University of South Carolina Libraries
1- j Gr S e g dp 1-a.Gen. Squler giving (11i)10 gnboat Isobel on her way to Nanne American minister to Egypt. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVENTS Jrion Leaders Warn That They Will Order Rail Strike if Men Vote for It. GOVERNMENT TO COMBAT IT resident Harding Gives Labor Board Full Support-Tariff Precedes Bonus In Senate-Conference on Russia at The Hague-De Valera Is irreconcilable. By EDWARD W. PICKARD [h THEl railway tuaintenance of wn: l workers, shop then and members o .-ther unitons thnt are ualloting oi thI uestioan of t walkout, vote for a strike n .July 1, the oillecials of the union )ns will lind themselves In direct con let with the government, for 'res cent Hiarding has let it he known that Le will, to the full extent of his pov --r, hack up the federal railway labo Board. whose adjustments of wages t *rovluded by the t ransiportat ion ii< nye brought on the crisis. The Pre: 'ient and the cabinet nre keeping I -lose touch with the de'Veloptents, an -tit agencies of the government will 1) employed to prevent a strike if possihil -id to render It inetfective If it doe )Inc. The stand of the union leaders wi 't forth in a long statement to th hr hoard In which the decisions n alt b)ody were dlenoun ced and( watri g was given that the strike wouldl h ]Iedl if the mien so votedi. lien 'i - ooper, chairman of the hoard, reple this with charges that the union of! ils had distorted and misconstrue e hoard's deeisions In a manner *isied the mten, andt he citedl Inst anci this dlistorlti. "A strike of railway employees Id Mr. hlooper's letter, "Involvir * ol wages, their emnploymoent ari I i r wel fare, hased upon such ml 1a aling statements of' thisa hon rd's se1 W'.nen(5 ts ad declarations, woutld I ii just to thle men and to thle p~ubl Ic so fatr as lhe shtop ern fts are col 4 ned, 000 of t he I tree rensons1i ft di ilring a strike miay he removed witl nS( few day)3s. Th'i~s is the pratiei * 'faiin g oult shop wiork tunder ti '- rat systemii. The inh)1or i ord lit o conisiderinog "17 com11pin ts file Inst v'ariotis rond s andit its findtiinj. said to be almoitst ready for at mtitQmenjit. IIlenrings In :30 othc ('s aret no1w being held. IEarly3 I y' thlet hoitrd( d(eded such a ens~ - tinst the Indinta lI arbor I1elt ii (, the pr1 inciple's it ('1mtieiated thle ig, briefly, thiat such coot ract olate t hi'e) tpirIit ad piurpose5t of tht 'de (t' wig(e detlsiotis of (lie ritil reaid ithior hionid to whieh the' entrit wa*~s a pairty andi wleh thlle ca rrier' pi 11n1(1 eli'eet." hallwny executives genterally are ca :l~y will vo(tte for ti strike, it will no be ordered; and1 tey sny t hat tif It P t r:ans5por it ion will not he seriotusi; crii ped. 'rTe trnin hiiandlIn g for'ces Iiin.titing emtinteers, firemen, condutct '''and switchmeitn, are not inivolvedl ii T~lis Amzeriengn P'ederanion of Lt mon wa':s initoducedl eniin g for thi *j.al of the Ciinuis-Esch trant a'voring government ownershIp of thi 't 4ihwna. At the requiest of the rai unIon chiefs the resolution was hait ~ a; je miacinists, said: "Not for a stingic omen t hatve we ahandoned thec pro am f government ownership. Blul opresent admninistration is un ~iendly to us and we thought that it .)ould he Inladvisablle to press the mat ~r at this timte. Our enemies would ngethat the forthcoming strIke a lled to force thte government to hecotrlof the ratirondse. WVe want IhAtIssue to be cienu cut." especial cornit~ ee of the A. F. uns to graduates of U. N. signal school tt ang, China, to protect missionaries there of L. convention appointed] to con Sider recent l'nited .States Supreme court decisions affecting labor cases r"ecottedt amlendmlents to the Con stitution p~rohbiuting the labor of chil dren under 1G; prohibiting the enact ment of any law or the making of Judicial determination which would deny the right of workers to organize, to deal collectively with their emuploy ers, to collectively withhold their labor and patronage and Incluce others to do so; providing that if the Supreme court decides that an act of congress is unconstitutional, or by Interpreta tion asserts a publec poliey at variance with the statutory declaration of con gress, then If congress by a two-thirds majiority repasses the law it shall be come the law of the innd. The committee also recommended that congress he urged to enact it child labor law to overcome objections raised by the Supreme court to pre vious laws. -0 NE: of the worst labor clashes In the history of Illinois occurredi last week at the strip mine of the Souathern Illinois Coal company in Willilatnson county. A gang of steam shovelers wa-is at work there, andi af ter l'resident Lewis of the United .\llne Workers had declared they were to be treated as "commlnon strike t b~reakers" they were surrounded atnd aittacked by at crowd of striking !miners r armed largely with stolen weapons. .The nonunion mhen, after at long hat tisredrdadmn ftewere murdered in cold blood by thehr captors. The number of dead is un il certain at this writing, but probablyv e' is ats high ats 40, and perhaps much e higher. Governor Small ordered s 1,000 members of the state national guard mobilized at Chicago. Though a the miners quieted down somewhat e after their orgy of slaughter, there f was great danger of recurrence of the adm~iitain h tpbia .eatrsared oge trug4wt of 1 to 2 rejectedi . .sinalorah motg Ciona to sroeacth isoarif for t ouandafter afectng wtrge cate r(lalostdnlanimusly t tak the honu: bt ilonth sla'l tjaI lrde lof ousinessih drediatnery fooiing thsae ofacth alif meanyure. Drin t he debakn t doeny the Dmofcwrers tevoreanizas saile th olevlydenthhand thei aort 80rty faoridlgat the dopnofee eourteitht theta mact of cpodngess s ttif ~nthey wouald os byiniternt s4be passertd bli Amol'ust . iac - Cons I ie sauo elration of hp ubid rgills also ia' cobess defyred Presidents ant. ~ring coni'pasentigto lapoitshallne-n C~fe | (mite hat'ofe aen.h arf i ht conerece hen uhis ttet t Cil1 lfe aso law n4 oherhouse ol)partisars I'i5t( dby thoe ovemte coutto of-e NI: lqof tn Amrtlabn cases Thn laDeoctsie atgain ti maeitc ofea thae - te'uwilli tis ssul colive. i\en r wilethe ow covery Airano Lasker5 5lole as wasaten r tem reil quietedf byte I'eissunee ofew Trof sury Un e M iaten ~(ikrlings dleclain that', Wt'( t4 lide threit thre millllinm i itCOVIING)3 cror,' on nlsted~n paeron ranedrely ith,0t0land carrying about S$'9'Ai0,000 the navafte aprongrato b Ie, wsrpassledl'ehesat and oftent tocr conf~eree with cohe boose Thy e. Stio'on The pesnnher al is An Am ericn ares romg but, trheb Dom ( igh republ0c and Nerharagua C hwger deeaedaferong deate' being00 onsmberedo thislatee by the interdnionallcomiso at T.'heg Haglie, tinrs shleti has,' somdledwhar economer thens thaty thf slugter, powers finwaf greatdangt commctissare of ftr eignp t afac the actussa blaetra exetive dsrcefulte afarecn. a n VIreLdIGt the reqope of t eooIl tracts, eintrducong lwer andpub.a enatr agtrsd and ge-troughig bons bill guarante preaemb a prae ii 10 tiy nni itsl o ed.te )111 C, S C it n aa t1 C Camput Vaili, New York. 2-U. S. c 3-J. Morton lowell of Ohio, first p p IIe also says Russia is willing to demobilize 50 per cent of its army if 'olind, Lithuania, Latvia and Es thonia will reduce their armies in proportion. The success of the con- r ference at T(he Hague, he asserted, depends mainly on France, and he added that if it failed, Russia hoped to conclude separate treaties with England, Italy and other powers, r Japan's delegates to the conference r have decided that France's Russian t program is futile and unreasonable, and now it looks as though France I and Belgium stand alone. It may be I that one or two other countries will suppioit their demand that, as a prior f condition to discussion, Iussia agree to recognize the rights of private I property. The British and their fol lowers wish to omit all discussion of l the principles of communism and deal with concrete cases. IF IRELAND is pacifled it will not be with the consent and aid of Eamon de Valera. Though beaten in the Dail Elreann elections by a con siderable majority, lie still persists in his implacable opposition to the treaty which establishes the Irish Free State; and he declares lie does not believe the Dall will pass the new Irish con stitution in its present form, which he says is "well composed in all Its parts and peculiarly fitted to the end in view, the degradation of the people." Ie adds that it would ex elude from public service and prac tically disenfranchise every honest re publican. Directly connected with the Irish trouble was the assassination In Lon don on Thursday of Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, late chief of the im Ier'iil general staff of the British army. lie retired from this post last -'ebruiary and was elected a member of parliament from an Ulster district. lie also was appoInted military ad viser to thle Ulster goivernmient and - ws a leader In pIans for pacillcation. He was shot to (lentih by two mnen. B""-T''-" erhnps nrce pr ospect forp pactication and unification of Chn. Acting as an agent of P'resi d 1n4L Yuan-hung, General Chen took posessioln of Canton, defeating the trPoops ofi Sunt Yiat Sein, who later was taken lprisonier andl held on a Chinese cruiser. (Chen set up a provisIonal government pledgedc to suppilort the ce'ntrail governmiuent at Pekin, andl de cided that D~octor Sun should be per umilttedl to resign. Priesident Li even fo rmailly invitedl Sun to go to Peking and assist himi in reoiganizing the ge'neiral go ver-nment. Meanwhiile G~en ('ral Chant:11 , thle dlefeated Manchur iian leiidler, and General Wtu senedl an armliisitIee. Of iouirse' ther'ue is still a lot of tight ing going on in China. In Kaint'si province soime ten thousand of ~U Wu' troops mot ini(ed, klldi ninny Ilmtlv(es and statted( on a march tow~ard Na nchanig. I iIitih and Aimerilean gun-] houts1I huied ( to thle priotection of for eigner-s in t ha t region. A """wa-s givn to flu Yap A treaty wi thle United Stateis by thle .1 li anese Privy counlcil Iand lettersP of rat ilbfiaton will soon be i-ece'ivedl In Washint~i'on. 'The othier treat iis of lie Wa~shiington con ference wilh r-alilled iearly in .July, accordting to Americ-lan ii sterP to Egypt.- lie wvas noiimtated by I Psidenit Iliardinlg aind prompt ly conftirmed'( biy lie senlate. The selection (if Mr-. I iowell for this post tiont would seeml to be (especially wvise, as lie hats been the Amer-lean dip1)1(. mauitic agent and1( consul general in the hmdn~ of the Phlaratohs. SENATIOR F RANK KEL000 w'as r no iated for another term by the Re~ptiu~ans, andl his opponent In f the Milnnesota fall campaign is to a be the flirst woman ever nominated by ai major paRrty for a seat In the upper hiouzse. She Is Mrs. Annau DIckle Olesen, winner In the Democratic primaries. She heat her nearest competitor, Thomas a Meighen, by several thousand votes, Mrs. Olesen was one of the McAdoo floor imanager-s in the DemocratIc con vent ion of 1P'20. Another wvoman wvho I ('nmie to the front in that convention, Mrs. Isetta .Tewell Brown of WVest Vir- ri glnia, announces her candidacy for the senate subject to the Democratic h prinmaries of August 1. 'st Dl RIEF NEWS NOTES HAT HAS OCCURRED DURING WEEK THROUGHOUT COUN. TRY AND ABROAD VENTS OF IMPORTANCE athered Prom All Parts Of The Globe And Told In Short Paragraphs oreign-. The Yap treaty with the United tates was approved by the privy coun Ii and Japanese prince regent. This 'eaty fixes the rights of eash nation i the island, which is under Japanese tandate. Sun Yat Son, the president without republic, has disappeared, accord ig to advices received at Shanghai -om the South by Chinese circles in Mat city. The strike of the Mexico Tramway ompany's employees was settled re ently. The settlement was a com romise, neither side gaining a con lete victory. The assassination of Field Marshal ir Henry Hughes Wilson has stirred ngland to the depths. Mingled with eelings of sorrow and dismay are ap rehension of further outrages, as it is nderstood other members of parlal tent have been threatened. Wiu Ting Fang, former minister to Vashington, more recently foreign ninister for Sun Yat Sen in the dis upted southern republican government t Canton, died at Canton, according o a recent Reuter dispatch. Wu, an iutstanding leader in politics and ju isprudence of China for many years, emained, at last reports, loyal to Sun Cat Sen and was believed to have led Canton with the deposed South "hin- president. The Reuter dispatch rave no details. An attempt to assassinate the arch )ishop of Aragon while he celebrated nass at Montevidio was made by a 1-year-old youth, believed to be an anarchist, who gave his name as Be iigno Herrera Salazar. The president's residence in Canton ias been taken by the troops of Gen ?ral Chen Chiung-Min. Dr. San Yat Sen is supposed to have made his es mape on board a gunboat. Kiwanians and their wives and friends numbering five thousand per sons are attending the sixth annual convention of their internatioanl or ganization opening at Toronto, Ont. Washington Existence of a "combination" of banking, railroad and industrial inter ests dominating industry and deflating labor, charged recently by W. Jett Lauck, representative of railroad un Ions, was denied before the senate in terstate commerce committee by L. F. Loree, president of the Delaware and Hudson. A rsolution censuring Commissioner E'rank A. Harrison of Lincoln, Nebr., for "falsifying the records of the com mission" was adlopted unanimously by members of the American commission to the Brazilian centennial exhibition. Later members of the commission call ed upon the president and requested that he remove Mr. Harrison as a member of the commission. Indlications are that unremitting pressure will lbe exerted to bring ac tion on the disposition of the govern ment's properties at Muscle Shoals, Ala. There is no question but that i majority of congress favor the ac ueptance of Henry Ford's offer. The senate agriculture committee, in vestigating proposals to dlevelop) the government's projects at Muscle Shoals, Ala., is prepared to close pub ic meetings and begin preparatinos of reports for- senate considleration. Chairmtan Norris, after hearinmg Maj. J. FT. Burns, of the war dlepartment otrd ance bureaut. remveie thte data col ected by~ the department and congres sional commniittoos and recommended ' sptecific polic'y for- soltion of the Mutscle Shmoals prtoblemns. A compromise arb-itr-ation plan to de 3idle the issues of thte Chilean-Peruvi. in (cnfetrence atppeCars to be taking lefinite form as a result of the conm iul tait iott of both ideis with Scre'ctary )f' State Iluaghes. .A comtpromaaise plan by wmataen the naited States would arbit rate thte dif 'it Itltes arising froam thIte unfCulIfillmtet ft the Taena-A rica clause of the tr-eaty 4 Anc'on a ppearas to be gaining favor mong hoth Chiilean and Peruviant rap-4 'csentativces in the Washington contfer nces. Thte senate has atdopted the confer. nec report on the atrmy~ applropriation ill fixing the size of the armyi for heo coming fiscal .year at 12,000 offi ers and 125,000 enlisted men.j Mrs. Izetta Jewel Brown of Fair-. iount, W. Va., it is learned in Washt- f igton, has announced her candidacy I ar the United States senate from that tate. Although commending (the Philip-, ine aspirations to independectde andJe amplete self-soveroignty, Presidentj [arding replies to the Phtilippino Isl- tI nd parliamentary mission "that the I me is not yet for indlependiencoe " he president's statenment was made~O the members of the mission who st week presented to him the Fill. no argument and plea for a sepa ate political existence, J. J. Britt, former member of the i )use from North Carolina, has as- ai med the duties of counsellor for the u: 'olaibition unit. Another address in the series plan ted by Republicans in charge of the ariff bill designed to show that im orters and big department stores are ighting that measure because they do lot want their profits cut lown, was lelivered the other day in the senate )y Senator Watson, Republican, of In ilana. Senator Simmons of North Car dina, the Democratic leader in the ight, replied sharply. In the event the next lower house )f congress goes Demorratic a revolu ,ionary change in the traditional poli :ies of that body is expected. Demo :ratic leaders have under considera .ion the advisability of making a dec aration of principles and policies with -eference to the congressional govern nent. Congress has adopted an attitude of 'watchful waiting" regarding the in pending railroad strike. Mrs. John A. Logan, president of the Dames of the Loyal Legion, stated In Washington recently that the or ;anization would urge other patriotic nd educational societies to press cam paigns against use in the schools of any state of histories that do not con. form to facts. Domestic Directly after news that gold dig gers were seeking a lost Jesuit treas uire in the Wye river, Canada, and that an expedition had just left New York for Belgian Congo, there to search for precious metals, announcement was made in New York City of two new treasure hunts that have been organiz ed and will soon be on their way. Seized by a party of unidentified men, Jule Garrett of Jamestown, N. C., was placed in an automobile and taken to a lonely spot near Deep Riv er church, where he was severely whip pied, according to a story he told offi cers of High Point, N. C. Garrett told the officers he had recently been warn ed by unidentified persons to esgt him a job and go to work. A. K. Kroh of the Goodyear Tire company, speaking before the Georgia Automobile Dealers' association in ses sion at Macon, Ga., told the dealers that factory advertising in magazines and otherwise is unprofitable without the co-operation of local dealers. Contract has been awarded by the Loray mills at Gastonia, N. C., for a five-story spinning mill to cost approx iinately $200,000. The machinery will be moved from Pawtucket, R. I., the owners believing they can get along better with unorganized Southern la bor than they can with Eastern organ ized labor. Lincoln Greene, vice president of the Southern railway, speaking in Ashe vile the other night, said that the present industrial situation in the, South is but a forerunner of the good things to come. The striking union miners and em ployeef/of the Southern Illinois Coal company are reported to have engaged in a lively scrap at Herrin, Ill., the other day. One union miner was kill ed, and twelve to fifteen employees of the mine are reported dead. Gen. Julian S. Carr of Durham, N. C., wvas re-elected commander-in-chief of the United Confederate Veterans at the annual reunion just closed at Richmond. T1he boardl of directors of the Arkan sas Cotton Growers' Co-operative asso ciation has decided to seek an advance of S'7,500,000 from the war finance cor pioration to aIdl in the co-operative mar keting of the 1922 cotton crop, it was recently announced. Organized labor virtually committed itself at the American Federation of Labor e'cr vcn-tion to a progrram favor ing adoption of four constitutional amendments, the repeal of the Slher man anti-trust law andl the enactment by congreso of two other measures for the avowed purpose of curbing the courts on account of decisiona adverse to labor. Dr-. J. M1. MTaxon, rector of Christ church, Nashville, was elected bishop coadljutor of the dliocese of Tennessee at the annual council of the Protest ant Episcopal church held at Nas~h ville. lbilization of the one hundredl and thlirt-secon d infantry of the Illinois National Guard, ordleredl by Gover-nor Small ini a message from Waukegan to hold itself in readliness for dluty in thle sothernc-m Illinois inining region, has begun. Ar-ms and eqluip~ment have been diistr'ibumted to the ,gat hering iua rdsmen at the Chiicago a rmc ry. "Bloody" WVilI lson, so-cald b1( e ause of many acts of violence in re ~ent times, most of them accompanied my niummerous fat alitieos, is preparing or wvhat official action is expected in 'onnecti!on withI the massacre at the aester Strip mine (Horrin, Ill.) when etween twenty-seven andl forty-five Persons wer-e slain after strikcing min 'rs had stor-medl the sixty or more trikobreakers operating the mine. The body of Bon Chambers, a farmer vying near Samson, Ala., was fouind, pith four bullet wvounds in the head, eating in the Pea river. Donie Hiol (lay, alias Donie Jewers, and WVill Veeks have been arrested charged 'ithi having murdered him, Marconi, inventor of wireless tel raphy, speaking in Atlantic City, N. ,the other (lay, told newspaper men ast he expected very soon that every ause in the world would own radio luiipmont that would enable each me to talk without others listening in ith anybody lhe with whom he nilght ish to converse, The American Federation of Labor ill establish a legal bureau in Wash gton, D. C., to defend local uinions gainst any suits that may be filed ader recent Supreme court decigio ivaranso.. Onsr DYSPEPSIA IS NOW THING OF THE PAST St. Louis Citizen Eats Anything on the, Table and Has Gained Several Pounds in Weight-Gives Tanlao Full Credit. "The other medicines I tried before. didn't even budge my troubles, but three bottles of Tanlac have fixed me up in fine shape," said H. Mohr, well. known citizen living at 112 S. Fourth. St., St. Louis, Mo. "Two years ago my stomach went wrong and my appetite failed me. Gas forned from what little I would eat and pressed on my heart until it pal pitated so I could hardly breathe. I wasn't able to do regular work, be cause of pains in the back, bad head aches and dizzy spells. "But I have gained several pounds: now since taking Tanlac and eat just anything I want without any trouble. The pains and headaches never bother Ine any more, and I am only too glad: to pass the good word along about Taniac. It is simply wonderful." Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. Rule With No Exceptions. Whten you meet ia wealthy old bach elor you inay be sure that you have at laest eneountered a InanI who has: learned to say no and stlek to It. REST YOUR TIRED FEET ALLEN'S FOOT=EASE. the antiseptem powder to be shaken into the shoes, stops, the pain of corns and bunions,. and gives. quick relief to sweating, callous, tired, ach ing, tender feet. blisters and sore spots. It. rests the feet, keeps them cool and comfort able. Shoes and stockings wear twice as long Whoa you walk In comfort.-Advertisement. The Originator. "Who started this 'See AmericaL First' mtovemntu '" " Couimhtis." Might Hear of it. "Itclgt m adItcksgr a-not ed-headed." "I said I would not c11ll her red-headed." If it is true that two hends are het ter thtan one. every moan should have a double skull. COCKROACHES Waterbugs ANTS Easily killed by using the genuine Stearns' Electric Paste Also SURE D E A T H to rats and mice. These gists are the greatest carriers of disease. They Guatroy both food and property. READY FOR USE-BETTER THAN TRAPS Directions In 15 languages In every box. 2 os. sie oSIc. 16 os. sIze 61.0. MONEY BACK IF IT 'AILS Pts ANCOCK SULPII. MP D For Eczema, Rheumat . Gout or Hives Expensive health resorts sought by thea sds have grown around springs contain Hancock Sulphur Compound. utilizing the secret of the famous healing waters, makes it possible for you to enjoy Sulphur Baths In your own home, and at a nominal cost. Sulphur. Nature's best blood purinier, is prepared to make its use most efficacious In Hancock Sulphur Compound Use it in the bath, as a lation applied to affected patts, and take it Int ernally. 60c and $1.20 the bottle. If your druggIst can't supply It, send his name and address and the price in stamps and we will send you a botte direct. RANCoCK LUQUID SULPHUlt COMPANY - aktimoere. Md. Esisre &ohue campe'rnd ogsyIE. LI,,aid Ces twe4 For CROOp COLS INFLUENZA & PNEUMONIA Mothers should keep a jar of Brame's vapemenths Salve convenient. When Creup. Influenza or Pneu nionia threatens this delirbiful salve rubbed well lnte the throat. chest and under the arms,. will relieve the eboking. break congestion and promote restful sleep. Wk 0 l .2 t i sAllt re . Cs~lor .Setreall Dram. Drug co. aN. WllcaorN.C IGirls! Girls!! Clear Your Skin With Cuticura Soap 25c. Oiment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c. TI CHILLTONIC NOT ONLY FOR CHILLS AND FEVER BUT A FINE GENERAL TONIC. For Adult. ~_ - -I and( p Af*II/ftig Ists r.Veers ermi ge, E HURT? E.Ad! n tcs ' 14T Wayerg Ilseor