The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 261, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1922 Page: 1 of 8
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922 3
Volume 8
Number 261
4 Fe
RAILROADS OPEN WAY FOR SETTLEMENT
THE PRESIDENT
Miss Inez Phang
Sir Charles Higham
CRITICIS
FOR
STAND HE TAKES
1
4
FIVE PEOPLE KILLED
PREJUDICE CLAIMED
V
clerks brotherhood here, tonight after
i
2
I
Saginaw, Mich., July 12.—A request
over the head with a bludgeon.”
F
ALJUDGE
brought into Denison to fill the ranks
EIGHT CHILDREN
By The Assoclated Press
White Spot On Planet Mars Esti-
ance Of Proposal
Flagstaff, Ariz., July 12.—The vast
r
Workman and William L. Sallisbury.
been as fixed or as brilliant.”
John L. Lewis,
$
& T. shops.
Topeka. Kan., July 12.—A telegram
Paris, July 12.—United States Mar-
..
disorder, Governor Allen said.
ties to control it.
Poplar Bluff, Mo., July 12.— Approx-
--
■
r
ernment’s bill for protection of the
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a railway strike.
"Mr. Harding gives the railways a
ators, continued to pursue a policy
which high officials declared was in-
tended to evade or delay an immediate
Shreveport—Fort Worth won from
Shreveport today 10 to 1 in the third
game of the series.
their members to do any of the work
of striking shopmen the executives
began consideration of a peace pro-
gram submitted to them by Ben W.
Hooper, chairman of the labor board,
Galveston, July 12.—Blate's home
tun with two out in the 10th termi-
nated a pitchers’ battle between Bai-
ley and Lyle, Houston winning 4 to 3.
flag came a ear bearing a large flam-
ing cross. The affair was orderly and
quiet and carried out with precision.
Say Harding Gave Railroads A
Gentle Tap Over The Wrist
For Violations And Whales
Unions With Bludgeon
SAYS HARDING
IS AUTHORITY
Wichita Falls—Dallas outhit Wich-
ita Falls and took the final game 9
to 8. Numerous fast plays featured
the game.
Executives Say Settlement With Unions Must Be Made Through
Labor Board; Recall Of Strike Would Permit Former Methods
Of Conference; Jewell Declares It Final Only For A Day
K
E 3
RATE ON LONG
STAPLE COTTON
Richmond, Va., July 12.—A strike
of union elerks employed throughout
freight handling by outside contract-
ors.
SPOT ON MARS
IS SAID TO BE
‘SCENIC LIMITED’
COLLIDES WITHA
LOCAL FREIGHT
10,000 See Klan Parade
Memphis, Texas, July 11. — Over
10,000 people witnessed the parade of
the knights of the Ku Klux Klan in
.
freight train.
The collision took place at the base
of a long down grade of the edge of
Kansas City’s largest park.
Needles, Cal., July 12.—Four men
were wounded here today in a clash
between strikers and their successors
at the roundhouse of the Atchison, To-
peka & Santa Fe Railway.
participated in the voting, which es-
tablished the main principal of the
binl.
mated To Be 800 Miles Long
And 400 Miles Wide
By The Associated Press
Washington, July 12.—Anthracite
West Bound Flier, St. Louis To
California, Running Late
Causes Confusion
National League.
At Pittsburg 3, Boston 4.
At Cincinnati 4, Brooklyn 1.
At Chicago 1, New York 5.
At St. Louis 2 2, Philadelphia 8-3.
By Th. Assoelated Prems
Washington, July 12.—A special re-
port by the Department of Agricul-
ture as to the damage wrought in
the cotton states by the boll weevil
will be made under a resolution by
Senator Smith, Democrat, South Car-
olina, adopted today by the senate.
The information is to be given in the
August cotton report of the agricul-
tural department.
The secretary of agriculture, under
the Smith resolution, to confer with
the agricultural commissions, county
agents and other in the cotton belt,
and to obtain information regarding
the area of the weevil infested fields
and also estimate of money damage.
The information is to be published in
detail by states.
DAMAGE IT TO
BE ESTIMATED
ST The Aroetated Pre-
Chicago, July 12.—While flatly re-
fusing to meet the leaders of 400,0C0
striking shopmen to discuss peace pro-
THE RAIL HEADS CONSIDER
HOOPER’S PEACE PROGRAM
American League.
At Washington 1, Chicago 4.
At New York 4, St. Louis 7.
At Philadelphia 3, Detroit 7.
At Boston 7, Cleveland 11.
Ghe Atlarshall Htlorning Nlews
______________MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS—SIX THOUSAND WORD NEWS-REPORT RECEIVED DAILY______________
___________ Marshall, Texas, Thursday, July 13, 1922
Chekiang Openly
Defying Peking
. I
k "
Forty Passengers Are Injured,
Most Of Them Seriously; A
Large Number Of Travelers
Are From The East
THE WEATHER.
East and West Texas: Thurs-
day and Friday partly cloudy;
warmer Friday, partly cloudy.
j The condition of J. W. Pike, who
was shot during the clash here early
4
* 9
Some Sayin’s
Of Si Bones
■4
1
By The Assoclated Prema
Washington, July 12.—A tariff rate
of 7 cents a pound on long staple eot-
ton was approved today by the serate,
41 to 14, after an amendment by Ari-
zona senators to make the rate first
15 cents and then 10 cents had been
rejected by overwhelming majorities
Strike Proclamation Condemned
By Car Brotherhood
President
to maintain order here when a threat-
ening crowd estimated at nearly 1,000
persons, collected about the Perry
Marquette yards. One report which cf-
ficials could not at first confirm was
that strike sympathizers had broken
into the railway roundhouse, seized
strike breakers brought here by the
road and marched them toward the
Saginaw river.
Reichstag Passes Measure.
By Ths Amsoetated Prem
Berlin, July 12.—By an almost
unanimous vote the Reichstag late
this afternoon passed the second read ■
ing of the first paragraph of the gov-
2r• e
17 .
*.
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,3 e, 2*
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Two conditions were attached to the
anthracite employers’ acceptance of
arbitration as a means of ending the
suspension of operations in their ter-
ritory. One that a separate commis-
sion consider wage scales in that in-
dustry and a second that the commis-
sion be required to return a decision
about Aug. 10. Meantime they agreed
to the president’s suggestion of pav-
ing the wage rate of March 31 though
protesting that this “would embar-
rass rather tha nassist the effort to
restore normal conditions” because
public demand "for decreased prices
of anthracite is imperative.”
| "If the president had taken half as ,
much interest in enforcing decisions'
of the railway labor board prior to,
July 1, when the railways were vio-
lating these decrees as he has taken
Denison, Texas, July 12—Reports
that more strike breakers will be
sideration of any matters which rep-
resentatives of employes might de-
sire to submit.”
The willingness of the roads, how-
MARSHALL, the place
- where Cheap Fuel
and Raw Materials
Meet, Invites You Ta
Become a Citizen
MINE WORKERS
AREFAVORABLE
TO ARBITRATION
MARSHALL has the
" Cheapest Industria
and Domestie Natural
Gaa Rates of Any City
in the Southwest
since July 1 in enforcing the man-
dates of the labor board against the
unions, there never would have been
posals, railway executives tonight
left open the door for a settlement demands
of the strike through the U. S. rail-
2
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4
F' ‘
New York, July 12.— Officials of
the New York Central Railway, after
a conference with representatives of
the clerks’ union, announced tonight
that they had reached an agreement
which probably would avert a threat-
ened strike by the clerks, station men
and freight handlers of the road.
The agreement was said to cover
By The Associateet rrens
Peking. July 12.—The governor of
the province of Chekiang has openly
a reply from the road to the union’s
sections of the country. One man belief that the shooting of Pike was
was killed, several were seriously accidental.
jured and a score kidnapped and beat-’ According to Sheriff Craig the
en in these outbreaks. , shooting occurred during an encoun-
Missouri Pacific Railway shops at
Poplar Bluff, Hoxie, Ark. and New-
port. Ark., this afternoon. The men
went on strike in sympathy with
the shopmen.
By The Assoctated Presa
Kansas City, July 12.—Sharp crit-
icism of President Harding for his
action in issuing a proclamation in
connection with the railway strike
was voiced here today by F. H. Knight,
assistant general president of the!
Brotherhood of Railway Carmen, in
charge of the international headquar |
ters of the brotherhood in the ah- |
sence of Martin F. Ryan, general
president.
Mr. Knight said:
to keep them moving.”
So commented Federal Judge Hutch- 8’ The Aroetated Pre
son here today when United States
the system of the Chesapeake A Ohio
Railway from Newport News to Chi-
cago is practically certain, said H. J.
Osborne, general chairman of tha
response and in which officials saw x0110
a disposition to reject the govern-l side. 1.e.....e ....... --------- p...
ment’s settlement plan if public opin- sought by the Southern Pacific was mosphere.
ion would approve such a course. " — - — “ M---
The most serious outbreak was at ter between Pike and two unidentified
Denison, Texas, where 51 men were men. The officer declared that ac-
attacked by a mob early today includ. cording to information he had receiv-
ing 48 being brought to Denison to ed the two men approached Pike and
be sworn in as federal marshals. The that when Pike, fearing trouble, pre-
attack occurred while the men were pared to defend himself, one of th
marching for the train in which they, men drew a gun. Pike, it is said,
had arrived from Dallas to the M. K. struck at him with a brom and it is
_ tween strike sympathizers and rail- this morning, is not regarded as seri-
c— ! way guards and federal marshals were ous, it was announced at the hospital
LEAGUE RESULTS 1 reported in increasing numbers and today. He was interviewed today by
______| annulment of trains continued in many Sheriff Craig who later expressed the
By The Assoelated Press ... .. - ' L- 1-• -----
public. A large number of the depu- this city Thursday evening. At the
head of the procession was carried a
after a conference with B. M. Jewell, yacations.sick leave and wages and
- ■ - - ’to provide that there would be no
No bud, you air mistaken
‘bout the yung men choosin’
their mates. I’m gittin’ ‘long in
yeers en by obsurvashun iz thet
the gurl picks out the feller sev-
erul munths fore the feller
knows it hiz own self.
Ef you kant save munny you
air az shore ez shootin' to envy
the man thet kan en the chances
air that you will hev it in fur
him.
Yes, sister, men air alius say-
in’ thet they admire the buty
thet iz natural, but in these
times ef I wuz you I wud use a
little flesh powder en jist a
triffle uv the red on my lips. Wo
hev to sorter konform to the
custom. But I wudnt ware my
dresses enny shorter then my
bruther wsnted me to en I wudnt
hev my shoulder blades a show-
in’.
Oh yes, son, we kno you cum
from Verginny en thet you
b'long to wun uv the fust fam-
ilys, but ef you’ll nuckel down
to work we wont tell enny bod-
dy. You kant help it
San Antonio—Couchman was in
rare form today and blanked the
Beaumont team by the score of 9 to 0,
making it three straight for the lo-
cals. Couchman also led at the bat
for San Antonio, getting a triple, a
double and a single.
way labor board.
I Immediately after reaching an
agreement with the heads of the “Big
Four” brotherhoods not to require
.i '
i i
- ter addressed to Mr. Hooper, asserted
MkVances To Cotton
Growers Approved
at 9 o'clock this morning after con-
necting with a Pennsylvania Railway
fact train from New York and Phila-
delphia. Most of the passengers were !
from the east, officials said tonight.
The train makes a few stops in Mis-
souri and Kansas. ,
Misunderstood orders are believed
to have been the cause of the wreck.
According to the rules of the road a
freight train must seek siding 15 min-1 Miss Inez Phang, winner of politics _ _
Utes before a passenger train is due study prize of the New York univer-’gentle.tap on the wrist and whales
regardless of other orders. It is be- ’ sity, says she is going back to her
lieved the fact that the train was late Chinere home and make use of the
confused the men in charge of the ideas and ideals she learned here.
Bous government with Dr. Sun Yap induce the president to make the ar-
Sen at ita head. 1 - “ ----’ ’ • " “
tiss representing the German Nation-
a! and the Bavarian peoples' partits large American flag. Following the
postponed until Friday. Union offi-
... j ’ president of the cials announced they will not oppose
defied Peking and a movementis said United Mine Workers of America, and the injunction unless it was sought
to have gained headway in Chekiang other offficials of that organization because of alleged rioting on the part
to invite the provinces of Sukien and called on Secretary Davis today and of the strikers. This would he con-
Kawngtung to establish an automo- were understood to be endeavoring to tested vigorously, they asserted.
Washington, July 12.—Approval of
advances aggregating 124,000,000
to the cotton growers associations
was announced today by the War Fi-
nance Corporation. The advances are
to be used In the orderly marketing
of cotton.
induce me preuenl iu mame LIe " -
bitration proposals apply to all the1 erre,
partially unionized territory as well/ROI I ILL LU II
as the mining area shut down by the DVLL VV Lila V IM
imately 100 stationary firemen, oilers CBN A FT B LIVIG
and pitmen, members of the mainten- 3 E N AIL r I A LA
ance of way union, walked out at the *
Meanwhile the miners union, and along the lines to prevent any inter- r
to a degree the bituminous coal oper- ference likely to obstruct the mails. i
A
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l .
29,
Nuhk
. *- 17
from J. E. Hopkins, M. K. & T. of-
ficial at Parsons, to Governor Allen shal Daer received from S. L. Stew-
this afternoon stated that 300 men art, in charge of the M. K. & T. Raii-
are at work in the Katy shops at Par- way property at Denison a telegram
sons and 40 more mechanics are ex telling of the treatment given men ar-
pected to arrive tonight. The message riving there Tuesday night to protect
stated Kansas is the only state in the company property. The message
which the M. K. & T. operates where’said that the situation was critical
strike conditions have been without and that Mr Stewart had been unable
to secure a sufficient number of depu-
event that the board should deter- and though, the situation hadLappar-
17 A-DAD AI AI mine upon that course was expressed entiyguieted down following the dash
VAPOK CLOUDS in an enclosive by the executives. The which occurred early this morning,
TH1 VII ----Tjletter was signed by heads of four there wAs an unmistakable tenseness
j railroads. ” iin the air. According to the reports
I “It may be final but its only final "the strike breakers will be brought
for today,” declared Mr. Jewell, when here in automobiles from a nearby
the text of the letter was read to him , town, presumably from Sherman.
over the telephone. . Pickets have been urged by mem-
Authoritative reports declare the bers of the executive committee of
shopmens’ program for settlement of the loc , shop crafts to refrain from
the strike includes an agreement to any violence and union officials here
. ’ : abolish the farming out of shop work are making every effort to see tha:
Deputy Marshal R. A. Harvin request- white area observed on the planet to contractors, the revision of arv order 13 maintained. Sheriff Craig
mine owners today submitted a re- ed authority to appoint more deputies1 Mars in the past few nights probably Ipay schedules in respect to overtime held a conference with the executive
.. . . .e sponse to the government s offer of : to handle the strike situation here. I is due to clouds of dense vapor, it was permission for a rhearing of • committeemen this afternoon and lat-
today by the explosion of « 75 millt- ’ arbitration in the coal situation that: The Federal government virtually explained today by Director Slither of Whole wage controversy bv the labor er issued a statement to the effect
meter shell on the back porch of A President Harding was said to regard took over the situation when Harvin the Lowell Observatory here where board nd the creation b’v the rar that troops would not be necessary-
house here occupied by Edward C. as a complete acceptance. ’announced he would station deputies studies of Mars have been in prog- roads of a board or adjustment nro to prevent further disorder.
ress nightly for months...The "spot" vided for in the transportation act. I H..D.MeGee, general manager of
ference likely to obstruct the mails. 1 8 estimated ., y Mr. Slither to be Railway men asserted- that the the M. K. Ib T. Railway, left today
He invited the city to “co-operate in about 800 miles long and about 400 roads specifically have-all agreed to for Dallas to confer on the strike
the matter.” j miles wide. (stop the practice of outside contract- situation. It is understood that from
Everything was quiet here today; . It.sis an important event from a ing on orders of the labor board and Dallas he will go to Austin to re-
following a period of activity on every scientifie standpoint,’ he said, "an .that an agreement by the board to quest that troops be sent to Denison,
Hearing on the injunction plea seems to be a phenomenon of the at- grant immediate hearings to requests though this report could not be con-
"" " - moThere, We have observed spots for pay increases retroactiveuntii firmed.
on Mars of greater area but none has July 1
Meanwhile violence outbreaks be.
. - • that the strike was called in defiance
a1 of the board and that therefore ary
conference between the executives and; was sent, to Governor Proesbeck at
I the strikers would not be “permissable Lansing late tonight for state troops
4 head of the striking shopmen.
-1 Their answer, in the form of a let-
cc i- u l , .. ,■ lor tolerable as it would place the
Sir Charles Higham, M. P., the first - . . > •
। a " strikers in the position of seeking to
advertising man to be elected to the ... _ . P . . . j ■ .
I - . . .. . . find means to subvert the decision
house of commons and the first ad- , , , a uwuwu
vertising man to be knighted by King oune ar '
co . I.; . .L ■ A prompt recall of the strike or-
George for his services to the empire 1T 1 a . ,, ,
din ____ _ . .0 11 der, the letter added, however, “would
during the war, came to the United '___■, ..____ .. , , ’ I
state, as an emissary of Lord North- permit thegresolutionof former meth-
cliffe, to invite the Associated Adver-iods of conference and permit th con-
us , tising Clubs of the World to hold their
1924 convention in London.
ever, to respond promptly to any
.believed that the gun was discharged
by the blow of the broom.
bituminous strike.
So far as the willingness of an-
thracite operators to settle was con-
cerned, Mr. Lewis said: “Arbitration
on the anthracite fields would be con-
Isidexad by the mine workers along
hwRhe bituminous arbitration pro-
posals at the general policy commit-
tee meeting Saturday.
Response from the bituminous ir.-
dustry, it was evident, would not be
in the president's hands before Mon-
KILLED WHEN BIG — I Houston, Texas, July 12.—“Why do;
gpT ypy AnFg President Harding Said To Re- pou aask.me for authority when the
•nuuH —al LV1 . Hard Response As Accept- to move—put on as many as you need
",31)
By The Assoclated Phss
Watertown, N. Y., July 12.—Eight
children, ranging in age from 11 to
16 years, were blown to pieces late
By The Assoclated Press
Kansas City, Mo., July 12.—Five
persons were killed and about 40 in-
jured, most of them seriously, when
the Missouri Pacific “Scenic Limited” I
flyer, west bound from St. Louis to
California, collided head on with a lo-
cal freight train near here tonight.
(. The flyer was running half an hour
• late on its schedule. It left St. Louis
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Price, Homer M. The Marshall Morning News (Marshall, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 261, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 13, 1922, newspaper, July 13, 1922; Marshall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1411301/m1/1/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .