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Show COAL SHORTAGE GROWING WORSE I ; I Schools, Stores, Railroads, Industries Feel Grip of Fuel Famine. (Continued From page One.) t i mi wn determined to effect a return ot jnatfUietion at Tin1 mines. "We will i:ot eotil eomeho'sv, IT. II. Mi 'rriek. banker ami president of the Missisippi Valley association . assertcl, ''and if it la-conies nceossarv, 1 !j troops simtiM be called To take eoin-niand eoin-niand and t'ny miner or otlier individual indivi-dual wlio interferes with the a. lion of t lie oov era me nt should bo shot. Charles Piez. formerly vi.' )irosldejit of the shippinLr lmrd and oenera! m:m-.'(L.r(f m:m-.'(L.r(f of tin- Ihaerene v Fleet corporation, corpora-tion, (N-e hired ' ' t h" nl'x'ort of -Hln,nmt men to tlictnte to the entiu1 nntioii what ir sliould do siiould be nippei.1 in the bud." It w:is MiipL'es'tod that hours for retail re-tail stores lie fixed at from In a. m. to i p. ni. Many industries nffiliated wiili tin? Jllinois M;i nuf aetttrers ; asso-chition asso-chition blttn a fived:iv week. T. W. Proctor, K-ioiial coal ehnir-inau ehnir-inau nf the northwest, declared There wero out Sn.p) ears nf eoai tivatlnble for the use of .,0,o()0,0i)() ipnpl". He su-mstod su-mstod it niiht beranne necessary To t-uiif isiT,T' supplies of schools and private pri-vate owner: of tin; nnneseni iai class. |