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Show 7 t Plans Feast aiy3 Deposed President of South China Republic Says He Song for Her Five-tim-e Leaders Statement. Tor several days, previous fo ths out Will Die Before Yielding. Major and Big Citizen break of ths trouble, the mine guarde ' f Some Say They WilJ Induce Him to Enter Politics . Again and Defeat Gang. S y M. C. BURNETT. 1922, by Salt Lake Tribuna.) Harrl-- i CHICAGO, June 24. Carter H. (Copyright, f , ' TUB SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, .JUNE 25. 1922. explained the Herrin situation to Far" . rington. "Men familiar with the conditions In ths mining camps In Illinois snd ths character of Illinois miners had Impor tuned the company npt to attempt to do eo," Farrington's statement added. Chicago f s. Ikir. citizen of Chloagtf, flva times mayor of the United pf'tha second largest city Jlutea, la home after a fourteen months' tour of the world, and thereby hang. a tala. a welcome auch iitat would XT m city were Cripple errek h It ha 40a. That waa the spirit of the If Chicago la giving him had been stopping cltlsens on ths pub mine and had them to submit to being searched. This naturally created an Intense feeling (ft Indignation. "Wedneudiiy, 'June 21, the union miners met In mean meeting and decided to go to the mine to try, by peaceful means, to persuade the nonunion men to etop working. Upon appioaihlnr the mine tad while etlll on the public highway, they were fired on by the mine guards and two of their number vere ktled. The men In who were killed were not armed. fact, there Is no evidence to show that any of the union miners were armed, hut Instead everything indicated that they were on a peaceful and legal mission. Following the killing of their .two comrades, the miners disbanded but in greater numbers during the the break night near the mine and onwere of day Thursday morning again Dred OB by the tnlno guards, 'This secthe to Infuriate ond attempt aeimed pmon miners and if was at '.hit JuncIts reached hightrouble the ture that est point. lie highway near th ed eom-pell- -- Many people were saying, ftCarter, did you bring me any aou'enlre i Bon Japan?" ohd, ''Oh. Carter did you Charge Is Denied I fet any of that good liquor on the ship ' "The allegation thnt a telegram sent a a A Hah fftf OUr ami by J. - Lewis started the trouble la not true. mayor. "We sincerely regret and deplore the I; And there's tlie etory: .Harrison for pretrouble,' but contend that It was comthe 'Thompknock to "Harrison Jtjoor"; cipitated by the action of the coal acted of which the of pany, the city.',! representatives itrm crowd out that could be I When they put on the banquet In the against the best advice Gold room at the congreae hotel Ihurs given them. Wllllsmeon county miners, Uke all Hay night the clock will go back thirty the"The rent of ths Illinois miners, are gear. liberty lovlntf clllseiy, but It la safe to sav that they will not submit to Feast Planned. of machine gun and mine the about guardInequ'tles rule, such as has existed In West ijifhla dinner is going to be Just Hie finest sort of town meeting thatChiVirginia for more than a quarter of a g century. fsigo baa hud In y tars In the disturbed terri'Order pre-al- ls and mueie and Ice cream Just like other which you've .suffered, tory now and at do not expect any furbesquets from who In town disorder. ther one but at this everybody ' (I anybody Is going to hate a chair, a that la, and it will be a fine CROWING DEMAND li chair, bight tor thieving In the suburbs unless Charley FUamorrie has the police chief LEGAL ACTION has Who used to be Carter's secretary all his constables keeping strict watcnou tlie homes of Chicago's poor million By ARTHUR EVANS. Chleege Trlbunl!t Lake Trlboae Leased Wife. Xhere'11 be plenty of rich men at the MAKION. Ill . June 24. fclow dawning fact, horror banquet, pretty near all of them, inBome-dnIs striking Egypt and the citizenry a but there'll be poor onea, too. of this and other tuwns are beginning to who knowa everyone who should ba call for an Investigation of the massacre known In Chioago looked over the list of hear Herrin, for punishment for those re1079 persons who will crowd Into the In Hermob the for atrocities. sponsible Gold room and allowed as how ha could rin Itself the general attitude is still - - ft the names of man who had to sweat one wholeover the of satisfaction deep lot' what they earn with Their hands as sale murders. well as those who even have somebody While some of the labor leaders appear te 'dlp their coupons. be rather stunned bv the terocity of L Chicago Proteatante, Chicago Catholics, Thursday mornings outburst, the miners Carwill ba men drinking in general snd many of their leaders still Chicago Jews ter' Harrtaon' a health Thursday night who are exultant. Hatred of the etrikeureak-ers- " from is carried beyond death. The in.represent everything Chicago anhas, expand-- i tensity of feeling is gone, bud unbelievthe thin lme that separates te on the north stilt Evanston from able lag city as.lt may sound, the massacre The Is a cause lor mirth and laughter. the steal mills on the south. Every shaue .I f political opinion will be holding down morgue with Its sheeted victims still Is Chairs, too men who have fought Mr. the side show. Morion and tuthe cities Harrison politically, men who have fought in the region are agnast over the outtt With him. Carter la a Democrat, If you break. A6 the outside newsptuiers come dont atready know that, but as much in, giving further details and telling how Yj the soup will go down Republican tbroata at th outside views1 Tho murder, Jc asking, "What can be done? down Democratic. Itoma-oomln- g. . I- bt g, Bpeecfr-maSrn- FOR r - 1 dll-Men- , ! Dont Fear Punish meftt. Something Expected. ' Theyre going to sing a welcome-hom- e "Nobody will be punished. la the genSo many partici1, gong, too, and wave flags and toast the eral talk In Herrin. all with the pated in the outbreak and n the mob waa leading cMlrsa of the haa auch a Volstead recoin drinks that representative pure lopulntlon, that the view Is that It would ii .mended. No ono is supposed to peep is difficult to be This responsihang extremely about the mayoralty next spring. , a ponpollUcal, nonsectarian banquet, a bility on any Individual. e Politics Is Involved, for the mining vote "no politics, and w1 pearly easts the grgat bulk of the ballots. So r&ut some sealot la apt to get over the far Ss any teal Investigation goes It Is chains and start things milling. Chicago well recognised that the local government 'e.Ja. acclaiming tho return of a . leading is tna futility. the T elttsen with all the fervor of the grown- Herrin, county seat, the general talk is that anv Investigation worth the op small town all cities are grown-u- p name to come from outside. have would Is with ;; small towns, bat Chicago bulling A. D. Rodenberg of Centrsdia and W. E. I comment on politics. of East St. touts are lookTrautmann . In ! CAn a former champion politics U gems back? That's the question that has ing the ground over for Attorney General Asoffice. . yet they have (his town on Lake Michigan and the Brundnges voiced no conclusions. Deloe Duty, state's ,1 drainage canal by the ears. Can Carter aMornev, who qot the eun-- lotion of the H Harrison reenter the political ring and who were executed for the killings 1, sec hit way Into undisputed claim tor menWest Frankfort last year, declares he ir four years to a desk on the fifth floor, at But Mr. Duty wtll push Investigations. City hall? of investigators no to round has force with that question Is another-- ' it ' home-comi- ng -- s cross-sectio- come-hom- Coupled accept the' nomination? is a question that will have to before there can be any fancy I footwork In tho ring. Mayoralty candl- dates In Chicago are thick enough. On II tha Democratic aide of the house another eaadldate la born every minute, but the are telling the old, heads hereabouts wofld that tha nomination will be Har- risoni it hell take It. I "And not only that, he'll have to take f It; We'U,make him. declares a growing ; army. Will Harrison this i' And km settled 'inarrlsonii Prominent. i Mr. Harrison, on arriving In Ran Fran-- : risen on his homeward jaunt, told lnter-- ; viewers be wae coming home to play with his grandchildren and lead a peace-- ; ful life. Tar removed from main bouts on the political card. What he wishes I to do. however, doesn't fit in with louder I speakers than he and presently, the wise- acres say, Mr. Harrison's protests, If they continue, will be drowned In shouts of "Harrison for mayor." of American municipal!- 1. Tha history ties does not furnish a parallel to the oase of Carter Henry Harrison and hi father. Carter Henry Harrison, Sr. Both were mayor of Chicago five term. Carter j 'Harrison, Jt., was born in Chicago, April An assassin slew his father 24, 1440. I October 22, 1893, when ths world's fair was hers. Tbs son eras first chosen mavor In April. 149?. snd he was elected at each I biennial election thereafter until he had ; served four terms. Retiring from pollutes tn 104, he maintained no active con-- t neettons until 190?, when he sought the Democratic nomination at ths primaries, land lost. He was given ths Democratic nomination in 1911 and elected for a four-yeterm. ,, 1 1 1 ar lit The county board, which up evidence. might give him a force In n emergeuey, has about thlrtv. members and some theso are miners. two-thir- Hands Are Tied. Thus Mr Duty's hands are tied. Sheriff Thaxton talks of a "thorough Investigation." Wllllamion county laughs over this, for the sheriff is running for election aa countv treesprer and the miner! much criticism have the votes There of the sheriff fur jus Insistence prior to he had the situation ths outburst that well In hand. For st least a weak a dmiionKtrsllon hntl been looked for by In tbs two days of the townspeople. rioting, the sheriff apparently was not outon the ground at any time while the bursts were in progress. There are reports that some deputy sheriffs the yhooting. hut made no effort to calm the n,ob. Removal of ths sheriff by Governor Small has been rumored a possibility. The natives here say that would serve to make him. county treasurer by a landslide vote iu November. 1 Views Conflict. to whether tne calling out of state troops would hove averted the murders, cne view here among eubbtantlal citizens la. that although the presence of troops might have delated the outbreak, It would have come eventually after withdrawal of the soldiers. If the mine continued to run. They argue that the effect would have been to stir the miners up atiU more by the Idea that the state a soldiery was being used to protect " mine and vtlie whole region, with Its more than 2S,0'tmlner, would have been up Tn resentment and turn toll. Aa conservative townspeople snd some mine operators here view H. although the stark brutalitv of the murders cannot be sufficiently deplored, yet the ataiter of .the rouble wna the Southerh Illinois Coal company. The mines of Illinois are 100 per cent unionise?, and to attempt to run the atrip mine at iTenahaw Crossing with nonunion labor, protected by armed guards, was to invite mob outThis viewpoint was put before bursts. Superintendent McDowell, mho waa une of the victlma, several times by Colonel Sam JT. Hunter, but tho mine continued to operate and the armed guards stMl miners, pzaseraby, kept intercepting farmers end all at the point of- guns on the public roeuis. A "strlke-hrea'itlng- - Osatinssd from Fast four. Mna in blocks, pigs or slabs; 2 cents In Sheets. 1)4 cents la sheets coated or listed with nonprecloua metals, and 1)4 tents on sine old gad fit only to be if The original rate of 46 per cent ad Valorem on print roller and block used ,ln printing, stamping or cutting designs 'for wall or crops paper, linoleum and oil. emtb was advanced to 40 per cent on of the committee. Under now paragraphs proposed by the ) committee, the senate approved a duty of ad valorem on polished j i per cant j tiUmdrtuai steel rolls and a duty of 49 1 on r cent pressed drills, metal cutters, sympathisers started out visiting aH ths eo, etc, containing mors than 4 par nonunion mines operating within a radius t t of tungakon or molybedenum. of approximately twenty miles. . t completed th gnota! schedule. Workers In the nonunion mines ware -- -- v SHANGHAI, China. June 24 (By the Associated Press.) Sun Tat-Sepresident of the Republic of South China, deflea the Peking government, denies that Tie haa taken refuge In flight, and declarea he will die rather than yield, according to advlcea from Whampoa, near Canton, where the southern leader Is making his headquarters aboard the 1. - -cruiser Wing- - Fung, ' Bun, when located aboard tha Wing Fung at W'hampoa, flatly contradicted recent reports that his navy had turned against him and declared that hia with hie army In Klangal province which he haa ordered to .return to Canton would follow bis banner In a n against Chen Chiung-Mln- g and tha forces of the north. His downfall he blamed on the treachery of trusted subordinates led by Chen he bitterly de Chlung-Mlnwhom nounced at a traitor." He excused hti bombardment of Canton, agalnat which the American minister protested, as an expression of hie protest reauUed-l- n. whleh-ha., n, ovsr-thro- &JGnfi&MUyLfid Clotting S ervice All Men Appreciate ;A counter-revolutio- is treachery ' ' - cruta-togeth- er h satisfaction thtrir comes with buying yqur clothes from a real mens store. d- ERELS-ar-"fceltngof"geTiiii- Tie xj-i- his overthrow. Plans an Attack. Sun confidently asserted that as soon as his Klangsi army returns he will attack Chens forces In the Canton territory and, backed by his navy, hopes to regain hia lost authority. In any event, he declared, he was prepared to stake his life on thowasissue la hia country's cause snd ha ready to die fighting for it. I am the victim of ths treachery of my subordinates and supposed friends," he said. "As a man and aa a patriot, i am going to set an example for future ths generations, and will not submit toleadforce brought to bear by the Peking now admit they "After six yeare they were wrong by reconvening parliament They and ratifying the constitution. want 0 reap the advantage and eliminate those who foXight tor these things T am going to fight for humanity and civilisation, republicanism and righteousreness, 1 have not resigned and will not resmy sign to force. I will only give subordiignation to parliament, not to nates." c Then, too, you get better merchandise, pay less and remain content longer. Kincaid - Kimball Clothes CFamous fr fine Clailorinij will instantly appeal to you . The neat, stylish appearance of the summer clothes especially. They keep their shape, always look well and keep you comfortable; They are at least worth your considera- Mutiny Quiets Down. Press ) The crest of the mutiny which with has drenched KlangSi province blood apparently aa past. Reports from the best available sources place the death toll at more than 4000 and Indicate the destruction, er severe damage, of four cities, but do not Indicate that any for-no However, eigners have been molested.from 600 Chiword has been received nese Christian converts reported Imprla oned In ths compounds of th Catholic Losarlst mission at Talho, since they were besieged there Thursday by mutineers, except their original appeal for aid. A a result anxiety which has been felt for several days reached a higher pitch this morning. miles south of Klanfu Talho Is twenty In Klang-S- l province. Datest reports are that foreigners, except doctors attending wounded In the although hospitals, have left Nanehang. are felt that city Is quiet and no fears la the under for Its safety. Nanehang Is who provided a civil governor, of care with 414,000 a month by private Interests for use in maintaining order. Chi-to nese are reported to be hurrying there gain his protection. tion and inspection. We have a better stock of Summer Apparel now. Utafts Greatest Clothing Store No Wive Communication. South of Nanehang communications may virtually are at a standstill, and itdetails ba several days before complete muwreaked the by of tha devastation tineers becomes known. However, It Is established that the greater portions of Dung Talho, Wanan and Klanfu, In these Chuan have been destroyed. cities many have been slain, the greater portion of ths known dead having been found there. A steadily decreasing amount of credit lining accorded dlspatchea, apparently based on rumors started by overwrought natives, that foreigners have been , to mistreatment. commander General Tsai Chen-Heuof ths northern Chinese forces In Klang-B- 1 part of whom mutinied. Is declared to' be Increasing his hold over the men and to have stopped their retreat and the looting along the Kan river. KEARNS BUILDING Company SALT LAKE CITY aub-iect- n, told to quit work. In all Instances, according to reports, these requests were immediately compiled with. In a number of Instances operators of the nonunion mines learned of the coming visit of the strike sympathisers and closed their mines In several other Instances It Is reported that the working miners ran for thetr homes when they saw the many automobiles loaded wKh strike sympathisers headed for ths mines In which they worked. The number o t automobile and occuestimated. Reports pants is variously from Pershing state that about 6 o'clock this morning one party of possibly 100 men tn score of automobiles left for the vicinity of Knoxville, where there were approximately half a doxen mines in operation. They returned about noon. It was later reported that another group of approximately the same number left for Bussey, in the southwest corner of Marion county, where there ere a number of other smell nonunion mines. Members of the party decline to aay who acted as their spokesman or leader. All of them eay, however, that there waa no violence. It Is estimated that there were approximately 400 men employed In the nonunion mines within a radius of fifty miles from Pershing, where the agitation to cloea theee (nines appears to hevs had Its origin. The total output from all the nonunion mines in this vicinity Is estimated st about fire carload a day. MINES IN IOWA ' FORCED TO tLOSE Stop KNOXVILLE, low. June 4. (By the Associated Press.) The first demonstrw tion of union sympathisers In Iowa since the coal strike started nearly three months ago today resulted tn the closing of approximately a dosen email nonunion wagon mines Early this morning, following a mass meeting last night of striking miners at the near-b- y mining town of Pershing, scores of automobiles loaded with strike 1 Bitter the Against Struggle Government of Peking. Plans to Continue Non-unionis- ts. CANTON, Ilk. Juns 24 (By the Associated Dress.) Rwooplng down upon the strip mines of Fulton county, 'automobile loans of union miners, by the mere show of force, this afternoon had coal stopped ths work of all nonunion They gathered minors In th county. quletlv this morning at various points throughout- the county, and visited every mine- operating. With the memory of Herrin In mind, snd In some cases, with sn evidence of fright, the workers stopped work Immediately. Rome of them fled, but most quietly laid down thetr tools. Ttmuausds of tons of cool have been take Hw- -v these strip or "wagon county each week and cagu and other pointa nines of Fulton nipped to Chi- - Ogle Places Blame. 1ITTSRPRO, Ia., Juhe 2 k In Responsi- Herrin, llL, bility for the mine riots was placed upon the refusal of the United Mine Workers to negotiate a working agreement with the operators by A. M. Ogle of Terre Haute, lnd., presldciE of the National Coal association. In a statement made public hera today. No words of condemnation are strong enough," said Mr. Ogles statement, "to properly characterise the Illinois mine they Increase the horoutrage nor couldmust feel toward the ror which all shameful atrocities that were committed mob." by the Aquila Nebeker It Active Candidate for Shrievalty Aquila Nebeker wants tn be Sheriff ot Salt Lake county. He made this announcement yesterday and said that his name would be placed before the Democratic county convention this fall, and that he was an active and not a passive candidate. "I have held moat every office tn the Otete except that of sheriff." said the former United States marshal, "and now I went to see how It feels ta be Sheriff. I am making this announcement because I want she nomination and election and solicitous friends." not simply to pi Mr. Nebeker ,whe recently completed more month a of then four years a term as United (hates marshal, la a native of Salt Daks and attended the publlo schools hers. When a young man. how. ever, he went to Rich county, where he was engaged In farming when appointed Before Utah became a stale marshal. Mr. Nebeker was elected to the legislature tn 1492 and again In 1144. He wu elected to the constitutional convention In 1904 and then for four years was preaident of the state senate, being elected to this poeKlon In 1(0 and 1094. He - (wdd numerous ether offices and Decomposed Chloroform Sold by U.S.; I Warning Note Promptly Sent Out Trlbon.-ftl- t Lake TrtbsM leased Wire. NEW YORK. June 24 An Invisible peril that haa been lurklug for months, menacing thousands of lives and perhaps causing death In many cases, was bared today, when the World obtained the admission of the department or agriculture that It has condemned as unsafe a vast quantity Of chloroform sold from ths army surplus stores. This chloroform, put Up in small tin containers and Intended for an anesthesia, has been distributed to surgeons and to and hospitals throughout ths country, there is no way of telling at present how much of it ha already been used in connection with operations. About DOOO.OW cans are said to have been sold and It ta estimated that possiof tt has decomposed to bly such ait oxtent that to administer It to a patient would be (o Invite death, a David B. Levy of New York, drug wholesaled and Inspector, who bought and of the cans army sold upward pf 40,000 chloroform, has written all his customers, requesting them to return It to him at his expense and for credit. One wholesaler said that he was in receipt of a qommuncation from a physician upstate expressing Che opinion that the death of one of that doctor's patients, which occurred In the course of an operation, had been due to some of this decomposed chloroform. 80 far. the World was Informed, all the cases of decpm.ositlon have been discovered In chloroform which the government purchased during the war from & R. Hquibb A Sons of 40 Beekman street, manufacturing chemists of many years' standing. , To Inform users how they might the army chloroform from the kind now being fnsnufsetured, Squibb tc Bone have Issued a warning toU persons upon their mailing list. Ths last lantp sale of this chloroform. It was nd. was early this year, when shout 400,000 cans were disposed of In The prices at anrttop Philadelphia ranged from 414 cents to 444 cents a can. The retail price, It 4a stated. Is about ti positions ot trust and Is one ot the best known men In the etete. have been discussing Mr. Democrat Nebeker candidacy for sheriff for some time. He has been en active worker tn the party since before most of them esn remember and be sayg he expects to be s good Democrat for several years yet. His home la st 101 East Second South aries for K. C Wright resident engineer; H. (1. Chapman, transttman. and Tnomas Gllmsrtln, Inspector.' New Inspector enraged by ths commission Include T. H. Inthroft H. R. Allen. H. D Cropper, Fred Haynes, -- J. Langton, R. J. Standing and George Evans, . Chirac er , street. SALARIES INCREASED. cents SPEAKER ANNOUNCED. J. Reuben Clark will be ths speaker this evening at 4.8 oclock at tho Twentieth ward chapel. .Marjorie Dodge, who will render appeared In "The Creation. Fay Toll'changes of the stats rood commission recently passing the state board several of examiners provide for increased sal Coop Oolos, accompanied "N- ,- by Bqnire from Pag Coetlno--4 On fereee to give an additional Judge to tho New Jersey, New Mexico, eastern Illinois and middle Tennessee districts Twenty-fou- r federal district Judges and one circuit Judge in the Fourth circuit, would bo authorised under the conferees' agreement which soon will be presented to the house and senate. The original addihouse bill provided twenty-thre- e tional judges and the senate bill twenty-fou- r, but distributed in port in different districts. In addition to Now Jersey, New Mexico and the middle Tennessee and eastern Illinois district, the bill authorise Ihe following addittonul judges in district In which the senate and house bills were In agreement: Two each In Massachusetts snd southern New York, and one In eastern New York, eastern western Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, northern Texas and southern Florida, eastern Michigan; northern Ohio, northern Illinois. Minnesota, eastern Missouri, western Missouri, eastern r Oklahoma, Montana, northern Californio, southern California and Arisona, .one. The house opposed vigorously (he senate amendments providing additional judges tn New Jersey, New Mexico and Georgia, the senate conferees Anally being compelled to yield on the Georgia The senate was equally opjudgeship. posed to authorising additional Judge provided tn the house bill for the middle Tennessee and eastern Tennessee districts, but Its conferee yielded. It was said, as the house managers did SO tfcff, senate additions. e |