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Show VOL.. 105, NO. 8L SALT LAKE CITY, TUESDAY MORNING Maximilian Harden j DIE TARIFF-DELAYE- V COMES D B? LAFDLLETTE Unable to Agree on Basis of Negotiation, ' Parley Is Adjourned for Week. Upper Chamber Forced to Committee Chairman Makes Recess Until Wednesday Public Quest of Informa-atio- n as to Business. by Absence of Quorum Progress Whatever Is Made, Secretary of Labor Davis Tells Public. Smoot Charges Propaganda Questionnaires Sent Out to Interested Parties Calling Against Duty on Wool in Pending Legislation. for Facts as to Industry. No WASHINGTON, July 3 (By the Associated Press.) Deadlocked over a basis of negotiating a settlement of the bituminous coal strike, the conference of operators and United Mine Workers officials accepted the suggestion of government representatives today and adjourned until next Monday The government, so far as could be learned, did not present any propos'tlon Copyright, Underwood ft Underwood. as to a basis for the ending of the strike, Noted editor who has been made victim which has been in progress since April of personal attack In Berlin. 1, but there was a belief In some quarters that when the conference reassembled Mondaj. President Harding, who then will have returned from his Ohio trip, will lay a government proposal before the conferees. DC -- EDI Davis Statement. - When the1 adjournment was taken at 1 10 o'clock this afternoon, after joint sessions and an intermediate separate aesslon of operators and miners, Secretary f Labor LfctviB, one of thenogovernment representatives, said that agreement had been reached and no specific program for the future discussed, although many different plana had been proposed. Asked concerning the indications for a successful ultimate outcome of the conference, which assembled Saturday at the behest of President Harding, Mr Davis said, with the agreement of Secretary Hoover and the other government representatives, that so long as we hold them together there nJ hope. The adjournment, it was said in circles, will allow loth the operators and the miners an o,portunlty to talk with their codeagues in the fields John L Levis, president of the United Mine Workers will reman in Washington, and it is considered likely that Alfred M. Ogle, president of the National Coal association and head of the operators, wtH do Likewise to nt No Specific Action. FELLEDBY FOES Harden Suffer ing From Wound Received in Daylight Attack Maximilian Tribune Sett Lsk. Tribute Cable. BERLIN', July 3 Maximilian Harden was stabbed at 8 30 o'clock tonight in the Grunewald Villa section of Berlin. HI, conditionals grave. The attempted assassination undoubtedly was he work murof the raonarchlstlc der organization Consuls, which murdered 'Rathenau. Tha correspondent saw Harden at noon today. Harden then be-- 1 eved the present crisis would blow over. He was wa.klng home to his villa In 30 oclock tonight when Grunewald at he was assaulted by two husky men with blackjacks. Harden, covered with blood, was Just able to reach home, where he collapsed. He was later taken to a hospital, where It waa determined his injuries were serious, but not dangerous to his life. One of his assailants, who was captured, had a dagger and a blackjack, also a membership in The Assoc atlon of National Mlnaed Soldiers." a reactionary, monarch-stic- , organization of war veterans. CMr gw anti-Semit- The official assertion later wa made that no definite or specific proposal for a basin of negotiation had yet been put forward which could be taken home by mlneia and operate)- - for local dlacue- slon. Also 11 wus learned that no compromise schedule had reached any definite form to take the place of proposals of negotiating on the basis of the central competitive field or by conference. In each district The administration s reasons for holding i lie confi rence sessions behind closed door were explained by Secretary Hoover in a statement as follows "The reason for executive session la very e'rnple When difficult problems come up for disiuasinn there Is always " p a tendency of men on both tjbles in speakThe attempt on the Hfe of Maximilian ing to the puhl'c j react t enter upon subisof one most noted the at Hardest, the not to European question jects pertinent comes just a little more than ! sue. publisher a week after the assassination of Walter Hathenau. the German foreign secretary. Marion Citizens-Prepare- to Herr Harden, in the course of the war, many published striking articles in his Town new ape per. Die Sukunft, mostly denouncof the the German governpolicy ing MARION. Un'o, Jul 3 j (Bv the Assoment. He frequently aroused the ire of citithe Imperial authorities by hla stateciated Press) Memor.esof Mnrioit zens today were carried back to the summents. and In July, 1917, his publication mer days of 1929 when! resident Har- waa suppiessed for the remainder of the was in full war. ding's front porch campaign" In one of his articles that attracted swing, for not since! that time has there been such an outpouring of people a much attention he eulogized President w In another he appealed for Gerhen Wllern town hlch the occurred toddy that yi began the celebration of Ita one hun- - man democracy. Herr Harden has Incurred the hatred dredth anniversary. The Impending arrival of the president of the Nationalistic agitators and was and bia address scheduled for tomorrow near the top of the list of men marked afternoon attracted many from surround- for assault, along with Teodor Wolff and ing territory determined to remain' in Max Warburg For the past six months Herr Harden ceiebra Marlon for all of the three-da- y Iras active than usual, icstrtrtv tion While Mr. Harding was a familiar fig- Ing his ed torlal output to home conure here as a private citizen and Vnited sumption. He also refrained from givStates senator, he has never appeared in ing public lectures where he aiwajs waa Marlon aa president of the Vnited the target for grilling bv monarchists. States, and the town la determined to make the most of his Initial visit since hla inauguration, Because of a request that he be alCool-heade-d lowed to obtain as much rest as possible while here, no formal reception has been LOS ANGELES, July 3 Two stage arranged for the president and his party, who are expected to arrive tonight. hands were painfully burned and a girl overcome by smoke in a fire MARION; July 3 President Harding usher In excellent which caused damage estimated at 35009 reached the city tonight to Orauman'i theater at Third street and spirits. Broadway earlv tonight. The audience, numbering about 2000, at f rat started $5,000,000 to stampede,-b- ut regained lta presence of mind when the orchestra began playDone ing and a song and dance team hurried BALTIMORE. Md.. July 3. The fire onto the stare. The ftoe started when an actor apwhich swept the Locust Point river front with of the Baltimore ft Ohio railroad last proached too near some old prop. a torch. night caused damage estimated by the The hands were on burned the stage and 34.801.900 company at seriously while running down an asbestos - threatened the public health service hos- arms curtain. pital at Fort McHenry. Two elevators containing 1.374,000 bushels of grain, two warehouses and piers 400 loaded with merchandise, a power house, drying Shed, barges and other structures Ceremony crumpled within a furnace that stretched along the water front over Wi area of KNOXVILLE Tenn., July 3. Nearly six city blocks. Two firemeiuVero se400 were. initiated Into the Invisible Emverely Injured by falling debris. When it was seen that Fort McHenry pire at a mystic ceremony of Klansmen In 400 was the disabled danger, hospital veterans of the world war there were tonight near Lenoir City. A barbecue evacuated as fast aa army and voice followed the Inltlat'on, which took place ambulances douid remove them. Thy at the top of a bluff near the town. The countryside waa lighted by red lanwere taken to a public school near by. Half a dozen ships were tied up at the terns, while a fiery cross, suspended over an were in removed All tut Improvised altar, marked the spot safety, piers. where the ritee occurred. More than 2100 at considerable risk to the rescuers. persons witnessed the ceremony, advices from Lenoir City stated. The Klansmen FATALITY AT CROSSING. were attired In white robed, but were DETROIT, Mich . July 3 Charles De- unmasked. ( gel, a truck driver, and Floyd Chlttlng-to- n were killed and three other persons were Injured st Halfway, ten miles east Stop of here, this afternoon when an Interur-ba- n car of the Detroit Vnited Railways on to on the struck Degels truck crossing and showered Re contents of tiling on Chit NEW '"July 1 Delegates to the who wars twenty-thir- d YORK,national tiifgton and other encampment o t the waiting for the ar to pass. Veterans of Foreign Wars from the states of New Connecticut. York, -Massachusetts, MORE "COPPERS" ON DLITY. Rhode blend. Maine, New Hampshire and CHICAGO. Julv 3. Tha first contingent Vermont, will leave on August' 7 from the of Chicago s additional 1900 new police- Grand Central station. New York City, men will take the field against criminals In a special train. Stops will be made at when 635 men, clad in new uniforms, go Chicago, Denver, Colorado Springs, d out next Saturday. Every one of these Springs, halt Lake City and Portmen will be put to traveling beats," Chief land. Chariee Fttimorrla eaitL. "With the other This special train will run from New 406 men we will have enough men to York to Beattie without a change of cara cover the city for tha first time In a Various activities for those on the special dozen- - years train have been provided on the route. V -- ic I Celebrate Centenary 1 WASHINGTON. July 3. The senate was unable to hold a quorum today and was forced to rbcees until Wednesday, after It had approved a tariff rate of 5 cents a pound on unshelled almond A Vote' on the committee rate of 15 cents a pound on shelled almonds went over. The three hours the senate was In session today were taken up with a discussion of the duties on almonds. Senator Johnson, Republican, California, leading a fight for the committee rates and Senator Walsh of Massachusetts, a Democratic member of the finance committee, Benator Walsh sought opposing them. to have the senate approve the house rate of 4 cents a pound on unshelled almonds, but as unsuccessful. The Massachusetts senator declared the datlee proposed would be a burden on tne candy Industry. He argued that 85 per cent of the almonds used In this country had to be tmpoi ted and that the duties proposed were unjustified. He said, also, that duties were Imposed upon seventy-seve- n raw materials used In this Industry, and that necessarily these duties would have to be passed in higher prices to the consumer. Contending that within seven years California could produce all of the almonds necessary for tha domestic market. Senator Johnson told the senate that the rates proposed were necessary to equalize production costa here and abroad. Senator Smoot of Utah, ranking Republican on the senate finance committee, told the senate today that propaganda, which Jte said clothing manufacturers were circulating, to the effect that the duties on wool In the pending tariff bUl would Increase the price of suits of clothing by 33.35. was untrue. The Utah- - senator declared that the rates In the pending measure were lower than those In the emergency tariff, and declared that 107,000.090 pounds of wool now were held In bonded warehouses In this country pending passage of the bill, so that It could come In at a lower duty than now would have to be paid. "ll1 i New York Detectives Find Recovering Valuables Pays Lske THbene Leased Wire. Chlrsta Trtbene-Ssl- t NEW YORK, July 3. Aetlng Detective of Sergeant Irving .O'Hara, brother-in-laIn Major Hylah, Inmade more money the form of cash resingle month wards for recovery of stolen bonds and Jewels than h'a salary for ths year, according to ths City Record, official pubHis salary lication of the municipality. la 32700 His rewards of a month totaled A similar amount appears to have been received by Acting Detective Sergeant James F MtiCov Both men are attached to the bomb squad. The sums represent what the two policemen received after the usual deduction from their rewards of It) per cent for the police pension fund and 13 per cent for the pokes relief fund From the City Record It appears the two officers received permission on June 2 to accept 38257.25 reward for their work in recovering Jewels valued at 3376,000 The reward was from Mr Regina R. V. MlUhlser. w i - Theater Panic Is Prevented Orchestra by Nearly Damage by Maryland Blaze Kuklux Initiated in Tennessee War Veterans Will Here Seattle Way Glen-woo- I Yields After Battle With Cancer Sculptor-Pugili- st CHICAGO. Julv 3 Maximilian Hoff- man, young Chicago sculptor, who won his way to artistic train ng abroad through his victor.es In the prise ring, today lost his last battle when he succumbed to an Insidious foe, cancer Eleveh years ago Hoffman worked in an ornamental poster factory in MiHe studied at ntght He wantlwaukee ed to become a sculptor and in 'order to earn money with which to get his training he became a pugilist, and many a contender fell before his right in Milwaukee fight ring Finally he wee able to go abroad to study So successful was he that before he left Munich he had won two first and one second prises In the Royal Academy exhib.tlons there. He also took many prises at other exhibitions Hoffman was married In February. 1921 28 PAGES WASHINGTON, July 8 Searching Inquiry Into the financial accounts and general business operations of more than 360 oil companies. Including practically every refining, producing and marketing concern In the country, Is ,mada In the federal manufacturers committee questionnaires sent out and made public today by Senator La Follette of Wisconsin, committee chairman. The Information sought by (he committee, In connection with the Investigation it Is conducting Into the oil industry and business methods, the questionnaires sa, should be In the possession of the committee by July 15. In each Instance the questionnaires were accompanied by letteis explaining that the Information was requested under a senate resolution, and would be Fimade a vital part of the Inquiry nancial schedules for the oil Industry, special reporta on organisation and business of companies In the oil Industry and price schedules for the oil Industry for the period January 1, 1920, to June 30, 1932, each with blank spaces to be filled in by the recipient, are made, a part of the questionnaire Would Learn Spread. EiShopcrafts Workers Are 'jd Outlaws hy Rail Board; Maintenance Men Defer W alkout Hopes Expressed That Strike of Brotherhood May Be Averted; Conflicting Claims Made by Leaders; No Disorders Reported. July 3,(Ry the Associated Preas With striking shopmen fbrmally branded by the United" States railroad labor board tug outlaws,'' the board tonight directed Its efforts toward the prevention of an extension of the walkout by iuo.ooo maintenance of way men. Iu a formal resolution the board declared that tha unions, by their action, forfeited all right? before the board aa railway employees and- that new organisations of shopmen tak'ng the striking men s Jobs should be formed tifTe present the shop emplojees In disputes before he . board. r Following a meeting of the' executive council of the 1 nlted Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees and Itall-w- a bhop Laborers in Detroit todav to tanvasa a strike vote, it was announced that the threatened walkout would be held up pending a conference with the labor board In Chicago at 10 a. m. tomorrow. Members of the board expressed strong hopes tonight that the conference would avert a walkout They declared that the only question at issue was one of wages and that the wa) already has been opened reconsideration of wage reductions for which went into effect on July 1 simultaneously with the shopmen s walkout. f CHICAGO. n Vc r V $ - '! General Nr Feeling Prevails That Insurgents Eventual Will Be Defeated! DUBLIN, July 5. (By tha Associated Preas ) Severe fighting In O'Connell street waa lq progress at 10 o'clook tof night. The national troops wars main- -, talning unremitting pressure, but at that hour there wa no Indication of surTen-ihs- r. A JJ SL. J0 ) 'v cvr- to O'Connell street had been barred, and some of the post occupied by the irregulars were on fir, y - DUBLIN,' July I. By tha Associated Press ) The final assault on ths positions held by the Republicans in Sack- vllle street was begun at I oclock thla morning and waa stlU continuing nearly an hour later. . , The other areas held by the insur4 In various of gents this city wars parts occupied by ths Free Statsrs during the night. Heavy fighting is going on in Sack-vll- le street, which Is swept by machine gun fire The national army forces arn operating from O'Connell bridge to tbs Parnell monument. The return flra . of the insurgents la Jteeble. I Tha machine gunners ar maintaining a devastating fire against ths front of tha buildings, particularly the attack on Hamman's hotel,pressing where Eamonn de Valera ia believed to be holdout hla ing following flight from the Gresham hotel. DespKe the great danger from stray bullets a large crowd ia watching the distance. fight from j , x iv X. Hooper, chairman of the board, announced that government report Indicated an increase In the cost of living slrue the board rendered ita wage reduction decisions, and that this could be made the basis of an immediate appeal to the board by the employee for wage increases I nten leaders were Quoted toOne of the radical Irish Insurgent day as demanding only that thetheboard apers captured In Dublin fighting. hold up its wage cuts pending was declared, it The difference, peal was alight and the belief was expressed that the gap would be bridged withou a Meanwhile, conflicting claim continued involved in regarding the number of men Neither the the walkout of the shopmen union leaders nor the railway manager M Jewell B but yvould give any figures, reiterated previous statements that the strike was practically 100 per cent perBen W Refinery, wholesale and tank wagon or retail prices are to be given, with a view; Senator La Follette explained, of learning the spread between the selling and service station prices of gasoline and oil. The differences between the fect prices between crude oil and finished Rail Head Claims. products also are Inquired into. on the other call upon the oil The questionnaires The railway- - executive concerns to stats their banking oonnee- - hand, declared that traffic waa being continued practically without interrupthat Oratisued ea Fags Twe tion, and repeated their assertions (Oeiama Ose.) the efficiency of the roads would not be for walkout ths seriously Impaired by several weeks and perhaps months New the u to take ted workers were being veer and the optnloft of places of the striker the rail heads waa unanimous that there- lead- Morale Impaired. . ) j Details of' the operations of the ns. 'Outlaw Decision Is Do- , nounced in Unmeasured Terms by Labor Leader. be no interruption of tranzportat liXh ''outlaw order Issued bv the labor by Mr. Hooper board followed a statement WASHINGTON, -July 3 The ruling of last week that blood would be upons the United State la$or hoard outlaw Mr Jewell's head" In Ignoring the board order to appear befors It and Justify his Ing the railroad unions how on strike waa denounced hy Samuel Gompera, pree strike order. The order says In part. Ident of the Ametjcan' Federation of LaText of Order. bor, in a statement issued tonight, as 'If it be assumed that the emploees who4 leave the service of tha carrier be"utterly bolshevik in .character, and ao with any attempt by ths board to disband unions cause of their dissatisfaction decision of the labor board are within at will. The ruling, Mr. Gompers added, thsir rights, it must also Inbetheconceded service was palpably too ridiculous and fatuous that the men who remain Is are to be accepted as permanent American and those who may enter It anew employwithln'their rights in accepting government policy, strikebreaker not are that they ment, Any a well aa the "The action of the board," Mr. Qom-per- s' that they have the moral, of service In such to engage statement continued, is e tartly a legal right, the American public to avoid interruption replica of the action of the Communists TOKIO. July 3. (By the Associated of indie, en sable railroad transportation, and that they are entitled to the protec- in turning the unions Into government Press ) The admiralty today issued a tion of every department and branch of controlled agencies for the carrying ou (Srmsi statement flatly den) Ing recent ThV government, state and national,1' of the orders ot me state. Freedom waa that During the day the board received an reports Japan evading ,the of expression vanishes under ths order B W O'Neil, president from inquiry Washington naval treaty by Increasing the International Association of Railroad the board. construction of auxiliary vessels who asked The Supervisors of But I say now that the workers bl to statement, which outlined the tentative what hla men should do if called uponMr. of America, either on the railroads or elseduties shopmen. the auxiliary program, also announced that perform in a letter, replied: where, do not Intend to sacrifice freedom Port Arthur, taken from the Russians Hooper, of expression and of action. Tha board In the war, would be Hoopers Reply. abandoned as a naval port. undertakes to say tliat unions which difof the opinion that the The board Japan s auxiliary naval program, acshould not fer with ths board must cease to exlit cording to the admiralty, while still un- members of our organization with whom they are "outlawed ' Whether this Is for completed, probably will consist of four be required by the carriers to perform duties the moment an assumption of authority cruisers of 10,000 tons each and four ot you have an agreement 7000 tons each, otherwise than the supervisors' work as on the part of tha board la Immaterial first-clatwenty-fou- r with an aggregate tonnage ot within the scope of yotir duties unless destroyer It Is the logical outcorh of the ver; purely voluntary. ' 33,000 afid twenty-fou- r eubmarlnes with such performance ofisthe shopmen s strike tablishment of such boards. The third day an aggregate, tonnage of 28,166 a This, teajs the official statement, rep- passed In comparative quiet, although Wrong in Principle. resents a reduction of 13,395 gross ton- - Ught disturbance was nage, or one cruiser thirteen deetrov ere I "It hi an inevitable consequence lot submarines less than IroI" Chicagoof forsb opC E Johnson' and twenty-fou- r n Initial action that was wrong in printown' run out the original program for snips to be and ciple and that has proved impossible In erai tn&n&gsr of the Kaumi Cty South action, completed in 1927 em, reported to the labor board during Obsolete ships will be scrapped as nc "The railroad labor board, aa an Instiof hla assistants had ones of the same type are 'completed The day' that one strike sympathizers at tution isfunctioning In the twentletn cenThe new plans involve a greater total been assaulted bywhile second tn Incongruity onl to the an tury. air repairing cost than the old program, owing to in- LeesviUe, Iowa, 'open shop' movement. creased expenses In material and laboi, hose The law gives the workers, or the were In the larger cities police guards but a saving la to be effected b convert railthe right to aecllne to accept railroads, about thrown been to have Ing the port of Maid Mura from a navai reported the board's rulings. The workers, of ne way property, while the chamber of combase - to a naval port jjuLsbollshing the merce a Mo. declined, and by vote of the eessity. following of Kansas City, naval- port Arthur f l be withdrew a request to membership their services telegram accomplished aq soon as ratification of special meeting, The) deolined to woik for the terms orthe Washington treaties Is a fact. 'l dered the board, on he board now deby Uontinod The reduction in tonnage will necessiclares them 'outlawed" This Is autocracj (Column Thru. ) tate dropping 12.000 officers and nonwith a vengeance It seeks to put the commissioned officers from the navaJ whole force of government back of the rolls. Peace in South movement to kill the spirit and the fact bargaining, of joint negotiaImminent oftioncollective and agreement by the voluntary of workers-an- d coming together employA Hongkong disI.ONDON, ers July It is the calamitous outgrowth of News there Central to lhe says Idea. mistaken a patch sfe' Indteattons'of the approach of perce ln''southern China. General Chan Kwlng-MinNo Autocratic Rule. former governor of Canton, Is said Unions cannot te unmade and remade to have expressed resret to Sun Yat Sen government dictation. This is neither at the recenj happenings culminating In at the ejection from the city of the govern- the Russia of the black1s autocrat nor of Dr1 the re! autocrat. This bv Sun. the and America, where latter and that the situation is getting better ment beaded Is showing responsiveness to the peace the people of voluntary action, of conferhourly from the strikers' standpoint ence and agreement, of freedom of exJ C. Goad, business secretary of the overture Railroad Shop Craft The first step in the direction of peace, pression and of lawful action, is rooted with headquarters in Oakland, reported today that 300 it is added, will be the dispatch of a in our . soil. .and grown into our instituThe unions exist for hutions Southern Pacific ferryboat repairmen had circular leegram by Dr Sun acknowlJoined the striking shopmen In that H)y. edging that he usurped the government manity, for the. workers, snd they cannot at the whim or The Southern Pacific company --disputed hv force and without authority from and will not fancy of a band of dictators theae figures, saying that, wjjde some of Chan Kwlng-Mir boards whether .si ordered the k thg the men had quit, there was a sufficient LONDON. crew remaining to take care of all work July 3. A dispatch from directorate of the Pennsylvania railroad new and and a amenable board dissolved As fag as number of men at work waa Hankow received here today aajg "The Japanese garrison, consisting of created - when that railroad refused to concerned, the situation presented little of special obey the orders of the board. Of course detachments with battalion a change. The Northwestern Pacific, which evacuated Sunday. The troops It did not. nor will It in any such case. runs from San Francisco to Eureka, an- troops,been maintained in recent years for The railroad labor board is seeking to nounced that all Its shops were without have of foreign interests, the perpetuate what it believes to bS ths workmen and that no attempt would be the protection aa the foreign garrison In Tientsin existing dominant economic condition same made to operate them at present " The But the board Is mistaken in Its anal) a s an Peking road can operate for two weeks without It of modern trends and 'fundamentals. the services of shopmen, it was declared IN OREGON. have been equaly as fitting and would DOUBLE DROWNINQ At a few points strikebreakers were as for ridiculous hoard to ths equally 3 P. . McNeill Ore July called In. J At La Grande. the SEASIDE, dissolution of railroad direcHerbert - Brown were drowned here order thewhere strikers protested against ordersOre, such directorates refuse reported and to .have been Issued by an today O'Neill, a lifeguard, succumbed tn torates th orders of the board. to obey save an to three canoeists whose Railroad ft Navigation company effort. special agent that the strikebreakers arm craft waa overturned In a vain effort to save Brown. The canoeists were saved DESPONDENCY CAUSES SUICIDE. themaelvea At Los Angeles a few strikers were re- by bather who ran a lifelins Into the ST. 1,008, July 3. Despondency over susf ported to be returning to work poor health for several years is believed - Officials manned a wrecking car which by business associates to have been the FOUR KILLED AT CROSSING. cleaned up freight WTeck on the Southcause of the death of Leon V. Quick, ern Pacific line from Fresno to Merced 3 Four BILKS, Ohio, July of the persons former grand secretary-treasurwhich blocked traffic for some hour were ki led, three instantly, when the au- Oder of Railroad Telegrapher whose were assisted They by the section worktomobile In which they were riding was body, with a bullet wound near the heart ers. struck by a Baltimore ft Ohio expre-- s and a discharged shotgun by its side, was Armed guards were placed at all tun- -' train at ar cross ng here late tonight The found in his garage this afternoon. Quick, neie ar.d bridges on the 'La train was running over the Ene tracks a former banker, was an unsuccessful Ore , division of the because of freight) wrecks on the B. ft O', candidate for the Republican nominaline near here. tion for governor of Missouri la 1912. would Denial Made That Country Evading Washington Treaty in Respect r Russo-Japane- 1 ss wwero rtiid tlonal corps as revealed In tha latest official communiques are regarded a pointing to Impaired morale on the part of the Irregulars and to ' the rapid crumbling of their defenses when set J j riously attacked. The rapidity with which the Free Ft at 4 era dislodged the Insurgent caused surprise. Yesterday's operations In most 'case were carried out by the use cars and Intense machine gun fire. Apparently only In one case waa artillery brought Into action and that was the attack on Moran's hotel tn Talbott street. The wiping out of this hornet's nest relieved considerably the difficulties confronting pedestrians In ths center of the city and reopened the main approach to the Great Northern railway station and tne Central telegraph office in Amiens street near by. A Difficult Job. 1 It Is generally believed tbs task Of clearing ths Republicans from Sackvltle street will prove extremely difficult end Involve heavy property damage, particularly In view of the report that they are commanded by such experienced as Eamonn de fighter and Valera and Katha Bruga. Dublin were eleven killed and sixteen wounded The Stephens Green club, which had been held by ths Irregulars since Friday, was captured by national army forces today. The Irregulars had evacuated ths position. f. Censor Gets Busy. LONDON, July 8. 2.15 P. nt fByfth Associated Press.) No word - regarding the developments of the fighting in Dublin has reached London since the receipt of messages filed at 11 a, m , st .which time the national troops were directing an Intense machine gun fire against the positions occupied by the Republicans In merit's military censorship is assumed to be the cause of the delay. Press message received from Du Uttar this afternoon were marked: Passed, Vr the military censor." ; According to a Dublin dispatch to th Pall Mall Gazette and Globe, th Irish Gratis id m race Tw. (Column Two.) -- hl his-wil- China Regarded as ... n. "X-as- .i Fire Has No Holidays It burn ft fiercely on Independence So do not 4ay ia at any other time. take foolish rlek. Try to bavft go od time without burning gunpowder, but if you must celebrate with, flreworka, let them be handled only by grown persona who realtse the danger1 and can take proper precaution In former years the nation paid A fearful price for its patriotism. EvsVy Fourth of July thousands of people nightfound themselves homeless by women to mention the men, fall or killed were who children and mpeopJe are now beginning to realize to cause that It Is mot truly patriotic but. even their neighbors: danger to la sancss far toq caret, of so, ths toll nt The National Board of Fire Underbookwriters has prepared a let setting forth In detail how to rethreatduce the danger of fire, which ens every home In this country every " minute of every day In th year. BuOur Waslhngton Information valreau will secure a copy of this uable booklet" for anyone who fills out and malls the coupon below, enclosing two cents In stamps for return postage. Write your name and addreei clearly. Frederic J. Ha skin. Director, The Salt Lake Tribune ' Information Bureau. Washington, D C. I enclose herewith two cents in postage on stamp forof return the Fire Booklet. free copy I- Oregon-Washingt- Name er j ...... Street City State Orande-Port-lan- Oregon-Wash-lngt- . All the approaches of Strike of Shopmen on Pacific Coast I.' Steady Pressure, but the Rebels Decline to 'Yield. 10 Basis for Appeal. J0' Free State Troops Maintain Liam Mellowes ' 1 Sweltering Passengers Experience Eff eels "The ultiSAN FRANCISCO, July the traveling publlo mate consumer had Ita first experience today of the effect of the railway shopmen's strike In the Pacific coast region. Passengers on the Overland Limited of tbe Southern Pacific lines, coming through the Sacramento valley where the thermometer registered 104 degrees, were told the electric fans In the care could not be operated. It was said the electricity must be conserved for lighting the cara and that no electricians were available to make certain repairs which jrould have permitted the fane to be operated. Some trains also were delayed bi leavthe ing Spokane. Wash., as ofresult of the Southstrike Striking shopmen to work must return railroad ern Pacific next Thursday morning or their places will be declared vacant,. J If. Dyer, genannounced eral manager pf the Those returning at the time specified will retain the seniority and other he said. privilege Western Pacific officials took the stand waa "too early to close the door. that It They announced that theymenwould Issue have had no ultimatum, "until the over.'' plenty of time to think theofmatterFederathe L. 8. Gordon, secretary tion of Railway Employees of the Southern Pacific system, announced that the freight car strike already has caused congestion in certain portions of Texas FIVE CENTS i- - .. . 1 LUA U IkUkf !lll |