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Show ; I passenger 1 ram 1 1 Service Curtailed II By Coal Strike kl jr-rst Week Sees Discontinuance of Bunkering of Foreign it Vessels at American Ports Restrictions in Use of Public 1 1 Utilities and Appeals for Fuel From Various Cities Suffering Already Reported in Some States and Drastic Orders Given. I fHlCAGO, Nev. 7 -Curtailment of Miser twin service. discontinuance , r "'..nkonns of foreign owned vessels M Su r' tr,ctIons ln tb" "", Twlbllc utilities and appeals for coal vJL vrioua c s the strike of bl- ,nou, coal miners today rounded out ' firf, vrr-k. p.iv the nation further I J idlctlons ol the threatened distress I So ere expected today, with HttU fhnnpo In the general conditions surrounding sur-rounding the strike, itself. To the states already reported suffering suffer-ing from a coal shortage. Kansas. K- 1 broska, Alabama and lowu, today wis adder? Oklahoma Follow the fjr.it law of nature which Is self-preservation, and tal s any coal you can fret your hands on, ' was the reply of Governor Robertson, Robert-son, of Oklahoma, to one county's ap- j peal for aid. While It officially was announced by ' the director funeral of railroads that no ; general curtailment of train service was I i contemplated. B trains today had beuTI h annulled In the central wesl Repioml I I directors had orders to eliminate ser- ! ! vice, where absolutely necessary, in the ' I P'lhlic Interest. 16 TRAINS TAKEN OFT I ABERDEEN, S. 1)., Nov. 7 Six J I teen passenger trains out of Aberdeen I cn the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railway, have been eliminated as a result of the shortage of coal, it was announced today Thi; is the- only curtail men! of passenger service in South Dakota as a result nf the strike of soft coal miners. oo |