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Show ONIONS CLAIM I NEARLY 100 PER I CENT ARE OUT I Labor Board Chairman Makes Appeal for Men to I Take Shop Jobs CAN'T CALL 'EM SCABS H Rail Executives Declare Several Thousand Men I Remain at Work CHICAGO, .Tuly 1. Out of approxl- HH inatcly 10.000 shopmen employed on B the IlifnoLs Central railroad, only 4.000 H joined th' country wide shopmen's IB strike, which began today, according H to figures gicu out tonight by a mem-bor mem-bor of the Fnlted States railroad la- H lKr board. These figures were sld to rover the entire system nnd were the flrt complete olI for any road centering in Chicago. ( I",D.R KAPIDS. lovta, July 1 B Fifty noe;ro workmen passed through here tonight from Chicago cn route to Perry, Iowa, where, according to C, S. H MarMmll. local superintendent, of tho H hi 'o. Milwaukee & St Paul rail-road rail-road thvV will be employed in the Mil- H watikee shop. The men oempled a H j special caf. Two hundred fifty shop-men shop-men walkexl out at Perry today. 'HICAGO. July 1. (By the Asso- B ,.u.-d Press.) With the country-wide Ujp!-:e of shopmen declared by union H '. iders to be practically one hundred Bj per cenl per:C t. the nation's great H transportation machine continued lti B j work without Interruption. Railway executives were unanimous H I In expressing their belief that the I strike would have little effect on the ' operation of their roads and at tho -ame time asserted that any move o- IH ; word a settlement would have to coma H i from the United States labor board of the employes. B M lewell, president of the rail- K department of the American Em? Federation of Labor, who Friday re- 8gfc- fused to ippeai al s federal lnqulrv Kj into the strike call, reiterated trat I the only basis for a settlement was for the roads to agree not to put into I effect v tge decreases r ntty order- ' ed for the shopmen by the labor Ben . Hooper, chairman of th? H labor board, declared In a formal statement that the power of the gov- H I ernment, coupled with public sent:-i sent:-i mer.t would give every protection to 1 every railway employe who remains on the ob and to all new men wh l ; take the places of the strikers In th Bgr" ' present walkout. c r CAIjL THEM scab--Mr. Hooper asserted that the strike was called against the decisions of H a federal tribunal over rulings laid down after careful consideration the evidence on both sides. The mSffl who take ihe places of the striking shopmen will render a public service. he declared, and should be immure from the characterizations or "scab t or "strikebreaker.'" The walkoutibegan in all sections Bp?'-' of the country prontptly at 10 a. m., and In many places took on the as-pect as-pect of a holiday, the men -unci; : and cheering as they threw dow El' their tools. As reports came In t H j union headquarters during the aay. 'leaders asserted that the ranks of H the strikers would number more than H three-quarters of the 400.000 mem- H j bership before nighfall. Later BO Jewell said that reports from 128 of H r he 20 1 class one showed pi t - H tlcally a 100 ner cent walkour DISPLAY OP 1 DRCB. The only display of force reports 1 during the day was at Beardstown, 111 , where several hundred shopm.t. after falling to persuade four com- H panlons to join them in the walkout. H nicked them up bodily and Carrie I H them out. BBGk "We sent them home," the leadm was quoted as saying, "to avoid tron- !HK ble." In Chicago; the huh of th walkout, where it Is estimated 100.000 men are affected no disturbances of H any kind were reported, and all of Brc the roads claimed that both pas;eii- HE;'-; q(r- and freight were being hand' without interruptions of any kind. "Train operations are Just as USUgl and we are carrying the crowds evn on the extra sections that have heen attached for the holiday pilgrims," was tho word from the general OfflCj of the Northwestern lines H& WON'T STOP TRAINS. CLAIM. R "I do net expect the strike to In- IH terfere with train movements " -t : . I H S. M Fulton, president of the Chi- H , ago Creat Western r.iilroad an I H chairman of the western railway ex-ecutives, ex-ecutives, "The experience of the Cnlon Pacific, the Southern Pacific HHB and other roads that have had exten-slvo exten-slvo shop Strikes, shops no Interrup-tlon Interrup-tlon of traffic is to ne exprrted." Among the presidents of railways H entering Chicago, the determination was expressed to have no dealings with the representatives of the strtk- iK ing unions. They were unanimous In Lw declaring that the Issue wan not bo H tween the union and the railw 'lBBI (Continued on Page Two. Hs BEBER 0. 0. P. FORJ.HJATTIS (Continued from I'ae One) Arthur YVoollcy in which the 63 delegates dele-gates to the state and the congressional congres-sional convention wer apportioned to the various wards as follows DELEGATUS APPORTIONED "Seven delegates and 7 alternates to those districts Included In the First ward of i iK'd.-n Ctf, town. Districts number 1 to 11 Inclusive Four delegates and 4 alternates to those districts Included In the Second j ward of Ogden City, towlt: Districts Number 12 to 18 Inclusive. Five delegates and 5 alternates to those districts Included In the Third ward of ogden City, towit: Districts Number 19 to 27 Inclusive. Kle , n delegates and 1 l alternit', to those districts included In the Fourth ward of Ogden City, towit ! Districts Number 2S to 4 1 Inclusive Twelve delegates and 12 nlternati to those districts Included in the Fifth ward of igden City, towlt: Districts Number 42 to 45, inclusive. Fourteen delegates and fourteen al- ternatcs to those precincts outside of Ogden City." in ILESG ITES SAMJ i This resolution wns passed and the lelogates separated In groups to cau-:us. cau-:us. Tho names of the delegates which I :hey selected and which were passed jpon by the convention follow. FIRST WARD. Delegates Arthur F. Larson. Henrv Mack. J. U. Eldroelge. Jr., TV. J. Crltch- iow, j. c. ijou, airs. Alice Collins, J L. Hobson. 1 Alternates Earl Golger. Job Pln-gree. Pln-gree. Jr.. Thomas Wilson. Fred Nnls-bltt. Nnls-bltt. Hazel Newey and U. F Holllngs-head Holllngs-head SECOND WARD. Delegates A. G 8need. Frank Smyth, W J. Young, Emma Green-well. Green-well. 1 Alternates A. W. Larson I N Fulton. Ful-ton. J. E Williams, Gcorglna Marriott THIRD WARD. Delegates John Farr, W. W. Raw-son. Raw-son. David Jensen H P. Randall J. M. Forrlstall Alternates Sumner P Nelson. . R Madson James R. Jepson. W Shaw, T P. Tcrr. FOURTH WARD Delegates George J. Kelly C K Hollingsworth. W. Knrl Hopkins. John IC Davis, W. B, Zuppann. Fred W. Chambers, Samuel g. Dye, J. E Storey, IL. B, Scovllle. Walter E Whalen and, Mrs. Mary Mat son Alternates W. Hal Farr. W. P I Cook. John Sneddon. Thomas Clark. (C. F. Dlnsmore. Angus E. Berlin, Mo-1 ronl Skeen. F. J. Henderahot, Aaron' , Jackson. H II. Wardklgh and A T.I ! EXestmark. FIFTH WARD Delegates Joseph E. Evans, W H j Reeder. Jr., David J. Wilson. Warren L Wattls, Thomas Feoncy. George i Halverson, Beth Thomas, Frank J. Stevens, I. N. Plerco. Dan Pugh L. J Holther and D F. Steele. Alternates W. R. Skeen. I. V. Nlol J. W. Wilcox. E. P Mills, A R Mc-Intyre, Mc-Intyre, RoUrt A. Moyes W Smith David Pugh. c. h Hussey, Henri Vol-Ikcr, Vol-Ikcr, .1 T Newton and j. G Cromp-ton, Cromp-ton, COUNTY DISTRICTS. Delegates John Wilson. T R Jones, John T. Bybee, A L. Toone. Lyman Ly-man Skeen. E A. Groberg, p rl Thomas K M, K.i . M D Harris. Benjamin Ben-jamin Chadwiok, N P. Matthews Joseph Jos-eph Hogge, H. V Marriott. Mrs. D E Dona Idson. , Alternates John D. Hooper W II ;Chard George Randall. Carl Adams. 1 W Barrows, Ooorge D. Dean. W. E. ' Carver, sj. V. ((row, Joseph E Gar-1 lick, B S Green. H. D. Brown Richard Rich-ard A Slater, Georgo Weboter and Mrs Mattle Rltter. I The s-iine delegates namod for thsi tate convention will represent Weber county at the congressional convention conven-tion to be held In Ball Lake on July 15. |