THE NORTH PLATTE SEMI-VEEK),Y TRIBUNE. GOAL HERS OF U.S. GO OH STRIKE PERSHING EXPRESSES VIEWS A. E. F. General Tells Senate Commit tee Army of 300,000 Sufficient. Favors Military Training. PROFITEERS AND UNION HEADS IN SAME BOAT. I 1 1 lj! III W D Summons of Workers' Organi zation Obeyed By Men In Twenty-Eight States FEDERAL INJUNCTION ISSUED Union Heads Protest Government's Action Uncle Sam Moves to Pro.: tcct Interests of the People In Grave Crisis. WnnhliiKLoii, 1). C Bituminous con I mlnWs In twenty-eight states of (lie union laid down tlielr tools unit quit work Inst Saturday In oboyaneo to a decision readied at tho convention of (lie United Mine Workers of America At Cleveland, Ohio, September 23. The first alarm of the strike, which Is exported to cause a general paraly sis of Hie business of the nation and untold suffering It not brought to a iqioody conclusion, was given at the Cleveland meeting when the declara tion was mado that tho war time wage ngreoment, entered into between the government and tho miners, would end November 1. Kxccutlvo olllccrs charged with the duty of negotiating u now agreement were ordered to stand out for three demands, and If not granted, to Issue a strike cull for moro than 400.0(H) soft coal miners In 28 states. These de mands were: A flvo-duy working week, a six-hour Jay and a wago lncrense of 00 per cent. At scnlo committee meetings In Buf falo and Philadelphia miners and op erators threshed over their differences without settlement. Representatives of the miners contended that tho de mands wore not arbitrary, that the 00 per cent wage Increase was set as n basis for negotiation, that a six-hour day meant actual tlmo tho miners were to work underground. Insist On Short Day. Tho miners Insisted on a live-day week, they said, because there were not four days' work a week tho year around for each miner. They contend ed by limiting each miner to flvo days (hero would bo a more equitable distri bution of tho work. Tho leaders de nied that it was tho beginning of a na tionwide campaign for a shorter work ing schedule. After failure of tho two sides to get together tho strike order was Issued mid Secretary of Labor Wilson, acting by direction of the president's cabinet, immediately called Into conference tho heads of the mining and operating as sociations. Subsequently tho full scalo committees, of each were called In nnd various proposals were offered and re jected. Put Up to Wilson. Tho finul proposal was mndo by President Wilson. It suggested nego tiation without reservation, submission of questions still In dlsputo with tho failure of negotiation to arbitration nnd continued operation of tho mines pending final settlement. Tho operators, as set forth In a state ment by Secretary Wilson, nccepted the offer In Its entirety ; the miners ac cepted the offer of negotiation "and held tho other two for consideration later." This, as explained by Secre tary Wilson, abruptly ended the con ference. Tho minora in tho scries of confer ences charged that wlillo the wartlmo ngreement still bound them to work nt the old wartlmo wago scale, it re moved restrictions on tho war prlco of coal and permitted operators to churgo what they pleased. This, they declar ed, had led to proiltccriug. An appeal to the miners by Presi dent Wilson mid announcement by At torney Ocneral Palmer tlmt tho strike would bo considered "Illegal," failed to bring about tho rescinding of tho Btrlko order. On the ovc of the strlko Judge A. B. Anderson of tho federal court nt In Nebraskans Secure Divorce Los Angeles, Cnl, The third mnr rlago of David Eugene Thompson, former Nebraska capitalist, publisher of tho Lincoln Star, former Amorlcan minister to ltrazll and Mexico, rail rend magnate and millionaire, ended when ho was granted a divorce decree from his youthful wife, Florence Cook Thompson, said to bo more than llfty years Ids junior, on a cruelty charge. Suicide Bridge To Go. Chicago Park employes have begun razing suicide bridge, tho high viaduct In Lincoln park, from which somo I0 persons have leaped to death or Injury In recent years. Clothes High In France. Paris. Smart clothes in Paris this soason are tho costliest on record. Many articles uro actually worth more than tholr weight in gold, which Is three fruncs leu centimes per gramme. Government Given O. K. London. Tlio government was given a vote of confidence in tlio house of commons last Friday on Its financial principles, by an overwhelming ma jority of 355. Bond Sale Falls Through. Illsniurck, N. D. Sale of f3,p()0,000 worth of pinto bonds, $2,000,000 of which were to bo used as capital for tho bank of North Dakota, Is said to have fallen through, bonding houses of the cu t having refused to under write i pi I ;.vuv Washington. Dissenting In many Imporlaiil respects from the program recommended by the War department and the general staff, (leneral Pershing told the military committees of con Kress that .'100,000 men, rained entirely by voluntary enlistment, should be the outside figure considered for a stand l:ig army. He favored universal military train ing to provide an emergency rcsene, but thought general educHtlonnl work should be combined with it and mill titry discipline "somewhat relaxed" so Hint the system would be In complete harmony with democratic Institutions. He ll.ed six months as the training period. Tho department had recommended an army of more than 500,000, with a system of universal training not em bracing Iho educational Am lures. Its recommendation for a training period was three months. Departing again from the expressed views of the department, the general declared army purchasing should be reorganized In a new bureau apart from tho quartermaster corps and that a separate department of Hie govern ment should be organized to co ordinate and supervise military, naval and commercial aeronautics. lie con sidered the department's request for &U general staff officers excessive, and made clear his opposition to any effort by tlio staff to extend Its authority Into tlio details of the uepartment bu reaus and of the line. dlnnapolls, Ind., Issued a restraining order to stop olllclals of the Mine Workers' union from engineering the strike. , Tho principal leaders In the miners' union met. the court's action with de nunciation as a "violation of consti tutional rights," declarations that It came too late to reach their men with n countermanding order, and with pre dictions that It would be disregarded anyway. Attorney General Palmer empha sized to the labor loaders that tho gov ernment's Injunction was In no wlso nn Infringement of tlio worklngniim's right to strike, but that It was a law ful process against n calamity to the country. Ho pointed out tlmt the In junction had been Issued for, tho gov ernment, acting for all tho people, nnd not for tho employers, acting In conlllct with their employes. Plans Not Made Public. The attorney general declined to predict what would be done If the minors failed to heed the federal court's order, pointing out thnt the court Itself Initiates means to dcnl with thoso who disregard Its man dates. The government's program to deal with the practical as well as tho legal phase of tho crisis lr steadily being carried out. President; Wilson, by executive or der, fixed maximum prices of soft coal. Fuel Administrator Gnrllold restored the war ordors which will glvo the railroad administration the power to seize coal In transit and divert It to consumption, in accordance with n preference list arranged with the Idea of doing the greatest good for tho greatest number. Tho machinery of the railroad ad ministration through which the nets of tho fuel administration will he carried out was put ready for functioning. Troops In Readiness. IJ, R, troops have been dispatched to some of tho mining districts, ready to take part In keeping order and pro tecting those tnlneYs who wished to continue nl work. The extent and full nature of troop movements hnvo not been disclosed. Both branches of congress have passed a resolution pledging support to the administration In its measure to deal with the emergency. Explosion Kills Fourteen. Toklo Tho maneuvers of tho entire Japanese navy, In which tho emperor participated, were marred by an ex plosion on the battleship Hyugit In To klo bay. Fourteen men were killed and 30 Injured. The emperor was aboard tho battleship Settsu. The maneuvers, which were the most elaborate hi the history of tho navy, Included mimic battles and airplane at tacks on coastal cities. Hoarders Soon to Face Music. Washington. Many new arrests In n number of states for violations of fbe food and fuel control law are ex pected soon by tlio Department of Justice. Prepare to Combat "Flu." London. Knglnnd Is preparing for n recurrence of last winter's epidemic of Inlluenza. A vacclno has been pre pared In largo quantities at St. Mary's hospital and other bacteriological con tors In London for the distribution through the United Kingdom. Fatal Wreck In West Los Angeles. Seven persons wero killed and 00 Injured when Southern Paclllc train No. 00 southbound, was wrecked near A clou. The engine, two baggage cars nnd live coaches went Into a ditch. Ten Below In North Dakota. Illsniurck, N. D. Tlio lowest Octo ber tuinperiiltiro ever recorded In the weather bureau hero was made the morning of the liOtli when the thormo meter reached 10 degrees below zero, tho bureau niMiouneod. 1 Scene during Roosevelt memorlul ceremonies nt New York public library. 2 Admiral Kolchak's forces in tho move from Stepanovkn to Mnxlmovka, near Ufa. 3 Scene at Webster hall during the sesqulcentennlal celebration at Durtmouth university. HEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENT oal Miners Insist on Strike and Big Contest With the Gov ernment Begins. DRASTIC MEASURES ADOPTED War-Tlme Priority List Is Re-Estab- llohed for the Distribution of Fuel International Labor Confer ence Opens Congress Over rides President's Veto of Dry Enforcement Act. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. The grent struggle Is on. The Uni ted States of America versus the Uni ted Mine Workers of America. A na tion of one hundred and ten millions against n labor union of perhaps half million. Boldly defying the federal govern. mcnt as represented by the president and bis cabinet nnd the governments of many states ns represented by their governors, the lenders of the union de creed tlmt the strlko of bituminous conl minora should go Into effect at midnight Friday. Regardless of the fact that the strike would cripple the entire country and thnt the resultant suffering would bo felt most by their follow workers, they refused to do anything to head It off, falling hnck on tholr oft-repeated statements of Its Justice nnd on tho nsserllon that, us It was ordered by a general convention of tlio United Mine Workers, no repre sentatives of tho orgunlzntlon have luthorlty to set such action aside. Immediately after the conference of .eaders of the miners had Issued Its itutonient the government began to mobilize Its forces to mnke good the jromlse of President Wilson thnt tljo nines should he operated. The cnbl act met In speclnl session nnd definite plnns of action were discussed and adopted. Meanwhile Dr. Harry Gar add, federal fuel ndmlnlstrator, hnd oeen summoned to Wnshlngton und itops wore tnken to rovlvo the fuel ad ministration to prevent hoarding nnd profiteering. Attorney General Palmer '.ssiicd n long statement In which he undo It plain thnt the strike was 11 .egal nnd thnt the government had joth the right nnd the power to crush It, "without Infringing on the reeog- ilzed right of men In nny line of In- lustry to work when they piense and quit work when they please." The plans of the federal olllclals. It was said, Include prosecution for ronsplracy of (hose guilty of causing tho strike; armed protection for those miners who are willing to continue nt work, and allocation and distribution of coal to railroads, essential Industries and homes. Orders fof proper dlspo sltlon of troops went out from the wnr department; In some of the coal niln ing states tlio jNatlonal Guard was mobilized and In various communities steps were taken for the formation of citizens' committees to nld the author ities. The first thing done by the govern nient wns nn order from Director Con? sral Illnes to the rnllronds to confls into all coal In transit, If necessary, to operate tho roads and build up a re serve. Then the attorney general an nqunced that the fuel administrator would tnko control of the handling of tho coal and would use his authority under the Lover act to meet the situ ation. In tho distribution of coal, the wartime priority Hat of the fuel ad ministration Is to bo followed. This Is ns follows: 1. Steam railroads;. Inland and coastwise vessels. 2. Domestic, Including hotels, bos pltnls and asylums 3. Nuvy und army 4. Public utilities, Including plnnts and suclv portions of plants ns supply light, heat und wnter for public use, 5. Producers and manufacturers of food, Including refrigeration. 0. National, state, county nnd uiu ulclpal emergency requirement. 7. Hunkers and other marine emer gency requirements not specified above. 8. Producers of newsprint pnper nnd plnnts necessary to the printing and publication of dally . newspapers. Another plan of the government was to obtain from Federal Judge Ander son nt Indianapolis a sweeping Injunc tion against the miners' organization and 83 national and local ofllcers, for bidding the "encouraging of the strlko by word of mouth, book or pamphlet" and prohibiting the use of tho organ!- zutlon's funds for the promotion of the strike. Vlolntors of tho Injunction would be punished for contempt of court. The mine operators promised the government their unreserved co-oper-utlon in Its efforts to keen the mines open. Conlldentlal reports from gov ernment agents bud led to the belief tnat a largo number of the union miners would not strike and, in addi tion, It wns estimated that the non union mines could be counted on to turn out a considerable quantity of coal. Their annual production Is nbout 180,000,000 tons out of a total of C00, 000,000 tons. At the best, however, the production will bo tremendously decreased and if the strlko Is pro longed consumption must be reduced nccordlngly. In this process nnturally tlio unessentlnl Industries will bo the worst sufferers nnd It is ensv to nro- dlct (hat many thousands of them will ne cioseu uown nnd vast numbers of men und women thrown out of em ployment. President Lewis of the miners luld the blame for the situation on the mine operators and severely criticized President Wilson who, he said, had prejudged tlio case with only a imrtial and Inaccurate knowledge of the facts. The union oflicluls, while as serting they could not now stop the strike, left open one possible door bv ssnylng they were ready and anxious to meet the operators for the purpose of negotiating an agreement and brlncrlntr nbout a settlement. Later It was snid the ofllclnls wore ready to nbandon the demand for a six hour dny arid five day week and to modify the demand for a CO per cent Increase In wages, If the operators would curtail if not nbandon Saturday work and agree to a "moderate" wage lncrense. At Indianapolis It was as serted tho extreme demands were put forward to satisfy a large radical ele ment thnt threatened to revolt ngnlnst the Lewis regime. The International labor conference provided for by the peace 'treaty has assembled at Washington"; but, owing to the treaty situation, It Is In doubt as to Its own status. Secretary of Labor AVIIson called It to order nnd welcomed It to the United States, but this country's official connection with It ciiine to nn end there. For the pres ent the conference wns considered "in process of organization," and thus Mr. Wilson und other Americans were en abled to sit with the delegates from other lands. The conference asked the Federation of Labor and the Uni ted States Chamber of Commerce to name delegates, and this wns done. Thirty-one foreign countries were rep resented by 83 delegates when the ses sions opened. The representatives from Germany and Austria were due to arrive November 3 and the organ izing committee recommended that they bo given early participation. The International congress of work ing women also opened In Washington with -10 delegates present anil Mrs. Raymond Robins presiding. The wom en made It plain at the outset that they were not seeking any special privileges for their sex hi industry, but that they demand full share In any plnns for their protection that men may consider. An Interesting Interlude at Wash ington was provided by the visit of the king and queen of the Belgians. Albert was given un enthusiastic wel come by congress, and In addresses beforo both tho senate und the house gave formal expression of the grutl tude of his country to Amerlcn. The roynl couple culled Informally nt the White House. lleforo leaving tho United States King Albert took occasion to mako a pilgrimage to the tomb of Theodore Roosevelt and to lay upon It a boautl fill wrenth. It wns n fitting Incident of Roosevelt week, during which hun dreds of thousands of dollars were contributed by admirers of the great American fornhe purpose of establish ing mcmorlnls to him. President Wilson stirred up a mighty hullabaloo by his veto of the dry enforcement action the ground thnt the emergency vhlch called for wartime prohibition had passed nnd thnt tho law should bo repealed. For a few hours the wets wero Jubilant, believing that John Barleycorn hnd been given a lease of life until consti tutional prohibition goes Into, effect In .Tnnunry. But tlio drys quickly got Into uction nnd forced Immediate no tion In the house, with the result thnt the veto wns overridden by a vote pf 170 to 55. A Inrge number flf mem bers wero ubsent, but postponement for this reason was refused and, In deed, If the full membership hnd boon present the result doubtless tvould hnvo been the snme. Next dny the sennte nlso passed the bill over the president's veto, the vote being 05 to 20. The net became effective nt once nnd the country beenme bono dry until the treaty with Germany Is rati fied. As soon ns thnt nctlon Is taken by tho senate, according to a state ment from the White nouse, the pres ident will lift the ban. This aroused both the -Anti-Saloon league anil the more rabid opponents of the treaty. The leaders of the former declared they would maintain the contention that the ban could not bo removed un til the trenty with Austria and Hun gary hnd been ratified. The lntter nt tncked tho motives of the president and said ho had delayed lifting the ban to force the senate to ratify the trenty. The liquor men found some consolation in a decision by a federal Judge at Louisville that the wartlmo law is Invalid and that the government could not seize liquor In storage with out paying for It. But tho revenue agents went right ahead scaling up all the stocks of liquor they could Hnd and they found most of them. No one on either side of the treaty fight In the senate would admit, that tho promise of a wet spell In the least affected the contest, but there wns evi dent a disposition to get through with ihe matter speedily. Tho rejection of all nniendnients clenred the way for the consideration of the rescrvntlons, nnd It was predicted that the same conservative Republicans who voted with the Democrats against the amendments would compel the adop tion of milder reservations than those reported by the committee" on foreign rotations. It will then bo up to the administration supporters to accept these or stand responsible for the com plete failure to ratify the trenty. The re-enforced red nrmy defending Petrogrnd succeeded, by desperate fighting, In recapturing several towns and In forcing back the white army, but late reports from General Vuden Itch are to the effect that he Is recov ering the lost ground and that the of fensive Is proceeding satisfactorily again. Finland unnounccs thnt It is giving Vudenltch nld In the way of tanks and ammunition, but cannot send a regular expedition unless prom ised certain compensating advantages. General Denlklne's advance on Mos cow nlso wus checked by tho bol shevlkl nnd. If wireless dispntches from Moscow nro to he believed, there has been a serious revolt ngnlnst him in the Ukraine. Large bodies of tlio troops of Petlurn nnd Mnkhno nre lolnlng the reds and n number of Im portant towns have fallen Into the hands of the rebels. From the same source comes the story of another up rising against Denlklne hi the Caspian region that cuts off his oil supply. It Is well to uccept nil stories from Mos cow with 'reservation. Possibly In response to tho wall of the Letts that the allies hnve not been giving them suillclent help In tholr light against the Germans nt Riga, the allied fleet In the Gulf or Riga has been re-enforced by some large war ships and the positions or the Germans nre under continuous bomlmrdincnt. In the Baltic, It Is Mild. 'here nre CTi British worships which shell Kron stndt dully. These vessels also tire cnrorelnz the blockade of the liolshev 1st const of Russia ordered by the al lied wnr council. PALMER SCORES N. I DEALER Declares Government's Action In Fix ing Maximum Price Solely for Protection of Public. Washington, D. C. A suggestion from the Wholesale Conl Trade asso ciation of New York that the govern ment should not fix n maximum price for coal or Interfere with the normal course of supply and demand during the strike brought from Attorney Gen eral Palmer the vigorous assertion that lie would take the same nctlon ngalnst persons enhnnclng prices as wns taken against the union olllclals. W. A. Marshall, president of the as sociation, wrote Mr. Palmer recom mending that miners who want to work he given protection and that coat consumers bo allowed to obtain fuel through the usual, normnl channels. "I am In receipt of your letter und nmnzed by Its contents," the attorney general replied. "While of course proper protection will be given to nil miners who nre willing to continue nl work, It must bo perfectly plain to you that even under such conditions the supply of conl must be far from nor mal. Your proposition amounts, In effect, to n declaration thnt conl deal ers should be permitted to take advan tage of those abnormnl conditions and'' hnvo tlielr prices based entirely upon the law of supply and demand, which' Is only nnotlicr way of saying that they should be permitted ,to charge the public whatever they please. The demand for fuel will bo constantly Increasing and Willi the supply de creasing, unless there Is government regulation, prices charged' to the pub lic would lie outrageous nnd the profits accruing to dealers unreasonable. "The nctlon of the government In restraining the ofllcers of the mine workers' union from furthering the strike order already Issued wus taken solely In tho public Interests, and I shall not permit It to bo used directly or Indirectly for the benefit of the em ployers' side of the controversy. If any advantage shall bo taken of pres ent conditions by nny arrangement, or agreement of two or more persons to restrict either production or distribu tion In order to enlinnco the price of fuel, I shall without hesitation take precisely the same action ngnlnst suclr persons ns hns been taken against thet ofllcers of the mine workers' union." THREE MONTHS SUPPLY. Statisticians Claim Nation Has Suf ficient Coal Until Feb. 1. Indlnnnpolls, Ind. The cllmux In the strike of bituminous coal miners of the United States Is expected soon by both miners and operators. Tho coun try's supply of conl, they agreed, will be budly depleted In three weeks. Tue following npproxlmalo average figures on tho present supply of coal has been furnished' by one of the lead ing stutistlclnns on coal In the coun try: Normnl number of tons mined nnd consumed dally, 1,750,000. Num ber of tons above ground, 17,000,000. With the number of miners reduced by hnlf It enn be nssumed, ho said,, that the production will be cut In half, thus making It necessary to draw about S00.OOO tons of coal daily from the reserve supply to meet tho nation's needs. If this condition continues for more than three months, the supply of coal will be exhausted, according to tbese estlnmtes. At headquarters of the United Mine1 Workers, officials are making every effort to comply with the Injunction is sued by Judge A. B. Anderson re straining them from participating lu or directing the strike. Starving in Bolshevik Russia. Helslngfors, Finland Petrogrnd luift been without bread for the last two weeks, thousands of persons dying dally, according to Information brought to Helslngfors by tho Finn, who es caped from a prison camp at Moscow. The population of Petrogrnd has fallen, below -100,000 he said. Conditions In Moscow, the Finn reported, were much bettor. Prominent Stockman Killed. Omnlin, Neb. Phil Kellogg, prmol nent live stock commission man, wns killed and eight others were Injured, two seriously, in a collision of two automobiles in tills city. .Not to Obey Strike Order. Washington. Timothy Slieu hns given notice to congress that the Brotherhood of locomotive Firemen and ISnglnenion, of which he Is acting president, would not observe pending antl-suiko legislation If ennctod Into luw. Periodicals Leave Gotham. New York. -Moro Hum (10 periodi cals affected by the strike and lockout existing In tho printing Industry hero have arranged for publication lu othei cities. Amendment Slate Cleansd. ' Washington. The -IfS aniendmeiils attached to the peace treaty passed Into history when the last survivor, a proposal bv Senator Mosw, republi can, New Hampshire, lo revise voting strength In the league of nations, wns defcatei' In the senate, 17 In 30.