The Omaha Daily Bee VOL -19. NO. 3H. Sf$4 n tMM.CitM Maltw Mar M. im. at f, 0. Ua.r Art at" Hut I. Ia7i. OMAHA, FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1920. By Mill (I v.ir). Imld, 4th Zaaa. Dally aa 8ua4. M: Dally Only. M; Bandar, 14. Outtlda 4th Zaaa (I yaar). Dally aad Suatfay. til; Dally Oaly. 112; Suaday Oaly. IS. TWO CENTS OIT8IDE Old HA IMI UM .V ul bllfkb. rise ckmo. RAIL BOARD TO CONTINUE CAR HEARING Oespite Formal Withdrawal of Complaint by Employes, State Commission, Fearing Strike, Rules to Rush Probe. BOTH SIDES VOLUNTEER TO GIVE TESTIMONY Union Breaks With Investigat ing Body When It Refuses to Consider High Living Prices In Connection With Wages. I)ej,ite the nwt inn fur . ili-rnn-t nuanc e i.( th- M(f he,1ni'g. filed rtrrUy bv tin- street cr men's I l inn, t tt - St.ite R.iilwav 'immih- nn mini tin1 hearing h mid be f .11 1 in tied nn it nun motion. sked by the i riiiMiiion hrthrr I n c lirn t viiiilf! appear .it ihc hear ii'K, A. II. IW)if", rnunel for the litnnn, replied he would adwsc them nef to make t voluntary annoaraiire. "If thev are summoned Sefore the rommiiion in a legal manner I will mie ttirin in appear." lie s.tid, "l.ut the nrif;al complaint of the i:'t'otl o longer etts a f r n we .n mure rued." J. L. Wcb-tir. riin.e for the )ii aha k I mm. il R'lifU Street K.vlway company. ail the company ilfl lint .ippne the moron fur dis imal of the hearing, but would m le a voluntary appearance before h.- t(.mn)n.ion if so ordered. See Possible Strike. "I lob! the i nuiiiioii when it tint took up the dispute that the union would only abide by it de . tston if the de-iinn were favorable to it." ilrrUreil Mr. Webster. "Its action today verifies my statement." I lie commission, in its derision to ruittinue the bearing, held the evi dence already taken, showed the possibility of an interruption of ervjec. tin:' establishing a prima f.Kil cae Alvin J-. Johnson, counsel fr the contpany, averted there was no evidence on record to show a strike ote hid been taken. The state rient regarding the strike vote, of fered by Attorne Bieelow as an admission of fact, and testimony of Preaident Short, of the union that t'o-thirds of the union mcmher bii h.-id voted to strike was .stricken from the records when Bigelow in truded Short not to reply to Ques tions regarding the gWitee ""veitf count. Mr. Johnson contended. " The Human Element. "I don't believe there is. a labor rrearition in America willing to :id in fivinir a standard of wages on a commercial basis, where the h-i- (titatlaiKH re Three. Column Two.) Packing Salesman Loses $ 1 50 in Bold Daylight Holdup B. Bartlett, 2IKM' Ha'nev street, city talesman for Swift & Co., win held up and robbed of $150 in collection hy a lone negro bandit at Thirtieth and Lake streets at 3:30 p. m. yesterday. Bartlett was driving his Ford north on Thirtieth Mrect vhen a tugrrt biled him to stop- He cotn- ded and felt a revolver tabled into ii jibs with the command. "Hands up" 1 fir negro took $150 in Cash and a number of checks, amounting to fhe collections the salesman had m:.de fr the day. 1 he negro nude his escy.pe over the Lake street hill. Police were called and are scouring he neigh korhood for the bandit. Turkish Peace Delegation . , f i i ! AlTIVeS in PrenCn tapiiai : Taris. June 17. Turkey's peace '.rlrgaiion. headed by Daniad Ferid -i . .: - ...... ..i : today. It na met at the station byTcu1oj he res.gned from Columbia I'ol.' Henry, who had charge of the (iernun delegation at the peace conference. The party was escorted s Versailles, where it is installed in the same uite f rooms used by he German last vear. Daniad - A i i . . : i n rrlST l4! urcu dS9l(MCU kj upair mert used by lount von Brock-dorrl-Rantan as head of the Gcr ttan delegation. Wedding of Helen Taft To Take Place in Canada Xew Haven. Cann.. June 17. An announcement from the family was thai the marriage of Miss Helen Tail, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. WiKura Howard Taft. to Frederick ). Manning. will take place at Mor tar HayrtTanada, Inly 15. Miss Taft tll come here from cryn lar Saturday for the Yale corr.mcncc-i n.t period. Automobile Thief Draws Five Yean in State Prison Oticjfo, June 17. Fied Steffler. Aadron. Intt, charged with transporting a stolen automobile ret a state line, wis given five year ia trin by Judge Landis mltn kt admitted his story U Id the cit ol service in Frame was li'.te. To companions were give txm-RKratha sentences. Vf "Drag fiaf" Omafcav. Mrddrn fall hy city ofticali for toVery Vu! to do constructive a a grand ee4n el thjt etas of fnmenrr . (rota Omaha. Commit a It ger fat in a call for three it 4 aggers and Commissionet Twl am a lot ef witltng to sf tagraata JVilson Sure People Will Condemn G. 0. P. for Refusal To Ratify League Covenant Says Processes by Which Republican Platform Was Accomplished Seem to Have Been Prussian in In spiration Hopes Democratic Convention Will Say What It Means on Every Question Wihout Evasion. ' By The Associated Press. New York, June 17. President Wilson, in a special interview giv en to the New York World, to be published tomorrow morning, said he was "extremely confident that the democratic convention at San I'liiicisro will vyrlcome tlu accep tance by the republican partv of my invitation to make the league of na t ii mi i the issue in this campaign." "I am ever more confident." the president said, "that such referen diiir. will confirm my faith, that the American people desire it above anything else that a political party now may provide and that they will condemn the republican policy of dei'ying them the consummation of their hopes. No one will recom mend a referendum on that issue more than I." "I suppose I should feel flat tered," ho said, "over beinp made the issue of the presidential cam paign hy the republican partv. But even the effort of the platform mak ers at Chicago to confer the dis tinction of being not only a burn ing but a living issue by camou flaging and obscuring the real is sues will not deceive the people." Attacks G. O. P. Platform. "The processes by which the Chi cago platfo'rm was accomplished seemed to me to have been essen tially and scientifically Prussian in inspiration and method. Instead of quoting " Washington and Lincoln, the republican platform should have quoted Bismarck and Bernhardt be cause the republican attitude regard ing the supreme issue that cannot be abandoned or disregarded strongly suggests the arbitrary influences that dictated the doctrines of those two eminent persons. "Every charge directed against me and my administration is obviously designed to becloud and negative the paramount issue confronting the American people, to befog their sense of responsibility and make vio lation of the obligations they have assumed to be of small consequence. I sincerely believe that the attempt DR. JAMES HYSL0P DIES FOLLOWING LONG SICKNESS Secretary of American Psychi cal Research Society Victim Of Thrombosis. New York, June 17. James Her vey Hyslop, secretary and director of research of the American Society for Psychical Research, died today after a long illness in Upper Mont clatr. N. J., it was announced here tonight. Death was due to thrombo sis. . He was 64 years oldv Having long been interested in psychic phenomena, Dr. Hyslop in 1907 raised an endowment fund of $1-75,000 for the re-estjablishment of the American Society of Psychical Research, which had dissolved fol lowing the death of its secretary. In a biographical sketch issued todj by the society, Dr. Hyslop is de scribed as "formerly a "materialist and agnostic," who became "con vinced that demonstrative evidence of the continuance of human life after bodily death exists." Dr., Hyslop is survived by a son and two daughters. Born in Xenia. O., August 18, 1854, Dr. Hyslop was graduated from Wooster college, studied two years at the. University of Leipsic and later at Johns Hopkins. He was succes sively professor f. philosophy at Lake Forest university. Smith col lege and Bucknell university, then ol ettlics ana ps) cnoiogj i hja university and later professor of .. J t-.l - ri.,r logic and ethics at tne same msr.iu- Suffering trom pulmonary luoer in 1002 and soent the next two years in the Adirondack, He was author of a score of other philosophical and psychical works. Woman Loses $27 to Holdup. Returning to her home, 2510 Vinton street, lat Wednesday night. Mrs. A. P. Shafer was held up by a small man armed with a nickel plated revolver, who took $27 from her. The robberv took place within half a block of her home. "I'm hungry and 1 gotta eat. I aint no mean guy," the boyish highwayman said, according to Mrs. Shafer. Terpischorean Revelry Reigns Supreme When Hundreds Join in Street Dance The pavement on Eighteenth street, between Faniam and Harney streets, was transformed last night into a terpsichorean .revelry in which hundreds of Omahans .partici pated with considerable spirit. It was Omaha's first street dance, held under the auspices of the Ne braska National (Juard. the regular army and the American Legion, s It a sa democratic affair ind was witnessed by thousands of evening outers who tarried along the way to see this outdoor event. Cornmeal was spread over the pavement to make the movement of the dancers easier. The Twentieth infantry band of Fort Crook, under the leadership of Col. Beaumont B. Buck, furnished the musk. Another dance will be held tonight at the same location.... i dpt. Thames Thorburn of the Luted States army engineering , of the republican party to win the sanction of the American people for its attempted evasion of these obli gations will be decisively rebuked. With one thing I am fully satis fied this is that the republican party in its platform has joined me in the suggestion I made in my letter to the guests at the Jackson day din ner in Washington in January h:t. In that letter I expressed the hope that a sincere attempt would be made to determine the attitude of the American people on the league of nations by the resort to the gen uinely democratic process of the referendum. Confidence In Delegates. "Of course, I have no yvay of an ticipating the probable trend of sen timent 'that will be expressed in the democratic national convention at San Francisco or forecasting the ultimate conclusions of that body. But I have every confidence that the delegates who will sit in that con vention will repeat the challenge T issued to the republican party and express their readiness to permit the people to decide between trje vlgtie and ambiguous declaration liy the republican and a positive and defi nite expression of opinion by the democratic party. Whatever else the democratic party may do, I hope that its convention at San Fran cisco will say just what it means on every issue and that it will not re sort either to ambiguity or evasions in doing so. "This thing (the league of nations) lies too deep to permit of any polit ical sculdtiggery, any attempt to side-step or evade moral and hu manitarian responsibilities much too solemn to treat so lightly or ignore. "I should prefer at this time not to discuss partisan politics or to venture any prediction as to the probable attitude that the democratic convention will take on any subject. I sincerely believe, however, that the vast majority of gentlemen who will sit in the San Francisco convention will appreciate the necessity and permanent value of keeping tlie (Continued on Pnm Two, Column One.) CHICAGO GANGSTER MURDERED IN FULL SIGHT OF POLICE "Paddy, tEe Bear." Shot Down In Broad Day Assassin ... Escapes. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee, I .e aril Wire. Chicago, June 17. It -is still the 'open season" for labor czars ano gangsters, the latest shooting from ambush disposing of Patrick P. ("Paddy the Bear")) Ryan, chief of the notorious "Valley gang," saloon keeper, Jabcrv slugger and ward politician. Ryan's slayer lay in wait for him in the very heart of the gang leader s bailiwick at 10 o'clock this morn ing with a half dozen persons, in cluding a policeman in sight. Ryan was on his way to the Desplaines Street station to answer a charge of receiving stolen property. As he passed an alley the gunman stepped out, automatic in hand, and opened up, putting four bullets into the "Bear." Ryan staggered to the mid dle of the street and sank down, while the gunman fled back through" the alley, exchanging shots with tin. policeman who pursued him vainly. A wagon drew across the line of pursuit with the neat opportunism o the South Side bad lands and the policeman was balked. Ryan was 35 years old and had a wife and eight children. He was suspected of complicity in the murder, recently, of Edward J. Coleman, another labor czar -and the police believe his killing is an outcome of that slaying. Detective Sergeant James Hosna was mur dered in Ryan's sloon by "Big George" Vogel, but Vogel and Ryan and "the porter of ' the saloon were all acquitted, numerous "witnesses" testifying that all of them were in a rear room at the moment of :he killing and saw nothing. Officers Miss Whisky. Kenosha, Wis.', June 17. A stake. $75,000 worth of whisky, contained in a car from Cincinnati to the "Kenosha Distributing company" under a fraudulent permit, escaped the United States prohibition forces Wednesday night. Thursday federal officers found the car empty. corps, who is here in the interest of a recruiting drive, explained that the object of the dsnce was to promote a better understanding between the people and-their peace army. "We are endeavoring." said the captain, "to have the public under stand that the army is really of the people; that we are giving a voca tional training to all recruits and that he who enters the army will be better fitted to resume his vocation at the expiration of his three years' enlistment". Assisting Capt Thorburn last night was Sergt. F. C Shaffer of the First Nebraska National Guard. The guard and the regular army are now engaged in a recruiting drive, which will be continued for several weeks. Next Tuesday evening, an athletic tournament will be given in the Auditorium under- the direction "f Amos Thomas and Tack Kilnur- tin. ROGRESSIVE WING BACK OF HARDING Disappointed Members of Party Agree to Boost Ohio Senator During Campaign Despite Personal Wishes. JOHNSON CONTINUES TO MAINTAIN SILENCE Message Promising Support of Senator Kenyon of Iowa Re garded as Significant of Feeling in Hawkeye State. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee, leaned Wire. Washington, June 17. Elements of the republican party, which were opposed to Senator Harding's can didacy at Chicago, are apparently re solved to swallow their disappoint ments, and to coalesce behind the nominee in the effort to make repub lican victory in November certain. This theory is borne out by several assurances of support aiveiv to Sen ator Harding today either verbally" or m the form of telegrams and let ters. R. B. Strassburger, one of the Johnson managers; Senator Moses of Xew Hampshire, manager for General Wood and influential in the progressive wing; Senator Kenyon of Iowa, another progressive; Sena tor France of Maryland, a candidate for the nomination, and Nicholas Murray Butler, all promised their support. - , But while these representatives of various factions in the party commu nicated today with Senator Harding and offered thejr aid, no word was heard from Hiram Johnson. The. senator was said to have left Wash ington for Chicago to go from there to California in a few (Jays. He has not been at his office since he re turned to Washington Monday nign. and has made no statement of any kind as to his stand. Mr. Strassbur ber said he did not believe the sen ator had any intention of leaving his party and aligning with a third party. Relations Cordial. When Senator Harding was askrt today if any arrangements had b-?en made for a conference with Senator Johirson, he replied: "I hope to see all of my colleagues. Our relations have always been cor dial. I shall see every republican it is physically possible for me to meet. - I v. ill get the views of every 8a.rtyjan w4lhiitread-aWtiwIecided upon-.! ana l snail, nor consiucr mc ques tion of international differences in connection with conferences. I wish to say at this time that all repub licans look alike to me." Senator France came out flat footed for Senator Harding. After his visit he issued a statement say ing that he had had "a long and most enjoyable as' well as satisfac- (Contlnued on Tcire Threc Column One.) Soft brink Keeper Loses $233 in Cash In Daylight Robbery The soft drink parlor of Joe Siska, 2723 Q street, was robbed yesterday afternoon of $233 in cash and 19 checks ranging in amount from $4 to $31. Sisfla had just endorsed the checks and was preparing to go to the bank. He stepped outsidefor a few mo ments and when he returned the money and checks were gone from the cash register No one was seen in the store when the robbery took place, but a for eigner had been loitering about the place for several days, Siska told the police. Clerk Is Arrested, Charged . With Betrayal of Texas Girl William A. Knight, a clerk. 2574 Spalding street, was arrested by Detectives Hagerman and Dolan at Sixteenth and Farnam streets yes terday and taken to the police sta tion where he was booked as a fu gitive from justice. Knight formerly was employed in the south as a cotfon inspector and during that time is said to have be trayed Catherine Lee, a Cleburne (Tex.) girl, according to the police. He will be returned to .Texas by authorities, who will come to Omaha with extradition papers.' according to the police. He is at lilrtv under $500 bonds. Knight is married and has two children, police say. Rickenbacker Is Named on Ohio Aviation .Commission Columbus, O., June 17. Cant. Ed ward V. Rickcnbacher, America's premier ace, was named a member of a state aviation commission by Governor Cox. ' The commission is said to be the first of its kind in the United States. . The function of the commission will be to direct a campaign for srfety in air navigation and to for mulate rules governing flying. TheJfVeather ;r Forecast. , , ) Nebraska Unsettled Friday and Saturday;.: probably . showers; -not much change in temperature. " Iowa Partly .'cloudy Friday; un settled in west; Saturday unsettled; not much change, in temperature. ... Hourly, , Temperatures. t ,. - . 8 i .5T I 1 saw M.. .4. AS a. 1 i . M. ...M 1 . m. .ST i I p. m...., ...... e S .'. w..J i P. an... .,.... I p. m... l a. m... IS I T . m... .....ft, p. m.. a. m., I a. m., II . an.. U i sT 1 o . r V, -y BUBONIC PLAGUE HITS GALVESTON; BOY, 1 7, IS VICTIM City Officials Demand Immedi ate Federal Aid in Effort to Prevent Epidemic? Galveston, Tex., June 17. The death of a J7-year-old youth here yesterday after a brief illness "prob ably was due to bubonic plague, according to a diagnosis made pub lic tonight by Dr. M. F. Boyd, pro fessor of bacteriology at the State Medical college. , At conference that diagnosis was concurred in by federal, state, county and city health officers. An immediate effort for the ex- termination of rats and mice was Follov4mr-accmference this after noon presided over by Mayor, H. O. Sappington it was decided to ask Surgeon General . Cummings at Washington to dispatch health serv ice experts here to help prevent pos-. sible spread of the disease. In a statement to the public the commit tee in charge asks citizens to catch all rats and mice possible and de liver them to the city authorities for examination. All rats and mice killed, it was requested, should be tagged with the -locality where they were found, so 4hat quarantine pre cautions could be taken should the rodent be found to be a plague car rier. Miss Wyoming Rides , Pony Into Lobby of Hotel, Lassoes Clerl Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leased M ire. Chicago, June 17. Loungers in tlie lobby of the Congress hotel and the fashion plates patrolling "pea cock alley" were shaken out of their customary languid poise today when a breezy girl mounted-on a tough little pony rode through the doors up to the desk and lassooed the as tonished clerk. Then she dismounted and regis tered, when it was discovered that s,he was "Miss Wyoming," other wise Miss Helen Bonham, daughter of a Wyoming ranchman and the personal messenger of Gov. Robert Carey of Wyoming, bearing an in vitation from the executive to ilayor Thompson to attend th? "frontier day" roundup at Cheyenne the last week in July. Later in the day she rode into the city hall anJ delivered the message, her pony stamping impatiently upon the mar blfloors, which did not give him a very certain footing. Move to Reduce' High Cost of Fall Clothing Washington. June 17. Threat ened high prices for fall clothing are to be nipped in the bud by the Department of Justice. Howard E. Figg, special assistant to. .Attorney General Palmer, today announced the beginning of drive aimed at the high price of fall wearing apparel which will be along the same lines as those which brought spring prices tumbling; The - plan is to organize public sentiment against heavy uying, at the opening of the sensor, when high prices will be at their peak if they are high at all. Wherever this plan fails the department's special agents will start legal proceedings in cases .where the prosecution seems justified. Gov. Cox Will Not Attend , Democratic Convention Los ' Angeles, June 17. Gov. James M. Cox of Ohio, candidate for' the democratic nomination for president, will not attend the demo cratic national .convention .in Sao Francisco,', it was announced .here by Edward Moore, national cam paign manager for Governor Cox. Mr. Moore said it had been - de cided it would , not sbe -'dignified" for Govcrnpr" Cox ta : leave his of fice jn ,an- effort to obtain the presi dential nomination, - - .."-K "v I - Which Driver? GOVERNOR GIGS BACK ON CHARGE CHICAGO; IS WET Says Liquor Statement Given Wide Publicity Was Just a Joke, at Informal Interview. Lincoln, June ' 17. (Special.) "Jifst a joke," is the way Governor McKelvie answers the demand of the Chicago city council that he "gig back" on the statement made that if any one wanted a sip of !, Mj-hkS uw??. the recent republican convention" it could be had. Governor McKelvie upon his re turn from Chicago last week told state house reporters that there was plenty of booze in the Windy City and that the price ranged accord ing to grade. The Chicago Amer ican took exception to the statement any wired for verificaion. The 'gov ernor took no notice of the inquiry and now the Chicago council wants him to retract his statement. In the meantime the governor has received more head line advertising in Chi cago papers than a candidate for the presidency, but should he ever go to Chicago again and want to quench his thrist well the lake is close bv. Thedemand that the governor re tract is sent by Chief Garrity and the governor's reply follows: "The circumstances incident to the statement to which Chief Garrity takes exception are so ridiculously trivial that it hardly merits the dignity of attention. It was jok ingly made during an Informal in terview with the reporters upon my return fr,om Chicago, and, however true it may have been, it was not intended to be given the promi nence of publicity. As for' proof, I frankly admit I have none. It avas a subject in which I am wholly dis interested and was mentioned only as a" matter of gossip. "Most assuredly, I would not wittingly injure the feelings of Chief Garrity or reflect any discredit upon his department, for so far as I know, he is a capable and trustworthy of ficial." Suffrage Bill Defeated. Baton Rouge, La., June 17. The slate woman's suffrage amendment failed Thursday to receive the. neces sary two-thirds vote in the senate. The vote was 23 to 16. v Social Lions Work All Night to Finish Job When Hod Carriers Demand Wage Increase W'at is you all argufying abo't?" lustily yelled a negro straw boss, who boastfully said that he was a corporal in the A. E. F. "I'se got to get fru here and sleep so I can wbrk tomorrow. ' I'se making hay while the sun shines, I is." With the stern command to re sume work, Richard Peters, son of R. C. Peters, president of the Peters Trust company, and ' Herbert W. Potter, secretary of the Peters Trust company, ceased looking at blistered hands and rubbing aching backs and began "mixing" cement.- The hour was 3 a. m. and while a flock of taxis waited to take the "laborers" employed home from pouring two feot of cement around a new vault in the Peters Trust, building, a crowd of social lions was straining every muscle -to complete the task. The strike of laborers tied up the work on the vault at a critical pe riod and a hurry call fcr help brought a'Tew society favorites and Ctefghton college .graduates who were aided , by a few nonunion laborers and. employes of the con tractors. .;' f "., :Forty tons of steel Svere embed ded in the cement, which covered a tcol-prcof wall VA inches thick.. The work was supervised tv John LMeusen, jr., who had planned on I PALMER ORDERS DRIVE AGAINST COAL PROFITEERS All Federal Attorneys Cau tioned to Be On Watch for Cases of Overcharging. . Washington, June 17, A drive on profiteers in bituminous coal was ordered today by Attorney General Palmer. All federal district attorneys were ordered to give special .attention to charges of such profiteering and to seek indictment where investigation warranted. "The Department of Justice," said Mr. Palmer's instructions, "is re ceivingjav number. of letters in which complaint is made that bituminiJus coal prices at the mines now range from $7 to $11 a ton, with a further increase imminent. The writers say that 'operators arc attributing the advances in pay to car shortage and export demand, emphasis being placed upon the xport demand. "Production cost figures gathered by the Federal Trade commission from 1,589 bituminous coal operators in the principal production regions mining roughly about 60 per cent of the annual output, show that during January. 1920, their-cost per ton av eraged $2.32 at the mines. Since then there has been an increase of 27 per cent in the cost of labor, en hancing the production cost to $2.79 per ton. The accuracy of .these fig ures fs borne out by information in fetters coming to the department from purchasers of coal, from wnich it appears that prices in May did not greatly exceed those furnished to the Federal Trade commission for Janu ary. "This situation demands the prompt attention of all United States attorneys. Please give spe cial attention to the matter and seek indictments where investigation dis closes that an unreasonable profit has been taken, advising the depart ment of the action -taken." Von Kaufbeuren Rejects Chancellorship Office Paris, -June 17. pr. Mayer von Kaufbeuren, German charge d'af faires here, has refused the offer of the German chancellorship, tendered him by Karl Trimborn,, leader of the German center party, who is trying to form the new German ministry to be organized as a result "of the recent election. Dr. Mayer declared he considered the mission he has in Paris too im portant to give up. a week's sleep, having just quit working night and day completing plans fora new Nebraska capitol. He got some satisfaction, however, between shovels of cement bv warn ing his brother, George, that he would never4,makc an architect if he spent all hi 3 time counting I listers. Alfred C. Kennedy, manager of the rental department of the Peters Trust. company, admitted that a gen eral, raise in rents would be an nounced today to pay for arnica, liniment, etc., to case his weary body. Grant Peters, nephew of R. C. Peters, and Tom Berney, each with a "hod" filled with cement, were slowly climbing a ladder when the lunch hour was called. Five min utes was spent i'i argument between the two, after which they returned to tile ground. When R. B. Mc Fadden. timekeeper for the Laten sers, who had donned overalls and was aiding in the emergency, asked the reason, they indignantly replied that -they were not "scabs" and would not work, overtmie. , J. A. Stapp and M. R. Ashby, su perintendent of construction on tlie Peters building and the court house, respectively, meekly, took orders from the negro corporal, although in the habit themselves of bossing- hun dreds of mci"'" LABOR CHIEF DEFEATED ON KAIL ISSUE Annual Convention Endorses Government Ownership in Spite of Bitter Protest of Veteran President. GOMPERS MAY NOT ASK ANOTHER TERM Meeting Calls on Congress ta Establish U. S. Employment Service as Permamcnt Bu reau in Labor Department. Montreal, June I7.--The Ameri can Federation of Labor's, endorse ment today of government owner ship of railroads, at its annual con vention here was declared by la'tor leaders tonight to have been the first genuine defoat Samuel Gompers, its veteran president, has suffered in years. The final vote was 29,059 for government ownership and 8,349 against. The decisive vote, it is reported, prompted the labor chief to state be fore the convention late today that he "was ot quite sure" he would be a candidate for re-election. Mr. Gompers fought hard against the convention's action, declaring it was a step toward the "enslavement of the workers as government em ployes," who, he said, had been C!e nied many political and economic rights tinder the past adniinisti.-i tions. He received only a mild ova tion. The United Mine Workers and he powerful railroad workers' organiza tions combined to bring about Mr. Gompers defeat. They also had the. support of the machinists union and the metal trade organization, ?11 powerful voting factors. Stand By President. The Carpenters' union and the Building Trades organization stood loyally by Gompers, but were over whelmed. " After 'the federation's action, the executive council, whose members supported Mr. Gompers, are said to be placed in an embarrassing posi tion. They must now take steps to bring about government ownership, which they have opposed, or resign, it was stated. Supporters of Mr. Gompert" de clared last night that they Would urge hrm to.retain leadership Jof the federation and stand up for e-elec-tion for the thirty-ninth timeX Despite the protest and desires of Mr. Gompers. the convention in creased his salary as president from $10,000 to $12,000 a year. In making an appeal to the dele gates not to give an increase. Mr. Gompers declared that "$10,000 is all-sufficient for a man liCing in the ordinary modes of life to satisfy him and his needs." Other Salaries Boosted. The salary of- Secretary Frank Morrison also was increased from $7,500 to $10,000 a year. Organizers' wages was increased from $48 to (Continued on Tage Two, Column Four.) Sinn Feiners Capture Two Officers" in Attack On Police Barracks Cookstown, Ireland. June 17. A hundred Sinn Feiners today attacked the police barracks here and drove the poljce-to the upper part of the building. They captured two police constables and withdrew after -two houfs fighting. Cookstown is a strong Tyrona unionist center. Ulster volunteers were aroused by the gunfire and mobilized, but were not asked to as sist. They watched the siege of the barracks. One constable was severe ly wounded by fusillades by the raid ers. Dufigannon police later inter cepted a motor lorry in which there, was a man suffering from dangerous gunshot wounds. The police asscrl that two other raiders were shot Ask Italy, Belgium and Japan To Interallied Conference Paris, June 17. The premier's meeting at Bologne bids fair to blos som into a full-sized interallied con ference. Premier Lloyd George and Premier Millerand have decided to invite Italy, Belgium and Japan to attend. This amplification, it is un derstood, is due to the progress made by the Franco-British financial experts studying the German indem nity question. They have decided on a definite scheme which will Serve as a basis for Monday's conversa tions at Bolognc. It is hoped that the conference will be conclu-led by Tuesday night. Mr. Lloyd Gecrge will reach Bo lognc Monday evening, M. Millerand and Marshal Foch proceeding there the night before. Mrs. Tabor Wants Trial Put Off Until It's Cooler Paw Paw. Mich., June 17. Post ponement of the retrial of Mrs. Sarah Tabor for the alleged slaving of her daughter, Maud Tabor Virgo, will be asked when the second hearing is opened Monday. Attor neys representing Mrs. Tdbor de clare that to .subject her to a court ordeal during the hot summer months might result in her death. Lloyd George Meets Cabinet. London. Tune 17. Premier T'lrtvi George conferred with the cabinet today on the subject of foreign af fairs. This conference is considered as probably the most important one the premier will have before hi meeting with . Premier Millerand in Fiance.; early next week. ' . ; . - ....... ,. V