THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. : ADJOURNMENT IS | CLOSE AT HAND Resolution Fixing June 28 as Final Day Passed. —————— SOME LAST HOUR LEGISLATION Prohibition Amendment to Constitu- tion Suddenly Reported Out—Would Absolutely Prohibit Sale or Manu. facture of Liquors—Bounty Bill Goes Through Over Governor's Vete and at His Suggestion. Harrisburg, Pa., June 19.—If the legislature runs according to schedule 4t wil close firally on Thur=day, June 28. The house resolution fixing June 14 as adjournment day was reported out of senate committee last week in amended form, the change advancing the date just two weeks. There is a possibility of the leaders reconsidering their action regarding adjournment if the direct inheritance tax bill is vetoed by the governor. For such action would mean the cut- ting off entirely of new revenue and the resultant necessity of slashing hos- pltalls, schools and other deserving ap- propriations. Rather than permit this calamity the legislature may decide to continue in session longer for the pur- pose of seeking new revenue raisers. It begins to look as though the ses- slon of 1917 will go down into legis- lative history as the first assembly in Pennsylvania to pass a resolution to amend the constitution for state-wide prohibition. That this action should Ye decided upon during the closing days and after the . “dry” forces throughout the state have given up the battle is all the more remarkable. The house committee on constitu- tional reform reported with a unani- mous vote the Smith resolution to sub- mit to the people the question of adopting a statutory provision against the manufacture and sale of intoxi- eants. If the resolution passes this session, it will be submitted to the 1919 session before it could go before the voters of the state. HON. EDGAR R. SMITH. Youngest Member of Legislature and Author of Some Important Bills. The significant part of the program is the attitude of certain leaders. They are ready and willing to put the Re- publican party as squarely in favor of submitting to the people any question for which there is popular demand to be settled by the electorate. Pro- gressive anti-liquor legislation of the character embodied in the Smith reso- lution would please a good many per- sons in Pennsylvania, and if the reso- lution is not speedily adopted before the close of the present session it will be because many of the leaders have changed their minds." The Smith resolution, to be submit- ted, would prohibit the manufacture, sale or keeping for sale of vinous spiritous, malt or brewed liquors after July 1 of the year in which the amend- ment is made to the constitution. The legislature of 1921 would enact the necessary prohibitary legislation. : Edgar R. Smith, author of the pro- hibition resolution, represents Bedford county and is Pennsylvania’s youngest legislators. He is not yet twenty-eight, Another of his bills which attracted attention was directed at cabarets. Last Wednesday the legislature wip- ed out a veto of the governor and a bill that had been disapproved bv the chief executive was placed upon the statute books notwithstanding the ve- to. To make the occasion more inter- esting, the action by the legislature in overriding the veto wag taken with the advise and at the request of the gov- ernor. Tt was the first time in thirty vears that a hill was put through over the governor's’ veto. The case was the Mitchell bounty bill which the governor vetoed last week. His veto message was a caustic commentary upon the practice in some counties of permitting and allowing fraudulent claims for the payment of bounties, and suggesting that if such claims are Investigated, and a bill is presented to mover only the worthy ghes, such a bill would be approved. i common to light steers, AMERICAN ARMY LANDS IN FRANGE Thousands of Soldiers Cross Ocean Without Mishap BIG RECEPTION BY FRENCH People Overjoyed at Coming of Unit. ed States Soldiers—Vive L’Ameni- que Is Cry. Pershing’s boys have landed at a French port. Thousands of them came within the last twenty-four hours out of the misty vastness of the sea, a U-boat infested sea that held no terrors for them— not a torpedo scratch on a transport; not a single man lost. Spick and span, with weather-browned faces, their eyes sparkling fight, every one of them every inch a man, they tramped down the gangways into a pandemonium of unending cheers. As these thousands of American fighting lads poured off the transports, scores of German prisoners stood on the pier. Teeth set, they looked half sideways at these strapping newcom- ers. Those who watched these pris- oners could discern a grudging admira- tion in their looks. The remarkable thing about these scenes attending the real entrance of the United States into the world war through the safe arrival of the ex- peditionary force was the spontaneity. the touching warmth of their recep- tion here. Not an inkling of the ar- rival had leaked out beforehand. There had been no preparations, no programs with speeches and song, no reception committee or the like. Not until the transports had safely arrived off this port ready to disembark did the momentous news become known. Then the people here simply “got wild.” The American troops answered the cheers by throwing small silver coins ashore. A roaring scramble among the street urchins followed. They did not spend the coins for candy. They wrapped them up carefully in their ragged handkerchiefs to save them as sacred souvenirs. The disembarkation passed off in the most orderly manner. There was not the slightest hitch. Ship after ship slipped into her berth, discharg- ing men and equipment. Confusion khakiclad youth and their officers. From the piers the American troops swung off through the streets of this port, where the whole populace had turned out to give them a tremendcus ovation. The crowds showered flowers, fruits, cigarets and dainties upon the marchers. . “Vive I’Amerique” was an unending cry. And as proof that but one corn- tident thought was in the hearts eof those cheering thousands, this about was repeated over and over again: “You'll chase the Germans out of our country.” “We will,” came the thunderous chorus from the Yankee boys. LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN Pittsburgh, July 3. Butter—Prints, 411, @42c; tubs, 40% @41c. Eggs—Fresh, 37c. Cattle — Prime, $12.75@13; $11.75@12.25; tidy butchers, 11.25; fair, $9.75@10.25; common, $7.560@8.50; heifers, $7@11; common to good fat bulls, $6@10.75; common to good fat cows, $5@10; fresh cows and springers, $40@90. Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers, $10@10.50; good mixed, $9@9.75; fair mixed, $7.60@8560; culls and common, $450@6; yearlings, $6@13; spring lambs, $10@10.50; veal calves, $15@ 15.50; heavy and thin calves, $7@11. Hogs—Prime heavy, $15.756@165.80; heavy mixed and mediums, $15.70@ 15.75; heavy Yorkers, $15.25@15.65; light Yorkers, $14.75@15; pigs, $14.25 @14.50; roughs, $13.26@14.25; stags, $12@12.75. good, $ll@ Cleveland, July 3. Cattle—Choice fat steers, 1,600 1bs. and upwards, $11.50@12.25; choice fat steers, 1,000 lbs. and upwards, $10@ 10.75; good to choice butcher steers, $9.25@9.75; fair to good, $8@9.25; $7.25@38.25; choice fat butcher bulls, $8@9.75; bologna bulls, $6.76@7.76; good to choice fat cows, $8@9.25; common cows, $5.75; milch cows and springers, $60@85. Calves—Choice, $15.26@15.75; good mixed, $15@15.25; heavy, $7T@14. Hogs—Choice heavy, $15.60; good mixed, $15.45@15.50; Yorkers, $15.40; pigs and lights, $14.26; roughs, $13.80; stags, $12.50. Clipped Sheep and’ Lambs—Spring lambs, $14.50@15.60; fair to good, $10.50@12; choice yearlings, $10@12; fair to good, $8@10; good to choice sheep, $8.50@9.50; culls and common, $6@7. , Chicago, July 3: Hogs—Bulk, $14.36@15.50; light, $14 @15.20; mixed, $14.25@15.70; heavy, $14.20@15.76; roughs, $14.20@14.45; pigs, $10.76@13.90. Cattle—Native beef cattle, $8.30@ 13.756; stockers and feeders, $6.40@ 9.60; cows and heifers, $5.40@11.75; calves, $10.60@15. Sheep and Lambs—Wethers, $8@ 10.75; lambs, $10@18.76. Chicago Grain Market Close. Wheat. Corn. Oats. JUIY....c0ccnnes 2.03 1.59% 66% Beptember...... 1.84% 1.50 653% seemed an unknown quantity to these; LANDS FIRST DIVISION OF TROOPS IN FRANCE vy A an Pras Ao a - GENERAL W. L. SIBERT. . General Sibert for a long time had charge of the work of constructing dams in the Monongahela and Ohio rivers. 5 A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR Russian troops have captured Koniuchy, on the Galician front, to- gether with 164 officers and 8,400 men, the Russian war office announced. The number of prisoners taken in the various secbors on Sunday is more than 10,000. Southwest of Brezezany the Russians occupied strongly forti- fied positions of the enemy. The Russian official announcement says that the Russians have advanced to the Koniuchy stream and also have captured seven heavy guns. Teuton prisoners continue to be brought in. The British made progress in their encirclement of the French town of Lens. The official statement from British headquarters reports the cho ture of German defenses om a half- mile front along the north bank lof the Souchez river, southwest and west of Lens. 0 The Greek government has brok diplomatic relations with Germany, pi Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey. It “is expected the next mowe will be a formal war declaration. Twenty-one British vessels of more than 1,600 tons each, and seven under 1,600 tons were sunk by mines or sub- marines last week, according to the statement issued by the admiralty. No fishing vessels met with disaster. The aggregate number of vessels fly- ing the British flag destroyed by mines or submarines last weck shows a net falling off of four, as compare’ with the losses reporied theo previous week, which numbered 1oiriy-two— twenty-seven of r-ore than 1,600 tons and five in the smaller division. In an air duel fought «probably the highest altitude at which aviators have met in combat—nearly four miles—a Canadian triplane pursued and defeated a German two-seated aviatik. The German machine had sought safety by climbing upward, and the triplane pursued. - At g height of 20,- 000 feet the pilot of the German craft either fell or jumped from it and dis- appeared at the moment of the first burst of fire from the gun on the Canadian. The German observer was then seen to climb out upon the tail of his machine, where he lost his hold and plunged headlong. The aviatik turned its nose down and fell. LESS DRINK AND MORE FUEL Coal Man Declares Production Is Hin: dered by Booze. Coal production in states where the fuel is mined can be increased 25,000, 000 tons a year if strong drink is eliminated, D. A. Morrow of the Pitts- burgh Coal Producers’ association de- clared before the senate interstate commerce committee. In the Pittsburgh district alone, Mr. Morrow said, production would be in- creased 5,000,000 tons. “Alcoholic liquor is one of the worst enemies of the miners in western Pennsylvania,” said Mr. Morrow. “It is impossible to get men to work more than a few days a week even when the car supply permits. The same trouble exists in Illinois and Ohio and also was felt in Indiana until that state became dry. Give up liquor and the production of those states would be increased 25,000,000 tons a year.” Mr. Morrow said the car supply question was worse in the Pittsburgh district than any other place in the United States. He declared that rail- roads had sufficient coal cars but sent them to mills for steel and other products. Charles Wants Peace. Emperor Charles of Austria is de- sirous of having peace at the earliest moment. A dispatch from Vienna said that Deputy Haesuer, who recently had an audience with the youthful monarch of the dual monarchy, an- nounced in the reichsrath that the em- peror had told him of his earnest de- gire for a speedy peacs during the in- terview. FEW CLASSES ARE EXEMPTED Go ~eription Instructions Are isousd by President Spent. WILSON SAYS NO UNFAIRNESS Details of Draft Will Be Issued In Later Proclamation — Regulations Made Known Now. The draft system is one of equality and fairness, President Wilson ex- plained in a proclamation accompany- ing exemption and draft regulations. His proclamation said: “The regulations which I am today causing to be promulgated, pursuant to the direction of the selective serv- ice law, cover the remaining steps of the plan for calling into service of the United States qualified men from those who have registered; those se- lected as the result of this process to constitute with the regular army, the national guard and the navy, the fighting forces of the ndtion, all of which forces are under the terms of the law placed in a position of equal right, dignity and responsibility with the members of all other military forces. ‘““The regulations have been drawn with a view to the needs and circum- stances of the whole country and pro- vide a system which it is expected will work with the least inequality and personal hardships. Any system for selecting men for military serv: ice, whether voluntary or involuntary in its operation, necessarily selects some men tio bear the burden of dan, ger and sacrifice for the whole na- tion. The system here provided places all men of military age upon an even plane and then by selection which neither favors the one nor penalizes the other, calls out the requisite num- ber for service. “The successful operation of this law and of these regulations depends necessarily upon the loyalty, patrio- tism and justice of the members of the boards to whom its operation is committed, and I admonish every member of every local board and of each district board of review, that their duty to their. country requires an impartial and fearless perform- ance of the delicate and difficult duties intrusted to them. They should re- member as to each individual case presented to them that .theyi are ‘called upon to adjudicate the most sacred rights of the individual and to preserve untarnished the honor of the nation. “Our armies at the front will be strengthened and sustained if they be composed of men free from any sense of injustice in their mode of selec- tion, and they will be inspired to loftier efforts in behalf of a country in which the citizens called upon to perform high public functions perform them with justice, fearlessness and impartiality. ~ (Signed) § “Woodrow Wilson.” In rules and regulations governing the draft given out by Secretary of War Baker these exemptions are made: Persons engaged in industries which act of congress authorizes the presi- dent to exclude from the draft. Officers of the United States and of the several states, territories and the District of Columbia. Ministers of religion. Students of divinity. Persons in the military or naval service of the United States. Subjects of Germany residing in the United States. All resident aliens who have not taken out their first papers. Upon application to the local ex- emption board the following may be discharged from military duty: County and municipal officers. Customs house clerks. Persons employed by the United States in the transmission of the mails. Employees of armories, arsenals and navy yards of the United States. Persons employed in the service of the United States designated by the president to be exempted. Pilots. Mariners actually employed in sea service within the United States. Those with persons dependent upon them. Any persons members of religious sects or organizations organized and existing May 18, 1917, whose then ex- isting creed or principles forbid its members te participate in war in any form. Those found to be morally deficient. The duties of the local and district boards were also given. The details of the agrart wil pe given out in a later proclamation. GUNNERS HIT PERISCOPE Two Attacking Submarines. Are Driven From American Ship. The gun crew of an American liner fired upon two German submarines during her voyage from the United States to England. Both targets were at a considerable range, but the re- port to Washington of the comman- ding officer will express the belief that one periscope was shattered. The passengers expressed the great- est admiration for the marksmanship of the American gunners as shown both In practice and against the enemy. Ee Ef RN On oy TWENTY NEGRUES KILLED IN GLiS4 East St. Louis Race Rists Fatal fo Many ema BLACKS’ DISTRIGT BURNED Three Hundred White Men Arrested by Military—While Homes of Ne groes Burn Whites Shoot at Blacks At least twenty negroes were shot and killed as they fled from their burning homes which had been set on fire by white mobs in East St. Louis, IL ] The exact number who perished in the burning houses is unknown and will not be ascertained for some time. Estimates of the number of negroes who perished in the fire ran as high as 100, but there is nothing authentic on which to base these estimates, ex- cept that hundreds of whites stood around the edges of the burning dis- tricts and fired at the negroes as they fled from their homes. Military rule was proclaimed and at the same time 300 white men were arrested and locked up at police head. quarters. The flames reached the very edge of the business district. The rioting is a recrudescence of race troubles that occurred here a month ago following the importation of large numbers of negro laborers from the south. Women and girls, joining the men, dragged negro women from the street cars in the downtown district. Early in the evening white mobs began to set fire to the homes in the negre quarter. State troopers themselves were dis. armed by the mobs in many instances and, together with the police, seemed powerless before the rioters. The disorder, which began when a mob of 200 negroes fired on an auto- mobile load of policemen, killing one, reached a climax in the broad day- light Monday forenoon. In this out- break three negro men and one white man were killed, two white men and two negroes were shot and wounded, and twenty-three others so badly beaten and stoned that they were taken to hospitals. With the saloons closed ang street car service stopped by order of the authorities, national guardsmen began escorting truck loads of negroes serey the iriver tq Missouri. Until the white women began to par- ticipate, negro women and girls had seemed immune from attack, but when this occurred, negresses, too, were ter- rorized and attacked. As the rioting downtown progressed undertakers lined their wagons by the curb ready .for the expected call to haul away the dead. Sixteen guardsmen were disarmed by members of the mob, who calmly asked the soldiers to give them their weapons “lest the guardsmen hurt someone in the crowd.” The guardsmen, according to the commander, Major William Klauser, patrolled the streets with loaded rifles, but were under instructions to confine aggressive measures to the bayonet. During the rioting no mem- ber of the mob was seriously hurt by the guardsmen and the outbreaks con- tinued in the heart of the city despite warnings of the police and national guard officers. LOADED CAR GOES INTO NIAGARA RIVER Twenty Passengers Missing and Sev- eral Are Iinjured—Car Turns Completely Over. A trolley car on the gorge route at Niagara Falls, N. Y., carrying forty persons, jumped the track and ran into the Niagara river. Twenty per- sons are missing and several are in hospitals seriously hurt. The car left the track just below the cantilever bridge, on the Ameri- can side of the river, and turned bottom side up in the rushing current. The cause of the accident was said to have been a washout. The roadbed under the cantilever bridge at the point where it occurred is a elay fill, and recently heavy rains washed it out below the surface of the roadbed. ‘When the heavily loaded car struck the weak spot the rail on the river side, about ten feet from the water, gave way. The car turned on its side, slid down into the water, and, as it struck the rocky bottom of the river, turned completely over, the top of the car resting on the bottom of the river: FOUR DIE IN MOTOR WRECKS Train Smashes Into Auto; Two Killed In Motorcycle Collision. Four killed and four injured was the Sunday automobile and motor cycle toll in Allegheny county, Pa. One of the injured probably will die. Two of the deaths and two of the injuries occurred when two motor- cycles collided, head-on, on the Noblestown road, near Camp Hill, Col. lier township. One man was killed and two were Injured when a westbound Allegheny Valley railroad train struck an auto- mobile at the railroad avenue cross ing in Springdale. W. 8. Kidd, a Civil war veteran was fatally injured when “Struck by an automobile in the Lincoln high- | Versailles township. COMMANDS TRAINING CAMP AT PLATTSBURG | Photo by American Press Association. | COLONEL PAUL A. WOLF. Colonel Wolf has his hands full in caring for the thousands of young men, mostly civilians, who are being intensively trained for officers’ com- missions in the nation’s armies. He has the reputation of a strict diseci- plinarian, but not a martinet and gets along well with his students. SECRETARY BAKER OPPOSES COAL PACT $3 a Ton Unjust and Unreasonable, He Declares—Sensation | Washington. Secretary of War Baker’s repudia- tion of the coal price pact made be- tween the operators and members of the coal production committee of the Council of National Defense and other representatives of the govern- ment in Washington has created considerable of a stir. It was agreed at the meeting that the government should pay a maximum price of $3 a ton for bituminous coal on cars as it comes from the mine, Secretary Lane of the department of the interior, who participated in : the conference in which the tentative maximum price was reached, had praised the operators as patriotic and told them that they deserved the grati- tude of the country. Mr. Baker, on the other hand, stated in his letter that the price was exorbitant, unjust and oppressive and that the coal pro- duction committee had exceeded its authority if it had made any such agreement. There were other developments which made it evident that the gov- ernment as represented by the presi- dent and some other officials were prepared to make a determined fight on prices. Secretary Daniels announced he had ordered fuel oil, gas oil, gasoline and distillate required for the navy up to Sept. 30 to be furnished as needed, the prices to be determined later on the basis of cost of production, plus a reasonable profit, He said also that he would not pay the $3 per ton for bituminous coal that had been agreed upon as a maxi- mum at the conference of operators to which Mr. Baker in his letter re- ferred. He said he was getting coal now at a price of $2.33 at the mines and $2.85 at the ships. THREE KILLED BY CAR Interurban Hits Auto on Pittsburgh and Butler Line. Three persons were killed and three were injured, two seriously, when their automobile was struck by a southbound Pittsburgh, IIarmony, Bune gout New Castle railway street car a riders crossi os ssing, near Evans The automobile was demolished and its occupants were hurled in all directions. io In Open Boats Nine Hours. The captain and crew of twelve men of the Norwegian steamer Sorland, torpedoed off the French coast, were brought to an American port by a steamer which picked them up after they had been in open boats for nine hours. The Sorland attempted to es- cape but the U-boat overtook and sank her with a single torpedo.