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DAILY NEWS.
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R 20, 1916.        HOME EDITION  ON SALE EVERYWHERE IN CHICAGO AT OR BEFORE 5 O'CLOCK
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ANDS IN NEW YORK   Details on Page 1 of Main Sheet
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ILLIAMS
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COACH MURPHY OF
PPOSING TEAMS IN THE

Daily News.]
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N MIDWEST PIN MEET
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oweiers Threaten to Start a Rival Organization.
The Chicago Daily News.
s, Mo., Nov. 20.—Peopria bowl-
p the hatchet, dipped the brush
r paint and went on a tear late
 The cause of all the trouble
 he 1917, middle wesern [[western]] tourna-
en    to Des Moines,

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FULTZ ON WARPATH; STIRRED BY REBUFF
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Head of Players' Fraternity, Turned Down by Minors, to Push Demands.
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STRIKE IS A POSSIBILITY
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National League Owner Says Showdown in Controversy Is Bound to Come.
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BY OSCAR C. REICHOW.
President Dave Fultz of the Baseball Players’ fraternity refuses to take a blow on the chin without putting up a vigorous fight in behalf of his organization. He attended the meeting of the National Association of Minor Leagues last week in New Orleans and was not given the hearing expected. He was turned down cold, but despite that says he will not permit the request to rest, but will take it up to the higher powers for official decision.
I Fultz’ demands are shunned as they were in New Orleans trouble between the fraternity and organized baseball is likely to be born. It is reported in the east that a strike of the payers is possible and that the men of the organized ranks will be compelled to grant their requests. If the war comes it will take place before the teams go south and it is possible that the major league and some of the major league club owners will be forced to delay the starting of their annual journey to the southland.

Sends Requests to National Body.
The executive of the fraternity refused to comment at length on the action taken on his demands from the National Association, but intimated that the association was influenced in its decisions by word from the powers in the higher ranks. He said:
“We did not think the National Association would do anything of its own account. We knew that if it did anything it would come from the powers above. For that reason a copy of our requests have been sent to the national commission.
“Before the fraternity takes official action I want to see what the commission has to say and whether it will grant us a hearing. I want to hear what the commission has to say officially before I say anything and, besides, it does no pay to jump at conclusions too

SPORTING EXTRA
LATE NEWS BULLETINS
EXPLOSION ON BOAT KILLS 2; MAY BE OTHERS DEAD.
[By The Associated Press]
New York, Nov. 21. — An explosion dnc apparently to a defective boiler cost the lives of at least two men — the captain and the engineer — on a tugboat, the Rembler. on the Brooklyn water front to-day. The bodies of two other men, a fireman and a deckhand, are believed to be in the hold of the vessel, which sank at its pier. A score of other persons working on lighters in the vicinity were injured.

HOLLAND PROTESTS AGAINST BELGIAN DEPORTATION
[By The Associated Press]
London, England, Nov. 20. — An Amsterdam dispatch to the Wireless Press says the Dutch government has instructed its representative at Berlin to notify the German government that painful impression has been produced in Holland by the deportation of Belgian civilians.

BELGIAN ORDERED TO REBUILD DINANT HOMES
[By The Associated Press]
Amsterdam, Holland (via London), Nov. 20. — According to the Telegraaf, the German have ordered the owners of houses which were wrecked in Dinant, Belgium, in August, 1914, to rebuild as rapidly as possible. If they are unwilling to rebuild their houses they must remove the wreckage and make the sites into gardens. The town of Dinant, the Telegraaf says, has been ordered to rebuild the belfry of the church, toward which the German ofer a subsidy of $3,000 from the Begiar budget. The twon has protested against the order.

PICKLEMAKERS PAY $100 A TON FOR CAULIFLOWER
[By The Associated Press]
Riverhead, N. Y., Nov. 20. — There is such a shortage of all articles that can be used for pickles this year that agents of pickles manufacturers paid as high as $100 a ton for cauliflower to farmers here to-day. Riverhead is reputed to be the principal cauliflower market of the