- . "iwwjMPMmw jui io,niisjivviv;Jfft"r-.-1' NIGHT EXTRA icimring 'FINANCIAL EDITION jSTRA VyN V V . 21fc r larger NIGHT EXTRA ol. m.-Now PI1ILAD32LPIIIA, WEDN I5SDAY, XOVJ3MIH5II 15, 11)10 CortmoiiT. 101(1, nt tint Pintle I.iixirn CourNt PIJIOB ONE CENT RAILWAYS JOIN P.R.R. IN FIGHT ON 8-HOUR LAW Injunction Sought Against Eniorcing auuiubuh Act GENERAL MOVE IN EAST Objections to 8-Hour Law Made in P. R. R Suit mHE net deprives employers and Congress is not lawfully empow ered to enforce the net. I? Is nn unlawful invasion of rients, personal liberty nnd property. The act is illcRal, inoperative nnd Mt blndinK because of .the incon sistent nnd conflicting intcrpreta- Brforeement of the act will largely increase amount of wages which will b payable to company's employes liter January 1. Congress did not attempt to define In what manner present standard iay's wages should bo ascertained. FIRST SNOW OF WINTKU II KUE WITH COM) WAVB Flurries Make Debut of Season as Thermometer Fnlls 10 Degrees Tho nrst snow of winter fell In Phlla ilclplila today after the mercury linit did down the tlicrmonicter nineteen degrees tn twelve hours, in mot parts of tho city It melted, however, before It touched tho ground. Today the city was tho center of the eastern cold area, n record November rold wave having swept across tho con tinent from the Northwest, breaking low temperature records for this time of tho year In many parts of tho country and ns far South as tho Texas panhandle. The tempera ttiro was 31 degrees at 8 o'clock, and Forecaster George Hllss has predicted a temperature of !8 degrees or lower for tonight. Snow flurries were inter mittent during tho day. Tho tempcraturo roso to 36 degrees at noon. WILSON MAY TAKE PEACE INITIATIVE, APPONYI ASSERTS Election Assured, President "May Prove Different," Hungarian Says D. S. RETALIATION URGED AS ANSWER TO BOYCOTT NOTE Drastic Action Unlikely, However, in View of Possible Results COMMON GROUND NEARER GERMANS BATTLE IN VAIN TO REGAIN GROUND ON ANCRE All Teuton Counter-Attacks Crushed by British, Haig Reports A eeneral movement by tho railroads of (h East to tesi mo icKHiuy " "" "" Em eliht-hour law affecting railroad cm- yloyes Is presaged by the action taken this ''afternoon by tne i-cnnsyivunm jutum.. Tt. company filed n bill In equity In tho rnlted States District Court asking nn In junction against tho thrco Federal District Attorneys In Pennsylvania to prevent them from prosecuting the company under tho provisions of the Adamson law. PWIqwIng tne action ny mo i-ennsyivnnin. Baliroad, the New York Central also filed bill of complaint In the United States Dis trict Court In New York asking that tho Aiamsoh law bo declared unconstitutional. In line with the steps taken by tho Pcnn ijlnnja and Newr York Central roads, Charles Heebner, of tho Philadelphia nnd Hading Railway, announced that the Read ies .would tako similar action during tho present week. Many other big Kastern iritems are expected to follow suit. In' the West similar steps have been U!n by the Union Pacific and other roads. The bill of the Pennsylvania Company lilting that the Adamson act be declared unconstitutional was filed through John G. Johnson. .ATTERDUUY SIGNS PLEA in affidavit to the truth of the facts ret forth In the action brought by the Penn Ijrlvanla road Is appended to the bill and 6 pea by W. "W. Atterbury, vlco president tlarge of operation. tit Feaerat District, Attorneys In Penn ijtnnla are Francis Fisher Kane, eastern ; Jtojkr S. Burnett, middle, "and U. Lowry Homes, western district. The bill goes on to contend that Con gress Is not lawfully empowered to enforce rich a measure and that the act itself de prives employe and complainant of liberty of contract. COMPANY'S COMPLAINT The bill says In part: 'That the Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany now pays and did on September 3 and 5, 1916, pay to Its engineers wages or 'compensation corresponding with the amounts or rates originally determined through and by awards mado by boards of arbitrators appointed pursuant to agree ment between the company and tho Bald employes; that It now pays and did on September 3 and 5, 1916, pay to Its fire men, conductors, trainmen nnd baggagemen wages or compensation corresponding with the amounts or rates originally determined through' and by awards made by boards of arbltrators appointed pursuant to the act i uongrets or the United States, ap proved June 1, 1898, entitled "An act con .cerning carriers engaged In Interstate com ntxu and their employes," generally known and, referred to as tho Krdman net or to tke act of Congress of the United States, approved July 15, 1913, entitled 'An act providing for mediation, conciliation and arbitration In controversies between cer tain employers and their employes." gen erally jtnown and referred to ns the New lands net The 'Adamson law Is then given In Its entirety. BILL NOT BINDING, HOAD SAYS The bill also contends that the Adamson Uw Is Illegal and Inoperative and not bind ing upon the complainant because of tho In consistent and conflicting Interpretations. ia pointed out that neither now nor at tte date of passage of the act wad thero b exlatence any day measured by hours or ork done that could be regarded ns a andard day. Nor was there any wage Hid that could be regarded as a standard tot employes embraced In the act. The company avers that nfnr,n.m f act win largely Increase the amount f wages or compensation which will be jrable to Its employes after January 1. The company further contends that the WOULD MEAN TRADE WAR WASHINGTON, Nov. 15. Publication of tho note of tho British Foreign Ofllce refus ing to modify the British blacklist of American business firms has brought scores of demands from business men that tho United States now wield tho weapon of retaliation, tho Instrument of last resort, as a means of obtaining relief. Sccretnry of State Lansing and President Wilson today were nearlng their final deci sion as to whether retaliation shall be em ployed and British ships bo refused clearance from American ports when they refuse to carry the exports of tho black listed firms. Tho matter has been given a great deal of attention by Secretary Lansing since receipt of the blacklist note, seven days before election. Notwithstanding the flat refusal of Great Britain to adopt a policy In accordance with the demands of the United States, State De partment officials today said there was small likelihood that retaliation would be employed. President Wilson and Secretary Lansing, It was said, had resolved to accept the re port of ofTlcials of the Department of Com merce and tho Federal Trade Commission, whose Investigation of the subject brought recommendations that plans for retaliation bo dropped. They held that such a course would result In the Allies adopting counter retaliation, which would play havoc with American commerce In all quarters. A sharp rejoinder to the British note is not unlikely, some officials believe. They think the State Department will hot over look the following paragraph In the note, which is signed by Vlscvunt Grey, British Foreign Minister: I am bound to observe what I do not. think will bo denied that no adequate action has yet been taken by the Gov ernment of tho United States to sup press breaches of neutrality of this particularly criminal kind, which I know it Is the first to discountenance and deplore. Tho "particularly criminal kind" referred to the Viscount's own statement that Ger. man business firms In the United States had been the bases of supplies for German war ships and paymasters of "miscreants em ployed to destroy by foul means factories engaged In making or ships engaged In carrying supplies required by tho Allies." Aside from the assertions regarding thin alleged failure of tho United States Gov ernment to suppress such activities, tho British note is largely a reiteration of tho British contention that the blacklist policy, being directed entirely to the governing of the trading operations of British sub jects, Is entirely within British rights. r , t FRENCH JOIN IN FIGHT Extend Positions Near St. Pierre Viiast G000 Foes Arc Captured COUNT APPONYI By CARL W. ACKERMAN BHKLIN, Nov 13 campaign worries off his mind, his election assured. President Wilson "may prove an altogether difterctit President and see his opportunity when the moment arrives to help obtain peace in Europe." So declared Count Apponyl, one of the. most prominent of Hungarian leaders nnd a world figure before the war In the peace-by-arbltrntlon movement, on his arrival hero today from Budapest to speak at a special meeting of the Ilelchstag. He de clared peace was "getting nKirer." "I'm sure It's on its way." he said. And he added with a happy smile: ' "I don't mean pence will come next week or next month or within two months even. I am only certain that the founda tions for peaco are now being laid. If you will compare the speeches of Chancellor Bethmann-Hollwcg and Earl Grey, made ut the beginning of the war, with what they have said recently, you will seo that tho two rhlcf belligerents arc getting on closer ground. They are Mill wide apart but they arc approaching a common ground. And why not? All wo nsk Is Kccurity. We ask nothing but to be pcrmltled to live and develop In peace. COMMON G HOUND KOIt PEACE "Wo able that kind of penco which the people of nil civilized nations want tho peaceful opportunity to Ilvo ami exist hap pily as a nation." "Is this 'common ground' the desire of all nations to have International agreements which will keep peaco?" tho Count was asked. "Yes." he nnswered. "Tho peaco which closes this war must he u peaco which guarantees future world peace if such peace can bo; anil I don't know why not. Tlyn all this horrible bloodshed will not bo In aln for futuro generations." "But docs England want peace?" There are peace parties In till :auntrles England, France, P.iusla. of courso Continued on Pace Sl. Column Tnci LONDON. Nov. IS. With no abatement In the fury that at tended Its Initial smash, tho British stotm of metal and men against Germany's daunt ed suViirfiicr formications on both t.Ides if tin Aticrc ltlver continues. All lato ills patches from the front said German counter attacks bae lu-en futile against tho Brit- lib. who nr holding the innermost socllons ff Hsit n taken at Beaumont, Hamel, Ream-Mint and St. Plerro Dlvlim. General Haig olllclally reported to tho W.ir mid' ('iday Hint hn has completely to-iin-ii the gri'iind recently won, nnd that bo ha. taken many moro prisoners, lio tinuniimvd he would send a moro enmpre 1 imiic rrp.ni later. T,i.' i.immi outpouring of high explosives mill shrapnel from tho British big rfini3 iiinnriMl t.i renter on tho German lino I'rnun niiout Mlrauniont to tho north and t nn.. mit to the south. Mlrauniont Is tin itnpio'i i t railway center nnd affonl.j an a eo o m cluet-le.i!rand, which Is opposite lle'Hiiernn nnd slightly more than two into nnrthweit of Bapaume. Graudcourt, on tir .Nnere'M south hank. Is on n south ram. ii lunnch of the railroad that cctitora nl Achiet-lc-Grnml utter passing through Miraui'ii nt. . Tho tot rifle effort spent on capture of Beaumont, military experts said, coupled with operations described in late press dis patches from the front, led military experts to believe General Halg already has be gun a flank movement, with Its pivot nt that village, to encircle Mlrauniont. The number of prisoners taken continue to mount. Nearly flOOO wore In the British rear when General llalg filed his last re port. And the German losses also arc reaching serious numbers. For the first time slnco tho battle of tho Somme began, the defenders' losses havo exceeded those of tho attackers, according to General llalg. Tho mighty thrust which the British launched .alone Is now receiving the co operation of tho French. Strong French Infantry attacks wcro driven homo south of Bapaume. Throughout the night there wns violent cannonading nil along the twenty-mile strip of Somme front. While German Infantrymen sought to stem the onrush of tho Allied legions, massed batteries of Krupps maintained cur tains of drumfire along, the rear of the new Allied positions. ' Dispatches from tho fiont today give graphic accounts of fighting amid the ruined buildings of Beaucourt, which were captured by General Ilalg's men on Tues day. Tho German garrison holding tho village had fortified most of tho houses and had built tunnels connecting up these blockhouses underground. Even tho cellars had been turned into fortresses. When tho British soldiers began to fight their way through tho streets, clambering over the piles of wreckage, they wero met with withering blasts from maclilno guns nnd lilies. Tho combat finally resolved Itself Into a hand-tii-hand struggle, In which tho bayonet played the chief part. Using their list, like clubs, the soldiers battered their way fbrwaril Canadian troops played a big part in the fighting. According to olllelal dispatches from the Canadians' headquarters to the War Olllce today the Canadians captured 1000 yards of German trenches. Including tho last sec- Continued on l'a" I'ol'r Column Twu PARENTS AND DAUGHTER HELD IN DEATH OF GIRL Finding of Body of Missing Daughter Reveals Alleged Murder in Illinois Continued onj'nae Sis. Column One THE WEATHER FORECAST For Philadelnhia ami mVi...v.. rr .' afternoon and tonight, with rrebablu snow flurr? .;.i,.. u-j fonf, with lowest temperature about iy-tght degrees; Thursday partly . ty and contmucd coW; gentle vari m$ wiyd. VVitii .. ft . S!i? ; I ??-.-o Pm. , " .wn uuiiia.i;ia a, m, oRK B,VKB TII,K I'HANOKS !.! HE!TNUT STIIBBT WHAUF mViur' '22! '" I S?" water .J'J:1T p.m, ".itr .0.-OJ a.m. 1 nigh water. 53p, m. "2TtATl)RK ATTACH IIOUK .101 UT 121 iTtQl "a ACCUSED OF KILLING MOTHER AND BROTHER John Edward Teiper Placed on Trial at Buffalo Charged With Fiendish Crime rsmL i n nf PONTIAC, III., Nov. 15. Jacob C. Die mer. wealthy retired farmer, his wife, Marie Piemer, and his daughter Magdalene were today formally charged with manslaughter In connection with the mysterious death of Christine Dlemer, another daughter, a nor mal Bchool graduate, whose bruised body was found In the Vermillion niver. All three were arrested. They were later released on J10.000 ball to await the action of the Grand -Jury. It developed that the murdered girl con trolled the family finances. When Coroner Myers went to the farm and asked for the dead girl's personal palters, the father gave him two of his own notes, one for J1300, and tho other 11300, both, made out to Christine, He handed ever also a check for 50 which she had made payable to her father. Miss Dlemer disappeared October !7. The family sold she had gone to Florida to spend the winter. This week Mrs. Frank Ilalnea, rowing across tho river, found the body. It was Identified, by the father and the theory of suicide was accepted until the coroner ordered an autopsy. Then It was revealed ahe had been murdered. Colgate Receives Appointment JEH315Y CITY, N. J-, Nov. 15, Colonel Austen Colgate today received from Gover nor Fielder fffrmal notification of his ap pointment aa adjutant general, to succeed iha lata Wilbur V. Sadler, lio has not as I yet formulated any reply, and did not UU wMtfer k wuM aaaast Ww aAc, QUICK NEWS P. R. T. ATTORNEY AGAIN FAILS TO SEE MAYOR Elllo Ames Ikllard, chief ceutiwl for the yhllmlelpliln Rapid Traatlt Oompany, today mntle another untmeceanful attempt to con fer with Mnyor Smith relative to the proposed 1uk of tiP Ritv , high-speed" line to the transit company. Mr. Jlnllnrd rnllnl :i; Mayor's office a elioit time before 1 o'clock and found ,'. Miyo: nWnt. Yesterday afternoon he made n iljiiUnr unBttcre-sful . 't. On troth orensjione he declined to Mate whether he Ued cove 'o- ... twiftteiit or whether he wnn simply tryhig to fntittc rcnfori !.-,, TODAY'S RACING RESULTS 1'iM Bowie race, selling, 2-ycnr-olds, 0 1S furlongs Meddling SItss, DT, 'roppleman, $10.60, 98.00, $8.30, vonj Green Tree. UjJ, Lykc, $a.80, 5p2.$0, second; Kuthryn Gray, lis, Dutwell, S?1).00, third. Sim?, i.oo a-n. BRYAN WILL BATTLE TO CONVERT DEMOCRACY TO PROHIBITION NKW YORK. Nov. In. WILLIAM JKNNIXGS 15KYAN. the old-tinio lender of Democracy, lias put aside all personal interests and for tlic next four years will strive ceaselessly to make the Democratic party declare for national prohibition. The former Secretary of State, here today for the first t'me since the late cam- paten started, stated his purpose in unmistakable terms. "When an issue arises," said Mr. Bryan, "it must be met. The pro hibition issue is here. The Demo cratic paity cannot afford to take the immoral side of a moral issue. "ilv work durinc tho ne:tt four years will be to do all that I can to make Democracy dry. That is the plain, unequivocal statement of my attitude. "It is not at all impossible that 'the two parties will in 1020 enter into active rivalry for the dry vote of the country. The Democratic party does not owe nnythitiR to the political bosses who control the politics of wet cities, and a consider able majority of President Wilson's electoral votes came from dry terri tory. "Of the dry State--, seventeen went for Wilson, two more were close and in four other Slates which he car ried, prohibition has virtually been decided on. The President carried nearly all the States in which women vote. Therefore, prohibition and woman suffraKe arc paramount to the party. They should not and will not bo side-tracked." Mr. Bryan will lose no time in KcttinK to work. His drive against the liquor element in tho party will be started from Indianapolis, next Sunday morniiiff, when he speaks before the .Women's Christian Temperance Union's national convention. He will" leave for Indiana tonight'. O'NEIL ORDERS PROBE OF ALL RISK CONCERNS Insurance Commission er Will Begin State wide Investigation STARTED BY PENSION MUTUAL DISCLOSURES Wood Got Big Salaries for Little Work, According to Examiners RELL WELL REWARDED WILLIAM J. BUY AN "Wizard" Wood No "Piker," Declares Commissioner WOOD, "Insurance Wizard of America," paid himself enormous salaries for what Insurance Com missioner O'Ncil regards as "doubt ful service." "Insurance Consolidator" Wood paid himself $9000 a year from tho Pension Mutual Life Insurance Com pany, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and $7500 from Union Casualty Insurance Com pany, of this city, and figured on 20,000 a year from tho American Assurance Company." Commissioner O'Nell says he dis covered the "insurance wizard" was paying former Attorney General John C. Pell $7500 a year for serv ices as counsel. Wood is described as. "no piker" by Commissioner O'Ncil, who also describes conditions of his compa nies' nffairs as not "savory." HUGHES LEADS WILSON IN MINNESOTA IJY 22.' ST. PAl'b, Minn., Nov. If..--With ten precincts of cMll.iti otor.s uml j-oliller votes from llfUen counties missing Hughes, nt noon, led Wilson In Minnesota by 223 on the face cf available figures. Uelurns tode" allowed the snme indPllnltmncKH, however, that will feature them until thu official recount In Hennepin Coimty (Minneapolis) tomorrow. Civilian voters thus far i?l: Wihion. 173,310; llUKhes, 178,652. Soldier voters in fifty-;ix of Boventy-ono counties give: Wilson. 971; Hushes, SS2. These totaled: HurIich, 179,531; Wilson, 17'.i.31J. Hushes's lead, 223. REPUBLICANS SEE LITTLE HOPE OF CALIFORNIA SAN" l-'KANClSCO, Nov. 15. Itesuinpllon of the olllclul presidential count 111 California today found Ilepulilicnn leaders almost hopeless of any iniportunt changes being made In the 3CO0 plurality slven President Wilson In tho unolllelal returns. Hughes has made less than 200 votes net gain In the entire State. Of this 190 votes gnln was obtained in l.o.s Angeles County. About one-fourth of tho precinclH are still uncounted. WILSON TO SET NOVEMBER :!0 FOR THANKSGIVING WASHINGTON. Nov. l.Y The White Ilous" loiUy officially announced for the first tlinu thai IVeshiej.t Wilxon l.d ieiRiiuu.l Nowmbiv 3u as Thunkxyivins Day. Doubt as to whether November 23 or Naxcinber 30 would bo Feleeled lias resulted In thousands of telegrams of lmiulr beinn re '.-, ed in tho taut three days. The President has not yet completed his Thanksgiving Day proclamation. PHILA. ELECTRIC CALLS ASSESSMENT OF 2.50 ON STQCK Directors of the Philadelphia Kleetrlc Company, at a meeting tn Camden today, called an assessment of 12.50 iter share, making the stock full paid. Tho assessment Is payable December 1. Tho last previous assessment was $5 a share and wati paid December I. I1H3. which brought tho stock up to S22.50 paid. Tho fiKsessiucnt called todas was h step in the refinancing plan of tlm coinpnny. The directors also declared the regular iniurtciiy dividend of l,i per cent, payable December 15 to stock of record November 21. BUFFALO, Nov. 15. Tho trial which will determine whether John Kdwnrd Telpcr 18 a matricide, nnd fuitriclde, guilty of one of the most fleldlsh murder plots In criminal annals, began here today. Debonair nnd well groomed, hl cheeks ioy with the cxerciao of a inllo walk from the penitentiary, tho young defendant looked the picture of confidence as he took his place In the dock. He smiled gayly to his wife, seated nearby, nnd watched court proceedings with detached Interest. The murders occurred nearly a year ago. On Orchard Park highway, outside the city, Mr- Agnes M. Teiper, her daughter nnd a younger t-on were returning home In nn automobile after n visit to John Teiper. The latter was following in n second automobile. Ills story and he was the only one able to furnish a connected version of the night was that lugnwuyinen Muuueniy niiacuru the car ahead of him. When he sought to Interfere he w-as knocked ueu?eIoen uml robbed, he said. Police found the mother and yours son dead and tlie oaugnter ciuuueu into insensi bility, They found valuables of which Jo)in Teiper said he had been robbed In a ditch nearby. Tho motive upon which they held Teiper for the crime was the nordld one of ineney an Inheritance hastened by crime Mrs. Teiper had n fortune of f 150.000, which she expected to divide equally among the three children. The tedious work of (selecting a Jury occu pied most of the time In court today. Both mm n creed to the taking; out of the court room of the testimony of the sister, Oraoe J BRIDE REFUSES DELAY; WEDS MAN IN HOSPITAL Illness of Bridegroom Only Pre vents Pomp and Circum stance of Nuptials James A. Kmmoiis. young society man, of 430 Carpenter street. (Icrmantown, was nt tltcd In n lounging roho and lay In his cot with a physician on one sldo nnd a nurse on the other when he was married in Chestnut Hib Hospital today to Miss Mildred Hughes, 150U North Sixteenth street. Young KnunmiH. who is convalescing from pneumonia, came through the ceremony In fine shape," according to his physician, Dr. J. T. Ullom. lio didn't show a bit of tern nerature even when tho final words of tlie ceremony wero pronounced by the He v. John f Francis, pastor of the Oxford Presby lerlan Church, 151'J North Seventeenth street. . ... The tialr vero to he married at C p. m. today with some pomp In tho Ilellevue Stiatford. But the bridegroom was strick en with pneumonia, and It was found neces sary to withdraw the invitations. The bride, however, was determined that the marriage should not be postponed, so she nrranged to wed Kmmons today at the hospital. Tim Ooodman room, wherein the cere- inony was performed, was transformed Into a bower with American Beauties and other (lowers. Kmmons was propped up in his bed with pillows, and he wore a little bou nuct of lilies of the valley In the light lapel of his lounging robe. His pale face wore a happy smile when the guests arrived. They were Mr. and Mrs. Hobert J, Hughes, parents of the bride, the bride, groom's mother, Mrs. H. Emmons, the bride, groom's three brothers. French, Lewis and Grey Kmmons, the attending physician, Doctor lilom, ana aims uiucKin, me nurse. CATTLE ON HOOF BRING $11.10 A HUNDREDWEIGHT KANSAS C1TV, Mo Nov. 13. A record price for beef cattle was paid at the local stockyards, w'iien forty bead, averaging 1357 pounds each, sold for $11.10 per hundred pounds. FIRE SWEEPING OIL STORAGE PLANT IN MEXICO WASHINGTON, Nov, 1.". Commander Frederick A. Trnilt. of llio battleship Illinois at Vera Cruz, reported to the Navy Department today that tho lire at Pnerta Plata. Mexico, in the oil storago ipmrt'ers bad destroyed four giant tanks filled with oil. Marines from tho gunboat heeling huvo been landed to help light tho lire, but so far have been unsuccessful. Tho oil was consigned to the Diitlsli Government. TOTAL DEAD IN PADUA RAID NOW NINETY LONDON. Nov. IS. Thirty more iindu. lime liecn found In house that wero destroyed In tho recent air raid on Padua, a news dispatch from Homo wild today. This brings the total dead up to nliiel. SENATE MAY PROBE INDIANA CAMPAIGN WASHINGTON, Nov. 15. Adinlnlblratlon lenders hole today are planning to have the Senate turn full attention to political affairs In Indiana whon the luveu- tlgatlon into national campaign expenditures, ii iieBiin. ueporm are ourrnnt llml approximately $2,500,000 was prnt In that State neerelly hy HopublleanH to brlnic about tho election of James K. Watson, of Itushvllle. nnd Harry H. Now, of Indian npolis, us United States Senators. It was learned today tliat Republican loaders In Congress will ulso Insist upon a thorough examination of tho Ucmlcratlo cxponso account In Ohio, Kansas and California during the gonoral investigation because no generally satisfactory explanation has ot been made us to why thoso normally Republican States went Democratic. ' 3 RAISE POTATOES WORTH $810 ON THREE ACRES HAGBHSTOWN, Md Nov. 15. Guy King, Maplovllle, brother of ex-Sheriff Otto W. King, has broken all local records by raising 600 bushels of peach blue potatoes off tbreo acres of ground. He values tho crop at 810,- or $280 per acre. A sweeping Investigation of Insurance companies of nil kinds doing business In Pennsylvania is planned by Insurance Com missioner .1. Denny O'Ncil ns a result of the sensational disclosures of the nffairs of tho Pension Mutual Life insurance Com pany, of Pittsburgh, Pa., with offlces In this city, and tho Union Casualty Insurance Company, of this city. Applications for receivers for both com panies have been made by the Attorney General's Department. Tho deficit of the Pension Mutual Life Insurance Company la said to be $1,098,422. nnd the deficit at the Casualty Insurance Company moro than $200,000. Both the Union Casualty Insurance-Com'. pany nnd tho Pension Mutual Life Insur ance Company are controlled by the Coiv solldated Investment Company, with offices' In the Finance Building. The dominating, power of this company l Lyndon D. Wood, who through a method of consolidation hoped to bring seventy-five Insurance com panies Into ono gigantic merger. These plans fell through when the Pen sion Mutual Life Insurance Company's tan gled affairs became public Tho investigation, said Commissioner O'Nell, wilt cover secret and fraternal so cieties. "I believe that wo will bo ablo before tho first of the year," said Commissioner O'Nell. "to bring to the public Information and conditions that will Impel the Legisla ture to strengthen the State lnsuranco laws very materially, nnd bring under the super vision of tho .State lnsuranco Departmeni every company Issuing an Insurance policy of any kind in this State." Tho operations of Wood were exposed further today when application was made for appointment of n receiver for the Union Casualty Insurance Company of Philadel phia by Attorney General Urown nt the reipieFt of lnsuranco Commissioner J. Denny O'Nell. gigantic scliemo to control seventy-eight Insurance companies In this country. Is president of tho Union Casualty, which ha offices at Third and Walnut streets. Insurance Commissioner O'Nell had some startling things to say concerning the Pen slor Mutual LIfo Insurance Company, with which the "lnsuranco miracle worker" Is nt pocketed. "Tho deeper we go Into the failure of the Pension Mutual Life Insurance Com peny," paid O'Nell. "the more we find to Interest us In our application for receiver ship. The department Is rapidly coming Into n lot of Information which will be useful lu clearing up what nppcars now to be anything but a savory situation," In tne application for rccelversh.p for the Union Casualty Insurnnce Company of Philadelphia It is nsktd that the olncers of the company be retpilred to show cause why tlie company should not be cither dis solved or its nffairs run by the Insurance Departmont In the interests of the stock-' holders. The rule is made returnable be fore Judge McCarrell November 29. It. C. Bowers is president and Thomas Wood is secretary of the company, BUI SALAH1HS TO WOOD Commissioner O'Nell wiya that I IX Wood, head of the Pension Mutual, has. hoc n paying )nnt enormous salaries for what O'Nell regards as very doubtful serv ices. For Instance, O'Ncil says. Wood has paid himself $UCU0 a year from the funds of the Pension Mutual and $7500 from the funds of the Union- Casualty Insurance Company, for which a receiver was asked In Harrisburg, and the commissioner says he Intended to have a salary from the American Assurance Company of $20,000 a year, "Certainly no one coujd accufce Wood of being a piker," observed Mr, O'Nell. " Tho exaniluer, It Is said, also discovered ' THIS PORT CHOSEN FOR SEVEN HUGE TANKERS Philadelphia will be the homo port of the seven tnnksblps which aro belnrr built for the Atlantic Refining Company for foreign service, Kach tanker will coHt . 4 AAA ft A A V t. r nl,.l.l mnrlna ullllAflrtt Anilnnt tnr 4 llM (nmnDnu room OJ mo l"nvtL vti ivruio- r -'"-- rurlnir for th nntUnt iIha. I av least fl(vvv,vvv. ouocuu , uuuhci, umwuv 0r""'" --" " -rwi 'dP VMn i LMWural W. arrivai at Z ho.ptut !" P ' ' ' ' announced that hU corporation Intended to make this port a shipping center. t . 9 that Wood was paying John C, ilcll counsel or for other services $7500 a year from the Union Catualty Insurance Jon pany and that one or two others got a Ilk sum, . "Mr. O'Nell made no such stalcine," tSJ? t. o,.