Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 23, 1919, Night Extra Financial, Image 1

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    "Wyv-
Euentng public Siefrger
5J'-VPi
' NIGHT
f EXTRA
F7JVAJVCIAL
tr
m
VOL. V. NO. 266
Entered aa Second-Clam Matter at the roatofflrr. at I'hlladelphta, Fa.
Under the Act of March 8. 1870.
PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1919
rubllihed Dally Kxrrnt Runway. Subscription Trie fft a Tear by UilL
CoprlRht. 1010, by Public Ledger Company.
PRICE TWO CENTS
THE WEATHER
Wellington, July S3. Fair tonight
and Thursday.
TKMrKKATLnn AT KACH HOUR
j 8 I 11 10 jll 12 I 1 I a I 3 4 ti
1 7.1 7.'l T5 175 7fl 7(1 t7.'i I I I 1
WW
1
E
Denied Bail, Prisoner in Glass
boro Shooting Mystery As
serts Robbers Slew Wife
FATHER-IN-LAW ARRESTED;
MOTHER IS WOUNDED
Describes Hand-to-Hand Fight
With Intruders Watch Miss
ing, Money Untouched
DENIES MURDER CHARGE
Family Physician Stands Up for
Accused Man Believes
Him Innocent
Mrs. Clnr.1 Sabor, twenty-seven years
old, was murdered in her home nt Glass
boro, N. J., early this morning. She
leaves three little children.
Mrs. Jennie Krasnc, her mother, was
shot in the left arm after grappling
with the murderer.
Charles Sabor, thirty-six years old,
husband of the murdered woman, wns
arrested on suspicion of having done
the shooting. He wns given a hearing
by a local justice of the pence, held
without bail and sent to the Woodbury
jail.
, Israel Krasne, the father of the mur
dered woman, wns arrested this after-,
noon as a material witness nnd held
under 1000 bail. He gave a check on
a Wilmington bank.
Sabor is a grocer in Main street,
Glassboro. 'He and his family live over
the store where the shooting occurred.
They came originally from Philadelphia.
Sabor Denies Guilt
Though Sabor was arrested, he denies
that he is guilty and says that masked
burglars entered his home early this
morning, shot his wife and mother-in-law
and fired a shot at him.
This story is supported by Mrs.
Krasnc.
Glassboro police, the county coroner
and detective nnd the county prosecutor
are working to clear up the mystery.
' Sabor himself mndc n long statement
after his arrest, in which he told of
hearing shots, waking to sec a maskoll
man standing in his doorway who fired
at him, and then finding his wife's
body.
Dr. Harry Clark, of Woodbury, the
Gloucester county physician, assisted
by Dr. Meredith J. Luffburry, of
Glassboro, performed an autopsy on
the murdered woman early this after
noon. The date for the formal inquest hns
not been fixed. Coroner J. Preston
Potter, and also Mayor of Clayton, have
i
U
1 1
taken charge of the investigation.
Mrs. Krasnc, mother of the murdered
woman, is in the Cooper Hospital,
Camden, where she was tnken for treat
ment. She has a bullet wound in her
left arm.
Mrs. Krasne made a statement today.
She was hysterical and told her story
with difficulty. This afternoon she had
recovered n little from the shock of the
shooting nnd repeated the details more
coherently.
Awakened by Shot
"Some time after 10 o'clock," said
Mrs. Krasne, "we had gone to bed
and I was half asleep when I thought
I heard voices outside the store. It
sounded like two men talking. I fell
asleep, nnd I do not know what time
It wns when I wns awakened by a
fchot. I thought it came from my son's
loom, where Charley was sleeping with
one of the children."
"A man came rushing into the room
where my dnughter nnd I slept. He
had a handkerchief tied over his face
and n pistol in his hand. He pointed
it nt my daughter and fired.
"He turned to run. I ran after him
and caught him. Ho was a man about
five feet eight inches tall. He wore
a black coat nnd n black slouch hat.
I grappled with him in the hallway.
It seemed that it was several minutes
that I struggled with him. Then my
strength gave out."
Mrs. Krasne, according to her story,
had been holding the hand in which
he held the pistol. Finally he wrenched
it free and raised the weapon to fire
at her. She threw up her left arm
and the bullet entered it.
Says Men Fled
The two men' then ran down the
stairs, after one of them had fired nt
Sabor, who by that time had been
aroused. Israel Krasne, father of the
' murdered woman, hnd also come into
the room by this time. Mrs. Krasnc
had tried to tear the handkerchief from
the face of the burglar, but did not
succeed. (
Sabor and Krasne left the house in
search of a doctor, Mrs. Krasne said,
after trying in vain to telephone from
the store. N
Doctor Luffbcrry, the family physi
cian, who has known the Snbors since
they came to Glassboro, was awakened
by them ringing his bell and kicking his
front door frantically.
Doctor Iiuilberry said: "Sabor
shouted to me, 'Doctor, come quick.
' Burglars have killed my poor wife.' I
naked him why he didn't get the police
i if'burglars were in his home. I wept
with the two men, and found Mrs.
i Sabor dead. The bullet had severed a
1 ' largo blood vessel, and she had bled to
deaths
"- Jf J'l have, known the Snbors for a long
'. -flme, I do not believe; Sabor is .guilty
i ' , -! tt8; enme. They were an unusually
- pdl'initfil -and 'loving "couple" , .
""'ii-'-"?''
I Hir ' -; W& IB
C ffSBBaMln r ifiriiiilMi't
MRS. CLAKA SABOR
Who was shot to death at her
homo in Glassboro, N. J,, early
this morning
IRIEO, U. S. REPORT
Probers' Findings Presented to
House Declare Evidence
Flimsy and Makeshift
PROSECUTION IS SCORED
Ity the Associated Press
Washington, July 2.1. Thomas J.
Mooney did not receive full justice in
his trial nt San Francisco for nlleged
connection with the prcp.-lredncss day
bomb explosion, according to a report of
.Tohn n. Dcnsmorc, former special agent
of the Department of Justice, who in
vestigated the case for the government.
The report, dated November 1, 11118,
wns submitted to the House today in
response to a resolution.
"The plain truth is," the report snid.
"that there is nothing nbout the case
to produce a feeling of confidence that
the dignity nnd majesty of the law have
been upheld.
"There is nowhere anything re
sembling consistency, the effort being
n patchwork of incongruous makeshift
nnd often of desperate expediency."
The resolution called for information
ns to activities of the Department of
Labor in the case of Dcnsmorc's re
port was forwarded by Secretary Wil
son, accompanying his own statement.
LOGUE CRITICIZES
U. S. COMMISSIONER
Says He Is "Passing Buck" in
Liquor Hearing When Tes
timony Is Refused
Criticism of United States Commis
sioner Mnnley. including a charge that
he was "passing the buck," wns made
by J. Washington Lngue in the Dis
trict Court in the Federal Puilding to
dny during n hearing of a saloonkeeper
who was charged with violating the
wartime prohibition law.
It nppenred that a woman who, ac
cording to agents of the Department of
Justice, had told them she purchased
the whisky from the defendant, was
prepared to take the witness stand nnd
deny that she ever made such a stote
ment. Commissioner Mnnley would not
permit her to testify. Neither would he
permit n patrolman called as a wit
ness for the defense to take the stand.
Mr. Loguc appeared as counsel for the
snloonmnn, Paul J. Kilbride, of Twelfth
street and Susquehanna nvenuc.
According to Agents Spraguc and
Foley, they saw him sell Mrs. Marga
ret Tyler n half pint of whisky fbr
seventy-five cents. This occurred on
Saturday. The government ngents
snid they stopped the woman on the
street after bIic left the saloon and
that she then admitted that she had
purchased it from the saloon-keepur.
Following a remark made by the com
missioner to the effect that there was a
place higher up for such argument, evi
dently meaning the higher courts, Mr.
Logue snid.
"Oh, there is a place higher up, is
tlcrc? So you are passing the buck?
Here we hnve the princlp.il witness nnd
you will not permit her to get on the
stand."
The saloonkeeper was held in ?1000
bail for court.
U. S. COURT UPHOLDS
WARTIME DRY LAW
Act Declared Constitutional in
Test Case Against Liquor
Dealer
New York, July 23. (By A. P.)
Constitutionality o! the wartime prohi
bition act was upheld in an opinion
hnnded down hero todny by Federal
Judge Thomas I. Chatfield, of Urook
lyn, in a test case against Stephen
It. Mlncry, a saloonkeeper, brought by
' t. t inn.. n..ifli t...,i.itii. r
Connecticut. Judge Chatfield's deci
sion was based upon testimony ho heard
tccently in New Haven where he sat in
the place of Federal Judge Edwin 6. ,
Tboaug, of Connecticut. '
MOONEY
UNFAIRLY
E
If Others Don't Speak I'll Put
Responsibility Where It Belongs, ,
Says North Pcnn Cashier j
MISTAKES WERE THOSE i
OF JUDMGENT, HE CONTENDS
Declares There Was No Inten
tion of Wrongdoing Will
Take Short Vacation
RECEIVING TELLER WARNED
E. L. AmBler Said to Have Been
Told Last Thursday Not
to Accept Deposits
Today's Developments in
North Pcnn Bank Scandal
Italph T. Mnyer says he is "the
goat" in collapse of bank nnd will
name those responsible for failure
soon if these men do not come for
ward. Itcported that Mover told the re
ceiving teller Inst Thursday not to
receive deposits, ns the bnnk was un
sound, llnnk failed the following
day. r.vnn I,. Ambler, receiving
teller, refuses to deny or confirm
this stntement.
Former Governor Itrumbaiigh
telegraphs from Maine that he
knows nothing of deposits made
while he wns governor, or of the
financial deals of his insurance com
missioner, Clinrlcs A. Ambler.
Liberty llond owners received
their bonds today.
"I'm the goat in this thing."
Itnlph T. Mojer, cashier of the de
funct North Pcnn Hank. Twenty-ninth
nnd Dauphin streets, now held under
$2.",000 bnil on criminal charges grow
ing out of the failure of the institution,
mndc this stntement today nt his home.
"Moreover," he ndded, "if sonic
people don't soon speak I will have
something to say nnd place the re
sponsibility where it belongs. There
nre other people in this thing."
Moycr, highly nervous, fnce un
shnven, dashed from the bnck door of
his home nt Third street nnd Olney
avenue nt 10 :.10 o'clock this morning.
He was overtaken before he entered an
automobile at the wheel of which sat
his brother, f!. S. Mojer.
At first he refused to reply to ques
tions. He puffed furiously nt a eignr
ctte. Suddenly his attitude changed.
Going to Take Rest
"Yes. I'm going away," he snid. "I
must get n rest for n few dnys. I do
not know where I'm going. When I
feel better I will return nnd do whnt-
cver I enn to help the receiver."
He wns then interrogated regarding
the business of the bank whjch caused
its collapse. Itegarding the notes w'.-h,
it is alleged, had been rediscounted he
snid ;
"Mnny things were caused by neglect.
The mistakes were those of the heart.
They were mistakes of judgment, nnd
there was no intentional wrongdoing.
I am waiting nnd taking all the blame
on my shoulders now. For the present
I'm the goat of this affair, but if some
one doesn't speak pretty soon I'll have
something to say which will cause quite
a stir."
Moycr reiterated his statement of
being n "goat." nnd ndded that he will
see that the blame goes where it be
longs. "Do you expect any more arrests?"
he was asked.
"I would rather not say," he replied.
"The entire cane is in the hands of the
district attorney."
Mnyer then jumped in the automo
bile and departed toward the city.
No Arrests at Present
AWhe office of Assistant District At
torney Joseph II. Tnulane it wns stnted
thnt no nddltionnl nrrests were expected
"for the present, at least," snjd Mr.
Tnulane.
Owen J. Roberts, n special United
States district nttorney, today was re
tained by several of the stockholders to
represent their interests.
Moyer's attitude regarding the failure
of the bank wns further brought to light
today when his nttorney, William Mor
gan Montgomery, said that he under
stood the cashier telephoned Evnu L.
Ambler, the receiving teller, last Thurs
day and told him not to accept addi
tional deposits as the bank wns un
sound. Mr. Ambler wns questioned nt the
North Pcnn JIunk today, where he is
working with the bnnk exnmlners. He
came to the little window and spoke
to newspaper men.
"Will you deny or confirm the stnte
ment thnt you were warned Inst Thurs
day by Mr. Moyer not to accept addi
tional deposits?"
"I will neither deny nor confirm it,"
said Mr. Ambler. Then he slammed the
window.
Message From Rrumbaugli
The Eveniso Tunuc LiAxjer re
ceived a telegram today from ex-Governor
Martin G, Brumbaugh, who Is
spending t lib summer in Maine, in
which bo states that he never knew
(hat state funds were deposited in the
bnnk. He likewise 'disclaims knowledge
of the financial dealings of Charles A.
Ambler, former insurance commissioner.
It is charged by William II. Gery, at-
Continued on l'ace, Eight. Column Threo
11 'i
Whon you fcJV o.r j-r 1 1 1 n ar.
talak .fit-
, naumveuh
IT
I
ASSERTS MOYER
HMSfflU
ML: Syj i
laBBBBBnir dHMJHJH
lr"'.v .' UK11
- . 5 wvk I
1
.,M.Wf.4vHM
MISS MAItII: KIANN
The singing ingenue of musical
comedy and Ha:r Clark, comedian,
reealed the fart that they had been
secretly married seeral months
ago, Mhen they mocd Into their
new cniinlrj homo on Long Island.
PENROSE SEES CITY
n
P A' tl .., . , . i'i
rredlCtS That Philadelphia Will
Soon Break the Bands of
sjuuii Diea me Ddiiu& ui
Contractor Rule
RAPS PARTISAN
POLITICS
I
Philadelphia is destined "to resume
Its rightful place in the van of Ameri
can municipalities," in the nplii'nu of
Senator Penrose.
' Tim itei'lflriltfot, K imtitnlH1 in n t.
-... .... ..i..i11 ,, iniiuiiK ii in ,,ii
introductory article he wrote for a
pamphlet on "Municipal Heform in '
Philadelphia." which is being which-
distributed in this nnd other hirge cith.
of the country. Copies of the pamphlet
nave ucen sent to senators anil con
i I
AS NATION'S MODEL
Kicssnicn nt nsi ngrnn. ...-. . .,i:t .ml
t. , . ., the stabilization of the roads credit and
Senator Penrose praises the new eityj. f;i!t, the recommended eousoli-
eharter recently adopted by the Legis- l,intions. The sum eventually would be
lature, nnd declares that, because of its returned to the government.
t i .... , , , , Government gunrantee of earnings
unanimous approval, "there should be ,;"trnfvor, "by the conference. In
no doubt of the dverw helming verdict J . , jt vn1 urp0(l that the Interstate
for municipal redemption nt the polls.'
"And in my judgment there w'll be
none," snid the senntor. "Most
pntriotic nnd grentest of nil American
cities in every fundamental strength
and virtue thnt is real Americanism.
Philadelphia will break the bands of
Contractor rule as easily ns if they were
ropes of sand. In being first among the
cities of grent size to give to the coun
try an illustration and pattern of
efficient administration, it will resume
its rightful place in the van of American
I municipalities."
Charter's Shortcomings
In Senator Penrose's opinion. "Mil-
nieipnl government increases in cfTi-; niinual contribution of excess earnings
ciency in the exact ratio in which is istn the general contingent fund would
divorced from partisan politics. )(1 increased to two-thirds, the remain-
"The new Philadelphia charter," he'jK one-third of this excess being re
adds, "foils to take a large step in this tallied by the company for distribu
dircction and is therefore not nil thatitinn nniong stockholders or other law-
it ought to be."
Senntor Penrose continues:
"The charter falls short in that it
does not definitely and nt once cut
nwny the incubus of pnrtisau nomina
tion, ejection nnd responsibility for
municipal rule which ultimately must
follow if Philadelphia is to enjoy the
full benefits of self-government.
"But ns (iovernor Sproul hns well
Isold, u charter from heaven would not
help Philadelphia or any other city un
less the citizens perform their duties
of electing the right kind of men to
public otlice nnd of exercising the right
kind of public iulluencc nnd interest in
their own affairs.
"To make it possible for the citizens
of Philadelphia to excicise such an in
fluence nnd to give them nn opportunity
to mnke the new charter effective, the
Legislature has passed a group of re
form laws dealing with election matters
Contlquetl on Pure i:uiit. Column Mi
SUN SHINES AGAIN
AND WEATHERMAN
GROWS OPTIMISTIC
Deluge Is Over, He Believes, and
Clear, Balmy Days Are
Soon Coming
The sun will take treuent peeps nt
Philadelphia this afternoon nR n kind
of promise for clear weather ahead.
"The sun may Tiot come out to stay,"
says the weather man, "but we don't
expect any more rain today. Wc think
the nun will be coming in and out 'this
afternoon."
Philadelphia was harder hit by rain
than any of the other nearbyjweatntr
stations, 0.01 inches having fallen dur
ing the eleven days of raluv, j
Pp to 8 o'clock jemlny.iftnorning
Philadelphia had hnd'morf than six
times as much rainfall as Atlantic City,
but during the last twenty -four hours
Atlantic City had almost two Inches
of rain, bringing her record up to 2,07
Indies for thj wet period.
New Yore was a close second to
Philadelphia with 0.32 Indies, followed
by Baltimore with .1.02 inches. Wash
ington, P. C, had 5.4S inches of rain
fall and Ilarrlsburg G.02.
Bcranton appears to be the only near
by town tmt escaped a deluge. Ita rec
prd. or the.perioil was only 2,00 Inches
BIG RA L MERGER
IE
CONTROL
OF U. S.
Transportation Conference Of
fers Plan for 20 or 30 Com-
potmg Private Systems
ADJUSTED RATES TO
URGED
ASSURE SIX PER CENT;n,v ,.,,..
hitlnn ls Depiih Simpnn. approving
Commerce Commission Would 'J'0 '"''"''"nt's definition of policy.
slmueil rnnhdence' in the government b
Adjust Scale, With Excess Pro- -S!) ' n. majority of n :i. The
viding Maximum for All
j By the Associated Press
1 Washington, July 2,'t. Private own
ership and operation of railroads, merg
ed into twenty or thirty great compel
ling sj stems under the supervision of
jn federal transportation board with n
statutory Mile of rate-making, assuring
to the loads a net return of (I per cent.
! wns offered to the House commerce com-
... , , , . , . ,
Inuttee todny as the plan of the natioinl
.transportation conference.
Harry A. Wheeler, of Chicago, for-
'mer president of the Chamber of Com -
lnrm' "f '" ' ,",,,1 htnt("- "1,"h ,,s-
n,l,r'1 "IP ,'f",fprc"t'0- explained "'"
hearings had been held for sit months
!n' ""h shippers, railroad men. labor
. . , , , , , ,
union oniciais nuu inuiKcrs oau nnn
eaid. The plan evolved wns snid to
I be a combination of the best features
"f l,,,lll' already put forward, with some
new elements assembled into what the
conference regarded as n hnrmonioiis
nhole.
Remedial Legislation Urged
Continued government operation, un
til remedial legislation is enacted, was
nrreil liv the conference, with the limi
tation that such legislation should be
enacted this j ear
With the return nt
the roads nt n time when mnny probably
' '"; tfSjl -
j ),,. f'ongress n railroad reserve fund of
-.nn nun (inn mlmlnistered by the pro
posed federal transportation board, for
Commerce Commission ne mime rrspim
slble for rates nnd fares, designed to
vicld the carriers in each designated
traffic section not less than ('. per cent
.. tnlm vfiliin nf the I
upon tlie aggrcRmv .- - -
property. Those roads earning more
than (5 per cent would he required to
j pt bnlf the excess into n company con
tingent fund until the fund amounted
to 0 per cent of the fair value of the
company's pro-ty. tlie oilier mm K
ing to a general railroad contingent
fund administered by trustees appointed
by government authority and maintained
for the benefit' of all the railroads of
the country.
After any road's contingent fund
. vfne
bed the fi per cent requirement its
ful purposes.
Contingent Fund Real Guarantee
The general railroad contingent fund
would be used to assure the 0 per cent
return, without entailing a gw eminent
guarantee or unreasonable rates. It
would be drawn upon by nil roads of
a designated traffic section when, in
any year, tlie net return fell below (I
per cent nnd those roads would shore
in the distribution pro rata to their
cros earnings. The fund would be
built up to $"."0,000.0(10. and any cx -
ces would be surrendered to the gov
ernment, to be used for providing addi
tional transportation facilities or les
sening the cost of transportation to the
public by reducing capital and invest-j
incnt accounts of the roads. I
(roiiping or consolidation of the rail- '
roads into competing sj stems wns de
clnred to be "essential, because railroad f
rates must be the same for similar ser
vices, whether performed by the weak
necessitous railroad or by the strong and j
prosperous one." The grouping should
be about the present strong si stems, it
was urged, along commercial lines and1
not by nrbitmry territorial sub-divi-
SIOIIS. UeSlllllIlK mrimiuiiui.i r-ll,Mllil
be subject to jurisdiction of Congress.
nccording to the conference, through
fedeial incorporation, with powers of
police regulation nnd local taxation re
served to the stntcs.
Director Sjstem Proposed
Pncli of the consolidated companies I
would be required, under the plnn, to
hnve twelve directors, three of whom
would be selected by the federal trans- ,llpnt nho1 t)lplr rowbml, ,uls carried
'doles nC """I0 K," "n'k ,,a' ' ,," '"cr
Itegulution by the federal govern- Schuylkill river this nfternoou.
Continued on Tone Klslit ''nluinn Two j
AUTO VICTIM UNIDENTIFIED
riniriu sircei. .Mounded. Scores were injured in vary-
Hunt on to Find Parents of Child1 He recently returned from overseas ,,, (loKr,.os nB mMt of ,
Killed by Auto lwllTP he 8m'((, as n 1!,,t,'ia'it '" """lists, clubs nnd stones nnd the wielding
The brown-haired boy, wearing knee.
pants, who was killed by an automobile : swimming to the Montgomery county i T)l0 mn knpa ,nst n,K,lt . ,fcnoc
which ran him down yesterday after-: shore, is Horry Brown, twenty-two n. Hiilbfinger, nnd the seriously wound
noon at Market street near Sixty-first ,,nrs oW ot Federal street. u,l man wns Benjamin Belmont, both
street ns he rode on a bicycle, has not Both men hnd been enmping nt I.afa- members of the defense guard, who
been Identified. His body is at the i ?'? nl)0,lt two miles above, the dam. were shot down on the street by n
Misericordln Hospital. I They left the camp this morning and . nrgro while doing duty In one of the
Search by police fnllea to reveal who
the parents of the dead boy are.
The child was barefoot nnd wore a
black oilskin coat and lint. He had nn u
gold signet
"V,. J,"
ring with the initials
KKASI10KK KXCrilfUONP KVKRY IJ.Y
vl rhlKdelphU R dins R. R. lo AtUntlo
City. 0tn City. TVIMwnod tn Cap SUy
IrfV Cheitnut St. and South fit. rtrrlti
J 9 A, . rr 11.25, JVir lax 10c. 4dvt.
Clemenceau Wins Decisive
Victory in French Chamber
"Tiger's" Government
to 176 After Strong Speech by the
French Premier
I Hy the Associated Press
I Paris. July L'.'t. Premier Clemen-
jreau. wlin wnn for his cabinet n wtc
jof inntidenco late jcstrrdn.i in the
Chamber of Deputies, emerged frnm the
'ciinllirt stronger thnn the text vote
urM Mite, which was on u deinnnd for
priori! j for the lesnliitinn of Dcputj
f'haiimet, gave the premier a uinjnritj
of ninety-one, the resolution being de
feated 'JT2 to 1S1.
M Cliaumet's resolution for which
priority wiih asked was on the high cost
of living. Priority for it was sought
oier the resolution of Deput) Augag
neur. which wns adopted I'ridaj by a
mnjiiritj of fourteen, the government
In in
the minnrit). It was the
Aug.igneur resolution that resulted in
'"' resignation of M. Horet the former
mmhI minister, now replai ed by Joseph
i j , s,-,,,,,,, K
i The premier directed his light. lie
nnd all his ministers were on the gov-
!mlm,1,,t 1"M"'11 l""1 "" 'i-i'nbcr was
Nter. was sent fust to the tribune, as
the interpellation on the eot of living
biought about the government's demand
fr v;,1,,' "( confidence. M. N.mleiis
wn followed b Kticmic Clcincntcl.
minister of commerce, llllfl I.ollis Loll-
..i , ikt,.,. ,,f reconstruction. These
three ministers had been the objects of
the chamber s principal ciitit'isms re
centlj. M, Clemenceau won applause even
PHILS TAKE FIRST OF
PHILLIES r
Bancroft, ss 0
BIackburne,3b... 2
Paulette.cf 1
Meusel.rf 0
Ludcrus, lb 0
Whitted.lf 1
c
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Sicking, 2b... ,
Tragressor, c.
Meadows, p.. .
0
1
1
Totals G 6 27 12 1
BASEBALL' SCORES-NATIONAL LEAGUE
PITTSB'GH. .00010000 0-163
PHILS 00... 2 1000003 x 661
Carlson & Schmidt; Meadows 4c Tragressor. McCormick & Harrison.
CINCINNATI u
NEW YORK (1st).
CHICAGO 0
BROOKLYN (1st) . . 0
Alexander and Killefer; Hiimnux and Millev.
FRANCE FACES BREAD RATIONS IN SEPTEMBER
ARISi Jul7 23. France may be imt on breud lations
again. It is said the system of bread caids probably will be le
establlshed la September, because of a po&iible tdiortage of
.wheat, ,,
fS - '
TI GO OVER FLAT
; 1 DEAD:
"
Boat, Carried by Swollen River, i
j
Carries man to Death One
! c,.,:, cf
wvvillia iu uaioijf
BODY NOT RECOVERED
j One man is reported to have been
drowned and another narrowly es, aped
The missing man, who is belli veil to
have lost his life, is Samuel Slmbin,
twenty four yfnrs old, of KL'IO South
IBs companion, who escaped by
' started to row uown me river, u ncn
I they approached the dam, they were
' caught in the swiftly moving current
! and the boat carried over the comb
Just as th boat started to go over the
dam, Shublu shouted to his companion
to jump into the water. This Broivn
refrained from doing. Shubin jupiped
sad-bas not been seen since. Both were
laiptrtnbjs, buUs. . , ,
R K DAM
Upheld by Vote of 289
from the opposition when he follow ed I
his ministers to the tribune and made
points in his address that caused some
of his leading opponents to laugh nt
members of their own parM. To tnn
sole himself for the criticisms of his
administration, the premier said. "I
have merely to think of those that will
he leveled at my stieicpsor."
Amid tense silence the old man
wnlkid slnwlj up the steps and turned
nnd saluted the Itlglit and Center and
glowered at the extreme Left. The light
of battle was gleaming in the "Tiger's"
i'j i' as he said in a low voice:
"You blame me for not having chosen
my colleagues from the learned. An
eminent man is not iieccssnrili a mem- I
her of the French Ai adeuii
The house laughed and was disarmed.
Strolling up and down the tribune. lie I
hesitated, stopped and then i ontiniicd : '
"You wanted nie to make war; I,
have made wir. You wished me to j
make peace It is harder to make peine
than it is to in-ike war. It is a ipies I
tiou of otiliilcncc. 1 lune obtained all
that France could desire and mntiv !
things that France could not hope for."
M. Clemence.iu expressed the desire
to go before the couutiy in new elec
tions. "I had thought." he said, "that after
live j ears of war I might rest, but I
hnxo been told. "You nride the war.'
"The work of peace must b in-
t'liuid. All the ambition which I hai
at this moment is that jnu Keep me in j
power until m work is done, ltut I
should gic you a cordial handshake ',
if j on send me from this tribune in the!
minority."
The premier described the situation '
Continued on 1'uge KIkH, Column tint
TWIN BILL FROM PIRATES
PITTSBURGH r h o a c
Bigbet', cf 0 0 4 0 0
Terry, ss 0 0 3 5 0
Stengel, rf 12 3 0 0
Cutshaw, 2b 0 0 0 0 0
Southworth, If.. . 0 12 0 0
Mnllwitz, lb o 0 11 0 0
Barbare, 3b 0 1 o 1 )
Schmidt, c 0 112
Carlson, p 0 0 0 o o
Ponder, p o 1 o 1 o
Totals.
1 C 24 9 j
0
0
0
0
jIROOPS END RACE
ITS AT
Organized Mob Violence Quelled,
but Sporadic Firing Continues
in Negro Districts
WHITE GUARD IS SHOT DEAD
Hy the Associated Press
Washliicton. July 2."!. Altlmuch
there was sporadic tiring in -omc of
the negro districts until early this
morning, the major casualties in last
"'&"t s clashes between whites and ne-
lI,'ops consisted of only one white man
, killed and another probably fntally
of IftllL'nil h,l. It. nnnn nt .l.nn .,--....,
., ,i, ,,.,, .,, ., . ,... .,
oincK districts.
2000 Soldiers on Guard
Despite the fart thnt the capital was
an armed ramp, the tourth night of tlie
race warfare was less violent than
Monday, when four persons were killed
outright and nearly a dozen serjoiuly
hurt, Feeling, which was Inflamed by
, CentlnuH as I'ait tt.,.CeJuu Caa
CAPITAL
JAPANESE DENf J
PARIS DEAL WON I
IHtUjIUI :
Envoys Declare Province Wasn't
Awarded for Withdrawal of
Racial Clause
WILSON FOUND IT FUTILE
TO OPPOSE NIPPONESE
Peace Conference Circles Seek
ing Compromise to Ap
pease Chinese
M'KELLAR LAUDS LEAGUE
Page Against Pact, He Tells
President Sterling Wants
Reservation on Article X
I5.i the Associated Press
Paris, .luh 2.T The Japanese dele
gation to the Peace Conference today
issued a denial of assertions that the
Shantung settlement in the fierman
pence treat.i was in exchange for the
withdrawal of the Japanese contention
regarding the raiial claiHC in the league
of nations eciennnt.
Conversations on possible compro
mises which would solve the Shan
tung problem constantly are taking
place. The opinion prevails in confer
ence circles that some arrangement
probably will be reached by which the
gentlemen's agreement formulated bc
twicii Japan and the other great powers
that Japan shall return Shantung to
China will lv made public.
While this agreement was not for
mally prepared nnd signed by the great
powers, it is known thnt notes were
made, but that the Chinese delegates
were never shown nny sort of written
document nnd consequently refused to
sign the trenty. They said verbnl state
ments were ton vague to insure thera
ngninst the permanent loss of Shan-!
tung.
While it is not known positively that,
the Chinese would sign the German
trenty nnd ithdraw their objections to
the Shantung settlement in'the treaty
if the gentleincn'h agreement were
definitely put on record in writing, the,
opinion seems general in conference
circles thnt such would be the case,
although some of the delegntes appar
ently believe the terms of the gentle
men's agreement must be amplified to
insure n return of full political rights
in Shantung to China.
Washington, July 2.1. (Ity A. P.)
Senator Page, Bepublicnn. Vermont,
frankly outlined his objections to the
peace treaty to President Wilson nt the
White House today and told the Presi
dent he would not npprove it. Beyond
tins statement Senator I'age would not
discuss the conference.
Senator Sterling, South Dakota, nn
other White House caller, said neither
he nor the President mentioned the
Shantung settlement. They discussed
Aiticle X of the league of nations
covenant referring to protection of na
tions against "external aggression,"
nnd the clnuse relating to the With
diawal of nations from the league.
Mr. Wilson's condition rontinued to
iniproie todny. and it was expected that
within a few dayp he would have en
tirely i isnvered from the effects of nn
nttucl. of intestinal trouble. The Presi
dent, however, still is wenk, nnd for
that reason held confluences today in
his study in the White House Instead
of in the executive offices.
Inquiry at the White House todny
concerning published leports that the
Sbantiiug provision of the peace trenty
was Piesideut Wilson's personal solu
tion of the problem brought neither con
til mntion nor deninl and only the state
ment that no comment would be made.
! I'nable to Sway Japanese
Senators who have discussed the
Shantung provision with the President
stnted. however, that they had not been
given to understand that the President
proposed the Shnntiing provision as a
solution of the problem, but that he had
found himself unable to convert the
Japanese delegates to any other view.
The senators said they had been told
that Piemiers Clemenceau and Lloyd
(Jeorge represented to the President that
they were bound by the agreements of
their governments with Japan, and that
if the Japanese statesmen were to be
converted to nny other views, the Presi
dent himself would hnve to undertake
the attempt. It was futile, the sena
tors snid they were told.
Senntors culling nt the White House
today were the last on the original list
I of iifteeu selected by the President,
but invitations for otlier ltepub
llcnns to cull nt the White House will
go forward from day to day, It being
tlie President's desire to confer with'
all of them before he starts on his tour J
of the country. '
President Collects Documents
President Wilson has been devoting1
some of his time recently to gettjng
together documents used by the Ameri
can ptfiee delegntiou at Paris which
have been nsked for by the Senate in its?
consideration of the treaty. Secretary
Lansing, who was to arrive In Wesh-f
ington late today from Paris, was ex
pected to assist In this work. s j
VhlIe the foreign relations commit-
tee has not yet reached a decision as
to railing members of the American
.iMo-ntinn for examination on featured
of tlie treaty, it la probable that Mr., ',. 1
Lansing will be summoned aCter itMV
committee 'completes thu reading of tfc
int. ivhlcli was coutlel toAi. ."' . 'ftP
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