I HP ' Jj-v- ,.V, 'c . -,.,. ' ' rbJ 1 - I ilCKSTERS DENY BOOSTING PRICES i.OUrb Doalers Say Wholosalors Forco Costs Up by Hold ing Food Stocks REFUTE LOAFING CHARGE City huckttcrn arc Indignant nt charge that thev work ono iln nui loaf one day." They also a-fort thoy ' dot responsible for the (MflrrcuroH between wholesale nnr! rotnll nrioos of Tegetnblen. William Ii. Walsh, president of the TbllaMelphla Curb Mnrket Men A wiclntlon. today made n counter-neounu-tiou against rortaln commission uier Chants, who, ho says, if they ennnn eft top prices- for produro. Iinld it mid let,it rot, rather than sell It at lower prices. "I won't nay tliut thin class of wharf merchant predominates." said Mr "Walsh, "but I will sn.v thorn am man of thorn, and that the very ones who have been attacking the huoUsters re cently nre nothins mnro nnr loss than profiteers in this way. rt.A,. ,i nni Vinv tholr stuff from tlio Routh or from farms of Pennlruiiia or , New Jersey, but buv it at tho wharves nnd resells at n larse profit Thi base their selling price onl on the scarcity of the artlole. "Other wharf merchants, and thiinl; fullv thpy are in Hip mnioritv. keep in Close touch with the publlo through us I the. hucksters, nnd If we tell them that , a -certain article will not brine proht at the price they nr" asking thev will come down in prleo. rather than let u CO awav without bujins. As a te-mt. those fellowH are cleaned out everj night vhllp the other man has stork iieoiimu- , latins "Charges that we work one dn nnl i Innf Iho next nre ull 'blink.' If we can not Ret a certain ORctnblo at a reason able price, and Hint von often occur-, we do not take that particular veRotnble on our da's route. Acoordlnely. sonic days we stnrt out with only si or .. lll... i...l.n.l rtf tnti rf ii in?Ol . '". . Z ,, l.liV f I is ossib .to but we E" ""I d! ij if ,1 P"--1"" to ret nnv stock at all. ' gei nny mock v ... . ' "Our hours nre from ' o eincK in tne p0sKihlf. mornitiR until II o'clock In the after- During the worst period of the short -noon, nnd it i stonily, hard work. Sonic nR0 t(ltlti nf .i.-..0(i0 was lost in ex of the commission merchants who nave, 0rti,)nt,. t.rnilum. durinR two d'ivs' been attaekinu us work onl from -i a. ' bu)lnB bj "Mr cker. but while he was m. until noon. lioidins down tl snpplv hniiRht from 1-i.nti. Hupp Trollts quoted tnc inolut a hi. f ...nnnL 1 ..hiillence llll Otie to tilll ... . . " .i,i..i, I...,-.. teen luiiuiripnlitj joint action was initiated "Ah for the prices which lime licen , Wnshinrtn,, ..,! ut ltrrl.h,,n. .i.i..k ns hhowlns that we ore protiteer. ,.,,,,,, inimr(,latl, priority order . the are misienuiiiK. .- "" "' for tiftcoii rnrlond, of coa ii dnv. el false sncli in. the ciiarRe . T)l r(l((U w k iuer mnrfe . ',1 on thirt baets ,., , ,. , . . , VI 1IIIIIUH" f. ....-.,- "- f a case of such prolit as that. Some of the linusualb low prices quoted h the commission merchants in their chnrRes are on portable which no otic wmilii bitv. and which are ili-tim th third .rate. It is unfair to compare the pi ices rcharscd by hucksters with tho-e of -nt-tin tomatoes and jcilow ciuumhers and bad cantaloupes In the wholc-nle markets. Persons roIiir there to bin produce never buy such thins, and they are only sold when the cunninR season starts. "The hucksters of Philadelphia sell Uielr Roods as chenplv as they enn. tak- Inc into account the wnRos of the driver, his nssistant. the upkeep of a horse, and otlier continuallv increasing costs. 1 tell my men to sell 'at lower prices rather than briiiR a load or unj part of n load of vegetable back. It fv to my ndvhntase. a- well as to I net "of the public. , ' "Can the commission merchants, who wait until an nrticie is scarce and then ,boot prices, say ns much.' I hey know hnf lliev enn nlwats dispoec of tlieir, oiuirlu tn'ixtiiMisivp retail liou-rs and ho tels. so thej do not worry abut huck sters, but in doing as they do they arc mnkinR the public suffer." P0NZI CONTINUES TO PAY Attorney General Finds Nothing II 'legal in Get-Rich-Qulck Scheme ... Tnnl bv doubting investors in his get- rich -quick scheme of international postal eexhango continued today while new believers in tho nnssibility of nb nnrmnl nrnfit tool; their mono to a Iloston. .Iul 25'. I lv .. IM ino'sim inai ouiers mr imeen ciirioiuis u ,', inv' run' nn the coffers nf Charles' dny wore issued b the two commis- rival a few blocks awa. I Former Police Lieutenant's Parole Ponzi. having a"-"! 1 'W'r'l Officer Gives $1500 Surety Attorney Pclletier to accept no ijpposit' ,..,,. , ,. ,. , nntil investigation of his accounts had. 1'avid It. Bennett, former police lieu- , been mnde. stood in his enlarged offices tenant nf I'hiladeli hu. is making prep and saw everything going out. with no arations for leuving tne Chester count new funds coming in : but. although jij.il on pnrnV Sunday inorning next, payments in thei nt two days nre esti- about o clock, in company with Her- , mated to have exeocded SI .000.000 he man (i Hutt. whom the court named1 was honoring everv demand. His rival as Burnett", parole officer. He will foreign exchange company, with a come to Philadelphia, whorp he will I promise of ."( per cent profit in forty-1 greet hi. wife and children. The latter I five days, was taking all the money pre- he hus not -ecu -ince lie entered the, sen'trd. with no immediate payments to 'prison door. , ,,,,,, , be made. There wns a fair -sized crowd Beiiiiett will remain in Philadelphia f ..eh nlnee foi u week resting up and then re- , "'""" '.'"- . .. .... AlonnvvhilP. inVOstlcrill 111 Ot 10 Oiler ations of both exchange tirouers was Tinder way. Governor Coolidge said the attoruej general had informed linn that, .o far. nothing had developed to indicate that Ponzi had operated in other than a legal manner. TOO MUCH "MOTHERING" Husband Objects When Wife Cares for Fifteen Children at Time Chicago, .Tub 20. The mothering in stincts of Mrs. Daniel I Sullivan, wife of a wealthy manufacturer s agent, have broken up her home The pair had no children hikI n tine home. Mrs Sullivan began taking children from slum nurseries until she was caring1 for ten or fifteen ut u time. They were not adopted but were supported, cared for and educated. Sullivan did not object to the nmnov she spent ou them, but he did object to the number in the house Me settled a sum on his wife nnd disappeared. She has just obtained a divorce for de-er- f "In five years." said Mrs Sulliwin. '.'I have cared for M2 babies. Some of tbem I have kept for two yours and it is like parting with ihildren of my Own wncn i nuve io give mem up r-AMDI CDC CI CCPC TUICC bAIYlbLtttb rLttL-C lliltl" Payroll Robber Says He Lo6t His Share of Loot In Play Gary, .lulv U0. Alex Trusewich. who a arrested by the Clary police Ti.es- day. with Philip Davlduk. and confess- eM to the $0000 puyroll robbery in the Jones l.augniin nieei v o. mine at rittsburgh, Pa., on June l.f. said he xovelved a little more tlmn $1000 in tho uplit. but lost it ull over the gam bling table, part of this amount in Chi ctgp. Trolley Hits Wagon; Driver Hurt A wagon loaded with potatops was (struck by a trolley tills morning at v about 0 o'clock, at the corner of Nitio- .Culll and vuiiuwniu iirrrm, nun inc "fv ... niA.,.,1 Tf .U ., n.n.. r.1 (III r t-t, JWV-i"(i ai,ii', ...ft,", ir, ".j. c x, pecouu sircei, n inrowu irom '..V'gon.. .He was taken to the Gar- IC.Hpgpital. Claims Discovery of Hull of Good Ship Mayflower London, .Inly 20. Discovery of the hull of the Mayflower, the chip In which the Pilgrim Father palled to America. Is rlnlmed by Pr. Keu del Harris, chairman of the Kng1ih speaking I'nion. according to the Dall) Mall, lie will iwenl details ot the secret at a conference ot Ply mouth in September. In the meantime, however, the paper learns that old timbers In cluding onken beams supporting the roof, found in h bnrn adjoining nn Inn called Old Jordan's Hotel, at Chalfont,, St. Oilo. nucklneham shirc, arc considered li.v Porter liar ris to have originally formed port of the hull nnd dork of the Ma.v dower. Somo of the brums, wliirh are worn and worm-eaten, hear mark Indioating the, might foriuerlj nine held ship's rivets oud tnekle SUPPLYJFOR CITY Public Service Commission Frees Phila. From Paying Big Price for Fuol FIFTEEN CARLOADS DAILY The eity ms beeu freed of the ne cessity of paying exorbitant rates for eonl to Keep jts water i-erxiep in opera lion nnd maintain other municipal nc tivities. A. Lincoln Acker. eit pure ins iir i Rent, by an appeal to the Public Sorv- c CflmroisNio, in which he cxpn-cil . .... .i I A. Lincoln Acker, citj pnrcha ac the roiirIhr tactics of dealers who were nhl" to obtain an oversiipply when the eit fac-cl a slmrtiiRc, 1ms obtained an adeipiutn Mipply. "Mr. Acker also carried his appenl for coal relief to the federal Infer ',"", ''""'Here Con.misslon with th ,.,,, h,f u rnI,t,nn of , i,i, ,u ..:.. .i ... ..i.. i.. .i.."i.. i ... tile k with the it ihe victim is thousht speculators to the hnre-t needs, of tin Ilerron. iisl.stnnt purchasing acent. that the danger of a shutdown of the city's water system tlironch lack ..f fuel Imd been -afolj pn-sed. Mr. Iler ron declared that in-tead of supplies: ailerpiatr only for two or three d'Us at many of the bij; pumnius stations the reserve stocks nre sufficient now to op erate the plants from liftccn to twenty i iliMs, acconlitiR to the needs of the different stations. it appears that the notion of Mr. Acker fnresta'led n scheme to mull t the city .if premiums for co.il runiiinq into hundreds of thousands of dollars duriiiR the shortage. The oit had a contract to pav S7..".7 it ton f. o. h. at the mines for the soft coal used ut tlio pumping station. When the r.iilioads j did not make deliverv of enrs the cit ! was left without fuel. Iho scanty re- series dwindled us inndcuunte ship. j incuts dribbled in to provide for the 1 cnMsnnmt Inn nf ""itlO tmw iluilv nf the I different nlants and whim the situation I bernmr alarming Mr. Acker was forced i i,.... t ,i, ..., ......i... f....i . ,, llltnv ,,n-,.,j .,! !,, !,,, n. 1 .... . . . . . ' .... Illir,- Ul lull'-, l.lllhlUL tl- 111,11 U Til' a ton. Mr. Acker bought ns dosolv as possible, but in his purchase of !?2S.. 000 worth of coal during two days lost 51. ".0110 as compared with tho contract price. lllmu n, (xh.i.i .... wan i .... I....I. .. .: 1 The while condition was laid before the Interstate Commerce Commission I at Washington and the Public Sen ice i ommission nt uurri-mirg wuii ine re .... .i... e.- .... I 1. - sions. BENNETT BOND PROVIDED ' . .. !-... , .1.. .. ...1 l. I lurn in ! I ncsiiT, 11,-n- ill will enter the employ of the Uenny lug Company a. a mechanic. He has been promised .teinlv work and good wages Mr. Hutt lias filed his bond of $1."00 as a guarantee that Bennett will keep In. naiole. There are costs amounting jto Ssno which must be puid. nnd it H , understood that Mrs. Isaac Deiitsch, widow of the Fifth ward loader. j will endeavor to raise that sum among i lirr friends. WILL CASE GOES TO JURY Disposition of Hotel Man's Estate to Be Decided II i "1 l !.-. ...... ,f A jurv will decide tl e dt po.it on r.f the nropertv of the late Martin Kuuffinan. who for ninny ducted the Lehman House, ninth ami Murket streets. II- died at .'IS North street, I'ehruiiry '-. 1010, estate valued at S'JO.000. is snid to have doubled in pars con at Thirt.v I'iftv third leaving an The estate value smi e the testator h death A will dated September ( '.nr. directing tne estate snouid ne ciisrritiuterl under tlie intestate laws, was admitted , ,M.r.hfitA slinrtlv nftei- Tr IvnnfT man's death. Later, another instrument ' ,ated Mav .'11, BUS. was admitted to probate, bequeathing most of the estate to a nephew, HU Kindig, Jr.. to whom , the testator turned over most nf his nf-, fnlrs Th0 f,rf,t WU stipulated that Milton Kauffman. one of the nephews. was to be ignored in the distribution of -ue r!,lu- i ..,...,, nMim-m nmmr.,- WOMAN COMMITS SUICIDE Quest of Chambersburg Hotel Gives Philadelphia Address A woman who registered as Mrs. Herman Jueohs, of IMS Pine street, this city, committed suicide jesterday in the Hotel Montgomery in Cham bersburg, by winding a towel snakecf in chloroform about her face she was found dead by hotel attendants who smelled the chloroform and forced the door of hpr room wIipq she did not an hwer their knocks. At tho Pine street address, u rooming house, last night, no ono knew of a Mrs. Jacobs. A telegram from Chnm bersburg was received ypMcrday after noon telling of her death, ACKER GETS COAL l .,. ... in.' Jl C III! Ill -- II ll'l 1 1 III .lilllll'S ,. i. r i. . i- ,. . i iMJUr PLANES START ' ACROSS CONTINENT t Throo of All-Motal Construction Start on Journey to Pacific Coast PIONEERS OF NEW SERVICE, By the Aswlatel rrcs New York. July '-'0. Three ll-netnl innnnpianes, carrjlne the llrst trant-eon linrnt.il aerial mall, left the ffolliR tirhl nt IVnlrnl Park. 1.. I., nt 10:0 o'clock todnj for San Krnne'sco. nieven .lirplanes ceortcd the tron cnntinental maehincs In u fnrewell tllRht ocr New York before the jump west word on the patlitindlne trip to pstab- 'nil mi aerial man roure oeiwcen nei-o nnd the ruclflc cont. The monoplane corried letters from the mayor of New York to the minors of Saii'KianeUco and other ritles alone the route, which will follow In general that of the transcontinental Ulcht cf nrcv plnnrs last summer. le eland Is the tir-t scheduled stop. Otlier stotis will he mnde at Chicaco. Omaha. Clipjennr, Salt I.akoCit, Iteno ii nd Sun I'mmd'co. Tin- trip not onlj is e.peeted to make' p.ws'hlo the estiihll'hment in Septem lrr of regular iierinl mail service from I ri'it to const, but to jield informnticu of aliif to the War Department. 1 Koe.irdltiR tIMs proposed exienMon to the I'aelfie const of the nir mall route, which now ends nt Omaha. Major T,. II. t - ..1 . iiiiimiixl AnrlflMl if I liit it t I rill , K "' I i I "iiwiiiiii' ii'i' in ' i mail srice. said : j "The inroiiRh '"rMce. which will he 'startcil in Spptemb-r. will cut In half the p'l-sent t'ne-din letter time to Son I'r.iiicisoo. At the start. th New I York-Omnha end of iho run will be cov Pr .l'- ""','', ,"","' ' "ii ha'f I" He llnvilands. As soon as " "' w" "r ','"" ',, '"'', t '! ,", ...n..l tuAtmn uiifid nn Inn nntlrii rtlti ered li nn-meini pi.-mrs iiiiu uu- am-ii metal monoplanes on ine enure run from const to eon-t The parl includes Lieutenant f'ol onel II i:. Ilnrtnej. chief of training group, a run air vci-icc; Major I,nt: 'nhn M l.arseii. owner and de.siitner of the all tictnl piani's: I'aptnln "I'd die" V Uicketihacker. Lieutenant Charles It. folt : William II. Stout, of Detroit, de Iriiit of alrnhincs; (iould Dietr.. of Oinnlia : r V. Allynne. of Cleveland: iirun and eiUlinn plmtopni pliers. pilots ii nd inechlinics. Two of the planes will he left on the const and one to be u-ed for forest tire patrol h the air srioe. NAVY TO SELL HORNS New Musical Instruments Offered at Less Than Usual Prices i fiwinu to the fact that the unvy re-! tail store, outside the sate.s of thei Philadelphia nuvj vard. will he closed at the end of this week, il has been decided to place the nt ire stock of i surplus nn musical instruments on' ut pries troni Nl to isi.i less than the fornnT prices Ml of the wind iusiruments an- of either triple-nlatcd silver or nickel plated linish and all instruments are couipped with cases and other acres wtries. The following prices i HI be charged for these instruments : Alto horns, nt .f "i.so ; baritone horns, nt S7-I : bass horns, nt Sir'.l.'JO; bugles. S.1.: cellos, at s'l,i cornets, nt SU." lunnets. at N.I.I..I.I ; cMiibals. at $1 1.TiO; Ilia drums, at SMI; tenor drums. at ,51 0: tsmniini drums, in sets nf fwpntj -four and twenty -siv inches, nt J IS." per set; piccolos, at ?.".": buri "' saxophones, at Sl'l.".: triangles, nt Valve trombones, at N-'.1.20: slide trombones, nt S.s!: ioas. at $10: bass violins, nt Ml. and first and second v-mliiw nf .Q'M None of these instru a I . .... !non l'nvp ,,V,T 1" ,,s'',, "",! nl1 "r(, " first-class condition. JQ DELAY CLEANING BIDS i .......... ... 'h. ! Street Sweeping Specifications for Not Ready Until Monday The specilicntions upon which alter nate proposals for clcuning the streets and collecting ashes and rubbish next year in nine di.triets in which the city i. tinw divided nnd also in fifteen dis trict., which division ma be mnde, are not likelv to he printed aud de'ivered beiore net Monday. In order to comply with 'hi pru M.inn. of the ucw charter, however. Prank II. Caven. director .jf the De- paitment of Public Works, will lufert Hdieitisements in the newvnpon ou Satnriliij a. king for proposals for the.e operations. Copies of specifica tions will be distributed among the eon tractors nn Monday. iJirctor Caven was in conference yesterdiM witli l'red C. Dunlnp. chief of the Bureau of Hlghwnv-.. nnd John II Vol-nn, noting chief of the Bureau of Stnet Cleaning, regaidiug the sub lect t obtaining the necessary equip ment if the officials should decide to linve the work in part or as a whole I irtririued by the municipality. - - A $10,000 LEFT TO HORSE Animal Named as Beneficiary In Soldier's War Insurance Policy Buffalo, N. V.. Jul 10. Kniplow, n thirteen-jear-old stallion, was the beneficiary named in the $10,000 war insurance policy carried by Harry K. Thurman. of Memphis. Tenn.. and his aunt Mr-. Mary Mitchell, of Buffalo. is complying with the terms of the pidicv. Thurman died in action overseas-. I III' 1UIIS III l 111" I II-1- I UIIH' mi ,iii:h Mitchell sought to have Kniplow I placed among the mounts of Troop i I. state guard, in the armory here she .uid Thurman was much attached in the horse, und having no near rela tives who would suffer through his death, he decided to provide for the ani mal's care in case hp did not return. The surplus above the co.t of tho horse's- keep goes to Mrs. Mitchell. Kniplow is .suffering from u spruined tendon, but is recovering, und is ex pected soon to become u purt of Troop Is outtit. vvliere no n a great luvoritc. New School to Reduce Congestion I Colllneswood. N. .1.. July 1J0. The I .CR0.000 purochtal school being erected I ut Lops nnd Atlantic avenue, is nearlng ; completion and the rector of St. .lohu'n i Roman Catholic Church, the Bey. John I O'l-'arrell, believes that the school will be ready for occupancy shortly after . September 1. As the locul public schools will bo overcrowded next term the completion of the parochial school will relieve the situation, as approxl- ,,.t,.iv Kin lower-ernde childreu will be, rared'for in the new institution. Rat Inspectors Named nirerior Kiirbusli. of nubile health, yesterday made two more appointments to the teinporur.v force of inspectors engaged In carr.ving on an intensive campaign for the extermination of rats, and the elimination of Insanitary con ditions in vvhloh they breed. The new appointees are Joseph T Beurdvvood. of 217 South Thirty-sixth street, and Walter A Hlldretli, of niTi South Korty second street, both at ?100 a month. .'...' WALT WHITMAN'S HOME AS MEMORIAL aiMi,"T," "" "" j .iiit tttt-- r-tm -, wffbr lO ' i1 IfflSIBnin r fiMwSS-r''vT'''Ml''''iMyTiit fMlELim x-X 'yyJsllllBiO 1.Ib9IIh 39IKv!K.Iu HEaEEyMra,w?i' Mf' iinV . tfr m iWiiiT fflfiiit 'i- ..t.MrhitiimttiwigiLM3gKjffiiaaMMiiMB.ajawai f?irfiMi"yHMBHWnYii MWiiitiiiMmni'?TiiBW il C '! f!L litei-r r'lioi i ft-iiep w-v JSm POLICE ARE I0LD P0T-0F-G0LD YARN! Larceny Suspect Assorts Ho Buried $9000 Given to Him by Mrs. Bergdoll for Grovor SAYS HE'S GERMAN OFFICER A hirreiu snspoct who claims It was an officer in the (Senium hum told de tectives todav he buried in tlit- citv SfliMill intended for ("Srovor Crr'innl HrrRilnll, tin iugitive iirnn .oiiict. The money, he cdnimeil. was given to him h- Irs. lCmma C. Tlrrgiloll. the clrn ft clodgep's mother, to be relayed to the runaway. He assorted (!rorr i nrw tit Wlnsor. Canada. The kiisprrt, originally "slated" as Ooorge Kerqiison, Arch street near Sev euteentli. told detectives his real mime is Frederick Ituseh and that he is re lated to a wealthj brewing family. Ituseh. or rerguson. told llrteetr j liieiitenant Cnociin ar City Hall that i I lie hud buried the "not of gold" lit i l'raiikford avenue and Bustletnn pike. ' He wanted to he tnkeu there to dig the) i money np. I Coogan was wnry. recalling the ' pot- Of-gold" sfory told by Hergdoll himself! which it'll m ins cscuiic in-rc uinn nu , arm sergeants utter he hud ueenseii- tenced tp live j ears' imprisonment for i draft dodging. Found ICinpty Hole A law.vor to whom tlio defendant also told the "pot of gold" stor.v sent two niUCS to lac iron. lire spm mini,. They reported thej found u hole but no money. Ituseh is to ho examined today by Dr. John I'gnn. a pnliee surgeon. The suspect was arrested July 10 ns he tried to pawn Walnut streets. . i .. v". .1 . .1 wiiteh at Ninth und The timepiece was identified as the piopert of Lieutenant P. X. Ii. Bellinger, or the navy, who made the transatlantic flight in the IN.C.-4. A handbag containing the lieuten ant's jewelr was stolen from his mo torcar us the tuiwil officer wns lunching in ii Broad strert hotel. Busch. or rerguson. was held in Sl.'OO bail Tuesdiu bv Mngistrnte Carson in Central Station on a larceny charge. The defendant, while in the oellroom nf Citv Hull tmlnv told a turnkey he had "nn important message for the do tectives." He was brought to Detective Lieutenant Coogan Met firmer in Oennnny The suspect asserted be hnd met Grovor Bergdoll in Germany prior to 101-4. He said he nut Mrs. Bergdoll in the Bolloviio-Srrntford. June -0. She was accompanied l.v u mun named Brnuu. lie claimed According to Busch. Mrs. Berg doll gav-p him seven S1000 liills nnd twenty $100 bill, to bo taken to (irover. Busch said a. lie was not yet road to louve this citv he 1 rouglit the mouey m n lonelv sunt at Krnnkford avenue and Bustle'ton pike where he buried it. Busch told Coogan he mot Grover in Cleveland after the lattcr's second escape nnd that he has uu engngement to meet the shirker iii the same city September 2 He further claimed he knows u girl who is to moot (irover in Cleveland next Monday. Busch alleged that the draft evador is now at Windsor. Canada, where he is selling stock, and bonds with an oc casional forav over the American bor der with "bootleg" whisky. G. A. R. Encampment Sept. 19-25 Columbus. ().. July 20. (By A. P.) September lO-'J," ure dates of the na tional oinatrtpniont of the Grand Army of the Republic to ho held nt Indian npolis this venr. it wns announced here todii bv Jo-iph W. O'Neall, adjutant general. Spanish Growers Destroy Wine Io Keep Up Prices Madrid. July 20. (By A. P.) Thousands of persons in Spain are Incensed over the notion nf the wine growers m the Valdepenaa aud other vine.vard districts, who after u meet ing threw large quantities: of this er's vield. which Is extremely bountiful, into the rivers in order, it is said, to maintain the high prices of wines. Lack of transportation prevented the producer!! from exporting wines and fruits, therefore, in tho course of their meeting the wine-growers de c ided to destroy the products rnther than permit the public to obtain winch at moderate prices. J. . , ' -- The little frame liouse at :'M Mirhle street, Camden, where Waif Wlilt -man spent many years and wrote mtirli of his verse, lias been houjlil by tlio city of Camden. It will he converted In a museum as me morial to the poet. Manr Kills, of Camden, shown In (he oval, was the prime mover In the project TO SURREND 10 GEN. MARTINEZ Bandit Chief Says Mexico's Need of Peace Prompted His Action FOLLOWERS WILL BE AIDED H) the Associated Pre-s Mexico City. .Inlj 'JO.- "I am Mir "cnderiiig uiirondltiomilly berHiisp the (niinlrv needs peace fur reconstruction." said Krnncisco Villa jesterdnx when he' lnel (Srnernl "Martine., chief of opera -ions in the stales of Conhuila and Nuevo I.con. nt the rnllroid stntion In s.ibina. When (Srurriil .Marline., who I' arranging surrender terms with Villa, I arrived at the station, the rebel gen- oral approached him with brad uncov- oi oil and hands extended I Villa will make his residence nt .Nieves, Zacatccas. aftc disbanding lil" 1 troops at Torreou. according to a gov , rnl, l(,n coiuiminlniie His men It I acldecl. will go fiom Saliiiin to Torreon on foot. villu's men. newspaner a.-counts say. on. nPrP, two trains, hut refused them. Kach of the 00(1 soldiers w i'l re echo a .m-ii-'s ,m t Cet n -tart in life. Moxlrall. Iower Calif.. .lulv 2!l. t ij .. i',i--troops wove liping rp (Tinted here todii bv IMiih.-iu Cantu. governor of the northern district of Lower California, to repel what he do- 1 scribed M'sterdaj as nn "invasion of Lower California by Meicnn federal soldiers. Three lerruiting oflices were busy un til late In.t night enrolling men. 'Gov ernor Cantu hoped to obtain an nrmv of -1000 as Hip advancing federals, it was saiil hero, numbered about rtOf'0. The governor expects an attack nt Kn- cenniln In .il.j.nt ..n...... .1... . .....I ... i ' .iimmii .-.-,i-ii nil,, nun in, ii f'nin,.mi ,,., ! !,, ,. ,i, . " Wa-shliifflon, July 2!!. The extra dition of I'ninci.eo Villa. Mexican bandit chieftain, maj become one of the knottiest problems in connection with rerognltini bv this government of tlio provi-iiii.nl Mcstleau (iovernmetit set up under President do la Iluerta since the death of Vcnustiann Cnrrnnzu. Official, of this government linvo long believed Villa was the one factor in the turbulent Mexican situation thut must of necessity be finally adjudicated before stnhle government can he as sured and piotectlnn guaranteed the life , , property of foreigner.. Hie crime which ilia nornetrntrd ugalnst Aiiicrirnns and American sov ereignty and upon which tlio demand for extradition h.v this country will hinge if it is made. I. the massacre nf nineteen Amorionns. including one woman, at Columbus, N, M., 'In 1010. Villa, together with nil men known to hnve been involved with him in that raid upon Aiuriean territory, were in dicted bv a New Mexico grand iury for murder, and tho expedition of fieu eral Pershing into Mexico was ordered in nn effnr' to apprehend the bandit chieftain. Kour men won- tried and hnncpil for participation In the raid and two turned state s evidence in an effort to gain mercy and incriminated Villa diroctl ns tho netunl lender of the exiipditinu. The indictment agninst Villa still stuuds. The position of this government is that the snvereignl.v of the laws of the United Stntes ns repic.cntpd by the action o' the New Mexican Grnnd Jury must be upheld. BOY HURT BY TRUCK Camden Driver Says Youngster Step ped From Behind Trolley Car Krnest Dirusso, seven years old, 1000 South Fourth street, Camden, sus tained a fractured skull when he was struck by a motortruck at Fourth and Viola streets, Camden, this morning. He is in a serious condition in the Cooper Hospital. Joseph Scardiieio. twent -nine years old. n neighbor, who lives at 171") South Fourth street, driver of the truck, wns nrrested and held in $1000 bail, He says the boy stepped from behind a trolley car into tho path of the ma chine. Hit by Auto, Boy May Die Walter Williams, seven yeurs old, a negro, of 34 Armut street, was struck by un automobile ut Armut street and Germantovvn avenue lost night and probably fatally iujiurd. lie was taken to the Germantown Hospital. His skull is fractured and he 1ms internal in inripH. Charles Silver, of Seventeenth street above Berks, was the diiver of the uutpmoDiie. John D. Rockefeller at Shawnee Htroudsburg, July 20. The Buck wood Inn, Hhawnee-on Delaware, Is entertaining John D. Rockefeller. 1 SERS r .. . , I DRY LAW GNORED PENNSYLVANIA Stnto Wettost In Union, Fed eral Agent Kramer Do claros PITTSBURGH SITUATION BAD WnnliltiKtnn. .Inly 20. Western 1'ennsylvanln Is canting the federal pro hibitinn enforcement officials more trou ble than any other section of the I'nlted States, according to ,Tohn V, Kramer, federnl prohibition commissioner. "More whisky and bepr nre being sold in western Pennsylvania than nnvwhere else in the United States," said Kramer estcrdnv. "Thin flows over into Ohio and makes conditions very bad In the eastern part of the state." he added. "We have done effective work in clean ing up the suburbs of Pittsburgh, but conditions In Pittsburgh arc not good. There is a situation there that is hard to handle, but we are after it. "It Ii true that intoxicants are being sold In large cities of the country, hut we regard the situation in New York nnd Illinois ok relatively better than In Pennsylvania, particularly In the mining regions. "The New York city liquor is being sold more or less onenlv, but up-state New York is not bad. In Chicago lifpior is being sold, but down -state Illinois is observing the law. In Penn sylvania, howi-ver, our problem is not localized. Wc nre having trouble throughout the stnte." .lust what proportion of his force lias been assigned to Pennylvanla was not Indicuted by the commissioner, hut he intlmnte'd that additional agents arc assisting the regular force In its ef fort to remedy alleged conditions. Kramer recently returned from a tour through Pennsylvania and Is directing the drive that Is being made to eloau up the stnte of prohibition vlolatgrs. The drive, he said, would be centered upon "the king" bootleggers who con trol the siinnlv. Asked whether former brewery rou ters like St. Louis. Clnclnuntl and Mil waukee were giving the enforcement officers much trnifble. Kramer replied that conditions in those cities wore mild compared with western Pcnns.w vanlii. where real beer and whisk were being dispensed in open violation of law. Near-beer manufacturer, lie slid, were complaining that the were unable to sell their product because other brew ers are not complying with the law. Kramer also took occasion to refute statements niihlished recently in sev eral newspapers that beer brewed in the home for fnmlly consumption may con tain more than one half of 1 per cent al cohol without breaking the law. "No malt boorngo containing more than one-balf of l per cent can De man ufactured een for Oiir own use with out violating the statute." he said. "The only things that may be manufac tured in our own home for our per sonal use with an alcoholic content of more than nne-lialf of 1 per cent nlco hol are cider and fruit juices. "In tlio case of cider and fruit juices mnde in the home for use there, the nforceinent others must prove tlint tlie arc nctuallv iutoxicnting to be ! legal. Cider play bo allowed to be- come bird uiuier normal communis u it Is hcinj done fur the purpose of mak ing vinegar. Neither sugar nor other fermentable substances may be added to the ciiler or fruit juices to increase tlio alcoholic content. "In other words, all beverages con taining more than one-half nf 1 per cent except elder and fruit juices are Intoxicating within the meaning nf tho i law. pvpii though they arp not actually ph.vsicall.v intoxicating if they contain more than one-balf of 1 per cent nl- ' colinl." DRAFT EVADER SURRENDERS Oregon Slacker Tires of Lonely Life in Mountain Fastnesses Portland. Ore. Jul "JO. (By A. P.) Throe carts of wandering in the mountains of southern Oregon in efforts to escape a charge of evading the so le otivo draft wore ended today with Alfred l'attig. twent -seven .vonvs old. farmer, iu jail bore. He surrendered, he said, because of loneliness- which became unbearable. During his wandering., he told county authorities, lie lived chiefly on the meat of wild animals and bori-ic. Kattig and his brother Charles fled to the mountains in 1017 heeause of con scientious scruple, ugalnst wnr. lie dc clnred. The took clothing, salt, marches, weapons, ammunition and a prit, prrtor's pan. "We protended to be prospectors when wc occasionally met minors or others in the mountain," l'attig told authorities. "Onep 1 returned home in February. 1018. 1 saw in mother and returned to the mountains. About Christmas ot mm we ueaiii, from an old miner. Charles hended. thnt the wnr wns over. Kntlig lias not been npprc- GREEKSHALT ADVANCE Victors Walt to See Whether Turk Nationalists Submit to Treaty Athens, July 20.- iB A. P.) The Greek army In Asia Minor is waiting to .. ... ...... It. I . . .. . rupylng more tprrltor.v and pursuing' Mustuphn Kemal Pusha, tho NntlonalsJ ivt leader, to Angora. However, lr is tho view or General I'arnsKevopouIos, the Greek ronininnder-in -chief, that his forces can easily finish touting the Nn- tionallsM. (ioneral Pnrnskevopoulos adds: "The march to Brussn was not ou our pro gram, but in view of tho weakness of the Turks and also the excited condi tion of our men we pushed there with cavalry, which took the city almost without resistance. In two davs on a front of 413 kilometers (2."7 miles! we inflicted Irreparable losses on AIus tanha Kemul. many of Mr divisions falling Into our huuds." Arrested on Suspicion of Hold-Up Sharon. Pa., July 20. (By A. P.) Adam Pavilla, of Fnrrell. was arrested Inst night ou a charge of being one of several meu who last Saturday held up nnd robbed a paymaster of thc El- Bel Co. in Canton. U., ot nearly 54000. The prisoner later was identified as one of the robbers by another member of the robber band, who was shot and thrown fromi an uutomobile near Youngstown following thc robbery. He also Identified the nutoniobllc used by the robbers and which wbh ubandone'd in Farrell. HEATHS MILI.KH lulw.SO. at lijr hnnif. o; Olncy avs HANNAH A UU.MSUY. widow nf haniuel I.. J. Miller, formerly of tuiem, N. J. Knnral nervlcn Saturduy. 'J p. , ut HI Johii'n Church. Salem, N. J. NOULK -July 2t. liMILY. wife of John Noble Kunernl nervlrm Saturday, a p. in. from residence 671 , Johnson M , fier niuntown Interment prlvati-. Hemjliu may be viewed Friday eve BISl.TZKIl. Huddenly July 'J8, (lEOKOi; V Hlil.'l'ZUIt, Funeral buturday, j p. n, nt hl latu residence, 1(140 Jlarlia bt. in'. t prme n t A r line I o n reni ; I .jv "Z.Z- HKU' WANTKO-TrKMAIjiT' "CIiEIIKT brTiht and capable, knowfe-dnS-of' Manoiruphy not eusestUI. must write led. p hand II 003 f.editer Office ' " see wnotuer tne iiirhisn .Nationalises wiiue iiiieiupiiiig in risui mi niiiuino submit to the pence troatv before or-I bile after it hud plunged down an em- ' . ' Wwm International DUCHESS OF OPOBTO Widow of heir to tho tlirono of Portugal before tho revolution, ar rltod a New Yorli esterday on the liner Urltannla from Lisbon. Bo fore her niirriago to the Portuguese prince she was Mrs. Van Vallien. berg, of New York, and was Known as the "S 10,000,000 widow" PRISON LEAGUE DISBANDED Action Follows Murder of Convict In Auburn Penitentiary Yard Auburn. N. Y., July 'JO.Aftcr seven cnr.s of existence the branch of the Mutual Welfare League of Auburn Prison, the first established in the state nnd country by Thomus Mott Os horn, prisoner reformer, former warden of King Ping prison and former com mander of the Naval Penitentiary nt Portsmouth, lias been disbanded by Charles S. Itattiguu, slate superin tendent of prisons. All iictivities of the league, were sus pended by orders of the superintendent nnd many convicts from nil over the state who hud showed by their brains they could do executive work ure now doing manual labor in the vurlous shops nf the institution. The action of the siinerintendent followed the failure of the otflcials to ascertain the name of the inmate who murdered .Philip Nlss uian. a New York convict, in the prison iird. WOMAN CUTJN FALL Sharp Edge of Dish Slashes Throat. Is Found on Lonely Road The sharp edge of u rhinn dish that broke when Mrs. Mnry Rupert, seventy wars old. l.'-O I,ep street, tripped and ! CV.II til I.Vfinkfnnrd rnnil nnd Orforil nvp- mie last night, cut (lie woman's jugular join and lacerated her throat. Mri. Uupcrt was roturniug from a store with a dish filled with ice cream when she fell. The dish wns shattered and when the woman fell on the sharp fragments she wns seriously cut. The accident occurred in ii little frequented nnrt of the road, nnd the aged woman was not found for some time after il-jslie was injured. Two men driving I past in an automobile saw her and look her to fM. .Mary s iiospuai. u re quired five stitches to close the rut in the woman's throat. AMERICAN WOMAN HONORED Order of King George I Conferred on Dr. Blanche Norton Constantinople, July 'J7. (By A. P. i King Alexander has conferred the Order nf King (leorge I on Dr. Blanche Norton, of Lldon, In., a physician of the American committer for relief in tlio Near lSast. Doetor Norton dis tinguished herself at Kerrassunds, Ana tolia, by treating the trachomatous ,os of (Jrcek orphnns, from whom she I contracted the clisouso. Decorating Doctor Norton today the Greek high commissioner said she was' the lirst woman to receive the. order. It would he an inspiration to Greek women, he viid. to devote themselves to the bottom tit of social conditions In Turke.v . Doctor Nit ton's eyes nre much im proved after four months' treatment and the doctors promise they will be com pletely cured. PYTHIANS ELECT TODAY Knights Will Choose Supreme Com mander at Cleveland Cleveland. Jul 20. (By A. P.) Selection of a supreme commander of the Knights of Pythlus is scheduled to take place during today's session of the national encampment of the organiza tion now being held in this city. The present supreme commander. Major General Willinm II. Loomis, of Grnnd Bnplds-, Mich., is seeking re election. State Commander Brigadier General Thomns 11. Mlnshull. ot Cleve land, is also an aspirunt for the omcc. IGNITING GAS BURNS FIVE Auto Breaks Main and Match Causes Explosion .. Washington. Pa.. July 20. (By A. Tl 1-1.... ....... .. ...... l...-nn.t ..!.-r..ii.. i i,i j mc iiii-ci wi-ic ijiiiucu puiudiiiy '...'I. 1 ,1 4 Il. I ..... baukiuent near here jesterday and had broken a three-Inch gas muln. It is supposed that ono o: tho men lighted a match, and the escaping gas, igniting, enveloped them in flames. The in lured : Constable Milton Owen, CharloN Mit chell. Homer Clark. Albert Magnnr and John Alloy, all of Washington. J Too Much Hay rnusually heavy crops have sent the ' price of hay down from ?(50 to SIS a! ton. In Bucks county hay is to plen- ' tiful that the farmers arp oxpei louring1 irnuhle in having it cut. .They are rp. i ported to he selling it in the field at $5 an apre. the purchaser agreeing to cut the buy. which runs approximately three tons to the acre. J E Caldwell (6. Jewelers Silversmiths Stationers Chestnut and JtwirER Streets Silver Baskets -and Trays for fruit, cakes, tea cakes, sweetmeats, crackers and sand WICHES. W " V jY ,i v t. WILSON MIS L Secretary's Report Is Said to Rocommend Reopening of Bituminous Award BIG SHORTAGE IN CHICAGO By Uio Associated Press Wiwhlnjton, July 20. gMrct(1 .Wilson's report on the coal situation in Ki-unui, iui particular emphasis upon conditions in Illinois and Indiana, was scni lonay 10 1'rwiucnt WilRon. While tho secretary refused to dis cuss the nature of tho report, it w,l intimated at the Department of LaV,, that among the recommendations j. one thnt tho award of the bltamlaout conl commission bo, reopened on u, ground that an equitable adjustment of the pay of day laborers in tho mt. . had never been made. Chicago, July 21). (By A. p Coal In dealers ydrds in Chicago todav is a sixth to a seventh of the norirnl supply, an official of tho largest IocaI company snid. He declared that if nothing is ,1a. ,. improve the constantly diminishing re ceipts. Chicago will bo "going on n vncation" next week. "Tho normal supply in Chicago at this time of tho year is f.00,000 in 700.000 tons," this coal official salt! "These figures relate to coal in dealers' yards. All tho coal ou hand in the yards of Chicago today is not over 100.000 tons." v Tho executive committee of Indiana coal operators convened here today to consider the miners' strike in Indiana Philip Penua, of Tcrre Haute, chair man of the committee, declared reports that the operators would meet the miners, arc inaccurate. "The coal situation in Indiana is better and I feel that today there will bo even a larger number of miners at work than there was yesterday," Mr. Penna said before the committee went Into session. lie estimated Indiana coal production at about !I3 per cent below normal. U. S. TO MAKE PROTEST Objects to Exclusion of Americans From Oil Fields In Near East Washington, July 20. (By A. P.) ltcnresentations have been made to Great Britain regarding refusal of en ponuuuy tor American citizens in tne development of oil fields in countries over which mandates nre to he exercised under the League of Nations, it was stutcd today at the State Department Included in these fields are the rich oil deposits in Mesopotamia. Department officials would not dis cuss the oil agreement entered into be tween Oreat Britalu and Franco and designed to secure international co operation nnd to eliminate co-operation which might give rise to frictiou between those countries. SEA MYSTERY UNSOLVED Coast Guards Fall to Find Trace of "Phantom Ship" Cantain Christovcr Bcntbim. of the United States coast guards at Town send's Inlet, went to bcu again jes terduy in a surfboat, and spent ten hourd searching for traces of a ve.l which appeared to sink off thc roast Tuesday. "I was hrml.v convinced when we left the beach Tuesday morning that ii vessel was on fire and sinking," lie said. "Wc made a thorough March Tuesday, but yesterday the search was extended to a radius of twenty-five miles. Wc found nothing to indicate a vessel hud burned and sank." Captain Bcntbim said no further senrch would be modo for traces of tlir "phantom" ship unless there is further news of her. ARCHBISHOP IGNORES BAN Mannlx Plans to Sail for Britain Despite Government's "Ukase" New Yorli, July 20. (By A. P.) Plans of Archbishop Daniel J. Maonlx of Melbourne, Australia, to leave here next Saturduy for Great Britain on the Baltic ure unchanged by formal noti fication from the British Government that he will not be alowed to enter Ireland, because of his recent utter ances nn thc Irish question, tho Anicr icon Commission on Irish Independence announced toduy. "Despite Lloyd George's ukase," the announcement said, "Archbishop Man nix will sail on Saturday noon, tverr lover of liberty, especially every one et Irish blood, should attend to bid him godspeed." The Baltic stops ot botu uueensiowu and Liverpool. The commission did not state at which port thc prelate planned to land. MorrlBtown Lost Two In Population Washington, July 20. (By A. P.l The census bulletin, toduy records fie population of Morristown. N. J., at 1-.-uO.'i, a decrease of two. Other populations all showing increases, arc: Laredo, Tex., 22,710; Ramsey county, Minn., including St. Paul, 214,-151; Abilene, Kan.. -1895: Augustu, Kuu.. 4210; Frrdonia, Kan., 31154: Lyons, Kan., 2510; Ncodosha, Kuu.. 3013. IP2SR. C Brass Beds Relaeaaertd I - . Sin NOTK We uraol ull ws5n,.i nbolutty fount to nrw nt 1-8 the ot. 1-KATHERS STERILIZED nnd Made Into MiittrfM"; fll years' eiperl'iice insures """ niiBiaiuuii SICHEUS 2d and Wash ineton Ave. Auto rallH ; everywhere. Ett.h. ,31 j.ar. rnonr -iamDarq my-""" A REH EARING 1 ; yv-rf. ,.vU !)V , Lrj(&ti8&&gib-m feltl)W,.H.(,'CTto