f"f -- . &'wm!mr&:' ' O-TJ m i j , r,1 " i.Wt '' r tr lUV'f NT-.. J' -. " ni TiIT T" "" ' . K ' , .'J H V'SK "I T" . J-w ji -. w rtV r- ? ' ,- '."y ... - -u ..Wili.V- "ni', ' ,r '' -TXr V. " ''..'"A" ' 1. i 3r v 1 1; J" Y " j ,j",5 J ."'. , . '. r . - "" 'v ,T ,. " i .V ' " - : r, -y.,-,. e ' - . t t . 1 .J? ' - . ,T " VXLL Vs. "K I ' sJcE V..! ..- T-N ' ?. " l' . 'THEWtATHER " VA lv' i Wl '" NIGHT EXTRA Fair today" Thuwilayi moderate temperature and moderate northeast winds. TEMrKHATimR AT KACII nOUR t ' . ' , i If ' 1 A V i'4V H v .4 ' " I "ML10 '" 112 'i1', i1 a ' ' r" J, -- i;. i4 ti nfi i u i iini . in m !" I'" "i a' ), PRICE TWO cents fe ,) .3 VOL VJ. NO. 277 Entered as Becomf-Clam Matter t the Poitofflc. at rhlUdeiphta, ya. Fubllshed Dallr Ecnt fiuniSay. Bubeerlptlon Prtc 10 a. Tear by Cfepyrlifit, 1620. by Public Irfdeer Company. Mall. i-tiim Matter at the Fostofflc. Under the Act of March a, 1879, PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1920 WARSAW TO BE EVACUATED, AIDED EXPERTS m r- S!TOrPSBrr A..A?fe s' ' 'Ufa? i V - V - ' , ' r -. J . i" .!"' - rWTID Jr,' 9 I w .'? . " tAJi.. IfJlfi t V.ir jsW- "P" -WE! MW V viH-r iiM 'J --.; WTWi .sLm . 1 .. J- MM B -Ji t H I fzuentag. p ttbttt meager f . fcM m Mm :-.- - , DECIDE fie Crank'9 Under Secret Grill in r CM IS ALIVE, FEDERAL AGENTS ON CASE BELIEVE Chief Inspector Leonard Tells of Human Net Spread to Catch Suspect BLOODHOUNDS TRAILED MAT. TO FIX IDENTITY Special Train Used as Part of Elaborate Trap 110 Men Used In Plan "The Crank," the man who swin dled the fatner of Kidnapped uiaKeir Coughlin out of ."P12TO0Q, is being grilled In a Hcehided spot, proDatJiy in bouxu Jersey. . . . Postal inippotors who arrested mm near l'gg Harbor otiMonday nre trying to make Mm disclose tho hiding place of the tnhy. Fire federal agents are in various parts of Pennsylvania today working on clues furnished by "Tne Crank." They loft Philadelphia yesterday. Ono went to Pittsburgh. I'nitfd States District Attorney JIcAtot. of this district, spent the night nt his cottage at Capo May Tolnt. N. .., nltlinugll MS laiilliy was not uirru. i nj he went to this place alone Mrs. Mc- vtv wntlltl nllt saV. .Mr. McAvov. seen today at his office In N'orristown. ould not comment on Hie report he had been in Jersey helping in Interrogate "Tin1 Crank." After declining to answer questions rolntiin to the arrest of "The Crank. " Mr. McAvov said: ."I am entirely sub- Mront to the stnto in this matter, as the major charges against the criminn! ai e .blackmail, and kidnapning. ' ' tleorge A. LcoiinnT. chief postal in sncctoV. who arranged tho detailed plan for "The iCrnukV canture. today rc- fefflfed Hint, (he ,prfwiertpositivcly is ine Kidnapper (mine, pany. lie based his'dssertlon on various de tails, hitherto vmrpvcaled, of letters vhleh "The Crank" sent Mr. Coughlin. They showed mi intimate knowledge of .the I'lrciimstnncch attending the theft of th" child which could have been known, only fo the person who committed the crime, t-aK .Air. Leonard Trapped by Own Letter "The CotighlliiH received freauentlet ters from 'The Crank," " Mr. Leon ard went on. "It vns the last letter, received Fridny, July 110, which proved 'The Clank's' undoing. In this letter Mr. Coughlin was instructed to leave Philadelphia Monday afternoon on the Heading train which left for Atlantic City at 2 o'clock. Mr. Cough lin was instructed to sit on the right hand side of the cur. He was told that at some point between Philadelphia and Atlantic City n white flag would he displaced so that he could see it. "On scoine this white flac Mr. Coughlin was to throw n package con taining $10,000 iu bills from the win dow. When this was done, according to the promise made in tho letter, the thlld would be returned to its parents. "Major I.. (S, Adams, who Is in iharge of the state troopers, person allj made nrraiigeiucnts for n special train to make the same stops and run on the same time schedule as the 2 oMni'lt train. Miilor Adams covered tho district from Philadelphia to Atlantic j'it li taking a map and dividing it into sixteen dlivsions. He called upon 110 state Hoopers for assistance. "Sundaj night the men were sent out to cover the entire distance.' The ob jeit of their work was explained to them mid it was so arranged that they v.eio nil at their posts before daylight. Special Train Used "Mr ( ViiiMilIti li.rt lYMlnrlnlnliifl flu IV was Instructed. The special train arijtug right troopers left five roin- mes ucioio the i: o'clock train. Sir. Coughlin wns told about the layout of the map, and wns instructed to throw the 'mono' really a package of news- rupiTs- out nl the window, lie was grw'ii n set of large ligurcs, one for each V.. J. ,llvls'"iis. into which the Hue from 1 hllndelphin to Atlantic City had been imldwl. He was also given a map Hiowing these divisions and their cor ifsjioiidlng numbers. As soou as he irnd thrown the package out of the window he was told to find the place on the map, get the proper number and ''t i "JP tllf' window on the left hand Hie The object of this was to notify the troopers stationed along tho line where the flnK had been displayed, so mat they could close in on this point. 1" the special train preceding that on which Coughlin rode wero ten state troopers who had been In training for some time. They were all athletes and exceptional runners. There weio also f couple of bloodhounds and two postal inspectors. Mnjor Adams rode with the engineer on the special. "lien the special approached Mil (JI titan ln.l ,...,1 l... il . . . . ere alighting from the train the Are na" ws iistructed to throw out a '"!?. """i1"' Kl'r'on, so that 'The mm l'"ull I,nt beoomo suspicious, ihc men then started back toward l'outlr.unl on ! Two, Column Thrro EXCHANGE RATESLUMPS Pound Sterling Falls to $3.5654 Be- cause of Polish Situation rMiW Y."lu Auk" ' Apup weakness "'.Mlllll lllll Illlir ,tj tin tun.. I " , ,,. "S.Wjft The weakness was ? , tllO UuKvorab e Polish altuatlnn due ufnYprable Polish situation ,nd 'ale offerings vt bills. Dee III'. U PI WlIU Kmttl'in ft ..... it.- rr,k SKLW? - ntuu wuh iiismicrcii tn nt nn u-.t unit's MARCHIONESS OF QUEENSnEKRY Former stage beauty, Irene Rich ards, whose husband, by the death of tlie ninth Marquis of Queens berry In Africa, succeeds to the title JUDGE'S HOME ENTERED Burglar Alarm Causes Arrest of Man at Mc Michael's House The ringing of a burglar alarm in the home of Judge Charles B. McMlchael, 2030 Dc Lancey Place, this morning, resulted in the arrest of n man who, tho police say, was caught in the act of rilling the judge's home. ' After the alarm was sounded in the offices of the American District Tele graph Co. a telephone call was sent to the Twelfth and Pine streets station. A detail of patrolmen, headed by Detec tives Iiurton and Maclnncs, was hur ried to the McMlchael home. In the yard, the police say, xvlth n xvnllet and other articlos owned by the judge. They say Harris, who also is known as James Wilson, said that lie came from South Carolina and that he wns staying nt 2018 Nnudaiu street. He was taken to City Hall for a hnarlng. Judge McMichacl is away on a vaca tion. CONVICTS AID IN CHASE Nevy Castle Prisoners Offer Reward for Man Who Escaped Prisoners nt tho 'New Castle county workhouse. New Castle. Del., have pool ed their money nnd offeicd a purse of .$IiO for the capture of Peter (Jreco, u prisoner who escaped from there on Monday. Warden " I'lummcr communi cated the reward offer to Director of Public Safety Cortelyou. Director Cor tclyou hus ordered the Philadelphia po lice tovwntch for tho man. but the re ward probably will not be accepted. (Jreuo is said to have headed toward this city. The honor system prevails at the jail. TAKES BABY FROM HOSPITAL Camden Mother Disregards Doctor's Advice When Child Is Burned A baby, severely burned, was removed from the Cooper Hospital today by the mntlier. who told nhvslcions if home remedies did not cure her child nothing would. The child, two-j ear-old Ttudolph Tlak, 110 South Ninth Street, Cam den, began playing with mutches while his mother wasTtetting breakfast ready. When she discovered him his clothing was a mass of flames. At the hospital physicians told the mother her baby was severely burned and might die If taken away. She in sisted she be given the child and then went home. SAY BOOKMAKER Griffith, Known as "Millionaire Gambler," Arrested With Wife in Raid by Police HAD BUSINESS SYSTEM A man known ns tho "millionaire gambler." and his wife were lield iu bail today charged with operating n "long-distance" gambling house. The man is Hurry Griffith, alias Harry Wash, 122V North Sixteenth street. His wife, who acted as his secretnry, was arrested under her maiden name of Ella Broderlck. flm fni-t Hint thev were married de veloped ut their hearing in City Hall. The niau wns held in SM10 bail nnd the xvoinnn under $000 bail for further henriiigH. , The police say books seized In firif fith's place show he operated with a Mstem of agents In every section oi net pionts, nccorci apiiroxlmnted ifSOO. slness was nperui ordlng to the de- tivtlvcx who Investigated the case. Ue had three telephones In his otllic nnd received almost hourly reports from his district "bookies" tclllug of their bets, all of which he backed. - Detectives llagert and Mcliulund wntched Griffith's place for several weeks, but could get nothing on him. Nobody but Griffith and ills secretary ever entered bis place of business. Then tho telophone companies fur nished lists of Ills cnlls and the police got their first real clue. The two de tectives forced their way into his place, but were forced out when ho threatened tn kill tliem. they say. Then warrants for him and UN wife were sworn out nnd hist night Lieu tenant Wagner, the two detectives who investigated! Griffith, Detoctives Galla gher and Hubn made tho raid. MADE 1800 A DAY POLICE BALK $4 CLOIH ROBBERY IN Thieves aruf Three Patrolmen Exchange Shots Outside Frankford Mill 112 GALLONS OF LIQUOR ARE STOLEN FROM HOUSE North Thirty-third Street Homo Is Looted While Family Is at Seashore A $-1000 eloth robberv was thwarted this morning in Frankford. The nollcc are seeking the men concerned in It Thev also nre senrchlnir for a gang of thieves who stole S2.p00 worth of whisky nnd champagne from n house left x-nennt for thn aiimmer. Though this theft probably occurred several days ago. the details have just been made public, The cloth robbers xverc surprised early this, morning after they had removed iiftv?seven rolls of cloth from the mill. nnd had It loaded on a motortruck ready to enrry it away. . Shots wero fired bv the police in the pursuit, nnd It is believed one man was hit. At 4:.10 o'clock Patrolman Samuel James, of tho Frankford station, was pavslng the mill of Julius Gaebauer, nt Frankford nnd Adams nvenues. when his attention was attracted by a live ton nuto truck. The patrolmen saw a young man sneak out' of the mill and pile cloth on tho truck. .Tntnes summoned Patrolmen Colwcll nnd Price, who were on duty in that district. Thinks Man Was Wounded The three patrolmen hurried to the mill just in time to see two of the in truders dashing up Deal street, n little street back of the mill. A third man wns trying to climb a barbed-wire fence near itlie mill. Patrolman Colwell fired nt him. i The robbers answered the shots, nnd a running battle followed. Tho robbers escaped. . . ' Returning to the loaded truck, xvhicli the robbers abandoned, the police found the fifty-seven rolls of cloth, valued ut $1000. The truck is believed by the police to have been stolen from the Itobluson Auto Express Co., 12 North Fourth street. Thieves Get Liquor Twenty-four cases or champagne and forty gallons of whisky were stolen from the home of Morris Alblus, 220,"i North Thirty-third street xvhile Alblus and his family were at a shore resort. Alblus discovered the robbery Mon day when he made a flying visit to his home. All his privnte stock, valued at more than .$2."00, had been removed from the cellar, except three demijohns of whisky. Those containers had been moved to n cellar window as though tho thieves planned to return for them. Albius nnd his family left for the shore about June 15. The lioutcs on either side of their home nlso were un occupied temporarily. A watchman named George Hall was employed to guard the three dwellings. Hall on Huniioy tounu a rear win dow of the Albius bouse opened Ua summoned a patrolman of the Twenty sixth anil York streets station. They watched the window for a short time and then entered, searching the first nnd iipncr floors without finding nny trace of nn Intruder. They bay they did not go into the cellar. 4 Husky Butcher Changes Plans of Auto Highwaymen by Weil Directed Bow MEN ESCAPE IN MACHINE When a bandit told William Tcufel, n powerfully built butcher, to hold up his hands about midnight last night, the butcher did ns ho was told, but executed an uppercut with his right and knocked tho bandit halfway across the street. Tho Injured highwayman with his com panion then escaped in nn automobile. Teufel lives at (I2.17 Market street. He had been attending a meeting at the Labor Lyceum, Sixth and Brown streets, and lind walked from the hall to Eleventh street and down Eleventh. At Callowlilll u small touring mr drew up nnd stopped. In it sat two men. One of the men, about twenty-five years old, and 5 feet 0 Inches in height, stenned from the enr, approached Teufel and asked for u match. When the butcher readied for a box in his pockets the bandit drew a gun and said: "I'ut up your hands. Here Is where you fork over your money." 1'n went Teufel's hands, but the.v went up fast and hard, catching the bnndlt nn the law with Ills rig lit list. The bandit was knocked Into the car tracks. The man In the automobile at once covered Teufel with a gun and ordered him to stand still. Meanwhile the man In the street arose, staggered to the car and wns helped in. Both men then drove away. Teufel was not robbed, although he hod $50. in his pocket. ' All physicians nnd hospitals have been warned to be on the lookout for n man with a fractured or Injured jaw or nose. RUNNING GUN FIGHT ONE PUNCH ROUTS ROBBER WITH UN South Jersey in Renewed Effort to Find Coughlin Baby Wilson Ashs Observance by U. S. of Pilgrims' Day Washington, Aug. 4. (By A. P.) Piosldcnt Wilson In a proclamation today "suggested and requested" that December 21 be- celebrated throughout the United States as the tercentenary of tho landing tit tho Pilgrims at Plymouth in, 1020, nnd appointed Samuel W. McCftll and Richard Hooker, of Massachusetts, and George Foster Peabody, of New York, as members of the Pilgrim Tercentenary Commission, In the proclamation the President recommendod that the day bo fit tingly observed "to tho end that salutary and patriotic lessons may be drawn from tho fortitude, perse verance nnd tho Ideals of the Pil grims." Rev. W. H. Wolf, of Crosswicks, N. J., Drove Away Saturday and Has Not Returned MIND MAY BE AFFECTED The Rev. Walter II. Wolf, n young Methodist Episcopal minister of Cross wicks, rs. .1., has been missing since Saturday, xvhen he drove away from homo in nn automobile furnished him by his congregation. Tho clergyman, who is thirty-two years old and married, is pastor of the Crosswicks nnd Ellisdnle churches, about four miles from IJordcntowrt, N. J. Tho clergymnn's wife says ho bad n prolonged illness early this yenr and she fears that his mind may have become affected. Mrs. Wolf notified the Tren ton authorities today. Her husband was driving toward that city when last seen. Mr. Wolf served ai pastor nt Wius low and nt Port Republic, N. J., before he wns assigned to his present charge. He is about five feet eight nnd one-lialf inches tall, weighs liiO pounds, and has light nair. The young minister's moth,cr-injlnw, Mrs. John If. Mennb, ofr K'nmdeu. was nt the pretty little pm'soiiagc at Cross wicks today. Mrs. Wolf had gope to n sister's home near Colllli;swood with her daughter Marian, throe and n half yenrs old. Wlfo Fears an Accident "Mr. Wolf took no clothing with him," asserted Mrs. Mennig. "He hml appeared to be happy 'and thoroughly enjoyed his pastoral work here. He was devoted" to my daughter, his wife, nnd they never had u quarrel. "Mrs. Wolf fears that her husband has bVcn kiljed in nn accident. We de layed notifying the authorities, ns we hoped he would return at nuv moment. Absorbed in His Work "My daughter is holding up bravely and ussures ilttle Mariau that her daddy will be home soon." Various theories are given by the townspeople to account for the minis ter's disappearance. Members of the congregation say thnt he uppeured to be nbsorbed in his church work, lie wns a quiet, studious man. they de dare, and was devoted to Ills family. The minister's father lives iu Colllngs- wood. FISHERMEN, TAKE NOTICE! Manayunk Farmer Modestly Talks of His Tomatoes Theodore Mcnke, a fanner nt Shaw mint, north of Maunyiink, modestly ad mitted todav that he now raises tomn toes slightly larger than pumpkins. "Yes." lie snld, "I picked one fnir sized one from my tomato patch yes terday that made a meal for my wife, our nine children, a grandchild nnd my self. "Pretty fair sized one it wns. 'Weighed five pounds and four ouuees. We had some of it raw, stewed part of It, and fried n couple of pounds. Mr. Monko Mas lieen fnrmlng three cars. It Is not known what ho did before he took up tomato raising, but his nelghbois say lie must have been a fisherman. TRY TO IDENTIFY SUICIDE Man Who Killed Himself In Camden Thought Movie Director A man who killed himself by cutting his throat ami shooting himself nt I'lue Vuljey, N. J'., about fourteen miles from Ciimden. Inst Saturday, tuny have been a prominent motion picture ill rictor. The nnine II. W. Blltzer was found in his Piiiinuui hat. Ills suit wns made bv a Los Angeles firm. Police ut Los Angeles" learned the tailor made the stilt for a man by that mime who wns a prominent motion picture play director. The eastern office of the pit tin e com pany denied the story. Turn to the Comic Page In the first two columns there is u story that will interest you. t Pleased the President Mr. Wilson is a frank admirer of detective tales by this author. THE PARADISE MYSTERY J. S, Fletcher's clever nnrra tivo is cleverly told, "Benin It Today! Mil FEAR ACCIDENT E SEEN BY HARDING IN CLASSAPPEALS Second Only to Surrender of Nationality to Internationally, v Says Candidate LEAGUE OF NATIONS PACT AT ODDS WITH CONSTITUTION Covenant Opposite Extreme to Referendum on Proposed . War Declaration By the Associated Press Marlon, O., Aug. 4. Decrying ap peals to classes as a menace second only to surrender of nationality to in tcrnationality; Senator Harding, in bis second front porch presidential cam paign speech today, declared that If he could choose but ono be would "rather have industrial and social peace at home thnn command the international peace of nil the world." He asserted it would be unwise for this country to permit "our nctlvltlcs in seeking for noaee in tho old world to blind us to the essentlais of pence at home." and added that "If Amer ica cau be made to forget the attempted barter of nationality, well and good," but that "when nationality is surren dered to internntionnlity, little else matters and nil nppeal is vain." The address was delivered to n delegation of vtayue county, u., Kepublicnns. Senator Harding's Address Senntor Harding's address in part follows : "You must be confidently nnd fear lessly American to measure to the re nowned name of Viine. The story of Wnyne county Is that of the great be ginning of the Northwest Territory, whose sturdy citizenship xvns strength ened by the hardships of the forest plo ncer. "The pioneer gave the conquering westward march of civilization,, wl)iei our obligations are to preserve and de fend. Homo day 1 hope we shall fittingly Uiuttmcinnrntp the sacrifices, oud the achievements of these courageous fron tiersmen nnd their btrong-hciirted women. "It Is worth remembering thnt the pioneers these stalwart makers of America weie little less vnricd in their origin than our people of todav. Either they or their forebears came from lands across the sea. But they were thinking only of America. Theirs was more than sole allegiance to the land of ndoptlon : they were interested nnd devoted heart and soul. They were in complete uni son, with one purpose, one confidence, one pride. "When I sat on the Senate committee nn foreign relations and listened to American delegations uppenllng in behalf ! ot Kinsmen or old home-folk across seas, 1 caught the aspirations of na tionality, nnd n perfectly natural sym pathy ninong kindred in this republic. But I little reulized then how we might rend the concord of Ainciican citizen ship iu our seeking to solve old -world problems. "There hn'c como to me, not nt nil unbecomingly, the expressed nnxlotics of Americans foreign-born, who are asking our country's future attitude on territorial awards in the adjustment of pence. They nre Americans nil, but thc have a proper and natural inter est in the fortunes of kinsfolk nnd nn tive lands One cuunot blame them. If our land is to settle the envies, ri valries, jealousies and hatreds of all civilization, these adopted sons of the republic wnnt the settlement favorable to the land from which they came. Concord of Citizenship Broken '"The misfortune is not alone that It rends the concord of nations, the greater pity is that it rends the con coid of oui citizenship ut home. It is folly to think of blending Greek ami Bulgarian, Italian aud Slovak, or mak ing them Americnn, when the land of adoption sits In judgment on the land from which they came. "Governor Coolidge spoke the other day of tho rebcuc of America from the reactions of xvar. We also need to be rescued from the visionary and fruitless pursuit ot peace through supergovern ment. I do not wnnt Americans of foreign birth making their party align ments on what we ipenn to do for somo nation of the old world. We want them to be Republicans bceauso of whnt we mean to do for the United States of America. Our call Is for unison, not rlxaling sympathies; our need is con cord, not the antipathies of long in heritance. 'Surely no ono stopped to think t'ontlniird on rase Thlrttf n. Column Three COX GUESJ ATPICNIC , Will Not Discuss Politics Considers Aid to Suffrage Dayton. O., Aug. !. Governor Cox, Democratic presidential candidate, will bn the guest todiy and deliver nn ad dress at the annual plculc of the Gem City Democratic Club, of this city, nt Shiloh. about ten miles north of Day ton, The governor said he did not ex pect to discuss uutional politics, but would deal principally with reminis cences of his state career. The governor yesterday considered further aid toward ratification of the woman suffrage, amendment by the Tennessee Legislature. Mrs. George BassT chairman of tho woman's bureau of the Democratic National Committee hnd reported the governor said, that prospects for ratification in Tennessee were unfavorable. Governor Cox announced definitely jestcrday that no would not bo able to attend the vice presidential notification ceremonies for Franklin D, Roosevelt, at Hyde Park, N. Y on August 0. It was understood that Governor Cox wished to let) Mr. Roosevelt be tho prin cipal Democratic Ucurc at Hyde Park, NATIONAL INA POLISH NURSES FALL EXHAUSTED Cracow, Poland, Aug. 4. (By A. P.) Thousands of wounded soldiers arc taxing hospital facilities here, and doctors nnd nurses, exhausted by long vigils, arc often dropping beside the operating tables. The American Red Cross has opened nn improvised school for nurses, and 300 women are being given a hasty clcmcntnry cTiursc. P. R. R. BKAKEMAN KIILED AT SPRING GARDEN ST. George L. Hopkins, 037 North Seventh street, a, brakemaa. on' the Pennsylvania Railroad, -was killed Instantly this afternoon In tho yards near tho Spring Garden street bridge. Hopkins wcr making up a freight train -when an electric passeger train cam along behind him. Other -workmen called a warning but he did not hear it In time. ' 41 RAIL STRIKE LEADERS REPORTED INDICTED i CHICAGO, Aug. T. The federal grand jury investigating the rocent railroad strikes will report at 2.30 this afternoon, It was an nounced at the Federal Building today. It was reported that the jury had roturned Indictments against forty-one leaders in the strike. COURT HALTS PROBE STEEL WORKMEN OFP.R.T.ERNS MAY BE UNIONIZED Judge Linn Grants Underlying Companies Stay of Proceed ings Before Commission BUSINESS MEN OPPOSE IT Judge Linn, of the Superior Court, today grunted a writ of supersedeas to uttoruevH foe the underlying companies ,pf tliC'Rimid Transit Co.. which stays ull proceedings affecting the underlying conipaiile iihw before the Public Serv ice Commission. 'Henri P. Brown, former Judge Dimuer ItocbcY and John J. Sullivan, attorneys for the iinderl.vlnc companies. nppinrcd at Judge Linn's chambers this morning nnd asked for the writ. Judge Linn called in C. Oscar Bcasiey. at torney for the United Business Men's Association. Mr. Bcasiey opposed the granting of the writ, saving that the evidence now i before the Public Service Commission wus incomplete, and thnt he did not i think the commissions Investigation should be interfered with. Tlie writ was asked aud granted on the ground that the underlying com panies would be "put to vast expense if "a long and extended hearing" before the Public Service Commission were continued. Argue Court Hus Right Mr. Brown, attorney for the Second and Third Streets Passenger Railway, otic of the underlying companies, argued that the question of whether the Pub lic Service Commission lyid jurisdiction over the underlying companies should be decided by the Superior Court before the hearing of the Public Service Com mission wns continued. lie also contended that the Superior Court should pass upon tlie question of whether the reduction in rentals asked by the United Business Men's Associ ation is within the statutory powcis of the Public Service Commission. A third question raised b. the attor ney wes "whether the Public Service Commission has the constitutional right to revise the rentals stipulated in such leases, where it affirmatively appears thnt the leases were made prior to the nassnge of tlie nubile service comiian.v law, and where, it further appears that the reutnls bear no relation to and are iu no sense dependent upon the number of passengers carried, or the rate of fare charged by the operating com pany. Tlie cliect oi .niuge liinn s nction win be temporarily to take away" from the Public Service Commission its right to continue its investigation of the under lying rentals. Tlie Superior Court will sit October -l in Philadelphia after the summer lecess. L ntll then no action enn be taken on the constitutional ques tions raised by the underlying com panies. Rule Halls Investigation In granting the writ Judge Linn sold: "It is ordered that tlie appeal now pending in this court shull operate as a supeiscdens, and that the Public Service Commission Is hereby directed tn stny nil further proceedings ngniust the underljing comiinnles, pending the termination of their uppcal to this court." Mr. Ilcasley was" taken by surprise when the uttorneys' for the uuderliing companies sought "'e writ of super sedeas. They were iu Judge 1. Inn's chambers iu City Hall when Mr. Beas- Continued on Vatr Two, Column Oil Ty Cobb to Stump for Cox and Roosevelt New York, Aug. 4. "Ty" Cobb, star outfielder of the Detroit base ball club, will appear as a "spell binder" tn the coming presidential campaign if plans of Senator Pat Hurrison, chnlrinan of the Demo cratic National Speakers' Bureau, materialize. Senator Harrison an nounced today that he proposed to take Cobb with him on u proposed "sMilng around the circle" iu the interests of Cox and Roo&cvc"t. T "Not a Strike; Organization Is Better Word," Explains A. F. of L. Secretary DENY PLEDGE TO HARDING' ShtM Mtpntrh to Kvenliw I'nbUc Lcttarr Atlantic Ciiy. Aug. 4. There wns extreme reticence nmoug members of the executive council today over reports to the effect that n campaign is about to be set iu motion for the unionization of the plants of the United States Steel Corporation. ' Mr. Goinpcrs declined to discuss the matter, but Frank Morrison, secretary, made a significant statement, when asked to confirm tlie intimation that a . . .... T ... i. general strike of the thirty A. F. of I unions which hnve n place in the steel industry is contemnlated. "I should hardly call It a strike : organization would be the better word." Mi. Morrison declared. He declined to comment upon repie- Mentations to the effect that the Aiiuil- g uted Association of Iron nnd Steel Workers has received assurances of the co-operation of tlie entire labor move- ment in n great drive, but that was said to be a fact even whlW' the executives council thus far has not taken definite action. Call Organizations to .Meet It is probable, however, that the call to the thlrt of more steel and iron workers' organizations to appoint rep resentatives to a general campaign committee will be formulated nnd np procil here een if the call is not sent out until later. The view was expressed here that Mr. (iompers and the chiefs of the Amal gamated linxe selected this particular time for declaring their purposes to unionize the steel industry tor psycho logical reasons, and K was prcdh ted that congressional candidates in nil of the districts in steei and iron territory, western Pennsylvania iu particular, will be "felt out" his to how they stand on the subject of the light of steel workers to exact recognition of organization. Time Is Propitious This nlso is held to be a particularly propitious time for waging n wide open battle against a very wore subject with the Americnn Federation, the course of public officials In McKeesport, Brad dock and other steel making towns is refusing to permit the holding of public demonstrations in support of unionism and employing force to miiKe their in junctions effective. It is believed to be tlie present inten tion of union organizers to mnke this nutl-unlun pollc, a campaign issue in Pittsburgh and western Pennsylvania congressional districts as well, und to raise in Ohio, the home of both the Presidential nominees, the issue that public authority is denying the right of free speech to patriotic American work men. Today's session of the executive council wus devoted to hearing juris dictional questions uffcctiug the jewelry makers. If T. V. O'Connor, chief of the Inter national Longshoremen's Unl visited Marion and "tendered the nid" of that powerful labor body to Senator lluril lug. ns reported iu dispatches from the Ohio city, ho acted without any author ity of the American Federation of La bor. Samuel Gompcrs. president of the A. F. of L., made this declaration after a session of the executive council here this morning. "This interesting information from Marlon is all news to me," Mr. Gom iiers exclaimed, almost exploslveh. "Neither Mr. O'Connor nor any other niau has the right or the power to pledge the uid of the American Federation of Labor to auy niau. "I must wait for eoufirniution of this report before making any further state ment. Ah matters stund, 1 hardly cuu credit the report." Somo ot Mr GoinperN's collengues thought it quite possible the diief of me ioupsiorenien might have made some 111 i ' ,,i, I - -.. - -..-.-, ,J"T'nu i-im! in iiwiiiiiicui ior, me laiiiiro hi ine nun inistiation at Washington to back up his men lu their Kinicc, Wlin you think of wrltlmr. think WlUTtXd.' -Aav, CAPITAL OF POLANlJ GIVEN 0NLY2 ORl DAYS TO HOLD OUT Lfl Defendors Floe So Fast They $ Are Unablo to Burn Bridees" Behind Them U. S. RED CROSS SHIFTS ITS, HEADQUARTERS TO CRACOW' British Send Sharp Note to Soviet, Asking What In tentions Are By the Associated Press 'Al Paris, Aug. 4. Warsaw will have to he evacuated within two or three dnyr, in the nntnfnn nf iUn Vrnnitli nn.1 Tlrtt ... . r : ",L .At. isn military experts there, nnd the gov.- l fl,,,A.. 1.. ..... .....! .- 1... . 1 f1.t V Sr'V v....,.,-,,, ,n i-Airrii'ii 10 ue ijiuvfu niimn v that period, probably to Cracow. The report of the members of" the military mission, telegraphed here last night, declared the Polish army njohg the river Bug hnd retreated so preclpl lately that it did not even destroy the bridges behind it. This river was Wary saw's last line of defense. A special Russian cavalry corps, the, military men reported, was driving southwest along the border of the Al lenstcln district nnd had yesterday readied a point thirty miles from Mlnwn, thirty-one miles northwest of Warsaw, on the only direct railroad to DnnEli frnm thn Pnltul, ..nlini n.Ja cavalrymen were said to be beaded iiiriniKii .uunvn inio me roitsn corridor to the Baltic, nearby, nnd thence to romernniu. The experts reported that the Polish forces were demoralized nn tho whnla 'northern and central fronts nnd Wer ?,r,f,n!n(:!j;(,.Ti'c i!fJi' ,mr.Li'-I 1 li " V MMUHIHMIIII UUIItJ Ul Jaf 110 1'OICH ni&k.nr n ,tnml nnw .- H Little Hope of Armlfttlcn-w.u The Polish arfhlstirc ileWntrrf . turned to Warsaw last Polish Government has nignt nndUHfe'.yjlHi little hopeofV ' j the speedy arranging of nn. armistice, v Members of the allied mission , are, convinced that the Soviet government does not intend to negotiate an armi stice, they reported, and declared their belief that the Russians had set the next meeting of the negotiators for to- day at Minsk knowing that it-would ! bo Impossible for the Poles to nrrive at that time, making a pretext for ftrthcr ,"',? ,.,,,,. . , n . The Polish Government is undecided , js to whether it will send emissaries to 'Minsk, 'the experts said their gravest 'concern was the imminent cutting oitof I arsaw s direct communications with i Danzig, upon which Poland Is depend-' I ent for military supplies. Lord D Abernon. the British nmbas , "'"'or to Germany, a member of the ""iiii mission in i-oiann. nas returned to Warsaw from Danzig. Conversations relative to the Polish situation were begun last evening.' ber twsjen Pnrls and London, according .to the journal. Most of the newspapers of this city express the opinion that a new exennnge or views netween tne French and British foreign offices is necessary because of the decision of thp Soviet Government to conduct peaOe conversations coincident to the nego tiation of nn armistice with Poland,. ' From n military viewMi!nt, a num ber of military experts on the stnffs of newspapers here say the slttiutlon, while of a serious nature, is not desperate, at least for the present. e London. Aug. 1. (By A. T.) The British Government is irritnted over what it believes is Soviet Russia's equivocation over the British sugges tion that the Russians halt at the armi stice line of demarcation in Poland uud begin pence negotiations. It has dispatched a sharp note to the Soviet government demanding a yes or no an swer as to whether that government in tends to listen to the suggestion. The note, it is reported, contains no threats and is not iu the nnture of an ultimatum, simply requesting a quick answer us to what Soviet Russia In tends to do, Whut was regarded here as the omi nous silence of Warsaw, so fur as ofH- chil messages were concerned, was broken today, but the dispatches con tained little to indicate what was go-i lug on. An unconfirmed report today said thnt both tlie British and French mis sions hnd left the Polish capital, An Knglish semiofficial n,geney which normally receives many messages dally giving full details of conditions in Po land, received today its first message from Warsaw since Monday. It showed evidences of censorship, being reduced to Inconsequential Information. (Dispatches from the Associated Press correspondent at Warsaw, giving de tailed information of conditions there, have been coming through to N'ewYork with fair regularity in vlrtunlly th.u iiormni time of transmission. One mes snge received tills morning was timed in Warsaw at 1(1:10 o'clock last night.) The question whether the proposed peace conference iu London shall be abandoned Is said to be conditional on Russia's reid . One of the chief ub jeets for discussion at the coufcrfuce was to be the Russo Polish peiiee, aud ' the last British note points nut that if the Soviet Government dec Mrs to make peace with Poland illrct then one of tlie innin reasons for the Lon don conference is removed, Leo Kninenerf, president of the Jlofl cow rioviet, who came to r.ngmiKl, li neaee with the other Soviet dclrrai! in the proposed negotiations over tlntre" sumption nf trade with Russlu, has been l.imi. tin.! ilni'U Htmi t lntkfltiM lisuiii w n-j y. in, if iti,ir n ituiniv ttuyiljft Miy .... Veii hy any UrltMi unit-lain. t c'rossiiig of the Itivei- Bug lit IIul- ut several ,' ' points by tlie Soviet ariiiv iidyiiifcltig"o ."5 ' 11' Su .,.,.,,.,,.,...,.1 ..t..lnll., I... A f.? N cow today. The continued ndyanee,f, ij jl Continued en f sue Thirteen, Colusm CM.'I ,A -'$ nr & V $ Q !;il in '-'At Xl ". 1 a m s; Y An m MS M U , M ?1 a: '! J K t i V .V s. IT. tt - miwm S''yrfrKtiu Mdkhtfmtst!&!.