"ft ' ' , J, i -r ,'.- " i ,fl J ,-l c t. ' t " ' t - i- , '' 1 '( Cuentnd THE WEATHER Occasional showers tonight and prob ably Sunday, followed by clearing nml cooler; jnodcrato easterly winds. WIGHT EXTRA u TESirKHATUKK AT KACH HOUtt rwr y ''wjf iw Jiw.nvw'1; .'A,;;" Ifeftger Bubltc vS- "A1 Vol. vi. no. 292 entered aa Second-niaM Matter at lh Postemc. at Philadelphia, I. PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1920 Published Dally Except PtiniUy. Buhtcrlptlon Trice M a Tear by Mali Copyrltht, 1020, by Tubllo Irfdrer Company. PRICE TWO CENTS Under the Act of March 3, 1879. BOLSHEVIK DIVISIONS SURROUNDED BY POLES w, . y f it rhih 'U Mi American Athletes Once Again Clinch Track and Field Championship in Olympic Games ll 1)110 111 12 I 1 I 2 1 4 1 n 7nJ71 m 174 I7fi 7.'i 175 I j ! ii i i . six U.S. POINTS IN 3 FINAL EVENTS; MDONALD VICTOR tow York Voteran Captures , First In 56-Pound Weight. ! Landers Get3 Markers PIGERIO, ITALY, TAKES SECOND TITLE IN WALK Hamilton Leads In Deotathlon Jests Ahoarn Disappoints In Hop, Step and Jump Winners at a Glance Hop, Step and Jump Final TImJos, Finland. Distance, 14.55 meters or 47 feet 7 1-3 Inches. BO-Pound Weight Final Pat McDonald, New York A. P. Distance, 11.205 meters. 3000 -Meter Walk Final Frigerio. Italy. 'Tlmo, 13:14 .6. Antwerp, Aug. 21. The last chance bf the United States losing the track unci field championship in tho Olympic tames was eliminated at tho stadium to day when United States nthlctes BCored twenty-one points In three finals. Uncle Bam again has clinched tho crown. These twenty-one points raised the American total to 170. Even If Eng land, the xcrond place team, gains the highest positions for nil of her athletes in the remaining events, she cannot overtnko the husky and sturdy United States representatives. Pnt McDonald nnd Pat Ryan, tho New York veterans, helped swell the mitert Htatcn total with first and second place respectively in-the fifty-alx-pound wight throw and Sherman Landers, of uic university ot Pennsylvania ami Chlenzo A. A., and Dan Ahpnrn. of the Illinois A-. C, took fifth and sixth jilaeeaijn.-thf; hop, step and 'jump. The other American points were picked mi by It. Itemcr. of the Ameri can Walkers' Club, and Maroney, St. Ancjms Club, who finished third nnd fifth respectively in the 3000-mcter walk. Relay Teams Qualify American sprinters and middle dis tance runners came through In the ro lay trials and qunlificd for the finals and Brutus Hamilton is leading in tho com petition for the dcctnthlon chnmpion hln, so the Stars nnd Stripes are on their way to glean a few more points. Thp 400-mpter relnv tpnni. Vnmnnsoil ...v. . - : ' - - of Charlie Paddock, of the Los Angeles A. C. ; Lorcn Murchlson, of the New York A. C. : Morris Klrkscy, of tho Olympic Olub of San Francisco, and Jackson Scholz, of the University of Missouri, casib qunlificd for the final Jy winning their boats in 43 seconds flat. Luxembourg, France, England, Sweden and Denmark also qualified in their heats. The 3000-meter team, which was made up of II. II. Drown, of the Bos ton A. A.; Larry Shields, of tho Meadowbrook Club, of Philadelphia; Iran Dresser, of tho New York A. O. ; Jilke Dcvnnnoy, of the Mlllroso A. A.'. M Now York, nnd A. A. Shnrdt, of we Chicago A. A., together with the warns representing England, Sweden end Italy, qualified for the finals. Italian Double Winner Frigerio. of Itnly, wgn tho 3000 nietfr walk in 13 minutes 14 1-5 sec onds. Parker, of Australia, finished Mcond; McMaster. South Africn, fourth, nnd C. S. Dowson. Enirlniid. th. The competition is n new event and consequently no pruvlous timo lias wen recordod. It was Frigerio's second Olympic championship. Ho won tho 10,000 Jnter walk the other day. A. O. Hill, of bngland, Is the only other double Wnner. Hc holds tbo 800 and lfiOO Jnrter titles. Frigerio outclassed tho field. Parker Jltcrnnted with tho Italian in setting e paco until 1200 meters from the JPe. where Frigerio dashed Into u lorty.ynrd lend which ho held to tho I. ,I,aier bent Reiner by about the wme distance, the latter being ten feet head of McMaster, who was rapidly overtaking the American at tho end. .. Hie fcliowine nf Alionrn wns n rlla. 'net disappointment to the Americans. iwa,s MPreted that ho would win worn posinou nt ,ensti n ilol(g tbo wrld s record for tho event. hhormnn Landers is the lntercollegl Me broad jump champion. He also won in.i P. 'P.nnd jump chninplonshlp ,nJ,'o IVnn relay carnival in tho spring. t .l ." "10 I''nn star' took m-Bt Pln', R.rs '4,7,fpt't 7 1-3 Inches). Three . t 'n,1,P(1 "'''"'I Ilm. They i4r.f-JanK.n: UAH meters; Almlof, lj: and Sahllng, 14.175. mes. niTerJcan, ," ami nn lm-il.'.-".01'1 ,t athletes of other notions bei, . ' m tuc clns,,(lc Marathon to c run tomorrow. Tim A,.1n.i,.nnu n- tomorrow " mvuviiiin lid' Continued jinj-uie Tour, Column Tu ASKS RECALL OF ENVOY U- 3. Telia Letvla Nagel Is Un desirable l.etvfnSl,l"Btoln' auk. 21.(ny A. IM- n'tatf t ,." .nsKC" 1,v tho Un ted ?reenti,Lr''c'a,J A,fM Nnsol. hearing ttUoS , i "I V,vi" "wn-tnry of 1p ?ork h 'i'" H b(.'i,1B 'IPtuIneil at New It !yatlln,i'''1'lgratlon authorities. Kiwi w ! ofllclully today that Hove nm a rpsurdcd ' "' American n" "5 SSni T, n" '""leslrabio resident wintry, " l bc Pc"nlttcil to enter the rabW,.!c'arlle,1 U,at S011,, l'o K" thai v!I" n. wn'1 i to Riga asking I .e fo V.v"?,1. V"J,,."t,.. '?? " 'ailed Y.iw .i ' "".S'1 "P 'furs mat TH ,or2-tho cablegram was re- How the Nations Stand n a 8 S3. lOO-mcter dash... 10 0 in o 10 8 o o o o 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 7 1 3 0 0 0 3 1 11 0 0 0 0 1 12 7 3 4 7 4 0 0 0 '2 0 3 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Javelin throw!... 0 lOO-mcter hurdles 17 Fcntalhlon 11 BOO. meter run.... 0 High Jump 17 800-meter run... 8 10.000 .meter walk 0 110-meter hurdles 11 Shotput 7 Itroad Jump R Hammer throw. . . 13 moo-meter run.. 4 3000-meter steeple- 8 Tug-of -war 0 200. meter dash .. IK 400-mctcr run... a 10,000 -meter run. 0 Polo vault 14 Hop, stop, Jump . . .1 no-pound weight. 13 3 0 0 4 0 1 ia 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 Totals 173 02 -05 02 20 Other nations liavo scored points as follows: Italy Seven In 10,000-meter wnllt, three In lO.OOO.metcr run nnd four In 3000-mctor steeplechase. Total 14. South Africa Three In 800-meter run, three In 10,000-meter walk, one In 100 meters, one In 200-meter dash and eight In 400-mctcr run. Total 10. Denmark Seven in polo vault. To tal 7. Canada Seven In 110-meter hurdles and thrco In 50-pound weight. Total 10. Now Zealand Throe In HO-meter hurdles and two in 20-meter dash. Total 5. Norway Ouo in pentathlon and two In broad Jump. Total 3. Czccho-Slovakia Threo In 1500 meter run. Total 3. Holland Two in tug of war. Total 2. Belgium One In tug of war. Total 1. SHIBE'S CONDITION SERIOUS Owner of A'a Hurt When Autos Collide on Ashbourne flke Suffering from a possible concussion of the brain, Ilenjamin F. Shibc, presi dent and part owner of the Philadelphia baseball team of the American League, is in n serious condition at tho Jewish Hospital, as the result of nn nutomobllo nccldcnt yesterday at Ashbourne pike and Cross-roads. Mr. Shibo and Dr. David Faigen baum, 1031) North Eighth street, wcro riding in the former's cor when another machine, driven by David Smith, a chauffeur, rammed tho Shibo car., turn ing the innchinc over. The occupants of tho Shibc mnchinc wcro taken to'tho hospital, while Smith, uninjured, was urrcstcd nnd held by Magistrate Comly to await the outcome of Mr. Shlbe's injuries. It was said nt the hospital today that Mr. Shibo spent a very rostlcis night. CARNEY LOSES ONE VOTE "New Citizen" Says She Will Have Revenge on Magistrate A man nnd the woman ho married to reform were eacli held in ?3000 bnli for court todny by Mngistrnto Carney at tho Twentieth nnd Iluttonwood streets station, charged with peddling dope. As the two were being led from the courtroom tho woman turned to tho magistrate mid said : "Listen, you women are about to get tho votu; you'll never get mine." She is Mrs. Mnrio Dale Anderson, of Melon street near Thirteenth. Sho was arrested with her husband, Fred An derson, of Rldgo avenue near Seven teenth, in n raid last night on a house on Mount Veron street npar Nine teenth. According to Detectives Kelly nnd Dedmldge, Mrs. Anderson spent n vear and ono-hulf in the House of tho Good Shepherd. The detectives ay Anderson married her when slip left the institu tion to aid in her reformation. 4 FEET PLUS BOTTLE WIN Little Man Knocks Out Taller Op ponent, but Lands In Jail Peter Fostaklovitz, of Gcrnmntown nvoiiuo near Hunting Park avenue, is something like, four feet tall, according to the police, while nis ndvertnry in n flcht last night is at least six feet. But FoHtnkicvitz carried the difference in his 'hip pocket, nccordiug to tho police. Ho became engaged In an argument with John Meely, of Elser street nenr Pike, Inst night. Meelv struck Fosta kievitz with his fist, pollpe snv, where upon the sninllcr man hit Mccly over tho Iiend with n bottle. Moely went to St. Luke's Hospital, nnd Patrolman Benl arrested Fostakle vitz on a charge of aggravated assault and battorv. Mngistrnto Price held him in $500 bnll for a further hearing Aug ust :s. HOPE FOR AMERICANS AMEF Nearl French Troops Nearlnp. Adana, Where Workers Are Besieged Constantinople, Aug. 10. (Hv A. P.) Advices to tho French inUsIon here leport tho rapture of Tarsus, Asia Minor, August 1 li by French troops. Hope now is hold out for thp Amer ican lellef workers who have been be hipped in Adana since June 20. Tardus is situated halfway between Mersina and Adana. In n recent dispatch from Constan tinople it was stilted thnt eighteen Americnn workers, Including two Phil ndelnlilanH, were in Adana, but wore unable to leuvo boenusc of Its Invest input by Turkish Nntionnllhti,'' who were endeavoring to starve tho French gnrri hon into n hiirrt'ndcr. Three Trainmen Killed In Wreck Kalamazoo, Mich., Aug. 21. (By A. P.) Threo trainmen wt-re killed this morning near Sehoolcrnft, south of here, when their trnin, n Lnke Shore freight, ran Into an oppn derailer Tho dead aro Engineer C. E. nossett, Flro man P. J, Grove and Brakemau O. J, Bodrlek, nil of Elkhart, IwL They wcro buried under a coal car which overturned. 29 BELIEVED LOST L Freighter City of Superior Sunk' After Being Struck by Steamship King WOMAN AMONG MISSING; CAPTAIN AND 3 MEN SAVED Alarm Rang Two Minutes Bo fore' Crash Boat3 Torn Away In Launching By tho Associated Press Sault Sto Mario. Mich., Aug. 21. Tho lives of twenty-nine persons, one of them a woman, arc believed to have been lost shortly after 0 o'clork lost night when the steamer City of Superior, n freighter, sank four nnd one-half miles northeast bf AVhitpflsh Point in Lake Superior nftcr collid ing with the steamship Willis L. King. Four members of the crew, Including Captain Edward Sawyers, of Albion, Mich., were saved. The missing woman, is known to have been tho wife of the second engineer. Captain Sawyers would make no Btntpmcnt except thnt thp night was clear, no fog being In evidence. Alarm Signal Sounded Walter Richter. boatswain, one of the survivors, who was brought hero by tho steamship Turner, is In a local hospital, seriously Injured. "The captain's nlarm signal rang lust two minutqs before tho crash," said Richter. If wo had had two minutes more no lives would have bpen lost. The King struck us just aft of amidships on the port side and the impact took away tho entire stern. Tho crew kept their heads nnd nil waited calmly for the boats to bc launched but there was no time. Several of the boats were torn nway while tho men were attempt ing to launch them. Boat Thrown Overboard "A boat I was attempting to launch was thrown overboard carrying me with it." Richter reached n floating hntch cover nnd later was rescued by the 'L timer, Riehter's homo is in Lorain, Ohio. Other survivors were Oni Lehne, of Chlcneo. second mote, and I'ctcr Jacob son. of Cleveland, wheelsman. These two, with the captain, wcro brought here this morning. nmniniK f the Pittsburch Stpam- ship Co., ownpr of thp City of Superior, snid tho vessel left Snndusky for Lnke Rimnrlor on August 14. 'ihcy unucr stood that the collision with tho King occurred in a fog rievelnml. Auc. 21. (Bv A. P.) George A. Mnrr, secretary of the Lake Cnrriers' Association, saitt me nupcrior ritv lcf Rnnduskv. O.. unbound on August 14, with tho following crew of thirty-two: Master. 13. L. Sawyer. Almont, Mleli . : mate. Leo Roes. Detroit; bee ond mnte, (J. G, Lehne, Chicago; RnntHwnln. Walter Richter. Lorain. O. : wheelsmen, John Galloway, Detroit, Bennnrd Masiak. Mnrinetto, Wis.; watchmen, Gerald J. Cleary, Cheboy gan. Peter .Taoobson, Cleveland; deck hands, Tony nnywllle, Gary. Ind., Joe S. CnnigUH. Clevelnnd, Jay McIIntton, Palestiup. III.. .lames Daley. Boston, Mass., Clarence Sprague, Cleveland; engineer, George H. Ferguson, Geneva, O. ; second engineer, J. E. Eagles, Con neaut, O. ; third engineer. H, II. Mc-' Ciillough. Murciuette, Mich.; oilers, Peter Koblcsky, Mnrinetto, Wis., F. G. Tiniin, Youngstown, O. ; Joseph Tedo rosjd, Cleveland; firemen. Albert Wehner, Pittsburgh, Pa., Philip Mucho, Duluth, Minn.. Arvo Llnqulst. Hancock, Mich., John Uusltola, Chisholm, Minn., Angel Cnrusos, Gary, Ind.. James Buike, Chicago; coal passers, James S. lllckc.. Gary. Ind.. F. A. Kruger. Jniksou, Mich., Steve Wosiek, Chicago; steward, Jesse A. Hnrdcu. Cleveland; second cook, William D. Bass, Circlo villo, O. ; porters, E. J. Uichardson, Cleveland, G. W. Parker, Cleveland. JOHN BARCLAY JONES DIES Sugar Refiner Overcome by Heart Attack at Brother's Home John Barclay Jones, a member of the Society of Friends in Germantown. died of a sudden heart attnek nt 5 o'clock jestordny nftcrnoon whllo stand ing on the porch of his brother's, homo, at 114 West Coulter; street. Mr. Jones was sixty-five years old, He was engagpd in the sugar refining business, being .connected with n new refinery being built ot Wilmington, Ills wife, Helen Hopkins Jones, of Maryland, died in 1011. Mr. Jones Is survived by two children. Miss Esther E. Jones nnd John Barclay Jones, Jr. runeral servico will bc nt the home of his brqther, Edward M. Jones, Monday nftcrnoon nt 4 o'clock. Interment will lip iu tho Friends' Burial Grounds at Gormantow,n. Bed at 6:30 P. M. Every Day. for Month, Boys Sentence West Orange, N. .)., Aug. 21. (By A. P.) Six bos, ranging In ngo from ten to thhteeu ypnrs, found guilty nf lobbing neighbors' fruit trees, todny faced a court scutenco to go to bed at t) :30 o'clock each evening for thirty days. The parents, who wcro ordered to enforce tho sentence, were given dNcrt tlouary powers in administer ing the further punishment of cos tor oil to tho culprits. N SHIP 0 LISION ON LAKE SUPERIOR Developments of Day in Presidential Fight Colonel Oeorgo Harvey visited Senator Harding at Marlon, O., nnd 1icusM?d the Lengu&.of Nations with him. Governor Cox again attacked tho "senatorial oligarchy" In n speech nt Orrvlllc, O., replying to Senator Harding's commendation of the Senate. Plans to establish Harding and Poolldgo clubs among traveling men wore nnounccd In New York. L Erwin Starts for Fort Leaven worth for Four-Year Ter,m With Thirty Others 0 m IS HANDCUFFED TO ONE Erwin Bergdoll, sentenced draft dodger, left Governors Island, New York, nt noon today, on tho first leg of his Journey to Fort Leavenworth, Kan.. where ho will serve the tprm of four years imposed by army court-martial. There was little of tho dramatic about Erwin's departure. Prisoners are sent frequently from Fort Jay. at Governors island, to tho mllitnry prison at Fort Leavenworth, and the ceremony of their transfer lias lost all Its novelty. i-rwin was one of u batch of thirty men sent to Knnsns. Ills last few minutes nt Governors Islnnd wcro hu miliating, hs he was searched from top to toe, as were all thp other prisoners. Last week, necording to Captain Samuclson, who is in charge of the dis patch of prisoucis from the islnnd, n sergeant about to go to Leavenworth for life for having killed n comrndo in France -was found to hnve n thin sow hidden in his shoe. The search always is rigorous, moro so since the discovery of tho saw on tho "lifer." After he had been searched, Erwin was handcuffed to a short-term man. Bergdoll, sentenced to four years, .Jk regarded as a "long-termpr. ' It is customary to handcuff mpn .entenced to long terms to men whoso terms are brief, on the theory that a man who is soon to get out, nnvliow, would not jeopardize Ills chance by trying to es cape. Army "Chow" Rations Bergdoll, with the others, was givon thrpo days' rations, consisting largely of hardtack nnd "tinned wlllio" the "army chow" which ho would hnve pnten before this had ho not fled the draft. ANo eaph man got twpnty ono cents a dnv allowance for coffee. Erwin took with him some fruit and candy left over from yesterday, when his mother made Iter farewell visit. Promptly nt 1 o'clock. Now York time, or noon heio. the thirty prisoners, under guard of Lieutenant M. D. Barn dollcr. two sergennts nnd six privates, all armed, were put on two hip motor trucks. Thp trucks were put on the ferry and taken to the Battery, New York, where they immediately went on another ferry for Iloboken. At Iloboken thev wore nut on a special car attached to a Delnwnre. Ln knwannn and Western train, which will tnko them to Buffalo. Thp trip to Fort Lonvenworth will occupy most of three days. From Buffnlo the special car will be taken to Chicago, nnd thence to Kan sas Cltv, Kansns, where Fort Leaven worth is located. Thp thirty prisoners nru on n special day coach, which will hp their traeling homo clear to the fort. .Mother Is Indignant Mis. Emma Bergdoll, mother of the two draft dodgers, Grover and Erwin, did not attempt to see her son ngaln beforo he left today. Sho paid him a long visit yesterday weeping before she left nnd declaring angrily thnt "tills Is what comes of being decent and giving yourself up." She seemed to feel that Erwin wns being punished more for Grover's escnpades than for his own orfme. She tried in vain to get permission for him to rcmuln In the East for another month to nttend to some business matters. Erwin wns not allowed to converse with any one as tho prisoners were being got ready to go. It is ngnlnst tho rules for prisoners to talk on their way to prison, oeti among themselves. The enforced silence did not seem to bother Erwin, however, as ho has been of a silent habit pver since h sur rendered. He did not seem to be de pressed. Erwin's sentence wns approved bv General Bullard. commander of the Department of the East, this week. lie was seutenced to four jears for deser tion in time of war, but by good con duct will havn to servo something less thau three cais. NINE ARRESTED IN RAID Police Say Poker Game Was Run at 906 North Nineteenth Street Acting Lientennnt Mortimer nnd a squad of putrolmen from the Nineteenth nnd Oxford stieets stntlon Inst night swooped down on the residence of David Baggndy. 000 North Nineteenth street, where they say a poker game was In progiess, and arrested Baggudy and eight others. flnggudy will be arraigned before Mngistrnto Medeary In the Central Stntlon today charged with being the proprietor of the placo. Tho others, who aro aroused of being Inmates, are ; Michael Cnrlle, Tenth and Vine streets; Henry Bertram, Nineteenth and Brown streets; Nicholas Qules nnd Peter Nab laud, Sixteenth street and Fnlrmount avenuo; John Kerpllne, Eleventh and Mt. Vernon streets; John Ohius, Camao and Itaco streets; John Jacobs. Third ond York streets, and Philip Johuhon, u anu me streets. SEARCH BERGDOL ON WAY TO PRISON TENNESSEE COURT ISSUES INJUNCTION TO. STOP SUFFRAGE , Temporary Order Prevents Of ficials From Certifying Rati fication to Colby- ANTIS FLEE STATE TO BLOCK RECONSIDERATION Thirty Members Go to Alabama, Leaving No Quorum; Speaker Orders Arrest By tho Associated Press Nnshvlllo, Tcnn., Aug. 21. Chan cellor James B. Newman tiday Issued a writ of injunction temporarily re straining Governor Roberts, Secretary of State Stevens nnd the spenkers of the Tennessee Senate and House from cer tifying to Socrotnry of Stnte Colbv Ten nessee's ratification of the woman suf- fraeo amendment. A meeting of the House todav to clinch ratification of tho suffrage amend ment was blocked by nntiuffrngo mem bers, thirty of whom left Nnshvlllo Inst midnight for Alabama so ns to mako Impossible n quorum at tho sossion which wns to have opened nt 10 n. m. Lack Quorum by Seven Only fifty-nine members, seven less than u quorum, answered to their names when Sncfaker Walker called the House to order half an hour after the regular meeting time. Tho speaker declared the House in recess for one" hour to give the scrgcant-nt-nrms time to round up absentees. Since tliirtv of tho nl sent members wore reported nt Decatur, Ala., however, there seemed little pros pect tlint a quorum could uo nnd. Speaker Walker directed tho ser oeant-at-arms to arrest and bring bc foro the bar of the HotibC nil absent members. Suffrage advocates had planned nt the session today to move to reconsider the ratification vote of lost Wednesday, whan tho amendment was approved. 40 to 47. nnd then to lav that motion on the table, thus-preventing further efforts ut reconsideration. I. K. Riddick, suffrage leader, de daring the Legislntmo "was acting under federal and not state law in con sidering the suffrage amendment nnd thnt the state constltutlonnl quorum wns not necessary, moved that the Walker motion for reconsideration of ratification be tnken from the journal. The speaker held tho Riddick motion out of order. On an appeal to the House thp speaker was overruled b a vote of 11) to S. Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 21. (By A. P.) Thiity members of thp Tpunesseo House hove gone to Decatur. Ala., ne cording to the conductor of the Louis ville and Nashville train, which arrived hero nt !) -30 a. m. today SEVEN-YEAR LIMIT FOR WIFE Rich Dyer Says He Can't Be Bound Any Longer New "York, Aug. 21. "Seven .years is the longest I can mnko my home with any woman," Mnrtin D. Pollock, wentln president of a dyeing company, wrote his wife, Mrs. Augusta Pollock. Penni less, yesterday she nsked the court for an "immediate payment to tide over living expenses" pending the hearing in her suit for separation. Justice Hendrlek ordered Pollock to pay ?.ri0 for tho maintenance of his wife nnd five-j ear-old daughter. I'oliock hns nn income of $15,000 n year, his wife asserted. REVENUE AGENT SLAIN Body Found In Auto Parked Staten Island New York. Aug. 21. (By A P ) ' The body of Robert Hayes, internal revenue inspector, shot twice through the head, was found early today sitting upright in n touring ear parked at South Beach. Staten island. Charles Kane, of West Now Brigh ton, owner of the automobile, informed tho polico that the car had been htolen from in front of a South Bench dnnee hall, where he spent laBt evening with a party of friends, A South Beach watchman said hc had heard a shot at about 4 a. m. nnd dis covered the body in the machine while on his way home shortly afterward. HEAR ST. SWITHIN LAUGH? Chuckles Caused by Storm and Re port More Rain Is on Way Itniu swept down on Philadelphia out of the Wpbt. Instead of coming on horseback, like the well-known Lochinvar, the rain rode the 'crest of it low barometric pressuio wave. Showers from tho West aro predicted for tonight and probably tomorrow. This morning's bhower was not scheduled and probably occurred because of u "slight disturbance" ou the Virginia coast. There will bo easterly winds tonight (hnnging to westerly. Monday will be clear and cooler. Sherley Quits Rail Administration Washington, Aug. 21. (By A. P.) Tho resignation of Swoger Sherley, Inilsville, Ky., ns director of finance of tho railroad administration, effective September 1, was announced todny by Secietary Pa no. Mr. Sherley, it was understood, will return to the practice of law. D. C. Porteous, asslstnnt di rector of flnnnce, hns been designate acting director, tho secretary said. The resignation of S, Lake, staff officer in charge of labor mattoiXfor the rail Voad administration, was also an nounced. TODAY'S BASEBALL SCORES PHILLIES... 0 0 PITTSEI(lst).l 0 ATHLETICS-ST. LOUIS DOUBLEHEADER OFF The Athletics nnd the St. Louis Browns were booked to stage n doublehender rtt Shibo Park this afternoon, but Just about the time the first game was to have started it began to rain briskly and both games were called off. MOTION TO RECONSIDER SUFFRAGE BEATEN NASHVILLE, Tenn., Aug. 21. The lower House of the Ten nessee Legislature today defeated 50 to 0, a motion to reconsider its action in ratifying the woman suffrage amendment and ordered the Senate joint ratification resolution transmitted to the Senntt that It might bc sent to the engrossing clerk. ' ' ITALIAN PREMIER TO CONFER WITH LLOYD GEORGE BERNE, Switzerland, Aug. 21 Premier Glollttl. of Italy, fi expected to anlve here tonight by way of the Flmplon Mountnii louto. He is duo to reach Lucerne early Sunday for.his confercw with Premier Lloyd George. U. S. AVIATORS LEAVE FOR RACES IN PARIS NEW YORK, Aug. 21. Clarence Coombs, alternate pilot of the "Texas Wildcat," one of the three American entries In the Interna tional airplane rnce, sailed today enrout for Paris whr h will as sist Roland Rohlfs, formr holder of the world's altitude record In his attempt to lift tho Gordon Bennett aviation cup. Rohlfs sailed for Havre yesterday. Only three countries France, Great Britain and the United States are entered for the rnce; t CATCH IN AFIER m AUTO CHASE Philadelphia Cottagers at At lantic City Startle Resort Before Capture POLICEMAN IS INJURED Two Philndelphlans summering In Atlantic City were held under ball by the lecorder nt the seashore resort to dnj for a hearing next Monday, follow ing their nrrest enrly this morning nfter a sdisiitionnl automobile chase in which a traffic sqund patrolman was hurt. The men a nested aro Albert W. Pierrepont, a coal broker, whoso sum mer homo is nt 20 South Weymouth ovonup, Ventnor, nnd II. M. Royd- hnnso. n hllllripr. wlin Is n rnttnper nt n,lll South Brighton nvenuo, Chelsea. Tho Koydhousp-Arey Co., of which Mr. Bojdhouse is n member, is engnged in building nn addition to the bonrdwnlk end of Haddou Hall, one of the beach front hotels. Leon Jones, a member of the motor cycle squad. Is the patrolman who was Injured. Ho is In the Atlantic City Hospital, and is expected to be ablo to testify ngnlnst the two Phllndelphians Monday. At cording to testimony giveni before the ujcorder today, Pierrepout was driving the machine shortly before 0 o'clock Inst evening, nnd at Atlantic and South (Varolinn nenues careened Into ii trolley pole. Two taxi drivers. D. L. Briggs and B. H. Mason, signalled for him to stop. Instend of doing so, tho police sny, he swung into Smith Carolina nvenuo nnd gnve the wheel to Mr. Rojdhouse The tni men pursued in nnnthcr machine. The PhilndclphliuiH tuiued into Arctic iiM'niio, then swung over n cross stieet bnek to Atlantic avenue, going townrd Chelsea. Benjamin Schwartz, in another mn chine, joined in the pursuit at New York avpiiup, bellpving the Phllndel phintm were driving a stolen cnr. Jones, the traffic patrolman, blew his whistlo ns the cnr passed Arkansas nvenuc, nnd wheu Bojdhousp did not stop, jumped Into Schwartz's machine. Itojdhouso kept on nt high speed, necording to the police. At California nvenui! his machine threw a shoo and the tire crashed ngnlnst the door of the firrhouse there, bringing the lire men out. A squarcr further on Joues tried to leap to the running bonrd of the Phllndelphians' car, but missed ns it put on speed and fell upon his head. Jones wus picked up nnd rushed to the hospital. The car driven by the fugitives crashed into the street curb ing a few moments Inter, and two pa trolmen arrested the occupants. Mr. Pierrepont put up $200 cash ball and Mr, Hodhouso $50 as ninety for their appearance. Monday, They sppnt tho night iu adjoining cells at the At- lnntln riltv nnllpA f.lntlnn COX SEEKING VOTES E Audiences More Easily Moved bv "End-the-War" AoDea Than by Progressivism AFTER WOMEN'S BALLOTS By CLINTON W. GILBERT Copyright, 1010. by rubltr Lrdacr Co. Ornllle, O., Aug. 21. Governor Cox continues pounding away at his Lenguo of Nations issue. He got a big response to his argument to "finish tho job" which tho American soldiers did in Franco and to keep faith with those who fell there. This country must enter the league and use Its In fluence to prevent futurp wars, he said. After tPRting both isstips, the league and progressivism, the Democratic can didate seems to have reached the con clusion thnt his best chance to win lies iu appealing to the idealism of the people nnd presenting his candidacy as a crusndo to stop war. no is surprised and delighted nt the MOTIONAL PLEA response which his advocacy of tho Bialystok and drodno, thus making the league calls forth. At first, he was In- ' retreat of the Soviet army impossible, dined to believp that the leagup would s,"'n nn operation, to succeed, would have to be subordinated to nn iittuck hnve to be executed with grent rapidity upon the Republican paity ns the pnrtj 'nnd with clockliko regularity, it is d of reaction, but now ho is persuaded by I clarod, and the Polish organization, what has happened at his meetings so I nfter its long retreat and the bard fight- i far, that his best hope is to urge everv- j ing of the past week, can hardly bo In a where tho quirk ratification of the position to mako such an effort. league covenant, with no captious in- hUtenco on the exact language of reser- Warsaw. Aug. 21. Poland's nrmrU, atlons ns the way to lessen the likclt- rapidly following up the retreating en-' Hood of war. em.. llorthpast and enst of Warsaw, Seeks Women's Vote n,,( further successes for the Poles are This idea has especially impressed ' fCnnIr1U'd' Th? E,c?p,ur,wf .gokolow, him since the ratification of the suf- i nohlczyn nn'1 ,nin,u. wlth thousands fragn amendment hv Tennessee hn ! f Prisoners and great amounts of war made the general participation of the women voters in the election probable. The women voters, it is argued, are srrongiy opposed to war. Mnioovcr, most of them have not seriously con sidered the League of Nations. They aro open-minded. They ure idealists nnd emotional and Cox makes an emo tional appeal for the Lengnc of Nations. There Is often some locnl incident, some story which gies point to his appeal, und more thau once he has hnd his audience, even the niuln pnrt of it, In tenrs. At South Bend. Ind , he nskud those who had served in the grent war to arise nnd he demanded of the nuuience, um not they do their Job well?" When tho audience replied heartily that they had, he went on to say: 'Now It Is for us civilians who 1 111111111111 in uuiiit- in no our joo wen mid enter tho League of Nations so as to end the prospect of future wars.' a iocni cnoirman who has ost a son In France, some incident of tho returning troops of Ohio, the Joy or the sorrow of some mother, give him his lead, ami he goes straight to the hearts of his hearers before he makes his appeal for keeping folth with those BIGSLAVARMY . CAUGHT III TRAP; 1510 CAPTIVES Soviet Forces Reported Encir cled Between Brest-Litovsk and Siedlce POLAND'S PEACE TERMS PRESENTED AT MINSK Delegates Demand Complete. and Inviolable Independence of Republic By the Associated Press Paris, Aug. 21. Six Bolshevik di visions, consisting of from 30,000 to 40,000 men, are surrounded by Polish forces between Siedlce and Brdst Litovsk, according to press dispatches received here today. London, Aug. 21. (By A. P.) While Polish troops onthe Warsaw front ore endeavoring to cut off the re" treating Bolshevik!, Poland's delega tion nt hc Minsk pnrley has presented its peace Hjrms to the Soviet govern ment. Announcement in Warsaw today said the Poles had captured 15,000 prisoners up to Thursday. According to a wireless dispatch from Moscow today, the Polish' de mands, presented yesterday at the sec ond sitting of the conference, include the complete and inviolable indepen dence of the Polish republic with no luterferencc in its internal affairs. M. Dombskl, head of the Warsaw ff delegation, said Polnnd did not declare war. He asserted his government had land merely to attain the free, decbde,. !& of the peoples thennelves regtfrdlnK1 h tneir tate, nnd declared Kussia wo try ing by force to establish a Soviet regime in Polnnd. M. DanishpvHky. chairman of the Russian delegation, made n statement asserting tho Ukrnlnp has nn inde pendent republic allied to Russia. He therefore proposed that the Polish del egates obtain a supplementary mandate fiom the Polish Oovprnmpnt nuthorlt i ing thp delegation to conduct pence ne I gotiations with the Ukraine. Then 31. Dnnishevsky read the terms proposed by Soviet Russia. ' At the end of thp session M. Dan ishevsky protested against what h termed the Polish policy of dragging out thp proeppdings. and assprtpd that all responsibility for the bloody conse quences of such a policy would remain on the Polish delegates. Washington. Aug. 21. (By A. P.) ratifications of the Bolshevik army nt. tnn pnt rnnpo tn tho rinninnr river. w,,lc" empties into the Jiiaeu sea are reported In officlnl advices received to day bv the State Department to have been destroyed by the South Russian forces under General Wrangcl. Brussels. Aug. 21. The Antwerp uocKworKers nnve reiused to continue loading munitions nboard tho American vessel Warsznwa to bo transported to Poland, according to the Nucion Beige. The newspaper adds that, thirty car loads of munitions sent by the Amer ican army on tho Rhino hnve been con signed to railway sidings. Paris. Aug. 21. (By A. P.) Lib eration of Polnnd is . ussiircd by the grent victory won during the Inst week over tho Russian forces, according to French military circles, but there is doubt thut it will vlcld more important results. The Bolshevik nriny probably will escape total destruction, although its retreat is entailing very heavy losses. In following up this success it will be logical for tho Poles, nfter crossing the Hug ner. to mnrcn northward toward , material Is reported in today s official ( eommuniquc. At S edlce the Poles cap- ni red uriiu'ti vuiuiui-vr .iuwimi (u-iacn ments composed of local communists. To the northwest of Warsaw, the Bolshevists attacked Plock in a drlv designed to carry them across tho Vis tula, where there is a pontoou bridge", but a Polish counter stroke broko the attack. Iu this operation the Poles ConllnuMl on I'nca Tho, Column Four GERMANS FORM SOVIET Seize Town Hall and Force Relch . bank to Hand Over Million Mark Brussels, Aug. 21. (By A. P.) A eciutf facial telegram from Dusseldorf, I says that an insurgent movement, ni- lesedlv orlglnatlnc in thp German Pom munlst pnrty, has resulted in the proitJnmntiou of a Soviet republic at Velbert. Rhenish Russia. The dispatch stated that CommunUta seized the town hall, extorted moqer from the richer Inhabitants and forced the local, branch ot the Relcbsbank 1a hand over 1 .00O.O0J-raarkl, Not(eM 1 s ) it i : e . & ?'! rft .-,-..,. w.w i .. r ... , jp vtf 7V ; r-M f CoatluacJ an Pacq Two, Column Oat n ! TlmntnliAtil JaIh I. .,. x .J. .. A, . F . i MUU .ltuSUV.U iu JVIU lBC lywtpuJH,,, l&irttoail"i!& ""y ; fMA' ,&' i, '