filmdm Is Waiting for Just Such a Type as Yqji Mag Be Have You Sent Your Picture? Page 10 Steftaer THE WEAIHER Fnlnfonlght and Sunday; somewhat wanner tonight: ccntlnuod warm Sun day; gerttlo KOtithorly winds. f TEMl'EItATURK AT EACH HOUR ' IU, icuenmg NIGHT EXTRA. C8J P I10--!11 ,12J 1J 2J''3 HJ tsi HtV II ' M o Ji I F .Ent.r.d. Steond-Cl... . Maltar at th, .Pgjtofflw. at Philadelphia, Pa. PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1921 Published Dally Except Dundar. Subscription Price 10 a Tear by Mall. CopyrlKht, 11)21. by uttla Ladnr Company, PRICE TWO CENTS w""" nm nvt V MIKIUU D, &OIU public m- i . . f .VOL. VIL NO. 214 R i PDIIPI F IN PR MN FUUUIli.,iiii..iwm ME YEARS FOR iMan and Wife Were Convicted IK -- .ii,Jkv nt Dnarrlar a4- TOl IVIUIMOI VI """ul Marcus Hook VICTIM FOUND STABBED; s ? . ACCUSED PHILA. MAN f X s M.r Mlrncho. cook nt the Eastern tVptnltentiary, and her husband Jncklno, (. TfDO live" i" " " ""v . Nfere imprisoned for second degree mur ' 'der fire years ago, will walk out of that Institution within n week, freed . o! a crime which the State Pardon - Board Is now convinced they did not ' commit. ! Fire years ago Mr. and Mrs. MJracho were convicted in Chester County of the murder of a man named Poter Garage, who had come to board " with them in their home at Marcus Hook. Nobody knew Oarage, who nr- ' riied with bis son,. He said Mr wife ' wis dead. ' One day Garage was found stabbed. sriricbo was away from home, off looking at n house ho Intended to buy. Mr. Mlracho found the" wounded man, nd him taken to the hospital nnd then helped tho nurse prepare for the cmer- f;encyopcration which was perfosmed a in attempt to save his life. Stabbed By Phlla. Man ' Oarage told those nround, him tliat le had been stabbed by a man from Philadelphia. Latcr,--just before ho j-mmi fvtttMn ntlmt trr flirt nnprnHnn nn -interpreter talked to him in Italian. Afterwards, nt tue trial, tnis interpre ter testified that Gnrngc had accused Mr. and Mrs. Mlracho of the crime, and they were convicted. Thea began a trnln of mysterious cir cumstances which in the end formed the '""basis of tho couple's pardon. Less than twenty-four hours after Garage died a. woman who said she was k wife, and proved It, came to claim uwchild. She told an amazing story. 'She said her husband 'had killed n man ia Utica', N. X-., which afterward wns Moved to be tho case. She said he had "carved" another man, in another town, and then had attempted her life. 'According to the. wife's story, Garage .had attacked her with a hatchet, strik ing her over the back, nnd when he thought &he was dead, pushed her down the cellar- stairs. He followed, hntchct in hand, and stood over her. Sho thought he was going to strike again. He leaned over her and listened for the, bentlnir of her heart. She held her v in-rath, and apparently ho did not de tect the flutter of her Heart, lor sue was almost dead in jreality. Then he kissed her three times and left the house. Recovered in Hospital She was found, scut to the hospital, and ultimately recovered. " Her husband apparently believed sue was dead, and she made no 'attempt' to find him, fearing that lie would try again to kill her. The wife of'Gnrage went to the priest at Marcus Hook nnd told her story. He sent her on to the District Attorney. ' A defense wns prepared for the Mlra ehog, Who had been indicted for murder, nnd a witness was discovered who said he would tell the liRmo of the rcnl mur derer of Garage when he went on the witness stand. Whether it was coin cidence or deslgnthis witness was mur dered mysteriously on a visit to Phila delphia just on the eve of the trial. When the trial came up Garage's past was not made known. In view of the later facts, pieced together by Mrs. Charles Pawling Plummcr, of the ' Pennsylvania Prison Society, nnd dc'i velopctL before the Pardon Roard by Senator Samuel Salus, attorney for the Mlrachos, it seemed evident that there had been ample reason for several per sons, relatives of Garagc'H own victims, to have sought vengeance agninst him. There was no motive apparently for the Mlrachos to wish to kill him. The granting of the pardon has been announced and thft document is being t expected any day. The husband and wife will owe their freedom to the efforts of Mr. Saluu and Mrs. Plummcr. Mrs. Plummer aw Mrs. Mlracho on her daily visits to the prison, nnd the woman always said she was iu jail "for doing nothing." Hit by bit sho told her story; Mrs. Plummer became lutcrosted and legnu an investigation of her own which took her to various citieN, among them Heme, Utica, Buffalo nnd Roches ter, in New York nnd various small towns in Pennsylvania". FIRES 3 SHOTS INTO BREAST Man Commits Suicide In Bathroom of His Home . Rlcha-d A. Huebnor, thirty-three Jears old, of 2748 South Smcdley wwt, killed himself nt 12:4fi o'clock !" ornlng by firing three bullets into fll breast) uis'..Iluebnor wl' hoard shots from l".?athro'". rushed in nnd found her '""lying. She called tho police " no Fifteenth street nnd Snyder uvc X, ft.8'1"", and the dying man was ,ni.n ? Su ABncs' Jlosplttii. Ho lived knWfWlf,e pa.,d ''l0 on,y MnMins sho S.for, hw huRbnnd's suicide wero a i-.v.uugeu uinesi nd no children r.u.ongea uinoss and Inek of work. Thov BEATEN AND ROBBED v'etlm Loses $11 Returning From , Visit to Fiancee's Home 272omv I?ieMnc?r twenty-one years old. home t?l 8,?,dnham street, walked stuuJ wn' of Sflvontcenth Btreet and of nol7,tt.yem,c' "n(l fcl1 I"'0 the hands lot nl,U )imcn,,.II 'ad,passcd un open ft n"ln J,'JB lr?fttl bri('Ke when wo ihadSw. eyes s,CI.,IU,d ".t ,llQ itrfk. AVlc,lnk 8n5's ho attempted to with i? ?'nrP rnP "" tho elbow i iJ hlnckjnck. aln.teiL l . athcr mn held a gun that nL?ly llcnrt' .nnd Mi 'Don't try ot ti i ' or you r a ileail.onn.' They MyinV . "?.m rno' thcn bckcd away, one !,?, !'fy we,lt! 'Do't tell any Ln.Ut ,hl8' or wc Bt yon.' " mS ' rI)ortc(1 the hojd-up to the ka. MURDER NNOCENT GIRLS REACH MSk jaBBBKBBBatBBTay bbbbbbbbbbDbPHbA 8mbBB3cbBb9IBBBBM aiaBBBlPiViBBBiBVBOHBil f'IHifllEH&QIIIB bbB' K ' ? bbbBbIB v9imM laBBBBBBBBBBwlHBBhf ' ."I &&') aaBSMtwf,: i'f-07, t VbHBT''I tAJ?M"' -V'' ,VVf' -'" WZHf' " "" BBBBB'P VV',T. T T H -K ri&L. iii s JHray BBBBBBBBRnBBaBHiBBBBBBB VV 4 I I II mm laJ IVl 1 K IKaK K JW. WiBBBBBHIBBBBaaasaBI iaf al BBB1 BBM BBI flBk (t X J TBaaB) MB-. Bh K BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBbIbIbBBBbK '"wkl!1 "''VVS j S'XBBBalBBBBBBBBBBBBlBBSiaBBBBlBBBBBBBBBaBBl? MM Feminine 'Ertoch Arden' Causes Arrest of Man Who Married Again Last August NO. 2 GOES PRISONER'S BAIL A wifp he said ho believed was dead and whom he had not seen for nineteen yenrs caused the arrest today of William Hansel, forty-seven years old, 4722 Dnrrnh street. Frankford, who married Hgain nine months ago. Hansel was arrested nt his home by District Detective Dougherty, of the Frankford ntntlon, on a wnrrant bnsed on nn nffidavlt by the Itev. Win. C. Kilpatrick, who married the defendant to jtllss Jane II. Korslnko last August. Hansel was arraigned in Central Sta tion today before Magistrate Cnrson, who held him in $G00 bail for a further hearing Monday. Mrs. Hnnsol No. 2, who. is forty-two years old, was at tho whohcarlng, but the first wife did not nppcar. The accused man said his first wife left him one year after their marriage twenty yearn ago. Mrs. Ilnns'M No. 1, through nn attorney, alleged her hus band deserted her eighteen ears ago. Iloth have bven living in this city ever since and say they never met after the separation. Mrs. Hansel No. 2 offered bail for tho dcfcndant today. She insisted on the magistrate's accepting her surety, nr gulng that if she was not legally wedded the law against a wife going ball for her husband did not apply in this case. Wife No. 1 wns Miss Anna Muy Mnr tin nml gave her. address as 1104 Free mnn street at the tiimi of her marriage twenty years ago. The first license wns traced by Thomas Hrannlx, a clerk In the murrlagc license office. MERELY A MOVING MISHAP Bureau Falls Three Stories From Window Hits Woman Mrs. .Icnnlo Fisher, fifty-eight years old. 3.117 North American street, wns struck yesterday afternoon z.v a bureau which dropped from the third-story .window of a house on Tenth street above York. According to the police, Jacob Wein berg, who wns moving, had balanced the bureau nt tho window ledgo, pre paratory to lowering it to the street, when It got nwny from him nnd fell at the moment .Mrs. Fisher was pass ing. It struck her n glancing blow. The injured woman was taken to the Kplscopal Hospital, where tho surgeons dressed Injuries to her back. Weinberg was arrested by the police of tho Park nnd Lehigh avenues sta tion and given a hearing nt that sta tion house today by Magistrate Glenn. Mrs. Fisher wns still too 111 to nppear ngaliiNt him, and he was held In ?400 bnil for n further homing May 28. MINGO CITIZENS ARfVlED Guns and Pistols Distributed as "" Martial Law Begins Williamson, W. Vn.. May 21. (By A. P. 1 Major Tom Davis, who was sent herf Inst night by Governor Mor gait to enforce tho Governor's procla mation of martial law in Mluuo County. today visited the towns along tho Tug Ktyer where disorders ncurred last wek. He found the country itrncofiil and quiet. ItillcH and pistols were distributed among the citizens who hnvo been sworn in as State policemen for the emer ge ncy. All fight, B6ys, Let's Go! Keep Your Eye on Sister For sister's a "reg'lor feller," "nnd when her eyo lights; on Pngo 11, look out I There's a fine chance for nil of you boys and girls nn opportunity to enpturo a possession you'll covet. But it's tho fast-fjteppers who'll win- Turn, quick, to Page 11. IT HONOR ROLL IN MOVIE CONTEST bVMbVbVbVbHbW' V BMMBWm." '-' kBlBBBBBBBBB.- -' ''' m "-jSri4-rij: -.' v'5aMi r THELVfA BCEr.'Snf Warnbn3, St. These girls, with thoso whoso pictures appear in the Dally Movie Magnzino today, arc on the honor roll in the Movto Beauty Contest now being conducted to pick three girls for 'stardom with tho Betzwood Film Co. WHEREVER THERE ARE MOVIE FANS THERE. ARE MOVIE ASPIRANTS' TOO Movie fans are numbered by the million. And eight out of ten sit in tho darkened houses, fascinated, dreaming rosy dreams of what they would do if only they had a chance to act for thc screen. That chance is hero for you The Betzwood Film Co. magic today. wants three j;irls for" comedy roles for its "Tponerville Trolley" series. All that is necessary is a photo- graph that shows you have the looks nnd the personality. Send Xours In Today l'ou yourself do not know whether or not you havo a chance nt this coveted prize. Our judges may decide you aro just tho typo they want. Send 1 your picture and see. Details on Page 10 MADAME CURIE DEDICATES GOVERNMENT LABORATORY Specimens of Carnotltc Ore From Which Radium Is Obtained Given Scientist Washington, May 21. (By A. P.) Mndamc Marlc Curie, who received n gram of radium yesterday from Presi dent Hnrding, set in motion today the machinery of tho new low temperature laboratory of tho Bureau of Mines. A distinguished gathering of Government officials and prominent scientists from all parts of the country was present to welcome Madame Curie nnd witness the dedication ceremonies. Duo to fatigue, which made it Im possible for her to remain nt the labor atory more thnn n few minutes Mndamc Cur4o was unnblu to deliver a dedicatory oddrexs. The ceremonies were curtailed, Madame Curie replying briefly to ad dresses of welcome, by Dr. II. Foster Bain, director of the bureau, und Dr. It. B, Moore, chief chemist of the bu reau. Later sho pressed a button that set in motion thu complicated machinery of the laboratory. On behalf of Gordon Kimball, of Ouray, Qol., Madume Curie wns pre sented with a largu specimen of carno tito ore, from which radium is obtained, said by scientists to be one of tho finest specimens of radium -bearing ore ever obtained In tho United States. Shu also wns presented with n bottlo of ore, for warded by Mr. Kimball, part of the first shipment of carnotltc ore ever mulle in this country. It was mined 'in 1808 before its radtum-bcnrlng values were known. Mndame. Curio wild both speci mens would bo placed In her museum In Paris. AMERICAN STORE ROBBED Thieves Smash Safe Combination and Flee With $289 Kobbors forced u rear window of the American Stores Co.'s store nt JtS.'t South Twentieth street iarly this morn Inc. smashed the combination of tho safo and escaped with $280. Tho robbery was not discovered until tho store was opened at 8 u'clock. A heavy iron crating was torn fiom n rear window. i wv 1. ' RICH WOMAN STOLE EOF Injuries in Auto Smash Said to Have Made Chicago Broker's Wife Kleptomaniac HAD A LARGE ALLOWANCE By the Associated Press Chicago, May 21. An Automobile accident, whieh resulted In Injuries leading to kleptomania, wns blamed by relatives and physicians today for the nets of Mrs. .Toseph S. itcil, wife of n wealthy broker, and who confessed last night, accordiug to police, that for more tlmn a year she had been robbing the homes of wealthy families by posing as a maid. The loot was said to total more thou .?2.",(I00. and much of it was found in Mrs. Hell's liomiT" Mrs. Hell was hold In a detention home today booked on four formal charges of robbery. Her condition wns said by nttijnding physicians to be serious, for in addition to mental troubles with which she was nid to be afflicted, she is soon to become n mother. Membcis of the family today said that Mrs. Hell wns in an automobile acci dent several years ago. An operation was necessary and the wound never healed, relatives said. They declared that previous to the nccldent Mrs. Hell wns normal in every way. Tho case was one of the most un usual on Chicngo's police records. Mrs. Hell, with nn nllownnce of ?,'!00 n month from her husband, fwo automo biles nnd a magnificent home, forged references, nccording to he alleged con fession, and obtained employment ns a mnid in fnshionnble North, Shore homes, robbing them when she left. She wns identified by four former employers. All said she was a "perfect mnid," nnd showed such efficiency that she wns trusted fully. Her loot ranged from canary bird cages to valuable pieces of jewelry. A, number of platinum nlns nml illnmnn.i rings were being traced today by the police through pawntickets found in Mrs. HcU'Hahnme. Her husband recently had given her a small apartment building. It woh said oy iciuuvl-, iiiio .urs. noil was quoted as saying thnt much of the property sho stole was used In furnishing it. Mr. Hell refused for some tim6 to be lieve t'u charges against his wife. "Why, I can cash my personal cheek for .$250,000 at any Chicago bank' T,,! told reporters. "Why should my wife stenl? His income was said to be moro thnn $1150.000 a year. Mrs. Hell Is thlr v. eight jcars oil!. Sho has a married daughter, eighteen years old. FOUND $40,00, NECKLACE Property of Supposed Smunpler Picked Up on. N. Y. .Pier Now York, May 21. (By A. P ) A pearl neckhico with platinum el'nsn valued nt ?I0,000, was picked up today by n customs guard ut the pier where the Aqultnnla docked Inst night, Tho necklncn did not hum. t.. .. ship's manifest, and the theory was ad vanced thnt it hail licnn IiikI nr !... away by some on attempting to smug elc.lt into the, country. s w Ul MA OUR GOLF TEAM I 9 MAIMS TO 3 Americans' Sweep Foursomes and Win Five of Eight Single Tilts at Hoylake T.OLLEY TROUNCES EVANS; PLATT LOSES TO ARMOUR By tho Associated Press Hoylake, England, May 21. Tho American golfing stars decisively de feated their English opponents in the first international golf, match here to day. The Americans made a clean sweep of the foursomes and captured five of the eight singles matches. The net result of the day's piny wns nine victories for the Americans' as against three for tho Britith. Indlvldunl matches resulted as fol lows : Cyril Tolley, tho British amateur golf champion, defeated Charles W. (Chick) Evans, American amateur chnmplon, in their individual mntch tills afternoon. Tolley's victory Wus by 4 up nnd :i to play. Francis Oulmet, runner-up in the United, States Golf Championship Tour nament in 11)20. beut .1. L. C. Jenkins, of Troon, by (! up and " to play. Robert T. (Bobby) Jones. of,At Inntn, defeated B. II. De Montmorency by 4 up and .'l to play. Jesse P. Guilford, of Boston, de feated Georse O. Simponibv 2 up and I to play. Tfio match was n close one, Guilford being only 1 up nt the ninth hole. C. C. Aylmcr, of Rnnchigh, defeated Dr. Paul Hunter, of I.os Angeles, cham pion of Southern California, by 2 up and 1 to play. At the ninth hole Hunter nnd Aylmcr were nil squurc. T. D. Armour, of I.othlnnburn, beat J. "Wood Piatt, the Philadelphia cham pion, by 2 ui aniTl to play. Frederick J. Wright, of Boston, champion of Mussochusetts. defeated IJ. W. E. Holdcrncss, of Walton Heath, by two holes. W. C. Fownes. Jr., of Pittsburgh. the veteran golfer, defeated Itogcr wetnered, of v nrplcuon, hy up nnd 1 to play. Wcthercd wns 1 up nt the uinth. fc Gallery Follows Evans When the first of the indlvldunl matches bean the weather was ex tremely hot. A tremendous crowd fol lowed Tolley and Evans. Tolley won the first hole, three strokes to four, getting down n three-yard mitt. The second Jiole was halved iu four, nnd at tho third Tolley ran down n four-jnrd putt for four, being then 2 up. Evans won the next, .' to 4. but Tolley was nun in 2 ill) at the fifth. The sixth nnd ' seventh wero halved, while Tolley won the eighth and ninth, which he turned 4 up. Tolley was too strong with his ap proach to thu pin at the tenth hole which Evans won in 4 to 0, but after a half In .'I nt tho eleventh the Ainer ienn lost the next hole, 4 to 0, through being bunkered. He wns ngnln bunk ered at the thirteenth and lost in .1 to 4. making Tolley dormle fi. The Englishman lost the next hole, but se cured a hnlfnt the fifteenth, which gnve him the match by 4 up and .1 to play. Oulmet Up at Turn In (he mntch between Oulmet and Jenkins, the American won the first three holes. At the third Jenkins played for tho hole while Quinict s ball was hanging over tho lip of the cup und knocked It In, thereby giving the hole Continued an I'tute Tiro, Column Tno MARINE WORKERS ACCEPT 15 PER CENT WAGE CUT Agree to Shipping Board Demand In Strike Settlement Conference Washington. May 21. (By A. P.) Acceptance of the 15 per cent wnge reduction for marine engineers do uinnded by the Sliipplns Jlonrd, but with modifications ns to woiking condi tions, Is understood to be included in nn agreement reached here today at confer ences between Secretary Davis, Chnir innn Benson, of the board, and repro sentntites, of the Marine Engiurois' Beneficial Association. The changes in working conditions and overtime, it was Indicated, would brlug the nctunl reduction iu wages to somewhat less than l!i per cent. Secretary Dntis W. S. Jeyins, of the Shipping Board, and the marine engineers' representatives will go to New York today to confer with the American Ship Owners' Association in nu effort to huve it agree to the terms also. Until such nn agreement is reached, Secretary Davis said he pre ferred not to make public the terms. The ittdlo operators, Mr. Davis said, would agree to the terms accepted by the marine engineers and it is under stood that Andrew Furuseth, president of the 9'ameu's Union, will sign a similar agreement. Admiral Benson will submit the pro posal to ship owners ami it was expected that tho agreement would be signed some time today by representatives of tho engineers hero and the Shipping Board Mean. While the radio operations wero not represented at today's conferencu it has been assured thnt a scparatu agree ment will bo reached between them nnd th Shipping Board, bnsed upon thnt with the engineers. Andrew Furuseth, prosident of tho Seamen's Union, it is understood, will sign n similar agree ment for that organization. EX-GOVERNOR ARRESTED Former Executive of Florida Charged L wun peonage Albany, Gn May 21. (By A. P.) Sidney J. Catts, former Governor of Florida, was arrested here today on a Federal warrant from Florida charging peonage. Catts' bond was fixed at $2."i0O when ho was arraigned before United Stntes Commissioner- George White. Horn! ti. not et been furnished. DEFEATS BRi ONS Remorse-Stricken Moyer x Is Now Broken in Health EX'pashief of North Perm, Bank Wails at Night for Children Annoyed Toomey, His Cellmate Halph Mojer, serving a term of from! "Bill" Houston, an embezzler, whose twelve to fifteen tears in the Eastern t,,,'," n,n' lrom 'ivi' '" Mx QatH- Penitential'; for' helping wreck the North Peim Bank, is reported to be broken In hinltli and spirits, n prev to remorse for ,s oust nnu anxiety' for the future of his children. Charles Tooim-y, who embezzled n fortun from nu estate In the .enre of the fidelity Trust Co.. nnd woA sen tenced to ten to thirty years in the same Institution, Is .Voyer's cellmate . fli lnt..,M k,"wn ns "Ttve've Block," n the Penitentiary, nnd is doing what he en u to make the .tounger innn's out look more hopeful. "I have n hard tlmv gelting to sleep the way Mat er cries for ills chlldien every night." Toomei tiM n f-1.,,,,1 "it 'is pitiful to hear him. Scarce n night passes that he does not tell me how sorry he Is for what he did, and how differently lie would order bin life If he "al it all to do over again. ' There J, jut one thing that ho tvnnts. and that one thing in his con stant concern and prn.ter, that his chil dren mnr ciotv nn vniul "I've tried to cheer him up, to get ii m out or himself. Uvi him lo go out nnd take it is n ilifliuilt job." tried to get exercise, but .Mojer, bioken down with grief over his separation from Ills fninili ,i,,.l tl... iiisgince ne feels lie hn broiiuht tlieni, hn aged iieicentiblt . The two former bank emiilotcs. both clcv er accountants, nre working nights the reuitentinr.t's iiccomils. Tuomev nu ns nssistnnt Uarrv Borne, who lig'- iircu iu a sMisntioiinl jewelrj stoic rob- Dery nt j 'in lenth at I'tftfcnth nml Wnlnnt uti'm.tu I.. I 111 11 I 1 . - ....... in mill, und Is servini? frnm i.iflit i ten .tears, nnd Moyer as assistant to1 MAN, IN PISTOL BATTLE, DRIVES OFF RUM THIEVES Detects Robbers Rolling Out Barrels! of His Private Stock James J. Burns fought n revolver battle with robbers early this morning whfii thuy made a try for some of his private .toek. lie lives at 4727 San son! street and his cellar is sqid to be well stocked. ' About II o'clock Mr. Burns hcanl a noise and looking out of tho second- story back window he suw a motor-. truck and a touring car standing near by and two men rolling a barrel of whisky from his cellar. Running back he got his pistol and leturned in time to see nuother of his whisky bnrrels make its nppenrance. He tired two shots, the hnudits icpljiug. then lied. The tthiskj, cins'stiiig of two full bar rels, n demiiohn nnd another of nlco hol. were left standing on the pave ment. .-Ncignuurx tcicpiionen lor tlie police mid details hurried to the scene in time .u "i' i'" i"- "ui-ix.i omit nnu uie tcimi. i jiiifiiiii ii).u prvtiui lliuiurc.i tic policemen fought a duel with robbers who were after the same stock. SAILOR MISSING FROM SHIP AFTER RAID PORTLAND, MAINE, May 21. James Walker, ft Negro member of the ciew of ".lie schooner Mniy W. BarreTF, wns missing today after n mid on the vessel by a gang of men who attacked the five Negro btuigrs nfter driving them from their bunks to uie deck al pistol point. Tho Negroes fought "Back but weie uadly beaten. When the encounter was over, Walker could not be found"1. It was believed he went overboard in the fight, and police made arrangements to search for his T3ody. y YOUNG WOMAN KILLS HERSELF WITH PISTOL CINCINNATI, OHIO, May ST. Mis. William G. 'Fisher, twenty-six years o"u, San Finuclsco, ended her life cnily today by tiring a levolver bullet into her rigiit temple, ftvhen In her betl loom in the apaitment o: ner aunt, Mis. Kathiyn Claik, "here. Mrs. Clark told police she could asciibe no motive for Mi&. Fisher's act. MORE SHOOTING -IN TUG RIVER VALLEY WILLIAMSON. W. VA May 21. Within a few hours after the authorities, after examining their morning lepoits fiom the Upper Tug Klver Valley, had announced that all was, quiet, they weie lnfoimed that the little mining town of Meirimac. the scene of much shooting the past ten days, had again been filed upon. There were no casualties, the reports said. GENERAL STRIKE THREATENED IN BUENOS AIRES BUENOS AIRES, May 2T. Failure of the Argentine Govern men to accede to demands of union leaders to "officialize" woik in the port zone here may result In a general stiike. The time limit given the government by the unions in their viitual ulti matum expired at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon and an hour latei union delegates met the Minister o7 Finance to Team the govern ment's decision. The rehult of the interview was not made public, but general meetings of cart men and stevedoies weie balled foi today for the consideration of measuies the two unions may adopt. HARVEY HOTLY ASSAILED IN HOUSE WASHINGTON'.May)21. Ambassador Harvey was attneked in tho House 'today by Representative Stevenson, Demcorat. South Carolina, who objected to Mr. Hnrvey.'s statement nt the Pilgrims.' dinner in London that the United. States "entered the war to cave its hide-not to save civllizaion." Mr. Stevenson said that in an uuuicsa at Vnanesion, a. c., in some of his- ancestors during ,the Civil War were so yellow they hired substitutes, and tlmt onb went to Jail rather than fight to preserve . the utilnn. rwiriinn. i,4. jv s ihi ;"7,""uu ue ieu,nS lue umiBH io iigus xor American independence, 1 ' Both Put at Night Woih ' Toomey and Moyer were put nt night t work hv Warden "Bob" McKentv to save Moyer from tho pressing nnxicty thnl his more cheerful cellmate, Toomey, found weighed most heavily on the for mer North I'enn Bnnk official nt night. The two men, who hnvo become fust friends, work on the books often until midnight, posting the records of the day. An elaborate system of records is kept nt the Penitentiary, showing ull the work done every day by tho in mates, and the former bank officials, because of their expert skill in such matterH, have saved the Penitentiary much money. Toomey More Reconciled Toomey apparently is tho more rec onciled of the two "to the long years of confinement tlmt loom ahead. He works hard mornings and night, nnd in the afternoon plnys ball in the prison ynrd. He is reported brown-skinned ond vigorous, and of great use to the warden because of his kindly way with younger men, helping in the maintin nncc of discipline. Another prisoner who had more than ills full shine of notoriety, jet is re ported os "milking good" in the Peni tentiary, is Peter D. Trendttay, serv ing a twenty -tear sentence forthemur- I der of Henry T I'oirce. Trend tvnj lias come to be known ns "the boy with a smile." nnd hit-, become (he lead ng tenor in the piison choir. lie sings solo there, by the waj. with "Butch" Afnsctn nnd .losenh fnslelln u lm . nm !ni.iU..n..,l ;,, ,.,. ,,!.... .,.;,!, it... ....... ....... ............. .r, .. . , 1., ,, , I II.' HI I) i - .. f I )..i, .. ..!,-,. I'.,.,lo. ;., . i... i.-:r.i. Ward. WILKES-BARRE "SLACKER" ENLISTED, FATHER AVERS Lad Missing Since 1917 Others on List Protest Innocence Wilkes-Barre. Pa., May 21. Only four of the men whoso names nre on the slacker list furnished to the War Deportment of District No. .'!. of this city, can be found here. Several of the remaining twenty, however, nre known und huve relatives here. Andrew Delimun, nn aged man. says Ills son. .Tohti, whose name is on the list, went away In 11)17 to join the army and has not been heard from since. Reading. Pa., May 21. With the re lense today of the delinquent list of Reading Drnft Board No. 2. Paul llohr baeh, one of the eleven men named ns slackers, wns arrested by a city detec tive and tukeu to Fort du Pont. Del., for eoiirt-mnrtiiil. Appiuentlv no mis takes have been lutiile in the list. One of the slackers. Moses Ender ftl'flVtfin W fl nn ul n V..r.,.n ...!..!. i I 0f tis clt, . who recently Imd his wife iirresteil on a ciuuge of higauiy. He now serving ten .tears in a Soifthern juil for an auto theft. There are no frnees l here,, of nuy of the others. 1800, Mr. Harvev "boasted that i. , ., . . . uv Buppoaeu ino Amdassctdor Bet ,1 that hi!? a I estors had-refused $25,000 GEM THEFT IN AMBLER HOME OF It B. STRASSBURGER i Mystery in French Girl's Arrest Explained Marjorie Bourne'3 Jewels Stolen RICH PEARLS AND TIARA GIVEN UP TO STATE POLICE .MISS MARJORIE BOURNE BiflMiiiiB. "W mam: . 'i .mmmmmW mm ' ! The 1?2.,).000 jewel robberv near Ambler, which has been shrouded In secrec.t by the State police, wns com mitted ot the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Benver Strnssburger, Nonnnndy Fnrm, Gwynedd Valley. Mr. Strnssburger, whose, mngnlficcnt French chateau, with its broad acres, is one o the show places ot this part of the country, talked freely today of the robbery. The jewels, n $20,000 penrl necklace nnd n $."000 tiara, nre tho property of Miss Marjorie Bourne, of Onkdale, L. I., sister of Mrs. Strnssburger. and one of the bencficinries of tho $.'0,000,00(1 estate of the late Commodore Frederick G. Bourne. .- Madeleine Gonnneret, the maid, who" State police allege, confessed the rob- i bory. is in the Norrlstown jail. Sho was held in S2."00 ball csfcrdny by Magistrate Urban, of Ambler. . Mr. Strnssburger said thnt Miss Bourne enmo to Normandy Farm ten dnys ngo to visit Mrs. Strnssburger, who wus Miss Mary Bourne. After several days Miss Bourne In terrupted her stay there to visit other friends for a few days. She forgot her jewels and left the tiara ami the neck lace in n bureau drawer in iter luxurious bedroom on the second floor, part of one of the finest suites in the home. (In her return to Gwynedd Valley after an nbseuce of several dnys. Miss Untune discovered her jewels missing. She consulted her sister nnd Mr, Strusbburger, nnd the Stnte police were culled in. .Maid Yields to Questions When domestics in the chateau were quizzed hy the police the said the maid showed extreme nervousness. ' With this lend they investigated and biUteicd her with iucstions until her self-control broke. Two State troopers went to the maid's room in the hervntitft' wing, and. following her directions, found thu tlnra and the uccklace hidden iu a closet. "I am going to try to have the girl depot ted," said Mr. Strnssburger to da. "Sho lias been in this country five months and came to us from a New York fain 11 She had good references. 1 nm going to look into that side of the mutter "I don't believe she was 'planted by a band of thieves. I nm more in clined to believe she is a kleptomaniac and could not icsist taking the jewels when she discoveied them iu the bureau drawer. "I did not want un.t publicity given the robber and asked tho State police to withhold in name. The reason was i hat I did not want our place a target for crooks I' might have had to shoot Mime of them." He Could Shoot All Right Mr Stinssbuiger's past i coord shows he would be cntiiel capable of dealing with u buigliii discnteiod nt Normandy Farm He is u graduate of the Naval Academt al Annapolis and while an en sign gained renown for a deed of heroism on board (he battleship North Dakota, A boiler had burst on the battleship, killing three men and endangering the lives of man otheis Mr. Strassbur ger rushed into the boiler loom, turned off u talvo and ui olT the rush of dendl.t, sculding steam. Later he was promoted to lieutenant and still later made naval aide to President 4feuHe veil. ' After resigning from the Navy he served as Consul General in several Kuiopean countries and ns n Secretary of Legation nt Bucharest und of tlm lhnbass at Tokio. Mrs. Strnssburger in 1010 inherited S 1,000,000 from the estate of her father. ( 'ommodore Bourne, who was head of the Singer Manufacturing Co. oud di rector of many big corporations. Miss Bourne (iocs Homo Miss Bourne left Normanil Farm this morning and leturned to her Long lie laud homo. Tlio lobbery at the Strassburger home recalls other big Jewel thefts in this section recently. The most scnsationnl was that of jewels Valued at ?.'l2f).00O from the home of George II, McFadilen, Jr.. at Vlllanottt. Thoso jewels, including a pearl neck lace, disappeared from Mrs. McFnd den's boudoir. A French governess, Muduino Jeanne Auberlet, and n French moid. Mile. Blunehii Magutt, were ar rested ami chaiged with the (heft, but were subsequently fieed by n mater trnte. Other jewel robberies occurred Oclo her 0. 1020, nt the home of Mm, W, Sackett Duell, of Meadow brook, Pa,, where $20,000 of Jewel were taken, and October 1S, 1020, when gemn valued ot $1)0,000 were stolen from tbi home f A. J. Antclo Dnvcreui at Orcland, I'o. ti VI jfrm&ijskiy .Sr-ntjLj.itiHCjti'-.fffa (". ' ij.'.4-f. ' '-a 1 1 ,- ' . "Hi&iWI