V - i?i r I. 3 J I" m n. r K f- I t I. h A I & i iw .' .N rpiiW" r- OVER BASEBALL 2. v . ,. " --' ' D--.J J MaI ft jiwi Dumu biiu unisons ro ' Divided on Right to Use Grounds for Game ? TIST NEXT SATURDAY Jlryn Mawr Is divided oyer the nub- i Jt of baseball, and tt of strength! 11 looked for Saturday, when the home tm It chrduled to play n tame on tfct school grounds at Pennsylvania ave-1 nt. 'A doxen people whose honm faco the M (laid where the boyi play aay they will call the police and hare the player artHted it they try to hold the game. Edward Agncw. business manner of 1 the Bryn Mnvrr team, lay the fame will be held In plte of protects, bh he believes public sentiment of llryn Mar 1 behind him. - -William h. Austin, president of the Lower Merlon ichoolbosrd. gave the Slayers permission to une the grounda. lalf of the eight member of the school board favor It, tho other half oppose, . led by the board's secretary. William ' J.i Byrnes. fcrs. William 8. Hower. whose home mtt the baseball ground, objected to m piaying oecnuse tne mm it was naley and brought an "undesirable dement" Saturday nfternoous. She cir culated a petition In her neighborhood arid took It to Mr. Austin wltn a dozen signatures attached. Mr Austin said b was in favor of baseball and hail Sren permission to the boya to play on lot. He refined to forbid It. Mrs. Hower then took liar petition to. Mr. Byrne and he no far agreed with her as to call In Chief of Police Xtynaghy. The chief took a squad of men to the ballfleld last Saturday and Mscd the player off. .The team manager has circulated a gltitlon itnd obtained 000 signatures, tcluding the town's most prominent tttldents and business men. Including the Chamber of Commerce. GIRL MAY GAIN ADMITTANCE TO U.S. BY WEDDING SOLDIER Barred by Officials, Pretty Immi- grant 8eeks Cltlienahlp Marriago to an American soldier may be. the solution of pretty Seraflne Guldiee'a problem of entering this country and escaping deportation to Italy. The soldier who was accepted oqt of ten lochlnrars who laid their hearts at the immigrant's feet Is Sel dlflo Freacurl, twenty-eight, of Tyler, P. ,8rnn, who is twenty yearn old, has been at the Gloucester detention house since March 25. Authorities say is an illiterate. Countrymen to torn Seraflne has endeared herself etaed upon the matrimony plan to keep her in the country. .The happy Immigrant today told of ker soldier lover and said she expected to be married in a few days. Above all, HeraAne la pleased with the "grand btaucoup" mustache her soldier lover carries. tFreacurri, urged by his countrymen, mcceeded in having the United States District Court grant him a writ of habeas corpus, which will be argued at Trenton. 30,000 RE-ENFORCE TURKS . . 't Entrenched Army Will Risk Battle (When Reserves Arrive Constantinople. Aug. 1. (By A. P.) The Turkish Nationalists, according j to advices from Auatolln, are holding positions east of HIvrthlMar, about fifty miles east of Ks,ki-Shehr, while await ing 80,000 re-enforcements said to be expected from Clllcla, Mesopotamia and the Caucasus, whose arrival Is dcxlred before a decisive action with the Greek U risked. The Nationalist announce a deter mination to fight to the bitter end, and their leaders express belief that the Greeks are at a disadvantage because Ot their lengthened supply lines nnd the scattering of forces over n wide area in a hontile territory, with the rllaoads rendered umlem. .It Is pointed out. however, that the Turks abandoned large quantities of applies In their retreat, giving the Greeks sufficient provisions to last them a M considerable period. MIND BLANK SINCE aTr RAID ramon In Hospital After Wander- s ' Ing About Aimlessly V.N?ryok A,XJ' ! The parents of ,I!eut. GeorRe Hamon. who was found yanderlng about the Weelmwken ferry house two weeks ago and who has not Men able to remember anything that happened since September, IMS, ex ptlng that he started on an air raid at that time, are expected to arrive in New ork today and probably will take their son back with them. m.t ' " MTIi- lUchnrU Hamon, of iu1B, wuio., nnu not seen their son for six years and had given him up as dead. LUutenant Hamon is now in n hos P't. e said jesterda; that if his Memory does not Improve within the uext few months he intends to go to France and visit the sector he fought la and see If he can find out there what happened to him after he started an the raid with other airmen. TO MEET ON BLUE LAWS Plana to Fight Sunday Ball Oppo nents to De Formulated Tonight A meeting will be held at 8:30 this .arenlng In the Benedict Service Club ' headquarters, 137 North Fifteenth street, to formulato plans to fight the Sabbath Association In its crusade against Sunday bnseball. A test case before the State Supreme Court Is being planned to test out the legal signincance of the term "diver sion" as used in the legal text of the Sunday blue law. One suggestion which finds favor aeong the members of the nw organ isation to fight its cause in the highest tat court is to raise funds by play. lag exhibition game of ball. Many Influential societies have members tWong the new organization's official IWAY NOT BE NURSE'S BODY Ralatrvoa of Mollle Oatea Will At. tempt Identification Today W-V Warwick, B. I., Aug. 1. (By A. An autopsy late last night on , woman's boor found thrown up by .i tide at Warw ek leads Med cnl fMtamtner Samuel II. Long and other tnormefl to Deiieve mat ii is noi me ly of Miss Mollle Oates, the Hun- at ton. L. I., nurse, who disappeared trim the stramcr Georgia, en route to J.7 -"--'' u . . . -. "tavldene rrjaay nigni. MNo water was found In the woman's Naa, anil n severs auroaion on tne reread Indicated that the woman died DI0W on enp ncau ami not oy Itt Uie opinion ot tieaicai Laaa the body w thrown ainepier etnafe, near : Mr UeUjr to a it a V' (KK52V 1. T Mir.il.lM if s mttmjsa ; Hi TOOK lllaliely 1. McCaugliu (on left) was W. Coles ALLIED SUPREME COUNCIL WILL MEET NEXT MONDAY British Ambassador Co-operates With France In Warning Qermany London. Aim. 1. The British Tor- ! '1U Office today received a repl from Premier Briniul, of France, ncccptlng the propositi that the next meeting of the Allied Supreme Counill be htild In Pari a week from today, Aticunt S. Premier Lloyd George, Lord Curson, the Sec retary for Foreign Affair, niia other officluli of the Foreign Office will lcnv London Sunday for the meetlui;. Pre mier Booomi, of Itnlj, and Marquis Delia Torrcttn. Italian Minister of Foreign Affflirs, idso will be present, The latest telegrnmb frmn I'pper Si ieslu reiiort the fltuutlon tiiero iih quiet. Lord l'Abornon. the British Ambas sador at Berlin, haH been instructed to lo-oporate with hi Frcnrh and ItnMun colleagues in notlfin3 Germany to hold lii-rslf In readinesn to protlde for tin distwtcli of allied fnrcc to Silesia ncioss Germanv. The French authorities in Upper Hi leMa bue let it lx known thut if liny trouble dtnilopH from either the Poles or the Germans, the allied forces will net tojethei . nnd Gcrmnnj has Issued a proclamation warning all Germans In Silesia or on its borders to maintain ab solute order. The meeting of the Supreme Council was set orijlnnlly for AugtiKt 4, but Lord Cunvm yesterday requorfted .1 four-day delay to enable Premier Bo noml to be present. L0SES0nJNDERTRAIN National Guardsman Was Stealing Ride, Police Say A twenty - two - year-old National Guardsman, who, police say, was steal ing a ride on a freight train, lost his left foot when he fell under the triln at Fifty-ninth ureet and Baltimore avenue at 7 :15 o'clock today. The soldier Is C. L. Itowlfs. Po'.lco took him to the University Hospital. BRIDE'S POEM IN NUPTIALS Clergyman Reads Verse at Mra. Wagstaff's Wedding New York. Aug. 1. Ltterart and social circles are awaiting with In terest publication of Mrs. Blnnrhe Shoe maker Wagstaff's Intest poetic effusion. "Mnrrlage," which was read Haturdn by the officiating clergymen at the cere mony, which joined her to Donnld Carr. New York real estate broker, at tho bride's summer home, Blde-n-Wee, Manchester. Vt. The wedding of the society poet, for merly the wife of Alfred Wagstaff, Jr., vrhoin she divorced last Decembor, rnme as a great surprise to all but itlatives and ft few intimate friends. Tho Itev. Sidney It. Perkins, of the Congregntionnl Church of Manchester, rend her latent poem, supposedly In spired by the approaching nuptials. Shortly after her first wedding Mrs. Wagstaff wroto the following lines : 1VI. fn tha inrtf! nmnnr,rl trt TOM T- l.. I ..a,, U,lrJlr.r. vml IrMrtiWnff vnutfue ' Is there a heart gnln hHlf so sweet As when ou kneel nt my feet, Loving me, telling me you are mine? Is there ft vlctorj more divine Than I nm loved nnd loved so well? Dearest, the aim of those who dwell , trlbuting a number of interesting fiction compared stories In June. 1R01, ho obtained a With our hone of loving, of having position ns n special writer on the In- chared l nuir-r, Hnd afterward he became n This long life together nnd then to be i member of thn retioitorlsl staff "stUl One in n timeless efrnitv!" I Inter he speeinllred in the reporting of .. . ,. , . . shipplnc news, and finally beonmc ship Mr Cnrr, amateur gol er, real estate ,J ,n.nr ,i. nnsitlnn h held until Tuenty-seventh Division, hat- likewise expressed hinelf on tin1 snhjert. His tlioilRhts, published some enrs ago, dlcus.s the Hitiintlun In this fashion un der the title "I.oe" : "Love Is the mist-born breath that buya nwhile The Rolden fume of nn ambrosial dream. Delight e mlfs us the dear lips of one We love and long to kiss, but hiie not won. UlDlWl't HIIU u.v.o.wo 'iivmit vfc ...u Love, low ho keen n rupture that It reekH of pain '" Poetess Is Bride MRS. DONAIJ) OAKB A poem by tlw bride wwi-eadat the voddlng of Mrs. Uhnelie ShoenvUier Wogntaff oiid 0Hiaid Carr, at Alaiuhenter, VM m! "clty la wondering novr It compare with tlM rttttm written on the oeeaatoa oi tur first mpnt evening public OATH OF OFFICE TODAY Ledger l'holo Hirv.c? sworn In today as Collector of Internnl Revenue for Philadelphia. Oeorge Is the new I'nlted States District Attorney DIES AFTER WIFE'S KICK Man Tells of Quarrel That Ended Fatally Sharon, Mass., Aug. 1. An nutopnv will be held on the body of Levi V Lombard, sixty-five ,onis old, inventor nnd machinist, to determine whether hln death 'van due to n kick in the stomach by his wife, Kate V Lom bard. Before Lombard')) death at r hos pital he told of a quarrel with hi wife that started last Wednesday evening, when she refused her on Archie per mission to lenvo the house. Lombard i rrn1,?nstrntj nn.J when ho followed the child und his wife up'italrs she is al leged to have kicked him. Lombard then left the hoime and his wife is sold to have followed, hitting him twice on 'he head with a ml&silc. Lombard sought refucc in his machine shop, where he was found by neigh bors Mr T.nmhnn to (1 thr nutlior ties she kicked her husband in self-defense. TO HONOR WAR HEROES Erect Statue and. Lansdowne to n.-ll.,.. It A-mllll. n.i utu""" " -.. j A committee of twenty has UeciUeil to erect a monument in honor of Lant downc's wnr heroes nnd to dedicate it Armistice Day, November 11. fh..!.. 4l. .....-, At ftlAUA elt iltWI in tl.f fiervlco will bo inscribed on tln ..............- ..1.11. ...Ill V.A nlmtn1 nil iin ' i high Kchool lampus. The twehe men from Lnnsdownc who 'died In the seivice were l'dmund C. Cook, Paul do Ncgrc, Graham I'lder, , Norman Leonard. Kilwanl 1 . Ale t . ,. Shane. Howard B. Melody. Ryan. Soecorco Tecco, Ilnymond v at hen. John Welgle. Edwin S. Williams nnd A. Clinton Wunderllch. Deaths of a Day Thomao 8. Dando ! Thomas S. Dnndo. president of the Sporting Life Publishing Co . the Dnmlo Printing and Publishing Co. and the Manufacturers' Cnounlty Insurance Co., died at 0 tfO Inst night at Mllford, Pa. TT ..nu -l..'-lv VMM aU Mr Dando was the son of Mr. nnd Mrs. .Towph Clifford Dnndo, and was born In Philadelphia Hp was edu cated in Friends' schools and loter studied under a private tutor. He was a member of the Vnlnn Icague and was a member of the Keystone Shooting League nnd the Mverton Gun Club. Besides being a crack live bird shot, Mr. Dnndo also was nn enthusiastic golfer nnd belonged to several golf clubs. Arrnngemnts are being mnde for his burial from his home at Ardmore. John Way Atkins John Wa Atkins, who for many jenrs wns shipping editor of the In nulrer. died vesterday morning in the Philadelphia General Hospital from an Illness from which he had suffered for reveral months, Mr Atkins wns born In Milton. Del.. October 11 18.2. He received his i early education In country schools near his home Aftr having taught ehool In Dela ware for three years, Mr. Atkins came to this city and In 172 becnnif n re porter on the old limes, nirer con- the time of hi- der.th The funeral of Mr Atldns will be held Werlnesdnv nfternoon at 2 nVlucK nt 2010 Noith Ilrond street. Intfr ment !ll he mnde In Mount 1'enen Cemeer His widow and foir grand children surie him. Dr. George H. Durgln Dr Genrire H Il'iriln. neniher of n wldelv known Germantown fnnnlr. died ln-t night nt his home, 0.1 West Die. ten avenue, in his slxtv-elrhth wnr Dr nnr;in was horn In I'hll'ide'nMn, April 30 1S.M. the son of Dr and Mrs. Georne II Ilurgln. 2d. He graduated from the T'nlverslU of I'ennBjlvnnin Medical School In 1S77. His horlv will he cremated Wednes day and the ashes will be hurled In West Laurel Hill Cenetorv. Thomaa Brooks Thomas Ilrooks, widely known ns n market gardener In tie northeastern nectlon of the cltv, died Saturday nt Ms home, Comly nnd G tret, Lawn dale. Mr IJrooks, who wor nlttv tnrs old, was a eon of the lnte Thomas TlrooVH, who eatabllahed one of thn first market gardens In Phltadrlnhln Tor twenty -four venrs he nlso wns en gaeed In the produce buHlnesB. He leaves his wife nnd two arms, Thomas Ttronks, fid, ind Albeit IIiooUh. runerul services will he held Wednes day at B P M nt Tilnlty Lutheran Church, nighteenth nnd Wolf utreets. George B. McCulloh' Funeral Funeral service b for George II Me Culloh, who met his death Saturday evening bv striking hit hed on a divine board while making a dlfllcult "stunt" dive, will bo held from hi home, 212.'! Hansom street, nt 11 o'clock tomorrow morning Interment will bo in West Laurel Hill Cemeterv. Mr. McCulloh wa graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1007. He recently succeeded to tho business at his uncle, the late Kamuel W. Lovlis, In tho Ileal Btate Trust Ilulldlng HU mother survive him, and alto hlo tit ter, Mlii: Josephine McCulloh, prom- inent linger ana muna. ',.., i.i,'.;:-l. Unftilif I I. fi ledgek Philadelphia; monday, GOLDEN WEDDING REPEATS CEREMONY OF 50 YEARS AGO Bartholomew Schmltt and Hlo Wife Will Be "Married" All Over Again To celebrate their fiftieth wedding an niversary Mr. and Mrs. Bartholomew Sehmitt, U120 North Lelthgow street, will have the ceremony repeated today, ns nearly as possible duplicating the conditions of the original ceremony. The ceremony, which will take place at St. Bonlfacius' Roman Catholic Church, Hnucock and Diamond streets, the scene of the first wedlng, will be unusual. 'While performed according to the regulations of the Church when do'lred, it Im n rare event. Today's ceremonv wit: be performed by the Hev. Alfred Menth, assistant riftnr of thn church, and will be at tended by the family, Including nine children, twenty-four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, in addition to n few ft lends who witnessed the original ceremony. I Mrs. Schmltt will wear a wedding dress nenny atipucaung inc origiuui. and the groom will wear his Civil War uniform. He was n member of Com- pany B, Forty-seventh rennsyivania Infantry, during the conflict. A re- . l. .M1 K Ini. at AUnninnln Mnll.i i5.f"u" V'il '"'"" "- - "- " Fifth nnd iauunin sirocrs. Mm. Schmltt was born in this city In 1852. her husband having been born In Bavaria, Germany, in 1845. MOORE INVITES HARDING Mayor, President of Waterwnyo As sociation, Pinna for Convention Mnvor Moore, as president of the Atlantic Deeper Water wajs Afcsocla- ' tion, has extended to President Harding an invitation to attend tho coming con ventlon of that organlzntion in Snvan nnh, Ga., Novcmbor 10 to i. Plans for the entertainment of the delegates on their way to and at the convention are progressing rapidly. Major Moore reported jesterday that nil northern representatives will be the guests of Mayor Co-run, of Wilmington, North Carolina, on their way to Sa- .nHHnk A thnr jiff v nti (nsnpftlnn w'lll be made of the Cape Pear Illvcr bv the visitors, A motorbont ride and nvsfrr ronst on the Hound In the isorin Carolinn city has also been arrnnged. SPANISH TROOPS VICTORS Cut Their Way Through Tribesman to Rescue Surrounded Force . . . .n. t 11 i IlIK Oil. AUg 1 1 1 A. i.i Spnnlsh troops who are fighting their wn southward from Vienna. .Morocco, inrougll Hie rnnKS oi inucmiini uu have hemmed in General Navarro, near Montnrrult, have won an Important victory, says a Tangier dispatch to the j unny .Man The Spanish, who are under the com' mnnd of General Cavalcnntl, hnve rc taken Gouroiigou, Atalayot, Sidl Hamid, el Hndj nnd Nador. ELKS GET HOME Two Tralnloads Were Escorted Clubhouse Two tralnloads of Lilts arrived nt the ti ii rr 1 i .1 I I r. Itendlng Terminal this morning after twenty-eight days' traveling to the nn mini convention nt Los Angeles nnd n return plensurc trip afterward. They were met by mnny not for- tunnte. enough to hne gone on the till A hnnd wns present to greet the trnelers, who were ccorted to the clubhouse nt Juniper nnd Aich streets The Elks did their belt to boost Philadelphia nt every town where the Mopped and especially Inform every mi of the Sesnui-Centennial to be he , . i inOi ncre in x. The Engagement Diamond Quality Is Imperative, whatever the size of the stone. J. E. Caldwell & Co. Chestnut & Juniper Streets The Lessened Blow nv a. D. i.aidi: After weeks of constant watching at the bedside of her loved one Death entered. With nerves at breaking tension with heart near shat teredlittle wonder that she was unable to attend to the necessary final arrangements. She knew not where to turn A fritnd told her of the Broad Street Chapel, Asher & Son, 1309 North Broad Street, Then a quiet but sure hand took the helm, Every de tail was attended to in a way that left nothing to be desired A load was lifted from her sorrow-burdened shoulders. The splendid service left her with soul aglow. The last rites had indeed been more to the living in honor of the dead, than for the dead alone. If that deepest sorrow should enter your home, you, too, can claim the wonderful comfort and tender help of Mr. Asher. At the time of death, phone Poplar TIS0 i r t mmBxiB'amBmmmmmmHmmmmmmmMmmumwwwmmmomxHwnmim J. i. ;..j.i,T..f, .1 i ,ii, in, , .win, .iJUuJ ,r PHYSICIAN'S WIFE AND SON ACCUSED ElWood Adamo, in Joan Cun ningham Case, Charged With Taking Actress' Gems MYRTLE TANNEHILL ROBBED NVw VatIi. Ancr. 1. Dr. Clinrles B. ...... .,., ....n. -. . - .dams, of -17 Irving place, was In tho West Side Court yctcrdny, when his wife w an held" in $5000 ball on n charge f criminally receiving stolen property, ind hi stepson, Eiwood Adams, twen- ty-one, was held In $7500 on n charge I of burglary. 1 The arraignment of mother and son revealed that detectives have been work ing secretly In nn effort to connect ung Adnmi with other thefts than those whlrii Jenn Cunningham, a Fcrv ant girl, recently awserted she com mitted at IiIh Insistence and to prove Iter love for him. The jounB chap's mother and his two-months bride hnve Insisted on his nnocence since his arret, as a result of i he Cunningham girl's confession last January 10 They said then : , "We will stand by Eiwood to the end. Ttierc Is nothing In the story tho Cunningham girl hns told the po liceexcept tho desire or n jeoious woman to 'get even.' We know he Is innocent." Mother Mnhes Denial After she hud been released in ball yesterday, the mother said : "I simply am the victim of pollco persecution. I am placed In this posl. tlon becaiiKc I din what any other mother would do take tho side of her boy. The charge against me Is ridicu lous." Young Adams, who had been released In $5000 ball on the original charge, did not obtain $7000 additional bonds yesterday, so ho was locked up In the Soventh district prison. He stoutly as serted that he and h!n mother knew nothing of the burglnry as a result of which they were arraigned. rThln rnhhprv nrnrrwl In tht nnnrt. ment of Myrtle Tnnnchlll, nctrcsa. last January 1.. Untrnnce was gained Dy a pass key. The police charge that young Adams and a man accomplice did It They said they expected to make another arrest soon. Pearls nnd other jewels valued at $2500 wore taken. Opeinted in Philadelphia The robberies to which the Cunning ham girl confessed were committed here nnd in Asbury Park and Philadelphia. It was stated that the girl took Jew elry nnd furs of n total vnluo of about $10,000. Ttie police accuse young Adams of selling them for about $1000. of which the girl's sharo was less than $100. The doctor'n wife, who woro a light blue nult and u white turban hot draped with n veil, a pearl necklace and sev eral rings in which large diamonds sparkled, and her son, who Is a slim, dapper youth, were represented by n former Assistant District Attorney, Alexander n. Knmlnsky. After thev had entered pleas of not guilty Knmlnsky fought to have lower hall imposed, but without success, De tectlve Kicrnan told Magistrate Simp son that young Adnms already Is un der $5000 ball, nnd ndded that the no- loce cxrected to mnke still further charges against him. EDUCATIONAL NKW YOltK n ev,ry thaui)d "'Ei'Vnont throunh I spinal adliutmont plvon b competent . ..." V'. ' f. .uiiihh n,w;i- Thapubllo Is rapidly rfouinllnr the vnlua m inn iiminou oi aruaisaj neaiinff, and will I rrqulrs an Innreaaliur number of pracUtlon ! era Send for lltoratura exp'nlnlnr the coumo, nkw VonK roixr.r.K or chiropractic Drpt. 8 2l W 1iA t.. New York N y. lUMiHAMTON. N. Y. Till! niNflHAMTON TRAiM.vo HCHOOL ra & mental dafictlVes No a, limit p,y". lcl Culture Manual training all bran he sv.i ,uv, i'ii. iiwiiio-nv.ivui ivr nnr.oua r.RCK. "; r.iVS AiAi.'.'i'i ' XX, " up auoi'st a nor.rir h,,. mnKnamion ' - i .-saw orK us rain lew Ave IETIIN HMITH - U Pltmiin N J . nn Jul .11 .1 iiiajwvj a.iiin, area ,u. uemuvea and 1 frionda InWtcd to aer Ices at hU late re. urnrn, u jiz?i ue, t eanenaa)' 10 30 A .V Interment Rlerlew Cemetorv, Pnnna. Kroe. N. J. NOni.IT Autuot 1. at h-r lnt reldenee lni'l North Jlroad ELIA n.. wldaw nf in. I eeph C. Nohllt Due notice of funeral will bo tflven. MOnGEY July ?l ALHEHT I,., jounu- ept on of the late William 13. and lUbeccii l Jane Morgey, aged 27 Ilelame and frlenda to Imliod to attend f uncial eertlcca on Wed nesdav. at 1! P. M from tile renlrtenen of trothir-ln-law, Gooifs Wallace. 3028 North t"i?,n '.1 ,n,,"r.",,ni.Wo:!.IJ.,n,,r.r. ':'"."" ir...i.i( July ill Jl'l. I. 1.A11A r . daurhter of late Adirr and Mary DtUr. Srlee at rrMdnnco of her coueln. Mra p1"''.1, iniVrmVnVtnrKiik " ' Tue'day' 8 MoonE Juis .11 MAnoAnnT J. wife of James Moore, formerly of lrt24 Ellsworth J . I'.elntlve; and friends also Ub.rt Pell I.odae No 60. I,. A. II of It I,, Invited to attend funeral Thursday, 2 r SI., from lati reiaic l'i nflth st Inter ment Mt. Morlnh Cemetery Kemalns may be leuert Wednesday evenlnir MnTIN July ?1 KMKI.INB, wldov nf Hi'nard K. Martin, axed S3 Ilelatlvaa and fronds are lnlted to n'tend funeral eerv ces Tueiday, 8 I M. reeldenoe of her oon-ln-law Mr Joeini Heckler 1130 North 8th at Interment strictly prlate. wmmRMmmwmmmwmmmmmmmmmmMm& iiswsjssiiflwW'sa'Sfn.iii.isiisajBSWhi s. august vi02r' Robbed of Jewels G.V V' lJ ' --h ?N .:- ,.. -. rr '- 'V?"V &wtx&i)SVM<: i fe8ia4i MIS8 MYRTLE TANNEHILL, As the result of the robbory of MIna TannehlU's apartments In New York early this year, In which $2300 of Jewels were taken, El wood Adams was hold yesterday on a charge of burglary and his mother on a charge of receiving stolen goodfl.. Mlia Tannehlll Is a well known actress MISSING BOY IS FOUND Weot Philadelphia Youngster Fled After Brother Fell From Roof IUjmoud Fowler, thirteen yearn old, of 4010 Olive street, who has been nwny from home since last Tuesday after noon, when his brother Horry, seven' jenra old, iell from the roof of the Fowler home and fractured hU skull, was found yesterday afternoon In the vicinity of the Pennsylvania Itatlroatl tracks by detectives from the Thirty ninth street and Lancaster avenue sta tion. The two brothers were engaged in kiteflying from tho roof of the house juot beforo the younger brother was injured. Ho was taken to the West Philadelphia Homeopathic Hospital and has been unconscious ever since. For the last five daya Raymond has been cueing out n precarious existence. Tho detcctlvea turned him over to tho Juvenile Court. Ir'iBiMUrWJIW eggKaMC:ji; fe " S&t-. Special August Sale Oriental Rugs We believe this is the opportune time to buy Oriental Rugs. . Every Oriental Rug in our stock has been repriced at one-half the prices ruling in 1920. If the new tariff goes into effect basing the duty on American instead of foreign values, it will mean higher costs. Special Note Persian Mosul Rugs At Pre-War Prices 1 Average Size 3 ft. 6 x 6 ft., $25.00 to $37.50 Bills for rugs purchased in this sale will be dated October 1st and the goods held for Fall delivery, if desired. FRITZ & LARUE, Inc. Importers 1615 CHESTNUT STREET Blww,ffi 1 33 Kirsc ho The 'fact is these suits are offered below their replace ment cost. Such an oppor tunity cannot last cer tainly not so far as Kirsch baum Clothes are concern- 3-Piece Suits and Topcoats (Front the Kirschbaum Shops) 30.00 Cashmeres and Cheviots 20.00 35.00 Worsteds and Serges - 23.34 40.00 Worsteds and Serges 26.67 45.00 Worsteds and Serges - 30.00 50.00 Worsteds nnd Serges 33.34 I 1' BRANDS BASEBALL TRIAL A BURLESQUE Defense Attorney Pictures Ban Johnson as Villain and Charles Comiskoy as Horo MAHARG AND BURNS DUPES Clilcflgo, Aug. 1. Opening its flnnl argument In tho basoball trial, the de fense today pictured tho baseball scan dal investigation nnd trial ns a theat rical burlcsquo In which Ban John son, president of tho American League, was tho villain and Charles A. Comls key, owner of the Chicago .club, the &ont' . . iL "Tho entire caso wna merely nnothcr onfhronV nl the Comlekev-Johnson feud," snld Henry Bcrgcr, first of the, nine defense attorneys to talk during j tho dav. He defied the Jury to find anything in Illinois laws making the. throwing of a bnseball game a crime. There Is no proof that the ball players intended through throwing games In the ' 1010 world's series to Injure their ciuo or their league," said Mr. Bcrgor. "To have Intended to do so would have meant that they were trying to destroy themselves, nnd that is absurd. "Tho whole affair Is a theatrical nlav n farce, n burlcsaue with ita villains and Its heroes. "Over In his law office sits Charles V. Barrett, the prima donna American League attorney, who vamped Bill Burns. "Then Sits Uio Vlllnln" "Next to him sltfl the villain, the walking bank of tho American League, Byron Bancroft Johnson, whose ma chinations of yearn finally havo been successful. "Johnson has hnd his revenge on Charles A. Comiskoy and It has been sweet. Tills villain in theatrical terms bap, tried for years to 'get' that arnv-halred owner of tho Chicago club and ho finally hna 'got' him. "In posing as a hero who would clean up baseball, Ban Johnson has pulled the strings, the puppets havo thrown the mud nnd an old score against Comiskoy has been pnld. "And then wo have tho chorus the State's attorney, Tyrrell, and these .Ti B RE! WINDSOR ROOM- -1204 Chestnut St. 11 SOUTH 15th ST. Founded In 1894 - 3 Percent Off C aum Our entire regular stock oj three-piece suits and midsummer suits reduced one-third. ed. The mills are now showing woolen for Spring 1922. The high prices quoted make this sale all the more remarkr able. Buy now for next Summer Heavy-Weight Overcoats At Half - ' , 111 s- 1 ' l I others, who dance and sing ns or dored. "Maharg and Burns are tho vlllnln's chief assistants the dupei of that man ter mind. "When you discuss your verdict re member there Is not a criminal case be- ' fore you, but another example of tho Insidious work of Byron Bancroft Johnson, of his attack on Charles A. Comlskey." Mr. Berger then nnnlyied the con spiracy laws in nn attempt to prove thero was no crime in the case. Tnn Wrong. Truck Driver Flnec1 Glrnrd Caranzlo, of Mifflin stiro near Eighteenth, was arrested last night at Magnolia, N. J., charged with driving an improperly tagged tnotoi truck. Justice of the Peaco Jackson fined him $25 and costs. The truck is being held until legal tags are. placed on It. PIANOS Banjos at $20 Case, extra strings music rack aiuL instruc tions go with it Othtr muitcal out fit at all prictt EASY TERMS WURUlZER 809-11 Chestnut St. Walnut 2010 Copyrlrtt. 1021. Tha Ttudolph WurlltMr Co. I 1 II lothes j I 1 w l i 2-Piece Suits i5.ooCooI Cloths and Braemars 10.00 18.00 Cool Cloths and Braemars 12.00 20.00 Palm Beaches & Cool Cloths 13.34 22.50 Palm Beaches and Mohairs 15.00 25.00 Imported Scotch Braemars 16.67 30.00 Blue and Green Flannels 20.00 Price It '.1 1-