J'F(fWm!H!9l9 'i .v 7 & i ,, i 'K EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEEr-PHItADELPHIA, MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1921 J Subdue Second Fire & r y in PL Breeze Plant 5. . f -'WiullJiacd from Vn On "V 1. - . ..L t.y 9t no-8 was touched at too bottom witn MV savage rea ana toe neat arovc com- ' uiuciais DBCK UUUUIXUS HI KV" Death At Men's Dadis This wns not true of the firo-fight-ers, however. Haggard nnd grim from the long battlo. theso mca Inched up to tho. Cqkos until tioy actually ceciacU to bo standing in them. Directly Luhlnd tab mca fightlac tie flaming separator thla morning wiro several huso tanks vdth capacity of thousands of barrels Most of the oil bad been drawn from them, but they were still filled with ex- Eloslve vapor and enough oil to annl Uate the tiny croup of men backed so Closely against them. These men kept streams directed nt the flames, while other croups poured tons of water on the tanks behind the fighters, nnd still others kept n spray constantly going over the men closest to the blare to keep them from being . roasted nt their work. r Outside the gates of the big plant the ( 'police had n cleared space extending ' for nbout a half mile from the actual blaxe. In places the fire lines almost touched tho walls of the plant, but so vast Is its extent that they wero In a safe distnnco from a fire of, such co lossal magnitude. In the long lines of people massed against the wall of tired bluecoats could be discerned the wor ried faces of wives nnd mothers won daring if tho new outbreak would bring tho melancholy parade of ambulances that bad marked the conflagration Sun day morning. Despite all this, work continued as usual In tho parts of the plant not touched by the fire and ong fines of men stood outside the employ ment office seeking work. Job SeeUers Defy Flro The line of men applying for work passed almost directly beneath one of the parts of the plant nearest the fire. A big man stuck his head out of the ndow nnd grinned down through the oily grime on his face. In the line were men who had been employed In that two acres of ground that had been wiped out by Sundny night's blaxe. One of these men, evidently knowing the grimy man leaning from the win dow, looked up nnd smiled. The man In the window yelled down: "Hey, Mac, what are you doln for a llvln'." . , , , , "Nothln yet," wns grinned back, "haven't you heard about our vaca tion?" "Within n few minutes the vacation was over and the man wns walking in with a group of fellow workmen to take tip his labor in nnother part of the plant. In order to do this he and his companions hnd to pass a line of am bulances drawn up nt the gates waiting for possible victims from the fire, whose smoke caused the incoming workmen to choke as they passed through the gate. Wreckage Cleared Away Most of the men hired today were put to work aiding the firemen In fight- 4 fog the smouldering blaxe, nnd others were mit nt work cleaning up the wreck- age. 'When tho second outbreak csnio this morning few of this group left the ' plant. They merely fell In line with tho older men and sought to prevent furtther damage. Marks of tho excitement nttendant on the first blaxo were easily discerni ble in the neighborhood this morning after the explosion of riic separator. Besides tho residents of the neighbor hood, there were large groups of people who wero evidently sightseers nnd who took n morbid pleasure in looking nt the outer walls of. n very modern nnd ef ficient looking factory, with only :i mounting pile of black smoke above the roof to tell of tho havoc being wrought within. Tho neighborhood was somber with a nbanging pall of smoke, relic of the other Are, when tho wind blew the other way, and appropriate as a shroud over the homes of the men who had died In the blaze. Even after the fire wns declared finally "under control" lnrge croups remained gazing at the plant. When the fire was at its height, so largo Is tho plant that a view from Passyunk avenue could bo little more exciting than looking at any of the oflicc build ings of Bread or Chestnut street blnz inc. Only tho knowledge of the drama being enacted within held the crowd. Tho60 who remained after tho police line was lifted this afternoon sat on an embankment and just gazed at the walls. Half-smlllng employes glanced out nt them from time to time. Thpy were waiting patiently for something that might happen. Lntll an oil fire is out it's a dangerous fire and most of the group loltrelng outside the plant knew it. Company Officials There "i. When the flames first burst out Sun day morning officials of the compnny were Immediately notified and rushed at once to the scsene. J. W. Vnn Dyke, president, and W. M. Irish, vice presi dent and general mannger, with Edwin B. Cox. treasurer of the company and a member of the City Council, were in this group. They "stood by" until a late hour this nfternoon. Mrs. Olive MeClone, widow of Hugh McClonc, one of the workmen who lost their lives, told today of a brief tnlk she had with her husband before he died. Mrs. MeClone said she had aroused ier husband shortly before midnight Saturday, as he was due at work at 12 o'clock. He hurried to the plant on his motorcycle and when he arrived List of Dead and Injured in Point Breeze Oil Fire Dead James MrUhorn, Jr., twenty-one years old, BR32 Larchwood avenue, died of burns In St. Agnei,' Hospital. William II. tanlfen, Jr., thirty, 2335 Morris strret, died of burns in St. Agnes' Hospital. Htiph McCluno, thirty-'five, 0152 nclnhart street, died of luras is Mothodi&t Hospital. Frsnk Jordan, twenty-cue, 6150 Reinhart street, killed in a motor cyclo crash speeding to the. fire. William C. Crteddl, sixty-six. 2213 Moore street, died of burns In St. Agnes' Hospital. Mr. Crlsdcll would have been pensioned begin ning today. Kit Cell, Morris street, dtcd of bums In St. Agnes' Hospital. Injured John Jrum, fifty-four, city fire" man, 2715 South Eighteenth street, overcomo by smoke. St. Agnes' Hos pital. William Young, thirty-five, 827 North Twenty-fourth street, burns of body. St Agnes' HospltaL John Oorman, twenty-seven, 1447 South Twenty-eighth street, over come by fumes. St. Agnes' Hospi tal. John Connelly, thirty, city fire man, 2203 Mifflin street, overcome by smoke. St. Agnes' Hospital. Edwin Woodcock, twenty-three, address unknown, body burns. St. Agnes' Hospital. Nell McCoy, forty-seven, 1140 Cambridge street, burns of face and body. St. Agnes Hospltnl. Hugh Martin, sixty-one, 1111 Winton street, burns of body. St. Agnes' Hospital. William Donahue, forty-nine, 1838 Rltncr street, broken ankle nnd burns. Methodist Hospital. Samuel McKnight, thirty-six, 2423 South Mole street, city fire man, burns of body. Mothodlst Hos pital. John Wilson, age nnd address un known, burns of fact) nnd body. Methodist Hospital. Thomas McGlone, thirty-five, burns on face and body. St. Agnes' Hospltnl. Joseph Dougherty, rwenty-cight, city fireman, 1C07 Federal street, overcome by fumes. Methodist Hos pltnl. Many more were treated for minor injuries by ambulances and at vari ous other hospitals. FOUR VICTIMS OF POINT BREEZE FIRE ssjj 4Ti Hero are reproduced photographs of four of Hie men who lost their lives ns results of (lie Point Hrccze oil works fire. They are, rending from left (o right, Frnnk Jordan, 0160 Reinhart street; James Mulhcrn, Jr., 5532 Larchwood nveiiue; Hugh McClune, 0152 Itclnhart street, and William II. Hanlfen, Jr., 2335 Morris street. Jordan was killed in a motorcycle crash on his way to tho flrtf. Tho other three died of burns in hospitals wns asked to take another workman to his home a short distance nwny. "My husband said the other mnn had seated himself in the sidecar." Mrs. MeClone stated. "The motorcycle was near the still where the fire started. My husband said he hnd not started the engine of his cycle and that ho had just about to throw a leg over tho saddle when tho explosion came. He was cov ered with blazing oil." The incessant shriek of the fire sirens on the compnny "reservation" Sunday morning had been heard by firemen on watch duty beside the alarm gongs In the downtown engine houses. As n result, the crews in many engine houses were "standing by" when the first nlnrra clanged over the Electrical Bureau wires. It had been sounded by Acting Lieutenant Mullln from a box Inside the company s grounds. As the city engines rolled from their stations and raced to tho plant the tlnmes had reached the "agitators." lead-lined tanks used for treating high grade oils. Fire Destroys iloso The heat was so Intense that the fire could be fought only from the rim, and much of the hose was burned up ns the flames swept here and there. The cen ter of the blazo was so fierce that even up to the middle of the ufternoon it was impossible for officials to penetrate far enough to take exact stock of how many of the pumphouses and auxiliary build ings were doomed. As throngs of sightseers and worried householders hurried to the scene the short-circuiting of electric wires of high voltage added bright flashes to the dis play. The crowds were stopped nt the Passyunk avenue bridge from tho west nnd well below the plant from the east, so that further casualties should not be added to the night's toll of death and damage. Up to 4 :30 o'clock in the morning, the wind enma from the West, nnd the drift was to Passyunk avenue. In this direction there wns a large bare space to cover to the Philadelphia gas works. and three squanes to the Philadelphia section of tho Atlantic Refining Com pany's works. Mnls wns toe most invornitlc circum stance of the fight nnd enabled the fire men to keep their efforts on t lie steam still, nnd tour Icml-llncd 'Vgitators" In which oil, varying from lCjOO barrels to 4000 barrels In nuantlty. is treated in the refining process. At about 4:SU o clock, however. there was n slight shift of the wind toward the south, which carried the lames to five of the storage tanks, In which refined oil, nnptha, gasoline and other finished products were stored. Pressure had been reduced in tlu?m and a constant drenching of "wntcr foam" and water administered, but nothing wns effective. Leaping nnd licking their wny In red-golden tongues from tho central treating point, the flnmes reached tho tnnks. A series of dull explosions fol lowed, nnd the contents of the reser voirs, whose capacity varied from 5000 to 20,000 barrels, were added to the general heat nnd nolso of tho con flagration. The smoko nnd the constant roaring of the flames added to the glow, which made the spot hideous, even from vantage points a number of blocks away. Since almost the first of the fire offi cials of the company were on the spot assuming direction under the general direction of Mr. Irish, who from the time he arrived at 1 o'clock until there seemed no chnncc that further danger wns to be feared, refused to leave the fire. Several times when he approached particularly dangerous ureas In his zeal to protect both the property of tho company and the lives of its men he was warned by others that he wns risk ing ills own life. Firemen wero subjected to a baking and broiling nroccsu no wood nr nihnr material could crente, ns the flames from me iuei nnreu and leaped in nn ap parently never-ending blaze. When tho tanks, agitators and still seemed at times to be coming within control there was the separator, a cement-lined pool of oil, about 150 feet wide, where the fire leaped into renewed life with the drainage from the ground nnd conduits. The scpnrntor is used to separate tho oil and wntcr, so tho water can be emptied Into the river, nnd the oil drnwn off from the top. Naturally, ns soon ns the hose of wnter wns turned into its caldron the water went to tho bottom nnd the fire leaped triumphantly along the top. Thirst and hunger were added to the exhaustion of the fighters ns the firemen kept on with one of the longest nnd most grueling jobs they ever encoun tered. Hnnlfcn wns tho first man found. His clothing hnd been burned from his body. MeClone was found next, almost twenty feet from tho point where he had last been seen at work. Nearby was Mul hern, who was semi-conscious. One of the most pathetic Incidents of the firo wns the death of Crlsdell, who was to have retired this week nftcr forty-three years of continuous service nt the plant. At the last meeting of the Hoard of Directors n pension was voted to mm. Crlsdell wns overjoyed by tho news, ns was his wlfo. who had planned a party for him. When he left for work Saturday Mrs. Crlsdell said ho would soon be awny from his dangerous oc cupation. Ho had helped fight scores of fires during his long service. Jordan, who was a neighbor of Me Clone, rushed to tho flro on n motor cycle nbout 12:30 o'clock Sundny morn ing. After learning of his neighbor's denth he started homewnrd to break the news. His motorcycle was struck by a truck carrying nurses to the big blaze. Jordan died of a fractured skull. mr -iiBLr- i Loose Leaf Binders in Stock 1 blank: books Bounfl anil Ixwa Laf Lmiooiunmia PRINTINQ ENanATOfa OSTICE BUUoomt sd OupyllM YU n "top In at G29 Jtarkat Street am! set lint what you want rlsht from our itoek without the usual delays Loo-ie Lif Lrdcr nnd LaTM Pout Hinders ning Memorandum and Blor Irlc Hook Record nnd Minute nooks. Aluminum Holders and Sheet Holders. Our stock Includes 'a complete lino of loose leaf 'jutnte. from thou, of tho lowest cost to ttie most elaborate. Tour neods will bo courtoously and promptly attended to hero. WILXIAM MANN COMPANY 529 MARKET STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. ' Nw York 0Ticei: S61 Broadway, founded in 18iS mmimmmwmmmmMswmm Mwmmmmwmwmiiiuw S ,1 t ,MHEnga2mg Tho "Food- Safe Milk For Infanta . & Invalid iOOOOKINa Drink" for All Affen. 1 Quick Lunch st Home, Office, nod ' fountains. A$k for HORUCK'S. JwAToid Imitations ft Substitutes y.A m ?:.i Apartments September lst,1921 several attractive apartments will be 'available in The Hotel St. James Annex (One room aad bath two ( rooms and two bathsup to five rooms and four baths (Hotel St. James m 1K?F "v.-' w .J v. r Ifttt at 13th St. XfauhAXi mmmmmmmmmmmmmm, MUlillll Limited Half-Price Sale At Wanamaker & Brown's LIMITED as to time, limited as to quantity, unlimited as to value and profit-taking by the buyer. 1000 Suits, all new, all-wool clothing, thoroughly represent ative of Wanamaker and Brown's entire stocks worsteds, light weight woolens, medium-weight suits. Many men will buy the latter for all-year-round wear because they prefer medium to heavy weights. We advise our customers and friends, as well as any man or young- man in Philadelphia, to take early advantage of this old-time half-price sale at Oak Hall the first in years. $30 Suits going out at half-price $40 Suits going out at half-price $50 Suits going out at half-price $60 Suits going out at half-price $75 Suits going out at half-price $85 Suits going out at half-price $15.00 $20.00 $25.00 $30.00 $37.50 $42.50 Sale started this morning when the store doors opened. WANAMAKER & BROWN MARKET AT SIXTH FOR SJXTY YEARS aMMMMiallllMilMiBMiii f"'" '" ))u" ill SWISS EXPLAIN DEFEAT DewalJ Fact That American Marks ' men Uted Apparatus Bomo, Aug. 15. (Iy A. 1.) Tho members of the Swiss rifle-shooting team, who hnvo jiiBt returned from Lyons, whore they met defeat for tho first timo in fifteen yrurs, nt the hands ol the American marksmen in the in ternational rifle shooting tournament last week, complain that the American victory wns due to "special technical r.ppnrnttiB such ns field glnnncs, lenses nnd padded cushions for resting elbows und knees, which, especially In firing from the prone position, gave the Americana nn advantage." In future the Swiss ten in will refuse to compete unless the marksmen refrain from using such pnraphernalla. Fund for Losing Ball Teams Dftrolt, Mclh., Aug. 15. To nid clubs that may encounter financial dif ficulties a sinking fund will be created by the ' Michigan -Ontario Baseball League through tho deduction of one nnd one-half cehts on every pnid nd mission. Tho plan becomes effective today. The league season, originally scheduled to closo September 18, will end September 5 it was announced today. POLICE BATTLE CROWD Thirteen Arrested In Row at Twelfth and Lombard 8treeta A fight took placo last night between police and a crowd ot Negroes at Twelfth and Lombard streets following the arrest by two detectives of n mnn suspected of theft. Thirteen Negroci nre under nrrcst ns n result of the row. but no ono is seriously injured. The two detectives, Anderson nnd Alexander, of tho Twelfth nnd Pino streets station, arrested the suspect Jutt ntter ho left a houso near tio cornur of Twelfth and Lombnrd ttets. ?c irroas in n crowd nnnrhv nn.tcrteu. arm , uhon they attempted to forco tho pris- i Itvi d imvaiov iuu liyiifr null iVUt The detectives wero fast settles the worst oi tns uneven struggle woi-ji detail of police srrlTl from the ststlon nnd nfter a fight arrested the thirteen negroes nnd routed the remainder. The thief suspect escaped. Two of the men arrested were held in $1000 bail, chnrged with assault and battery nnd attempt to kill. The others arc held in $500 bail n the same charge. BUSINESS MEN ORGANIZE Promotion of Good Fellowship Aim at Sharon Hill A Business Men's Association has been organised in Sharon Hill, with tho object of promoting good fellowship In the town. Officers elected were Frnnk M, Tanner, president; irnnk J. Donahue, vlco president: P. M. Read, secretary : Emil C. Wagner, Jr., trcnuurer, nnd Charles W. Tuppenny, publicity ngent. A set of bylnws is being drnwn up by n committee consisting of Messrs. Tuppeny, Wagner and Read. Drowned 8hortly After Betrothal Norrlstown, Tft., Aug. 15. There Is nn ndded touch of liuman Interest In the drowning of George Rogers, of Jcffer sonvillo, nn employe of the State In surance Department, on Saturday nfter noon In tho Perkiomcn Creek near Oaks. Ho wns betrothed just tho evening be foro to Miss Mnrion Htrltzlnger, daugh ter of B. Frank Strltslnger, a grist mill operator of this place. It is be lieved that his death was due to henrt disease, ns he was n good swimmer. His Doay wns recovered niter tour Hours' search by his brother, Charles. HOLD MILITARY FUNERALS Woodbury Pays Honor to Victims of Great War Woodbury, N. J.( Aug. 15. put s of the largest funerals ever herd in this city was held Saturday, when the body of William Stokes Bonsai, who wns killed in action in France, wns interred in Greene Cemetery. Tho Amcrlcnn Legion Poit, bearing tho dcccnscd nan's narao, bad charco of tho funeral. Tho survlces were in tbo Presbyterian Church. TJio procosslon was led by tho 'Third Regiment Band, followed by .. -.& J F .Jl n' A ....Ilia ".. C? tltlA tuo pOl mu jjiiutcp uMijr. vtatw Chaplain Dubel ofhclated both in tbo church and at the gravo. Lieutenant Bonsai was killed about three years ngo by a Germnn sniper. When news came i . A .1. 1.1. .It... Willi. Tl- OI U1S (icaill, iub iairn.1, nullum .uuji- sal, wns taken ill nnd soon died. He leaves n mother nnd a sister, Mrs. Robert Hendrlckson. Tho body of Edward "Wright, formerly of Swcdesboro, was burled with military honors Sundny nfternoon. Services, held in the Episcopal Church, were largely attended. yhe young soldier entered Cnmp Dlz Mny 13, 1018, nnd was assigned to Company A, U22d Machine Gun Battalion and sent to France. He wns stricken with influcnzn nnd died the following Oc tober. He wns the son of tbo lnte. Dnvld nnd Josephine Wright. Tho funeral wns in charge of Swain Post, and a number of fratcrnnl societies attended. The Swedcsboro Bnnd led tho procession to the cemetery. WAITE FOR N, J. FREEHOLDER Petitions In Circulation for Cotllngo wood Man Petitions nre in clrculntlon in Col Ungswood to plnce tho name of George A. Wnltc, a newspaperman nnd for mer Assemblyman In the New Jersey Legislature, on tho Republican ballot to represent that borough In tho Cam den County Board of Freeholders. Tho Jersey primaries take place tho first week of September. Mr. Wn-lte has been n resident of Cnmdcn for thirty years nnd of Col llngswood bnrougli slnco 1007. Tho cnhdldnte will make tho opening nd drcss of his cnmpnlgn nt the firemen's fnlr Thursday, Frldny nnd Saturday of this week. FIREMENOPPOSn PAID DEPARIINil ' i Wilmington Company Will XsJ ' unancoiior to Halt Pro. poood Organization TAXPAYERS ALSO JOIN fj Wilmington, Del., Aug. 1(5.-,,, G. nnrrnan, former City Solicitor inJ attorney for tho Dclawnre Fre Co pnny, will apply to Chancellor Joi' O. Wolcott, nt Dover, tomorrow ft nn order restraining the Directors ij Public Safety of Washington w proceeding with tho organization of . pnid firo department until such man! ns nre now disputed shall be cleared I u? , Mr. Herman nlso represents the ' payers, who nssert that nctlon ,.' bo taken to prevent the snerifico of til people s money, it wns stated last nlAV It is further declared that if is. Department of Public Safety end citJ Council hnvo proceeded in nny othil manner than is set forth In th. .!! whirl, provides for the inauguration of n paid firo department it will aftvi the validity of the bonds which ban been Issued for the purpose The Dclawnre Fire Company h sought tho proposed nctlon after h coming incensed with the failure of tho directors to purchase their fir.; house nnd fnlluro to offer Z than $0000 for their truck, which 2 them $14,000. They base their action however, on the ground that the dl.' rectors purchased houses nnd apparatus without first ndvertising for competing Woman Lost Seeking Daughter Mrs. Ellen Doolcy. of Wilkcs-Barre became lost in this city yesterday in an effort to locate her daughter, Mr Johns. In nn exhausted condition' tht uppcaled to tho Trenton avenue and Dauphin street police utation for a. slstnnce. Sho wns turned over to th Trnvclcrs' Aid Society. "' Vi c t rr o 1 a REG. U. S, RAT. OFF. wrm I il I No. 300 The new Victrola No. 300 Mahogany or English Drown $250 LfEft est addition th 4fee9 victrol ct to JLJLA JLicZ? While this new model marks a distinct departure in design, it still embodies the patented features which have won for the Victrola the universal recognition of superi ority The design of the Victrola is necessarily governed by its func tion as a musical instrument, and m this new style, as in all Victrola models, are represented the knowl edge and experience gained in nearly a quarter-century devoted ex clusively to the talking-machine art. j-! 'HIS MASTERS VHCE- wuuinKCfP Il'j?,dem?t3!F ?nd tIl trademnrked yrord"Victrola"ldentirVallourr.roducw look under the lid I Look on the labcU VICTOR TALKING MACHINE CO. Camden, N.J. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. if ' n .--C !..tlV J t2gflA lingtoa Cemetery pim if, .?&,;: jo2Ls: