l (1 M ti'tmim mmftm mmw 1 night and mmtt't little eintne.Irt tern, eratttres jtftitta nonlherly wind. Ttnlk-KftATlIRK Ar KACII IfntlH fi EXTRA "k i o no.ln" H2 M a i nTTnpf 5Tl7tl747T7nHlj8a I "PI ) . -. -l aw . c , .. ; "'. - ' .. . .,. ; :v.. ' A.. aH j va., rflrfe'4B4tt v dftjMtvuritfHMt- m er mrm m w 4r m m i -h ih ' .h - h 7- - .B .aBP ,m' - .-K- r ak Xk '-- .A. K. v , .K. .4. ' 1 aH r4H .K ' '. H. H rL. .M H .H utuiuu wuuiu wuui; - i i (.?t VOL, VII. NO. 309 fi .- - IEPHEW IS IN MOUNT HOLLY " ' " t'fill of Quarrel Aunt Had With Dobson Morning Crimo 1 'V Was Committed & . iimucmEDE HIGHLANDS ,nuni. - ........... , MAN SEEN IN UAMUfcN -a. i.t.f nf fleonte Dobson from liibun(Cn1ow at Runncmcde Highlands, lK J., folldwins the- murder of ,hi wife Ir'Thunday jnorninR. una uw nuvu u lllltr as tlio tamucn icrramm m mu fe PthnIvanla Railroad ttiroush the lo 'ftfitlon of one of Ihrco children Dobson ' iaaV with him. t Nine-year-old John McKcown, a infphcw, who was belns rearca oy tno wain beaten and bolted tolcath, has jlttn found at tho home of his grand- father, Edward Trincc, Water atrect, ,Munt Holly. i From his story of the flight of ' Ororgo Dobson, County 1'roscculor "Wolrcrton believes Mrs. Dobson was ' iltln In bed while tho nephew, hln Mwn-ycnr-old plstcr, Barbara, and ' Dobson's son, Rkymond, were asleep in Un 'adjoining room. , ohn McKcown told the police he was ' gwiktncd early Thursday morning by the harsh voice of Dobson, who quar- 'rded with Mrs. Dobson. The nephew of the slain woman did not see her at all Thursday morning", hc said. TooU Trolley For Camden I After the children had fiefen and dressed. Dobson hurried them from tho oungalow nt 0:30 o'clock. He took nil three across the fields and through tho oodi to Lnwnslde. n mile nnd n half away, where they boarded a trolley cir for Camden. At the Camden terminal of the Tcnn- njlywila Ilailroad, Dobson told tho children he and Mrs. Dobson wpre going joCIayton that day- to see about a The nenhew said Dobson asked hlnvlf he Would like to go to Clayton alone - M, go o thp home, of his grandfather at' Mount Holly. He asked his wife's nl?r, Barbara, tho prime qucNtion. The nephew sAId ho wished to go to the "grandfather's home, while Barbara raid, she would remain with Dobson. , Tha man ,then bought, a ticket for his ' nrphew and placed him on a train for Mount Holly. , iyifevtral officials at the Camden ter ming saw a man tallying with Dob ,mi' dfscrlptlon. Tiysy also saw n boy Y$mmtA to have been Raymond Dobson, dpi a little girl In a pink dress answer tnfc.tbe description of Mrs. Dobsou's ' nieiiey,, " -DoDson Headed for Canada, Belief Although Mr. Wolverton was in formed the' man bought tickets for Clayton, where he has rela tives,', ho believes tho tickets were 'purchased to mislead the authorities, afid. that Dobson by thlt time Is headed .for "Canada or tho SouthwcKt. The whereabouts of the son nnd Mrs, Pobson's niece is a mystery. It Is be HtTwJJobson may have abandoned them Mttie' distanco from Camden In bis flltht, Vhcn Edward Prince went to tho home of the Dobsons. ut ntinncmrdo Highlands Inst night lie was not pcr , ufitted to enter. ' Questioned by Assistant Pros(cuior Butllng, Prince said he had received n letter yciterday from Ir. Cliarlfs Dickinson, who lives near tho Dobson bungalow. Tho letter stated that Dob ton bad been beating his wife unmer ciful!), and that her jberearas nnd hU angry shouts were the rautte for alarm In the bungalow settlement. "Something bhould be done," the woman wrote. House Is Under (Ouard- Th home at Runncmede Highlands J. guarded by Captain Epbraim (Marp and Detectives Thorn mid Me Grath, of Center Township, Camden County. One new discovery came out nt the formal waminatlon of the woman's body by Coroner Bentley and Dr. Frank 0. Htera, County Physician. Two heavy fence palings, Htalncd with bood, were fouiid near the bed on which the woman's body was found, fad a deep cut was discovered In her brad. 'Tho police are eager to learn whether Dobson had the .$500 which Mrs. Dob Mn raised with a mortgage on her bun niow just a few days before the was murdered. If he had this money his capture may be more difficult, ns it ould lmvo helped him to get nway. Uobson is described or being live feet wn Inches tall, with a prominent ,''' "P"f- Ho i of extremely dark wrnplexlon. JTRAW HATS ARE DOOMED Colder Weather on Way, Forecast Saya -SnB',l"Kton' Bept. 10. (By A. P.) fi' on thn wono today, "eatler Bureau officials snid so and KS!?' "".' statement with formal ir'i .. 8 ot irost," "colder." "mucli Portion ""''coole'r" for thi northern portion of the country. I fr.in,;,",,1i.,.?...?.M:? ranged around "tann V.Zi it. , c,ln' ,0(,ll.v ln l0 na and Wyoming will beeln to fall lVbZVVhc MUIoWern Stale" Cooler .11 ti " u,"4po "r 1110 ' Ian u ? ' "10 wa-v postwnrd to the At- the MllLi ,,10t, be '(,,''1,'1 cast of k It oucht t iIU ' l blirfnu o0,clnl8 ,,i', 'I. ilemlw nfi. l.:"'Vut un"B aD0,,c ,,1U t Weall,; T,."""w JHV..... .. .. i- . ii.;, ..:"'""' umciais snut lucre L. nlu Mi. J""111"""! that tho heavy i Staf..t.S?A ."lnJ?.n ?thrr Texas v. u i.-AicririicPU eihcwneic. 18 8hlrtw.ii.t a..i. , m. . v, . "ror in oouri Mi S.i" .'".V" ""' vKlfl". t-nl'l to bo ' ' the . r,Ke "yinnftfltiBLTSj. came in inVshaJ i,StiBrlV. ,,cfor(, Mnglstrnlo Ab tliny ; -rpv were nil h m ni '. tt7r.i?ornl."?' niBorderly conduct, in- i.V??V b,'lk. Honm of the nrlm ners miHkrs I.A 80m? h?il 'or court and '3AP ""f"'! ' a warning UNO I Knitna . faco4.4WM.tifr r Main tha Act PICKING THEM William M. Johnston, the' Pacific In tho national tourney ID ATHLETE IN RIVER B. J. Dauriherty, Former Phila delphian, Killed Companion . Also Believed Slain SUSPECT UNDER ARREST By tlio Associated Press Chicago, Sept. 10. Dynamiting on tlie Desplnlnex River nt Maywood, n Chicago suburb, was in progress today in an effort to recover the body or Uori Ausmus, companion of Bernard J. Datighcrtiy, automobile salesman and athlete, whose handcuffed nnd mangled body was found in tho river yesterday. Ausmus lins disappeared and Is believed to have suffered a fate blmilnr to that of Daughcrty. Detectives expressed the belief today that Daughcrty-and Ausmus had been lured to the ban-men t of a house In the bodies manacled together" wltiil hanucuirs weighted with stones nnd tossed Into tho river. Detectives believe thnt the handcuffs broVv allowing Dougherty's body to be carrt.d to shnl low water. Harvey W. Church, a twenty-yenr-old railroad brakrmnn, wns being broiight- buck to Chicago today by a winnjl of dctectivcVfrom Adami, Wis., where he was arrested yesterday. lie made tho trip In the automobile which Daughcrty had been trying to sell him nnd was nccompanled by his mother. Mrs. ChUrch was not arrested. Daughcrty, a former football' star of Harvard, and a resident of- St. Paul, came here a short time ago from Phila delphia as salesman for the Packard Motor Car Company. Daughcrty wns picked by Walter Camp in 1001 nnd 11)02 as the best end on the All-Amcr-Ican football team, nnd nlso was well known ns an nmateur (iiatnnrc runner. Church, nccordlug to officials of tho Packard Company. Dntigut a car wnicn he said was for his father. Daughcrty and Ausmus took the car Thursday afternoon with Church to n Chicago bauk. where a check was to qs certlucu nnrl the rar nald for. I.oter neighbors saw Church and two men drive up to tho Lhurcli home in tho automobile and enter. So far as tho police con learn that was the last seen ot uauguerty or Ausmus. A visit to Church's home disclosed that Church and his mother hod left enriy jesterday In the new car. A search revealed blood-soaked rngs and papers In the basement, a blood-stained baoebnll bat and hntrhet. and clothing ami pnpers identified as belonging to Daughcrty. t Church, when arrested, refused to talk beyond molntnlnlng his innocence. Bernard .T. Dnugherty wns n sales man iu the employ of the Packard Mo torcar Cnmpnny, Aith offices nt 310 North Broad street, for several years prior to 1017, when he left here to go to St. I,oui. While in Philadelphia he roomed ot 8735 Spruce rtieel. Tho last year of his connection -with the Packard Company here tic spent with the Bethlehem. Pa., branch and lived at 112 East North htreet in that city. Miss Mary Lnrkin, cashier at the local offico of the Packard Company, re members Daughcrty well. She says he wns a Hue fellow, of exemplary charac ter, well liked by his associates and a good talesman. He was about tweuty elght years old at the time. Daughcrty camo here from Pittsburgh. TROLLEY KILLS CHILD Elghteen-Month-Old Boy Loses Life In Front of Home While running after his rlster. Wil liam Poono, eighteen months old. ran directly in tho path of) hhouml Route 53 car In front ! home, 1310 South Thirteenth street, tlilo' morning and was killed. The child was pinned under the car. His sister, Cntharine, fie years old, shrieked frantically ns neighbors made an effort to extricate tho boy. The crew of n tro'ley repair wagon removed the child from under the car trucks. The little victim was rushed to St. Agnes Hospital, Ilroad and Mifflin htreets, wheio ho died soon after being admitted, MARKS AT CENT APIECE German Coins Even Fall Below Penny for Time New Vorli. Sent. 10, (Ily A. P.) fleriuan marks sold for less than u cent n'i'ece In the foreign exchange ninrkot hero toiluy. After opening nt 0.00 cent they ad vanced to ono cent flat, which figure represented an otcrnlght decline of 0,0225 cents. m . -' ' , x-f SBB1 bV PUB Bfu t. 1'JBHbI v ' BODY OF SHACKL ,. ro.tomct Phiua.itrt.1. r of March 3. 18J9 OFF THE GRASS Coast tennis star, snapped in action at the Germantown O. 0. TO SHORE BY AUTO Mr. Harding to Spend Week- End at Atlantic City, Then Take Ocean JTrip SECRETARY HOOVER ALONG By (he Associated Press Washington, Sept. 10. President Harding will ave here at 1 o'clock (2 o'clock rhijadelphla time) by auto for Atlantic City. He will spend two or three days at the New Jersey shore resort, which he was unable t; visit on Labor Day because the presidential jacht Mayflower wns prevented by a t-torni from docking. After hin visit nt Atlantic City (lip President' plans to pick up tho May flower somewhere along tho coast nnd crulso for n few morn days, returning to Washington the latter rart ot next week. Cuests invited by tiie President and Mrs. Harding for the wetk-end Included the Secretary of Commerce and Mrs. Hoover, the Under Secretory of State nnd Mrs. Fletcher. George Vnn ,Flcet, I-uIjIIhIjcc of the Prcddcnt's newspaper ut Marion, O., nnd Mrs. Vnn Fleet. The President plans to play golf at Atlantic City and enjoy the rerort's pleasures In other respect". He nlso will probably see Fred W. Upham, treasurer of the Republican National Committee, with whom he was unable to visit when tho Mayflower was kept off the coast last week by heavy weather. Some businc'is was to be transacted by tlio President during his trip. He hoped to complete plans for the coming conference on unemployment with Sec retary Homer, who has the conference immediately In charge. The automobile trip to Atlantic City was decided upon, it wa said, to mnke mrc of reaching Atlantic City and also beenuse Mrs. Harding is not regarded lis "a good sailor" in heavy seas. No stops on the mttor tilp to Atlantic City were plnnned. Atlantic City, Sept. 10. Miss Mar garet Gorman. "Miss Washington," crowned national beauty queen here at the close of flic two-day pageant, will n?e President Harding on the occasion of the hitter's, visit here today and to morrow. Miss Gorman was preparing this morning to gieet the President, accom panied by her sponsor, Mrs. Thomas P. Kndicott. She is the doughtcr of Thomas Gorman, a clerk in the office of the Department of Agriculture at Washington. The President is expected to arrive in Atlantic City nbout 7 o'clock to night. "BUYS" AUTOS BY DOZEN AND" SPEEDS INTO TROUBLE 1 r r- Liberal Purchaser of Cars Finally Parka In Central Station Free auto rides, large and fancy din ners and the general Jife of a mon-about-town ut the expense of others landed John Martin, Spruce near Twelfth stieet. in front of .Magistrate Renshaw In the Centrnl Station this morning but it was good while it lahted. Martin's happy career was brought to an end by .Inmcs Martin, advertising manager of the Stanley Company of America, .lames Martiln had n loud Wall. He had been annoyed for tho lost few; das by dozens of motorcnr concerns asking him why he did not como up and sign the final pnpers on tlio dozens and dozens of high-priced cars lie wns uuying lor ins company. As James Martin, for himself or the Stanley Company, hnd no Idea of buying cars, the culls, to speak mildly, were irritating. So he got on the job and discovered John. John had becr using James' unine In vain, even hnd had cards printed, and was buying nutos by the dozen At least he was leading auto sales, men to thlnik that he wns going to buy them in qunntlty and they were responsible for tho wining and dining nforejiicntloned. Just to complicate matters ho had passed a bad check on one concern, ns initial navment for n ar In the sum of $."00, nnd had charged PRESIDENT ON WAY up a small taxi mil oc ? in the name of James. Magistrate Henshaw was sufficiently interested in John's "white light" career to hold him In $1000 ball for further hearing September 1.1 In or der that other details of his gay life might be looked into v PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1921 ZEUZO SH1MIDZU WINS TWO SETS IN TITLE TENNIS Japanese Star Holds Big Lead on; ' Marshall Allen In Opening Match FEWjPECTATORS ON HAND, FOR SECOND DAY START By ROBERT W. MAXWELL Sporti Kdllir Ewnlmr Publle T.riUfr Zenzo Shimldzu, ,thc little Japanese player wii'o gave Tilden such a -thrilling match ln the challengo 'round of the Day is Cup, 'started the second day's playln the national lawn tennis singles championships on the courts of the Ger mantown Cricket "Club, Mnnhelm, at noon "today against Marshall Allen, the youthful star from Seattle. Allen stood up well under the. fire from Shlmldzu's rncnuetjn the first set, but lost, 0-3. Shlmldzu's placements were too much for the Westerner In the second set, and the Jap. won a love set. Tho Pacific Coast" boy played great tennis In the third set, nnd carried the game right to the Oriental representa tive. Tho games switched first from ono to the other, nnd they were all even when they started the fifteenth game. The 12 o'clock whistles wcro blow ing in near;by factories when Zcuzo Shimldzu, of Japan, wearing his funny little hat. toddled out on the court to battle with Marshall Allen, of Seattle. Allen Is one of the best junior plajcrs on the coast, but that meant nothing today, lie was expected to osc. Crovd Slow" In Arriving As Is always the case, the crowd was slow in making nn appearance. When the opening match began, not more than two hundred spectators were In the stands. Tennis fans do not allow thejr favorite sport tokintcrfcrc with their luncheon. The, slim nudlcnco .was treated to some rare tennis in court No. 1 when Shi mldzu started to work on his youthful opponent. The little Jap kept banging the ball over the net to back court, sel dom ran forward and played to Allen's back hand. The youngster found it dif ficult to keep the ball out of the net or insido the lines, nnd lost the first two gomes. .He won the third, but Shi mldzu took the fourth, making the score 3 to 1. The fifth game was hotly contested nnd wen,t to deuce three times. Both volleyed wel), nnd the spectators ,wcrc astounded at the wonderful defensive game put up by the little athlete from Nippon. He rushed alljjjr the court, made almost impossible returns, placet! his shots, and Alien could nqt get the ball past hm. Once the youngster made a retftrn from 'the'back court; -The-bal-lilt,the tonof tho net and fell on the other side. Nine flmes out ot ten this .would count as a certain point, but Shimldzu sprinted, reached the. ball and made a beautiful placement shot for thegomc point. Allen Rallies Shlmidzu ran Allen nil over the court nnd soon had the score 5 to 1. The Pa cific Coast star pulled himself together in sthV seventh game and won after the Tap. had carried it to deuce. Allen also took the eighth on Shlmldzu's serve, 4 points to 1. Shimmy grew a trifle cureless and netted many of his returns. Allen playeiUbetter in the next game and scored th first three points on his opponent's errors. Two were In the net and the other out of bounds. Then the youngster netted three nnd knocked one out of bounds, giving the Jap the nd vantage. After a vnllev Allen wnllopcd another too hard and Shimldzu won the first set. 0-3. Shimldzu quickly won the first three gomes In the second set. but did his best work In the second. In this Allen had him 40 love, but the foreigner settled down nnd ran out with straight points. . l? n . rnPtrI the next two on luJlllant placements and took the final gome, 4 points to 1, winning n love set. Third Set Thriller All-n was in better form in the third set nnd won the first game. Shimldzu evened It up, but the yoimgi-ter won the nexi iwo, giving mm the lead, with three .-james to on;. The advantage was, short-lived, however, as Shimmy an nexed the next pair, squaring 'the Continued on Tnie Four, Column On Afternoon Matches in National Tennis Play Court 2 P. M. 1 Clarence V. Todd, Australia, vs Wll'ls K. Davis. California. 3 Viu-pnt Richards, New York. h Walter T. Haves, Chicago. 4 Robert Leroy, New York, vs. John B. Hawks, Australia. 5 R. Norrls Williams, 2d. Boston, vs. . . Ingrnham, Providence O-Wllllam T Tilden. 2d. Philndel- phlo. vs. P. L. Goldsborough, Jr. Holtlmore. 7 Howard Klnsey, Cn'ifornln, vs. B C. Oelsner, Montclnir, N. J, S A. W. Mors, England, vs. Ted Edwards. Philadelphia. 0 R. L. Bangs, New York, vs. Dr. George King. New York, 10 Phil Ncer. Portland, vs. John A. Mngee. Bnltimnre. 11 Gordon I.owe, England, vs. Andrew S. Morgan. Philadelphia. 12 Theodore Banks, Seabrlght, N. J vs. John W. Dudley. WnuMn,.,.. 13-WH'lani M- Johnston California; p vs. Ldjvnrd C. Hall Merchnntvllle. ,n 14 Edward AU son, Chicago, vs. Frank a . run, - lorK. 15 Morton Bernstein, New York, vs Francis T. Hunter, New York. ' 4 P. M. 2 ,V''n.t,hnn "'ns,,,Vurn New York, vs. Wallace F. Johnson, Phllndelnhin J. B. Adoue, Dallas, Tex. 0 StanVv I'earson Philadelphia, vs. Nnt . Nllcs, Boston. 0 Dean Mnthey, New York, vs Hugh Ta'lant, New York. '. 7 J. O. Anderson, Australia, vs. W Stuart Symington, Baltimore. B Carl Fischer, Philadelphia, vs.Q A. h. Dlonno, New York. 0 Craig Blddle, Philadelphia, vs Henry S. Parker. Niw York. 10 Gerald Emerson, Orange, vs. Leon de Terenne, Harvard. 11 Charjes 8. Rogers. Philadelphia, vs W. J, Gallon, New York. 12 W. O. Crawford, Baltimore, vs. A A. Hammett, New York, TheKuKluxKlan Exposed Inside story of the secret society that haii spread to -every State ln the Union but three, will begin, on Monday next In the Euening flubltc Kedgee After three months of investigation . jejery dctoll of the Klon's fight against Mews, Catholics, Negroes and foreign born will be revealed. Read tha Record of. Outrages committed lr mobs wearing the re- galia of the Klan. White women have been stripped and maltreated. White men have been whipped and tarred and feathered. Victims have been killed) Newspapers have been warned to make no disclosures. A mazmprChronicle Begins Monday Next TUSTIN IN BREAK Dispute Over Care of Mental Cases May Cause Changes in Cabinet MAYOR WILL INTERFERE An open controversylias broken out between Director Tustln of the De partment pf Public Welfare, and Di rector Furbush of the Department of Public Health, that may result in some changes in the Mayor's Cabinet. Thn row was made public by a statement written yesterday by the Mayor and issued by him today. ' The Mayor's statement said thnt "nn acute situation" hnd risen between the two departments that the .Mayor might be called on "to decide toy speedily." He ndded thaV "upward'of two hundred feeble-minded, Idiotic and epileptic public charges were sufferers through this difference of opinion." The trouble between the two depart - mentsjs no secret to the people who know what Is going on in City Hall. It dates back to the time ot the inauguration of the new city charter. Before that time the Department of Public Health had chargo of the cltyl hospitals, the Home for the Indigent at Holmcsburg nnd the Byberry Farms. The new charter gave the Director of Public Welfare charge ot the Home for the. Indigent and also the House of Correction, whieh-forn&erly was. under the jurisdiction of, the Department of rublic Safety, 't According to 'Director Tustln an agreement wns entered Into betwcn the two departments that only the physi cally and mentally well Would be cared for at the Home for the Indigent. He says that this institution is primarily for those who, through age, poverty or somo similar reason, become public charges, lie alleges that the Depart ment of Public Health has not lived un to this ncreement and has "nllcd 212 fccble-m)nded. idiotic and epileptic natlcnts unon us." "While I wns away sick," Director Tustin said, "ninety-seven Insane women were sent to the Home for the Indigent. These arc forced by clrcum stances to associate with about 400 sane women. They also sent twenty seven inanc men. who must live with a large group of sane men. We have no provision to take care of these pa ticnts. We have only one doctor and a very few nurses. The Insnnc patients mnke so much trouble that it is impos sible to bathe them in the showers in tho basement and they have to be bathed iu their quarters." Other details of alleged insanitary nnd inefficient methods were given bv Director Tustln. who nsserts thnt such patients should be taken enre of nt the Philadelphia General Hospital. The climax of the trouble came yes. terday. when eight wheel-chair pa tients were sent to thellome for the In- Ldlgent from the Department of Public Health. Director Ttistiu said that the people had to be taken in because of humanity, hut that he called up and refused to take twelto more that he had linon Informed werp romlnc. lie tlipn 'went to see the Mayor, with the result thnt the Mnvor issued his statement. Director Furbush refused to discuss the matter this morning, saying that he hnd not heard of the'Mnyor Issuing a statement and thnt he did not wish to get into trouble with any one. SENTENCE BANDIT "VICTIM" Frank Amon, Who Faked Robbery Story, ueta Ttiirty Days Frank Anion, of Omaha, who told police of the Twenty-second- street and Hunting Park avenue station a fnko storv thnt he had been robbed bv ban dits, was this morning sentenced to thirtv davs in the House of Corre-tlon by Magistrate Price, who reproved hliu severely. "As n deliberate trniihie-makcr I don't think we have anything to equal j on in Philadelphia, snld the Mngls. trnte. You have run the police to n great ileal of trouble, and It Is mv pet wish that you spend the next thirty da't on the rock pile." .Unon. wiid-ryrn anu exieied. told the nollee he hod hern robbed of SIOOD. h,,t under questioning he changed his storv and tlnaiiy aumirieu ne torn tlio storv In the hone of setting freo trnnsnortnVlnn to Omaha. DECAPITATED BY ELEVATOR Operator Loses Life In Atlantic City Hotel Accident Atlantic City, Sept. 10. Snmuel Circen. twenty-four years old. a Negro, elevator operator In the Hotel Tray, more, was decapitated Inst night In the elevator, and Ms body wns carried to the fourteenth floor, where the lift nutoinatlraally stopped. The operator was standing in front of the levator on the office floor. It moved and he leaped Into it. He trinned nnd fell. Before li vni.i -. gain his feet the elevator hnd reached! m FURBUSH tno secouu uoor. ureen's head was extended out of, tlio open door and wns torn from the 'neck. Few 'saw the tragedy. i "s PublUhed DHr EiCpt Bunday, ubirrlHfon PrJe l(T ft twr b UH. TL,opyrini, ii'i, Conservatism of Members Is Only Basi3 of Faint Dissent Hoard in Capital PRACTICAL CHARACTER OF BODY IS FEATURE By CLINTON XV. GILBERT SllnfT CorrfpondVnt Krrnlnjr I'nlitlr l&Ktr Copurjaht. tilt, bv Public I.fdaer Cotttpanv Washington, Sept. 10. President Harding's choice of delegates to the Far Eastern disarmament conference Is widely approved here. Secretary Hughes nnd Senator Lodge were In the naturo of the case almost Inevitably members of the commission. Mr. Root has many ndmlrers who de sired to se him made Secretary of State. By making him one of the representa tives of this country in the conference tho President allays the disappointment which was felt over the failure to put him Into the Cabin".. His large abilities and wide experi ence In international affairs, together with Mr. Hughes' exceptional talents, moke the American delegation exceed ingly strong. Mr. Root's previous serv ice In international discussions will en able htm to supplement Mr. Hughes, who Is regarded as better In outlining princi ples and formulating n case than In tlio give and tnke about a conference table. All Conservatives, Charge The only critlcUm one hears of the appointments, though not loud, Is In sistent. The progressive elements of the Republican Party insist that Sir. Hnrd Ingjs commission is made up entirely of conservatives, who have no special en thusiasm for or faith In the larger ends which nn international conference might promote. The objectors to the commission re mnrk none of Its members is distin guished by any passion for disarmament or any strong faith in the possibility of ending war. Two of the four men are advanced in years and for that reason perhaps not very forward -looking. Though the conference concerns the Pacific, all four of tho commissioners come from tho Atlantic seaboard, and all except Mr. Hughes, since lie begnn to plnn this conference, have had their eyes directed to Europe rather than to the Enst. Thre criticisms nre heard especially from Western and Middle Western Republicans. Hut the truth is that Mr. Harding had very little freedom of choice. Mr. Hughes as Secretary of State naturally became the head of tho delegation. If an Republican Senator had to be placed on the commission it wns im possible to pass over Scnntnr T.odgL-; who was chairman of the .Foreign Re lations Committee of the Senate, espe cially as Mr. Iodgo was ambitious to serve. Needed Underwood's Support Mr. Underwood's appointment was dictated by similar considerations. He has no special qualification to serve in the coming conference, not having given Continued on Tate Four, Column Seifn 'ARMS DELEGATION ' CHOSEN BY HARDING WIDELY APPROVED EXTRA FIREMEN INJURED IN BLAZE AT 21ST AND WASHINGTON AVE. A four-alaim fir is sweeping the plaut of the Quaker City Poster Advertising Company, at Twenty-first street nnd Washington nvenuc. The plant, formerly the Continental Brewery, occupies thvee-quartera of a city block, bounded by Twenty-first Ells worth nnd Alter streets and Washington avenue. The fire was discoveieu nt 1.1TD o'clock. A motor patrol of the Twentieth and Federal street3 station, on the way to the flic, crashed iuto a motortruck ana was dam aged. Volumes of smoke are pouting from the burning building and tut rounding factories are cndaugcied. Several firemen are' reported to haev been injured. DISSECTED BODY OF BERNARD DAUGHERTY'S COMPANION UNEARTHED UNDER CHICAGO GARAGE CHICAGO, Sept. 10. The dissected body o; Carl Abinus, nu romobile salesman, who disappeared Thursday with Bcrmrd. J. Daughcrty, tho former athlete, whose body was found in the Des Plaines River yesterday, was unearthed today under the gnrage in the ienr clothe home of IT. W. Church, 2022 Fulton street. SHIMIDZU WINS IN NATIONAL TENNIS Zeno Shimldzu, the Japanese star, won lu& way to the third round in the national tenuib championships at Manheim today when he defeated Marshall Allen, of Seattle, in straight uett. 0-3, 0-0, 12-ip. As can be seen by the bcorc, Allen yd up a terrific battle in tho third set beforo he succumbed. BOY ACCIDENTALLY HANGED Was Playlno in Rope Used for Con veying Hay When Death Results Lew Is tow ii, Pa., Sept. 10. (ieorge Bossinger, fourteen years old, accident, ally hanged himself last evening while playing with a tope carrier used in conveying hny to different sections of the mow in the bom at the Bosnln-er home. The boy had been missing two hours when the father. Wllllnm Ilk... inger, found him. The noiiy was taken down by thn father, who broke the rope with hli hands, in his frenzied efforts to save, his son. ny i-uu ic iarr vihpmj Anti-Combine Chief Ct tntl aV' ' FRANKLIN SPENCER EDMONDS Chosen chairman of coalition forces for tho primary drive against tho Varo Combine forces 17 DEAD IN ELOOD Victims Mostly Women and Children Toll of Lives May Reach 500 MILLIONS PROPERTY LOSS By the Associated Press San Antonio,, Tex.. Sept. 10. Seventeen bodies, mostly those of women and children, were in the Morgue nt noon, following a flood which Hwcpt through Snn Antonio' last night. Estimates of the probable loss of life are large, the police placing it nt 500. The property loss is certain to be many millions. As the waters recede organized bnnds ot workers and res cuers nre searching the ruined houses. The city hns not been placed under martial law. but the military forces at Fort Sam Houston nnd Camp Travis arc co-operating In relief and policing ".. ,n- .i. tiuii i-(Miii uiiicern. A survey is being madu of the dam age done and u meeting of military officials at city and county heads and the Chambers of Commerce is to he held at 11 o'clock nt which relief plans Cnntlnnrd an Pncf two, ( niumn llnr POLISH CABINET OUT Premier Wltos and Ministers Offer Resignations at Warsaw Warsaw, Sept. 10. (Ri A P v The Polish Cabinet, headed by Vincent n iios, resigneu today. M. Wltos assumed the premiership on July 24. 1020. In May last he ten dercd IiIb resignation to President Pil sudskl as a result of the Inability of the Government to soho the Upper Sileslan problem, Tho resignation was not uc' cepted at thnt time. AT SAN ANTONIO price two astentt ALLIES SELECT CHIEFS TO LEAD DRIVE ON VARES . , ( Edmonds Named Chairman o Coalition Campaign Body Mrs. Warburton His Aide PENROSE IS COMING TO LINE UP LIEUTENANTS Your Last Chance! Be a Citizen, Register! Today is your last chance to register. You cannot vote nt the primary, 3eptembcr 20, unless you qualify Jodny. Don't dodge the responsibility of citizenship. Register nt your polling place. The polls, open this morning, will be open again from 4 o'clock this afternoon until 10 tonight. Tax receipts mny be had at tho polling booths. Franklin Spencer Edmonds, for many years a leader in Independent politics, was chosen today to be tho i-oinmander-ln-chicf of the Torccs nlignfd under the banner of good government against contractor bosslfiu. Mr. Kdmonds wns selected to lead tho fight which the Administration nnd its allies wl'l wage before and nt the primary election on September 20, dt a meeting nt noon today at the headquar ters of the Voters League, 224 South' Broad street. Mrs. Barclay II. Warburton,-' rice chairman of the Republican State Com mittee, and chairman of the Repub lican women, wns chosen vice chair man, under Mr. Kdmonds, who will be chairman of the Committee of Control,, representing all elements opposed to the Vares. Edward J. Hunter, executive secre tary of the Voters League, was elected recording chairman of the committed (ieorge II. Porter, former Director of Public Safety, was made treasurer. Plan Stirring Campaign. t With the (.election of theso officers ihe ground ;)inns were laid and perfected for the stirring campaign which the. forces of goou government will carry on against the "Fifty-Fifty Combine'' and its creatures. Others, nt the meeting were Mrs. Doh son AltemiiH, Mrs. John Wunnmaker, tid, and Mrs. Frank Miles Day, rep tesenting the women. The administration's spokesmen in cluded State Senator George Wood ward, I'nltcd States District Attorney Coles. .Mr. Porter, .Councilman Patton unci Harry J. Trainer. Oscar Noll and other Penrose repre sentative's were not at the meeting. Mr. Coles said they were absent hpcsiiMT they wnnted to spend the actlvo liourn of the dny in their wnrds, seeing tci It that their forces get to the polls and register. They indicated before tho meeting. Mr. Coles said, that they would be thoroughly in accord with whatever decision was reached by the majority". The meeting was enthusiastic in its determination to carry the fight to the enemy witli the utmost vigor. Thpse who attended were optimistic over re ports of regiotrntion throughout the city, und predicted thnt nt the primary the Vare forces would go down in utter rout. Senator Penrose Is expected to ar rive from Washington next week to give ins "crMMidl aid in the campaign. This report reached independent headquarters today. Senator Penrose Is coming, it Is explained, to line up with the independents, those of hN ward lenders whom the "tifty-tiftv" fortes hnc managed to keep on their side up to this time. A special cfTort will be mode bv Sen ator Penrose to win for tho Voters League the support of Richard Weglein, president of Council, who is now dis poned to stand by the Vares. It was regarded a-i significant in this connection Hint Mr. Weglein wns not iiiimmir inoxp inviteil tcsterclnv to nt lend the gathering of alt elements In Mayor Moore s office. Carey Will Be Fought ' Senator Penrose also will try to sup plement the aid of President Judge Brown, of the Muulcipal Court, by Continued on I'nitr Tn Column Four caught1nsljde7seIs sandkill companion Workman, With Fractured Leg, Forced to Witness Tragedy He'pless with i compound fraeturn of his left leg. Harvey h. Scott, of Uichboro. Bucks Counlv, was forced to wate'i his companion, John Luff, twenty-three yenrs old. die under u sandhllde near Itichboto at 0 o'clock hisr night. LiifT, buried lo his neck in tho heavy sand, moaned fr help ,m, Bought to extricate himself. His arms wet' pinned at, his sides, nnd bv degrees bin breathing w.is i educed until the weight f the sand pressed all the air from his lung. The a-cldent occurred ut the Joseph blniipv band quarry near the Hollnud station of the Rend in? Itnllnnv a nind bank had been iiuleriuineil "nt the quarrv yesterday afternoon 'Last eve nlng Luff nnd Scott left Uichboro In a motortruck to get n 'nnd of sand. Thev drew the nintiirtriirk up n few '" feet from the sand bank und began dig ging. A few minutes later a largo -w section of the side of the hill caved In. The for'-o of the- sliding snnd knocked Scott against the side of (lie motor truck, breaking his left les In two places. A few feet from him Luff wni pinned, acainst tho tilde of thp truck, ' with only his hrnd protruding from tin (and trap. "I'm chlng." Luff moaned nil hit brenthlng became more difficult. Scott who is sixty years old. tried lo reari his companion, hut w-iis unable. move. While Luff wns slowlv perishing thtf motorists pnKscd on the mail ncurh j Finnlly Joseph Long, who live. n&V . the quarry, dlscoveied the mm h.i brought help, ' "?'J Luff was dead when removed htm ' tlit sand. Coroner Howard I. Wh4 i of Doylestown, who rxainincd the SKn" , tald'death was due to mtniirui.. 2 :! M ?i' t'J i If -i N 'I . M OlLDAd U World1, But lAtbrUsat-fc t K "V u - V ' 1 VS. -J i v . . hPr i ... M, 8-V& , y .V J W&cuU .u)'Vil.S-fr-.t t V , 't &.-) 'V .Oj CliA liltfir ll.