Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 01, 1921, Night Extra, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    WWST U MSlliP
mnEEWWTX '7Wm
IViT : - "' '1" '
V4
'
ITITffyw i" -v 'IJJBBHI' ..ffiJl 'J?S TfitTJWli
vv'' vvp-i -'Xi ? - yt,ny
"
XJr
i
-
-
thweXther
Fnlr tenlirtit nntl Sunday: continued
cool tonight; slightly warmer Sunday;
gentle weterly winds.
TKMPKIIATIIUK AT lJACIl IIOUK
Fhiii no in 112 li I a i a i
' 1 1 rnTno2Rrnefl
1
(18 1 1)1) 1 71
VOL. VIII. NO. 16
MM IS KILLED,
AS
iine bb; bridge
wis. Florence Ranney, 2540
Ceral Street, Victim in
Kensington Crash
DRIVER OF MACHINE
DRUNK, POLICE SAY
Mr. Florence Ranney, twenty-seven
jm" old, 2540 Cernl street, was killed
at " o'clock this morning when she
tanned from an mitomebllp which was
jnmpei irein u streets,
wrecKcti iu v
WCnner was the wife of Leuis I
;'" ,'hjef pettv efllcer en the U.
sTFmnthar stationed at San Diege.
e.n. !, , .'.... i,nB lieen ill-
-dnfrM.K.iant
ffl" Say MrV"l jeuld
actet en the Roosevelt boulevard
three weeks age, but escaped with miner
'"Knutomeblle In which Mrs. Rnnncy
was rd nit was n large touring car
ednnd driven V .erman iW
thtrtv-twe venrs old, 10 Jast mini
toiden rtwet. There were four persons
In the party, the ethers being .Mrs.
Tidla MUlcr. twenty -eight, a widow,
wl her brother. Frc.l I Merrh , thirty,
belli of 918 East Schiller street. All
thrtu ere slightly injured. They were
"eV lfaftcrnoen Henry was held wlth
,,? ,ii nnd the ether occupants of the
carLn $500 ball each by Magistrate
Reife !aw-in Ccntrnl Stnt,n-
liiver Drunk, Says Police Snrgcen
Lrilinu te Dr. Charles T. Russell,
pelke I Sfen at the Frent and West West
meS streets station, Henry was
drunk. Vellcc say they found an empty
S : whly bettle and two whisky
glasses in the wrecked machine. Police
also sev one of the eccupnnts of the
car told them thnt the party was in
celebration of Merris' divorce, which Is
Boen te be granted.
The car was beinj driven rapidly east
evtr Tlnjn street. At the junction with
Rcseliill street there is a bridge ever
the tracks of the Pennsylvania Rail
road. The car crashed Inte a concrete
abutment of the bridge approach, and
the two front wheels and the running
beard en one side were tern off.
Mm. Ranney was sitting in the rear
seat of the car with Merris. Mrs. Miller
was In front with the driver. Henry.
One of the doers of the tenncnu was
missing, having been smashed some time
age, police say. utid nt the moment of
the celli den Mrs. Ranney jumped
firn irl lirt nunitmn itiftltn,- fn eccntie
.M.u fell ....- l,JI.l .... .. ...-... v .. ,--
Injuijr in the crnsh.
II. I she lemnlned eated she prob preb
nbly would have escaped with n few
bruits. Her skull wns fractured, n
Jeng bash cut In her scalp, nnd her jaw
was broken, besides cuts and bruises of
the body.
Man Arrested at Heme Later
The car struck the abutment se vie
lentlj that it caromed off, and with the
front wheels gene continued bumping
nlenj the street for about seventy feet.
The speedometer, jnmmed In the acci
dent, still registered sixty miles an
hour when the police Inspected It.
Mertis, according te the police, hurried
nwn( from the rest of the party after
the leeldent nnd returned te his home.
He ias arrested there later.
Sits. Miller went te the aid of MrR
Raiiey, but could de nothing te help
her. jThc Injured woman was breathing,
but llainly was seriously hurt. Henry,
peliit say, was tee drunk te be of nny
Use.
Scleral persons passing at the time
8nv (lie uccident and telephoned te the
Frent and Westmoreland htrceU sta
tion The patrol wbh sent and word
relaed te the Relgrade and t'learfiell
streets station for their patrol te be
lent out also, as It was thought fov fev
eral persons had been badly hurt. At
the same time Motorcycle Patrolman
Frederick and Pntielinan Finn wrie
sent from Frent and Westmoreland
streets In a sidecar.
Through some confusion in the ad-dres-s
given, the pntreN went astray
and searched the neighborhood for the
place where the accident had occurred.
The sidecar, however, went sti night te
Hie scene, nnd Motorcycle Patrolman
Frederick went te the nld of the wemnn,
while Patrolman Finn took care of
Henn .
Patrolman Whales Drher
The motorcycle patrolman tired his
reveher in the air three times te let
the patrol wagon drivers knew where the
wrecked machine lay, and the two mo me
eor potreln came up quickly. Mean
while Finn Mas having a hard time
with Heur), who showed light. Ily
the time the ijatrels arrived, however,
Finn had given Henry an artistic trim
lnipn', blacking his eye, bruising his
cheek and ripping his fashionably cut
suit up the back.
The dying victim v,as put In one pa
trol wagon and taken te the Episcopal
Hospital ; Mrs. Miller and Henry were
put In the ether nnd taken te the Frent
and Westmerelnnd streets station,
where the pollce surgeon attended te
their injuries.
-Mrs. Jtanncy was alive when put
en the epeiating table at the hospital,
but dled-within n few minutes.
Mrs. Clara White, mother of Mis.
Ranney, with whom she lived, said the
dead woman had planned te leave for
California next week te rejoin her hus
band. Mrs. White sold licr daughter
hud worn the same diess last night for
the automobile ride which she had
'worn for the first time when she wns in
the accident thiee weeks age. This was
a skid en the Roosevelt boulevard, in
Which the machine lest a reur wheel and
pertly overturned en an embankment.
Mrs. Ranney was thrown out, cut anil
bruised and taken te a hospital, but
was able te go home after treatment.
''BOY DIES; MOTORIST HELD
Messenger Succumbs te Injuries
After, Collldlne With Car
Hurry W. Wishsefsky, llftecn-j ear
old messenger boy, 'JO 14 West Arlrnnii
strret, died in St. Jeseph's Hospital
this morning from Injuries suffered in n
collision between his bicycle and an au
tomobile driven by Frnuk U. Hill, twenty-six
j ears old, .'Ult Neith Sixth
street, September 2.1.
The accident occurred en Rrend street
between Jeffersen nnd Oxford streets,
whert'f It Is nlleged, the hey made n left
hand tiiru in flout of the car.' Hill was
held hi .TfiOO hall this morning by Mag-isti-iUV
Obwalrt nt the Nineteenth and
Oxjferd streets pollce station -''" a fur-
tutir bearing October la
BRED
c I
Entered as Eocend.cimii. Matter at the 1'ostefflce nt Philadelphia. Pa.
Under the Act et March a. 1B70
DEATH
M MiMMM.Miiin mi in i nil " '4'ii k
MBBIP i "iif y mmKmw1'' &m
Ledger Photo Servle
When the pollce examined the wreckage of this enr tliey found the speedometer needle still pointing te sixty
miles an hour. The car crashed Inte the P. II. It. bridge at Tiega and Resclilll streets early this morning.
Mrs. Florence Ranney, 2510 Ceral street, whose picture Is shown here, wni killed when she leapwl from the car
HAIR WAVE CAUSES
suraaji
Mrs. Claire M. Gibsen Says
Scalp Was Burned by Op-
perater's Neglect
ELECTRICITY TOO STRONG
Permanent disfigurement of her face
as a result of n treatment for a "per
manent wave" Is alleged by MrB. Claire
M. Olbsen in a $25,000 damage suit
against Antheny Bech, proprietor of a
"beauty shop."
The statement of claim alleges that
Mrs. Gibsen, then Miss Claire Velle,
of this city, went te Bech's establish
ment, at that time at 130 Seuth
Thirteenth street, en July 10, 1010.
The statement continued that Mrs.
Gibsen requested empleyes of Bech te
curl her hair and te apply treatment
recommended for 11 permanent wave.
During the freatnient, it wns al
leged, the operator was cureless and
negligent" In using a defective and lm lm lm
pioperly constructed electrical machine
which was net sunnlied with proper
guards, pads nnd Insulations."
Mrs. Gibsen alleged further that the
attendants failed te use ordinary pre
cautions te nveid contact of the cur
rent of electricity between her scalp und
the heated coils' of the apparatus.
As a result. Mrs. Gibsen's statement
went en, her henil and scalp were
burned, her scnlp and the musjles of
her head were severely injured nnd be be
cume infected, and the attendants, she
said, used harmful chemicals.
Y Mrs. Gibsen alleged thut the right
side of her head became Inflamed, in
fected and swollen"? requiring the shav
ing of the side of her head and the em
ployment of doctors.
The plaintiff stated that the scarred
side of her head wus a permanent dis
figurement and) thnt instead of having n
"permanent wave" slu lest n quantity
01' hnlr, besides suffering "humiliation,
pain, suffering and inconvenience."
Owen J. Roberts is the attorney rep
resenting Mr. Gibsen, who Is snld te
be traveling new. She lived in a hotel
while in this city. Bech's establish
ment is new at 1722 Chestnut strept.
Mr. Bech was said te be "tee busy"
today when an attempt was made te get
his side of the case. Mrs. Bech, how
ever, was told of the suit. She was in
dlgnant nt the allegations made by
Mrs. Gibsen.
"Thei are utterly absurd." she said.
"Hew can she say such things? Hew
can she try te clni any such thing thnt
slip say happened se long age?"
Mrs. Bach added that the attend
ants employed by her husband arc
skilled and careful workers and that no
patron ever has been Injured ns a result
of treatments in the shop.
JURY DISAGREES IN CASE
AGAINST N. J. FREEHOLDERS
Said te Have Been Evenly. Divided
en Malfeasance Charge
Cape .May Crurt Heuse, N. .1., Oct.
1. The jury which retired nt fi o'clock
lust night waB discharged this morning
by Judge II. II. Rldridge. after it
reported it was Impossible for the mem
bers te agree en the verdict. The
jury was discharged at 8:110 this morn
ing after spemllng the entire night in
the regular meetini: chamber of the
Beard of Freeholders.
The charge of malfeasance In office
wns the Indictment plnced against four
"i eehelilTR, Jeseph Camp. Jehn Fex,
Jeseph MncKlssie and Hepe Gandy,
hut the jury could net agree. It is
rumored around the couitheuse thnt
the jury steed six for conviction and
six for acquittal.
P. BORTHWICK BANKRUPT
Fermer Councilman Lists Debts at
$07,102, Assets Only $35,935
Prlngle Berthwlik, a contractor and
former Councilman from the Twenty
second wnrd, today filed a voluntary
petition in bankruptcy In the I'nited
States District Court, giving liabilities
of 507.102 and assets of SIlO.O.'l.l.
Berthwlck, who lives at 8018 Ger Ger
mnntewn nvenue. listed unsecured debt.s
amounting te $00,0(114, and secured
claims of $2.Vlb2.
TO HEAD ST. JOSEPH'S
Rev. Albert G. Brown New Recter
of Church of the Jesu
The Rev. Albeit G Brown, S. V.. for
sevetiil jciuj lector of Old St. Jeseph's'
Cuthelie Church nt Fourth stieet and
Wllllngs alley, has been made rector of
Chuch of the Jcsu and president of St.
Jeseph's College, according te a report
today.
ci
Ew?nmg public l&zbQZX
IN GO-MJLE-AN-HOUR
PRESIDENT OFF TO VIRGINIA
FOR MARINE MANEUVERS
Will Camp Tonight at Scene of
Battle of Chancellorsville
Washington, Oct. 1. (By A. P.)
President Harding and a small party
left Washington In nutomebilcs shortly
after I) o'clock today for Fredericks
burg, Vn., where they will witness the
fall maneuvers of the East Coast Expe
ditionary Force of the Marine Cerps,
spending tonight in n "tent White
Heuse" en the battlefields of the Civil
Wnr.
The President en arriving nt the
scene of the maneuvers will join the
group 01 lievernmeni emcinis, menieers
. rA.itvmuc. nnil nfmr new nml mn.
Ul .itjl!(4. l.n- ..u a.'j, wj ....it ...u
rine corns officers who have been ob
serving the maneuvers, which enter their
final phase today with re-enactment
of the Battle of Chancellorsville. To
morrow morning lie will review the
mere than tiOOO troops making up the
expeditionary force.
In addition te Mrs. Harding, the
President's party included Secretary
Denby, Secretary Wallace, Brigadier
General and Mrs. Sawyer nnd Secre
tary and Mrs. Christian.
PENNANT TODAY
Will Clinch Title by Defeating
Athletics in One Game
of Deuble Bill
SULLIVAN FACES .MAYS
ATIII.UTICO
Will, rf
nkc. VMt
C. Walker, r
lVrklni, !
Welch. rf
tialtnuaY, !)
Cnlliinnj, ss
Ilrailll. ll
SullUnii, ii
Vmplrci Nnllln,
NKW AOllK
Miller, of
Prrklnimugh, s
Until, If
Mruml rf
rinn. H
Hnril. Zb
MeNally, 3b
clianit. c
Mam. P
Vlnrlarlty and Wilsen.
New Yerk, Oct. 1. The Ynnkecs and
Athletics clashed in a double-header 'it
the Pole Gieunds here tedny and n vic
tory for New Yerk In either game
meant the American League champion
ship. Cennie selected u jnungster, Sulli
van, te oppose Carl Mays, the local
star. In the box.
There were 25,000 people prc.eiit
when Witt stepped te the bat in the
first Inning.
Should lain halt either of the con
tests, one regularly sehedulid and the
ether tinnsferrcd yesterda.i from Phila
delphia, when n new rule wns cited, the
Yankees win either of the contests, ei
the Indians again fnll before the White
Sex ns they did in the first game of the
present serii s nf four Cleveland would
be hepelesslj out of the running.
Only by taking tedaj's game from
Chionge nnd tomorrow's ns well with
the Phlladelphians winning the double
header f loin New Yerk, nnd Bosten
tnking the first game tomorrow, can
Cleveland again be a World Series con
tender. The American League race this sea
son has been one of the most exciting
In the history of the junior organiza
tion. Frem the sturt of the season it
Cantlmird en rncc Tnn, Column One
MISS PANC0AST OFF JURY;
MOTHER OPPOSED SERVICE
Mrs. Pancoast Registered Only Be
cause Mrs. Warburton Said
"Mary, Yeu Must"
Miss Murv W. Pancoast, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. W. Heward Pancoast.
2024 De Lnncey street, who has been
summoned te appear before .fudge Mon Men
nghau, in Quarter Sessions Court, for
service en the October Grand Jury, will
net serve.
"My husband get her excused." ex
plained Miss Pancoast mother tedny
YANKS CAN WIN
"A Grand Jury en criminal cases ls 110 jt will remnln cold for the next two
plnce for a girl. Ne. and It s no place da; s at least, although the weather will
for a woman, either. I be fair.
And then Mrs. Pancoast expressed At 0 A. M. today the temperature wes
her opinion of the changes wrought , 57, a (hop of !)() degrees since 2 o'clock
genernlly by the equal franchise. yesterda; nfteinoen.
"My sister-in-law. Mrs. Barclay! The figures for August were made
Wnrburten, 5011 knew, is very preml- 1 available for this morning and show
nent In suffrage, and nil that," she the month te have had the highest av
explained, "nnd I de net wnnt te n; ernge temperature since 1870 with 72.21
tee much against It, but I de net care degrees. September also set 0 record
for suffiage. I registered only because ns the drjest month for many vcars
Mrs Warburton said, 'New, Mary, you with n total rainfall of only 2 21 Inches.
must.' " ' -
" GENERAL WOOD IN TOKIO
Hurt In Fall Down "L Stairway TeU()( 0ct. i.(Hy A, 1MMaJ()r
A toe-rnpid descent of the "L" steps ' General I.eennrd Weed nnd W. Cain
at Fiftv-secend nnd Market streets last 'cren Ferben arrived In Tokie last eve
night landed Michael Denley, fifty-two n(. f(r a week's stay ns the guests of
M'ars n'd: of .r220 Muster street, In the the Government. They came te Teklo
West Philadelphia Homeopathic Hes- from Pekln, pieceedlnu by way of
pltal, suffering from Internal injuries. Mukden and Korea. An extensive pro pre pro
Doeley's feet slipped nnd he fell the en- gram for the entertainment of the
tire illght, striking two ether persons American guests hag been arranged by
en the way down. 'the authorities
PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1921
RIDE
1
!
F
OF
Frank Gedwin Says Fermer
"Buddy" Impersonated Him
and Cashed Checks
TOOK HIS CAR AND CLOTHES
Frank Gedwin, Illustrator nnd former
nvinter, 1002 Spruce street, Is sold
te have an Impersonator.
According te Mr. Gedwin's com
plaint, ledged 'at the Fifteenth nnd
Locust streets police stntien. ind the
warrant sworn out before Magistrate
Rooney nt Fifteenth and Snnseni
rtreets this mernin? the technique of
the Impersonator is peer, but his in-
' tentiens arc all-embracing.
I While the real Mr. Gedwin's work,
lie said, required n great amount of
, night work in his studio another Mr.
1 Gedwin wns doing nil thnt he could
te biighten the Velstenif-dimriied electric
signs of Philadelphia')) cafe district.
Sloreever, this etliT Mr
riding in the real Mr
car, wearing the ical Mr. Gedwin's
uniform, nnd, worse still, cashing some
of "a" Mr. Gedwin's cheeks.
As near as Mr. Gedwin mnde it plain
te Sergeant Mitchell, everything wns
rcnl about the ether Gedwin except the
man inside the uniform nnd the checks.
Hhs Sad Features
RIEND SUSPECTED
DUPING ARTIST
fnM Z n , ' mi f ""rr f, hel Tl" rare Is under conditions and
,ii hJ. ii '"'V10 Klzt'.ef nn"th(,r rules similar te these of the James Gor Ger
,.1 L L" ,'rt, P"- uniform l0)1 enntt C, prace, which Lecointe
and sign checks In a hnndwntlng net at .... feP vrnnrP Lt icar ever the same
nil like the original and cash them
without trouble, the story Is net nil
funny, because behind it there Is n
story of the war and the pain of a
former "buddv" gene wrong.
Mr. Gedwin was among many news
papermen nt that time he was an ar
tist in the employ of the Priiuc
Lumen Company who denned the
uniierm nt the first call. He served'
iu si us iirnuie. iimi mere met Arthur I
Kdwaras. He and Ldivards served in
aviation and the exigencies of the
service made Gedwin a flier and Cd-
"""'" n " :'" a" non-remmis-
UUlIMfU. I
IT.. ... ai e a it ..
ml f wLr n?ithe.flrit th0UKl1,t of,,,eth
was nes M.le 'and ?,LCUmC S ii"me
."ars'Tater s lv nentl " " ' i Sen,e
?ietOe&.
I'tt;t.,0,,-Hm was driving tij Broadway
in ms car. as ne stepped out of it
As he stepped out of it
Continued en Puie Four. Cetiiiun Tbiecl
COOL ANDFAIR,' IS PROMISE
But Showers May Spoil an Other
wise Perfect Week
Washington, Oct. 1 (By A. l 1
Weather predictions ler the week be
prt
Me 1
ginning
are:
lueiil rains first half and fair thereafter.
Keglon of tireat J.ukes cool and gen
erally fair but with a pnlubllltv of
showers about Thursday ; frosts prob
able. COOL SPELL IS HERE
After Het Period Weather Is Going
Back te Normalcy
Get j our tires stinted.
This is the dltcet advice of the
weather mnn, who announced this
morning thnt today ls the coldest Oc-
tnhnr 1 since 1MS1I MnpnAi'.i. I.n uAn
.miiH. ..v.. inu nr nisuce was ,.f,uncil of the association announced
signed Gedwin wns a cap aln and pilot . ,)mt it had net authorized the strike.
hangar Wffin.0' .'J Hff. " "!SLP.'M..fe'
ma j
cool and generally fair, but with a preb- , Vn '?" A,,Ilf "' "i'if1 nVtteru0y "f
ability of showers the middle and J1'1'' l's'v ( ?(,',lt-'1 , IN t ndliiR. it was
latter part of the week. Loe frosts ' f!Bted; wai?. for tlle ,,ul,.,lc e'V T
probable ever northern portion Courts ruling wns en 1 .1 urges brought
Seuth Atlantic nnd Gulf States, tern- by , ,tll,p iAtit"n"'v ejiernl, al eging
i.eintnre semeivl.nt l,el,.,v ,,r.n! . multiple Instances et misuse of his of-
Nnrfh nn.l Allrl.lln l...tlA u.n
IN
HURT. WI!YC0UNIN!
7 FLEE
N CHESTER PLANT
FLIES
OF
Several Have Narrow Escapes
as Mattress Factory Wall
Collapses
RUINS ARE SEARCHED
FOR POSSIBLE VICTIMS
Twe volunteer firemen were knocked
from n ladder by n squirming hose nnd
'njured nnd several ethers had narrow
escapes as a wall collapsed today when
fire swept the mattress plant of Meyer
Dlnnk, Seventh and Venn streets,
Chester.
Five women nnd two men ran from
their npartments en the second lloer
rear of the two-story brick building
when the fire began nt 7 o'clock this
morning. Eighteen empleyes, including
scvernl girls, escaped down stnlrway.
The Injured volunteers nrc :
Heward Bardley. II0.T Morten street,
a member of the Felten Fire Cnmpanv ;
bruised nnd shocked; may have in
ternal injuries.
Jehn Harvey Mauger, Third and
Morten streets, also of the Felten Fire
Company ; ruts nnd bruises of head and
body ; net rierleus.
The flri Is lipllnvpil tn hnve started
en the second fleer front, where n picker
machine was operated. A spark is be
lieved te have ignited excelsior which
hurst into names, the lire communi
cating with ether mnterials used In
stuffing mattresses.
In the apartments nt the rear of the
structure were Mr. and Sirs. Grever
Lane, Mrs. Jehn Hampton. Mrs.
Geerge Wilsen. Mr. nnd Mrs. Themas
Durnhnin and Mrs. Rebert Dedd. The
shouts of the factory empioyes warned
them of the danger. They ran down
stairways leading te Patterson street
nt the rear of the building.
The ilnmes were rearing through the
second lloer and had reached the I'nited
Gnrage en the first fleer rear when fire
men get hose lines In action. Bardley
and. Mauger were en a ladder ready te
play n heavy stream into the blaze. The
hose twisted in their hands and they
lest their balance.
About a half hour after the fire began
the west wall began sagging. Firemen
near the wall saw it totter and ran.
escaping the mnss of falling bricks and
beams.
The interior of the building was de
stroyed. When the fire was out n'sqund
of firemen and police began searching
the ruins of the wall, although it was
believed no one had been caught
under it.
1EC0INTE, FASTEST OF ALL
FLIERS. HURT IN AIR CRASH
Plane Smashed bv Forced Landlna
Durlnn Rie In Fnnee ,
During Race In y
Gedwin was 'TT', ;-. "". '",' ,'
. iiiwin uus,p .) Knill Lecointe. noted I renca avl-
'Gedwin s own i, , ter. holder of the world ' speed ii-cord,
was injured and his airplane asn the engin-ers.
smashed when he made a forced landing '..jt , n ,.jb he m.ide te last for
in the first lap of the Deutsche De La tllre(. Ill()llt ls iIU;er b constant tep.iir
Meurthe Cup race here tedav. I nnj Uu.riislen."
Lecointe wns lir-t te take the nir
nnd had mnde splendid time for the
first fifty kilemetres, flying thU dis
tance in 0m. .'"? 1-i's.. n new record.
'Ills Injuries nie understood te be only
circuit.
j HARBORSTRjKEAT N. Y.
Several Thousand Longshoremen
! and Checkers Walk Out
New Yerk. Oct. 1. (By A 1' )
Several thousand longshoremen
and
checkers walked out today in pretest
iRninst new working terms ngreed upon
recently by trans-Atlantic steamship
operators and the International Leng-
sheremen's Association The district
rr, 11.rt., ,.1. ., l Li.t.
a in "t ii mint i ii'iru unite llli'llu UULII
the Manhattan and Hoboken water-
fronts. Today's development came
' when the French liner Paris was com-
l,ort ""'' vover'11 thousand
'" ..rs ulld mnnv inriri. ilnpr ,.
',.j,r .i. -...i... ."....,. ..,. ., " .
Cllllilll lllU t-nilir. Hum Dl-IIVUIULMI lO
sail.
DISTRICT ATTORNEY OUSTED
Mevie Party Scandal Results In Re
moval of Law Officer
Bosten, Oct. 1. (By A. P.) The
Supreme Court of Massachusetts tednj
nnnnuiiied the remnvnl from office of
fiee by the District Attorney for his
personal gain or interest.
The most sensational of the specific
charges brought ngalnst Tufts hnd te
dn with the settlement of litigation
growing out of n midnight pnrty in
1017 at Mishawum Maner, a Webum
roiulheuse conducted by a woman known
as "Brownie" Kenned;. Scvernl prom
inent New Yerk motion picture pro
ducers were Involved. The Attorney
General charged that Tufts was con
cerned in a censpirncj by which thev
were induced te pay apprexlmatel)
$100,000 te Conkley and ether attor
neys under threat of prosecution. Pay
ment of the money was admitted by the
movie men, but Tufts denied he had
shared In it, had taken any action te
prompt the pa;ments, or had ac
knowledge of them.
Leve. Was Onv-Sidcd
MU
ARIi: CHIISTKU had nlwiirs
idered Christopher Lawless. lie
bullied her os a boy, Ignored her as a
youth and at last, purely from family
considerations, married her and
continued te be n stranger te her.
Life sometimes needs trouble te
clear the air. It did in the cuse of
Marie and Chester.
Ruby M. Ayres tells hew It hap
pened In her novel, "A Bacheler
Husband."
The story begins today en page 21,
'", i imi m'' iniii in iiKCN f'jM'i-uvu lima ,
Published Dally Kucert Bunday.
ptiDiisiieu u"0Jf(j;ltpJB21jriw
IES DISREGARD DANGER
SHAKY BRIDGES;
Lives of Hundreds Periled Daily
While Majority Spend Time
in Mouthy Harangues
WARNINGS PASSED BY ,
AND FUNDS ARE WITHHELD'
Ity GKORGE NOX MrCMN
Tl.is Is net politics. It Is the peo
ple's e-isln"ss.
The majority In Council, with its
pyrotechnic Patrick Henry's, having ,
undertaken, nltcrnately. the manage- '
ment and obstruction of the ritv's busi
ness hns these following matters In its
control :
It Is absolutely responsible for thn
continuation of existing conditions.
Its members, should fatalities occur
as a result of their negligence, would
be as Indictable for crime ngalnst
human life as would the motorist, who
dlregardlng the traffic officers com cem
mnnd te halt, rushed ahead and killed
n score of pedestrians.
The people, long suffering nnd pa
tient, de net lenllze that while thes
wide mouthed Clceres nrc proclaim
ing their indifference te the city s in
terests, thousands of lives are daily
in danger.
Appeals Waved Aside
Director of Public Works Caven
has lndlrnted It
Engineers and construction experts
have verified the fact.
Council has been uppcnled te, only
te wave the matter aside.
Three disreputable, absolutely dan
gerous cltv bridges hnvc been closed te
traffic. Fer years they bad been a
menace te human life.
There are five tbrr b-ldges that have
been condemned e"- year nge. But
thev are still In use.
An
annronrintien aggregating ?2.-
P2.1.000 hns been asked te replace the
e"e
structures. ,
Feet nnd vehicular trnmc sun me Simmons ncrept his resienr.ticr as lm
uslng them. There Is 'danger of p( rn Kieaplc nnd general business mnn
n henvllv-lended trolley or truck nepr 0 ,he ir iri- K'nn. wns as leni
smashing through the corroded beams at
nnv time.
Then whnt will the $."000 per annum
deelomntery ward statesmen say.
Citizen, who en feet, by trolley or
bv truck, cress these bridges, will read
the official condemnation doubtless
with the unspnvcn limuirj. ,, ' gntiennl Methodist Church of Atlanta
"Well, ivlmt s Council ceing te de." .... . . , . ,. ...
about it?"
The Forty. ninth Street Br'.dge I
Tnkc the Fertv-ninth Street Bridge!
It is between Pnscnll nnd Grays ave
nue above the tracks of the l'liiiauei-
phla. Wilmington and Baltimore Rail-
en,l,
The bridge cniries two tretiey iracKs.
It is cres-ed dailj by thousands of
pcepI(1 tn POI,tnnt menace of danger.
Its condition is s tind tnat only one
(trel!pv ,.Ilr j permitted en it nt n time.
, ..jt" ls iri ,. dilapidated condition,"
Slieu'd a leaded trolley crash through
Continued en l'nire Te. Column Four (
XT
YANKEES CLINCH AMERICAN
LEAGUE PENNANT BY BEATING AS
ICuW YORK, Oct. 1. By wmuiiij, the tu
l.'i'jki with the Athletics hei- this, .ifn
mini', (li.nlui' the Am-i lean 1.1115,11 ; :.. 1
'.11- tity tn. lu-jt World's, Seiit bfiwiiu 1.
jswt.uiws talie .ia 4Clcvelniul wiu its. two n. . 1
the Yuulis leic euth of theirs th Ynuhs w m.j
with a halt u.imt ndvnutagu.
TODAY'S BASETTATL SCORES
ATHLETICS 0003000 00
NEW YORK (1st). 0 0 10
S'lillivaii and FVilmi- : Mays, nml
NEW YORK .3000001-1
PHILLIES (1st).. 0 0 0 10 2 2 3
Douglas and Gennlis; Meadows,
EARTH TREMOR SHAKES ILLINOIS TOWi;
HARRISBURG, ILL., Oct. l.-lwe uibi.iki -I. '0 -.
have btui ceus 'il by n slight cnithqiuki. v.i.n nt
in ii'fs weif nil ikpii iinu bieepui
itpeited.
' SOVIET EXECUTES WOMAN
Panla Barren and Nine Men Asso
ciates Meet Death
Moscow. Oct 1 ilt A. IM-
Pnnla Ilarren, a woman anarchist lead
er, nnd nine men associates have been
executed by the Chekn, or Soviet Inqui
sition, and many ethers have been im
prisoned in Moscow The executions
were in connection with plots dntine
back te September. 1010. when bombs
were exploded dining n meeting of the
Moscow Committee of the Communist
i tin j, wicL-KiiiK i hk uuiiiune in which
the meetlne was held and killlns many
persona.
?., m
flitliwrlptlen Irl-8. 'tear by Mall.
pub'le Ledger Company
Fastest Flier Hurt
wtcteVberb) Pe
SAl)i L.KCOINTK
Helder of the world's speed record,
who was Injured tedny nt Etamiies
when his racing airplane made a
forced landing and was wrecked
IMPERIAL KLEAGLE
Clarke Fired by Atlanta Meth
odists 11 Years Age en 8
Charges, Records Shew
LYING, FRAUD CHARGED
New Yerk. Oct. 1. The World to
day prints the following copyrighted
dispatch frerr Atlanta :
St "t iLa I
ra :liilBBie
EUR ;sJk JH
I.V MUM. 2M
I -?.- 4 ' '
w
OUSTED BY CHURCH
' ' ' "" , . .; .............. ...i.i ,- piuniii-u mem una
had been n member nnd accused in ttie ' tli-nt them into a bedroom, they de
Federal Court here of having falsified . elnred Thev were found locked In
corporation nssets aim low wermiP"
?tock. Edward Yeung Clarke, who re-
ccntly lnsipted thnt Imperial wizard.
nse av, jnp, tjIP object of muen public
attention in Atlanta
InveFtlcnters for the World estab
lished bv documentary proof teda! that
en Wednesday evening. February 0.
1010. Clarke wns brought te trinl be
fore the members el the 1' irst I eigrO'
Ien eight charges preferred gainst him
by the pastor and an investigating sub-
committee. After these charges and the
accompanying specified offenses had
been read aloud and discussed, a vote
in im- i-iiun-ii wus uiin-n umi v num.- uupen n wiic ei tiiese imil ncarlv
expelled fiein its membership. Ne np- severed the bend. Bruises and bits of
'peal was -nken bv him from the notion I hair in her fingers told of her struggle
ei up niimn'suuuii nun m miKm
eitner civil or criiiunni. loiieiveu me
publication in the Atlanta press of the
chnrites mnde by the church committee!
and the vote or expulsion passed bj the
church meeting.
Ki ami Cliarge Was Made
A feitnight earlier, en January "J4,
1010, in bankruptcy proceedings in the
Federal Court here, involving the
Continued en Tnae Keur Column One
. 1:
1
3i t .
,amt
1-
10
11
Stiiiuit;
2 0 X
0
N.i I lm, Meiiraity, Wilsen
- 10 L0
nnd Hcullue. Hint nud Rilei
i ti'iii t.
I 1C Uiij
u i aah (. v.',,a
6 nieiiseu. u.n
ASK LEAGUE'S PROTECTION
Four Caucaclan Republics Seek Aid
Against Belshevlkl
Geneva, Oct. 1. (B; A P. i-The
assistance of the League of Nations
against flie Belshevlkl we.- asked tedii'
by representatives of the feu" Can
ceslan republlrs Armenia, AerbalJan.
Northern Caucasus and Gcergiu, whose
territory li new under Soviet dnmin..
tlen.
The; informed the kugue that tliet
had joined their Interests In a iielitlcu
nnd eennnm i nnnn nn,l ..k..i .1..
League's aid ft, securing the evacuation
et tuelr territory "bvjferelgn troops."
' NIGHT " f!,
EXTRA ,
PRICE TWO CENTS "K
E
Mrs. R. D. Eastlake, Daughterly'
of W. H. Therno, Hacked
te Death in Virginia
CHILDREN SAW QUARREL
WITH MAN AND SARAH KNOX
Mm Reger D. Hastlnke, dnughter of
Wi limn II Theme, 1700 Tine street,
this citv, nnd wife of a chief petty of-
icer Htn(len'l nt the Dnhlgren Naval
Stntien. Virginia, wns found murdered
In her home nt Colonial Bench, Va.,
yesterdni.
Her bedi had been hnckid nlmqst te
pieces with n hatchet Her husband
nnd Miss Sarah Knox, said te be a
trnlned nurse, formerly of this cltv. ere
held, charged with the murder. ' Miss
Knox is described ns about fifty yenrs
old
The bed. wns found In the kitchen Of
the HnstHlcc home, lying in a peel of
bleed. The wnlls nf the room were
"Pattered with bleed. A pistol was
found beside the bedv. but there were'
no bullet wounds, nnd the police believe
Mrs. Enstlnkn grabbed the weapon in
an effort te protect herself ngalnst the
murderous nsnult.
Mrs. Hastlnke's little son nnd daugh
ter snv they lienrd quarreling roster
day morning. Th"v said thev had gene
I " mi- Kir. nen deer, and find seen Miss
Knox nnd their fnther quarreling with
their mother. Suddenly, they sold, Mlsi
, Knox struck Mrs. Enstlekn In the fae.
hen the mother screamed her hus-
band struck her twice, the children said.
Children Locked In Roem
A tir In the two veungsfers, who
were h'enthlessly watching the attach
en their mother, attracted fie fnthcr'a
attention and he ernhbed them nnrl
mere iiv the police when the lmdv was
."covered
ine tirst intimation neighbors had
of the trncedv rame from Miss TCne.
She reused them by screaming for the
police nnd rapping en neighboring doers
for assistance.
w hen the police came she mild nhe
had passed the night at a smnll house
in the vicinity of the Hnstluke home,
and had gene te the house te visit Mrs.
F.astlake nnd found the bedv en the
fleer. The woman's husbnnd declared
he bad left the house nt 5 iltt) yesterday
morning and his wife was nil right at
thnt time.
At the Colenlnl Beach Hospital,
where Mrs. FaBtlnke's bedv wnu tnhnn
' twentj -nine hntchet cuts were found
,ier ner inc.
, ,
L.inclilng Wa .-airi!
After Miss Kuex and I'nstlakc had
' tieen he'd for the murder bv the Corener
the leciing in Colenlnl Beach ran se
high that an extra guard was placed
ever them te preient landing. Large'
crowds gathered ni the streets and
stared omineusl; nt the prisoners a
thev were tuken te jail. They are new
locked ui in the ceuntv jail at Mont Ment Mont
ress. des- by Colonial Beach.
Bloodstains were found en M1m
Knox's clothing and a bloed-sonkcd
rnlmeat of hers was found In the
house, it is charged. She accounted for
tliee stains bv saying she hnd knelt
in the ioel of b'oed lies de the body
after she discovered it in an effort te see
if tl.e-e was still life.
It is said h the police thnt the quar
rel between Miss Knox nnd Mrs, East
lake was of lenu standing. Mrs. East
lake had en several occasions been
forced te order Miss Knev from her
home. It is Nnid the nurse followed the
couple from this dt and wis constantly
in the eempain of L istlnke.
Mis Kast'ake had told relatives in
this citj and friends in Virginln that
Miss Knox had a peculiar fascination
for her nnd flint the ver; sight of the
woman caused nervous chills te run up
nnd down her back. It is said that the
women had cnnn- te blows scernl times.
The Enstlnkes moved te Colonial
Beaeh a htfle mere than a year age,
and a few wieks later Miss Knox put,
in her .ippe.iranee there, it is said. A
! short time Inter, after a clash with Mrs.
Eastlake, she left Virginia for a short
time, but s.ien r turned. Miss Knox
has net denidl intimacy with East
lake und told the police that her rea
son for b 1 tiK at the Eastlake home se
enrl; in the mmnlng was because she
hnd com. our te s c the petty officer
before lie went te the naval stntien.
Ilelnthes Prostrated
Miss Emllj Thnriie, a sister of Mrs.
Eii-t'.ike who lives at 17n0 Pine atreet,
was iriitmic 1 this meinlrig, as was
1 the girl's father
1 Mr Theme was a pi.ifesser In the
1 Sciiniii et Me, hiiiui ul Aits in the Frank
lin Institute for thlrty-lhe jenrs, and
has ri I'entl; be. ,ime 1 ennei ted with the
'iigiuiMriug tinn of William Sellers t.
Cn . l(iO) Ifiimilteii streit - -
Mr Tneine said his dnugliter became
acquainted with Eastlake while she was
a Mindai selieid ten. her In tile Grace
Episcopal Chur.li Mount Alr. East
lakes iiietlu r. the widow of Dr. Wil
liam De'iiini I .istlnke, still lives In
Bejei street, Mount Air; Dr. East
lake was tin In nil of a Japanese Hos
pital and dud in Japan a few jenrs age.'
About i lei en jenis age Eastlake acd
Miss Theme 1 1 iped and were married
h; a magistrate In this fit j . In 1017
he 1 nlisti'd 111 the tun; and was first
stn'ii'iit'd heie then in Ocean City, and
then 111 Cape Mn;
1 he tirst lutiii atinn the Therne fnra
1I1 had of tin tr.igeilv was 11 telegram
1 1 .mi the pidiie in Ciilenlal Bench. A
brother-in-law the Rei Themas II.
Y ni-llc; . reiri.r of St. Timethy's
(Inii-.li Cuteniille. Md . left tula
ni.ir ti 1 i.k: for Colonial Beach te get the
I'hihliii Thei will be taken te Mrs.
IVu, I..1. . s limn. In Miiiinl Alrv f
i'" -i .nti.er sister. MrH.' 8. r!
Tewei, Hi tug iii West Newton, Mass,
YAWN DISLOCATES JAW
j.
B. Roberts, of Cherry Street, Has
Doctors Clese Meuth
A long, heartfelt jawn early thl
morning dislocated the jaw of J, J
Roberts, sexxent; -niinS years old.
l.r,2l Cherry stret
Mr Rebeits, machinist, was en
way home from work, and was tl
A lie pii'ined the Hahnemann He'
he yawned. His mouth could f
I
closed again, se he rushed Inte tr
Wl
FOUND SLAIN
PHILADELPHIA
MAN
AND NURSE JAILED
a ir 1
Li
pltal, and there the physician fl
jaw ler mm.
4
1
3
?
t if - 1 J fs 1 1 1 x
)
ILms.
. MM t
.tJMS'
ludlEtltnr
-I s iii.
4iiw 1 I.
mmrjs
"'iiliiijliii 'Xit"
. L,maML3k,.'tauSf: