Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 29, 1922, Night Extra, Image 2

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GENOA CHAIRMAN
I':', ,-.-, SWSfm,
&4&WAT
?;,r.r- Jsu.. .. .
HttJ'Sl, . ftM Associates Press
rjt. April 20.--Fereln Minister
E&Slr .Iwkltcherin.efnussia, today sent Trc
FWI r Facta, of Italy, as president of
w us i economic ueuierence, a note cx-
'javiU.jrmlng the dissatisfaction of the Rus
Ml'l1 delegation with the delay In reply.-
K.W.V H l It. i,.. f An.lt n ....! .....-I....
KtJ',fce note would be withdrawn and the
l3t I" KtMians would resume their initial
' position unrjss tney were assured tnat
the credits necessary te restore Russia
Would be granted.
In line with! Prime .Minister Lloyd
GeorgeVdeclaratien that the new allied
proposals te the Russians must be con
sidered as a whole, a special drafting
committee, was endeavoring today te
frame a document which would har
monist the differences in the demands
submitted by the British and French
delegations. ,
The preamble was completed last
night, and the remainder of the draft
was expected te be ready for submission
te the full sub-commission en Russian
I affairs, scheduled te meet today.
. The French document Insists en the
fall payment of Russia's war debts and
' the restoration of private property te
foreigners.
' Concessions by British
While the French .document stated
tkat "agricultural reconstruction should
ceme before ether things," the British
program dealt mere fully with credits
for Russia, favoring a reduction in her
war debt and conceding that foreigners
formerly owning property in Russia be
granted the use of it instead of a re-
Jtturn of actual ownership, which would
lUeaallsatlbn.
" France would demand that if private
property cannot be restored the former
' t farther desire an arrangement for pay--.
Sweat of interest en the Russian state
ends. Falling an agreement before
December 31, next, the matter would
he decided by a mixed arbitration tri
bvaal with an impartial chairman.
' Leuis Bartheu. chief French lf1irnri.
rtoek occasion formally te deny rumors
l Moratorium for Five fears
', The, correspondent of the Central
News says he learns that the British
draft proposals te Russia set forth eight
Stints, the principal of which is that
Bssla shall recemize. all her rlehra.
cand, after a moratorium of Ave years,
Inav 2 ner cent Intpwat for fiVi run
then 4 per cent for. another five
jyears.
Aue aecument does net specify that
'Jtnscia must accent the nrinr-InU nf
(private ownership, but 'demands long
ieae or private property te its former
taw&ers. A credit scheme te finance
trade would be favorably considered if
iRasala accepted the proposals,
w lf:CBlcherin at first.efused te com'-
tea the proposals, and then, leek-
Ml & the French draft, he shook his
','SVPJWM-m thengh dismissing Jt entirely,
TJnvd tJmrkn ihmTttrirA fk
ty-iM!'' P"ict eleftnt in form, hut
rvysMMfm in .important .feature. ;.
Afr&mr,tttoe religiously moral."-"
"- w .h,fluiHi 'nnvnwn inn nfln
4 tmSki Aprif.28
?Z(Bf'A'p:fte
understands that M. Bar-
French general dele dele
te accent certain con-
S.jadeP-ri'
V5 itHitf;. chief or the
A yiM'aMem: Is Inclined I
n -T casatans te th BnwtfiinH rnlnllrn r vn.
dabta, formulated by the British dele-
Ij. n't i"" l ucnun, uecause lie una re-
aM at uenea, because he had re
:jri fr;i ww urance uw me armsn uev-
l,w iii'wsHineni is uispesea te reauce or can
ylj .J eel in the same proportion France's war
mv J dabta te Great Britain.
if,,y h A meeting of the entire French cab-
XSrT.i last ha hMn rnllfvl for Knnlnv nlirhf
$J&, $hwkm?'T. TlnrHinil will nntllna tU un.
iriftfteeace situation.
SV!!- J
3MI CHURCH HEAD MUM IN
1,,'. II II IBTtAP I flf Tlllni w
M'fir ' ""mimcluic ianulc
( t
Mttropelltan Had "Nothing, te De"
P (if With Venslatsky Marriage
Ky ''Sriage of Mr. and Mrs. Anastase An-
matter of no concern te Metropolitan
Piapen, of the Russian Catholic
dwrches of America. The metropeli
tan, who Is spending n week's vacation
nr Albany, N. Y., Issued a statement
ln'which he said he had nothing what
ever te de with the marriage, nnd that
it;, was a matter for the attention of
Archbishop Alexander.
. He declined te comment en dl.q-
I patches from Paris stating that "Mine.
4URjlKnTf Mburemsky Venslatsky " was
Heading' te him a certified cepv of her
t alleged marriage te the young Russian,
J wbe last February married Mrs.Jleam
J Stephens, middle-aged Chicago heiress.
Other officials of the Russ-ian Cathe
,dral in New Yerk have declined te com
ment en the status of the marriage
"antll the papers arrive from Paris."
Jh, $he meantime the divorcee heiress
nai her factory-hand husband arc nt
home In their Ridley Park "love net"
after having Issued statements in New
Yerk, through thelr,utteniey, that there
waa absolutely no truth in the claims
of' the. Paris woman.
TO BURY ENSIGN J. A. FLYNN
A' i
NVat Officer Who Lest Life Under
T -
IHentt' Hpefa Takert te R. I,
'Kaslen .Tesenh A, Vlvmn'ef th ll,u
aialabla' Navy Yard, wlie wuh criichprl
. wvwatu iii' uay wnen die trietl te
'afr-s runaway team nt Seventeenth
'! . . " .-..
BW aV0Mnut streets, will be hurled te.
Kir's1 S Wy ' services conducted by the
WMSk Wjd'KEIyun Pest of the American
Flx ,T body wns sent te Woonsocket to te to
ravrdWAhfspert of twenty-four men
V1 J iJO'l' ?!' '"' i,,ra "'tempanieu tne
y"A"lrjWw'W ino'Matien nere. Twe of Ills
?ftfi.'P Wern ntul Catherine Flynn,
LV3QaaiM here last nlcht te in-run., fnr ti
WiiinT finfl pAtfirtiA.1
te oensocket
OtaJii mernlnir.
rScj, W . unn, an erpnan, wns
ltr adaaiiyl hv thrcA uNrra uLn ha .....
i1luul. t.l...... i .
Pi&1, ten VMru nlfl. Il wnw ?tiAil K
- m -' "" " vi IUI ujr
until fourteen, when he joined
lie navy ncainxt their wIhIieh. Itnf h
,7'mada'goed lit the navy, nnd In the last
';v'XlUw years huu been miunurtlnir I he hh.
rjn4ra. who arc new past fifty.
tejjX Wv While here Tlynn bearded with Mrs.
Tate, U03U Chestnut street, and
4t engaged te marry her daughter,
"""f ' "l ' ' ' I . ! . .
-7 WAWrnt Shlpg te Reduce Speed
r W - . . -
.SSii1er-UnHed States Kngl
..IM'Mnil warutug for al:
nicer Office
varutuit for all vesscln. te
JPPPf.l''lr "I'eeii te live, miles per
Hmwihlle iNtssIng; the wreck of the
iihuuiu. wiucn nee in ine
ie epjtwute the Jntersec-
r,i Timeum jignt
IvwUJHhr
TE BATTLE NEAR PtKffl
''KftJ ' '1
- , I
Manehurlan and Central China
forces Struggling Few Milaa
Seuth of Capital
WARNED NOT TO ENTER CITY
By the Associated Press
Pekln,, April 29. The fighting south
of the Pekln -Tientsin Railway, which
"began at dawn today, was still in preg
ress this afternoon, with the sound of
I he battle distinctly audible here. The
engagement between the forces of Gen
eral Chang Tse-Lin, military Governer
of Mnncliurin, nnd General Wu Tel-Fit,
military leader of Central China, was
reported te extend atone a line frein
Mnchang. twenty miles south el Tien-
tin, te a point south of Pekln.
An attempt apparently was being
made by Wu Pel-Fu te wedge In be
tween Pekln nnd Chang Tse-LlnV
troops, thus turning the latter's flank.
General Wu's attack, launched at
Changsintien, twelve miles southwest of
Pekln. seemingly cuinc as a surnrlse
and spread rapidly into the general en
gagement new reported.
Mounded troops from the front beenn
arlrving In the city this afternoon.
The ferelcn leKiitleiiH here have nd-
vised the nationals of their respective
countries, who are new outside Pclln,
te hasten te the capital in self-protection.
Durlntr the nlcht sounds of inter
mittent firing came from the front, but
with tne dawn a briK cannonade be
gan, the city reusing te the mounting
sound. Seme Americans ventured out
te the racetrack west of Pekln, where
they saw unang Tse-L,ins troops di
recting artillery fire from the hl'ls.
Beth Chang Tse-Lin nnd Wu Pel-Fu
have annarently warned their forces te
avoid approaching the city en account
of the warning of the legations that
they would net tolerate disorder in
Pekln. The Government Is prepared
te close the city gates at any moment
hut this has se far net been deemed
necessary.
The members of the Government,
headed by Hsu Shlh-Cbang, are as one
In lamenting the hostilities. The Presi
dent declares he will remain neutral
and acting Premier Cheu Tzu-Chl says
that efforts te prevent civil war are
being continued. t
EASTLAKE'S LETTERS READ
AT TRIAL OF MISS KNOX
Prosecution Seeks te Shew Motive
for Killing of Wemany
Special te the Bvenlne Public Ltdgtr
MontreM. .Va.. Aeril 20. Letters
written by Reger D. Eastlake, te his
wife, Margaret, and Miss Sarah h.
Knox, new en trial here for the murder
of Mrs. Eastlake. were read today in
an effort te establish a motive ler tne
crime a Colonial Beach. Mrs. East
lake was the daughter of William
Thernc, 1700 Pine street, Philadelphia.
The reading et tnis correspondence
took up most of ,the day, the Common
wealth seeking te show that Miss Knox,
a Baltimore nurse, had great affection
for Eastlake, and that jeareusy prompted
the murder. Tne letters were intro
duced 'in evidence at Eastlakc's trial.
He was acquitted.
rtna nt the litr rpflil tedav had
beertwritten-by"Mrs2? Eastlake te the
nurse, lri"'whlch the navy man's wife
asked Miss Knox te "step tagging after
him." Mrs. Eastlake premised in the
letter te have her husband pay Miss
Knox $700 he owed her as seen as
possible, asking "Is that witlsfactery?"
Mrs. Eastlake wrote that the nurse's
visits te Colonial Beach had causeu tne
neenle te say that Eastlake "was "run
ning two estnb'Ishments."
500 CHILDREN ASK MAYOR
TO INTERCEDE FOR UKRAINE
Moere Is Absent and Director War-
burten Receives Petition
piu lumrirpd Amcrlcan-bern children
of Ukrainian parents marched te City
Hull today te present u pennon ie
Mujer Moere protesting against ulleged
Polish atrocities in Ukrainian East
Gnlieiii. In the absence of the Mayer
the delegation was received by Director
Warburton. of the Department of Pub
lic Welfare. ...
Adult leaders et tne delegation ex
plained that a population of mere than
three million Is being held In subjuga subjuga
tien'by the Polish army of occupation.
The petition requests that the Mayer
take sonic action in the matter.
Catherine Roselowicz presented the
petition te Director Warburton while
her sister, Sephia, handed Durrell
Sinister, secretary te the Mayer, a big
bunch of American beauty roses.
Director Warburton said that he
would bring the petition te the atten
tion of Mayer Moere when he returns
from Island Heights Monday.
SEEKS $4,000,000
IN SHIP SUNK OFF CAPE MA Y
Jay Mecray Proposes te Raise the Matizamqres, a Spanish Gal
leon Wrecked by Storm at Turtle Gullet Inlet in 1805
fly a Staff Cerrtapunient
Cape May. N. .1.. April 20. Before
you consider scientifically the cap of
Jay Mecray remember two thing: that
it Is April and Hint Mr. Mecray
"Watched the same stars and )hu ej vie
And the same tea,"
In ether words, nan. urcams are the
breath of life te the nostrils of Jay
Mecray. This hardy Imagination,
mere than iinjtnins else, nas inane me
limine of Mecray wliat It is inuay in
t'npe May County, and the meahure of
his importance In the cemimiiiltj no
body who has ever signed a regMcr.
ordered a pound of meat or bought a
bottle of juniper tar will need te ask.
The sea is the sea. It is April, and
new Jay Mecray has cenqclved a proj
ect matching the caliber of n Mecrny.
He proposes te raise the Matizameres
and te recover from the hulk some
$4.(100 000 In geld.
Th Matlzameries. according te Cape
Mav tradition, lies a few fathoms deep
in Turtle Gullet Inlet. It was a Span.
Ish snlleen, that in the year of 180B or
thereabouts was captured by llarbary
pirates and which carried In its held
some previously overlooked treasures of
n dynasty of Incas. Te these, in the
curse f tme as tehe Matizameres turned
en ether Spanish ships ,were added
great quantltes of uuwoens, sacred ves
sels and precious stones.
Shly Blown en Bar
One night the Matizameres was blown
hv aveniing winds en te the bar in
Turtle Gullet Inlet, a few miles out
rJweaHy' Moslems .perUbed, in a terrible
from eeweiia ,i emi, aim uer inw ei
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Thirty persons were driven te the
at Eighth .and Edgemont streets,.
DUBLIN PEACE PARLEY ENDS
WITHOUT ANY AGREEMENT
Cerk 8laylngs Cause Terrer of Re
prisals In Belfast
Dublin, April 20, (By A. P.) The
peace conference called by Lord Mayer
O'Neill, of Dublin, held another meet
ing here today, but after a three-hour
session it dissolved without any agree
ment having been reached.
An official statement said tt was re
gretted that no basis of agreement had
hin found nnd that no useful purpose
could be served by prolonging the con
ference. , tij
Tim ulavlnv nf several prominent citi
zens of Cerk yesterday hns caused a
sensation here equnl te that caused when
several members of the family of Owen
MacMaben were killed in ieitasi last
It is Widely believed here that the
murders were Intended in reprisal for
the MaeMahen killings. '
The Previsional Government is cred
ited with the declaration that these
guilty for the Cerk outrages will be
brought te justice. The public here
fears mere terrible counter-reprisals In
Belfast, which in their turn would have
a sequel elsewhere.
Belfast. April 20-(By A. P.) Ir
regular Republican troops today seized
the bended stores in Kilkenny nnd re
moved the whole stock of whisky te the
Kilkenny jail. Free State officers went
te the jail and issued an ultimatum te
the commander of the Irregulars that
unless the property was surrendered by
5 o'clock this afternoon, Free State
troops would move td the prison and
take It by force.
Irregular Republican forces today also
seized tire Customs Heuse at Galway.
and one of their officers took charge of
collections. , '
TRADE SCHOOL EXERCISES
Jehn Wanamaker Presides at Com
mencement Today
Jehn Wanamaker, chairman of the
Beard of Trustees of the Williamson
Free Scheel of Mechanical Trades, pre
sided at the twenty-ninth annual com
mencement of the institution, held this
afternoon.
Harry S. Bitting, retiring president
of the school, was the principal speaker,
while the ether members of the Beard
of Trustees attended in a body. They
are, besides Mr. Wanamaker, Rebert
M. Ceyle, Jehn S. New bold, Levi L.
Rue, Jehn Story Jenks, Charles Day
and Alfred O. Harrison.
LARKIN TO BE RELEASED
Irish Agitator Granted Certificate of
Reasonable Doubt
New Yerk. April 20. (By A. In
justice Cardo.e, of the Court of Ap
peals, today granted a-certificate of
reasonable doubt te James Larkin.
Irish agitator, convicted of criminal
nnnrchv, and new serving a term In
Sing Sing Prison.
Larkin was convicted In 1020 with
Charles E. Ruthenberc ami Isaac E.
Fergusen, who were released by Justice
Cardoze. last week en certificates of
reasonable doubt, pending appeals te
the Court of Appeals from their con
viction. IN'GOLD
by the pirates off the coast of Ills
pay, was wushed en te that pint e(
the will of New Jersey called Two Twe
Mile Beach, and was found und rolled
en u heg-shend by a couple of natives.
It was he who cave Cape May the
first and only ster of the Matlzmeres.
He lived nineng various farmers in
the county for many jeurs iiitcrwuru,
j and is said te have married one of the
sea maids hereabouts, and te have
founded a family
New and again throughout the years
a bit of spar or something was washed
ashore te remind the Inhabitants that
the Matizameres lay close by, bulging
with reward for any one who might get
Inte her. It was a geed thing te talk
about en the haid winter nights when
sturdy folk gathered around a fire.
However, nothing but talk was done
about it, but the talk served Its pur
pose in keeping the thing in recollec
tion. Attempt Made Forty Years Age
About forty years age the commander
of n. life-saving station at i;eki Hp-ing
made some attempts In raise the Mati Mati
zaeores. but- these were seen aban
dened. Hut meantime the house of
Mecray had been having its rise.
On tin Matizainere project Mr. Met
cray maintains the silence of great men
whose plans have net fully matured.
One learns nothing from ltlm; In only
impressed by the glitter In his ere.
Frem ethers eun gets the estimate that
the cost of looking into the hulk of the
Mutlmazercs, buried new under a hun
dred feet of t-nnd, would be no less
than 100,000. Mr. Mecray Is trying te
raise the money.
Remember, he is a Mecray and that
tt l April.
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street in their nlghteletb.es' whea Ire destroyed the Lincoln Republic Btaldlng
Chester, early today. The photograph was taken frees' the tower of St.,
.Michael's Church f. ' r
Rescued Frem Flames
" 'j,VW. r':
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BEATRICE SAUL
Twenty-two-aienth-old daeghter
of Mr. and Mrs. WIlUs Saul, who
was saved front the ire which de
stroyed the Lincoln Republic;
Building at Chester early today.
Slew Brunen,
Circus Man Say 8
Cratlaned ten Pan One '
de nnything, but he get me down 'te
where I had nothing.
Kept Lying te Wife
"We used te go out te Riverside al
most every, night and I kept lying te
my wife. I didn't want te de this and
I would keep bringing him back and
tell him net te de It. I guess wc haJ
been there twenty different times te de
tills job when I kept trying te get away
from it and things didn't work right
and it did come off then.
"He took me there the night before
it happened. He went te the ne.ie
with me that night. He left his cir
around at the same place at Cambridge
and wc walked up, Harry Mehr and
myself. Harry Mehr went te the back
deer and I was behind the barn. He
was trying te sec if Jehn wns there.
He was looking te see where lie was
in the house and I said 'Cem en
Harry, let's get back te town.' I coaxed
him away.
"He ha'd fin appointment in Phila
delphia te attend a meeting. Mehr and
I walked back te the car. We get in
and drove back te Camden. The gun
was still up In the garage in River
side. He hadn't been in my house
for n week before, lie had been busy
in Philadelphia. He would pick mu
up at the pose r.fice en Market t-trcet.
"On March 10. 1022, he met me be
tween a quarter after and twenty min
utes nftcr six near the pest etlitn en
Market street that is where we gener
elly met. As seen as I gut In tbc
car he turned around and drove tne
te Riverside. He stepped at the sta
tion this side of Riverside, toward
Camden.
"He told me that this is the last
night we will come together. He said
the gun was In the same place up
stairs ever the garage buck of Bruncn's
home. The gun was leaded and he,
told me where It wns. I went down
the read, walked straight en down. I
had my hat en nnd when I get te the
Uruiieii home I saw Jenn itruncn sit
ting at the window. He was reading
a paper. I went en In the garage,, went
upstairs, get the gun and came down.
I Idn't see any one else there. I
went ever te the window where Jehn
nen was sitting, r pulled the front
trigger. . ,
"Before I get out of the car he gave
me a bottle of whisky. 1 drank it
coming from Camden I drank it all. I
don't think it wns quite half a pint.
As seen as I shot Jehn Brunen I
turned nnd ran. I started te take my
gun nnnrt. I list a piece of it, The
two shells fell out when I pulled the
gun apart. One wus empty, one was
leaded. I don't knew whnt size shot
it was. but I knew it wns an awful
small shell that I bought. Harry Mehr
was with me when I bought them, but
he didn't go in the place.
Powell is a former empleye of the
hew. nnd has been living in New
Jersey for several months. His home
is nt in uoener street, wnere ms win
and an elgfi -months-old child Iv ;.
"irl3 I5f ? lr"j..!?"PaU -
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UU HUO wren i-i'i uncivil sin iiiu t u -
ncn show for five years as engineer, and
remained) as manager after Brunen's
murder.
Though Powell was charged formally
with the murder pnlv today, his r.vreit
really ioek Place April u ihmi. ie mi
was told of it at the time. He wa
Ne ene,
spirited away te the Mount Helly jail,
and has been there ever since en a nom
inal charge.
Powell Is'twenty-elght years old. In
recent months he has lived In Camden,
Moorestown and Mount Helly. His ar
rest was ordered by I'rosecuter Keisey
en evidence furnished by Ellis Parker,
Burlington County detective, who has
been' working against great odds en
the case ever since tbe murder eceurred.
' It was .revealed), for tbe first time,
fndsy that 'Powell wa picked up. pa
uaaprr street yaaata xToeper waning
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Cain and. Detective David Hunt, et
Camden
The detectives had learned that Pow
ell had gene te a Veterans' of Foreign
Wars meeting In Philadelphia, and
waited for him" until 1.80 o'clock In
the rooming. They arrested him as he
wns about te enter bis house, and put
him Inte "an automobile.' , '
Parker Kept, Arrest Secret ' I
Powell was immediately taken te
Mount Helly. Detective Parker guarded
the secret of the arrest se carefully that
no one suspected that' the man ledged
in the Mount Helly JalL might be
wanted in connection with the slaying
of "Honest Jehn.",
Mehr, who came and went .at will
after the murder, arranglng-te take the
circus out, en the read, for its spring
season, was arrested in Camden early
this morning by Detective Cain, Troop-'
er Baaing and udward a. Stene, under
sheriff of Burlington County.
Mehr was found nt his bearding
house et 0:30 o'clock.. He had net yet
get up" for the day. The detectives sent
up word they wanted, te see him, He
dressed .and came down, accompanied
ey tils wife,. Mrs. Bessie Mehr,
The detectives said they had a war
rant charging murder.
"Let me 'see It," demanded. Mrs.
Mehr. They read it te her. tt '
"Well,- it seems-te be in order; I
guess you'll have te de your duty,"
she said: '
Mehr merely remarked: "It's tee
bad you didn't serve this earlier. .It's
going te hurt the show." He submit
ted quietly te arrest. ' i
Mehr was taken te Mount Helly,
where he and Pewe'l; are being ques
tioned by Prosecutor Keisey and-Detec-'
tive,, Parker. Mehr ls-ledeed in the
cell. occupied by.-Frank James, wbe'was
electrocuted for the l'aul murder. ',
Beth men are formally charged with
the murder of Brunen, It h possible,
according te indications at -Mount
Helly, that there will be further ar-
rests before the day is ever. Detective
Parker would net discusn the case, but
it is understood that there are te be
some sensational developments in a few
hours. One arrest which Is anticipated
Is of a Camden County official.
Mrs. Brunen and her daughter, who
have been living in Philadelphia, went
te Camden nt 10.45 o'clock, and took
a trolley car for Mount Helly. v
The crime of which Powell nnd Mehr
are accused was one of the most sen
sational and mysterious that Detec
tive Parker, most netcd'Of New Jer
sey's murder detectives, ever has been
called upon -te solve.
Urunen, who had made a modest for
tune in the show business, .owned fa
comfortable home at Riverside, where
ne spent tne menins tnat the snow -was
in winter quarters. Ills wife, Deris,
and his daughter. Hazel, eighteen years
old, lived with him. Though he was
known as a "hard" man nnd a strict
disciplinarian in the show, it was net
believed that he had any deadly eno ene
mles. Wife Drawing Bath
On the night of March 10 Brunen
was sitting in the kitchen of h)e home.
reading, the evening newspaper. His
wife, according te the account she gave
me pence, was upstairs running water
for a bath for her husband. Seme one
crept up te the window, only two feet
from the, point where Brunen sat, nnd
fired .one barrel of a shotgun tnreugh
tbe glass, at point-blank range.
A heavy charge of BB shot en
tered the back of Brunen's head, kill
ing him instantly.'
Thirty Fleet e Street
in Fire at Chester
. ir,
Cnnrlmiea from Pan On .
clothing,' and overceatf .te cover these
who' had been forced te Dee without
clothes, se thut none.suffercd from ex
posure;'. ' '
' - Occupants, A wahened
The engines arrived in a few min
utes, and fire ladders vere erected In
case It wus necessary te teke uny of
tbe occupants down by ladder.
There was Intense excitement for a
few minutes, until the firemen assured
the occupants of the house that if they
hurried, every one, would be able te get
out without danger. There was little
time te dress. A few of the tenants'
were nble te put en some of their cloth
ins: ethers huddled theniNelveM in iIi-pkh.
Ing gowns and grubbed up their clothes,
nnn wnai eincr possessions tncy could
carry.
The halls and stairways were seen
filled with smoke, and the firemen were
forced te work fast. ,
c " h fi Z 'suffe In,' "E!
Gacv Har,iunrc Company, which was
I m,rn'cd out wltl, ,'ess yf V
. C-l-rence C. Ayre. upholstery steVed
,?.? "". ? and the French
Shen. owned by Mrs. Michael J. Cueev.
Firemen concentrated their efforts in
Sreventlng (lie spread of the blase,
parks found their way te Hie belfry of
St. Michael's Church und the new half-
riillMnli.flnllni Afniinnln fFmttln unu Jl.n
threatened. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Drg-
gins, .Mr. nnd Mrs.esepb nrewster.
Lewis Saul, manager of .Standard 'Beef
Company, and bis son' barely escaped
from the blazfng buildlna.
Fire Chief Allen Hlllegas arrived en
the fire ground with the first companies,
and speedily sent In a general alarm,
which brought tC fiye companies,. te the
fire. Tlje big' siren en top of City Hall,
which, hteught -all five companies. The
big sir os,teiot City Hall, which
Is usseVfer fire alarms; .shrieked and
wailedilintH every Wt MMiliestr was
,V- nvasrees ei.mmkbm get up
wmrTunm.i
tNlaia . the
i
nt vw
.
M
JW,iW.v
'ftflrV
'fr 1 V 4f y'&w jflj j ! . . ?&&
.WMWWP.WW irWMiTwr
JIL Ti ftlik "I
ISM
m
"VNV'
"Am
teWrrJ
s
r6ne& Dbiv
critic Clan
Ml,!
if
wstestiu&m
PiT
I AHOIRU ; wimm
Ki!b7
r!athttl
himi fair
m&vm
Isenampfdf.
hMW-lt-Jeha.::;
r larger was
irran, u
ter Pepper for. JuV
auaajm. t
errr vetefaad
pranueanim, as ;
tafnl camp-M
lower, or. therniif
hiatina around (
who hart heea
M v jobs" ebe-r
reri ne waa eauenV,
ke 8ente,vx '
r Mererriafetwi
causa
mm va.para
recemaiendM
nr.iin,f'lAnffiylM.
famous (nstitutlons'lerly6ur.State,''tB
sald,i your Stale) Capftel. It W
known fdV ether than' Its architectural
beauty. I found en .coming into your
city Business, blocks, breaking Inte the
kr lines. te take nf thnma nantlnv
en te the payroll:' These are evidences
of centralization. .'Yeu can erect sky-
crapera te taae career joenoiaers ei
the Old Guard, but the people in the end
must pay the fiddler ii
hen McSparra
becomes Get-,
b will make'-some ei
official
ra render Jt' return hv
renting'
them and net uslng.them te house 'of-
ncenoieers." .- .-
. Mr. Cox. indicated plainly that the
next national enmnahm will be waved
with Newberry, the League of Nations
and the last. Congress, as the big issues.
it Cox warmed up as he scored -the al
leged iniquities of the Harding '"Ad
ministration'. . In aflrmfng his league
principles, he declared: "My convic
tions nre na trlnmnhanf thav n
the night the polls closed." , "
Mrs. Clarence Renahaw. nt Pitfa.
burgh, Democratic State woman chair-
?an. Wjne preceded pox, Has a new ver
On of the "runtn" nesitlnn ntt th'n
Legislature. 'Democrats charged that
wnen wpeaiser gejuhgler Was .ousted.
einie policemen stqea en' guard nreund
the rostrum in the hall of the Heuse.
ifB' W"Mnaw, however, new .knows
Republican, woman "whn haw Mm
mounted policemen' riding up and down
In front ,of the Capitel steps, guard
ing it from without while' no 6ne was
allowed te enter or leave." The State
chairwoman expressed the hope of Dem
ocrats when 'she said of Gilferd Pin Pin
chet: "Wc will like him better if be is
defeated.''
BULK OF VWG.HUEY ESTATE
LEFT BY WILL TO DAUGHTER
Charities Here and Elsewhere 'Ben-
.. '.,efl Vnder 'Previsions' J". " .
Charities Wy this; tyty. and elsewhere
were named as benclclarles in the"will.
probated at 'Norristown tedaj, jf Wll
fiam'Gl Huey, one-time president' of the
ruiiadeiphia HtocKiiSxcnange and for-1
merly n Councilman in this. city. He
died several days" age at bis home in
Cynwyd.
After making several 'small bequests,
Mr. Huey gave Mary Huey, his daugh
ter, a life Interest in -his $80,000 es
tate. If she dies without children, the
estate Is te go te the Philadelphia
Yearly Meeting of Friends at jriftcenlb
and Race streets.
The retired bunker and broker be
queathed .$100 euch te the Children's
Seashore Heuse. Atlantic City; Rush
Hospital. Philadelphia; the Old
Women's and Men's home in the
Fifteenth Ward, this, city, and te the
,Tcmpernry Heme for -Women, Sixth
and Uuttonweod streets. .
The Pennsylvania Society for In
surances en Lives and Granting Annui
ties Is named executer.
FAIR, THEN RAIN, NEXT WEEK
Forecaster Attaches String te Cheer
ful Prognostication
Washington, April 20. (By A. P.)
Weather outlook for the week be
ginning Monday :. -
"Atlantic and Gulf States, Ohie
Valley nnd Tennessee, region of Great
Lakes Generally fair and normal tem
perature, but with a probability of un
settled weather and local ralnn latter
part.
Deaths Fall Off Irt Week
There were 462 deaths in the city
in the week which ended yesterday, ac
cording te the division pf vital statistics
of the Iiureuu of Health. This number
it thirty-eight lees than the total
deaths the week previous", and feet teen
less than the number reported in the
week ending AprlL 20. 1921. There,
were only three iicuiiih mis wcck from
influenza, und the some number from
filnlitlieria. There was a biff decline In
the deaths from pneumonia und only
four from; scarlet fever.
. Dies Frem Burns
Walter Laglin, who whs wilmislj
hiirned Thursday morning while light
ing u fire in his apartment, 1010 East
Huntingdon street, uiea lusunigiit at
10:30 o'clock In the Episcopal Hos Hes
nltnl as a result of his Injuries. The
body was sent te (hu morgue this
morning. ,,
DKATIIH
JIKKH. Suddenly April 21, MARY a.,
dsuctittr of the Inte Heliuitlmi and Macda
lena llvr. nelatlveii nnd friend, nle mem
ber of ithj"Jl"lK Family, AHnr and nmary
SAO A. M.. from. Iter inte ruildenct, 1HU W.
Diamond m. peiemn requum mam at St.
Benlfaea Church. 10 A. M. Interment Jtent
Helv Kedeemer Cemetery.
kELLY Suddenly. April 2. 8AMUKL.
JiUibanil of Elisabeth Kelly, nclntlver nnd
frltn'H .ile Hely Nm Beclcty, Church of
the Visitatien: St. Michael's T. A. .. In
vited te junnrsl Menfay. S 80 A. M. from
hia lata residence. BSD K. Caml'rln at. Un.
A. M. interment IlQlyHenulchreCeineterj.
KID1. April 286EOllUK W.. husband
et Kmlly Kldd .nscd US. Uelmlves nnd
friend Invltad te funerel Tuesday, a j ji
from hla late resldraca, Xilahep ave. north
of KalUmore eve.. Cliften Ilelibti, l'a. In.
tarment Arllnalen Cemetery.
RKAI. EHTATB TOB BALB CITY
2811 W. I.KHIOH AVi:. A property en u
cemlna-hualneea atreet; worth Investigation
' KEAf. KHTATE FOB BKXT CITY
VUllNrVn-'e fir rent. Junel: s roema and
lath1airardBtaU.Oreien eaiaJ.
AFABTMENTB AKDMOBK
bTOHKH, npt., 35 te tl-.l; carave; lurct
market houiie. ll-gkergs'w.1 LancaaiVr.
LOST AND rOUNI)
between llpial ana Pelham rd.. black law.
li.tlnn. uKavimMit MIM i-LJ-......." ""."
iwvi MvsiiiiiiviMiwftw vvssHllV(VIl saVV.
MtJhtny
'$,'
cwparnuiv -Ijex
nMM rt;farmcrV?attrt
"T."V ,rf" . - wr
Jl.fff. y.iirkJ' tfl&kM
&m&&
M
&&mfflm
fj&Mm:
PN' VOTERS
D,UP BUSINESS
Mrt
Thai execBUftraaailciivet tueauenai
HSUMBStti VeW- Lild, kfaai
sientaday.'jit'' thej purpose of winding
up4besJusii4Mf fe'tbe nnuualv,cei)yen-;
non or tne league, wnicn virmaiiy euu.
ed .with the mass-meeting last night in
Washington.' . .-Meet ,et the delegates re
mained there ter-a reception by the
PresidentandSMra. Harding at the
White Heuse this afternoon. , , ,
.Announcement of the meeting Iplact
for 'nurfc rpar'a . convention was -te "be
made by 'the sxecu tive council at the
conclusion v el , its,: session-. The Jndl-
Sna delegates1 expressed confidence that
ley would capture it for Yet Baden
BIDS FORM MORE "L" CARS
Must Ba Delivered Twe1 Weeks Be-
,.fera Frahkferd Lln'e Opens.
Bids for fifty additional cart te be
run en the Frankford '"Ij" were adver
tised for today by Director Twining,
i The bids submitted will be opened
May 23, and'the contracts will be. Jet
...Itl t.A .jMlafAti flinf 4lin -iMiraZ-nn
furnished net later kthan October. 25,
which is two eeks before the date, set
for the opening of the "L," Nerein
ber 5. ' ' .
The city has already purchased ntty
cars. , , - .
v Director Twining said he would seen
advertise for bids for "cleaning up tbe
odds nnd ends" of the work en the line.
Deaths of a Day
ISAAC N. HAINES
Aged
West Chester Resident
Dies
After Brief Illness
ivt rheatar. Anrll 20. Isaac .N.
, a
Haines, eighty-nine years old, one of
the best-Known emer resieenis et ucit
Chester, died yesterday at bis home en
North High street. Ha! wesw taken ill
en Saturday ref lest week. He was a
member of the Society of, Friends,. Fer
yeirs heJiad been a member et the
local Beard, of Health. , Mr.v Haines
for forty years conducted a coal yard
en East, Union street, but had been
retired for. some time. He was born
at Mast, Lancaster County, 'and at
various times was n farmer and .coal
nnd lumber dealer.
He married Ruth Esther Dickinsen,
of Christiana, who died December IS,
1011, leaving him five children: Jeseph,
who Is agent for the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company nnd, the, American
Ernresa Cemnnny In Rochester. N. Y. :
Edgar S., at'Oak Park, 111. ; Dr. Harry
I., in Centcsville: Mary S. and Sara
L., at -home. There are six grand
children; three sisters also arc living.
Themas Chamberlln
Themas' Chamberlln. eighty-four
years old, of 21NEast Spring street,,
Aramerc, veteran et tne uivn war,
died Thursday, at hla home. He had
been in failing health some weeks,
Mr. Chamberlln lest' his right leg in
the buttle of the Wilderness while serv
ing his second enlistment. He joined
Company B. of the Seventy.-ninth Penn
sylvania Volunteers, in September,
1801. and re-enlisted in February, 1804,
at Chattanooga. ,
Funeral services will be held Monday
afternoon nt the home of James Sura
mers, 21 East -Spring avenue, Ard Ard
mere. Mr. Chamberlln was net mar
ried. '
Sergeant Geerge Eldredge
Sergeant Geerge Eldredge, for eight
een years attached te the Falrmeunt
Pnrk guards, died suddenly in the Jef Jef
fereon Hospital Wednesday, following
an operation. Eldredge was forty-nine
years old nn'd lived at 0232 Bulst ave
nue, with his wife, Meta A. Eldredge,
ami his two children, Geerge H., Jr.,
and Eleise. 'Fer many years Sergeant
Eldredge wus,. prominent in, politics jn
the Twenty-fourth Ward, and was
committeeman of the eighth division.
He wns tbc son of Mary Marshall and
Jeremiah Eldrtdge, of Cape May. Ne
arrangements have been made as yet
for the funeral.
Mrs. Gertrude Knell
Mrs. Gertrude Knell, widow of Gus
tac Knell., who died Thursday at her
home, 482 Lyceum nvenue, Roxbnreugh',
will be buried Monday in St. Mary's
Cemetery Mrs. Knell was eighty-foul
years old. and had been a widow since
1800. She was born In (icrmnnv'nmi
enme here when nine jears old. settlltit;
in mmiuyuim. rjin: 11 survived 0) jour !
sons, uircn aaugnters, twenty-ciciil
grandchildren" and eight great-grand-chljdrcn.'
Mrs. Sara A. Hartzler
Harrlsburg. Anrll 20. Mrs. Run. 'a
Hartzler. seventy -air tenrs nlil. wirfew
of Bishop II. B. Hartzler, etlhe United
Evangelical unurcii uied.atMltheme,at
Washington Heights, nsBr-BsaSsreater.
day, Mrs. HrfjgcrvMeW3f the
founders of the WQMMjal'MJsiaenarv
Society of thut denomination; ;Vi,
yq
v$h
.11
V7Eaxwf&
tlttlii rtm i rf-t'tfiM il
immm
mm
The Department of Stationary
-S vi , fi
jk'
.executes
redding and ether
by the traditional
assuring superior results.
f
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aiaawiia m Miiaui -
nSM,
Mr ,.(i
a
rAUaaW,
iiiyi"v-r.-'B
TVTU-"?aA
RifinJifjim..
M
i. attorney tay,
Njte,00o,ifjefj;
Is worth amYth
em,Wfjraglil
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MUU' w
'"WTtieir
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ttey'eirrde-J
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Vi'Wli
W'MSMhnHmtWJl.
FCTMl
iWJisisrja
isVBlai4iti4it
authpHtlesftel5sari?rr
m aiieteate ; havai.Bf:rrM,u': i:
the. 8eetev-cMlrKfy, ,He has 'dl!i3
appeared.' ;H H, V , " w
:.MlM Elsie BUvena, weU-knen v '.';
tli;;J.ph A. ft
frere.Vthe autberltieacharae
On-'arrlvWbere.Pthe entlrei
registered,t;JlltMOrey'.wrV
im
Hh ml.t.f.A 1. Xrt.-.TJ11 iit' tBl
a room
caiiea eaw nerr irewentir.I Hetel Mu?
taches With therdJspsrlty'ln'thc rVriJI.
tered-namearin mlndeiected.thetn frean
the b6Wi VMrs. Bidley insisted 'taatfl
51, FIRES IN, 48 HOURS:;
m
riremen-uaiiea-Te nsmeye ax r-reaj:
Trae Yfjn Ojilyf.Mahi'lejw: Alarm S
yuite -n receru.naa oecn rcstaeiisuea
by .the flrc-fightinjp'forcea.'ef' theielty,!
nf fire dnrtriv tlinlfertv-elirhb.limrniUt!
who nave resiwuueu iu uiiy-enc-niarmar
liia at 8 o'clock this moraine Of, these''
thirty-five were nlarms'frem bekcrianaj
sixteen. weroiecaiinresi 'v.7v
Thin nl(1m(r nf firptt a?nrhiinlletasa .
with the four-alarm bllke iif the' plasty
or tne Jute jriDer uentainer uempiay,-
in Manayunk, Thursday'-'hoen" dang
the course of whlch'seyeral firemen Wertl
injured. This firen entdlled letfc'efjl
$500,000 It wnssfollewid'bj-anotbw'l
fire caused by nri , explosion In the.hQBMll
of William Jdmctts1820 8euthhYt
street'. Three-year-eld jIelinIdmeltfj
was burned Ue'desthfln this blaze! Ab3
ether fire whlcli 'endangered th lyes.tf
-LuirtT vuuiia. jiuiucn.,u,iui iuuiuihi.m
EllubeW AbMnM-ariByblffBulIM
narrow .cafcape lii tWS flrc.tt.i .-f,l
. .Of tf.e fty-eiie alHespen(le4'i
By ine nre miii,en odd, ie- ubixu, miu
malicious. , This .was a. local, bexV freer:
1814 Seuth Seventeenth, street. ,.('
firemen loeklpg for the blaze feuad l
W1IU1JT CAUiru nuumii miuv nuiuiiin t
that' she bad sent 'for them te take's),
cat down "from a tree -located -m front
of her home. ' . . . ?, fy
Three PrlsenersVreak, i
viuuneeravurz, aJa.1")' -r-"'Vi
A. I'.i ttscapcfei. inretf .prireue",,,
from the Franklin' County Jail wu dliv
7 .
ceverca teuay ey eucriu jibjv. -,m,ubj,
1 .. L L.I 1IC -'- fPUMl
-rii
tugitives are rranic- jxjcpeuuui, ,am
Diven tripef snnlenenl for u-lfe'dnMr
n1M
:
tien, and Samuel Shockey, cemiutN,9
Ml ,i'illaa . lawUnwl A fmirtll tpll
ener. Euaene Roberts.! wns--feund 0 -II
lm vrntuiil heneath . the .tlilrd-atefl'
window with n broken hip. ,Tlieriid
eners-Had made a rope off blankets, te m
reach the ground from tbe third, fleer m
Roberts fell and' was, injured whea.lht.BJ
blanket rope camesupart. t tf$
Perahlne Ave. Calebratea'Annexat Qfl
ThO residents of Pershing nvertudjillM
give n reception inUho'CelllngdaleTiw''
Heuse tonight'. InL celebration ef'tntifM
nniwullnn r Villi AmAntn lUll-nUffB.fSB
Pershing avenue was1ormcrla'p4rt.ef;
Upper Darby. J t ;t , " ' .,t$fti
Yerk Readr 10th aniT .,
Luzerne Circus Grounds,
Oa.We.k,
.arliil
Starting
Monday,
MmmmmmmK.tWm
I e1 pa H K ajPJB!rP4w
BBT r el.BBj .iBSk BBBWifll
1 .1
CPBUMavat
nmyS STi
BsQ&m
P00DUSHANN
With tm (wmeui mmm
f rim- A -
trt Paras Manfar, tfliSe.fV
SEATS ON SALE LIT MOJUl
CORNER 7TH ft FIU6RT i
BfaiijBjaMBaaaaavaM mmmm
social tl;ienery '
hand methed-r vt,
mum
,WJBeei,i
crieftt)
wi j inn laiaiui
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MrsanKellaMisatev
kone.'JaMeI.Wesitviciinia ef.the 'te
aB r -aiuu ,i .iiv-bk- r niFripain Jtjami m
, V Vsw"" Bl
im
iana- pegaq w oevete-'ConsiaertMe flasl
te Mrs; Dswls, Without Waramg.'ttea
a.aw4a bb ie. i xMiuit:jr,.UEII
neAr7 that, of hierkhl1sbaijd,,rl
neiana espiain-.eruienr'tnat sue vyta
ms wue.- -lie 'refused.), "Hhc '.had 'bbaBl
fcrrested.r .' V ' .' ''M
, That ,brei;e- V-frjfoufe -? t M
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