mn z?&tz&$mamm X'f, WmkWmWn't T r " v fjVV- g& . - vwwmwwm , ,.i T i.i'li - i m.im.m i i j tfTT' A fTST TlTTf A Cf A fM"TT"P A TT" TTT"VTTj O "IllO r- - fv V1 " EVENING PUBLIC EDGER-PHIIlAPELPHtA, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1922 HI MiM pe by alii Lwilble for Himself and Wife Tm. a r.rA Tower Over fer... . ? j e.ut Ta ecrram lMWWKcnu'w ' MEET NOMINEE HERE General Alter hns declined ! lirauLD i ,. 1.5 IIIAVTIPV 11.""" - . i . S- Ju-iMn nf Glfferd Plncnet te go rs i-.'S'Ji: flu,, home, r Kh 'would be gld te make P STJ&2E that the candidate hns in ,-..- Barclay H. Wnr- iSSi of tl.i city, and Mr. una bus. KShiniten Scrnnten, weracr.'H l'ln SffleM" Scranton. will be among &Ett at the Tlnchet home nt M I- Zi hxtay. Ceunciirann wipei. "J?1!!. Pinnhnt ramnnten In this m..." .. ul ..n.. tlie visitors. LS "Cun. rl-nBduU day in hlsrt im 'restr rdy. There were no guest. K day ended tat ntaht with a ?,..W'l3 unHMI h Ills tOWnS- '!: ..(,..! rtend'blV te witness ft, irtdaatien exercises of the Mllferd . OaIiami hiir nn n iuuilul l inv.-i JJK of them went te de honor te their Mr Plnchet was the commencement HMker After the exercises there was I wnernl handshaking, nml virtually "A. n.nnhiic.nn In thp Mllferd voting Aitriet was en hnnd, nnd even the one BIB lVnO TOieU ler iXI is DUDiti;iv.u f kivlM been present, ail. thirteen crnduittes were first firm oppertunltv te tell hew thev Uuajlt the world ought te be run, and ike candidate finve thp hey nnd jjlrls m of his characteristic mnn-te-mnn jilks, emphasizing that one should first 1HT an lae.ll nnil men K unswerving? M te lt attainment. He told the class of personal rein HMuwith sucre.fiil men of the cenn- try and their own explaintleiiR for their lOCOTSe?. tic teiu rnem uruius muni' :et tlum nowhere witneut ennrncter te irk them. Mr. Plnchet still maintains silence ns te the leiectlen of n chairman for the Stite Committee, which will ergnnixc nt I meetinr here next Saturday. i Jeseph It. (trtimly, in ills light for Control of the committee, hns ngnin fhansed his plans, this time trotting out Irerwentative Aaren Hess, of I.nnens- ttr. as llie "best pessmie mm ler the ckiirmanship. Mr. Hess throuirheut his lezM-.tlvn ttrter has been n Grundy lieutenant. If le actually enters the tleld ler the rtllrmanship he will be In ePP"Mtlrn te V?, W. Oriest. of Lancaster, who lined tp that county in the I'iuchet column it the primary. Mr. driest, It is snld, will stand with tie nominee en the must Ien of the dulrmmshlp, although thece who nre licking W. Harry linker for the pest Mr tnit Wriest favor. Halter. It Is said Grundr. werklnc with the Geerre Oliver interests of I'lttxburffh. decided te put Hess In the field tit con ferences here. Mr, Grundy nnd Mr. Oliver and ether Stlte leaders were in cenferencn mnnv leurs bre this week. The meetings were lecrct and held en beard the yacht yf Colonel James Klversen, Jr., en the Delivare. It fcai been learned that the head of tie Pennsylvania Manufacturers' Asso Asse Asso tiitlea la seeking te enlist the aid of lerretiry Mellen in the ihairnv 'iln .Mr. Grundy enlled en Mr. Mei.uu nt tte. Treasury yesterday, but.whuteviT it VIS they talked nhnne. Iin nuliL.nl lv ade little progress. At thci com-luslen M conference the Secretary said that 'Mr. Grundy came down te interest me la a certain matter," but he would net fr hat the "matter" was. Mr. Cru-dy refused te reveal the nature of M business. If, "IT'S TOO QUIETI CAN'T HEAR YOU!" mmX 'M&mmmmmmmWmmMm Mjf FammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmMfmmmmmmmmWm :iM SALOONMAN SHOT BY BOOTLEGGERS Jehn Dunn, Proprietor at Fifty sixth and Market Streets, In Serious Condition OWN GUN ' MISSES FIRE That's what Janes J. A. Meran (left) is saying te A. Livingston Allan (right) In tbelr airplane at Atlantic City, where they have gene for a "quiet chat." Meran, a meter expert, lest his hearing in the war, but strarfgely enough can hear the slightest whisper when he Is surrounded Djr the rear or his beloved meters DEAF MAN NEEDS CLA TTER OF BOILER FACTORY TO HEAR War Victim Overcomes Handicap When Airplane Meters Sputter Ferth Ear-Splitting Rears and He Detects Lewest Whisper 88 AWARDED DIPLOMAS ! W. T. Ellis Is Speaker at Wan- amaker Institute The best patriots are t'.iuse who bullrl n the Industrial nml intMinot,,ei trcngth of America. This statement was made by Dr. Wil- S. Institute of Industries nt their Bill werc"-'s In Witherspoon BmS'1 nmbiel- a m,niber of the HlTrut',ccs. Pded. In hia roductery remarks he save credit for i7i.S2s.Bn,M t0 t'"' training that received In the Institute forty years "Parden me, but will you step Inte thin boiler factory. I cnt hear veu." This Invitation might under ordinary drcumstarccs be considered just grounds for suspicion of its nuther's sanity, but it is quite another thtng when tendered by James J, A. Meran, of 1834 Ingcrsel! street. ' James Is deaf an a pest with one exception. Let him get his ear snug gled down close against the exhaust of a twelve-cylinder Liberty Moter bitting en all twelve, nnd he can hear the veriest whisper you may utter. Yes, It Is true, tee. James lest his hearing in the war. He was an expert en meters, nnd his job was te test out the big Liberty's and Rolls-Reyce Englcn that propelled the combat and observation planes ever the front. Fer ten, fifteen and often twenty hours a day, when the fighting was stiff, James would work in the hangars, tuning up the big meters, and listening with cspert cur for the minute sub-sounds that indicate trou ble within. All that time, for four and a half years nt L'Orly-Sur-Selne, his ear drums were assaulted continuously by the rear or the meters, which rivaled the guns themselves In loudness. His ear became se attuned te catch the slightest dissonance in the fiendish symphony that he could detect incipient flaws long before they became danger ous, thus saving many lives. Meran is net mucii en conversation, because he cannot hear whnt one nays when things are quiet, and when things arc net, one cannot bear what he says, which evens matters up. However, A. Livingston Allan, chief pilot and gen eral manager of the airdrome, who him self beasts a long nnd varied record in the American nnd British air services, nets as his Interpreter. "Jimmy can hear perfectly well when the meters ure running," said Mr. Allnn. "Even when your back Is turned te him, he can hear what you say in the midst of nil thnt racket. Hut the moment we cut them off, he becei-s deaf ngaln. "Sometimes," he continued, suiting the action te the word, "if you put your mouth te his enr nnd shout ns loud as you can HEY, JIMMY, CAN YOU HEAR THIS?" Jimmy smiled vaguely and shook his bead. He had heard nothing. "Every day I take him up for about half an hour, en the chance that It will Improve him In some wny," Mr. Allan HnlH. "Straneer things have happened. "A rhlld I took un lust the ether day spoke for the first time In his life after the flight. Well, I hope some thing f the sort may happen here." Inside, in the meter-room, Mernn was mere at home. Over in one cor ner a big Hispanie-Suiza was belching brown smoke nmid a rear of staccato explosions. With his bead close against Its valve-reds, Jimmy carried en his peculiar conversation, listening te the low -toned remarks nddressed te him, and shouting back his answers. "Number two is gummed up," he called, after listening for a moment with his enr close agnlnst the het black cylinder wall. "I can bear it plain as day." ONL Y LIVING SON OF 1 776 HERO FOUND IN PITMAN, N.J. LOOTS STORE SAFE BY TOUCH SYSTCWI Expert Gets $500 and $800 in Gems Frem Place at 21st and Market Streets NAB EMPLOYE ON SUSPICION e. With .1, ... Iew7rf ,. '"''""" "i niiiiresslns a fe -lowcratemnn he presented the $10 geld B f uZlTa PpLucu- the 6i''ate ,,"''"! with the highest Cec,Sb.,i'u1.r!szc.li"ewn as tbe TURFMAN LOSES HIS SUIT Jy Upheld. Res. $50,000 Alienation Proceedings JttS?V?y--Jun -(" A P) t?rt2;.Dfck'. 5ayKH3S!s r me verdict thnt T """""'"ly nrcrKfv, hin I -.- u jiv "nie, ' wife, and J2Z AT MARY'S PARTY 'AmJUrAb0UtH"''H' iteWS"!!' If?,1"1 hit nt t?i en-tep which m at ttiVLS1., Princess Marv' fle The ii... ,Q "ouse last nlhe rat w? ? m Ulles. ,,er husband, Viscount !kAHL members of l"!taiu of Jh.i."'. breeehes with feasr-- l"!int of the guests. ""' A thief with n velvet touch, evidently working nlone, opened a safe in the fruit store of M. A. Merlane, 2102 2104 Market street, during the night and stele $500 in cash mid three dia mond stickpins worth $S0O. The neatnesH nnd care with' which the job was done lend the police te believe It was the werK of an expert linger -touch robber familiar with the mech anism of nil kinds of safes. Net n thing Inside the 6nfc or the office wa6 disturbed. The robber seemed te knew where te get the money quickly. He took only that which wns In bundles and left some crumpled bills. Thnt the job wns the work of one man is shown by footprints. It was evident, tee, that the robber tried te efface that clue, as be took long and few steps once he get Inside. Entrance was gained by cutting u huinll pane of glnps In a rear room. The thorough finesse with which the man worked was further indicated by no sign of broken glass being left near tbe spot where he forced entrance. The robber evidently went te the store in a taxi. Tracks of nn auto were found near the window. Twe diamond pins were left behind by the intruder. .lut-t why Is u matter of mystery. Philip Merlane, son of the proprietor, bald he locked the &afe at 8 o'clock last nlght.( Elmer McDonald, an empleye of the Merlane establishment, who lives nt Tenth and Wuverly streets, was today nrrcsted en suspicion of being connected with the robbery. FINO IP. COURTNEY, EX-ATHLETE, SLAIN Fermer Villanova Man and Army Flier Shet at West West pert, Conn. HEARD IN ALTERCATION FIND COSTANZO'S NEPHEW Kin of Man Sought In Conduit Mur der Being Brought Frem Trenten Raphael Costauze, seventeen years old, the nephew of Chnrles Costanze, whom the police nre Reeking In con nection with the murder of his wife, Mrs. Millie Costanze, whose body was found in a conduit manhe'e in Oermnn Oermnn tewn, was located today In Trenten and will be brought back te this city. The youth, who believed he was Cos Ces Cos tanze's son, wns taken in charge by the police after Costanze and his wife dis appeared, and was put en the farm of Gcerge 11. Edwards, Krewstewn read and Rhawn street, jrrnnktera. lie ais appeared a few dnys Inter nnd, the po lice believe, stele some money that had been the property et a farm band who died. Mayer and 8myth Attend Dinner Mayer Moere and City Solicitor Smyth left today for the Wcllwoed Country Club at Charleatewn, Md., by meter te attend a dinner te be given tonight in honor of former Speaker Cannen and Senater David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. They will return Monday. Captain Jeseph P. Courtney, revenue agent nnd former army filer, who is re membered here as n football plny.er at Villanova College, wns murdered mys teriously nt Westport, Conn. Courtney's body, with two holes bnck of the left car, was found en a rail road track yesterday. Courtney was heard nrgutng with u group of foreign ers Thursday night. Tbu body had been run ever by A train nnd was badly mangled. The wounds in the back of tlisj head, pohsl pehsl bly bullet wounds, led le the belief the former filer wns murdered nnd his body placed en the tracks te avert sus picion. Identification was mnde by Vernen finilfrev. n railrenil detective, who knew Courtney personally, and had served under mm in trance. M.ne oeuy wns almost unrecognizable, but letters es tablished the Identity. The slain mnn played ns substitute en the Villanova football team in 1007 nnd 1003. Ue was nt the cellege one year, nnd formerly attended Hely Cress College. ... Courtney served overseas during the wnr In the American Flying Cerps, He waH credited with bringing down two German plnnes. He served ns football coach for Dartmouth, Hates nnd Muhlenberg Col Cel leges. lie also was assistant coach for the Bosten College team. Courtney was thirty-four years old, was a lawyer and special ugent in the Internal Revenue Bureau. He was un married nnd lived nt Bloomfield, N. J., with his mother. Mrs. Helen M. Court ney, nnd a brother and sister. Members of the family have told Westport police that Courtney W9 carrying about $700 In cash, a watch nnd n diamond -htudded fob. Only $2 wns found en the body. PRESENT BRICK FUND Children Give Annual Gift te Bishop Rhlnelnnder The Tenth Annual Presentation Service of the Bishop's Brick Fund was held this nfternoen at tbe Church of St. Mnrtln's-in-the-Field, CbeBtnut Hill. Hundreds of children of tbe Pro testant Episcopal diocese of Penn sylvania presented their contributions te Bishop Rhenelnnder and thus be came sharers in the work of building new churches throughout the diocese, and et aiding home missions. The fund has been In existence for ten years, since the first year of Bishop Rhinelandcr's episcopate. Each ten cents donated means one brick. Rev. Gilbert Pember. et St. Michael's Church, German town, Is chairman. Moscow Artists te Play In U. 8. Moscow, June 3, Nikolai Humiant- Twe bootleggers shot down a saloon keeper who refused te deal with them early last night and escaped in an automobile before any one In the saloon could Interfere. The man shot is Jehn Dunn, whose place Is nt the southeast corner of Fifty-sixth and Market streets. He in fifty years old and the father of five children. At the Misericerdla Hos pital it is said his chances for recovery are geed, although he has a bullet tnreugn nis rignt lung ana nnetner id his side. Dunn wns standing behind the bar, talking with three customers, when two mere men entered the saloon and saun tered toward the far nd of tbe room. They leaned ngnlnst the bnr and motioned for Dunn. He walked toward them, and the three engaged in earnest conversation. In the saloon was Beb Shelden, a negre empleye who does odd jobs about the place. He was working near the deer. Suddenly, as the argument between the saloonkeeper and tne twp men be came mere heated, one of the men drew a revolver and fired neintblank across the' bar at him. The bullet struck him in the side, Dunn renched beneath the bnr for his own gun, and both men pulled the trigger at about the same time. Dunn's weapon missed fire, and a bullet from the bootlegger's gun plowed through bis lung. He fell in a heap behind the bnr. Meanwhile the two bootleggers covered the cus tomers and Deb, an they retreated te the deer. Then they turned, ran te a waiting automobile and drove rapidly out Market street. Dunn was taken te the hospital, and for a long time was tee weak te make any statement. All he could murmur was "Ask Beb about. Beb can tell you." Lieutenant Duffy, of the Fifty fifth nnd Pine streets station, and Magistrate Dugan nt once instituted a sesrch for Beb, but he had escaped. Dunn became stronger today and gave a statemeht te the police. "These men came into the saloon," he said, "and called me toward the end of the room. They were selling liquor nnd offered me a quantity. I refused te buy any from them and they tried te persuade me. "I still refused, and the argument became heated. I still refused, and finally one of the men, the one wearing 1 a cap, drew n gun and snot me. Tbe j ether man also drew a gun, and I reached ler mine, out tbe cartridge failed te explode, and tbe man who hnd fired first Bbet agnin. Thnt is all I can remember." Dunn waB held up and robbed of $20 six months age. Twe men accused of tbe robbery, William Jehnsen, alias Dregan, of Fifty-second street near Baltimore avenue, who was arrested, charged with the offense, was due for trial next Monday. There have nlrendy been several postponements of the case. CHESTNUT ST. TO KEEP UP FIGHT ON PARKING LAW Association Expects Hall te Lead Battle en Fleer of Council In approving the new traffic measure providing for one hour parking in the central part of the city the Traffic Com mittee of Council virtually ignored the petition signed by almost all the promi nent business men en Chestnut street between Eighth nnd Eighteenth streeta, Klwoed B. Chapman, president of the Chestnut Street Business Men's As sociation, snld today. . "They paid no mere attention te our pi en for relief." snld Mr. Chapman, "than they would te that of se many peanut venders. "This new ordinance gees back six jears in the matter of prohibition ei parking. Restrictions were bet in 1010 nnd improved upon two years nge. We had means of obtaining relief then, but new, with the parking restrictions practically lifted, we are pewcrlcts. "We will renew our plea for the no parking rule nml we see hope in the premise of Councilman Hall that he will move te amend the erdinnnce te prohibit all pnrking en Chestnut htreet." GIRLS WHO MADE0WN DRESSES GRADUATED "All of Them Medel Housekeepers," 8ays Continuation Scheel Head "And every one of them is a model little housekeeper!" Thnt stntement was made yesterday by Miss Lilian II. du Bels, principal of the Holllngswer1! Continuation Scheel, at Bread aim Locust streets, as a long line of dnintily clnd girls, In dresses which they had made, appeared before n large audience at the closing exercises. The girls, among the thousands In the city who have left school te go work, have been attending the Ilollingswerth Scheel en? day a week, taking courses In domestic science and domestic art. The commencement program included addresses te the girls and musical se lections. The "Pnrade of Dresses" wen hearty applause. rob"charlten yarnall Pickpocket Get His Winnings en Herse in English Derby Charlton Yarnall, a raember of n prominent Philadelphia family, is mourning the less of u big wnd of money thnt he wen by beating the bookies en Derby Day in England. Yarnall had n nice bet en the Derby winner aud was congratulating him self en his luck as he joined the promenade. .... A few minutes Inter he felt for his wallet and it was gene. A pickpocket had gotten it. Mr. Yarnall is en his way home aboard the Aquttanla. Other pas sengers aboard the Cunarder include Alma Gluck. Rebert Hllllard, Charles R. Crane, Mrs. E. C. Chadbourne, Mrs. Deles A. Blodgett, 3d, and Miss Marlen Blodgett. David C. Montgomery, 92, Is Passing Twilight of Leng Life en Little Farm Daughter Only Companion of Aged Man Who Cannet Re call Bygone Days Se far nn In known, the enlv livlne child of a Revolutionary fighter Is one David O. Montgomery, new living in nn obscure corner of Pitman, K. .7. This distinction is mere or less a secret from the townspeople, by virtue of the senility wliL'li is at Inst settling ever His unusuni faculties ana the reti cence et his only living child, Mis, Ida I'leasanten, whose life is new spent in caring ter him. Old as Cap'n Montgomery Is new, nnd as irresponsible, even te the slinplp tnsk of refilling his own pipe, there la In his nspect every suggestion of the pioneer nnd none whatever of the metropolitan. Fer as long as there nre records of the history of the Atnericnn Montgemerys, It Is a story of unremitting bnttlc against nature against land nnd wnter. Family Came Frem Scotland The legend which has come down, almost altogether by word of mouth, is that in the middle of the eighteenth century the veunser anne of Castle Montgomery in the Scotch Highland emigrated te the colenics. Their namcH were Jeseph, Alexander, Rebert nnd William Montgomery. The latter Net tled In the New Jersey forests near what Is new the town of Uridgcten. What became of the ethers is net known, though lntely there has grown reason te believe that Alexander Mont gomery is the one of the same name who acquired a property In Brooklyn and .whose heirs are sought. At Jutt whnt time and why, William Montgomery chose te threw his let with the Revolutionaries, and wny lie, a Highlander, went te sea en a privateer Instead of into the army thern nre no means of knowing. It is known that In 1776 he wan a seams n aboard the sleep of war Wasp, one of the fleet of Comreedoro Hepkins that nttnrked the British fleet of Lord Dunmore in the Cnesapeak. Was Imprisoned by British This, it should be remembered, was net the brlgantine WaBp whose engage ment with the Frolic made n brilliant page in American naval history. This Wasn was nt one time taken by the British, and Montgomery with it. lie was Inter imprisoned in the fortress at St. Jehn's. N. B., nnd brutally treated. His wounds were allowed te suppurate and though at length they healed, he was left lame for the remainder of his life. However, he was a man of re markable hardiness. After the war Montgomery returned te New Jersey, married once, twice, three times maybe eftcner. He worked the land. At the age of sixty-nine he took te himself still another wife, n Mistress Clark, the daughter of farm t mytUIKrmmuW '' ' aVwunLaH ' V RECORDS TORN ROM DIER BOOK Criminal Laws Were Frequently Violated, Attorney for Re ceiver Charges GRAND JURY ACTION SEEN DAVID C. MONTGOMERY reaching his nineties. He died in com parative poverty because the struggle with -the land was In these days a bitter business. Besides his many mar riages had left many children. Seme of these the boys were bound out te neighboring farmers. Among them David Montgomery. Farming nnd this lad seem te have had little affinity. Blacksmithing, te which he wns later apprenticed, he liked no better. people, then seventeen and beautiful. XB Che old sea fighter died Can't Recall Early Days What hnppene.d between these years nnd tbe time he became nineteen Cap tain Montgomery cannot new remember, or at least cannot tell. Frem fragments of his random speech, however, one gathers that he moved with hi mother te Baltimore, studied navigation, and at nineteen wns the full-Hedged master of a sailing vessel, that mnde the Indies nnd Seuth America, nnd carried back great cargoes of hemp, rum, molasses, sugar and what net. He married. And after one voyage with him his wife compelled him te lcave the sea. Doubtlees if he wcri "discovered a fenw years earlier, "f'apn" Montgom ery could tell ruanv n brenth-catchlng yarn of life with the Delaware fisher men ; bnttles with gales nnd be en. Memories of Sea Battles Mrs. Plcnsanten snys he frequently nwnkens her nt night te tell Jbat the ship is drifting; that they will go a hundred miles down htream and maybe ngreund in a shoal. "Let us get out en deck," he says, "nnd see what can be done." And then she must pace the perch with him end listen te his strnnge fears. At ether times she must call a neigh bor te nssure Cnpn .Montgomery thnt he has put another length of hawser te Insh the ship te whnrf. And net until this assurance bus been many times given will he go te bed, os, as he thinks at such times, te "his berth." In August he will be ninety-two. There Is nothing in his appearance nnd en his better days nothing in sis before talk te betray it. 'Pnees nn which were listed thou sands of dollars' worth et securities re ceived bv E. D. DIer & Ce., xrem Charles A. Stoneham & Ce., when DIer took ever the business of this million aire, were tern from the blotter in the cashier's cnge In Dler's eSce shortly before the ?4,000,000 crash, and I am going te find out wny it was uene. Arthur Garfield Hays, attorney for the receiver in the Dler failure, the man who is digging deep into the affairs of this bankrupt, gave out tne aoeve mnic ment today. Hays, who has a force of seventeen accountants checking the ac tivities of Dler nnd his associates, de clares the conditions that have been re vealed by examination of the books are full of violations of criminal laws. He says he is certain the Grnnd Jury, which begins Monday its probe of the Dler failure, will speeeuy inaici u re sponsible. "It is almost impossible te enume rate the irregularities that have been unearthed in Dicr's office," continued Mr. Hays. Manipulations of books end records; destruction of records and the carrying of fictitious margin accounts are but a few of many problems that confront the accountants. "At present we ere mostly concerned in the disappearance of upward of $2,000,000 in sccurltlei thnt the books show should have been In tbe strong box January 16 Inst, the day of the failure. We located about $100,000 of the securities, nnd I think we may be able te trace a great many mere. We de knew that many of them were sold outright, hnd if we can trace these we will make an effort te recover." Fred Andrews, ex-cashler of the de funct Dler house, still holds the spot light In the bearings being conducted before Referee in Bankruptcy Seaman Miller. At yesterday's hearing An drews, after being grilled unmercifully by Mr. Hays, was forced te admit that while be was being paid $300 per wettc te de the work of a cashier, he spent most of his time looking after six -i'l.'" je.VWv. srrf" t's speculative- account "tliiit M M Dler'a books. . "c ' I. ' ' s Aridrnnm. BR Oft rtleUi U tlens, had no memory until It wm freshed ey me proaucuen ei ci RAverul times there were verbal 6 between him and Mr. Mays. WJES Twe accountants supplied Hara:wWj checks and ether data and be whirMiV,, t nwny nt-Andrews with a broadside tfcU had the cx-casmer gasping xer'Drcafpi Famous Resa Qardena Thrown Open The rose gardens of E. M. Reaea bluth, Wnlllngferd, Pa., said te con tain the greatest collection of blooms in the Stnte, will be opened te the public tomorrow and also June 11. Among the 1200 plants are 2S0 varieties of roses, many of which bave been brought te perfection-'only after years .f mm Allmlnntlnn nnw.AU. Mnnv'lm.. portntlenn nre among the collection, ' fi doubly vnlunble nt present because' of hJfa the embargo which has cut ett the sup ,'Mw nlv from Janan. France and Helland,. ,W,5 " " .rT-i. r H 'S . MWJ ' 'r&ti f BREAKFAST 35c Chelcs n( mtat, flh or acts. Oreal, fruit, hemlnr, potato!. Coffae and het roll. THE EAGLE .23 N. UTn , flSitiv :m ' Pi ,; COST OF TREASURY AUDIT MAY OPEN FUND DISPUTE Attorney General Alter Gives Opln "" Ien as te Appropriation .Harrlsbnrff, Pa., June 3. In ren dering an opinion te Cashier Themas A. Crichton, of the Stote Treasury, thnt bills for $16,000 covering auditing done by Main & Ce., under M- AGAIN CHARGE HARVARD DISCRIMINATES ON JEWS Fresh Attack Brings Demand for Legislative Inquiry Bosten, June 3. Charges of dis crimination against young men of the Jewish race are being revived against President Lewell, of Harvard, by Rabbi David H. Sheet, of Roxbury, and ether Jewish lenders in Massnchusetts. At the ame time two members of the h WiU "Thar rem arJB. mil ! OOWB jj peepla arm op 1n the . nlng and they'll com up svnal get us In a demonstrator." I a ten Cera . .. . 11785 esed Car.. -12785 Prices F. O. B. Factory Ditptay room epmn twastfi Moter&us Th ear of thm n preywusmifa MACKIN MOTORS, Inc. Jay Vsttdemift, Pre. 855 N. Bread St Pkesw Peslar7SM roctien of Auditor Gencrnl Samuel H , Legislature have demanded nn invest!- Lewis In the early part of this year, can be paid out of a deficiency appro priation made in 1021. 'Attorney Gen eral Geerge E. Alter says: "It must be remembered thnt sound public policy requires that the Auditor General must be given very wide discretion in the performance of the important duties vested lp him for the protection of the Interests of the Commonwealth." The question of payment of bills of accountants for the auditing of the Stnte Treasury and slmllnr work hns been much discussed about the Stnte Cnpitel and there were reports recently that they might be questioned. Mr Crichton, however, held the only ques tion was whether the fund was available for the work included in the bills by reason of the fnct it wns performed nfter May 31, 11)21, the appropriation gntien of the report that Ilarvnrd in tends te restrict thp enrollment of Jcwiih students nt the next term. A Mfitcmnnt enme from the college recently te the effect that Jewish stu dents nre "increasing mathematically" nnd thnt they, with ether groups, must suffer in the general restriction of en rollments. The statement denied dis ci iminatieti. Figures bhew that there are about four hundred Jews at Harvard. This is approximately 18 per cent of the enrollment. THOUGHT IT WASN'T LOADED Scranton Girl Sheets Younger Sis ter While at Play Scranton. Par.. June 3. (By A. V.) ffl FY j m9 km . UM rjlVvs iANKSc iattyBRxnmsaT- -.eill uBft BliiMb te. .l .1 II . 4J HAND.BAGS . "SUITCASES'- Style -Leether ofunusuel Quality quite. Distinctive Flt?drwih GetdVSilver, Ivery Shell'eriT desired pja i Gxre Fi t te d. Closing hour, today rK neon uai.ii ti,n inna tni i nt ii nnpma in. ' iiriuiiiK iuui.iv ."" '"'," v.i"v,-.. I Jlnry I'etrewsM, aged leurteen rears. curreU or te te "icurrca u m w fc, nnd klp(1 hfr ,ster c, d Mr. Alter says the Item of $110,000 1 t, . h , last night. ' in th Ainilrer General's department ,,,,"ll..,,.i.'L"i!.i.i . .. ' ?t '. bull IS Uflll 11UU1 ,11 llie UUUHJ OI. I ceNciiT -... wei4'i a;"ulii,""cSJb.i. sev. of tne Moscow Art 'inesire, ie ana Juay snows, rerresnment poetns and ' "friiw us asm at. . iSl. 7 T0N'0HT jmiht&?"Ar& tfcSrViJjJj her; yesterday for tin United States. He awln ' the afternoon alay wu XlfcrWiuinT Sil 'v mb.riand ,; i - ,.-,. .. .uk r ...i.i,.i. iue K'ri covers sucu worn i""i """"l Detention f the present bills are enfwed I nnd reteM , Hep , of thp shoetinB that th te the contract made b the Auditor , , in ft room en ,h ;, Genernl dated 3I 4,10-1, , fe null t- fl f , , heraP ,, M f , ing en a per diem pren t, "t thl her brother' revolver under a mat n prevision '."Xl.ttM. She pointed the ucapen nt her work tteatelSmW1 ' little sister, supposing it as net until early this car. says Mr. Alter, ... . t. . nothing happened. Then she pulled it ngnin nnd her bister fell with u bullet in the hend. l I i Dougherty's Faultless Bedding 1632 CHESTNUT STREET Luxurious Bex Springs, Hair Mattresses These who own Dengberty'u Bex Springs and Hair Mat tresses have reached the) heights of luxury and swrvica in sleeping accessories. Noth ing else could new satisfy them, and none ether will ever content you once yen havn experienced the delight of this incomparable beddtng. T.nxnrlenj B (Iprtaaw, BellabU natr MsttreMM, Mabegwnr Bed iteada, Eng-lUb Down Furniture, Unpi and Xanerr FnraKw. HOLD GARDEN PARTY Affair at Mrs. J. N. Pew's Heme te Benefit Girls' Club League "In a Marigold Garden" opened this nfternoen en the grounds et Mrs. J. N. 1'ew at Dr.vn Mawr. The garden party is for the Eastern Pennsylvania League et Girls' Clubs, and what money U raised will be used for permanent im provements te the clubhouses. There are fortune-tellers, hand nr. gan recitals, balloon venders, Punch "teems quite wltmn tne power ei me Auditor General," belli work referable te n period prier te May HI, 10-1. BANK CASHIER ARRESTED Philadelphia Student Valedictorian w , . , i j i"..i., .!., a,, i Wllllnm T. Manning, of rhilndel Officlal in Maryland Institution Ac-'phlUi waH vnJr(iicterlan nt the com- cused of Embezzling $40,780 i menccment exercise of the Itnltlmere Baltimore, June a.-iUy A. V.) - ' College of Dentnl Sursr-ry. held Inst , ' ' . . . .I,!.. .i. " Bbt nt the Auditorium Thentre, Hn - Edward F. Olmstend. cnabier of the nmeie Mltnnln,.B home )s nt 1327 First National Bank of Union Bruise, jjerrls street. Carrell County. Md , was arrested te-1 -. , 77-?- dny en charges of embftsiienicnt et $4080 in cash and $30,700 in Liberty Bends from the institution where he was employed for many jO'ir. The bank wiis closed Inst baturday by national bank examiners. TODAY'S MARRIAGE LICENSES Clark Kemusen and u firrs of a.iltwi't. .. ... iii.ni hustlliiu today harulinir nut Mnui for Juna Urlilen. Theae iiut worn Stanley Aahmeie. Mauch Cliunv., riorance llaubert, Uaslen, I'a. HmvUnil II. CullietHJr. .Norfolk, V un.i v.imiv if Kteui.rt 1S-1 Illlldale 111 HiCrrv Yeunc. -71 SwMn st unJ Stel a Hanklna. 102 N. attain at. Jehn H. Waur. !MU N leth st . ana Helen M. Klym i'JH.N. 10th m Uawaril Ueralll. -'04 N l- rent (it . anil Hut rlatt P. llhelm, 3&1S N Lee at Arthur Turner. .'IMS Clearlleia st . ami IOuUe Metabnimer. 34H Queen lane Wllllum T. Walr. 2d. liuck i County, anil LU'IU A. Stewart, Hucks County William W. Huivllck. i!li! Uiiena nt . awl Elliabdlli H. Moete, 212H Ultima st, William Uecker. 1U37 N. Mnchr t . anJ Held Ilaiihef, 25Ufl W Thompnen t. William Fleniln. 'J005 Edlaen t , ami Me teila Smith, --005 EdWen at. ni'aiell K. Huiihea. lUddenflcld. N, J ai il Ilebecea H. Hunter, lladdenneld. N. J William Van Alinkeclc, 4T14 PewUr at., and Kathryn I. Houch. 4714 Kowler t. Albert 8. Sttnhart. U21 Poplar l., and Sylvia, Albrt, 8007 I'asre at. Jehn l. Murray, 2'J37 MeClellan at , unil Katlinn K. JlcCermlck, 2710 ilontKemen nuu fiaicii r TStjc cA-iainc t3vaurent ane .erree oijeu 19th & Chestnut Sts. A delightful place te dine where you nre assured of the very best feed and of meeting the people you like te meet. unlltv feed .Vel Eipcnsin Oaenre A. Saten, Bealen. Man ii ?! OuBkrtiwll. 1'n. Lawrence It. Drewer, 00S N. 34th at., and Christian l'ewell. 013 W, Cambria t Jehn Ilreen, 810 B. IlUfipU at., nnd Maiy J. Hlmniena. 82lt Westmoreland si Edward Hell 1233 N, Darlen at , and Umnu e. I'almer, 2811 N 7lh t. . Fred IV Ha lowell, 2U5 8. HIcU at . and Klale M. llroekf 182(1 N Warnock t Jehn H. Bperry. 1MJ Venunife t and Der- elby F. Hart. 121 Haverhill rd. Jchn a. Shaffer, 1S22 Frankford rd.. and llertha M. Craig. Ht8 Palmnr st. Jehn V. Hplelman. 2D40 N. 27tH it . and Carrl Mae Oroff. ill 81 Torresdale ave. Henry Comfert. DS8t Morten at,, nnd Dera Waters. 2848 Jlorten at. William Hua. 31 l.aat Wredlawn at., and Mary K. Celeman. 0210 Hayna nve Ivi Be your own ROOFER 'With a Iirush and Seme "SHANOKOTE" The Wonderful Liquid Asbestos Cement Any one can easily step lenks In tin, sins and rubber reefs and imtke them as coeil as new. SHANOKOTfl Is the Bcnulne "no-coal-tar" nsbestes reef coat Ini; nnd Is free of acid, Jute nnd ether cheat) substitutes SUANOKOTU Is dnbbed en llke n paint nnd It covers the nnll-heles, laps nnd foams with a tielld sheet of asbestos film, trebling- thp life of worn out reefs nnd making them leak proof for 5 te 10 years. I cat. will corer uheut 75 square UH, l.!fl In liMst HI.SO In A-inl. runai (I.7.t In 1-ral, rani. Ilradaaar. ter for 100"c pure pulnti, tlitnslri and rubber roeflnf. The Shannen-Ellis Ce. 18 S,7th SUPMJJWS&V mmrffimiiiimiiVMtittfiyR j.rf?( 6Ae ''BALTir DIRECT TRAIN TO BALTIC AVE. STATIONS ATLANTIC CITY Fer the convenience nnd accommodation of patrons living in Jhe northern section of Atlantic City, new direct express service te and from Massnchusetts, Delaware, Virginia and Seuth Carolina Avenues will be started en Monday, June 0, 1922. Monday te Daillaht Time Fridays Inel. ffnturday Only Leave Chestnut Street Ferry . . 4:65 P.M. 12:30 P.M. Seuth Street Ferry . . - , x 4:46 " 12:80 " Arrive Seuth Carolina Avenue ... 6:01 " 1:39 " " Virginia Avenue ...... 6:03 " 1:41 - 44 Delaware Avenue 6:05 M 1:43 M " Massachusetts Avenue . . . . 6:07 " 1:45 " Ker the convenience of automobiles above trains will atop at Arkansas and Baltic Avenues. Northbound (weekdays) the "Baltic" will leave Massachu setts Avenue 7:10 A. M., stepping at Delaware, Virginia and Seuth Carolina Avenues, and arrive Philadelphia 8:20 A. M. (Daylight time). PHILADELPHIA & READING SYSTEM ATLANTIC CITY R. R. "The line that saves your time" iSulIzllflBP . V JW tjf.tS . "SVl im V a I vN ig kAllim ihT -':iV- I jjiiiimi iiiaigiiayj '...... iV?v rrli t'l si
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers