prF .7 1' wrwyjTSV'1 ' x c; vtFWtP1 "" ' "' WWffiBBjPBBBHBPfFvTiSt"' '7 ffTB'BWP'yynBiWiBWP '13 '?HSPrru wW1 lV! V tIWHPv-' vV vv''n!S5WPlBp!''"3 msaimmmm-: i9ww' twvmwmv$mMemw ..,.- --- ? jWi lHMtfH"nBIr- '-' imi iwvpmhih a B111MM 1 1 . Jf ." "r grjj". fVli' J. - .".v r- - b yv-v f k". -t ,i j if,-- r 1 .' . i K s r j. 'At -:mU 7 V "Tfr . . iHl I ,H ' '- ' - -- ' - VM 'iSVF Vi "J"-, ' 9 .?A i'rvr .i-' ,, ? 'f5 " ' '"- . ji .ami. ggS2S!Sj JJaAiVi.' ' lm. VOL. VIII. NO. 21 ntta con Philadelphia; Saturday, june 10, 1922 Published Dslly Except Sunday. Subscription Ptlet (8 a Tear by Mill. Copyright, 1022, by Publle Xdr Company PRICE TWO CENTS mir th Act of Mrrti J,, IBTO bbmki ictienreg yumtc meager Lsssn MHCHQT MAY 1N0WNSH0W CiwWftte Te"3 Leader8 Me " n't Submit te Assess ' ''merit of Officeholders UV . wy HANDLE OWN CAMPAIGN, ULTIMATUM lu busscb I floral Asher Miner Defeated for' State Chairmanship by 81-32 Vete PEPPER ON G.O.P. COMMITTEE (ijer Reed Hints at Refusal of Old Guard te Accept Nem " l i inee's Ideas ftn Combine's machine elevated W. , gift? Baker te the chairmanship of the lifibUdn State Committee at 12.45 t'Ottk today by a vote of 81 te 88 ctit t Antral Asher Miner, of Wrflres"- FflMfie Wharten Pepper was elected MtMUl committeeman. ' (ftftrd Plnchet, nominee for Gov mta, speaking before the roll-call, ibtiittctlly served notice en the State Ctaualttee that It mutt abandon the as Mtttnt of officeholders or ha weud run Ui iwn campaign. '' r Mr. Plnchet, who smaahed the Cem Hit ntchlnery In sixty-two of the gUM't sixty-seven ceuntlea', had urged lit (lectien of General Miner ai State dtlrnin. ' he nominee said significantly that, Imfptctlre of the result, he'was deter lned te carry out nil the'pedges he kd mide In his primary campaign. Delivers an Ultimatum fi Bin ultimatum en assessments he de- limed in Ibis way : "Either the State Committee must Itttdenthe assessment of officeholder m,I will be compelled te run my tra campaign separate and apart from Aijjtate. Committee." , liii attitude of the head of ticket, .- ..,...., ii . . bm en political meraiiTTt.ana ffttmti of clean adaltBBMlH mojutlenary te the dyed-in-the-wool KfauuMtlen members of the committee. ..Majer Cavld A. Reed, nominee for w United States Senate seat new held w Senater Crew speaking of campaign tadnf. said lie will nhldn hv thn Villen of the State Committee. ;"I don't consider myself bigger than m committee nnr bigger than the Re peMicin Party," he asserted. Reed M,he favored ."voluntary" contribu tion! from officeholders. The Way They Voted Fer Baker Philidtlnhin rvmnttr wimm a Hf .Mrs Fanny PrIce Charles B. HO, i Mrs. JIargaret Corbett, Themas 7: Cunningham. Mrs. Mame Keel, b C. Evans. Mrs. Careline E. Brit ! Ferd G. Zweig, Mrs. Rebecca B. Huwmen, Themas F. Watsen, Rlch WWeiltln, Mrs. Careline A. Moere. . wars BIcCandell, D. Prank Delaware County "William T. Ram . Berks County Mrs. MbebIa t nan. wresb, Charles J. Esterny. feeHaJdetn018 Stauff"' MUi CtrMn Pititit. nr -rv - Wtaier. """"'-iU"- " awara D?nM County Bert S. Hall. Dtnphhj County Mrs. Llllle Ment- CT.avrph s ,wsen' fewpen County Gyrus R. Lantz. County-Mrs. Sarah jr county miss Isabel Dar- Ri.il ,m SV""' JnceD Hcnlager. luehanna County-William Tlf- njeniln Pnnni. t.i.i ywmlng-Themas Gray. Tar?us Handwerk. gSR-Cfe-rte Shelden. Bk ebert A. Theman. W lam Thm.. ?erthumberliinrtT,- e i... 8kffi2w-H!i b5." " laessssr, p'-Harry DeSheng. ?!M?rrls Shleiby. OOMeiiy ' umnle Wyatt Then B. SESSS:. Ovation for Plnchet MN tl?a. mJV. I'RreurtAn who -ii..M.tH -. "T wnn a gavel. ' "' ""w Hker 5.V .c. cI,"lrman's direction. Mr. Si rri..a.'. "ccrc ay. rsndjhe call for Bwd BaV.,1.' warburten then tttSi: m Principal nom neea te the & ivfl"'ji j. ItlanJ " mn uaiiruaiu. sVJi Tn Mlf el,le t0 the plat- lis ft saw, tee." refrrin r i"'. wcrB eeing l BrV...r.L'5rln te her husband and ' ry(,,'ltWfnr,n, the llght-tex. eB Wlmary campaign, faoek 'ZrHrtnnwS! SCENE OP lOsVi f,Ptachet. RelllU1'c"1 candidate for Governer, is shown addressing State Cemmlfce today at its reor reer reor ganiiatien meeting at the Bellevue- Stratford. A few minutes later his pie te aelect Central Asher Miner as chairman was rejected by a vote of 81 te 32. Mrs. Warburton, who presided, Is shown at tHe officers' table with EX-CLIENTS BALK CHANDLER TRIAL Reluctance of Victims in Brok erage Crash te Testify Hampers Case TO PRESS CHARGES IN FALL The trials of Frederick T. Ohncdlcr, Jr., and Earl Mendenhall, members of the (bankrupt llrm of Chnndler Brether Ce.. charged In several bills of in aletment with embezzlement by agent, hanker and broker and fraudulent con version, are likely te be indefinitely postponed because of the reluctance shown bv their victims te appear in court and testify. Charles E. Fex, assistant district at torney, admits that in the face of the Unwillingness Of these nnmml flu rmu. Cuferaln the indictments, it is going te . m. ' UI' iaBK re Pre,s tie case. iie Tuen rer me reluctance la due iqe settlements being effected by the c. With these .who instituted IVnrOCecdlncg. TTnlPBrar r. FOX has served t1lrnnnl nihnninia en the prosecutors and will try for a conviction, probably in the fall. J. Heward Rcber, attorney for the re ceiver and trustee, sold today that credi tors will receive dollar for dollar if suits Drought against Clark, Chllds & Ce.. of New Yerk, are successful. The New Yerk concern carried the marginal accounts of Chandler Broth Breth ers ft Ce. and, se Mr. Reber says, sold out $2,000,000 worth of collat eral put up by the Philadelphia llrm. Creditors are especially anxious te delay action against Mendenhall be cause he has given valuable aid In straightening out the financial tangle and has helped te recover large sums. If he gees te jail, they argue, the prob lem of obtaining mere money becomes complex, if net hopeless. Beth defendants were scheduled for trial before Judge RegcrR May 22. Judge Rogers was net sitting that dav nnd the case was postponed. Assistant District Attorney Fex has net been able te obtain another trial date. Although the outlook for prosecutions Is doubtful, Mr. Reber is hopeful re garding the financial recovery. Discuss ing the case today he said : , "We have 160 suits pending against different persons who ewe Chandler Brethers (2,000,000 due en their mar tin accounts. All of these suits are being defended and these being sued are claiming irregularity in operation of the business of Chandler Brethers &' Ce. "We have also entered suit against the New Yerk Stock Exchange for 185.000, this amount being the sum realised for the seat held by F. T. Chandler, Jr. This seat is also claimed by Clark, Chllds & Ce., of New Yerk. "Creditors whose claims amount te Continued en Paw genr. Column Five MILLVILLE GIRL MISSING Left Heme of Her Grandparents Sunday Afternoon MlUvUle. N. J., June 10. Ne clue has been found te the whereabouts of Elizabeth Denten, fifteen years old, who has been missing since Sunday after noon, when she said she was going for a walk. The girl lived with her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Geerge Denten. Her father strangely disappeared ten years age. Four years age her mother died. She seemed happy with her grand parents. She took no extra clothing with her. ' Miss Denten had visited relatives In Atlantic City en previous occasions, but always told her grandparents she was going, and was well supplied with money for the trips. The police have been asked te aid in the search. SHOWERS ARE ON WAY Thunderstorms Expected This Eve ning by Offlelal Forecaster Leng-expected thunder showers will reach tills city tonight, according te Mr. Bliss, weather forecaster. In their woke will come fair and slightly cooler weather for tomorrow. A drop in humidity te normal re duced te a slight extent the discom fort of the last two days, The tem perature at 8 o'clock was 75 and mounted steadily. HOT AND DAMP NEXT WEEK Temperature Above Nermal, With Occasional Showers, Predicted Washington, June 10. (By A P.) Wenther outlook for the Middle At lantic States for the week beginning Mends jr : Considerable . cloudiness, ec caafenai aaewwi, isjaHgituft above FIGHT FOR STATE ft2RKiMP tHeHlHlMBV ejSWJL. ' vTsflH i. her aides LINER TRANSFERS 750 PASSENGERS AT SEA Olympic Sends Cherbourg Passen gers Ashore In Thick Feg Cherbourg, France, June 10. (By A. P.) In n thick fog out In the open sea 730 of the White Star liner Olym pic's passengers for Cherbourg were transferred during the middle of the night te tenders and landed nt Cher bourg without mishap this morning. The Olympic, which -sailed frpm New Yerk last Snturdny for Cherbourg and Southampton and wns due In Cher bourg Reads at 7 o'clock Inst evening, rnn into n thick bank of "pea soup"' fog twenty miles out, making "further progress shoreward hazardous. She re ported her position by wireless nnd tenders found her after Reme trouble. It was decided te put the passengers for Cherbourg en beard the smaller craft, thus obviating the necessity of the Olympic entering the French pert. The transfer was effected te the ac companiment of a long ground swell, but there was no wind nnd little diffi culty was experienced In the process. Police Commissioner Enright, of New Yerk, was among these landed In the tenders. He is proceeding from here te Paris te Investigate police methods RUMOR LENINE IS DEAD Premier Reported te Have eumbed 8everat Days Age New 'Yerk, June 10. The Tribune today prints a Washington dispatch which says: NicelaiLenlne, who for nearly five years has dominated the communistic experiment in Hussia, is dead, accord ing te reports received by en embassy here. In Moscow, th,e report says, it is common knowledge, though there has been no publication with respect te it, that he died several days uge. The report is circumstantial, saying he had n stroke, following which he wns out of his mind for about ten days before his death. , The StatP Department and the Rus sian Relief, headed by Herbert C. Hoever, have had no confirmation of Lenine's death. Londen, June 10. Frem sources which cannot be doubted it is learned that Premier Lenine's condition up te a few (lays age was regarded nt Moscow as critical, ana probably Hopeless, al though there is no word as te what change the intervening days may have brought. These advices stnte that the recent stroke of Premier Lenine was one of cerebral paralysis. He had lest speech entirely en June 1, and was expected te die any day, these about him being certain that the end could net be pro longed beyond a few week. DRESSED ON $1 A YEAR Hubby's Clothing Bill Cheap, but Wife Must Have Mere Jehn Stlrk, of Glndwyne. appearing before Judge Swartz in Norrlstewn yesterday en a non-support charge, testified he had allowed his wife $1 a week for clothes. He paid her $5 a week, the ether S4. he said, belne for beard. Asked If he theueht SI a week who enough for n woman te clothe herself, tirk replied that no get along last year with buying only three pairs of socks. Stlrk Is seventy-three years old. His wife is much younger. They were married a year age, Judce Swartz ordered him te nnv liU wife $7.50 a week. He started te go te jail, but his wife relented and he was allowed te sign his own bend. LIBRARY OF BOSTON MUST REMOVE SARGENT CANVAS Reflection by Picture en Jews Charged In Legislature Bosten. June 10. After extended dis cussion the State Senate yesterday fol lowed the action of the Heuse and passed the bill calling for the removal of Sargent's famous . painting, "The Synagogue," from the Bosten Public Library. The measure was amended te provide the costs shall be paid from any such sum as the Legislature may appropri ate. The Heuse concurred, but ns the Legislature will be prorogued today, the painting will remain In its place for an Indefinite period. Jews object te the Sargent painting ns casting a reflection en the race, al though Sargent has said no such inter pretation was intended. Representative Celeman Stlbert, who Introduced the bill In the Heuse, said the Sargent painting represents Judaism as down-fallen or dead, but his objection, he declares, is based en the "broader ground that it misrepresents the facts of history." Mr. Sargent falls te see grounds for offense en the fart of the Jews any where In the eunvaa. Through an inti mate friend he made It known a few days age at the Copley Plain Hetel that no renecilea uoea the Jewish Mee riMiiiiiiTbiriMswM i nn ,WM UKtaWNK? . rT t v 1 ref CONTROL in L....L .'X -M mil Ml ,iir-tl VVlSBBBBHBBBBBBBBH EH NEARS CITY HALL Clubs Frem All Sections Country Represented in 12-Mile Grind of CHEERING CROWDS LINE WAY All primed for a grueling contest and each determined te win, eighty-nine formidable nnd well -trained youths dashed off in the marathon race which started shortly after neon from- Villa nova College. Although the temperature was hover ing around 87 nnd a strong sun bathed the course, the contestants started off bravely nnd confident that they would make the twelve-mile run in' speedy time. The race is one of the features of the American Legien Field Day events. Seme of the swiftest runners of the ,country.,nre.nniong the racers and clubs ;iauu,r uie,iuiu(ue mates ISKsiesgesentca, . ;, nny hundreds of-spectators lined tra route nnd braved an unrelenting sun te cheer the strenuous contestants. Every country club and every big country house nlenrr the line held snectaters. Many of these who showed a tendency te lag were encouraged te further effort by the cheers. The run was down Lancaster avenue te City nvenuc, te Overbroek avenue, te Wynnefield avenue, te Belmont avenue, te Lansdewnc avenue; ever Glrard ave nue Bridge te East River Drive, te Spring Garden street, te the Parkway, and thence te City Hall plaza. Johnny Gray, who last yeur set a new record for the distance of eleven and one-quarter miles, wns net among the starters because of a bruised leg, CRUSHED BY TRUCK; DIES Ice Company Empleye Caught be tween Car and Platform Abe Otkis, twenty-nine years old, 15177 Columbia avenue, died today In the West Philadelphia Homeopathic Hospital from injuries he received yes terday when he vaa injured by a motor metor moter truck. " He wns employed by nn ice company, and was caught between a platform and the truck. Before he could be relencp.l he received fatal Injuries. A. Hulllngs. 433 North Helly street, the driver of the truck, was arrested and held In bail te await the action of the Corener. The accident occurred nt Pax ten and Jeffersen streets. MARJORIE HULBIRD KILLED Daughter of Vermont Ex-Offlclal and Anether Weman Aute Victims Bethel, Vt June 10. Miss Marjerle Hulbird, daughter of former Lleuten-nnt-Governer Hulbird, of Vermont, and Mrs. Arthur Mercer, both of Hyde Park, were killed yesterday when an auto mobile went down an embankment be tween this town nnd Itoynlten. Mrs. R. S. Page, of Hyde Park, rteuehter. In-law of Senater Carrell S. Page, who was driving the car. was seriously in jured. The three were returning from a meeting of the State Federation of Women's Clubs at Springfield, Vt. ADMIT WRECKING TRAIN Three 8cranten Lads Placed Dyna mite Under Ralls, Police Say Scran ten, Pa., June 10, (By A. P.) Jeseph Leseutskl, twenty-one, and his brothers, Antheny, nineteen, and Michael, twenty-three, of Scranton, were arrested yesterday by the city po lice, who say they have obtained from them confcbsiens of tA-e nttempts nt wrecking. On Wednesday night djnamite wns placed under the mils of the Delaware, Lackawanna ami Western Railroad in the northern part of this city and a plece of steel rail, sixteen feet long, blown out. A freight train was de railed as n result. The brothers snld they stele the dynamite from Reck's quarry nnd plnced It under the track Tuesday night. It did net explode, and they placed another charge of the ex plosive under the rails Wednesday night'. This time they were mere suc cessful. CLOTHING SHIP ARRIVES The Sabotewan Will Carry Apparel Collected for Needy Armenians The steamship Sabotewan, which will take aboard the clothing collected here for the suffering and destltute people of Armenia, decked last night at Pier 2J00 tSiABs. JarssrEi shoes are LEGION HON Blpxaest.', PRETTY GIRLS PROVE DOWNFALL OF YOUTH Worthless Cheeks Supplied Funde Until Police Stepped In The attraction of pretty girls and ned of money le entertain them In duced Harry Geslec, eighteen years old, of Norrlstewn, te pass' worthless checks, he told the Ardmere police to day. , Clyde Miller, an auto denier of Ard Ard Ard eoeo, and Nathan Harrison, cigar story proprieter: preferred the chnrges against him, nnd lie wns held In S2.0O ball for the Grand Jury. Clad In a blue sport suit with n pin stripe, straw hnt nnd rather elaborate sport shoes, Geslce arrived In Ardmere a month age. He wns masqucrndlng, police say, under the nnme of Jack Drake, and checks, totaling scveral hundred dollars, were drawn upon the Norrlstewn Na tional Bank. He snld he was the son of Dr. Jehn M. Drake, of Norrls Nerrls Norrls eown. But when the checks began te come back the police get in touch with Dr. Drake, who denied relationship. 6-FT. FALL K1LLs"mAN 8amuet Urwyler, Oldest Newton Ceal Ce. Empleye, Affected by Heat Samuel Urwyler, seventy years old; eldest empleye of the) Geerge B. New ton Ceal Company, 3125 Hcmbcrger street, died today In n fall from a six six feet trcstle in the yards of the company nt Twenty -first nnd LIpplncett streets. It is believed he wns overcome by heat. His skull was frnrtured. According te his employers he was walking along the trest!c when he sud denly toppled. He was rushed te the Samaritan Hospital, but was dead be fore he arrived. He hnd been with the concern forty years. He is survived by one daughter. MISS CATHERINE HUGHES IS BRIDE THIS AFTERNOON Secretary Reluctantly Agrees te Brilliant Publle Ceremony Washington, June 10. Miss Cath erine Hughes, daughter of Secretary and Mrs. Charles Evans Hughes, will be married tu Chauncey Lockhart Waddell in iseimenem innpei, wasuingten Ca thedral, this afternoon. This Is the first Cabinet wedding of the present Administration, and Presi dent nnd Mrs. Harding are breaking their visit te Senater Frelinghuysen, at Rsrttnn, N. J., te attend it. Beth families prefer a quiet wedding, bnt Mr. Hughes feels his official posi tion makes this impossible. As Secre tary of State it is Incumbent upon him te-invite the entire diplomatic corps, members of Congress and their families, heads of Government departments' and all -ethers in official life. Se,1 as the seating capacity of the cnapei is smau, tue ceremony will be followed bv a reception at the Pan- American Union Building, almost the only PIece m vvasmngten big enough for the affair. ,-j - 11 j -I "Killed in gun FiGHt Man Once Charged With Murder la 8het After Robbery Attempt Kansas City, Me., June 10. (By A. P.) Fred Roberts, known te police and underworld as "Big Fred" though of diminutive stature, was killed in a gun fight with three policemen early today. Roberts was charged with mur der following the killing of Miss Flor ence Barten, society girl here, shot te death en a lonely country read while driving with her fiance In October, 1020. Roberts wns never brought te trial nnd charges against him were dis missed following the acquittal of Den nie Chester, also charged with the crime. Roberts' death followed an attempt te rob the King Coffee Company, ac cording ' the police. CARS HIT, HURT BYSTANDER Autes Crash at 12th and Pine and Rebound Onte Sidewalk Twe bystanders were victims of an automobile crash at Twelfth and Pine streets shortly before midnight last night, when one of the machines re bounded and landed en the sidewalk. These Injured are William J. Brown, 823 Seuth Twelfth street, nnd Lena Chadwlck. 1210 Pine street, both Ne groes. The former received Internal Injuries and the lntter a compound frac ture of the leg nnd internal Injuries. They were taken te the Pennsylvania Hospital. The machines were driven by A. Pearlman, sixteen jears old. OOfl Seuth street, and William Irons, of Chester. Beth drivers were new. 15,000 SEEK DIAMONDS Biggest Rush In History of Seuth Africa's Diggings Occurs Capetown. Seuth Africa, June 10. (By A. P.) The biggest rush in the history of Seuth Africa's alluvial dia mond diggings occurred nt Mesesberg, sixty miles, from Kimberley yesterday, when about 10,000 diggers from all parts of the union nnd Rhodesia necced out their claims. The line of start for the peggers ex tended ever four miles, and Immediately after the proclamation wns reud, the diggers, each carrying four pegs, rushed te the points they favored. There were no casualties, which Is regarded as remarkable considering tne number of claimants and the excite ment engendered by the rush. There were many disputes, however, nnd these will he settled by the officials. A huge canvas cnnip has arisen and tne greatest optimism prevails. Beeth Tarkingten'8 Newest Short Story "US" never before published' Being a little episode of mar ried life and the first of a series of twenty-three stories en this theme. On Page 13 Tedau Next Saturday's story, con tinuing the series, is "REALLY MARRIED," by Mary Stewart Cutting, POLICEMAN DIES IN CYCLE CRASH Edwin Keck Leses Life at 12th and Diamond as Machine Hits Trelley FRANK RINERT, IN SIDECAR, NOT EXPECTED TO LIVE Were Returning Frem Police Band Rehearsal Motor Metor Moter man Is Held Edwin Keck, forty-eight vears old, patrolman of the Fnurtn nnfl Yerk streets station, was killed instantly nt 3:40 o'clock thlt morning when he drove his motorcycle into a street car at Twelfth and Diamond streets. Frank Rcinert. 030 North Nine teenth street, who was riding in the sidecar of the motorcycle, was seriously Injured. He was tnken te the Women's Homeopathic Hospital where he Is net expected te live. Edward Walthcr, motorman of the trolley car, was arrested and nt a hear ing before Magistrate Roberts In the Twentieth nnd Berks etreets station this morning wns held in $1500 bail for an other hearing Monday. Patrolman Keck became attached te the police force April 22, 1002, nnd most of the time blnce has been nt the Fourth and Yerk streets station. He wan returning home this morning from a rehenrsel of the Police Band. Walther, in telling the story of the accident at the hearing, snld that he had stepped his car at Twelfth and Diamond streets te discharge a passen ger. He had just started the car again, Continued en Page Tire, Column Four 1 LAST-MINUTE NEWS NEW YORK MAN WINS LEGION MARATHON Elmer Prim, New Yerk, running unattached, wen the mara thon of the American Legien, which had its finish at the City Hall. Prim's time wns 1.11.96. August Fagei, also of New Yerk and running unattached, was second in 1.17.27, nnd Jehn Oaughn, Morningside A. C, New Yerk, was thhd in 1.18.07. t IWLMRU OPPOSES ALLIED CONTROL OF FINANCES SOFIA, BULGARIA, June 10. Bulgaria refuses te accept the establishment of allied control ever her finnuces, as proposed by the reparations commission, nnd will attempt te icepen the question at the Hague conference, it is believed by Piemicr Stambeui.Uty. "I will net sign any such convention," the Premier said. "We retuse te recognize such a convention, and in se Ubjus aie basiujj our stand en the Tieaty cf NeuiHy." KILLS HERSELF AND SON IN LIGHTHOUSE Keeper's Wife, Unable te En dure Isolation, Poisons Her Children OLDER BOY MAY RECOVER By the Associated Pres Providence, R. I., June 10. Mrs. Nellie Smith, thirty years old. wife of Ellswerth Smith, keeper of Conimicut Light In Nnrrngnnsett Bay, admlnls- teraA nnlenn tflhlptij tn her tWO BOI1H. one two years old and the ether nve, I nnd then took poison Herself. The elder boy Is in a critical condition. After a year 01 quiet, aesoiaie exist ence in the stone line irem wnirn n beacon intermittently flashed te mark the chnnnel In the bny, Mrs. Smith hnd grown morose nnd despondent as a re sult of her Isolation. Several times she had importuned her husband te tnke her away from the place nnd mere than onee had threatened te kill herself. Thursday afternoon Smith had busi- .Afea In 1iAvlrlAnpA WllMp hn U'Hfl absent the woman found the poison tnb- 1 lets. Telling the children they were tney were bnby nnd boy. dis- at. taking canny, ne gave uur iu 1 iii he swallowed It. The elder lllrlni. the tfllltp. Mint it out unmiah newever. 10 cause nemine sui- fering. , 1 The motner, minmng Dem cmuiren 1 hntl been disposed of. then took n tnb let herself and her death wns immedi ate. Mr. Smith, returning In his dory te the lighthouse at 6 o'clock, found nlmest his entire family wined out. The body of the baby was en a table nnd the mother was sircicneu out en ner eea. The elder son was In terrible ngen.r. Smith hurried nsbore with the boy and after nn antidote wns administered he was taken te the home of Mr. Smith's sister, where It was snld that his condition wns critical.. The medi cal examiner declared the, tragedy must have been enacted at least bli hours before It was discovered. The absence of the keeper from the light and the consequent failure of; the light te flash was brought te the atten tion of the authorities at Newport and relayed te New Yerk se that a warning te shipping could be broadcast. BLINDED AS AUTO RIM FLIES North Wales Man Receives Frac tured Skull May Lese Eye Jehn Oscar Reynolds, twenty vears old, son of Mr. nnd Mrs. 'Jehn Reynolds, of North Wales, yesterday received Injuries that are likely te prove fatal when the rim flew off nn nntnnm. bile wheel wn MtWWearejeii bile wheel while he was Inflating u tire. eye is Dimaee ana his akull Killed in Crash NBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBlJeH I 'liaBHRIiB 1 '? ;fKw&Pl':X'''3aaBBBBBa 1 C ' ' t JBBBiKi SflanHu' ''' ' jfSBBBBBBl i 1 BBsVlfiiBBBB! i XWMSelnBBBBBBBBBBWte4JaBBBBBBBBBW' PATROLMAN EDWIN KECK Of the Fourth and Yerk streets station, lest Ills life when his mo torcycle collided with trolley at Twelfth and Diamond streets RAID INDIANA MINES Armed Men In Bands Which Attack Ceal Workings Terre Haute. Ind., June 10. (By A. P.) Serious disorders broke out at the Riley coal mine and the Kern Ceal Company's mines near here early today. Three hundred men, some of them armed, were reported forming for n march te the Riley mine, while a party of 100 men are reported te have at tacked the Kern Cempnny's mine, over turning cars of coal and attacking nnd seriously Injuring one of the men cm. pleyed there. Charleston, W. Va., June 10. (By A. P.) Hemes of Ncsre miners nt Sharlow. Beene County, were shot into by an automobile party last night and ene of the workers seriously injured. Troopers were sent te investigate. Ten men were brought into State police headquarters today under charges con nected with disorders around mines In the Cabin Creek nnd Taint Creek dls- trlcts, TRUE IN U. S. POSED AS LORDDEFREYNE British Slayer, Whose Reprieve Revives Scandal, Served Term for Forgery CALLED SCION OF NOBILITY By the Associated Press San Francisce, June 10. Mnjer Renald True, whose reprieve from the gallows for murder hns brought a storm of pretest from the British n claimed te be Lord de Freyne, stepson of Lord Glen Fnllech, of Scotland, when he served a fifteen-months' Federal sen tence m the Alameda. Calif., county money order..'" frg'DS 8t,Cn " thErlTl,!.neWfcpa.per ,ree,? tnmated that True wns the son of ene of the most noted gentlemen of the Enel sh nobility, but True's identity Iim been was tried for the murder of Gertrude IVi't" & -4 ngretrUnd(t hn.nr,.. ;"":"-'" '' mmitment te a he,yltal for the criminal insane -me wets or his cenv ctien and sen. tenceln Alnmeda were brought te Hint by William Madiera, postefflre nsne..- 'ter, who traced True in lis flight from J. ae tacts of his conviction nnd sen mc nii-inc uenitr tn v... v.. where he was arrested for the theft n mi mrgcry or money orders At the time nt l.i- Z .... he claimed right te the ti le' '- he lien? weleT;V,thVr 2eslnald French.ehe?: wise Lord de Freyue of France Park County Roscommon, Ireland " "He had been army officer sheen rancher in Agrica, aviator in nrasTf sasis: hant pr" '' Londen, June 10. (Ry A. P ) The outcry against the reprieve of Mnj"r Rnn(1I,T' ".K. committed" . i. 1 l l"e criminal Insain uftcr having been convicted of the T : j l "V'lruuc lnes, continued unabated today. According te the Evening Standard, en attempt probably Continued en r The. Onlamn Four 'BABE' TO SHOOT 'EM AGAIN Marble Queen te Battle Beys In Contest at Newark Newark, N. J., June 10. (By A. P.) Net te be outdone bv Jersey Cltv New Yerk, Philadelphia and ether cities, Newark Is going te vtnge a uiuruiu-Biiueung contest, and Invita tions te the champions of a desen East ern cities are te be issued by Mayer itreldenbach. The mmait win k. i..ij next Saturday ai the winner will get TEMPEST SPLITT WITH C RTE Lffl 1 Rumer Darts About City Hall That One Must Ge for Sake of Harmony POLICE LAX, SAYS DIRECTOR HONEST, ASSISTANT'S VIEW Believe Mayer Will Stand by. Latter Because of Thirty Year Recerd j TO PUSH RAID CASES Grand Jury Will Be Presented Evidence Next Week, It 13 Said jtfjgf , 1 Director Cortclyeu and Assistant DfV rector Tempet are sharply nt variance) in their view's en the police depnrtment. This developed today when Tcmpcsfr Issued a statement declaring the de pnrtment capable and honest. Cortelye'i has snld that conditions are precisely the opposite; that he had te te ?ldc, 7,ie? investigators because, ihe police failed. 7 n,w 'eVr,?11,0 Tempest's attitude, today, n delnlte break between him and, Cortclyeu is looked for. PornL,HalImrUmer Snys t,mt elth nlnnlT ? TemPf St B0, bcCnUS of lack of harmony nnd co-operation. Tempest has been quite outspoken In his defense of the police, while Cortel Certel you declares that ,e wns net receiving;, the support he should have been given in order te keen the city free of gam bling. Mayer Moero is known te rely ileTempcs' ?wln te the latter's bril llant record from the time he entered the police department ns n sub -patrolman, mere than thirty yenrs age. Director Cortelyou refused te com ment en Tempest's- statement that 97' CSnt jflhe v?llct', nrp capable and ?sti 8n? thnt th,e cit' at the present, t'iA 1 " u,' lre,n a viewpoint efi yice and gambling than It has been ler thlrtv vpnrx. He .ni,? .i. i. ..." -,- v ....... ..v .u iiiui nit: nam S. I R son mnklnir tlmf et.t,, i.i c --' te stand bacIT'ef ,t- ' Tempest had a number of conferences) with various officers today, and ex pressed his view regarding the caliber', ' et,ll pollce of thc clly- He said: , - " . i"v..ii ,-iy ei vice ana.ci;wie.l;;,v.s-"vt. a caremny Btndld,plnn neflWwmZi !??"! . A&Sttie4:rArf,Jl!a are capable and honest. Conditional here an far ns vice nnd crime are con icuii-u are eetter new than in thirty years. "Ne Organized Vice 116" Under the able direction of Llcn tennnt Lee vice and crime have been suppressed by work which was accom plished ma quiet manner and without sensationalism. There is no organized vice or gambling in Philadelphia and will net be ns long as I am Assistant Director. "There have been mere arrests for m.i !i,,,,s.?"d.et,,er serie"s crimes in' Ihilndclphia than any ether lnrge city . nnd there is le-j serious crime in this- ' city tnnn in nny ether lurge elty of the country. The police have net only been active in their own work, hut have given valuable assistance te the Gov ernment in raids en stills and dope' joints nnd have caused numerous ar rests, confiscated hundred of Htiils nnd seized thousands of dellnrs worth of drugs." "In a body of men such ns we hnve In the Pollce Dennrfment- ,.rv.r,;u!., 4000, it s only nntural you will find here nnd there a weakness. We have weeded out nil the undesirables and the city has the best nollee for.-., in tl, country despite stories te the ceutrary." Asked what inspired his tribute te the police today. Tempest replied: "I have been accused of being s listening POSt. This tnlk lllis ennn n ter, enough; new I propose te defend my self." On being reminded thnt his ntntement was contrary te one inude recently by j-Mri-Liur leneiynu, -I'empcst added : What I said is my personal opinion." Director Cortelyou was asked if he hnd anything te say regarding the Tern pest declaration. "I have no comment te make," he snld, "persons making such stntements are responsible for them." Incldcntnljy there Is censidernble ac tivity in police headquarters as n resulti y' of the Corteljeti statement. There apt pears te be n determination te dean up without delay. While Temnest wns lti-nisim. the u. lice bureau there n n conference be tween Captain Vnn Hern, who duected tiie recent mid. and Assistant District Attorney Gorden Neither would talk regarding their discussion. It In un derstood, hew ever, that cases against the i;nniLlers arre-tni will t pre pared for action by the Grand Jury next week. Suspend Patrolman A systematic canvass of gambling, vice resorts, hotels, speakeasies and clubs where liquor is being dispensed is under way throughout the city, with suspen sion nnd probably dismissal facing every pntrelmnn who fails te report condi tions as they are known new Mayer Moere gnve the eidem tn m ' rector Cortelyou yesterday, who trans mitted them te .Superintendent Mills. As evidence of the sineeritv nf th' drive, the suspension of Pntrelmnn WIN nam mimes v.ns nnneunceti into yester-, mi, i vii iiiiiiuieH nner gumming was re- 11 o'clock Mendny morning, BURIED FOUR HOURS Twe Men Caught In Ceal Rush ah) Barge Hurled four hours under tens at 1 cool, two stevedores escnnmt ,!..... ' perreti in run must en the puvemeat 'VK nt Frnnklln and Vine streets. fi The findings In the survey must be lav HiSS the hands of Superintendent Mills h,r5aJ a barge off Chestnut street, Camdea, . "X" 3 last niiht. Their lived were saved be- .Jfey cause the coal was heaped In such m ?VS&; way that the captives obtained air. ,$$! me men are xxenn iioene, 1105 Peams 9 street, Camden, and James Fredlia Wt$ii of this city. OthJr workmen a... i!5ft85va zzz. -LLii rrw:L.wi"i.ww R.nn a it nn m'aimI mlh. . ; m& r i"V - ? (t ' n mi m i.i:te 7sa Um &m M "d W 43 iK I i .j i w, ,? 11 " MA M &t1 Nlki, a.i f .VrH ' V . MCJSMj 1. T . " ' z:,mzfes.-Z. jwH-flei' -htuMi- ) ; "'. !.' "w? '- tmy A'i.1 1 A .1 ' ' jfvrX, V-V UA. 'N li .". K tw " -V -i v f ft Ail i - : i"A - . J . i k I. 'V . I ' j- 1-5 .i, 1 rwiifirittiij., it,, .u. ..;.,. . t- mai. .-..: , "1K " . i L-?. . I i -r-TeViWli.. & .,..-: ,&vA&fevS? ii - rV"'t' 't J f tki Biftv !. ii.ai it'L ,. m '.ijiui, i r t -JSiuku M. . jl.21 i'-i"i imwhwi r- mm- .,: "LLUJdaUlBUtilLh' .. .. :mmmmm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers