SP-r ' BPPf ;'4JIWPI8 iVA Rfc'W i t .'MrWWJT, rk V' V'p K; T$J3 '.) Euenmj jlubltc Sfeftger THE WEATHER ',( Pair and continued warm tonight and Sunday moderate winds, mostly southwest, , TEHrKKATUBE AT KACII HOt'lt i OHOIU 1 12 I 1 I 2 it 4 5 Tr7sWB2mM I I I I PPTP.R TWfl rVRNT V$i$a3 VOL. VIIL NO. 243 Enttttd as Second-Class Matter at th Posteftleo at Pblladalphla. Pa, Ondtr th Act of. Martin S, 1879 PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1922 Published Dally Hxcept Sunday. Subscription Price te a Year by Mall. Copyright. 1022, by Publle Lder Company H rrr J, ' JH-t jB m 12 ARE BURNED IS BLAZING GAS 'Explosions Send Fiery Shower .Oyer Firemen at 63d Street , and B.'and 0. Track3 'tanks fly through reef AS MEN BATTLE FLAMES Hewman Blown Through Picket Fence by Force of Series of Blasts CLOSE ESCAPES FOR MANY Mether and Child Knocked Down in Wild Rush for Safety. Buildings Wrecked Filming gasoline rained down en fremen and ethers, Injuring twelve men, at 0.30 o'clock today when ex plosions ripped apart the one-story pitnt of the Pennsylvania Synthetic Gas and Chemical Company, Sixty third street nnd Klngscsslng. avenue. Drums of gasoline tore through the reef of the building as firemen, delayed br defective water plugs, were atlvnnc Inr, watched by a crowd of several hundred men, women and children. A lighted match, dropped nccldont nccldent allrhi a peel of gasoline, is sold te have started the blaze. Mrs. Anna Newton. Klngsesslng trenue near Sixty-third street, with htr thrcc-months-eld baby In her arms, was watching the fire spreading along the woodwork of the building when flames reached the tanks and the Mfellne exploded. Firefighters and civilians were forced te run back as the fiery rain fell about them. Mrs. Newton was knocked te the ground but she and her baby were net hurt. The Injured : Battalion Chief William C. Barrett, apralned right knee. He stepped Inte a hole near the plunt. , Captain J. Simpsen, commander of Truck Ne. 13 ; sprained leg. Frank Murray,' 2000 Seuth Sixty third street, n civilian; right arm broken when he fell In headlong dash from plant. . , Alber Caler, ladderman of Truck Ne. 13; face and arms burned; St. Vin cent's Hospital. William Clark, ladderman, Truck Ne. 13; burns of face aud body; St. Vin cent's Hospital. Frank Valentine, ladderman, truck Ne. 13. Burns of face nnd body. Albert McKeown, ladderman, truck Ne. 13. Bedy burns. Jehn Elnell, C810 Pnschnll avenue, heieman Engine Company Ne. 40. Burns nna bruises. Geerge Elwell, 2516 Seuth Sixty Mrenth strct, driver of truck Ne. 13. and brother of Jehn. Burns of arms and hands. William Mitchell, 7410 Glenmerc avenue, hedman Engine Company Ne. W. Burns of face and hands. Alphense Welpert, fil05 Springfield avenue, hescinnn Unglnp Company Ne. W. Overcome by gasoline funics und revived en lire grounds. Carl Muller, a florist, Sixty-third itreet and Klngsessing nveuue, burned en back and hands. Jehn Klw ell wn nt ene side of the Plant u lien the explosions occurred. He wis blown through n pllcet fence nnd Jy dazed until given first aid by two nurses of th.. Visiting Nurse Society, wlie nnppcuc! te be in the neighborhood, Muller, whose hothouses extended Dick toward the gas nnd chemical plant, tad been playing a thin stream from n garden hose en the blaze when firemen arrived. . Muller then obtained coffee ami ginger e and was serving some of the firc ngnters ulipri the plant reef was burst JPcn and burning guselinc scared his tack and arms. A tunk automobile was bncked Continued en Pure Twe, Column Three BADLY HURT BY HORSE Jehn Funk, 2236 Huntingdon St., Kicked in Face Kiekul in the face by a liorse when attempted te recover some cgetn wes that hud rolled under the iinimal'H iij ' . n '''""!. twenty-four years I0 U llllCksfPn .if O'lHIl II....H.' .1 I'V1.'?! ""s tuken te St. .lescnliV ir,i. 2Jr hi t0,hy ln u K,,rleiiH condition. i.Vu . ." "" JHW WPrc broken und It iv,iii nr.i l,e m''lv,,d a fracture of thu Hi. affi'ItS'' XlMU- ARMS PACT APPROVED Jpaneae Privy Council Unani mously Favera Treaty Tehle, June 24. (Hy A. 1'.) The i,fSa?csn KtU'X '"l""-,ll today approved unanimously the quadruple treaty rec ommended at Jlie Washington Arms l-eiifereiue. The treuty was sent te the ;."? 1Ue1stml , for rntlllcutien. He premised that this formality would be wrrled out. A Gambler? Yes! It's true Jim Hnrkness ran n Mublc and played for big stakes. But Something Mere "as In his make. up. though Ills Iren father unci Iih eritlcUIng friends couldn't see. It. The Faith of a Girl Burnt out the diess mid left only geld. The story Is told in Leve Will Never Die On Page S3 Today . , , v , azzr i .'..j.r , .. ' in . JWZLMN.vn A? .. vrt'r.-. I . NUNS ON CROWD Girl Is Burned te Death Dressing for Graduation Flames Frem Gas Jet Ignite Flimsy Summer Gewn as Mildred Parser Fixes Hair of Cousin for Scheel Exercises Marlen Parker, fifteen years old, 4033 Pcnn street, Frankford, died today In St. Luke's Hospital from burns she received yesterday while dressing te at tend commencement exercises at her school. At neon yesterday Mnrlen nnd her cousin went te the second fleer of her home te dress for her graduation. There Marlen volunteered te dress her cousin's hulr and procured a small gas stove and a curling iron. Willie the girl was beating the Iren she stepped tee close te the burner nnd her graduation dress caught fire. Her cousin nttempted te bent out the flames. but failed te de se until Marlen was fatally burncdf Mrs. Jehn F. Parker, the (girl's mother, heard the screams of the two Financier Succumbs te Attack of Pneumonia In Tarrytown, N. y., Heme WAS BROTHER OF JOHN D. WILXIAM ROCKEFKLLEK 4 Bv Atseclattd Preti Tarrytown. N. Y., June 25. Wil liam lteckefcller, eh magnate and brother of Jehn D. Rockefeller, died here today of pneumonia, bhertly be fore 7 o'clock. Mr. Rockefeller had been 111 at his home, Rockweed Hall, ln North Tarry town. since Sunday, but word of his condition was net made public. Five doctors, under the chnrge of Mr. Rockefeller's personal physician. Dr. "W. J. Robertsen, were ln attendance wiien the end came. Virtually the en tire Rockefeller family were assembled at the deathbed. Mr. Rockefeller returned te his home last Thursday after n visit with his brother te the farm en which they were born nt Richford, ln Tiega County. N. Y. Friday Mr. Rockefeller complained of net feeling well, but the following day he Insisted en going out nnd was drenched ln a heavv shower. Sunday his cold gave his family concern nnd pneumonia quickly set In. During the week relatives were summoned. Mr. Rockefeller begnn te sink rapidly yesterday morning, but rallied about (1 P. M. In the evening came another sinking spell. Physlclnns and surgeons, fortified with ull the resources of sef- t'entlm fit en rage Four. Column Three LABOR FEDERATION DENIES RECOGNITIOITO SOVIET Proposal Defeated for Third Time by Convention Cincinnati. June 'J4. (By A. P.) Fer thu third successive year, the American Federation of Laber was placed en record by the action of its convention here today against recogni tion of the Soviet Russian Government. Firends of the Bolshevik! Government were beaten decisively, failing te force a roll call vote en their resolution favoring recognition. The convention quickly followed this defeat of the rad ical forces by adopting the resolution opposing .recoKiiltien. Matthew Well, a vice president of the federation, brought the long argument ever the Russian question te an end after it had been before the conven tion for a part of two days. He de clared tlie Soviet was a dictatorship, den iiig free speech and assembly te the 'people and maintaining ItH control of Riislsa through the Red army. At the recent Genea conference, he said, (lie Russian representatives were ready te trade the (.'euntrv's resources "ever the bargain counter for political receg nitien of a communist government. DOCTOR DIES IN CHAIR Dr. H. S. Zullck Succumbs te Heart Disease in His Heme Dr. Hewell S. Zullck, for fourteen enrs a tenor soloist ut the Church of St. Luku nnd the F,plphiiu, and u practicing phjslclun, died last night as In' kiit in his ollire clinic at his home, Mill! North Bread street. Death wns 1 due te heart disease. He was forty ' years cdd. I Dr. Zullck was horn in Orwlgsburg, l'a., and was a graduate of West Clies- ter Nermal Scheel. He received his lilogiee in medicine from Medlce-Clil In i lUOtl, and later lectin cd en dcrmatoleg) 1 in Temple I'nlverslty. i He is survived by hW widow, three daughters an.l two sons. Funeral ser i Wees will he held at his home tomorrow e enlng. Farmer Found Mysteriously Slain Lam aster, Pa., June 24. Zacharlus Keller, sixty-live sj'ars old, was 'inys terluuslv shot aniljlkllled in the stable rf ih farm curly 'Riiw mernwi, urn Mmiiir iviia feiiml nli'tbe barn fleer v,. ... ... J W ROCKEFELLER OIL MAGNATE DIES bb9LIIIIIIIIIIIHk- J. BtaasH . .. ...... ,v.i. .,.,., .. .,.ii1,iALV'rtv;.1..;!nK4S3-9! t . . girls, and ran te their assistance, only te find her daughter unconscious and her niece hysterical, nnd suffering from slight burns of the hands nnd arms. Marlen's classinntcs, attending the commencement exercises, were net told e the accident. Seme of the girls had called for Mar Mar Ien while en their way te school and had been told that their classmate had been burned, but would be all right In a little while nnd might be able te at tend the exercises and receive her di ploma. Finally their fears were allayed and they went en te the school. But today, after learning that Marlen had died nt 4 o'clock in the hospital, the enthusi asm and happiness of yesterday was lest. IN AGAIN OUT AGAIN TAXI MEN'S FATE 'Judge' Renshaw Frees Them as Fast as They Appear Before Him ORDINANCE MAY END 'WAR7 Superintendent Mills' order, de signed te bring about "pence" ln the operation of tnxlcabs at the Bellcvue Stratfprd, resulted in a steady proces preces sion of taxlcab drivers te Central Sta tion this morning. One after another th,e tnxl drivers were brought ln, nnd ns fnst as they could be heard were discharged and went back te their stands. At least thirty were freed by Magistrate Ren shaw, who said they had broken no law. Superintendent Mills en the stand defended his action, referring te nn ordinance of 11)111 which he said pro vides no parking en Bread street, sub ject te police regulations. Each cab company nnd an Independ ent driver had been allowed parking in irent or tne Jjeiievuc-Mtrntreru, ac cording te Superintendent Mills orders. Drivers of one company refused te obey. As each driver came, Magistrate Renshnw asked: "What Is the charge?" "Breach of a police order," replied the patrolman who brought him in. "What did he de?" the magistrate queried further. "He refused te leave the curb when requested," wns the reply. "Then why ddn't you nrrest all the tnx drvers who hnd cnbs at the curb?" asked the mngstratc, and dfcharged me (it'ienuuni. Exactly the same nrnensq urn m. pented by Magistrate Fitzgerald this morning when six independent drivers were oreugnt Delore hml, nfter their nrrest at the Reading Terminal. e.Wh,,le,thp '"wings were going en the City Ilnu courtyard gave the appear ance of n garage, with as many ns a dozen or fifteen cabs parked there. End of "War" Seen An end of the taxlcab war, however, is seen in nn ordinance worked out by Councilman Limeburucr, chairman of Council's Committee of Public Safety. The ordinance provides for licensing by the city anil a special examination nnd license for nil drivers. It places in the Department of Public Safety the right te designate the places known ns "hack stands." and regulate the con duct of cabs in these stands. A meeting of the Committee en Pub lic Safety has been called for 2:30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon te con sider the ordinance. According te the new "taxlcab" or dinance every cab must obtain a license from the city in addition te its certifi cate of public convenience from the Public Service Commission. The ordinance abolishes all public hack stands heretofore designated and places In the Department of Public Safety the right te designate space along the curb where the cabs may sUtnd. These limitations are te apply te railroad stations, public parks and buildings, hotels, steamship decks und ferries, restaurants, theatres, subway and "L" entrances, and the center of the streets where the street Is mere than thirty feet wide. All cubs are te be Inspected by De partment of Public Safety men when the licenses are granted. They must be clean, snfe, lit and free from noise, have a geed appearance and be well painted nnd varnished. The meters are also te lie inspected from time te time and upon the "complaint of any citizen. A rigid eiamlnatien is planned by the new ordinance for the drivers. They must pay $1 for their licenses nnd fifty cents a .war for renewals. The cost of the cab licenses is net fixed by the iruitisvii iiriuuaiiL'c. SHOOTS AGED NEIGHBOR. THEN COMMITS SUICIDE Boundary Line Dispute In Murrell, Pa., Ends In Tragedy Lancaster. June 24. (By A. P.) As a climax te a continued nrgument ever a boundary line between their properties, William Swelgart, an auc tioneer living at Murrell, nenr Kphrata, was shot by Geerge Buch, a neighbor, early today. Swelgart had removed n fence pest which Buch had put up en the line. Buch returned with n shot gun and at'llfteen feet blazed away at bis neighbor. Buch os found dead in his home shortly after the sheeting. He had hanged himself from a rafter in the attic. Neighbors feared te enter the house until State police nrrlved. Swelgart, who is sixty years e'd, In In a serious condition and net expected te lhe. FAIR WEATHER AHEAD Forecaster Sees Only Lecal Show ers Late In Week Washington, June ; 24. Weather out out leek for the Middle Atlantic States for I he week beginning Menday: Generally fair, except local showers itcnr end of week: moderate,, tempera ture first, part and ware thereafter. '' L-n. t , u ,ii . . .-a yijr . .. .., e. t r MOTOR THIEVES KILLED YOUTH, IS THEORY NOW Fenimore Lawrence Surprised Gang Stripping Aute, De tectives Believe FIND BRUISES ON HEAD; THINK VICTIM WA CLUBBED Police Were Hunting Robbers in Neighborhood Where Bedy Was Found WOMAN HEARD SHOTS Suicide Theory Abandoned as Bullets in Bedy Net Caliber of These in Scientist's Gun Police Send 'Message te Lawrences Slayer "Perhaps the person who shot Fenimore Cooper Lawrence could give a satisfactory explanation of the sheeting, but doesn't care te be brought Inte the matter. Neverthe lcs, If that Is the case, we would like that person te come forward and clear up the case." This was a statement made today by Captain of Detectives Souder after discussing the slaying1 of the Lawndale youth with Lieutenant Belsbaw, head of the murder squad. A theory that Fenimore Cooper Law rence wns murdered by thieves whom he surprised stripping stolen motorcars ln the weeds near Pennypack Creek Park was advanced today by detectives. The body of Lawrence, a distant kin of James Fenimore Cooper, the novelist. was found last Wednesday with two bullet wounds In the bnck. The flesh around the right- eye of the young woodsman and botanist was dis colored nnd his left temple bore n bruise as tneugn he nnd been struck by n blackjack or club. This was disclosed today. Frem the condition of the body, po lice new believe Lawrence had been dead seven or eight days before body wns reunci oanesuay. It was sprawled en a slope leading from the banks of the creek about fifty yards from Shady lane, which runs through thickets and wood land. About five hundred yards awny Is the Aeree read, running from Five Points, Fex Chase te Somerton. nnd giving ac cess te-Cheltenham, Elklns Park and Jenklntewn. It also connects with reads te Trenten. Detectives Sought Thugs Frem this section have come numer ous complaints of meter bandits, and as late as last Monday night Detectives Osterhelt nnd Kelly patrolled Verce reed en the lookout for robbers. Three shots were heard at 7 o'clock Monday night by Mrs. Jehn Boyd, whose home is near Shady lane nnd about half a mile from the point where Lnw-rence's body was found. While this was regarded as a clue te the time of the murder it Is offset te some extent by the condition of the body. A revolver with ene cartridge exploded lay near the dead youth. A book en botany with annotations in the juuiitt iimn a iianiiwriung also waM luunu. as was a neur Dug mask. .. Th? .. first theory regarding this mask wns thnt it had been tern from a robber by Lawrcnce during a life and death struggle. But the youth's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. Lawrence, 1023 Unruh street, Lawndale, say their son, en his Continued en Tare Four, Column Twe EARL HAIG TO ENTER LIQUqRTRADE AGAIN Field Marshal's Father Was One of Founders of Halg &. Halg ' Londen, June 24. (Hy A. P.) Field Marshal Earl Haig Is shortly te re-enter the liquor trade, with which he wus formerly connected ns n director of the prominent firm of Jehn Halg & Ce. The controlling interest ln the eom eem puny was acquired In 1010 liy the Dis tillers' Company, Limited, of Edin burgh, holding corporation for one of the largest group of whisky interests In the world. The field marshal will join the Dis tillers' beard ln Julv. BEBE DANIELS FINED Motion-Picture Star Is Out $15 for Breaking Speed Laws Les Angeles, June 24. (By A. P.) Bebc Daniels, motion-picture actress, arrested in (Herniate for violation of the speed ordinance, was fined $15 yester day. Miss Daniels did net nppear in court nor did her chauffeur. A representa tive of the Automobile Club of South ern California uppearcd for her and paid the fine. PROSECUTOR MAY ACT IN FAITH-HEALING DEATH Audubon Weman Waited Week Be fore Calling Docter, It Is Said A report setting fertli that the par ents of clsht-j ear-old Margaret Eliza beth Spargo. of Audubon, failed tujnre- citre a phsiclnn te attend her dii'V'Rfeij week she suffered from appendle im? me etui or which sue uicu, win u, ,. J0 today te Prosecutor Wnlverten, of Cam den, by Corener Heutley, Mrs. lllchard Spargo, mother of the child, 417 Maple avenue, Is niiIiI te be lieve In faith healing and called in a physician only when her daughtcr'a case befiime critical. Dr. T. V, Madden of CnllliiRswoed. arrived itiKt hef,.r i. child iIIqiI. " Nearly Married MARY DI LANOIO Of Plttsten, N. J., whose elope ment with Frantz Campcnl, of Camden, was rudely Interrupted by a Camden detective HOME TOWN POLICE RUIN ELOPEMENT Yeung Plttsten Sweethearts Nabbed en Eve of Marriage Anether shin en the sea of romance struck a reef when the matrimonial aspirations of Mary Dl Langie, eighteen years old, of Plttsten, Pa., and Frank Campenl, twenty-one years old, of 251 Pine street, Cumden, went glimmering, for the present at least. Xlie couple were ruaciy lnierrupiea last nleht hv n detective ns thev were discuRblng their future plnns at Fourth and Spruce streets, Camden. Earlier In the day Chief of Police Gravener re ceived a telegram from the Plttsten authorities requesting him te held the couple because the girl was under age. Mary and Campenl were born and raised together ln Plttsten, nnd their affection continued even after her sweet heart left his home town four months age te work in Camden. Fer some reasons Mary's parents wanted her te marry "an ugly man I didn't like," she told police. And se the undaunted sweethearts decided en an elopement. Yesterday morning the girl left her home te meet her future husband In Philadelphia, but she became confused en the way and arrived In New Yerk instead. However, she finally reached her destination and both were happily reunited. Then the nrrests. The youthful pair are being held pending the arrival of Plttsten police. MOURNERS FEARED Operator Requests Troops te Protect Them During Burial of Massacre Victims MILITARY PROBE IS BEGUN Bu Aaseclatsd Press Chicago, June 4. Illinois troops mobilized for nctlve service, held them selves In readiness ,today prepared te leave en a moment's notice for the coal fields of "bloody" Williamson County. Among the persennl requests te Gov crner Small for troops was that of William .7. Lester, president of the Southern Illinois Cenl Company, whose strip mine at Ilerrln wns the storm center, of Wcdnesdnj 's riots, Mr. Les ter said that soldiers were needed te nssure proper burial of the mnssacrc victims and te net ns guards for mourners ngninst whom It was feared the wrath of sulking miners might be directed. "Ne relative or friend of any of the dead Is safe under present conditions at Hcrrln," he said. "I cannot con ceive thnt such atrocities as the mas sacre of my cmplejes could occur In America." In another request for troops, sent te Adjutant General Carles Black at Springfield, council for tTse coal com pany charged thai the Sheriff of Wil liamson County was still refusing te de his duty und that there wns danger of further outbreak. HmtIii. III.. June 21. (By A. P.) A State mllltar Imcstlgatlen of the' Iester mine massacre, which took be- i tween twenty-live and forty llc-.. was Continued en Tnise I'enr, Column One 16 MISSING, 8 SAVED ! AS SCHOONER SINKS Puritan, Prospective Cup Contender, Wrecked en Sable Island Halifax. N. S., June 24. (Mv A. P.) The schooner Puritan out of Gloucester, prospective contender in the International fishermen's rnces next fall. has been wrecked en Sable Island, near where the l.pernnte went down, Advices received here staled that eleht men had reached shore, hilt that sixteen were missing. The American schooner Kspcrnnte feundred en May .'!0. 11121. one and one half miles south of Sable Island, known as "the gravejard of the Atlantic." In the full of 1020 the Kspcrante wen the international iMierincn's regatta, de feating the Canndian schooner Dela wnun. In Auga-l of last jear an effort was made te salvage the schooner. Sohle Island is little mere than a sandbar, twenty miles In length, with protruding nrms at either end parti) submerged, and the terror of seafaring craft. It is but a short distance from the scene of the Titanic disaster. Jeseph Hergcsheimer's new short tery concerning an episode in married' life On Page 12 Today Next Saturday's story in the all star American fiction series will te Dy Alice Uuer Miller " ' AHA K ON HERRIN Tl 0 Geerge W. Lefferts, Sr Leses Meney at Third and Moere at Point of Gun MONEY BAG SNATCHED FROM VICTIM'S SEDAN Stunned Crowd Watches Rob bers Speed Away in Limousine Four meter bandits held up nnd robbed Geerge W. Icfferts. Sr., owner of a mill nt 1720 Seuth Third street, nt 0:35 o'clock this morning, nnd es caped with n money bag containing a $3000 payroll. A revolver 1cfferts had beside him wns nlse tnken. Lefferts, in a small sedan, wns going south en Meyamensing nvenue, when at Moere street a llmouslne with four armed men In it cut in front of him nnd forced him te drive against the curb. Tlie limousine ennic almost te a step and three of the men jumped out. Twe drew revolvers nnd ran up te Lefferts, pushing their wenpens ngninst his back. A third man jumped en the sedan nnd grasped the money bag from the rear of the nincNiric. As the three men started back te their own car. nedestrlnns waitlne for a trolley car en the steps of the Abigail Vnrc Memerial Church, southeast cur- Cnntlnurtl en I'nif Four, Column Four u HUES ROB RATHFNA M 1 LAST-MINUTE NEWS BASEBALL SCORES BOSTON 0 0 - PHILLIES (1st)... 0 - McQuillan and O'Neill; Meadows and Henline. McCormick, Sentelle. BOLOGNA WAREHOUSES ARE DESTROYED BY FIRE HOME, June 24. Dispatches from Bologna today announced a destructive fire there this morning, originating- in n tunneiy and spreading te a large mill and a number of Wfuekeuset.. Large stocks of cereals and merchandise were destroyed. NO FREE AMERICA, SENATOR MYERS SAYS WASHINGTON, June 24. The southern Illinois min dis order was held up by Senater Myers in the Senate today as "proof" thnt there is no free America and n justification for the assertion that there can be "no fiee Ameiica &e long ns American citizens cannot work wheie, when, for whom and at whatever price they cheese without seeking the consent of an invisible government, an organized minority." 12 OF 17 ARRESTED IN LONDON RAIDS ARE FREED LONDON, June 24. Twelve of the seventeen men detained as a result of raids after the assassination of Titld Maiihal Wil Wil beu were released today. PLANS TO REBUILD STAGE AT ACADEWIY Stokewski Has Designed New Arrangement te Improve Acoustics There TO ENLARGE ORCHESTRA! "The back drop, I shall tilt, se; the fleer se; the wins like this, at an angle nnd the entire stage will pre sent different surfaces from which the sounds shall what shall 1 tay? bounce!" Having poured out his plan for the reconstruction of the stage of the Acndeniv of Music In conform ultli the latest deeIepments in the science of acoustics, Leepold Stokewski. cenduc- ter of the Philadelphia Orchestra, I leaned back in his Pullman section und , binllcd triumphantly He was en the Har llnrber express, rolling smoothly along toward North Philadelphia Matlen, where his baby daughter. Senia, with the cook and the1'10 knowledge of nn MlldnUls filed bj nurse, were te join him In the long trln te the Maine coast, whither Mine. Sto Ste Sto eowski had preceded them, "Ah!" he cried, "but thnt will change things. The acoustics there are geed, us such places go, but they can be mode better. Oh, undoubtedly." . He seized a piece of nlr in his lehg Continued en rate Twe, Column Twe BO, VfllKWV VranU4 celum ANT A JOB? TIIKHR .r. I hem advarcined In tin. n.i. columns today en paae 22. -Jay, AT HIS HOME DENOUNCED IN REICHSTAG Three Premiers and Other Leaders Slain in 16 Months A number of statesmen nnd po litical leaders have been nssasslneted recently. The list Includes: Foreign Minister Kathcnau, Ger many, June 241022. Field Marshal Wilsen, England, June 22,-1022. Lazeno, Spanish party leader, March, 1022. Rltuvuarl, Minister of Interior, Finland, February, 1022. Premier Hara, Japan, November, 1021. Alexander Dmitroff, Russia, Oc tober, 1021. Premier Grnnje, Portugal, and M. des Santes, founder of republic, October, 1021. Erzbergcr, ex-Vice Premier nnd Foreign Minister, Germany, August, 1021. Premier Date, Spain, Mf,rch, 1021. Talaat Pashn, ex-Grand Vizier, Turkey, March, 1021. RUTTER HITS CLAIM OF 'WET' DRY AGENT Didn't Knew Davis Carried Rum, He Says California in DEFEN DS APPOINTMENT S. P. llutter, new prohibition ill- rector in California, denied tedny that ' the cemmissi! iin tiuallen had con he had had any knowledge that Kdgar ' w-ueil. Chancellor Wlrth ntinniiticed A. Davis, whom he appointed a pre- the n-sissiimUen, upon which punde punde hibitlen agent while lie was in charge nienium broke out among the vnrleua here, had been u bootlegger. I I'nrtj groups. Da Is admitted en the witness stand, '''tte Socialists jumped up. shouting while testifying In a liquor case here , te Dr Helfferich: "Yeu are the nssaa that he had delhered rum for a Chester I sin !" saloonkeeper. "1 had no previous knowledge Pre. hihitien Agent P.dgar Davis wns a beet- legser," Director llutter 'wii'. "He was recommended strongly te me bv temperance workers In Chester, who as' serted Davis would unrnter Important bootlegging rings in thnt city I hne Das prier te his nnnelntment Davis hnd declared under eulh that his former rum-running; occupation was in the affidavit accempanjing Ids ap plication for the job. He Is still en the Federal pay roll, with no immediate prospect of being fired. His sponsor, the llev. Dr. Jehn Graham, of Chester, has come out with still another state ment defending the fdnaer self-confessed lawbreaker. X After arrljUt at hli I W late last CMtl ractirv 4uaw Ftctr' ASSASSINATED AFTER HE IS German Minister Shet en Way Frem Foreign Office ASSASSIN ESCAPES FROM GRUNEWALD Murder Connected With Recent Rumors of "St. Bartholo Barthelo Barthole mew's Feast" NEWS CAUSES TURMOIL AMONG PARTY GROUPS Dr. Helfferich Is Accused by Socialist Deputies of In citing Murder VICTIM OBJECT OF HATRED DR. WALTIIER KATIIKNAU B'j Associated Prss Berlin, June 24. Dr. Walt her Iliithe nun, German Minister of Perc'sn Af fairs, wan asfrnsMnatcd teilnj. The Min ister was Fhet and InMnntly killed an ht wns returning te hl residence la Gruncwnld, n suburb of Itcrlin, from I the Foreign Oilier in an automobile. There were two iht-ems in the au tomobile from which the Miet.s that killed Dr. llathcnuti were lired. Hli car was neuring hi Iieum- nnd hud re duced its speed when I lie machine con taining the assassin-, wa.- encountered. Beth the occupants are slid te linre opened fire upon the Foreign Minis ter, who fell te the fleer of his car fa tally wounded, expiring shortly after- I ward. I Large forces of police were quickly en I the scene nnd a tiring squad was ills 'pniched in the direction the muidcrcn were bdiccd te have tnUen. 1 I'ellce Without :i Clue l"p ie 1 :"() o'clock this afternoon the police were without a clue te the as sjissiiis. The niotercicle patrols which' took up the puisult 1nt the Hull, .shortly ' after Its beginning. Fellow llelfferirh Attach Tlie iissiJn.itlnn followed hard upon a ltrIellc attack en the Foreign Min ister b Dr. Karl Helfferich In th. Iteichstag )csterciii, when the N'atlen-j allst lender grilled the government gen-l crnlly and Dr Itnthi-nau in particular, concerning the cabinet's reparation. policy unil Its attitude leward the pepu-' Intleus of tli lthliicland und the Saar' Vnllej. -v" i News of tl,'ssassiiatlen reached, the Iteli hstag 1 ' o'clock, just when The) threatened te pounce upon hint, and Dr. Heirferlch hastily left the com cem initlee room. In one of the Kclchstag lounges, a heated outbreak of recrimination oc curred between deputies belonging te the Lift aud a pait. of rcpieseututlvM of the ether extreme In the chamber. When the news wus cemuiuiili-atril te tlie Reichstag itself at 11:2.'. o'clock, It wus received with deep emotion. Then amid turmoil, the Iteichstag ad journed. Hated hy Natleiiitllxtn Dr. Itntlienau, regarded as probably the ablest man In the Vlrth Cnblnat, with a declMve Influence inhanlng thfL liiiun.im.nr'u ji.,. r.ii. .aa .. Government's reparations and." j'v.ii j Tijin qp'YKXX f i uiuyr iiiirxH P&'JmWm?? '&., '' 'Jfl -, Hafti&L . Jikmmmmm cseuii row vm IMm r i l Zr- V " i. t ,. . l i u ..i a,,.w.'". T5i. -'. -' . -.vry-A,i'sK;Mwiivt.Msi.lir''i. JttbZfj&i"" . ,'tii. &i t.iA.t kMiA'XiJ&,iA-.