r7? v t'..-, WMTT v'i- l '".? jtyi&m sfHmw ?.' JxjsliaiFt? r.v-- . . .- fc.v. e- ji 1, RttT1'" ! V.'KWJ'J V'"i THE WEATHEM " Mostly cleHdy and unsettled tonight and Friday with peMlbly local shower! ',?', i'sw? V V3 , '?' little mange in temperature. tkmi':batubk at KAurnetm lis H I II 1(1 11 12 1 2 8 4 5 08 0 71 7 7 177 178 VOL. VIII. NO. 270 nttnd tt cend-cij.. Mtw tt Ih. Pottefflc at FbUadtlUhla. P. undtr tn Act of Mtrch I, 1S7S PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1922 Pvbllhd Dally Kietpt Bund., Subscription Prlet a' Ttlr by Maa Ceprrlcht. 122, W Publla U4tr Company w. lli"i"""P"PFWwl i V'JVi;'?.v " MTGHT icuenmg umicweug?; EXTRA xtra - m ,, PRICE TWO CENTS , M HARDING IN MOVE r IE MINE N I OTHERS M, IRDER PREVAILS nteur Ne. 4 Resumes Opera- tens After Year With 25 Imported Workers MIRERS PLAY PINOCHLE i STORE PORCH, UNMOVED ipany Officials, in Overalls llrand Crime Teil at Tipples and Weighing Scales &R00PS IN EASY REACH ut Ceal and Iren Police and j fL.:H' rtanntlaa Ctnnrl IY, 9IIDIIM - .... ..v. -' O...J n- rnlllaru ; v uuaiu aiwumeij if K. ' fly e Staff Correspondent ifanensburg, Pa., July 27. In the : test of strength between the strtk- rieft coal miners and the operators .Washington County, the operators teded In starting work this morn- t the big Menteur mine. Ne. 4. Fjkllls Station, near here. pthe' principal work was done, ac- ding te officials of the Pittsburgh Company, owner of the mine, by iclils of the company and twenty- IrJ.taperted workers. The number of , employed in nermnl times is 400. SJThls is the first day the Menteur ne has been working In a year. Efferts will be made late this afternoon te fjn up mines at Ilcndersenville and liMSflaewianu'i, iei n wncei uirneu mis I morning at 7 o'clock when the whistle ttar at Ilcndersenville. LiThe resumption of work nt the Men tour was maracu ny nuseruic pence nnu ttitt. The miners said they hnd or er dert from the union te "lay off nuy ,WDh stuff." RrvM'UI fnUrA fiimril IVnrlier "The workers at the Menteur were 'pirded by special coal and iron pe- M, under command of Captain Themas 'I. Delan, of Philadelphia, and bj tariff's (leputles. These company MlUi nvrft nrnlml with rnvnlrnra Mwed'bS bhetguns nnd machine suns. IfaU police and mounted patrols of il? V.IA1 !..-.1 .ltll. .. . .1.. .lauuuui uuum, mint; uui Ul iliu 'alee .tipples proper, were close nt 'UW'rldlnc the weeds and in touch bv SIe with the main gunrd nt Scenery .Cekcburg, headquarters of Cebncl lUckpele. Tie miners en strike nt the MoJiteur pn me percn ei me general store IH played pinochle. They said they WW stentfing pat. Meanwhile pickets, HKribed by the company as imported mers, reue about m nn nutomebile. !se pickets nid they did net live at DtOUTi but rnmn frnm nlwwlioi'e In Bft vmntiv IArthur Ncele, assistant general man- pjt ei me rmsmirgii L'eal Company, te Is at Menteur, exnects te lend two iCtfl tedilV. rPllit nnnl in tiuitin. Inn.luil I from the tipple in sight of the enrd W7ing miners. Ceal Recently Cut "en Inside" IjUt the coal leaded today lmd been i rrecnuy en tne "lnsiUe" wliile the 18 ua.e nfflnlnllv ntnic.l JNeale himself, ordinarily a white- r man, Was in overalls. He and Mr efncluls Niid they were doing the Ty nnd dirty work. Ncale was Hfhmnster. ffe'hey thought I was kidding," inejj .caie. "1 showed 'cm 1 could Uallv niirli " tOther white-cellar men nt work en Piippie teaay were Jehn Bradburn, met manager of the coal cempuny, H Harry M. White, general menugec I IAS rnmrmti v 'Neale mid the Btrikcrs would he Ecwa next Monday. Anticipating, ay of the minerH are moving out te- Troop in Quick Beach tWlthin fluids reach of the Menteur. waereenyillc and Meadewluiul mines irtoeph, of Chainbersburc. under Win Hey O. Dunkle. 11ns troop, W ll3 mnphlnn.fTMU lletunhnmt It, MUened in the hills nenr Mergunza'. iJfs f the National Guard en- CiTi." L?Kcl)u'-8 were officially no ne w mat these mines were te be Med. Ik hi . , ri.t. ""'""'"'" " ine Bituntien is tbe filS!! wl'cratlen between the State 75, me ."National Guard. Cole- Dill 1. '" C0U1,,lnlul et the 1m.Cii . 5-ul"UJ" i nemas .1. mc (BWiln, of the State police, have been he'un. " lBe m81 lWeU" ttit fh08il P,eraters reported tedny m there had been sheeting eurly yes r'7..n"ir "i0 ."endersenvlUe mfnes. tebJ, r.?e.,.. . b!.0t8" ,w. I'eard, and bHi i ' ',' wcre u'rectea nt Jeiui K? ?. i "? Bi1 ',crs ee'l le found. Uitlni n of ,tl,,is "wurence reached "oil G,'A?r1 "en'launrters. Sifa r tf?"1 ,lml, 'ran, police, was out wrerini i. . "B ln. 'I,H motorcar, - s ...u iiiiuii; uiivh avv Ctntlnmd cn I'age TweTc Thrre .PLANS "SPITE" mtl McCermlck te Shut Out View nf D , J". .. V1 bungalow colony i""6c., July 27. (By A. P.) The tel :? f. neart sub' m.,1 i ' " oungiuew co eny hns Et wart 7eetleu ,"f ltrcn. Klf till' ,tow'ie known today, E, V"1"1' and southeastern ex- aceuirn, , . r 1,st,ll, 1" addition acquired twenty acres adjoining the "A real cstnte nun. ...........i.. .i. wfill. ga" "" ,l,l''l"l''B luSfrVrVS"" te American Countess m'-l'-' ',.''? "'' 'iiiwB WIS' ! ''''" -4 ''Mn& m IMVM MBS. CLAUDIA W. TARTOUE Claudia Tarteue Being Adopted by Aristocratic and Wealthy French Weman BORN IN PORTLAND, ORE. New Yerk, July 27. An imposing icgni Document drawn up in a itreaiiwny law office is the modern glass slipper which will make of an Ameri can girl, born In Pertlnnd. Ore., n twentieth century Cinderella. Should the slipper Ot her feet or, rather, should the jlecumcnt be certi fied in Surrogate's Court tednv it will transform Claudia Windser Tar. teuc, daughter of Mrs. It. Bcngite Bur net, of Portland, and wife of Plerre Tnrleue, portrait pointer, into "the Countess de Itnmpan nnd Countess dc Chanquclet." Madam Tarteue Is being officially adopted as the daughter of the Counted Clnrel de Tecquevllle dp Rampnn de Chanquctet, after a friendship of years. Legal action will make her a member of the noble French family and one of the heirs te the aristocratic estntc that has been hnnded down from generation te cencrntibn. Mndnm de Tecqueville entertains in Tnrls ln n luxurious home en the Bue Viete. The Chateau de Teurlavllle, a splendid old mansion near Cherbourg, is her country place. The Counter de Tecqueville is the widow of Viscemte Augustln Rene Clerel de Tecquevllle, en officer of the Legien of Hener. Mrs. Tarteue was formerly Miss Claudia Windser, who inherited $000, 000 upon the death of her father in 1010. She Is n descendant of the Clive de Windser family, nf Ilnirlnnil. nnil her mother Is the daughter of the late Dr. Bengue. n French physician. She met Pierre Tarteue at a Colonial bell in New Yerk in 1018. She was dressed In n Colonial costume and It was said the painter fell despcrntcly ln love with her, acclaiming her his ideal of American beauty. They were mar ried In October, 1010, after Tnrtoue hail been divorced from another Ameri can girl, a Miss Dods worth, whom he hnd married in 1013. She accused him of cruel and abusive treatment. In Jnnunry, 1021, the new Mrs. Tartoue sued for separation. She al leged that he treated her cruelly, fulled te support her and made her pay half and mere of the household expenses : that sbe hnd te cook his meals herself and also serve as a model for his pic tures. When he went te a prize fight, she said, he would come home and prac tice ring tactics en her. Tarteue ln his reply denied all his wife's accusations, but charged she hnd deceived him. declaring she was thirty instend of twenty-four, years old and thut bhc had been married twice befere and hnd net been. divorced from either of her ether husbands. The la.st time the case came Inte public prints was ln May of tills year,' wncn airs, xnneue isiuea a. siuicmcuc blaming her husband's charges nnd nil of her troubles en u blackmailer, and said her husband nnd she were again the best of friends. It was then intimated that the suits would be dropped. BISHOP JOHN GRIMES DEAD Head of Diocese of Syracuse Suc cumbs te Leng Illness Syracuse, N. , July 27. Bishop Jehn Grimes, of the Catholic Dlocese of Syracuse, died last night after a long period of illness, which has been critical for the last ten days. Bishop Orimes was born in County Limerick, Irelnnd, December IS. 1852, of it family prominent In church affairs. He finished his cellege course with hon ors at the age of eighteen nnd came at once te Amerlcn. He was ordained n priest at Albany February 10, 1SS2, and Immediately afterward assigned as , an assistant- te St. Mnry's Church, Syracuse, new the Cathedral. He was iven his first pastorate at Whites- bove in 1887. and two jenrs later was returned te St. Mary's as pastor upon the death of Father O'llnrn. In 1001 he was mude a member of the papal household with the rank of moiislguer, and en May 15, 100(1, was catifreernted coadjutor bishop te Bishop Luilden. On August fl, 1021. Bishop Grimes suc ceeded te tlie bishopric en the death of Bushep Lutlden. BURNED IN TORCH BLAST Police Sergeant Is Injured at West Thompson Street Heme Geero 11. McGulre. n pelicu mh- gcttiit, whs injured this morning when it gnselluu tot eti exploded In his hum) nt hi home, 18U0 Wet Thoinpcen ntri'ct. McGulre's right side was burned. He was taken te the Ut. Jebcph'h Hospital. nnsi MAKES AMERICAN GIRL A COUNTESS PEACE DOVE'S COOS CAPTIVATE CARNEY Sweet Seng of Ancient Bard Ends Dispute of Angry Mag istrate and Auteist EVERY ONE'S HAPPY NOW Edward Carney, the iutrepld one, the restless meusqultnire et tlte miner Judiciary, softened his heart nnd his voice this morning nnd withdrew chnrgei against musha, yes! William P. Kelly. Sure lait night the two same were nt grips and 'red in the fnee about it. The "Judge" was driving nnd the wheels of his car locked with the wheels of the car of Kelly. This hnppcned en Penn Square. "Shame te you!" cried Magistrate Carney, "for a mean and careless driver." "Well spoken," replied Kelly, "and you are talking te yourself." , What's n Badge te a Kelly "It's te you I'm speaking," Carney declared in n rising voice, "nnd I've the mind te be speaking mere." He climbed en the running beard of Kelly's machine nnd extended his mag istrate's card. "Maybe you'd like te be having a leek nt that," he said. "Truce te you and all your gab," an swered Kelly. He put his feet en the accelerator and drove off, the "Judge" with him. Then the magistrate shouted the old Ijjoed-stirring bntllc cry of the Cnrneys nnd jumped back into his own machine. He followed Kelly and drove him en te a sidewalk nnd summoned a po liceman te arrest him. But it happened that this morning Magistrate Fitzgerald had risen enrly and had walked in the gnrden, reciting te himself the verbes of Angus Mac Angus, the bard : "Pence has put it's mantle ever me and ever all my brothers." 'Twas Bad Day for a Battle And these weids wcre ln the Magis trate's mind when he took the bench ln the Eleventh nnd Winter streets police station, and seeing before hlui Carney nnd the Kelly, they darting mean leeks one te the ether, his heart was saddened that there should be strife among geed men, nnd strong. He took Carney aside and in sweet tones whispered te him the words of the bnrd. that for centuries have been whispered beside the waters of the coast of Innismere. As he went en the face of Carney grew gentler, nnd he interrupted once nnd again with a soft spoken. "True for him." Se finally the magistrate rapped his gawl and asked: "De I understand that tne charge In this case is withdrawn?" "It Iff," replied Carney firmly. "Then," said the Magistrate, "th prisoner is dismissed and may there be peace te every one in this place." The Kelly went te his place ut 214 North Sixteenth street and Cnrnev w. tired te meditate the sajlngs of Angus Aiacivugus. SCREUTRQBBER Maid In Haverford Heme Grapples With Supposed Burglar A cllb stranger, neslnc ns a mncn- zlue salesman, today pushed aslde a maid in te home of J. C. Brown, a manufacturer, Thornbury rend nnd Hese lane, Haverford. The Intruder inn upstairs, but the maid followed nnd grappled with him. After struggling for a minute the maid screamed for help and the in truder ran down the stairs and from the house. Mnrtha Jenes, colored, the maid, no tified the Lewer Merlen police and n henrch was made for the man. Mrs. Brown was shopping In Ant Ant mere when the robbery attempt was made. She later told the police she noticed u jeung man near the drive way as she metered from the house. BABY TAKES OPEN R0AU Twe-Year-old Frances Mullen, 176 Qay St., Myk Starts Exploration The lurefef the open read held out its arms last night te two-year-old f tlic WBnderluBt. She set out all ?" frnm hpr home nt 17fl Gnv street. alone from her home nt 170 Gay street, Mnnayunk, te explore the neighbor hood. Frances traveled almost a niile before she enme te a step, and made her way unharmed through n crowd listening te the Municipal Band concert at Recter and Sllverwoed htreets. Then she walk ed some mere. The baby might have become n con firmed hiker if it had net been for the intervention of n sympathetic frlend of her mother's who recognized the child and started te tnke her home. They met the frnntlc mother returning from the Manuyunk pollce Untfen after having reported Frances as lest. 105 FLEE DUNPAlrTjAIL Irish Prisoners Escape Through Hele Blown In Wall Belfast, July 27. (By A. P.) Tiireugu n noie mown m the wall by a mine. 10." prisoners escaped from the JiuiuiniK jail, i.'euntv Leuth, tednv. The shock of the txploslen bbeck the town, shattering the window of the I.MIIltP lli-iLTlifnl nil.l ilin .In nl1lt.. nff i-1. . i,ebt residential district, . $6000 AUTOS DESTROYED IN ASPEN ST. GARAGE FIRE Lighted Match Dropped in Gasoline Blamed for Blaze Fire in a garage at 4210 Aspen street today destroyed four automobiles valued at about $0000. A lighted match dropped In a puddle of .gasollue en tbe oer Is thought te have started the blaze. Man Shet In Tlnlcum Poolroom Chester, July 27. Einjeue McGcc, nineteen years old. of Lsidngteii, Is heveling between life nnd dcitth in the Tin ler Hospital. He was shot in n poolroom at Tlnlcum. Carl Mc Cennell. proprietor, was arrested. but later rehnsed when McGce said it was accidental. McGee said he was standing In front of McCenncll, who ilrnw n nlhtel from Ills bin neeknt. nn.l IJ exploded, the bullet striking McClee. ' Says Family of Rothschild Broke Up Sen 's Remance Beautiful Yeung French Girl, Suing Baren in New Yerk for $500,000, Says She Still Leves Him New Yori, July 27. If everything they said In effect that here In America, that Mile. Mnrle Perquct of the Hut de Longchamps, Paris, has told her lawyer, W. M. K. Olcott, In the Inst three weeks can be substantiated, then the jury that hears her plea for S."00, 000 from James Henry de Rothschild, eldest son of head of 'the famous Euro pean banking house of that name, will be regaled with n story of such romance as'seldem happens off the screen. Mile. Pernuet is twenty-four. Mile. Perquct's complaint nnd affi davits were filed yesterday in the 8u- nreme Court-. Him. iirrnrillnv n for mer Justice Olcott, of her counsel, found it Impossible te receive report ers. De Rothschild, en behalf of whom Stnnchfield & Levy, his lawyers, deny everything, Is In Paris, whither Mile. I'erquct is planning te return te re main with her parents until the ense Is called for trlul. In these days of unrest and un pleasant suggestion, the newspaper have little opportunity te publish such nice boy nnd girl stories ns this one seems te be. Mile. Perquct says that net in remnntic history has n woman loved a man as she loved de Rothschild. And Mr. Olcott says that he.has letters, cablegrams, radiograms (nnd is waiting for an ocean liner te bring ethr letters) that suggest endearments breathed by Idas upon Mar'pcssa. Papers in Safe Deposit Mr. Olcott said his client nrrlved hi rew Yerk from Paris en May 15 in re sponse te cablegrams in which de Rothschild, who is twenty-eight venrs old and heir te the power the head of the great banking house swnys, urged her te come nnd be married. The cable grams nnd the letters were in n snfe deposit vault, he said, and were net dis played yesterday. However, he declared LANDLADY IS ROBBED BY MEN SEEKING ROOM Youth Steals Jewelry as Elderly Companion Inspects Quarters Police are looking for a man mnd a youth, with outward appearance of re spectability and refinement, who have n system for robbing apartment nnd rooming houses te which they gain en trance en the pretext of looking for quarters. Yesterday the pair visited the apart ment house of Mrs. Minnie Peters, Rll North Fifteenth street, nnd left with a diamond bar pin and ether jewelry valued at 05. A man about thirty-five years old appeared at Mrs. Peters' home yester day and asked te be shown n room. A well-dressed young man of about sev enteen was with him. The man ex plained that he would like te inspect the room, and instructed the youth te remain downstairs. After an inspection the room was found te be unsuitable, and the two departed Mrs. Peters went te her room. where the .discovered that her wrist watch, the bar pin nnd several ether articles of jewelry were mislug. She told the police the pnlr hnd nctcd suspiciously, that it had taken the man an unusually long time te leek ever the room she fchewed him nnd she believes that the young man must have slipped upstairs n the meantime and taken her jewels. N. J. COMMUTERS WALK Trains Tied Up When Barge Is Wedged In Camden Drawbridge Hundreds of New Jersey commuters en their way te the city this morning from points along the Cnmdcn -Trenten branch of the Pennsylvania Rnllread, and the branch te Camp Dix finished the lest lap of the journey en feet nnd by trolley and bus. A barge laden with 500 tens of small stone jammed in the Ooener ltlvpr Drawbridge at Seventeenth nnd Federnl streets, Camden, tied up both tracks from 8:18 until 0:10. Commuters en four incoming trains were told thnt the delay would be at least thirty minute, se most of them left the train and wnllted across a vacant let te the street cur line. The Public Service Company sent out three trolley cars te bring the crowd in, a uistnnce et nearly two miiea, but most wnlkcd. The city -bound commuters were from Palmyra, Burlington, Beverly nnd ether points along the Trenten brnnch ns well ns from some of the Seuth Jersey towns en the branch te (,'nmp Dix. The following train from Asbury Park nnd ether northern coast leserts was caught In the jam. Twe outgoing trains were alseNdelaj ed forty minutes; ene bound for Camp Dix and the etljer te Trenten. The sand bnrge became wedged in the drawbridge and waa removed with great difficulty because of the falling tide. PALMER INDORSES U. S. WAR CLAIMS COMMISSION Underwood Bill In Accord With Treaties, He Tells Senators Washington, July 27. (By A. P.) The Underwood bill te create an Ameri can commission te adjudicate American war claims ugnlntl Germany and Aus tria, and te puy such claims out of seized enemy alien property, was in dorsed by A. Mitchell Palmer, former Attorney Gcnernl and Alien Property Custodian, today befere a Senate Judiciary bub-cemmittee. Mr. Pnlmcr nnd another former Allen Property Custodian, Frnncis F. Gervan, new head of the Cheihical Foundation, and the present Allen Property Cus todian, Themas W. Miller, appeared befere the sub-committee tedny at the opening of hearings en the bill. "The Underwood bill." Mr. Palmer declared, "Is entirely feasible nnd en entirely proper method, under the treaties nnd the trading with the enemy net. of disposing of this enemy prepem nnd of passing upon, adjudicating and paying meritorious claims of American cltisseiiH and of the United State Gov ernment." riiniimen Cummins, of the sub-committee, announced in opening the hear ings that they would be limited te the two prepositions in thu Underwood bill creation of n clulms commission und disposition of seized enemy property. "U..'0 WJN.T A,U8Kn AUTOMOIIW.K? I'll a r nuulMeit i nt ... .. m . ". ...?! clnwItleU columns or the' Uvenlni OTrSiTn KKJSar free from the restraints that made mar riage Impossible In Krfnncc, the wedding could tnkc place. And while Mile. Por Per quct was en the ship. Mr. Olcott said, she received two radiograms each day from the man she hoped te marry. The great trouble is, Mr. Olcott says, that De Rothschild is a Jew and Mile. Perquet a gentile. The young wemnn's lawyer ndded that se far as he had been able te learn the matter of re ligion was really n small one te the young folks themselves. It is tbe tra dition of the Dc Rethschilds that can not stand the intermingling. . Servlce of the papers was made June 27 by Richard Campbell, who intro duced the young woman te former Ju tice Olcott, who Is te be the trial law yer. De Rothschild was then occupy ing an apartment nt 37ft Park avenue. Just before he snllcd, Mr. Olcott says, counsel for Mile. Perquct were asked te refrain from arresting the defendant. Didn't Want Him Arrested "I told counsel the idea had never occurred te us." snld Mr. Olcott vea terday. "The next day Mile. Perquetri wne, ji assure you, Is one of the most beautiful young women it has ever been my great fortune te beheld, was in my office. I told her I had net at tempted te restrain de Rothschild by obtaining an order of arrest. " 'Arrest him! she cried in surprise. 'Why should any one think of such a thing? I would never agree te it. I love him.7 "Mile. Perquct and De Rothschild have known, and apparently loved, each ether since their childhood. He came te America last April. About three weeks age Mile. Perquet was fetched into my office by Mr. Campbell, who said she had come te him with a letter of Introduction from n member of the Continued en Vast Four. Column Fire GUARDIAN LOSES BOYS DURING PARK JAUNT Jehn Ferman and Lerey Sykes, of Esslngten, Wander Away Pollce have started a search for two boys who disappeared last night In Fnirmeunt Park, wfiere they had been taken by a gunrdiun. They are Jehn Ferman, thirteen yenrs old, and Lerey Sykes, eleven, uetu et l'-ssingten. They were in charge of A. T. Kasley, of Cll Snndc avenue. Esslneten. Late last night Kasley appeared at City Hall Detective Bureau and re ported the boys missing. He said that they had disappeared suddenly ns he was taking them for a walk through Falrmeunt Park and Woodside. Kasley searched for hours, nnd when he found no trace of them he began te fear that they were either dldnnppeu or drowned, se he asked the police te aid in me seurcn. ueiccuve llischefr noti fied the police of every district in the city te be en the lookout for the boys. BOTH BOXERS KNOCKED OUT AT SAME TIME Referee Has te Count With Beth Hands at Grand Junction Denver. Cel., July 27. (By A. P.) The referee of n boxing contest nt Grand Junction, Cel., wnsferced te use betli hands ln counting out the principals in a bout there lust night, according te a dispatch te the Newn here. Jack Bowens, who wns trading punches with Whitey Hutten in n match at 1-10 pounds, get behind in the trading nnd received n blew en the point of the chin. As he started his dive te the mat. however, he completed tbe haymaker he had started for Hut Hut ten s hteinnch. It landed. Hutten nnd Bowens cellnp&ed en the mat ut the same tirue nnd the referee counted both I1IV11 out. CHECK FORGED BY SUICIDE FOUND AS MAN IS ARRESTED Detective Captures Prisoner Found Hiding Under Bed Bad checks bearing the name of n forger who Killed himself in nricnn r. cently were traced te Isadore Frankel, Thirty-first street, neur Ilerks, accord ing te the pollce. Frankel wns arrested near midnight in his apartment by a detective, who found him hiding under n bed. The detective told Mnclst n r..,.,..i he found checks ln Frnnkel's room made out In amounts ranging from 5 te JCO. One of the checks passed bore the name of Max lluhln, who committed suicide while awiiltliK trial. Frankel was held in $S00 ball for a further hearing. VETERANS AGAMsT ATTACK PRESIDENT'S PHYSICIAN Will Demand Gen. Sawyer Sever Connection With Hospital Werk Cincinnati, July 27. (My A. P.) Declaring that Brigadier Ccneral Charles K. Sawyer's connection with the Government hospitalization program for men wounded nnd diiutbllitntcd in the World War has been "meddlesome, troublesome and void of nny beneficial results whatsoever." Captain C. Ham- ilten Cook. Of HllfTnle. X. Y.. nntlnnnl commander of chn Disabled American Veterans of the World War. said to te day that his organization, comprising mere thnn 1)0,000 disabled men, "would lenve no Mone unturned until Oenernl Sawyer had been removed from the pe- DIHII MU ilWlllD Henceforth the Disabled Amnrln.m Veterans of the World War will fight te the finish te see that (Jencral Saw ,er is ousted and thnt control of the hospitals Is vested ln Colonel Charles It. Ferbes, chief of the I'nited States Veterans' Ilureau." Captain Cook con tinued. "He is directly responsible for the enre of the disabled veterans and should hae a freu rein. If he obtains geed results he will receive the recog nition due him. If the results are net geed he will be criticized until the tr tr eors are corrected. "The disabled veterans went con tract hospitals absolutely eliminated and the Government te take char"e wherever dibnblcd men are undergoing treatment-" AKi: YOU I.OOKINO FOK II KM' VER. .lrUn3?rfruu,l1!i?:in0C!iiF LEWIS NOW READY TO MEET OWNERS His Only Condition for Peace Parley Is That Sufficient Tonnage Be, Represented NO SEPARATE AGREEMENTS Miners' lenders from the Central dis trict nre ready te confer with repre sentatives of the mine owners, accord ing In an announcement inuile teduy by Jehn L. Lewis, president of the United "Mine WeLkcrSj of Ameiiui. nt the Belle- Tue-hliatferd. The announcement is thu most itn itn pertnrft since Mr. Lewis came here te confer with the various "district presi dents. Mr. Lewis' tntement Is believed te portend a swift termination of the mine strike. The miners' chief declared em phatically that the miners were ready te confer It a sufficient representation of the mine owners could be get to gether for such a meeting. r He ileelnrnil nn mn1intl-nl1v bnw : -. " ever, mat no sectional agreements would be drawn up. Any agreement would be for all or none. First Condition of Conference Mr. Lewis nnd the district presidents went Inte executive session this morn ing te continue their discussion of con ditions at the mine and the terms of .peace. Before the meeting, Mr. Lewis explained that the first condition of a ccuf( r .ic" would be, getting a suffi cient t image representation from the mine owners. That ically menns n sufficiently nu merous and representative body of ope-n'e"". If .iteh n body wcre brought te- ("ii-llrticd ei fase Four, Column Twe LAST-MINUTE NEWS LEONARD AND TE1VDLER BOTH UNDER WEIGHT JERSEY CITY, July 27. Lew Tendler and Benny Leenard, opponents ln a twelve-round bout here tonight, weighed in at 2 o'clock today nnd both were under the required scale, 135 pounds. MINE WORKERS HAVE WON, LEWIS THINKS Jehn L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, said in an interview this afternoon that "it was undoubtedly true te all purposes and effects that the mine workers have wen the present strike." He declared that It was admitted in fiuancial acd Industrial circles that no wage reduction could be enfeiced iu tl-t n-inins industry. He also explained plans for a joint iutcr-E-.a'-c conference between the miners and the operators. STILL FAVORS BAR PROBEOFfAROLE W. R. Nichelson Repudiates Criticism of Judges in Free ing of "Izzy" Ginsberg SATISFIED WITH RESULTS William It. NIcholFen, Jr., secretary of the Lnw Enforcement League, still feels the State liar Association should investigate the parole of "Izzy" Gins burg, notorious drug peddler, who wns sent back te pilsen recently te serve out his sentence. If.. Vlnl,-I .... . . . .hi. .in iiiMMiii reiurnca loony irem a trip te the Great Lakes. He was away during the Ginsberg inquiry, when Judge Henry C. Quiglcy, of Center County, was anxious te interview him nbeut statements ascribed te him. The secrctnry of the Law Enforcement League wrote te Judge Jehn M. Pat terson en his return denying thnt he hnd said anything reflecting unfavor ably en either Judge Pnttcrsen or Judge Qulgley. "I did say thnt the matter, if as rep resented, should be brought before the Hnr Association," wrote Mr. Nichelson. "Subsequent events have supported tills contention." Mr. Nichelson declined tedny te elab orate the statements made in his let ter. "I am well pleased with t .-.... the case turned out the return of Gins-( eerg te prison," said Mr. Nichelson. "Every citizen Interested in geed gov gev eminent must feel sntislled with the outcome of the case." Mr. Nichelson wns asked just what he meant bv "sub sequent events," bearing out liis in tention the case should be investigated by the liar Association. "The record sjienks for itself," he Mllll. ue.M' in il. nun i i larinnr nrifmii.nl i i.-i. tt r..i..-. Assistant District Attorney wlT , . tigated the Ginsberg pinele as "friend I or me court, commented br eflv Mr. Niiholsen's letter the papers. ' he said. seen Mr. Nichelson. He did just what 1 snld lie'd de, however repudiated the statement attributed te him." DEBS PROTESTS TeTenINE Takes Action In Behalf of Russians New en Trial Chicago. July 27. (By A. P.) Eugene Debs, former Socialist candi date for President, lias sent u cable gram te Premier Leninc, of Soviet Rus sia, pietestlng ngnuist execution of tlu twentj-twe Secial Revolutionists new en trial nt Moscow. Socialist national headquarters ted.iv announced that Mr. Debs hud sent the message following an uppcal fiem the beclullsts of Russia. SEEK HURST IN MEXICO Camden Detective Says Missing Real Estate Man Is Located Detective King, of Camden, believes Snmuel O. Ilurst, n Cnmdcn real estate man for whom a warrant waH Issued a month ngp charging embezzlement, Is new ln Mexico. The detective an nounced today thnt he Is prcpnrlng te ask extradition papers. According te the detective, sumi nl leged te hnvc been taken by the real estate man when he disappeared will aggregate $.'10,000, of which $4000 was lest by n Philadelphia broker. The de tective said thnt after getting the brek; er's money Hurst tiled te borrow $5 from the broker's office boy. FLIGHT REC0RDBR0KEN Navy Blimp Cevers 1100 Miles m 40 Hours and 40 Minutes Belleville. III.. July 27. (By A. P.) Tiie longest llight ever attempted by the army llghter-than-alr crnft service wns completed tedny when the dirigible A-4 arrived nt Scottfield near here. The blimp arrived from Langley Field, Va., a distance of approximately 1100 miles, In forty hours nnd forty minutes of actual flying time. Twe steps were made. The balloon will be sta tioned here permanently. BAY STATE POET WINS $500 Music Club's ' Federation Selects Libretto for Lyric Dance Drama Chicago, .Tulv 27. First prize of $500 in the National Federation of Music Club's "Lyric Dance Drama" competition has been awarded te Rebert Francis Allen, of Colerain, Mass., for his poem. "Pan In America." The li bretto is for a setting te an entirely new form of chamber music, the lyric dance drama being less pretentious than a pageant nnd mere easy te produce by smaller communities. The judges say Mr. Allen's poem Is beautiful ln lnngunge, cohesive in plot and perfectly fulfills the requirements. The prize winning composition Is te be performed nt the biennial fcstivnl of tbe federation In June, 1023, at Ashcvllle, VISIT TO HARDING MAY SETTLESTRIKE President Expected te Induce Rail Executives te Yield en Seniority Issue TO AFFECT MINE CRISIS By CLINTON W. GILBERT Stnir CnrrMpenUfnt Kvtnlnc Vulillc I-eiUfr CotwrleM. 1012, by Public I.cdacr Cemvanv Washington. July 27. Preeldeiu Huntings conferences with the rail road executives Mild Ilin strll.n Inn, In, .. 'which began this morning nre expected ie lean te a settlement of the railroad htrika. The President today saw T. DeWItt Cuyler, and L. F. Leree. of the Dela ware and Hudsen, will come Inter. These men ami W. W. Atterlmry, of the Pennsylvania Railroad, are the chief obstacles te a settlement of the strike, slnee they have objected mere strongly than the ren of the railroad executives te the reMoratieu of the strikers te their former seniority and pension rights. Their position is wenkened bv move meve me,,tJ, llke that of Daniel Wli'laul, of the Raltimere and Ohie, te take his men buck with their former rights, which has the sympathy of many rail road executives as a result of the lack of support of their position in the press nnd by the undisguised feeling of tin. Administration that the issue en which tliey nre holding out is net big enough te justify the consequences te til. t.iinirj ei prolonging the strike. An Academic Question Denicl Willurd's view of the seniority and pension question is thnt il is ac ademic from the railroad standpoint. 1'. ven if the railroad strikers could he in this instance fened te come back Mirrcndeiing what they had irnliiid tiirniiirii ir..- .-.. i " : lt' ,lrl :.l" .. " p co,.,i..-. tabllsh no hliiAlnu7ULu"L Het he mm In .. -,.in .i.. ,i '"..-,'.": . "I read It in lug men would lese nenierlty nnd pen but I hnven't I sien rights. That would iilums ,in. pend upon the strength of the 'unions nnu me willingness of strikers te hehl out until they arc icstered te full i lKnts. ter this icnsen the issue upon whlih he executives conferring here ted.iv have been holding out is regarded bj thu Administration and by manv rnil rnil lead executives as trilling. At tiie m.i.t nil that is imelved Is the punishment of these particular stiikers for hinliiT quit weik. And the Administration Ih tee greatly concerned with the preblei i of ending tlie co-il strike, which Is com cem plicated by lliat of thu railroads, te ie gnrd such n motive as worthy. It is expected lieie that the executive, Continued pn I'nge T, Column Three no, you w. Dlsntv nf f ANT A JOII? TURKIC ARK Wanted columns today en page 23, neni tt(lrtl-il In ri h.iS -A. FOR RAIL PEACE SEES BOTH SIDES Consults Striking Shepmen's Leaders After Conferring With Cuyler at White Heuse SENIORITY RIGHTS AGAIN UP AS STUMBLING BLOCK Counsel for R. R. Chiefs Calls en Daugherty Hepe for Settlement Crews CONFERENCES TO CONTINUE Mere Disorders Are Reported. Nen-Union Workmen Attacked and Beaten Hu Associated rrca Washington, July 27. The White Heuse again today became the center flf developments in the rail strike nnd the focus of efforts toward peace, Presi dent Harding meetlns In conference first with T. DeWItt Cuyler, chairman of the Association of Railway Execu tives, nnd then with the strike leaders, headed by B. M. Jewell, who reached Washington early in the day from Chi cago. Mr. Jewell nnd his colleagues went Inte conference with the President shortly after Mr. Cuyler had concluded nn hour nnd a half's discussion of the strike situation with Mr. Harding. Mr. Cuyler, en leaving the White Heuse, said he had presented the view point of the railroad managements and that he would remain ln Washington" "te await the pleasure of the Presi dent." but thnt there had been no new development in the situntlen. Mr. Cuyler Indicated that he would return te the White Heuse fop nnnthpe conference, after the President had dis cussed the situation with the strike lenders. Pressed for an opinion ns te whether seniority wns the sole stumbling In the way of settlement, he snld he had seen no statement from Mr. Jewell en the point and could net therefore sny whether that was the position taken by the unions. Laber Beard Member en Hand The strike leaders held a brief con . ferenee at their hotel before going te the White Heuse, the bends of the six International unions meeting with Wil liam H. Johnsten, president of the In ternational Association of Machinists, another of the labor organizations in volved in the strike. Mr. Jewell par ticipated ln the conference only for a few minutes just before :t adjourned. All of the strike lenders maintained absolute silence regnrdlng their visit te Washington prier te beelng the Presi dent, even refusing te say whether they came nt the invitation of Mr. Hardiraj or upon their own Initiative. The gen eral belief, however, was that Secre tary of Laber Davis during his confer ence with Mr. Jewell last week at Moeschenrt. 111., had suggested the leaders come te Washington nnd that they had acted upon that suggestion after Mr. Davis had acquainted the President with it. The union chiefs who conferred with the President in addition te Mr. Jewell nnd Sir. Johnsten, included Timethy Healy. president of the firemen's or er or ganisateon ; J. W. Kline, president of the blacksmiths; J, A. Franklin, presi dent of the beilermnkers ; M. F. Ryan. president of the carmen ; James Burns, vice president of the Sheet Metal Work ers' ITninn. nnd Edward Evans, vice president of the International Brother hood of Electrical Workers. Thern Calls en Dougherty While Mr. Cuyler wns at the White Heuse Alfred P. Theiu. ircncrnl rniin. sel of Mr. Cuvler's erirniil7Miinn via. lied the Department of Justice seeking a conference with Atternev Oencral Dougherty. The Attorney General was busy ut the time nnd nn engagement was made for later in the da v. It was i nderstoed, however, thnt Mr. Thern deired te see Mr. DaugherM' en a miner phnsu of the strike situation. Other railroad executives. Including L. F. Leree. of the Delaware nnd Hudsen, nre expected te reach the cup ital and held individual conferences with the President. The President's conferences with the rail chiefs began yesterday, when W. W. Atterhnrv, of tiie Penusyhnnln. discussed the situa- tien at the White tleuse. The President c nfcired with the rail executives particularly en the seniority Issue, new regarded ns the stumbling block in the wny of an ndJUHtmnt that would send the men back te work. In this connection, It was reeilleil today ' thnt, following refusal of Eastern roll executives nt their recent conference with members of the Senate IiiteiNtute Commerce Committee te accede te the union demand for restoration of senior- Continued en Vug The, Column Six SEIZE RUM-RUNNING BOATS Resumption of Liquor Smuggling Activities Indicated In New Yerk New Yerk. July 27. (By A. P.) Seizuie of three nlleged rum-running beats overnight wns declured by Federal prohibition agents tedaj te indicate the resumption of mtivltj bj liquor smug glers who have been uncommonly quiet for several weeks, The three beats were sel.eil In the vicinity of the harbor and officials be lieve they came from some lurger ship anchored several miles off the const. The first seizure wus that of the auxiliary sleep "K 1070(1," with 230 cases of liquor aboard. Thu second ship was taken by coast guards, who had gene te her aid when she grounded en n sandbar off Point O' Weeds, L. I, They said thej found thu vessel te he the sleep ".I. II. 0," earning lL'QO inses of liquor worth $81, OIK). The "drj navy" chaser Hansen nicked up the sleep "Marien Meslicr" three miles from Flie hln ml. TUP. JO YOU AUK I.OOKI.Nd FOB MA Ixi feuml In the JUlp Wnnl.d ceIuSumm page !!3, Ailv, I; 4 .. . :&, 3 ( . & aYrtte&luiw.. .frfr,.. ,.,. hf, VI , w It'L. , t - A.'il'. LI A Si. ,$- f