Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 29, 1922, Night Extra, Image 1

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VOL. VIII. NO. 272
LEWIS GIVES, MINERS' r
SIDE OF COAL STRIKE;
FIGHT TO LIVE, HE SAYS
Operators Deliberately
'Broke Werd of Hener,
He Charges
SAYS FATE OF UNION.
RESTS UPON BATTLE
Sees Tie-Up Until Owners Agree
In Meet Workers Under
Old Contract
QUOTES PENNA'S THREATS
Mserts Men Did Net Force
' Strike, but Had 'te Protect
Their Own Interests
ny oKenr.Eofox mccain
"I wnnt your story of the cenl
.iirlke." .
The remnrk wns addressed te n. brond brend brond
ineuldered mnn. weighing 200 pnuwR
He were n soft, gray-celnrpd summer
-anlt. white negligee shirt, turn-down
rellnr nnd Mack necktie, tied In a
, IoeP hew.
It wns in tne lODDy 01 mu i-n.-tuc-Stratferd.
This mnn hnd a large head, larcer
ippenrim: because of n henvy mns of
i,ni. .innffAfnnnlr Tienr n red 1
I Dr" II Him !! ..........
fall, round, smooth -"haven lemurcs.
i .L.t .,.. ..,t nlilpumntin in renesc, nnd
Inquiring grny eyes under dense, buhy.
' tjebreu s.
' .Timing hi nge, 1 would IW it nt,
fey. forty-si, years. In reality he Is
fcrtv-twe.
This was Jehn L. Lewis, interna
tional president of the United Mine
Workers of America, rhr se-calleii
lltrik- lender -of 050,000 men.
"Will ou mint whnt.I say?" he hf
' quired. jecuhrly, with a smile.
1 "l citninuv i repm-u.
Ixwls Joined by Philip Murray
. Tut then there strelleil ever from ft
little group in n corner n middle-sized
mnn with riiRRed, smooth features,
IIkMIj retreuve nose, nnd whitening
bbw,,',,,,i,0,i intn n "rench." or whorl.
' tLfl. il.A nanllAAM
Dlll nlT II"-' Ullt.ii"".
He rniely smiled in the ensuing talk,
poke with n bread Scotch burr, and
as en interested nnd Intense listener.
Philip Mm lay l his name, member
ef the Central Heard of Hducatien of
PltMmrKh.
He is better Known in im' i-iuin uts some iiisiiince irem .Matniuie. was
tmhistrv of this country as internutienn' i her uncle. Cjius II. McCormick, chair
JmliiMij of tmsieuiurj Mine mn" of ,1', nI "t Directors of the
Tice president of the I nlted Mine Illtt.r,llllleiml Harvester Company.
Weikers of America, in charge et tin. ..j flln nnt it,.i,.sted In the affairs of
He Is better known in the rallies ei
ii,v,.;. n.tl. i In tbis Ktrikc
Lewis and Mnrrny are me iwe uiu
Innillne liirnrcK Oil their Side Of tllC
iii n uii't i"j ..-- , i
prcM-iit industrial upheaval. t i jir. Mi Curmlrk snidjie would meet
"Te start at the beginning, sam 1is hen ,.1(l(m ln iri,,mi ,)Pn(l two
Mr. Lewis, "this suspennen of work Is mnlllw x Itli him In Fflmce and Italv.
Ttallv a lockout and net a striite. Switzerland is net included in their
"When the United Mine "'Ke ,,f itineiary. he asserted.
AmeVica met in convention last letiru-
ar te discuss the v.nuc-scule agree- Geneva. July 21). (By A. I) Mrs.
ment that was te expire March .11, stanlV It. Mifermlck. of Chicago,
thrre were 22SS delegates present. 1 here discussing jestenlay the reported en
n one from every local ln the country. I Rlgeim-ut of her niece, Mathllde McCor McCer
"After full discu-slen It win decided mvk, te Max (rser, the former Swiss
thnt when our Scale Committee met riding master, said:
lt!i the operators we would stand for "Although theie is an understanding
I luntlnuntien of the existing agree- between Mathllde and Oser, It cannot
Went ; that there should be no reduc- )0 railed an engagement. We hope that
tlen In wnges. ..Mathllde will wait another jenr, when
tiiu r nn..f.H,,r. Tnvitiitlnn ',", ul" ,IHV(' '""veil nt her majority,
lells of Conference Inltiillen .vfere dedillng en marriage."
'I was also instructed te secure an , Mrs, McCormick with her mother has
mii'i inie ceniereni-c m niun:ir .i
norntets I
in the centinl competitive
h includes Western l'enn-
nr i . wnieii memees tit u-m .....-
wlumia. Ohie, Indiana and Illinois.
.llil" lias neeii i no hmiiu cumuui ur-
tnren operators and miners for twenty-
S nTnuM.Jitnr.W1 S'tf
.fc..1'11;1,'...!- t
frrenee be held prier te April 1. WSJ!:
the time and place of holding such meet
ing Is referred te a cemmitter of two
optt.iteis and two niineis fiem each j
Ktiile herein lepresented.' 1
"In accordance with that agreement
I ItMieil an invitation In December
, , , ., .. i
laM. asking the operators te meet us
en .laiiiiary 0 at Pittsburgh.
'The operators declined the Invl-
.uii.m en me Bim mc. in u mu. mn According te witnesses, Walters at at
ret propose te participate in any mere u.mntC( , RPt ,mt f th ,mth of n
conferences or intcr-btate agreements. , .nncl1, hlt , , b t
in i!'1'' '". Fe,Vrmll'y l, lt-s,u''1 i!m)t u'r ' te pass, the speeding machine iwerved
Imitation te the operators under In-. , ',i. iff 'i ,,i, u..i-. -....
-.4. .IH . til
Itiurtoiisfiem our convention. I asked
then te meet ns In Cleveland lu March.
Again they declined.
Sajs Operators Itiehc Agreement
'ltj-.this." said Mr. Lewis "the
pernteiH dellbernlelv broke their word
01
honor
i it n.... . i
a vi tn'iiti), , iii s.:iiiiti. niiirivLT'lllilll
for twenty cnrs for the operateis said
In a pnhlUlpil inteniew:
" M iiiiinnt deny that our icfusal te
Buet Is a violation of our -ugicement
'Tlie cenunct agreement explied,"
Mr. Lewis continued "nnd the opeia epeia
t(irs having twice lefused a conference
en the wage scale, there was nothing
left for us te de but te milt work.
Which wc did.
It was either that, or else accent
' ra.;s !.n,esep,;?r,"7ve r
...... ....., W. E1U ItlLUlil
"am ceuiii lie. expected under such
circumstances?
II .it ,s,'"co """ "" '"lV0 repeatedly,
BJ through Informal channels and geiein-
ment influence, endeavored te bring
- hmiii.iih, .-inn ii . in vii hi eriiig
"out a meeting with the operators te
-.Mills matiers nut without success
"Why will they net meet ion. What
. ,. ..... ..... iim iiiii-i lull, t
l he excuse udvan.edV" 1 asked
I
I, i can best answer that question"
yi'le.l M,.. Lewis, "by quoting the
i uci-uinuien ei .Mr. I'ennii made before
vie National Association of Ceal Op.
Jinteis t their meeting held in Chicago
" .tln. last. He said:
'The United Mine Workers nf
America should be wiped out of exls-
.villi- mm us meiuerj obliterated for fer
cier. i
"Sinte .Apill 1 last," continued
JU. LcwM. "the strlke Jias been con cen
llimed. There are (1.10.0(10 men In In
Telved. The stilku will be continued
intn the uperuteia ugice te meet wlt.li
..
Entmd at Seend;Clii Matter at
Under tha Act of
Sails te Meet Oser
jn.MI.SS MATIIILDK McCORMICK
Who Imnnled a liner a't New Yerk
today for a trip te Europe, wliern
she Is expected te meet Max Oscr,
Swiss horseman, whom It Is said
she plans te marry
MAIHILDESAiLS;
Miss McCormick Secretive as
She Leaves for Europe.
"Running Own Beat"
WON'T TALK OF HER PLANS
Itu Aiieclntrd rr'ii
New Yerk, July 20. Mnfhllde Mc
Cormick, dauchter of Hareld 1 Mc Mc
Cenncik. of Chicago, sailed en the Mn
jestlc today with n maid q her only
cnmpnnlen.
She declined te dlseus her plans, te
mention Max 0er, Swiss riding acad
emy mat-ter, te whom she nnneuneed
her engagement last spring, te say
where she .would vllt In Hurepe or
hew long she would remain there.
"I haVen't u tiling te say," was her
enlv remark.
Miithllde's brother. Fowler, and sis
ter, Muriel, saw her aboard, neth
were reticent, declaring they knew
nothing about the plans of their seven-teen-jear-eld
sNtcr.
"She'h limning her own beat, you
knew," wnld Fowler.
Alse-m tile lulcstic. but in euar-
ters some distance from Mnthllde. was
ether people." he leplied te questions
concerning Mnthlble. "I don't care
..l,.lf .. l,rHiur'u fniil.. .lnnu'O
i iii ri iiiiiu .ill
just rented a Denutiriit chateau nt
( Pniugliis, near Geneva, where, mull
November, she will receive manv
.xeve nuer. sac win recrivi. mn
( fiiends and lelatlens. including Hareld
i .Morermlel; and .Matliilde McCormick.
.VICTIM OF MOTOR CRASH
! LEFT LYING IN STREET
Seek Motorist Who Deserted Chaa.
H. Walters, 2034 North 62d Street
Chniles H. Walters, thirty-six jears
old. of 2034 North Sixty-second street.
Is lu a xenens condition in the Suiimri-
M'll liwr.ll, Ml, II". II HTI.Il. ,11 il 1 IHIIItlllll
, u.,m(1 ,, Allegheny inenue early
' today resulting in the wreck of two
. -iUtonielilo,
leti Hospital as a lcsult of a collision
I" 11' " ! 1-11 HVik 1 IIIIVIO fllllLf"
,,,, ulth ,.,, fnrCP t)U , (
wnh irew trnm hg SPnt, n,,le ,,,,
en ,,,M ,lps ,, fm.p wn8 ternnn(, hI
head lacerated.
' .As Waltcis a In the street the driver
l11.1' w,n" rnr ninpeu put or
machine and after a casual leek at the
i i
nneonscleus .nan hurried a way.
' Hn.pltiili have been nsked te watch
f01" t,u1 ,1,r,v"i ' (lisn'!"0"1- ' ,"
believed he also was injured and will
apply for tieatineiit.
BOY AND WOMEN HURT
AS BUS STRIKES TROLLEY
tMI-.t-l-. TarifLfL Kft9 Smith Ttilfri
MlWIIWIWtl -www-r-i W WMf( t ill w
st:eet .Camden' ?riu,8e,d ,"1ce,,,-i"
One hey wns Injured nnd several
women were bndly shaken up this
morning when.an auto bus. en its way
te the Camden ferry terminal, collided
with a street car at Twelfth and Fed
eial streets, Camden.
Nicholas Tedesifi, tiurteen jenrs old,
"f "- Seuth Third street, Cnniden, wns
! bruised about the head and was treated
nt Coener Hospital.
The collision followed a blowout of i
one. or tlie tires en wie irucK. Tim
tire came off the wheel nnd the driver,
.lMwnid Sottelanii, ,'118 Herkley street,
' Cnniden, lest control of the machine.
I The trolley with which It collided was
i.i ni- in the same direction.
The te women, together witlheven
ether ims-engers, refused te go te ,i
hospital for tieatment and iHinrded the
trolley te thr ferries. The driver es.
raped injniy.
no YOU WANT A JOII.T . TIIKRE ARE
Dlenlv nt them aatrllen inline,
Wanted column! today &n past 18, X
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SILENT i
OSER
I
th roteffle at Phllae'alinMa, Pa.
March 8. lsTB
E
ARE LAID TO SMITH
Newlywed Pretests-at Hearing
yitheut Presence of W.
. R. Nichelson
TRIES TO SHIELD BRIDE
Hem R. Smith, war veteran nnd son
of nreputnble family, Interrupted his
hearing before Mnglstrntc Cewnrd te
ceniplitn repeatedly that he had been
denied cemuel. '
. Smith was arrested Thursday night
in Ms apartment nt Sixty-ninth and
Market streets, charged with having
passed worthless checks. He wiih In
sistent then that the news of his ar
rest be kept from his pretty young
wife, te whom he had been married
but a month. lie told the police that
the "bright lights" had led te his
downfall. He was held yesterday for
court en one charge and a further
hearing en another. x
Twe mere charges were pressed
against him today, and testimony as te
a third was ruled out because no war
rant had been Issued. Smith Ave or
six times interrupted the testimony te
declare: "I haven't been allowed te
cemiiiuiilcute with my friends or get
In touch with my attorney."
Finally the magistrate said: "Who Is
your ntternev?"
"Colonel William It. Nichelson, the
hanker." said Hmlth
Magistrate Ceward smiled. "Yeu
mustn't mind net having been able te
geln touch with him," he said. "Felks
were trying te get in touch with his
son net long age, for n couple of
weeks." The reference was. te William
It. NlchoKen, Jr., secretary of the Law
Hnferc;enient League, whose testimony
was desired In the recent Ginsberg pa
role investigation. The magistrate's
sally brought e Inueh.
Finally Smith, pointing te Detective
Gibsen who was testifying, said:
"I think that 'Nick Carter' here is
trying te 'frame me."
The magistrate assured the witness
that he would be given fair nlnv. nnd
would have an opportunity te consult
counsel before a further henring.
One of the complainants is C. T.
Mitchell, of .1314 Race street, who tes
tified Smith hnd approached him In the
lobby of the Cltr Club some time nge
and asked him te inderse n ?2.r check
se he could get It cashed. Mitchell
snld he did se, only te find there were
"Insufficient funds" In bank te meet
the check. Mere recently, he testified,
he met Smith and the latter gave him
$S in ensh.
Merris Ilrackman testified that' Smith
hnd obtained a $2T suit from his store
at 1.132 Chestnut street, paying with a
check. J. Lucas, an empleye of Hrack
man. testified Smith hnd come In later,
made himself known by the suit, whleb
he were, and asked indersement for a
check he wnnted cashed. Hraekman
declared he had indorsed the check nnd
sent the boy te the bnnk te cash It.
Smith, he said, took the cash, amount
ing te .$22T. nnd left.. The check was
worthless, according te the witness.
Smith wns held In bnll In both cases
for n further henring in September.
aldee"arrested
at home of friend
Released When Allan Hunter Re
fuses te Press Disorderly Charge
Alden Lee, 400 West Lancaster ave
nue, Ilnverferd. was arrested early
1 Thursday morning en the grounds of the
home of Allan Hunter, Jr., Crefeldt
avenue, St. Martins.
A patrolman took him te the Ger Ger
mantewn police station, where he wns
slated as "drunk and disorder!)." The
charge was net pressed, however, nnd
after he had been detained for a few
hours he was permitted te go
Mrs. Allan Hunter, Jr.. had gene te
a niirft. nf thn lllt.r'iitHntt ntwl tiu '
escorted home by Mr. Lee. She bade
him geed-night nnd entered the house.
She believed Mr. Lee hnd left the
grounds immediately.
Mr. Hunter, according te the police,
"aw Mr. Lee en the grounds of his home
'shortly afterward and summoned a pa-
trelman.
Mr. Lee's wife. Edith, n dailKhtcr of
Mr. and Mr.s. Oeerge II. ICnrlc, Jr.,
died several enrs nge. He Is twenty
nine years old, a member of the Merlen
Cricket Club nnd a gradunte of the
I'nlverslty of Pennsylvania.
CYNVmlvMAN WINS
RACE WITH BIG SNAKE
Policeman Sheets Reptile Four Feet
I Leng After Strenuous Run
I Mrs. A. J, Magulre, of Llnnllle
i rend, Cynwyd, wns gathering flowers
In her gnrden shortly before neon today
( and steeped as she approached it tall
hedge.
As she nrese again she saw n large
snake celled en the hedge.
Mrs. Mngulre fled, screaming. The
reptile dropped from the hedge and un
dulated along the lawn after the terri
fied woman. It went a few ards and
then decided another rest would be mere
pleasnnt thnn a chnse.
Neighbors heard Mrs. Magulre's
screams and summoned rntr eman
(Jeorge Dirks, of the Lewer Merlen
police. The snake problem was put
squarely up te him.
Dirks get a clothes prep and pinned
the, snnke down'. Then he fired three
shots intn the spot where Its nek
would he if snnkes hnd necks. The in
nder writhed for a few minutes and
died. .
Dirks measured the snake and found
It was four feet five Inches long and
three and one-half Inches thick, Imp
skin was blnck, mottled with white
spots,
SAYS VERSES AT WEDDING
Qen. Kneeland, 77, and Mrs. E.
Jehnsen, 79. in Romantic Nuptials
Danbury, Conn., July 20. (Hy A.
P.) General S.illmnn F. Kneeland, of
New Yerk, lawyer and nrtlst, seventy
seven years old, nml Mrs, Knstman
Jehnsen, seventy-nine, widow of a fn fn
meus nrtlst. were married In this city
ti day and left for their new home In
Pittslleld, Mnsiu., where they expect
te spend their honeymoon.
'Pliii nut rm ntt ii-nv nf Q Tnikm.l
tf..BUiAiin1 nhnrnli A fnr tl. A ia..,..,.,.... I
Cenerul Kneeland lerltcd some poems
of his own composition.
if it's , fnKn avtomeiiii.f; you
wunt, you'll find It or. pge18. Atlv. .
MORE BAD CH
CKS
PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1922
I "MUSIC" A CHILDISH REFLEX
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Till photographic study of the reception given the strains of Grieg,
Hetheven and oilier noted classical composers wa.s made nt the first
"Children's Concert" glen by the Tark Symphony Orchestra today.
The jeiingster wMh the pursed lips has caught a little, strain from
Strauss' "Blue Danube," his chum Is nonrenimltnl, hut the one In the
center plainly Is registering "Toe highbrow let's have some Jazz"
CHILDREN RAPT AT
Sit Without a Wriggle en Hard
Park Benches as Orches-
tra Plays
RIVER'S CALL IS UNHEEDED
Children some nine hundred or n
thousand of them gathered early this
morning In nnd around the music pa
vilion nttLcmen Hill, Falrmeunt Pnrk.
And this wns a little odd because
there wns- overhead n flecklcss sky, a
quick breeze that parted the foliage
deftly, a benignant sunshine that put
the shade te shame, and beyond, the
clear, cool river with Its call te youth.
Se It was odd thnt the children
should turn their backs oil nil this,
odd, notwithstanding everyone knew
that the first of a series of children's
concerts by the Pnrk Symphony or
chestra was te be given.
Nevertheless they were there. Chil
dren of whose genuineness there could
be no doubting nenriy all under thir
teen, barelegged mostly, and bare
headed Jill of them.
True, many of them hnd come with
elder folk, but net. It seemed, under
mandate, nnd as mmiy mere hnd un
doubtedly come nlene and free free at
anv time te cut across the hill te the
river. The Pnrk Guards who gave
jeu the programs would have admitted
as much had they been nsked.
Lollypop Net Barred
Still, nobody wandered, though te
,tnr mVant sitting in tin sun nnd en
. i t i i -n.i
very hnrd benches nnd net tnlklng very
loud, and nrter tlie tiling nnd started,
net tnlklng nt nil
Yeu might suck n lollvpep If you hnd
one and made no noise nbeut It, net
even wriggling- Thev gave jeu a pro
gram and the first thing It said en it
was thnt jeu should held fast te it,
and net give the mnn work picking it
P.-
l The musicians sat nueut in tne shell
and tnlv "pumped or whum-wiiam-we-wee'd"
or took the reeds out of
their horns and held, the horns upside
down for something te drpp out. They
seemed rather sleenv.
After n while Victer Kelnr, the con
ductor, came up, and you clapped jour
hands, for that meant things would be
gin new.
Then the Rum Turn Turn
He wero white pants and white shoes
and no hat. Ills blue' coat had an
ensy little curve In the back. He
poked his stick first at one musiclnn
and then nt another nnd then slapped
It against bis music stand. Right
away they were plajiug a thing that
went "dum, turn, trlm-tuni; rum, turn,
turn-turn, rum tidl urn ta." It wes a
geed thing with lets of bells In. It. It
kept en going "rum, turn tum-tum."
faster each time.
Yeu looked en the pregrnm and saw
It wns called "Turkish March" and
the lady behind you .whispered "Alt,
jcs. Frem the 'Hrtde of Athens.
i.eveiy num.-. nun me in ej- m-xi ie
her said, " 'Ruins of Athens my dear,"
nnd altheuga It wns a prcttj geed, sort
of march jeu had te admit fellows
would hae a hnrd time keeping step te
It. Maybe Turks don't march In step,
though.
P0INCARE, FEARING MURDER,
SLIPS AWAY FROM PARIS
BAREFOOT CONCERT
Leaves by Aute After AnnounclneJ,"', ,, , l tm 10r",01""0 " the
7 "tfluclesure In deep center for the longest
iopariure ey i ram
Paris. July 211. (Hv A. P.l All
Paris was surprised when it beenme '
known flint Premier Petneare hail slip- '
iipiI uuletlv out of the clt. by autoine-
1 bile for his ceun.rv home lu the De-
partment et tne .Meuse early tedaj.
It had been announced last night that
the Premier had left hy train for his
week-end holiday. Klabernte precnu- ,
tlens were taken nt the rnllwav sta Ien
whence he was supposed te have de-1
tinrted nnd it wns said an rntlnn
in hnd I
precetled the train te preicnt a fies
sinie nrempt te wtcck it.
It was learned eday, however, that
a quick change had been made In the
DUlll 111 OHlOr tO UtMt IM UtUMlllit
i"" ,,,1P ''einlet ;s life : which might be
nindc In connection with the announce.
ment jesteiday that a (icimiin iniiii
....... ,. - ,. ,..,, ,, . , . .1 mi 1 1 ji, in,-
nichlst plot te nNnssinatc him was jn
existence. -i
GHOST? BUNK, SAYS
RVERSDE
WOMAN
Anether Antigonish Mystery Is
Solved Without Aid of
Any Experts
'TWAS MEMBER OF PARTY
"Anether ghost of Antigonish?
Piffle!" said Mrs. Fred VTarner, of
Hlverslde, N- J., whose daughter
Eunice was one of a party of ten New
Jerscyitcs who visited a "hnuntcd"
house en the top of a mountain ln
Mnlne, near the Canadian border.
The home of the ghost, se he story
gees, was at one time the home of an
unhappy couple. When the woman died
she swore she would haunt her hus
band. According te the old settlers,
the woman was true te her word nnd
shortly nfter her death the husband be
came insane and died, from strange noc
turnal noises which frequented the
house.
Mrs. Perlle Chepin, owner of the
house, pointed it out te the party of
Jerscyitcs and they entered. Ne sooner
had the party crossed the threshold
when the bremldlc noises of the haunted
house prcvniled upon their Imagination.
But
Rising from the center of a closet en
the second fleer of the aged house came
a spirit. Net a Bplrit who waved
wrnlthlike hack and forth, but one
which wns dressed for a promenade en
Chestnut street en n Saturday after
noon. "Shrieks of horror arose from the
women members of the delegation,
while the men, in mere of n 'hurry,'
hastened out the windows," Mrs. War
ner said ln describing her daughter's
experience.
"Kunlce, who happened te be closest
te the 'ghost,' noticed 'he' moved only
Interilly, and net up nnd down ns most
'geed' ghosts de," Mrs. Warner said,
"se shq promptly untied the noose which
was holding the 'wraith' up nnd 'he'
enimpled te the fleer."
It was afterward learned that one
of the party following n session of
ghost stories en the night preceding
the adventure, had slipped away from
the gathering, end 'hung' the 'ecto 'ecte
plasmic fellow' in the closet.
LEE HITS" HOMER'iN
FIRST CUBS' BATTLE
Phils Ge Inte Lead, With
Pitching Brilliant Ball
Ring
niic.wie
Hrathrete, rf
HnlliH-lirr,
reirj. !li
Miller. If
llarbtr. lh
rrlbur. f
Kriic. Mb
OTitrrrl, r
ritTLS
Rnm, 8b
J. Smith. Jb
Villinnw. tl
Mnlkfr. rf
Meknn. if
rietilirr, nt
-lee. lb
llenlliur, e
ii-lmrnp p
I'mplrri ttldrr anil McCormick.
IUHK, U
Cliff Lee, the new- home-run king at
Itrnad and Huntingdon streets, crashed
his fifth home run in five gnmes In the
second inning of the Hist game of a
twin bill with Hill Killefer's Club this
afternoon.
At the stnrt of the seventh the Phils
weie lending .1 te 1.
With two down In the second frame
Fletcher lilt the right-field wnll. Lee
took n might j swing nt one of Osberne's
peSSIIHe tour-ply shot Inside the
grounds.
The Cubs made their only mnrker
without the semblance of a hit lu the
fourth. With two down. Tlnrlmp
wnlked. stele second nnd went te third
wneu iienune tnrew wild te second.
Frlhurg pepped an easy one heteen
the pitcher's box wul fiist base. (Joldie
Vnpp rushed ever, yelled "I get It"
anil muff is 1 It. Harber ceuntlnc.
Jimmy Smith wns at second In place
et rarMiisen, who i Buffering with n
nunc DUCK,
Jimmy Ulng hurled for the locals, nl nl
lewing nnlj two singles in t1(. flrNl
six innings.
Details of the (iauu
riltST Ilcnthcete gieunded te
'lleichci. lioiiecher was safe
------ ; ' .. ' i-nii' mi
rletcher s lev, tluuw. 'Icnj grounded
Continued en Taje ritttce. Column in.
rublittud Dally Kept Sunday.
Cepyrlsht, 1022. by
BORAH MAY FIGHT
Objection te Commission framed
by President Heard Among
Progressive Senators
HIS ADVISERS ANTI-UNION
n- CLINTON W. GILBERT
Staff Cnrrrimnitrnt Krenlnit Pnlille Itefr
Cepurlalit, lets, bu PnbHe I.rdatr Company
Washington, July 20. The legisla
tion President Harding premises In his
letter te Gnverne" (Srecbeck te ask of
Congress will bring Senater Uernh te
the feie. The brllllnnt Idaho Irregiilnr
Is chairman of the Senate Committee
en Education nnd Lnber. He Is work
ing hard prcpnrlng himself for a strug
gle en labor legislation.
Yesterday his committee sent him te
confer with President Herding en cenl
strike legislation. He hns Introduced n
bill providing for a commission te In
vestigate and report en conditions In
the coal Industry. President Harding hnd
premlsell such n commission ln his let
ter te Governer Sproul.
The Senate committee declined te re
port the hill sponsored by its chair
man, Mr. Horah, until it hnd con
sulted with Mr. Harding te see whether
there was any conflict between the two
proposed commissions. The conference
yesterday will seen he followed by nn nn
ether. The situation resembles thnt
when the Nnvnl Disarmament Confer
ence was pending nnd Mr. Uernh an
ticipated the President by getting
through the Senate n resolution for
such a conference that was net In har
mony with the executive plans.
In his letter te Governer Ureesbeck
President Harding seld:
"If the cenl producers of the United
Centlniifil en Tnee Fenr. Column One
HARDING MINE BILL
LAST -MINUTE NEWS
BASEBALL SCORES
CHICAGO -
PHILLIES(2d).... -
ATHLETICS
DETROIT
CHICAGO 0001000102 7 3
PHILLIES(lst) 020C-1. G21X C 8 3
Osberne and O'Farrell; Ring and Henline. Rigler and KcCermicli.
ST. LOUIS 1 0 0
BKOOKLYN(N.L.).. 0 0 5 -
i-'tctfer and Aiusmith: Grimes and UlUer.
CiAClSNATI 100000123.-5 1-I 0
JJOeTON(N.L.)lst... y 10000120 i II 1
r.i:;ey and Winge; "Watsen and O'Heill.
?Hn.S TAKE OPENER OF
CHICAGO r h e a e
Ilonthceate, rf... 0 110 0
nolleclicr. ss, 0 e' 1 2 0A
Terry, 2b 0 2 ,4 4 0
Miller, If 0 0 0 1
Barber, lb 1 100
Friburar, c 0 1 3 0 0
Krtiff, 3b 0 1'2 2 0
O'Farrell, c 0 0 4 12
Osberne, p 110 0 0
Stueland, p e 0 0 0 0
i
TotaJe 2 7 24 9( 3
LATEST RACING RESULTS
EMPIRE m st Belle eT Bluci'idf;e. 3-1. evei. 2-5, wen-. Mon Men
ardclla, G-l, 2-1, even, second; Dick's Cuightei. 12-1, 5-1, 2-1,
thud. Time. 1.07 2-5 Mai ten, Cull: IIni, Poinpeus and Recom
mendation also ran.
MINER KILLED BY PREMATURE EXPLOSION
GltEENSBTJRG, PA July 20. One miner was ki.Utl nnd
another seiieusly injuied at Maigulike, near heie, today by a
incmatuie explosion in the Dennelly and Kavole nunc. Jccp:.
Diakey was killed and his father? Audicw Diskey, injuied. Ac Ac
ceiding te the father, the explosion eccuned as Jeseph piepaied
te set off a dynamite blabt.
PACK YOUR BAG
Mr. Bliss Premises Beautiful
Weather for Week-Enders
Forecaster Hllss, than whom there Is
no better eonneUcur of geed, bad nnd
Indiffeient weather, decided this morn
ing that week-enders may go forth te
their various summer haunts confident
of fair skies.
Mere than thnt, he premises that the
iiistiiiiiarj humidity will be larking,
lli. if till tlWUllIM .1 Mini Villi .'niii.i!.. ..1. .'
I III!., ...' ................ ..... .. ..,,,,,, ,H,
the same, and that northern breezes
I will ptciail. Ne lain Is In sight.
AltK tV I.OIIKIMI I OK IIKI.fi l'Ki.
tiin
nip. i-i vri irin you .wnnt a ailvul
:inc uudr SltuuUeDH en paa 18, Adv.
SubjeTlpllcn Prlca IS a Yaar by MMI,
PuWIe LaArar Company
13-YEAR-OLD BOY SAVES
AUNT IN BURNING BED
Candle Startt Blaze Child's Hands
Burned In Rescue
JOHN HERPEL
Thirteen-year-old Jehn Hernel saved
lils aunt, Mrs. Mabel Iirennnn. thirty
one years old, of 1023 North Lelthgew
street, from prebnbie death ln n lire
Inst night, when ln response te her
screnms he ran Inte her bedroom and
dragged her from her 'bed which had
caught fire.
The boy wns severely burned ln saving
his nunt and Mrs. Brennnn Is In Roose
velt Hospital in serious condition as
the result of her burns.
Police say a member of the family
came tee close te the bed with a candle,
Igniting the bed clothing.
The flames were spreading ever the
bed ""when Mrs. Brennan awoke. Her
nephew was asleep ln an adjoining
room. When he arrlvpd the bed was a
mass of flames. He wns also treated at
the hospital for his burns. Meanwhile
ether members of the family were
aroused and an alarm of fire was turned
In. The less amounted te about $250.
TWIT BILL FROM CUBS
PHILLIES r h e a e
Rapp, 3b 0 14 4 1
J Smith, 21 0 0 2 0 0
" Willliams, cf 0 0 3 0 1
Walker, rf 2 3 0 10
Meknn, If 114 0 0
Fletcher, ss 115 11
Lee, lb 115 2 0
Henline, c 12 2 11
Kin:, p 0, 0 1 2 0
Wrifihtstene, ss. 0 0 1 C 0
Totals 6 0 27 II 3
MARKS AT 15y2 CENTS A 100
German Exchange Falls te Lewest
I Point Ever Reached
I New Yerk, July 20. Eitreme de
moralization wns shown by fJermnn ex
i chnnffp tmlav. the mark fiilllnir in IMA
ents n 100, the lowest quotation eer
recorded here, i
This present d un overnight decline
of nhieM two cents n hundieil. Tim
minimi, or pre-wnr, pi Ice of the murk
1 was 211 h cents each.
APMITMINTK TO SI'IT I'.VIIlt I'fKSr
I '. 't''. ' -1"', wn.ii.ni.111 iuy I9 rnunil
'(ulikly li cenHUlJns the Apartment culururi
?. vmw a. m
PRICE TWO CENTSS
TARIFF SCANDAL
tSi
nm
iva
'T! t!
?FC
tj, v:
. Vi t
HAK hIAHIh
waaaaaawM feM
FIGHT IN
Caraway Accuses Certain Mem
bers of Having Financial In- ' N
terest in New Schedules
INTRODUCES RESOLUTION '
DEMANDING INVESTIGATION
Reading of Newspaper Editorial
Starts Acrid Debate
en Fleer
SENATORS DENY CHARGES
Coeding, of Idaho, in Impas
sioned Speech, Declares H.
Will Fight for Bill
Washington. July 20. A scandal of
nntlennl proportions ever'nnnss the
Senate, according te certnln of Its
members who have been quietly In
vestigating the nctUitlcs of colleagues
In connection i with the tariff.
At today's session, n resolution wms
introduced hy Sennter Caraway, Dera-
I ecrnt, of Arknnsna, asking for nn In
vestigation of the charges that certain'
Senater nre interested financially ln
J the rates of duties proposed ln particu
lar schedules of the pending Tariff Bui.
The resolution provides for an "in
quiry by the Judiciary Committee of
the Senate, which would be Instructed
te make a report within ten days. The
committed also would investigate ether
charges that Senators, In the language'
of the resolution "are or were finan
cially Interested in the passage or ex
tension of the se-called emergency
tariff."
Senater Caraway rend from an eM eM
terlal ln the New Yerk Herald charging
that certain Senators were Interests!
ln the production of wool, and immedi
ately was Interrupted successively by
all of the Senators mentioned ln the
editorial, with a resulting running
crossfire of. debate which waxed warm
atttimes.
Wants Caraway "Investigated"
Senater Geeding, of Idaho, chairman
of the Republican agricultural tariff
bloc, said Senater Caraway had xtd
for a duty en rice and that his In
terest in rlcevRheuId be investigated,.
Denying that he or any of his relatives
had any financial interest ln the pre -ductlen
of rice, Senater Caraway said
he would sny te anybody who se charged
that he was an "unqualified llnr."
Senater Smoot, of Utah, ln charge of
the wool schedule, reiterated his denlnl
thnt he was interested in sheep-raising,
declaring that he had net owned a sin
gle sheep or lamb for ninny years.
Sennter Odette, of Nevada, another of
these mentioned in the Herald editorial,
told the Senate he did net own one
sheep and hnd no interest in the wool
matter, except that "I am interested
In the welfare of the West."
Senater Ittirsum, of New Mexico, de
clared If the Sennte wns going te spend
Its time Investigating "every little
slur" thnt was made ln the newspapers
against Senators It would accomplish
little business.
Senater Caraway replied ne did net
regard the charges that Senators were
voting te take money from ether people
te put In their own pockets through
the medium of legislation as a "little
slur." Mr. Bursum replied that he had
no objection te the "world knowing
about this matter." He denied he was
a millionaire, as one publication bad
averred.
Senate Rules and Ethics Ignored
These Interested in the investigation
charge thnt a considerable group of
Senators would benefit directly by
the increased import duties carried
In the bill, and have labored
steadily In behalf of schedules in
which they nre financlnlly inter
ested. It Is declared they hive lob
bird for excessive rates before the Fi
nance Committee In cloakrooms and
voted for them en the Senate fleer,
notwithstanding thnt the rules nnd
the ethics of the Sennte require them
te absent themseltes and refrain from
voting when they have private inter
est nt stake.
Other Senators, it is ngserted, hare
nn indirect Interest In some of the
schedules by virtue of investments
which would be enhanced in value by
the passage of the bill.
Jeffersen's Manual of Parliamentary
Prnctlce. the recognized authority, lays
down the following rule, which is In-
Centlnatd en raee Twe, Column 8Ta
CHARLES PIEZ, FORMER
FLEET HEAD, REMARRIES
Honeymooning In Europe With 8so 8se 8so
end Wife Was His Stenographer
Charles Plez. who lived in Merlen
while he was head of the Emergency
Fleet Corporation. Is henej mooning In
Europe with his bride, whom he mar
ried secretly four months nge.
She wns Miss Laura Coeke, his stt
nngrupher. Friends of Mr. nnd Mrs.
I'iez stumbled uikiu the reinnnee by ac
cident as the couple were about te beard
a steamer for Europe.
"Cieing te make it a honeymoon?"
they asked.
"We hnve been married fenr
months." Mr. Plez told his friends.
Mr. Plez nnd Mrs. Lnurn Olivin Flera
Plez were dherced Inst December. Mr.
tll.. 1 .!. 11 -II 1 J-
i IVA ui'Kiiu iih ifieurudiiiKn, uiii-j(ing Q tx
fiertlen. The former Mrs Plcc is said '3ji
te be living in .ew lern, ...--,
When Charles M. Schwab retired as '. -J!
director-general of the Emergency M
neei i orperation, .nr nez succeeded
him. He continued in that position
until May, 1010, then went te Chi
cago. He had resided in Philadelphia
for seventeen jeara prier te his con
nection with the Fleet Corporation.
Mr. Plez Is president of the Lng
Hell ('emi'niij. '1 weiily-fiist and limit
job after graduating from the rnglf aWs
n.eiLig ehnel cf CeKimblit l.'nivrrMry Wffl
ing i'iiik im-imc, mi in j, ins nrst
wit" lis dinftsmnu fur the
Inly 1t-iA,
.'....iHlilJ.
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