Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 04, 1922, Night Extra, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    tNe Weather
, Partly cloudy wid moderately warm
lenl'nt uid Tuesday pintle variable
"tli-MrEBATUnr. at K,fcn noun
I1TT0111 HB I t i 2 i a
VOL. VIII. NO. 303
Miss Daisy Wright, This City,
Among Victims in Crash
Near Claymont, Del.
ENGINEER COULDN'T STOP
Saw Aute, but Train Was Going
Toe Fast te Avoid
Accident
DRIVER "STEPPED ON GAS"
INSTEAD OF THE BRAKE
Car Is Demolished and Occu
pants Hurled rn All
Directions
ti.... norsen-. one n Philftdelpbinn,
nre killed nnd one wns Injured n nn
liitomebile accident nt 11:l,i e clock
hit night nt n grade crewing of the
rwmwlvania Railroad nt Cloyment,
Del. , ...
The accident was canned by (he driver
of the car placing Ills feel en the nc nc
wlerater instead of the brake pedal.
The Dead
Miss Daisy Wright, seventeen years
eM. 1020 Columbia avenue, Philadel
phia. Miss Mabel Slaughter, twenty years
old. Wilmington.
Ernest Stebblns. twenty cars old,
Wilmington.
The Injured
fleerse P. Cellins, twenty-five years
e'H, Wilmington.
It wns Cellins car and he was drlv-in-.
Southbound local train Ne. -103
struck the motorcar at the crossing,
'wrecking It.
'8. S. Maker, engineer of the train,
in wen as he saw the automobile dart
toward the tracks, put en the brakes,
but se fast was the train proceeding
it went a quarter of a mile Ixferc'it
Willi be brought te n standstill.
The moment the train stepped the
conductor. W, MeCennell. accompanied
hy passengers, ran along the tracks.
Ihcy first met Cellins, who was ruutting
for fssistnnce. He had fractured ribs,
(,ut.ef utlie face and of the leg. He
'Wan pin ceil in the baggage car.
Btfbblns wns found next. He lav
halfway between Clajmeut Station and
llie train, nnd was still thing. Ills
light leg had been severed, and his head
was crushed, lie died In a few mo
ment!. Found Dying Near Car
Then .Miss Slaughter was found. She
i.i Ijlng near the automobile, with
both legs broken and her head crushed.
She. died without regaining conscious
ness The body of Miss Wright wns
teilful lj Ing in a mass of weed-, terribly
erskhed.
Miss Wright went te Wilmington Inst
wttk with her mother. .Mrs. Annie Kin
ney, and her stepfather. Her parents
returned te this city en Thursday, leav
ing the girl with nn mint.
8he wns supposed te have resumed
work tomorrow in an uptown mill where
n was employed. Mrs. Kinncv also
is employed nt the mill. She nnd her
husband left early today for Wilmington
UDOn thft reoeinr nf u tftlnprnm lufnrni.
If hi-them of the daughter's death.
I' According te occupants of the Iieusn
wDre trie fiend girl, with her mother
and stepfather had rooms, the family
"Wed In three months age., The'v
formerly lived downtown.
Miss Wright's brother bad begged her
') return te Philadelphia with him ves-
Nfrdav, but she had declined, in order
iu take the ride.
.,C?1,ln?,; "he is in the Delaware Hes-
Pil. ilmlngten. and whose condition
?i?" ,H;rieus. made n statement te the
authorities taking' full Maine for the
"fCldent. Up sn hi Im c,,,.. it, ....) .,
I'feachtng in plenty of time, but lest
v v a,lul htcPPpd en the gas instead
''the brake.
Deubld funeral services for the two
women victItns w, be Mil Wefln0H(ln
"tcrrioen at the home of the Wllming-
it w ii m- M,8S WriEl,t "1" bc ""'
. t "IHIajiiHten, Md.
Bey Killed, 10 Hurt Here
tenAMltfcn'reul"0,d lK)J' "ns kllIc,l nnd
lomebile accidents in the city vestcrdnv.
Ont.H Di' 1ebcrt l prvls- "f 0M Knst
fifciiin. T.ent,,n'1 (J,ar'e streets, when
l-ii L,1,8first automobile ride. Uti
(emtnf' in,.,l,ls wintry three days,
. 2 I from ''"rope. Yesterday after
I fir' I?'1?"1 th0 i"vltatlonyefn Paul
UvfL n'nrf',,, years old, of 007
JWmerelan,l street, te an automobile.
AKl mn,chlnr. 'Wcd with one.
street bri,-elin "rrnn. 2813 Klpp
Mil ....wB """nines came together
iu knnh,irrce hnt VeryiH ""as thrown
ut' kncklng down Vincent Helland,
Continue en Pace four. Column One
.DIES OF FRACTURED SKULL
'".Miim Murray Received Injury by
ran in Bathtub
..'urrnv n. ti.i . .. ...
te t ly, 'nu.nt a?k " Ii" was about
- ie IUO.
GIRL DIES FROM FALL
'8llPPd Frem Wagen, Head Strlklne
v Pavement
"MW ol.',i?L,iJ'en' ,hrvp PRr "''.
WVi in. lu'L.'ir ,01' root, ,n in ,,e
P'tal te'l V Vr, , i . ' m,lr,,iintlilc Hos Hes
I"SW1 f?n!n ' '"J'Tlcs iiHinlnrl when
Mew, ' from n Wfl8'" '" front of ler
''laIrll,,.i!i,r! 1"ul '"nitied te the drlverV
s,
fT"
pfip-J 74 I7H IT" I7 MB I I I '
3AREK1LLE0
EP.ILI.tllH
SIRE AUTO
K IS Mei. ,rr?y' MJ-nne years old,
ru0Inbre,1U,l,,rwt. 1',,1 InM night In
V.l lite" ,,0,!n1,l1 frel" fracture!
'WnWnJ'" rr'VCfl when he slipped
th. !iAn,.n?. bntl'. nis head btriklns
"C IUI1.
fesjV''.
..I'UkWBUy iJS
:rn"V
i 4 i ..
Unlereil us Hecend-ClMS Mutter nt tlin
Under llie Act et
DANCER, HOME
BACK, HOPES TO
Emma Haig, Brought te Phila
dclphia Frem New Yerk
Hospital, Walks After Being
in Plaster Cast'Scvcn Wcehs
'All One Needs Is a Little Con
fidence" She Says Accu
dent Saved Her Frem
Breaking Contract "Tried
Anyway"
Pretty Kminn Haig. dancing star,
finds compensation? even in a broken
spine.
Fer even weary weeks she lay en
cased in n plaster cat. wondering
would she ever walk again. It did net
M'em remotely possible tlmt she might
dance once mere. New the seven weeks
,nre ever, and the cast and the long
days In n New YnrK Hospital are merely
memories. Tiest of nil. the surgeon's
say that she Is cured, and with re
turning strength will be able te whirl
as giddily ns she wns doing that night
in cy Yerk when she whirled clear
ever the footlights and broke her back
n. she fell into the orchestra pit.
As all the world knows, people don't
usually recover from a broken back.
It was only n marvel of surgery, a bit
of geed luck nnd the girl's youth and
wiiimy wini Dreugiii ncr iiireugn.
Was Tired Out Anyway
"I weufd have been compelled te
give up In a short time anyhow," she
said today in the home of licr aunts,
Mrs. (eorge Hughes nnd Miss Frances
Mngnussen, whom she is visiting nt
1030 Green street. "I wns tire,,! out. I
hadn't had a vacation in Ave jears, My
heart was giving out, the doctors said.
Hut because of my contract T couldn't
quit. Then along came the accident.
"It seemed very terrible at first, but
E
LABOR OAY SPEECH
A. F. of L. President te Address
Unions Frem "the Fullness
of His Heart"
-
MAY DISCUSS RAIL STRIKE
Hundreds of union members, cele
brating Laber Day nt Point ISrceze
Park, tensely await references te the
rail strike Injunction by Samuel (Jump
ers, president of the American Fed
eration of Laber, who speaks there this
afternoon.
Interest wns Inflamed because et At
torney (icnernl Dnughcrty's request te
District Attorneys throughout the
(euntry te keep watch today en speeches
about the strike situation.
"Mr. (Innipers will speuk extompor extempor extomper
nneousjy nnd from the fullness of his
heart." said Frank Ttiirch, secretary
and treasury of the Central Laber
I'ninii. who was with the Federation
chieftain up te 1 :" o'clock ibis mnrn
Ing. Mr. (leiiipers came here last night
and leglslrred nt the Adelphla Hetel.
He remained In his hotel room this
morning with his secretaries mid the
lenders of various units of ihc Federa
tion. I'c denied himself te alt ether
callers and would net disclose the na
ture of the address he planned for the
Central Laber I'lilnn picnic. A secre
tary will accompany him te the park
and miike stenographic notes of his ad
dress. Frem the standpoint of labor en la
bor's own holiday, the Point Tlreeze
specchmnking Is the most important of
the day. There has been no indication
from Mr. (Sninpers that lie will even
mention the Injunction.
At the office of the Federal Hurenu of
Investigational u stated no ngents
would he detailed te listen te addresses
by Mr. fiempers and ethers.
.lelin L. Lewis, president of the
Culted Mine Workers of America, also
is M'hcdiilcd te speak nlf Point l.iceze
Park tills afternoon Fnieii members
nnd their families crowded Inte the
park shortly nfter II o'clock in readi
ness for a program of sports.
Jehn C. Wnlsh. business representa
tive of the ("iranlte Cutters' 1'nien, was
in chnige nf the eentrsis. The program
Included a 100-yard dasli for union
memher, a flftj-jnrd dash for women
relatives of the union men, ;i 100-,ard
Cnnllniinl nn Piice Four, Column Twe
MOTHER TAKES LIFE
Frankford Weman Sheets Herself
Through Heart
neenuse of an illness from which she
had been suffering for nearly n jenr.
MrH. Henrietta Hoeney, thirty-one
years old, .'t"-" lJ street, Frankford.
ended her life shortly after 10:3(1
o'clock this morning by sheeting her
self through the heart.
According te Lee Hoeney, the worn
nil's husband, he left his wife in bed
when lie went out te nttend te some
business enrly this morning. He re
turned at 11:1.1 o'clock and found her
lying across the bed with a large caliber
revolver by ber side.
Hoeney sntd his wife had threatened
te tnke her life en soernl occasions,
Henrietta, a four-vear-eld daughter,
also survives Mrs. Hoeney.
GIRL IS FOUND LYING
ON BROAD ST. PAVEMENT
Alcohol Victim Wanted In Shere
Sheeting Case
Ttese Murinn. twenty-three jenrs old,
who t-ays she lives in Mnys Landing.
N. .1.. wns found carl;, this morning
iving in it semi-conscious condition tin
the pmement In fmnt of lintel Wnlten.
She was picked up bj a moierM mil
taken te the Jeffersen Hospital, where
she was found te he Miffd-itc; from nl nl
ce'inlMn. Later It was le.irueil ilmi
she was under S.100 bull in Ai'mitc-
mi. ..-ii w lines,,, in .i sheeting iiflrni
Tlie girl told deicctlvcs tint en Aiigusi
r. .. mini iitlenililcd le shiuil hci' while
slie was uniting for a friend.
...hm itiri. ETixrr; un DC
HEAHI uivue nis nwvna
....
Iinilen. -Sept. LTI10 heart of n
.!!. Lilleil before tlin Medlral He
pearch Council bent for live hours, utter
death, . y ,
' t f
"vjftwyi"'
MP
FR
mmmmmwmm$mm' mmmF mfm
taientna
Peitntucn nt Philadelphia. Tn
men et
. 180
March 3
WITH BROKEN
DANCE AGAIN
y?i. ', 4i, a.;.
fTJ"J27
,' . ... t .' si "! .. 'W
& :r v -' V-i
MISS EMMA HAIG
the rest has done wonders for me. My
spine is well, nnd my heart Is well. I vc
put en weight, nnd If feel better thnn
I linil felt in venrs. Anil if everything
moves nleng ns the doctors premise I'm
going te rejoin my cempnny in October
?'hr,n..,,hr,?J"Ri,'J,0X llcv,l,c'' 0IlC
in Philadelphia. Of course I expect te
de some dancing before that. I have a
let of new stens te work out.
1 "That's another geed thing the acci
dent did for me. When I wns lying
there encased in plaster I had plenty
of time te think and plan. I worked
out some new steps in my head, nnd
I'm dying te try them. 1 sketched
some new dresses, tee, and I mndc
caricatures of my friends who came te
see me. Luckily I draw, and luckily,
tee, the accident didn't affect my
hands."
Miss Haig, who Is petite with very
tiny feet, very brown I'urly hair and
delightful eyes that are n shade of
Continued en Pate Tour. Column Three
Harry Lahrochar Gets Coel Re
ception Frem Mate in
Gloucester Jail
RAN AWAY WITH YOUTH
After a cool reception today from bis
wife, under arrest in the Camden Coun
ty jail ns an eloper, Harry Lahrochar.
of (ileueesler, begged her te give him
the white Pomeranian deg she took en
her flight e the Seuth.
Mrs. Lahrochar refused te give up
the deg, which shared a cell with her
in New Orleans for two weeks while
arrangements ere made te bring the
thtrty-four-yenr-old wife and .Walter
Ratzel, nineteen yenrs old, back te New
Jersey.
The elopers were found ln New Or
leans by means of the Pemcranimi,
which Lnhreclnir said Imd been his
nightly companion for six years while
his wife was en duty at the (Hemester
telephone exchange.
Lahrochar told the police he is will
ing fe withdraw the charge agnlnst his
wife if she will mum In him. De
denned his best clothes this morning
for the visit te the jail,
Mrs. Lahrochar was unabashed when
her husband was 'escorted into the jnil
waiting loom. Lnhreclnir. apparently,
was willing te gather her Inlo his arm's,
but she wns net responsive.
I he remernnuin roeegiil7oi Lnlire-
clin enil jelped delightedly. As his
uc i rifcin iiminiie cniHimirn, ine nils- i
band then tried te obtain the de, but
without success,
Lahrochar was accompanied in the
jail by Hnrry Hurtling. Mrs. l.nlire-
ehnr s brother. The wife embracer!
Hurtling iind wept en his shoulder
a brief Interview
took .?Itl()D ill Liberty Heiiils owned by
l.alirecliar. I he wife said slie took!
nothing from her home but her personal !
property. I
BOY TWICE ESCAPES
FR0M S. P. C. C. CARE
Edward Agler Yearned for Heme
Where Ne Leve Awaited Him
Leve of home although no one was
there lii welcome Ii I in urged IM,iird
gler. twelve years obi. te ese.ipe w h-e .
liirimr the last tow daxs fiein tlin
iieadiiuarters of the Secicij te Protect
Children from Crueltj. e xvas sent
bnck tediix. and a close watch will be
kept en him.
Mm. F.iuily Agler. mother of the boy.
Is under arrest. His father 1h In te
Philadelphia Hospital mid two broth
ers nnd a sister nrc also In care of the
aiit-cruelty society.
Mrs. Agler was arrested a few days
age charged with crueli.i. After leeelv
ing reports concerning tins woman's
treatment of the children Pyilrelmnn
Hacker investigated. When he entered
the Agler home, It is s.ild. Mrs. Agler
was choking F.dwanl, llie ebln.st boy,
and refused te release him, despK,, -u
cries for mere. Hacker arrested , the
woman and the S. P. C. C. took charge
of her children. I'.dwnrd left home un
willingly. MARY EXPECTS STORK
Princess Restlrfg at Ancestral Es
tate of Lord Laacelles
Uillllmi. Sept. I Se, iety !, been
Ll ILI'lll
ix llie lllllietii uieiir 01 llie ev-
I led iinhal 01 an ii'Mr te rriiices!.
Marx. The new mrixal Is looked for
iluriiig the ChrMmas heliilajs,
'I'lie Pill sS s new n-siing , .,lv
vm.iiiI Heuse, llie Veiifshlre nucestriil
csiale of her husbmid. Lord Lascelles,
'CI... iikx allixill wl'l lie L'ninilclillil
"IIM'O t'i' . . 1
... ki.if (ieergc. hut will luixe the situ- .
. ip . m,, "Hunnnilile" preceding his or I
her iianie. If ine minx is a gin, it is '
: - . . , ... - 1
. ,, i .i.n ...in in, mi iiini xitit., ,i,..i '
.liClievi'ti em- "" .........,..,, ......
'.a -.. t t .1 mIIaII (111! illtllAH
, If a uey. iui.' "j ","
llie I'.sl "rltl or 1'iil'rrn
in WIIITINU iapr.
;Whln '' CppH'aijy, Aty
(
(sy tr-rf,Ti
er-.. r imi
L y (,'m. Arfc 'iffimU fe ,V' " 5-;
ELOPER WONT GIVE
HUSBAND
e
DOG
In
..
arraigned tomorrow in the office of ' nf 'Lille; .lenlc!,, ' "nZ '''" r Cl "il1rW':'V!1'' '''" Jri,rs;
.11 TH. I .III I lll'l 111' llllll lini7Pl lin ' C in crt... ., ! ....
iiimicc et nic icacc nuyciic II I am- in white i rnnerles wltli Im- l... 1 i '" " " K" "" " r.-iisnn nir .
den. Hatr-el's father sid he will ,,"- , P t ' "''i m? Wllil":, "J ,, llfU"u" of ,,,h 'P"
iiMi bail' for his son who is ncc.sed of udprncnth is tl.rcrVni rn in i .,. .. -i ' 0,,,t ,1,"ir- '' retirement nt iity .
vlelnthiff the Mmiui n..i ' u'''rueain is ine. criptui n injunction :-l ,..,, ..,,,, .w, , uniform with' bis
The nlloced rlnnei-s .!nr .1 ... ... " "" "Vu "2L ".TP" . """"St lei ' 'nhilo-enhv of life." adding that he
PHILADELPHIA, 'MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1922
MINERS ENTOMBED
E
SIGNALS, IS BELIEF
.1 '
Rescue Workers in Konnedy
Mine Are Sure They Heard Ex-
plosiens Frem the Argonaut
CAME AFTER THEY HAD
FIRED TWO BLASTS
Feeling of Certainty That
Trapped Men Still Live
Prevails in Jacksen
'?! .iMerlnfciI rrttn
.laclt-en. Cnllf.. Sept. . The night
crew of rescuers working in the Kenneth-
mine In nn nttempt te reach forty
seven entombed men In the Argonaut
K0),i mn(, declared en coming te the
surface today that when two signal
, n-nr..nnt ,.,
blasts were fired en he ..lOO-foet level.
they were positive they were answered
by five explosions coming from the Ar
gonaut. The miners declared that the
sounds could net have been caused by
falling rocks. It would hnve been im
possible te hear such sounds through
the thick walls of stone that separate
the two mines, they said.
All Jacksen is rejoicing ever the re
port, for n feeling of certainty that the
men imprisoned for n week still lhe
new exists.
Mine officials refused fe comment en
the statements of the miners or te give
out anything official en the report.
The present progress of the weik in
dicates the entombed men will be
reached about Thursday morning.
The explosion ui the Argonaut mine
ecciincd about midnight August ,7. It
wns accompanied by u fire which raged
three days and forty-seven miners were
trapped below the -1000-feet level.
It was impossible for rescue work te
be carried en through the Argonaut and
this was commenced in the Kennedy
mine ndjeiiiing. CrewR hnve labored
Incessantly night and dnv. as it was
necessary te blast their way through
hundreds of feet of dirt and "rack.
Cntll today, when it was reported
mm explosives liml lieen beard bv
workers en the .".TOO-font leu-1 of the I
Kennedy mine. bolieVd te hnve come
from the entombed men, hope of reach
lug them alive had been ilrtiinlh ;
abandoned.
UNVEILS FRENCH STATUE
TO UNMARRIED MOTHERS
Mayer of Lille Says All Children'
Are Equally. Honored I
Lille. France. Sept. 1 In the prcs
iiree of 2000 residents of the war-dev-.minted
regions. Mayer de La Salle'
yesterday unveiled Uesruelles' finneus
statue honoring unmarried mothers.
While the crowd, filling, ilie principal
s(iimc of the cit, , steed with bared
beads, orators lemlnded them of Hie
iieiu ine repiinnc owed fe unsung, un
honored mothers, whose love is s.inc s.inc
tlened only by the law of nature.
Statistics were quoted by the speak
ers, showing that for ecr 100 chlldicn
in Lille eleven were born our of wed
lock. The orators cniwlntnn,..! i. . ..i
system whereby very often the Infants
- .-.. ---... .......i. M,-.v,,-i
nrc compelled te surler the sins of the
p.iients, the children undergoing dl-
imiiui. iii-ii-ii, iiiiiioiiiriiieu mid crv
often abandonment nnd death.
nt.. or iiwitimufr, ..., n. ....
in i.ine mi cuiinren, whether login
ONE WE
K ANSWER
dur-.ered." the Mayer 'cenclii.le.l. 'i ul
peeen.
, ... ... '
Scores of Morning
Laber Day Games
NATIONAL LK.Uil i:
Chicago (I e n i e 2 it it ii ;
iinclirtl ii (i tr u e i e
Hntleiics ('Meows- Wlrf;
Win go.
SI. L. . . e I 0 I (I 0 it 2 i
I r I
Cniirii-
.'. II I
I'llls'tth. II i e e e e 0 it
f ,- I, ,r,,,rVlm'!
l..j,..,!.t nf.. ...
Adams- j
INTKKNATIONAL
Tni-nnie n e e e 2 I 0
P.ufVale. 0 1 11 1 0 :t 2 0
n
i:i
llnllClies ( Olllle V. lneentt IL.url
l.xii-l'rhan.
MONTfiO.MKKY (01 NTY LKA(il"K
Doylestown. . 0 0 u ti t 11 0 1 .-, ;,
Perhnsle, . .01100 (I t ;j 7 2
iMiiLA. sritutitAN Li;.(iii:
llalbore. . . 11 1 11 II I 11 0 11 ii 2 t I
McKlnley. . e 11 0 0 u e 0.! 0 I I
InilriKuilfiil (iame
Caiiiilen C. a 0 (i (i n 11 0 1 2 : 10
(ileiicc.st'r (i (I I 0 :; 11 0 1 2 11 11
Leg:)" A., tl II (I tl 2 (I (I 11 1 :,
N. Phils.. :s 1 :t ti :s 2 0 0 11
Snlias ... II I) 0 0 0 (I 0 (I 0 (I
.Mia 'linn (I I (I 0 0 0 0 0 ti
llrldesb'g, 11 1 0 0 ti ;i 0 a 11 7
Helslier ( 1 11 0 : 0 11 e 211
llclflcld :t 0 ti ti :t 0 1 1 11 1 1
Wildw'il. 0 (i 2 0 1 0 0 i ii ;;
11 11
i 1
N
"
II
H (l
n 2
j' " J ' 2 '.' ' ' '-! '!! -'
"" "". " " .". " .. iw i
Mouel,xpe
l.p'p
1'
I Miul"c.
1 .'miuIIiw'ii.
II ('
! . ,'mi.i '.,.. '
II I .1 II II II II 2 P I III t
0 I u ti it 11 2 1 1 ,1 ti 2
0 1 11 0 11 11 11 11 ti 1 :; 2
2 i) 11 11 11 11 11 11 2 2 1
0 11 11 0 11 11 1 1 11 2 11 1
11 1 11 11 ti 0 .1 11 ;i : 1 .
2 i 1 ti 1 11 ti 1 .1 1 1
;t 0 0 11 0 11 11 ti 11 :i .1 ;
llclancii
-. .
rutin) ra
Wilseiixllle. 0 11 0 ti :t 0 0 11 0 :t 11 in
Columbus,, 0 i) 0 0 0 11 11 0 0 ti (i :t 1
Kist Side (i 0 0 (i I 0 1 j) j-2 7 1 1
llftdden'il aoueooo 1 x a s 11
V3
vtf
r ,f
nun .-ri i uc nisi, sieiic. :
Te Supreme Bench
muTM
C.KOIM.i; II. SUTIIERIiAND
Kermer I'nltcd States Senaler from
t'liili, who will be iippelntcd Asso
ciate .lust Ice, of United States Su
preme Court te succeed .lustice
lelin II. Clarke, resigned
SUIHEf ANlTO GO
Harding's Choice te Succeed
Clarke, Who Has Submit
ted His Resignation
FORMER UTAH SENATOR
Justice Clarke Formulates
'Philosophy of Later Life"
Washington. Sept. L (Hy A.
P.) The letter of resignation sent
te. President. Harding by Justice
Clarke, of the Supreme Court, wns
ns fellows :
"I shall be sixty-five years old
en the ISth day of this month. Fer
a long time I hnve premised what
I think is my better self that at
that age 1 would free mself as
much ns possible from Imperative
duties, te the end that I may have
time te read ninny books which 1
have net had time te rend in a
busy life, te travel and te serve my
neighbors nnd some public causes in
ways In which I cannot serve then
while holding Important public of
fice. "As a bes'nnlng of what 1 hope
may nt Ic.isi be a partial reallza reallza
lien of this philoseph) of my Inter
life. I herein resign, as of Septem
ber IS. P.VJl. tfle office of Associate
Justice of the fsiipromeCotirt of
the 1 "lilted States, which 1 have
held during the last six cars.
"With grateful appreciation, my
dear Mr. President, of the ma in
courtesies, jeii have shown ine
through many years. 1 am.
"Sincerely yours.
"jeiin ii. clauki:."
i7y .1-neriafcrt rrr
Washington. Sept. !. The resigna
tion of Associate Justice Clarke ha
been leeched by President Harding, it
was announced today at the White
Heuse.
The President. It was stated, will
accept the lesignallen and Intends te
nominate former Cnitcd Slates Senater
Geerge II. Sutherland, of I'tah, te lake
Mr. Clarke's pl.iee en the Supreme
Court bench.
Justice Clarke mailed Ills icsignatlnn
te the While Hcnie fre'm his home In
Youiigstew ii. (t. It will become effective
September Is. when the nssnciiit
honed te serve his "neighbors and some I
i public causes" in a way which would
j he Impossible if he continued en the
I "bench. Mr. Clarke was iieuiinnted te'
'the Supreme Court bench ill 1 ill C by
1 former President Wilsen and, in point
nl service, is the miner associate jus- '
lice. .'
In announcing .Insliie Clarke's np-
(nnllniiril en I'nge sixteen. Ciiluinti Tlirrc
ACCUSED GIRL SWOONS !
1 Mrs. Bracken Denies Complicity in
Sweater Theft at Wildwood
Mrs. Man l'.u.'Un, twenty, three
eat sold, ."ili'J."i MiCalliini street, fainted
tins morning when
11-eil in the lie
tectlxc Huicnii with .1 man with whom
pelb e say she ran in' aj , of robbing a
benrilxviilk shop iu Wildxxoed, N. J., of
six enters, xnlued at SI, 100.
The .xnutig xxeiiiim was rexixeil In the
eflicc of lr. Chillies Hricker. police j
sin genu. She steutlx denied she was
Implicated iu the million, and iil-n
denied she bad eloped 10 Wildwood xvitli
Ficelainl Arneld, twenlx ears old. seu
of n pairleiniin living en Hum ciieslen
avenue, also licensed hi 1 he robbery,
:i!Tln "i
1 I m ii,,. sV
.. 1.. .1.1,, .1... ..:.. '
lll Ill.ll-Il,.t " 1. ...i- ,,,. CU
ill 1 in same iimc mm m 1 in n uuwinni,
she -aid.
Mrs. Itrnckcii's husband xisiied her
nt City Hall and offered te take her
U.liack home. Slie ngiccd. but first must
0 go te Wildwood teXtt tin' thin ecs. She
0 's '"'ing beld, awaiting rciiulsilinn.
WHAT is xline Temple's secret?
What fear lle behind these
terrilieil eyes',' Where "Iecs she go
en these ni.x sereis iritis that Iter
Ini-haml il'"'s mil undent, md'.' And
win I- this Meri f the gnl with
ipiaiul liimm mill elhu appeal called
"'The Superior Sex"?
Tin answer Is found in the cap
lj III nil. IH'" scilnl bx
Hazel Deye Itatrhelar
the 'irst lu'-lllllllicnt el which UlHi-;i
leilay n
The Weman's Page
A
ON SUPREME BENCH
i. j)feMt-',t Ju iMtJy?)
M " -. A tAWlJxTt .
Published D.IIJ5; BigjPt yp"VgViUf'gemUyTe'r "' ""'
LAST-MINUTE NEWS
. BASEBALL SCORES
BROOKLYN 0 -
PHILLIES(1st)...0
Shrlver nnd Deberry; Meadows and Henllne. O'Day nnd Hart.
MORNING GAMES
DETROIT 000 1 0010002 0
CltlCAGO(A.L.).... 1 0 1 0 000001-3 0
Plllcttc and "Woodall; Fnber and Schalk.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
ROCHESTER 0 300000014 7-
SYRACUSE 0 000000000 5
Kcenan and Lake; Dubuc and McCurdy.
OTHER GAMES
Ardmerc 10 0 .
Seuth Phillies 0 0 1
OlneyA. A 0
Notaucme HebVy 1
BIG DEMONSTRATION BY THE MINERS
UNIONTOWN, PA., Sept. 4. One of the largest demonstra
tions of Its kind ever planned by union labor in the bituminous
coal fields of western Pennsylvania is scheduled te be held here
today. Thirty thousand miners en strike since April 1, led by
the entire city police force, will parade through the downtewn1
business district nnd thence te the ball park, where they will be
addressed by Mayer Smart and William Feeney, union leader.
AUGUSTIN EDWARDS, OF CHILE, READS LEAGUE
GENEVA, Sept. 4. Augustin Edwards, of Chile, was elected
president of the third Assembly of the League of Nations.
24-HOUR COAST-TO-COAST FLIGHT STARTS TONIGHT
JACKSONVILLE, PLA., Sept. 4. Lieut. James H. Doolittle,
army aviuter, expects te hop off tonight from the beach at Nep
tune, near here, confident that he will have dinner tomorrow,
night en the shore of the Pacific at San Diege, Calif., mere than
2200 miles away. The airplane in which the aviator flew Sat
urday from Kelly Field, San Antonie, Texas, te Jacksonville, a
distance of 1050 miles without a step or a "miss" by the meter,
was ready for the start.
MUST TELL STATE WHY HE DROVE PAST STOP SIGN
HARRISBURG, Sept. 4. Rey B. Buch, alleged te have dis
regarded a crossing watchman's sign and te have tun his auto
mobile into a train, damaging the car and injuring two per&ens,
has been summoned te appear at the State Highway D?pan
ment for a hearing next Monday te explain why he ignored the
step sign. The license of Constable Geerge B. Allen, Williams Williams
peit, has been revoked for reckless operation of his car.
PEACE IN NORTH CAROLINA RAILROAD WAR
ASHEVILLE, N. C, Sept. 4. Peace has been restored today
between the Southern Railway management and switchmen, fire
men and hostlers, whose failure te report for work Saturday
night caused a complete paralysis of freight traffic here, by the
removal of all guaids within the read's local stiep6 and yards.
POLICE ARRESI
GIRL
DRUG RING HID
Elsie Whitaker, Who Jumped
Bail, Found at Heme
in Harrisburg
SAY SHE IS STAR WITNESS
1 ,.,
I ','M', hitnkei, txvent.x -lecr ;cnr
old. sought b , ledge Mm agban's or-
let s as a star w itnes, in the drug inxei
ligatien, wn located t m 1 . 1 ,it Harris
1 1 .. .ti 1... 1.- .1.. 1.....1 1...
11111K, nun win if niiniKiii cm i inline-
,li, ..,,1,.
"ll'iei) .
The girl, nuested as a drug ndilii
August -!'., at Sexentli niul Carpenter
streets, jumped her bail,
beliexe t lint members of
The police
the
drug I
rill"" ell snirited heenwnx or ncr-
siindi tl 'her le leave the i nx for fear
"
Il nl .!,, I. lll'l, lull .Inline Mlllllll.lillll
some of tin mm it's nf the inner work
ings of the ml i- .He
The iin'iie betiei,. u., i - t itieiin
bets 1. 1 the "ilicj" tool .'sill 111 I'tetu
the ;;lll wliiiii she xwi kiiewii te lime
when nne-ted line
Sherl'j ii'ici slie was taken Inte cus.
"eih the , 1111113 wenieu told the pnliie
tlint flic had ciime bete Irem Harris.
burg bet 11 use die
runilnupil un I
tli tigs tn lie obtained
'iiitr- Knur 1 iibimn I'nur
no Mir am 1 i:n .m'temiiiim -.
Tn rlnssifml i-elllinl v of 111 HM-nIng Puh
II. l.'ilr list wini. n( th l-cut lMmlni lu
le teund hi Lael Crs en liajc lT.,.Ul,, ,
jW wJwJ-..iv. RHkib. VamJw, , .sis. -.swhuvAs
134000 II 2 11 9 2
10G01101 11 16 4
E
T
Federal and Pittsburgh Officials
, Suspect Incendiarism Cost- ,
I ing Seven Lives
P. R. R. BUILDING BURNED'
Plllsliiirgli. Sept, I. lnxctigntieii
bx raih ax, nniuir ip.il, leuiilx and Fed-
oral agents were iimlei xx.ii tedax e
iletermiue the ciitise of the lire x lib h
1
. swept through a biiiiMieiise of the Pcini-
' . . 1 1 .... .
I Will 111 lilllireail III llie lillrtlelh stleet
J .litis xesienia.x
tiaiiiiing -oxen
ixcs
anil injuring ten oilier receiitl e
nn
plejed repair men Prepcrt.x le
., ,, ,,,,
nmre tlinii SJ Ml.tlOt-. fc
' " . ' ." ...T . .," ,,J ..r ....
.! lll.i'lli tirniir. i. nir II ' s 2 ll
seciniugl.
1 -11 1 uniiriiiii siaiciiiciiis ,,
surxneiN
seiMii.tr. nun in sjariee m n
li'ilfs of irifis.x winle tn-iile llie building
'"" ,l"" ' bl net Inxc beiu cmiseil
by Mnitks fi-eni pas-inr I imtiies,
nun ine 1110 siartei in
lieeigc i t inn less. Iiireilni ..t
Public Snfeix, pien.lseil a slmeuieni le-
lax en i be luxrsiigntieu b the police,
l'isiritl Atiuiiiex Hum llewmul sail
h. xi'iitltl imnicdhiich etder a llrmul
Jur.x Investigation "if facts wnrruni."
Agents el llie llepatlmini of Juslbe
H,,i nothing
CnMnufd .n r.st.Nlnt. Column T.
?
BUNKHOUSE FIR
NU
RIES STAR
(ieergc 1 Iggus, a xeittig man arrested . '"' '""" ," nr nMlun.i Aucailerd ,
ii,ip th., senne f it... il- .....V. .i i 'i"" '""' '"I for a tnr-al ija of ny-rhu nil . M
near llie scene el the lire cnrlj this nni ruminirilnn nf Ihih. Ur. Ti. MfJ J
morning, wns questioned at length nt l'lnBmi surrlnliiir;nt of ulin InnrunV JJj
I .' . ' . -t it I nn lalla nf laniiairHuiilaB . Aa.AHaJ 1 .1
,..,v, ............ ,v ... ,, ,,nn 'iiiiiviiium )n rrtiiCMtleH. In th einr.n nmn.tinn nf thm T
m (a hneilniinrfprn it unu niin.. .l !'"". rT " . T" -.- ieii iiitwiq! j
V!fl1
. .vfii
.?-!
lfc&fi.
'Sfcu.'! '.
j 'h.i'..
J( "I,,., ft ',
4" ltV '. .Ti
'
price two cafSTiSii
-.".p. 1.,
! TO FIX
h com Pie
AT PAR LEY HEBE
1
Priorities in Distribution te B4
HOOVE
Established After Final Rati-'
ficatien of Peace
TO FAVOR HOUSEHOLDERS
INSOFAR AS POSSIBLE.
j Scale Committee Indorses Pep
per-Reed Compromise After
a Bitter Debate
UNION VICTORY. SAYS LEWIS'
15 Miner Demands of Men, In-
eluding 8THeur Day, Ignored'
in Settlement
Terms of Settlement
of Hard Ceal Strike
These are the termsnf the Pepper-Heed
proposal for the settle
ment of the hard coal strike ratified
by the Anthracite Scale Cemmltee:
Contracts in force March .11,
1f21i, le be extended te August 81,
11)28. or March 81. IfcM.
Production of coal te begin nt
once.
Operators nnd miners te join In a
recommendation te Congress that
lTli.itinu be forthwith enncted
renting n separate Anthracite Ceal
Commissi,,!,, j,, authority te In-
vestigate mid icpert promptly en (
ex cry phase eT the industry.
Continuance of production nfter
the extension date te lie upon Hitch
terms as the panics may agree upon
in the light of the report et the
commission.
Lim rgein-v control of distribution nnr
I prices of anthracite x(i be taken seen
by Secretary Hoever at a conference
111 Philadelphia xmh operators and inln
!i'i engaged In the indiistrx. it xvns, sab!
1 t't'la.x nt the fuuiiperir lietimtment inj
j Washington.
An emergen. y orgiiulzatlen nleng thij
j same Ijnes as xvas used for handling hi.
iiiniiieiis tool Is expecteil, with house.'
j holder being r.i(,,n a- ninth ,irituity ni
1 possible in order ti insure thini a nap'
I ply of winter fuel.
I The Philadelphia cenfeience xxill hi
. convened as s(,en as arrangements alJ
. lendx sturteil can lie cemnlclrd. effli
cials here holding that the long ces;ir
tlen of hard-cnal pro.Iuttlen nccciiU
1'iteil imiiieillnie tcii te a cclcratc dis
tril'iifien if the i-itben-enn-umTs' siirt
ph Is 10 be ll-stii I'd.
I I leclsien n- tn .iitiib'iiieii plnncj
iluwexer. eflii iiiU indicated. mlclif
'iwnit the 1'iiiiicatieii of the authr.iiiti
"ngrci'inent bx the mine workers" tri
,ilisitlct i-onxcniien. cxpciicd te meet lr
Wilkes-Harre Thursihvt .
The possibility was terescrn thntBfue1
legisnlliin. new nendlug befnre C01W
1 gre's. might become a laxx iu lime te
enable antliraciti distribution en a Inrgi
'scale te c.iiue 'indei the control er-tht
Fuleral prngtnm. a the entpui of linnl
'iehI xyas net expected in reach anything
I'll." a'xi'ii mal I1 'ute in 1. - ilia n thirty
islerv ( .' , .
I Te Fainr Hollsiiieldcrs
.Mejnxj'hili' iQidiils ileclurcil, plani
1 for 'ntbnjriie dLslj jhiti i'M xveiild feU
1 le- lb lines s;dpte.d b.x Fcderill Fuel
' Ptsfjiibutrir fjpern-er ujid the IuterMitt4
,' CeruBf'iT" e CVtnniissi.in through the diw
j trlhulien ef real under piierities td
I consumers ilnssified accni'iiiii te their
1 imoertiince
In llie ilisirtbuiien of inithr.'ii lie. of ef
litials as.-eiteil. household ceustimci'1
prebabh xt eiild lie gixen llie rigllt of
xva.x as much as possible Iu elder tlwtj
homes might be supplied with fuelliext
xx inter
The compromise nleu pinpescd b.V
Senators Pepper mid Ke.-d 10 end lt1
strike xxa ratitieil nl " o'clock tlil4
"iimrniug bx the aniline He Scale Cera1
mitt'C
Katitii atieu 1 nine niier a hitler deJ
bale lutiiig sex era! hours.
The indersement of the plan xxas feN
lexxed b ti sniienieiii from Jehn L.
: Lewis, irestlriit of the Inucd Mini
Workers
lie huilcd the iigieeinent as a tri
umph for the union Hewexer, bofer
it was rem lied. 11 Merinx session pie
111led during xx Inch members' of th
Scule Committee pli ked the plan ti
pie, es.
The iinnei , xxill 1 ei inn te xxerk jiml
is -w.nl 1 iis ilie ngieciiient mis been rntiJ
ti.d-bx the trj-ilisti jci mi. ling. It 14
itli!x 1 but innnv of the miners xvill go
1 - i
( aiiliniiril nn I'utr Te, Column Ont
'"MOTHER" JONES. FRIEND '
OF LABOR. CRITICALLY ILL!
Has Worked In Behalf of Strikers
During Many of Her 92 Years
Washington, .sept I ( Ih . P )
leihei" Man Joins, iinnflicinl labor
lenlei . cs'ici itlh in l imcs of industrial
trlle. 1- nlic.iliv ill m ine Heme 01
it. '
"'"'"'",'""' ,
"inctx-twii xcm-s
The frailties of her
miiux of w hlcb xvrre
iieiit 111 sirciiiituis mi ix 11 ics in Dermic
of men ami wetiicti eugageti 111 strlKes,
letenll.x wen" augmented as a result of
In 1 mirk in I'obuaile. at cerdlnr tit
"' ..I l.tmllllr, till. slelllllS
1 nil' i,.."s i"..'
. . .... ... .1....-..1 i.. . t. - ,.
IU. units mimi. ,..-.. ...x luehc wni
, k..,l I !.
ineiitieii In Lciierts of tlin
railroad shepmen's strike of ".Mether'',
,,ne aclixines In her isitu ciiparltf ,
brn'ighl th" infm in il ion of her celidl--
Hen mid the siiiiciuenl that she was net
aware of lb" trmiM'"i lalieu walkeui. '
enc act ix mi's iu her usual capacity
h will li.- t In- lii-l strike. Mether Jeneii'
irieinls e.iiiii'm. ii xmiicii siii, lias, nut V'l
hud an in-l he part since slie begun raks
lit"- liilci'i-l 10 liibnl linilllles us a J
eh ml lent In i III Chicago ninny xear4 A
age. 'jj
1 "iiih urri.K kkii M'lKim. urn r. 4a
Adi:
.....'..- ..-LI'.i 3
l.k. IIS IIMkl-I r
y
Kl-f.
i I
fv
3w&
'3i
,M-Vj
t
.3
J
.
v-
t I
M
V'
'm J'
' '?'!..
m