Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 08, 1922, Night Extra, Page 2, Image 2

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGElR-JPHILADfiLPHIA, FBIDAY. SEPTEMBER ' 8, 1922
It.
.
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W. I. FORBES MAY
PHILADELPHIA'S ENTRY IN BEAUTY CONTEST
L
Fee of Ganna
HALED INTO COM
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fctfu1
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K.,.1
S5Y
f"jrK$?s,
a
DIE FROM POISON
IS AINEY'S APPEAL
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(WWS
I
vims
X
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Banker Who Mistook Tablets
, for Medicine Still in a
Critical Condition
Majer Leen E. Lyen, Regular
Army, te Be Executive te
304th Engineers
Magistrate Renshaw Summon
ed en Charge of Dealing
Out Injustice
Will Be Enough te Meet House
wives' Demands if They Are
Careful, He Says
MANY SHIFTS SCHEDULED
WAS ALONE IN HIS HOME
CONFERS WITH OPERATORS
??e&wv s 't ' tiyj '
OFFICERS ASSIGNED
10 M DIVISION
ECONOMIZE ON COA
wzr$mimm
FOR FINING
2 B
rtv-iK'.: rAysV'TsiM
!'i3 ? vsr ',' -wa'e ,-i. :.&:--M
'1A --fw jjHx3raMtrfa&v:itH
R
W
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The condition of Mnjer William
Innes Ferbes, banker, clubman and for fer
er member of the l-'irst City Troop, re
mains unchanged lu the llryu Mnwr
Hospital where he wns takcu yester
day morning from his Villaiinvii home
ftcr swallowing four polseu tablets by
Intake.
According te linnfiital authorities
Majer Ferbes went te his home en
Lancaster pike te pass Wednesday
Ifbt. Shortly after hl arrival he felt
111 nnrl went te a medicine closet in
tending te get some Htetnnrh tablets.
He cot the poison tablets instead. '
Sirs, Ferbes, who was at Cape May
with their two Miiall children, reached
her husband's bedside in the afternoon
and parsed the night there. Majer i
Ferbes has been icnil -conscious since,
being admitted te the Institution.
Majer Ferbes, who is In his forties,
la connected with the brokerage fit in of
Strnud & Ce.. 1420 Walnut street.
He is a former commodore of the
Schuylkill Navy and was at one time
chairman of the Rowing Committee at
the University et I'cnnsyivaiua. uis
father, the late Dr. William Ferbes,
was professor of anatomy at Jeffersen
Medical College.
Fer twenty-two years he was first
lieutenant in the First City Troop.
Bhertlv after the war began he entered
the 300th Cavnlry of the First Bri-
fade and was sent te Texas. There
e helped te organize the 300th Cavalry
and later organized and commanded
the Flfty-eventh Field Artillery.
He is a member of the Philadelphia,
Lawyers'. University. Hittenheuse,
Pennsylvania Barge and Bryn Mawr
Country Clubs.
Mr-. Ferbes, before her marriage,
was Miss Daisy Cxe Wright, daughter
Of Mr and M's. William TewiiM-nd
Wright, of St. Davids. Her grnnd grnnd
encle was KcUley B. Cexc. wealthy
anthracite operator, from whee estate
.he has an annuity of $20,000. The
two Ferbes children are William. Jr..
nx, and Charles Francis, four.
'WEALTHY WIDOW'S WILL
CENTER OF BIG COURT FIGHT
Purported Kin of Late California
Weman te Contest Document
San Francisce, Sept. ''. illy A. P.)
Controversy ever the estate of the
late Teresa Bell, widow of a San Fran Fran
ciseo millionaire, whee will out off
her five sunpesed rhildren. was further
Complicated today by the filing of an
appearance bv n local firm of attorneys
as counsel In the content for two pur
ported cousins of .Mr-, ncu.
Pi l VII vi'iriiir " '" .
The new figures in the will tangle are
H. J. Irving McNnir and his sister.
Mrs. Ada Wlcklinm. both of Michigan.
Proof that they legally are cousins ,
would entitle the two uinler previsions
of the will te share In the estate, es
Hrr.nt.Hl nt Sl.000.000.
Mrs. Bell, in n peculiar will, left S."
te each of the five Bell children, as- '
erting they were net Her etispung. anu
Dquenince me umr. "i e-i rmiv iu ,.
cousins who might be found, or. fail
ing that, te th State of California.
FEARS MINERS ARE DEAD
Argonaut Company Official Has Ne
" : ..
nuHs vi ..vew-w ,-w-
& uaaiiA riniAi .
Jacksen, Calif.. Sept. .s. ( By A. '
P.) V.. A. Stent, vice president of
the Argoneut Mining Company, be- 1,". TOliO.
lieves the forty-seen miners entombed Hirst, during the Corener's hearing.
In the Argenuut mine here have per-i declared Toomey was struck by a 1ml
ished. let from his revolver which rlchechetted
"I adlv fear that nil we can de is when he tired into the ground in an
te bring out the rertv-seven oodles."
Mr. Stent told the Associated Press.
"I de net held out any hone for the
rescue of many. If any. of the men. I
de net place any credence in the nlleged
reports of signals from the entombed
miners."
Five thousand feet of the "intensely
poisonous gas" is pouring out of the
Muldoon shaft of the Argonaut -mine
every minute and the smoldering flames
are burning unchecked, according te an
official statement esterda bv Dr. L.
H. Buschak, consulting chemical engi-
neer et tin State industrial Accident
Commission.
K. OF C. ELECTION EXCITING
W. F. Culhane Defeats J.B.Geraghty
for Pest of Grand Knight
Jehn B. Gernght, deputy grand
knight of De La Salle Council, Knights
of Columbus, of I.ansdewne, was de-
feated for grand knight last night by
"Wllllam F. Culhane
of the office.
. the present holder
The centept attracted much attention
men; Philadelphia members of the
order. .Mr iier.ighty. a close friend of'
Mr. Culhane, led the se-called pre- '
gresshe clement In the contest and Mr.
Culhane wns backed by the adminis
tration. Nearly -00 votes were cast
and the Interest In the election was se
great that the De La Salle clubhouse i
was unable te accommodate all anxious '
te be present, and the meeting was
held In the school ball of rt. I'hlle
menu's Church.
RAID HIP POCKET
Saloonkeeper, However, Insists
Was for Personal Use
I
.
It I
1
Prohibition agents jesterduy entered ,
a saloon at Fifteenth and Vine streets,
enri'luwl the nronrieter mill found a
half pint of whisky m his hack pocket, j
I'lliriCK union, me 'ireprn-uir. siiie n-
had obtained the liquor en a preserlp
tlen for Ins personal use.
Thirty gallons of whisky were confis
cated In a saloon at Fert) -seventh
Street and Woodland iiwriiie. War
rnuls will b" issued for the proprietor,
Christian Cehlhns.
Agents raided the saloon of Themas
Sherry, of HO.'l" Elmwood avenue, and
nelzed thirty callens of whisky. A small
Quantlt) of whisk) wes seized in the
nloen of J. C. Teherty, of Twentieth
and Ititner streets.
STORM-TOSSED, RESCUED
Helpless Schooner Drifts Menth
With Crew Near Death
Wilmington, N. C, Sept. S. (! A.
P.) Mere than a month of helpless
drifting at sea en a seilless, waterlog-
led schooner, swept by continuous
tonus, and a struggle with hunger and
thirst, was the storytteld by the crew
of the schooner City of Baltimore to
day following the towing of tlie vessel
Inte pert here by a tug.
Fer days Captain Bice, mnster of
the vessel, said his crew was without
water, but stuck te the pumps, sink
lag their thirst with sea water. Finally
a supply of water wes furnished by a
passing steamer, he said, but the men
refused the ship's offer te take them
aboard and steed by their ship.
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ft s BfrsSBBlBjiB jBBBBBBBJBBBBY fBBBBBBBBBBBVJlwK y F S BBBBaSilut r 4V-- vvf i Bk BfjM3w
lu...
Twe new pose, of Kitty Mellneux,
VOTE ON COAL COMMISSION
BILL DELAYED BY DEBATE
Heuse Measure te Check Profiteer- I
Ing Passed by Senate I
Washington. Sept. S. (Bv A. P.)'
Further debate ever previsions of the
Faet-findiiiK Ceal Commi-slen Bill,
which would direct a study of the ques
tion of nntlonnlUntlen of mines, was lu
prospect today when the Senate re
sumed consideration of the measure.
Discussion of the prevision necessi
tated deferment of final action e-ter-
day when the bill was taken up after
pnssase of the Houst measure designed
te check prnfiti"i'iiii; and control the
distribution of coal. The latter bid.
the first of the emercene coal measures
te pass the Senate, was put through by
a eti
of ) te i, and sent te con-
ferenei for adjustment of dlfferetic
with the Heuse
The Commission BUI was amended
diiring -ensld,ratiim ji'sterduy te diiect
a -I'pinite Investigation uf the nntlmi
uie industry and an inquiry Inte
an "organized relationships" between
miners and operators if they exist. The
commission would make its anthrncit"
report net Inter than July 1 m ct, while
H mill iu-iui. in hit- uiiiilll t liwu-t 111
(lllstr. ,vmllll , ,,,,. within five months ,
its conclusions in tin bituminous in-
0I ,lle hin 8 ,,llt,as,,.
ie. te nirern
rULIULHIHH 10 t-L-tHntU
FOR SHOOTING COMPANION
, . .
Corener Decides Fatal
Wounding,
m .i
menial
During Raid Was Ace
William D. Hirst, street scrccnm of
the Cermantewn jieliee staflen. was
exonerated today b Corener Knight
for the death of Patrolman Jeseph .1.
. -v.. .... . " u'j ui-i ....(, ..,.. . ,.,.
".ears wltli n imllet In his spine, died
at his home, ".41 M
mnntewn. August I'd.
.41 .ilorten street, Ucr-
. - . .
Toomey was snot r Hirst diirln
raid
iei.se en Chestnut iivemis '
a
near (Jermantown
utt-miv, irvL-ciiiuvr .
effort te halt inmates of the house as
they tied. held he would fight the causes and
Corener Knight warned Hirst te be powers that exploit the reservation In
careful in the ue of firearms, and ' dlen. for the -riginal American should
scored the police for the manner in T,et be exploited by trusts and unsscru
whlcli some of them use their revolvers. puleus persons.
STAGE HOLD-UP ON CRAFT
Motorboat Bandits Draw Pistol and
c-i,. nr, p.-.
&e,ze urass PU8e8
New Yerk. Sept. S (Bv A. P. )
inree moterDo.u unnmis jumped irem
their speedy craft onto nn F.irst Blvcr
llgh'r. the Alice, today, subdued lls lls
cer Kelly, the skipper, nt the point of
a pistol, and get awev with five bags
leaded with nrass time luses ter ter
pedees and shells worth S.10IK). The!
ammunition was sun te nnve neen or
dered by the Britisli Government, nnd
seen wiis te hnre been transported te
England en a freighter
Later dctcctncs found the stolen
',';"' ' , ,,,. ,,,. ,ir hlnM.
rnm tne looted lizhter. They hid and
when three men appeared the detectives
, took them te Jail, charging them with,
robbery All three said they knew neth
ing of the theft
HELD FOR ASSAULT
Reebllng, N. J., Man Attacked
De-
tective, Is Charge
Emanuel Ellisen, twenty-four jenrs
old. n Negro giving an address in
Itoebling, N. J., was held in 5.100 bail
for the i iraml Jury this morning b Be-
! cerder Stnckheuse lu Camden charged
with assault and buttery en Albert
T.nler. n sneciiil detertlw emplejcd by
the Pennsylvania Huilrnnd ut the Cam-
den ferries.
According te Te, ler. Ellisen was
creating a disturbance in the fery house
Inst niuht and when he told him te de-
sist, the Negro attacked him.
Harry Albaek, Camden, an electrician
werkinc near the scene of the disturb-
am e. testified Elli-en struck him also
mien nt imu ...c.v ., .,,,
noise
DENIED GIRL, SHOOTS SELF
New Jersey Lad Draws Pistol When'
Told He Can't Wed
Newark, N. .1., Sept 8. ( B A. P.)
ftefuxfil nnrentut trrm(K.s1nn In murrv
Jesephine Fiillene, aged nineteen. CmtIe The Grand Jury was nsked te find
Bocen. of th same age, shot himself ' an indictment egnlnst Geerge .Newlln
lest night In the girl's home. n tin ground he knew money he r-
He went there and asked te seelcehed from his brother was cmbez-
Jesephine. On being told he could net
see tier, lie cirew a piini ami nnsi.
Jesephine, who was in an adjoining
room, ran te his side when he fell,
"Kiss me. Jesephine, before I die,"
he snld. She did.
Recca was removed te a hospital.
Ilia condition is serious.
Empleyes Extinguish Garage Fire
Flre slightly damaged the rear of the
garage of William A. Herbert, 5437
Haverford avenue, at 10 o'clock this
morning. Emplejcs extinguished the
blaze wltli buckets of water.
WHAT WILL I'KOri.K HAYT"
Hv jreii evr r'trslntd'frem ertaln cn,
hnvt you v9. contract"! your nphers of um
tulntM, Iwcui8 et Murtam (irunily? If net,
von ara I he exceptional peraen, according te
Wlnnlfrcd Harper Ceeley Are you readlnu
her dally articles In the Kvismne J'udlic
Lidebi? "Max It a Habit." Adv.
:.v
the "Miss Philadelphia" of 1022.
RED MEN GREET
Wildwood Festival Address by
Executive Dwells en
Enfranchisement
CHIEF WOLF ALSO SPEAKS
"
Sp'tial Dlsratch fe Evrninu Public Ledger
Wildwood, N. ,1., Sept. S. Governer
r,i...nr,i. ,vn1 ,., ,.;iei m.nW I
.,,,,,....... I
t. TV . I f .. r .t , , .. - '
tie Bed Men s festival and pageant en ,
the biach last night. Chief Streng
Wolf, of the Ojlbway Indians et the Ca
nadian Northwest, was the ether one.
The most amusing incident of the day
was the arrival of the State's chief ex
icutlve. He landed at the station un-
riernicieu. ami witti no one te meet him
because he didn't wire lie was coming
rtM h ,. C1 ti ! i
J "f ,'evt'r"r l'hened te Senater Blight
, "" " ". n was sent te n station te
'meet his excellency, "hen the t.ev- i
emer nrrlieii at the Douglass Hetel, a i
committee of citizens, Including the
Mayer, was there te greet him.
Ihe festival opened with a Heg rai-
ing nt V.'tO P. M. Oliver I. Blaekwell.
"ne of the committee, introduced Chief
Streng Wolf, who made his appeal for
lnstice and enfranchisement for rli,. Ueil
Men In reservations.
He was cheered bv the 10.000 present I
when he shouted through n megaphone
that the Indian, the erislnnl American.
j Mill lll-ri iriMHICni UU 11 Hill Cll INI. JUL I
he is denied suffrage : that he went ever-
eas wumut ee ng urniteu te ngnt ier
the freedom of, the world, yet lie has net '
been cmancipa
n generation or two the -nl Indian will '
paten nimseii. jie said in
ee extinct unless ne is given ireeuem. i
. v. . ... . . . !
ifoverner J.uwarus tnen smeKeu tne
pipe of peace with Chief Strenir Wolf
and Jehn Turner, and wns introduced
te the gathering by Samuel A. Lenning.
the lioverner premised te am the in
difltis in raininir enfranchisement. He
'EIGHT CHILDREN STRICKEN
BY EATING POISON NUTS
GOV
EDWARDS
I The couple that registered et a Nash Nash
Twe May Die After Partaking of ville hotel said they were eloping nnd
'Toothache" Tree Fruit
I New Yerk, Sept. 8. Nine children,
ranging from two te eight years in age,
! were strhken seriously ill by poison
' nuts which they picked up in Franz
... , Ti 1. 'P . l.n .Llt.l ...
I riirei i jitk. lwe ui iuu eiiiiirrji te-
da wer" n ported in a critical cendi
tien.
One of them, plavlng in the park,
found a tree which was dropping bun-
lieds of nuts, shaped like limn beans
' and ceiered with burred shells. Pnr-
cnts of the victims said later these nuts
' ueie used in Italy for a toothache cure
and were known te be poisonous.
The boy lilleu ins pecKcis ana, re-
'turning Heme, uui--u ututi wuu inn,
I mate-, including one little girl. Almest
I immediately all became ill. Soen red
' "pletches 'appeared en their bodies.
Then delirium pet in
Geerge Glnrdlelle recognized the
' svmptems in his son Alfred. Familiar
w'lth the nut In his native land, he
1 Miiiektv Kilmlnlstcred an emetic. PhTsl-
' clans 'later Eald he probably saved the
be,'s life.
The ether victims were hurried te
hospitals. There their malady was
diagnosed as utrepine nulsening.
LAWYER REFUSES TO TELL
JURY OFNEWLIN THEFT
Contempt Threat Made by United
States Against G. C. Wfledward
As u result of his refusal te testify
for the Government before the. Fedciul
J? jurjV nBn,llht ,ieerBH Newlln,
... ... .i nf cmnicltv 111 the embezzle-
ment of JL'.'IO.OOO by his brother. Bay-
mend Newlln, from tlie i eatesnne .tt
tlenal Bank, Graham C. Woodward.
nn attorney, Is te be summoned before
h;,'1 S,atcH Dlstrict ('eurt f,,r
' ;0edward is counsel for Geerge
'Newlln, and declined te testify en the
vrmiiwl of tiducilirv relations.
zled. Bnymeiid was a witness yester
du against his brother.
FOUR MINE GUARDS HELD
Striking Miner Alleges Aggravated
Assault and Battery
Washington. Pa.. Sept. 8. Twe
State policemen and two conl-and-iien
policemen churged with assaulting Jehn
Bella, a coal miliar, at Denho recently
were held for court by O. P. Marschull,
(iimiIpb nf the neace. after u preliminary
hearing yesterday. The specillc charge
wus aggravated assault and battery.
The defendnntH were en strike duty
nnd arrested Pella en u chnrge of dis
orderly conduct. The miner testified
the officers assaulted him in their bar
racks and en the way te the county
jail.
They were made In Atlantic City.
EARL OF BALFOUR DEFENDS
WORK OF LEAGUE COUNCIL
Resents Charge of Nansen That
Starving Russians" Are Neglected
Geneva, Sept. S. (By A. P.) A
defense of the League of Nations coun
cil was made by the Karl of Bulfeur in
the assembly today. The adverse criti
cisms of the council for Its .method of
dircctliiK the administration of the Snar
Valley, said the Enrl, were the result
of intense propaganda with a view te
influencing the plebiscite te be held in
lli'l." te decide tne sovereignty of the
district.
He was vpenklne of the rcneminatinn
I of Dr. Hecter, of Sanrleuis, as the rep
1 i.. ..t i. e i-..n i:.
i v-i'iiiiiiM r n te,' eiiiir iiiiuy iiujiiii.i
thm en the Snnr commission
uv. Ilec-
ter was charged with falsifjing an nd
"" iiitiu mu luiiiiuiitiitta ui lilt' situr lu
. .,.,. Tlie H,,CIlk ,, that
h,. and the Marquis ltnpcrhi.il, of Italy,
dress from the inhabitants of the Sanr t
luiil vnfful In tlwi f'linnptl tit hunlm-n 11
I Hecter, but that the document In ques
tion had been translated by an impartial
' Dutch translator, who found Dr. Hecter
, had given n faithful version of it.
j The speaker resented the charges that
1 had been made by Dr. Fridtjof Nansen
that the nations of the world had 'been
' ,"v,','-'-iivi.jij;tiii;iiiin-
sian famine. Charity, he said, hud done
guilty of neglect in relieving the Bus
nil that could have been expected lu the
circumstances. The Soviet Cevernment
hnd geld for ether uses at the same time
' that foreign contributions were buving
thread for the Bussleu peejile, hede-
' elared.
c QIMrj PADHI VMC euilCTCn
WlbblNU tAHULYNt SHUSTER
TUnilfiUTTn UAlfIT El nnrn
' "uu" ' ' " ""' fcUUrtU
n .. . . ,, .
uauBnteP of Publisher Reported
Bride of Merchant's Sen
!,; 'from 'Nashville that a newiv
fMncifAii- 17 . C,.4 O 'fi i i-
mnrrlwl enuple nnsvu.rlnK , ,cucrlp".
.i -m,,' t, i..' ui....' .r'iL
,.,. .,,, .ii..j ,.c it- .r "
S? "",,r"ii, ""K'"e",.ofeA' ln
...,..-,.,, 1(n.-'mLiii w, lur ,l-mur,V 1'UO-
llshlng Company. New Yerk, nnd Wil
llnm Merris, twenty, son of a Glasgow
merchant, had registered et a hotel
there early yesterday, formed the only
due today te the whereabouts of Miss
Shuster, who has been missing since
Wednesday night.
Miss Sinister nnd Mr. Merris, who
were reported te have left Glasgow In
an automobile together Wednesday
night, are believed te have eloped and
the girl's mother has offered a reward
of $100 for her detention unmarried.
Police in all cities of Tennessee, Ken
tucky and Indiana have been asked te
be en the lookout for her.
had been "dihlng like everything all
night," according te reports received
here. Miss Shuster nnd Mr. Merris
were reported te have been seen driving
in the direction of Nashville Wednesday
night.
DIEdIVATCHINgT PAGEANT
Frankford Man Passes Away In At
lantic City
Ames B. Van Sant, seventy years
old, of ir,'J2 Church street, died in At
lantic City jesterday, being stricken
while watching the beauty pageant.
Yen Sunt was watching the pageant
nt the Kentucky avenue pavilion with
Miss Edna M. Beeves, of l!ll West
Washington avenue, Ilensantvillc, his
niece. Suddenly, without warning, he
keeled back and fell ever the railing of
n rest pavilion. He fell a half-story
te the sands below. Police rushed te
his assistnnce. The man was uncon
scious when taken te the hospital.
I'hjsicians nre uncertain whether the
fali caused his death or if it was due
te heart disease.
SHRfNEJSJiTllALiFAX
Three Hundred Philadelphia Lu Lus
Reach Canadian City
Three hundred Shriners of thn Lu Lu
Temple, accompanied by eighty women,
arrived at Hn'lfex yesterday en the
steamship Fert Hamilton, nnd were
given typical Masonic, reception by
the Halifax Shriners from Philae Tem
ple.
They proceeded te the grand parade,
where Lieutenant Governer Grant made
them welcemn and Mayer Murphy pre
sented Potentate W. Frecland Kendrlck
wltli the key te the city. An elaborate
program of entertainment has been ar
ranged.
HINT0N CHANGES ENGINE
Delayed
at Pert Au Prince
In
Flight te Brazil
Pert Au Prlnre, Haiti, Sept. 8.
(By A. P.) Lieutenant Walter llln llln
ten. who is making n flight from New
Yerk te Rie Janelte, was dclncd here
tednv owing te the necessity of chang
ing bis engine from low te high com
pression. Parts for the new adjust
ment were- supplied by the Fourth Air
Squadron of the marines.
The overhauling will ndd seventy
horse power te the machine. Lieuten
ant I Ilnten intends te leave Suiidu) lei
Sun Juun.
Penn State Opens Next Wednesday
fiinlr, Cnlleee. Pa.. Sent. 8. The
sixty-eighth jenr at the Pcnns)lviiiila
State College will start September 111.
The largest enrollment In the history of
the college Is expected. The number of
men nnd women students will prebubly
exceed the 3300 mark.
Practice of economy In the use of coal
wan urged (odey by Chairman Alncy,
of Ihe Public Service Commission, In
order that there may be enough te
meet the demands of all householders.
Mr. Alncy is conferring today with
various operaler) nnd representatives
of State fuel commissions regarding
distribution of coal and ether details of
the situation.
Y'cstcrday he conferred with Secre
tary Hoever nnd various operators and
commission representatives, and is re
maining here today, ns he expressed it,
"te gather in the loose ends."
Asked if the homes of the city would
be healed this winter. Mr. Alncy snld :
"There will be anthracite coal te
meet the necessities of the householders
if they will carefully conserve it.
"It must he borne in mind that It
will take at least a month before the
anthracite mines will be up te their
nerinnl output, and. therefore, during
that month the stnnll supply con only
be distributed in small allotments.
Among these expected te confer with
Mr. AIiipv inilnv is the fuel cemmis
siener of 'Rhede' Island, who failed te
get here jesterduy. Mr. Hoever nnd
the ether 'commissioners left hurt yes
terday. "One thing Is certain,"' said Secretary
Hoever after the conference, "and that
is that the American householder is te
be protected nnd he is te get enough
coal for' his winter fuel. At present we
have no figures te Indicate what the
demand will be for hard coal. It is
likely that the mines will be in opera
tion for three weeks before we can es
timate the extent of the need.
"The question of fixing n fair price
was considered at the meeting, but
that is primarily a State function.
The Government will lend all the old
in its power te prevent profiteering by
anybody. We hac arranged for com
plete co-operation between the Federal
authorities and all the Stntc adminis
trators." Needs of New Yerk, New England ana
ether Atlantic States were explained te
the opernters present by representatives
of these States.
SAYS CHEMISTS WILL SET
FUTURE WOMENS STYLES
Rustling Dress Made of Weed Is
Premised by Scientist
Pittsburgh. Sept. S. Dr. Edward
E. Slossen, delegate te the American
Chemical Society convention, yesterday
said women's fashions are about te be
dominated by a man in n white coat
with a test tube in one hnnd and sur
rounded by n laborateiy. The fashion
expert of the future is going te be the
cheii'ist.
And this is hew the scientifically
fashionable Hepper is going te be
dressed in lO'J.'i 'or lfllM : Hustling
dress mnde of weed ; bhecs of some
chemical formula which will create a
substitute for leather. The shoes may
net leek like leather; they may net
leek en tiling nt all like your life
long Idea of shoes, but as Dr. Slossen
nsked emphatically. "What difference
docs that make se long as they protect
jour feet?"
The chemist style creator doesn't
care whether you wear your skirt long
or short. The artificial silk made of
weed which lie is going te present for
feminine use will come in nny width or
any shape you like. Skirts can be full
and skirts can be narrow, and circular
skirts con he mode of material already
circular. That, the thoughtful scien
tist enn say triumphantly, will solve
the present question of cutting en the
bios and keeping jour hem straight.
The silhouette 'an be nnything it
wants, but it's sure te be sjuthctlc.
VANDERBILT DESCENDANT
BRIDE OF J. M. FRANKLIN
Miss Emily S. Hammend Is Mar
ried te Sen of Ship Magnate
New Yerk, Sept. S, Miss Emily S.
Ilnmmeud, daughter of Mr. und Mrs.
Jehn Henry Hammend and one of the
numerous great-grandchildren nf the
Inte William II. Vnnderbllt, was mar
ried yesterday nfterneun in St. Mark's
Church, Mount Klsce. N. Y., te Mr.
Jehn Mnrr.Mnnn Franklin, son of Mr.
nnd Mrs. Philip A. S. Franklin, of 11
Enst Sixty-sixth street. The wedding
uniting two prominent families of New New
Yerk brought together a distinguished
company.
The Rev. Dr. Ansen Phelps Stokes
elllclnted. The bride's rlilef attendant
was her younger sister, Miss Adele
Sleano Hnminend.
The bride is n granddaughter of
Mrs. Henry White, who before her mar
riage te the former Ambn'sniler te
France was Mrs. William Douglas
Sleane. Through her father she Is n
granddaughter of the late (icneral Jehn
Henry Ilnmmend. V. S. A. Mr.
Franklin is the eldest of the children
of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin His father
Is president of the Interiiiitienul Mer
cantile Marine Company.
MAJOR WILLIAMS HONORED
Named One of Five te Take Course
In Army War College
Mnjer Churchill Williams, of this
city, aji intelligence officer nt Washing
ton during the war. is one of five United
States reserve officers selected fiem a
list of about fiO.OOO te take a three
months' course in the 1'nltcd States
Army Wnr College at Washington.
The officers will be instructed in mili
tary matters, end ma) be placed en the
ellglele list ier uppeuiiiucui te the gen
eral staff.
Thn selections were made by General
Pershing s Beuid of Specialists. Majer
Williams, who is prominent socially,
was commissioned in the intelligence
section of the Signul Cerps during the
war. He visited seveial cninps, and
then was called te Washington te help
in the drive against German propagan
dists. When he returned here ufter the
wur and was discharged, he enrolled in
the rescrve ferce of the Seventy-ninth
Division.
RELIEF-WORK OFFICER NAMED
Stanley E. Kerr, of Hndden Heights,
N. J. , and fermeily of Darby, has been
made treasurer of the Beirut-Alepi e
District of the Near East Relief, which
places him in chnrgu of financial
mutters In connection with nil relief
work In Syria. Mr. Kerr wna graduated
from the University of Pennsylvania
in 1017 and is n veteran of the World
War. Mr- Kerr's engagement te Miss
Elsu Reckman, u rcilef and social
worker in Syria, was unneunced re
cintly. AUK YOU I.OOKINO KOH. IIFXI'? PER.
haps th vry peraen you want la iiiiver
tlulai under Situations en imu-e M. Adv.
W '- ' ' ?3PB
te J?u&lBb ' s a& J.. '-S ' ! t
v i Ml-'l
Si
MSIB. LUELliA MELUIS
Who sties te halt American con
cert tour of Mine. Ganna Walska,
bride of Hareld I' McCermlck
JERSEY WIFE WHO ELOPED
ILL AT HUSBAND'S HOME
Brether Visits Mrs. Lahrochar, but
She Refuses te See Others
Mrs. Evelyn Lahrochar, who eloped
te New Orleans with n nineteen-year-old
youth, is slightly ill tedny at her
home In Gloucester, whither her
husband took her last night after giv
ing bail for her release from the Camden
jail.
Harry Lahrochar, the husband, is
merely giving temporary shelter te his
wife because he did net want te see
her in jail, according te the husband's
mother, Mrs. Mary Lahrochar, 1-1
King1 street, Gloucester.
Lahrochar escorted his wife te fiO
Railroad avenue, Gloucester, their
home, nt 11 o'clock last night. Tip
pie, the white Pomeranian deg she took
en her flight, welcomed his mistress
with joyous heiking.
William Bagley. Mrs. Lahrocher's
brother, called en her this morning.
She denied herself te ether visitors.
Walter Bntzel, her companion in the
elopement, ulse was released in bail
yesterday.
Librarian Gets Chess Prize
O. It. Heward Thomsen, librarian of
Ihe James V. Brown Library. Williams Williams
pert, lias received one of the prizes of
fered through the I'l'iir.ir LEnii:n by
Frank J. Marshall. United Stntes chess
champion, for the best nnd most nccu-'
rate analysis of a position thnt oc
curred in one of the games recently
played by the champion.
Deaths of a Day
MRS. CHAS. H. LUDINGT0N
Main Line Veman Was Daughter of
Prominent New Yerk Family
Mrs. Charles II. Ludingteu, of Ard Ard
mere, wife of the vice president and
treasurer of the Curtis Publlsliing
Company, died yesterday at her sum
mer home In Sorennc Luke, N. Y.
Werd of her death was received here
lest night by Dr. R. C. Gamble, of
Haverford, n friend of the family.
Before her marriage Mrs. Ludington
wns Ethel M. Saltus, of Brnekyn.
Her parents were prominent socially
lu New Yerk. Her cousin, J.
Snnferd Saltus, numismatist and art
patron, died suddenly in Londen last
June. In his will he bequeathed! te
Mrs. Ludington one-fourth of his
icsldunry estate which amounted ap
proximately te .fl.000,000.
Besides her husband, Mrs. Luding
ton leaes three sons. C. Tenusvnd,
Wright Saltus and Nicholas Luding
ton. Charles Merris
Charles Merris, widely known ns n
writer and compiler, died jeHterday in
his home at 2223 Spring Garden street.
He wns in his ninetieth year.
Mr. Merris was n teacher lu the pub
lic schools in Ids )euth, and Inter a
professor of ancient and modern lan
guages. His authorship covered a wide
range of subjects, but ter the most part
was confined te historic and literary
mntters. Seme scores of works, in hun
dreds of volumes, were either written
or edited by him. Among the best
known of his works were "Hnlf Hours
With the Best American Authers," in
eighteen volumes; the Encyclopedic
Dictionary, tlie Imperial Reference Li
brary, Winsten's Encyclopedia, the
Graded Series of Dictionaries, "The
Arjnn Race," lives of William McKin
ley anil (Jueen Victeria and "Heme Life
in All Lands."
Mrs. Kate Redgers Woodward
Mrs. Kate Redgers Woedwnid died
yesterday et the home of her daughter,
Mrs. Frank R. Slmttuck, 2123 Seuth
Twenty-first stryet. She wns ninety
years old and is survived by one daugh
ter nnd two grandchildren. .Mrs. Wooii Weoii Woeii
wnrd wns vice president of the Heme
for Widows nnd Single Women for
thirty-five years, and n member of the
First Presb)terIan Foreign Mission As
sociation. She will be burled Saturday
afternoon at 2 o'clock from her daiigh'
ler'b home 1 11 Twenty-first street. In
lermcnt will be private.
Jeseph Gladlng
Jeseph Gladlng, widely known In Mn Mn
senic circles, who died Tuesday, will lw
buried tomorrow afternoon from his
home, 1110 Jncksen street. Interment
will be made In Seuth Laurel Hill
Cemetery. Mr. GInding was eighty-five
years old and wus a retired business
limn. He had been sick for a month.
He was a member of St. Alban Ledge.
Ne. r.2!, F. and A. M.; Temple R. A.
Chapter, Ne. 218: St. Alban Com Cem
mundcry, Ne. -17, K. T., and the Ma
sonic Veterans of Pennsylvania.
HKATHS
CHOOK. H.pt. 7. THOMAS II. CHOORT
Funeral services but., ut Ihe iM Mm's
llema. 8UH1 und Hariris: 1., 1 ,30 I. M.
Interment Ortenmeunt Cemetery
COl'ilHAN Sepi. 7. lUa. WILLIAM, neri
of tlv, late Wllllnm O anil Gertrude Can
nell Cechmn. uki-U 31. Funeral HcnUes
t hlH lute residence Ilethuyren, I'a., en
Hat., 11 A. M. Interment private,
McDONOUOH JOHN McUONOUUH. for.
murlv et i'lul Winter t llelatlvei, nnd
frlende are Invited te attend funerul Jinn..
s si A. M. from hi late rmldence. -je-'f
Cherry at. Solemn requiem man, Cathedral
10 A M Interment Hely from Cemeierv'
, TUHCHNUH At KlUabeth, N. J.T asUAlY
liualmnd of HhIIId 'leuchner, Hted rjl, IM
Htie und friend are Invited te uttend
funeinl out,, 'i I'. .M , rcsldeni.0, Kiss N
!' U t Interment prlvittu, Northwued
Cemetery,
illtiHT, Huddenly. at Htrnudnlmrir in
Kent. 7 AM..MIS If., vv If .. .. ,! ..it:. .. ?
iVi.. i-v,;;-:.ij ..:."" ..". :""'
I ft.T.xir. IV... MHO 1)1 Will Ulll M
Uuu notlce of funarnl wll( , uhtn.
her lain rmldenre, 33 Mlllbuurne iie
ourne. West J'hlla., I'a. "urniJ "
from'
Mlllueu
The following orders were Issued yes
terday by (he headquarters of the
Seventy-ninth Divisien:
Mnjer Leen E. Lyen, C. E. (Regular
Armv) is announced ns executive of
ficer 301th Engineers with hendniiarters
nt the office of the II. S. District En
gineer, 81i Withcrspoen Building,
Philadelphia.
Captain William J. Schnnl, Jr., In-
fnntrr fllesulnr Armv) Is announced
ns executive officer 313th Infantry nnd
acting executive officer Hendniiarters
Company, 157th Infantry brigade with
headquarters at lOflth Field Artillery
Armery. P. N. (!., WIlkes-Bnrrc. Mall
address P. O. Bex 273 Wllltcs-Barre.
The promotion ' of First Lieutenant
Sidney L. Roberts. Inf-ORC. Malvern,
in rnnlnln. Inf-ORC. is announced.
Captain Roberts is assigned te 310th
Infantry.
The following officers of the division
having reported nre assigned or at
tached te organizations ns Indicated:
Te Division Hendniiarters Majer
James E. Wright. AG-ORC-Attnchcd
Adjutants Sec, 2030 Bellcvue read,
Harrlsburg.
Te special troops First LIcutennnt
Albert A. Mlllmnn, Inf-ORC. . V 32
North Hutchlnben street, Philadelphia,
Pa.
Te division trains Second .LIcu
tennnt Leuis S. Lunlnk. QM-ORC.,
1714 Walnut street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Te 304th Medical Regiment Majer
Edward R. Plank, Med-ORC., 184
West Leuther street, Carlisle, Pn.
Tn 313th Infantry Cantaln Frank
M. Leng. Inf-ORC, Canadensis, Pn.
Te 3inh Infantry Cnptaln Jeseph
A. Davis, Inf-ORC-Attnched, 47 North
Sixty-third street, Philadelphia, Pn.
Te 310th Infantry Second Lieuten
ant Clnir II. Keen, Inf-ORC-Attnched,
Mnnhelm, Pn. ; Second Lieutenant Jehn
K. Williams, Inf-OHC-Attuclied, 71.11
Highland avenue, Chester.
Te 311th Field Artillery First LIcu
tennnt Jay W. Sechler. FA-ORC. 1211)-
21 North American Building, Philadel
phia ; First Lieutenant Frank J. Hamil
ton, FA-ORC, 4822 North Cnmnc
street, Philadelphia, and Second Lieu
tenant Stanley Levy, FA-ORC-At-tuclied.
480S North Hutchinson street,
Philadelphia.
MAN SHOOTS WIFE,
THEN ENDS HIS LIFE
Jealousy Said te Have Been Cause
of Action
Annlns .Tenes. Necre. 544.'? West
Gorden street, last night shot his wife
Catheiine, twenty-one, in the stomach
nnd then shot himself in the mouth
wltli a revolver. They were tnlv.cn te
the Women's Homeopathic Hospital,
hut Jenes died before reaching there.
The wife cannot live, doctors say.
Peter King. 2430 West Gorden
stieet, heard the shots and telephoned
the police. The woman was1 found in
the bathroom en the Hist lloer and the
body of Jenes en the Hecend lloer. Ac
cording te the police, Jenes wns jealous.
He had been ill for several months, they
suid.
RAID N Y HflllF'-? IM OIIFT
FOR DEATH-DEALING LIQUOR
Seek Source of Poison Alcohol,
Which Killed Eleven Persons
New Yerk, Sept. 8. (By A. P.)
Heading a squad of uniformed police
men and detectives, District Attorney
Rtlsten tednv raided every house in a
block In tlie Red Heek section of Brook Breok Broek
lwi in an effort te find the source of
the poisonous alcohol which has caused
eleven death in the neighborhood.
The raiders were net equipped with
search warnnts. hut thev visited every
cellar in the block. Members of the
party sold they were unable te get
warrants because the persons who gave
information nbeut the alcohol feared
that if their connection with the scorch
was known they would be killed.
RAID nTy. HOTEL FOR" DRUGS
Federal Agents Take Possession for
Three Hours
New Yerk. Sept. S. Broadway
crowds last night witnessed one of the.
most spectacular raids ever staged in
New Yerk when sixty Federal agents'
under Ralph Oyler, chief of the Federal '
Narcotic Division, ami detectives of 1
Inspector Bolen's staff descended en
the Hetel Lengnere, searched the build- I
ing from cellar te reef, arrested eight
persons nnd confiscated a large quan
tlt) of drugs nnd whisky, '
Fer mere than three hours the agents '
and dctcctles were in possession of the
hotel. Persons were freely permitted te 1
enter, but no one Inside the building 1
was allowed te leave until he hnd satis- I
lied the authorities us te who he wn '
and his business.
NEW PIER AT GLOUCESTER
Lawmakers Asked te Repair Adja
cent Municipal Structure
The Armstrong Cerk Cumpany, of
Gloucester, today notified (he Cj;j
Council of that town that it intends
te build a pier exendlng -ISO feet, with
a dredged depth alongside of thirty feet
en the river frontage of the Ancona
Company, recently bought.
Council was nsked te icpnlr the ad
jacent municipal pier, In danger of be
ing undermined uy tnu dredging. 1
""t.
The Engagement Diamond
A brilliant blue-white diamond of
finest material, perfectly cut and
proportioned, may be purchased for
a modest sum, the price being regu
lated by the size of the stone.
But One QualityThe Finest
J. E.GALDWEH & CO.
JEWEUIY - SlLVEH - WATCHES - STATIONERY
CHESTNUT AND JUNIPER STREETS
Saturday Cloning Heur 12 o'clock
SUa?nTIOrJ TO I'ATHONS: The Seuth Penn
in1,. re ,1?or wl" ,u f0UI"1 mera convenient for
entrance from meter cart during- the excavation
et uiestnut Street,
HEARING IS POSTPONED
Spectators In Central Police Static
were startled this morning when nn i
terney dramatically rend n siibneenn
Magistrate Renslmw calling fernV,
appearance before Judge MeDcvlit J
answer the lawyer's complaint that
client hnd been unjustly accused
fined. enl
Before rending the summons, tu
lawyer, Benjamin Levy, told the iiU.i,
trate he should be In Russia where
ntterncy said, he would make an'ti
cellent czar. "
The writ wns Issued en Mr. Lev,
statement thnt Magistrate Renshaw h.
wrongly held a man said te have, drl?J
en automobile recklessly. Ufa Unl
Bcnjnmln Kavitz, a soldier stationed i
l'ert dul'ent. Del wns arrested Sunda
morning for drviny a car ever a Z
near City Hall. He was held for
further hearing tednv. '
As the hearing today was about ti
begin, Levy walked Inte the courtrew
with Jehn Mniski, also a soldier H
denied that Knllts! was driving the e.J
He insisted thnt his friend was L h
the car, but admitted that he had eccm
pied it. "
The magistrate then charged MMsl!
with reckless driving and lined him J2i
He also fined Kftvltr. Sl2.fi0 and ce3
en the testimony of Mndlsen, a CHI
Ilnll guard, that Knvlt? knocked tw
bottles of whisky from his i,nn.i JLA
Hhc guard took them from the car.
"nc" x'cjy appeared before Judr
MeDevitt after reading the summeS
he nsked thnt the hearing of the wri
be postponed until next Friday se thi
he could have time te get held of wit.
ncsses.
He said that neither of the prlsentn
had done nnythlng thnt warranted thcll
being fined und denounced Mngistrall
Renshaw.
"He sits In Central Station just liki
n czar, your Hener," Levy snld,
want te show him there nre litxhet
courts thnn his and for that reason I
asked for the writ."
Magistrate Renshaw was nbeut U
enter Jude McDcvitt's chambers whei
Levy came out nnd announced the pesti
penement. The mnglstrnte turnH
around and walked away. He sal
later that he lined the two men becaus
testimony showed them te be guilty.
HUNT FOR BOY REPORTED
RELATIVE OF LATE CZAF
Federal Officials Would Find Shlp'i
Mess Lad
New Orleans. Sept. 8. (By A. P.l-
Federal authorities today began a searcl
for Eugene Deuwan, twenty-one, eali
te be a relative of the former Czar nl
Russia, who arrived here recently m j
mess boy en the Greek steamship Ef.
stathles from Ornn, Algiers, and it
sertcd the ship before it sailed back.
As Deuwan had no American paw paw
pert, orders for his arrest were issue!
when his disappearance was reported
by the captain.
Deuwan. according te the mnster el
the Kfstnthies, is tlie son of Grand Ad'
I mlral Deuwan, who wns killed when thl
Hussinn battleship Kensei Ostruev tui
I blown up in the Black Sen during tbi
! World War. Ills mother, GwnJ
Duchess Anastasia Deuwnn, it was de'
('air. The master of the vessel elite
I that young Deuwan hnd papers In Ml
possession proving bis nncestry, te
gcther with medals and decoration!
awarded te his father by the late Czar.
FREED TO ATTEND FUNERM
Ceatesvlllc Man Released Frem Jil
Following Sister's Death
Wt Chester, Pa., Sept. 8. Geerfj
McNcrney. of Ceatesvlllc, who til
been serving a short term in prlieil
here en a disorderly conduct charge,
was released today In order that b
might attend the funeral of his ell'
(cr. In the release bent by Mayer Cat
michael n fine also was remitted,
McNcrney will net have te serve til
remainder of his term, the release belnl
final.
Features for Tomorrows
Public Ledger Boek Pages
CLINTON KOGKRS WOOD
KUFF, picsident Civil Service Com
mission of riiiladelphla, calls I.cwIj
Mayer's "The Federal Service"
(Appleton) "a careful. Intelligent,
scholarly discussion of the whole
field of Geicrnnient employment.'
JL'DGK WILLIAM II. LINN
reviews "A History of the United
Stntes Since the Civil War," by
Kills ruxseu Oberheltzer.
A. HAMILTON GIBBS findi
Stewart Edward White's new nerel,
"Dn Tiptoe" (Uerun), "cenii'letily
fascinating."
Cl'LLKN CAIN writes nn open
letter te Hafael Mubutlul, author of
"Captain Bleed."
ANDKK TKIDON explains Ms
own Loek, "l'sjchelanalysls anu
I.ove" ((Brcntnne),
JOHN Ul'SHKLL, author of
"Where the Pavement Ends," ex
pounds personal methods of wrltuil
nnd hew he finds It te be a mystery.
"AN ATTIC SALT-SHAKEB,"
by W. (). T.
K.
!b
7
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B-i&M
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