Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 14, 1922, Night Extra, Image 1

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VOL. IX. NO. 1
Entarad Bacend-Clats Matter at lh Pestefflf at Phhad.lphla, Pa,
Undse the Act of March 8. 187 , -
PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1922
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PRICE TWa CBNTi
BST0FF1CE USED '
DRUG RING TO
I SUPPLY ADDICTS
Ion-Dellar Mall Order Busi-
U In Narcotics May Be
I'V." . . l..
'Bared Dy inquiry
it a
kl EFFORT NEEDED, SAYS
J0HH$ON TO CHECK MOVE
fcWtnt Found te Be Suffering
f verenal Furbuth Would
Regulate Its Sale
Victim of Amnesia
I
m million-dollar mail order business
3-j,- may be disclosed aa the result
rT- i..,..inHnn new belna conducted
W Superintendent of Malls Jehnsen,
ItU Aisistant Postmaster Mack, into
l?ti8 of the general delivery office as
ttrieeivlng center for transient drug
tldlcts.
?Mck said today he had received re
Wts frm observers whose names he
v.. ... , liif man iinrlnnhte.rllr
mim nei gn-, . .., -.
'far addicts, would stand, outside the
"leral delivery window, pitiaDie
tamtri wrecKs, tneir ew uu uunuB
.'ibUng, while they waited their' turn
It line for the mall.
Tie men who have observed these
'relicts say that when they receive
Matter they K te Bem0 secluded part of
the poitefflce building, open tneir man
'and la a few minutes appear orient
tjti, their drugged nerves quieted.
Suspected Mall te be Opened
Superintendent Jehnsen eald he had
taipected that the drug peddlers would
iwntually resort te the mails In view
ief'tie recent raids made en the rings.
The men who receive drugs in the
Mill are all transients. They have it
:jia.V through the general Delivery only
for convenience.
k. Hi mn hi tfinv rsiflhlfftfi thorn
9Lt in Ik .Id thev Iniinerllntrlv hnvn
Btltilr letters sent te their place of rcs-
IMhci,
t Gigantic Effertt Needed
"TMb new method vliich the drug
KpeMlers and addicts nre using will re-
nAeeerdine te Edward J. McMena-
Sla. one of the clerks at the general
MlTtrt window, it H impessible te
Mentiry, addicts, at a giancer
'.U'iWt'hand the mall out in almost a
Mimical fashion." he said, "hut
'ieee any. no, who' comes tq
Mr-window" me"r than dnce'br twice
' i Imuediately require them te fill out
I blink asking them wny they have
m eitaDilsned a permanent nuarew.'
Student Suffering Frem Verenal
"The result is that these who de use
. the wails for the purpose of distrlbut-
! leg drugs only jie se ler trnnsient aa
i diets. They are tee wise te come hack
: mn than once or twice te the general
window."
i Clayten Miller. Univcisltv of Penn-
rijrlTtnla ifnler student, who was found
i ,i a stupor ey pence et tne Tinrty-
ienna Bircct ana woeumnd avenue
-
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AUTO HIT BY TRAIN
AFTER M. FALL;
T
OCUPAN
UNHU
T
Driver Found Sitting Dazed in
Wreck of Car at Feet of
Steep Embankment
COMPANION SAVED BY LEAP
WHEN MACHINE HITS FENCE
V
Three Beys, a Weman and a
Man Injured in Five Other
Moter Accidents
GRACE WARWICK '
New Yerk girl, shown en hospital
cot. She wandered three days en
read between Getham and this
dty
N. Y. GIRL FOUND HERE
A VICTIM OF AMNESIA
Wandered en Highways Three Days
Before Reaching This City
After havine wandered for three davs
through smnll towns and villages en
route from New Yerk te this city, an
cli?hteen-year-eld girl, snid te be Grace
Warwick, is new in the riertpenstern
Hospital, believed te be a victim of
amnesia.
Late yesterday nftcrnoen the girl
walked into a men's ftirnlxhing store
at 318 Richmond street and was found
by the proprietor te have "lest her
memory.
When questioned she could give no
account of herself and merely asked:
"Where am I?" One of the salesmen
told the girl she was in Philadelnhln.
he lnughed and started te walk out te
"he street.
Fearing that seme harm might come
te her, the proprietor notified the po pe
Ice, who took her te the Northeastern
Hospital. . , .
Only after questioning for mero thnn
nlne hours by nurses and physicians
was it possible te get the name of
"Grace Warwick."
Further questioning revealed that she
lives at One Hundred nnd Eighty-first
street and St. Michaels place, New
Yerk.
The girl were a wedding ring. '
SEEKHlTFREAK
111 HARLEY WILL
D$ugbtqr of Fermer Cirard Cel-
itjce Ivl'athematician Says He
i CeVildn't Add Figures
Leslte Stand I nt, thirty-nine yean old,
of 2017 Seuth Sixty-first street, nar
rowly escaped death early this morning
when hlB automobile plunged through a
fence nt Sixty-fourth street and Say
brook nrcntie, rolled down n thirty-five
feet embankment te 'the tracks of the
Pennsylvania Railroad, .and then was
struck bv nn extiress train.
Patrolman Splcer found Standlnt, ap
parently dazed, sitting in his damaged
machine, the front of which hnd been
tern away by the collision. Anether
man, unidentified by the police, leaped
from the auto when It hit the fence, and
escaped unhurt. ,
Standlnt was sent te the Mlscrlcerdla
Hospital, where It was said he was
uninjured. At a hearing this morning,
Magistrate Dugan ollewed him te sign
his own bail bend for a hearing next
Thursday. He Is charged with reckless
driving. After his nrrest. Standlnt
was unable te tell police whether a
freight or express train had struck his
machine.
The nccldcnt occurred at a point
which has recently been the scene of
scvernl serious accidents. Sixty-fourth
street ends abruptly at the tracks of
the Pennsylvania Railroad. There Is a
beard fence across the read en either
side of the tracks and no bridge, Resi
dents hove long been protesting the ab
sence of a bridge.
Jehn J. Kelly, of 0421 Grays ave
nue, said today the place was net even
guarded by lights, and thnt nil of the
accidents there have occurred at mgnt.
Ten-year-old Sidney Ternnlent, 2285
Seuth Ninth street, was seriously hurt
Inst night when run ever by nn auto
mobile when crossing Snyder nvenue
nt Eighth street.' The driver of the
machine escaped. The injured boy was
taken te St. Agnes' Hospital.
When crossing the tlrcet near his
home tcn-yenr-eld Jexfph Rynn, B040
Arch street, was struck by en automo
bile driven by Merris Greer, 015I5 Hav Hav
crferd avenue.
Greer carried the lad in his car te the
TWO INJURED IN AUTO
CRASH ON PARKWAY
Dr. 8. 2. 8hep and Evan . Lawle
' Taken te Hospital
Dr. Samuel 55. Shepe, 2018 Chestnut
street, and Evan B. Lewis, of MO Beeth
Sixteenth street, were Injured and their
automobile damaged this meralnf when
It was struck and overturned, by a
motertruck en the Parkway at Twenty
first street. . ., .
The car of Dr. Shepe and Mr. Lewis
was going east and had almost cleared
Twenty-first street when ,the" tru,
coming north rapidly, struck the. auto
mobile broadside, knocking It several
The injured 'men were taken te' the
Hahnemann Hospital. Dr. B.hepe svif-
Juries. Mr. Lewis is scrtrely cut and
bruised. . . .
William T nrmn. 21 Reuth Thirty -
fourth street, driver of the truck, said
the erash was unavoidable. Ha was
arrested.
WAMfGTDB
I
lOUOFHI,
55ffl0 GOLD SEIZED
DN BRITISH VESSEL
New Yerk Dry Agents Search
Craft Off Scotland Light,
23 Miles Off Shere
JERSEYMEN CUSTOMERS,
LIST FOUND INDICATES
MAINS
GUNPLAY
"Closed Season" Still en Men,
Magistrate Says In Hold Held
ing Chefs Wife
Asbury Park Hetel Men In
volved byjapers Found by
N. Y.v Dry Agents
SHE SHOT HOTEL MAN
Names and addresses of hetelkeepera
of Atlantic City and Asbury Park and
a map showing motorboat rendeiveus
along the Atlantic coast were reuna en
the British schooner Gardner, seised
last night off Scotland Light, near New
Yerk, according te prohibition agents.
Resort hotel men who have been sup
plying their guests with Scotch smug
gled in from Nevn Scotia nnd the Ba
hamas are wnlting anxiously te learn
.-Vieiimr- Viei nnmen wirf in the Gard
ner's list. Prohibition officials say that
the men nnmed there will find out wen
New Yerk Jurist Involved
in Women and Wine Parties
Negro Maid Testifies She Prepared Luncheon
in Theatrical Man's Apartment rer euprvmv
Court Justice Marcus and "Tall Blend.
Cwttnaed en Pate Four, Column One
WINDOW SMASHERS
GET $125 IN LOOT
Reb Stere of Dresses at Eighteenth
i , and Yerk Streets
Iur automebllo hnndlts ilrevp nn te
J tM it rnnrlq KtnrA nf TTitrmnn Hi-pAn.
I m, at the northwest corner of Eight-
Mau and Yerk streets; shortly after
ipcleek this morning, hurled a brick
ttreuih a plate glass window nnd
Ktped with half n dozen dresses val
uta it $12r.
H. J. Knlser, a baker, who has a
op ea the opposite corner, nariewly
eped bclns shot when he rnn from
Ml bas?mcnt upon hearing the crash
ef-tlss. One of the robbers darted
Mwss the Etreet and forced the baker
Uewn the steps nt the point of a re-'Tehref.
$5000 IS BEQUEATHED
TO HAHNEMANN COLLEGE
Other Institutions Remembered In
Will of Late Dr. Blngaman
' Numerous bequests te hospitels,
, W'Ues and ether institutions wcre in-
UUflM In Ikn ..111 0 .1... t. Tl rt t.i
mman, probated today In Pitts -
iJ&9n.e.'its include Hahnemann Medl-
w umege, 50000; Y'ncnt Baptist
!tucb',9hester' Pa.. $4000j Homco Hemco Homce
MWe Hospital, of West Chester.
, WU. nnri ItnnHtf T.,elU..II (,.
.rk.T.ll-. ... "t..k .IIBHIUHUJI lui
v'uan erKers, 51O0O.
i,.i?nle 1- Mescrit, 4320 Mnnayunk
SI?",. whose will was probated here
SW. left $100 te the Presbyterian
'm!u j?r As,A tuples. The entire
tmn dl,P.SC1' of in her will came te
fwk1 aml,l? Mt ,0 Private bequests.
tf wim wlli? P"hated Included these
Hllllnm Vellmer. 001 Seuth Forty
ml )$SS?t'nsa,im Resclla H.
teWn,, Grccn Iane. Roxborough,
SrSL yir5a 3J'- bowman. Glad-
-. ..vuiBuiucry ueunty, U.UOO.
TOLSTOY'S NIECE COMES
; TO FIND WRITER'S SON
Ceunten Anna Zarnekau Living In
Wrdlng Heuse at Staten Island
xuZa?' Snt- 14. Declaring she
WnTk ir0t.m n,,88lft n" her hus
WkM bS.en slot down before her
fetarf.'"? "0'nevists. Countess Anna
K,7 l In New Yerk In an effort
laif le reus,n Cent Alyn Tolstoy,
ShnL u. ni0U8 KiiMlnii writer, who
WCenn scchu,len "enr stam-
'3inteB8 Zarnekau said she had been
CJ2. J" a Staten Island bearding-
an,i". i e?fra wwk- After her
I bv V!.cath B,, craped from Rus
rintan,ieljl:h cJ0a the White Sea
i J,'?"1' unl then came te America,
vBna n.i i riJluy .'" America lias
H 'Afi1 y the sale e' I'" jewels,
'Web1 lVe?,1 'no"ey, .s gene she buld
weniqjmva teind wurk.
ftw er.hii. A,J0.T TIIERK ARK
I WWBM "tBAV!S,!?.1-. lnih . W
' f sy tu4
"HIS MIND WANDERED"
a jAnd head by
were taken te
Mrs. Edith Harley Maccagcn, daugh
ter of Prof. J. K. Hariey, a former
instructor at Girard College, has Insti
tuted proceedings in the Orphans' Court
of NorrUtewn te break the will of her
father, who died in April, nt his home
ln,Trnppc, Md.
Rehind the action lies a strange story
of a one-time brilliant mathematician,
who, Mrs. Mnccagcn says, lest control
of his mcntnl faculties te such en ex
tent thnt he was unable te add a column
of fls'ire or te calculate a simple prob
lem in arithmetic.
The court has been asked te awarii
an issue te determine whether Prof,
llnrley had testamentary capacity, and
whether or net the paper in Question,
doted January 20, 1022. Is his last will.
In explaining wliet ehc-tel eved te be
the reason for being cut off in the will
with SI. the balnnce of the estate going
te Prof. Hnrley's wife and a wn,
Mrs. Maccagcn said her father dlsap dlsap
Dreved of her marriage te a foreigner
whom she met in Atlantic C ty, while
employed nt a beach fipnt hotel.
Her husband died six months nftcr
the marriage, she bald. Then she went
te her father's home nnd nursed the
instructor following en attack of ape-
p T?y.'--4. n,it,mMnn of Mrs. Maccagcn
thet her father started te lese control
of his mind following n streke he suf
? i in Mar. 1914. A second streke
occurred In 1010. a third In 11118 and a
fourth in 1010. Prof. Hurley's
faculties became further impaired with
each attack, according te the petitioner.
"A very marked change in the mental
condition of the deceased ensued imme
diately after the stroke of October,
1010 '' "he petition reads. "At that
time 'the deceased fell alone the road read
slde in Trnppe and from that day en
wns mentally incompetent nnd deficient.
"Ilia mind wandered. He wua un
able te count n column of figures or te
calculate n biminu prewem ui smunu-
matlcs in which heretofore he had ex
celled. He became uncouth nnd was
unable te dress and undress himself.
He lest control of his riewers, became
obsessed with hallucinations nnd fears.
conversed upon iuuiihii ieiuch nnu was
unfit te attend te buiness. He became
quite violent toward members of his
family ns well as te theso who had hith
erto been friends."
ERRORS BY CITY MAY
DELAY P. R. T. REPORT
Transit Attorney Unable te End
Hearing by October 15 as Planned
The Rapid Transit Company will be
unable te complete Its examination of
the city's valuation witnesses by Oc
tober 15 because of the numerous er
rors found In the city's icpert, Colemun
J. Joyce told Public Servtce Commis Cemmis Commis
Hlener Clement today.
October 15 was the dnte supgesten
by Mr. Clement be that a decision by
the Commission might be made about
the end of the ear.
CuAekI Doesharty nrsta sUCatbellM
lu tli. Manual et IT'.
West Philadelphia Hospital, where he
waft treated fop cuts and brnlscit en the
face and body. The driver then sur-'
rendered te the police of the Sixty
first nnd Thompson streets Btatlen.
Trelley Hits Aute
William J. Jenes, Yerk read neat
Woodland reud, Abington, nnd his sixteen-year-old
son Samuel were cut and
bruised at 7:30 o'clock this morning
when n trolley car crashed into Mr.
Jenes' motorcar outside bis home.
The machine was overturned. Samuel
wns pinned under the wreckuge
was cut about the lace
glass. Father and son
the Abington Hfcpltnli
Mr. Jenes is a proprietor of the North
Philadelphia Lumber and CotyscSJom CetyscSJom CotyscSJem
pany, Fifth and Lycoming streets.
Three automobiles were wrecked and
the driver of one was Injured in a
collision last night en the Chester pike
nt Norwood.
Geerge Atkins, of 6320 Elmwood
avenue, wns bruised severely when he
drove Inte the machine of Richard C.
Ylgueis. The impact swerved At
kins' machine ncress the highway
into another automebllo going in the
opposite direction, driven by Jehn J.
Magahern, of Wilmington, Del,
The three men were nrrested nnd
held in $300 bail for a further hearing
September 27.
Emll Chrlstcnsen, of 1S25 West On
tario street, was seriously injured Inst
night when the car In which he was
riding collided with a trolley car en
Mldvnle nvenue between Thirty-third
nnd Thirty-fourth streets.
- The machine was dtlven by Elmer
Alexander, 2001 Sixty-fifth avenue.
Alexander had n hearing tills morning
before Magistrate Darn, of the Twenty-second
street nnd Hunting Park
avenue pelice station. District Sur
geon Krntz testified the man was in
toxicated when arrested. Alexander
was held in $500 for a further hearing
September 28.
Chrlstcnsen Is in the Memerial Hos
pital with a prebable fractnre of the
skull.
"A woman has no mere right te sheet
than has a man," said Magistrate
O'Hrien today in the Twelfth and Pine
streets station, when he held Mrs.
Marie Cechct, 310 Seuth Smedlcy
street, in $1000 ball ferthe action of
the Grand Jury. t
Mrs. Cochet, en July 15 last, en
tered n rooming house at 1611 Pine
street, went te the room occupied by
Jeseph SImenlnl, assistant manager of
the Arcadia cafe, nnd ob he lay in bed
emptied a revolver at him, three shots
taking effect.
The shots were heard ty iienn
Cochet, chef nt the Manufacturers'
Club, the woman's husband, who ledged
in the same house with Slmenlni.
He rushed out of his room Just as
Mrs. Cochet turned the revolver en her
self. She had fired all the cartridges,
however,, and her husband bore her
down befere she could reload. With
the aid of ether persons in the house
he held her until the police arrived.
Slmenlni,. (it first though te be griev
ously wounded, lay in the Polyclinic
Hospital for weiks, but slowly grew
better. He said he did net wish te
press charges against Mr. Cochet. t
Today "Mr. and Mrs. Cochet nnd Sl Sl
eonlni steed before Magistrate O'Brien.
Slmenlni has recovered. Cechct and
his wife have become reconciled. The
husband was the wife's bondsman.
"I don't want te press this charge,
your honor," said Simeninl. "I am
well again. It was all a mistake. We
have made un our differences, and we
nil three are -geed friends once mere.
l none you wjii jci me wnuuruw me
cae.r
Magistrate O'Brien frowned aqu
thought. Then he shook his head.
"Ne," he said, "I am afraid I can
not de that. There has been tee much
sheeting of this sort laterly. Jt must
btoe. The community cannot afford te
Hel let such things go en. A woman has
ill, linui. IU OUVUb U UUU ..V Wl.Hl..
what the circumstances. She has no
better right te sheet a man than any
man has te sheet a woman, or te com
mit any ether murder."
"I Urn nPfectly willing te withdraw
the charge, your Hener," said Slm Slm
onlni. "I mall right again. It dfd
me no harm. I will net prosecute her,
and I would like it you could release
her." X.
"Ne," said Magistrate O'Brien. "I
cannot take tat responsibility. It is
net a case for a magistrate. The Grand
Jury is the proper place for a decision
in a matter like this. I'll turn you
ever te the Grand Jury and fix the
ball et $1000."
enniiph. nn Kpnreh warrants will .be
sworn out. based en the irjfermatf
obtained
AUTO DRIVER ESCAPES
Takes Injured Bey te Hospital and
Then Disappears
Sidney Senlet, nine years old, was
knocked down by a speeding automo
bile nt Eighth street-nnd Snyder ave ave
nue shortly before midnight and is in
a critical condition at St.1 Agnes' Hos Hes
pltal. The police are looking for the driver
of the car, who carried him te the hos
pital end left quickly without giving
Uis name.
Jacob Senlet, his father, after wait
ing lip several hours, made a tour of
the hospitals en a chance that Sldncv
had been Injured. He found him at
St. Agnes' after visiting several ether
places.
liv.
BILL HART'S WIFE SUES;
FILM STAR SEES BILL JR.
Cash Settlement of $200,000 Offered by Acter Extreme
Cruelty Is Given as Cause of Divorce Action
Bu Xtieclattil Prej
Is Angeles,' Sept. 14. Suit for dl dl dl
vorce en the ground of "extreme
cruelty" will be instituted at once
against William S. Hart, film actor,
by Mrs. Winifred Wcstever Hart, ac
cording te an announcement today by
Mrs. Hart's attorney.
Reports thnt Hart had agreed te a
$200,000 cesh settlement with his wife
were verified by Mrs. Hart's attorney.
He added that a complete settlement
hed net been effected nnd that his client
would ask for a much larger sum.
The suit fellows u meetlng of hus
band and wife at the cradle of .their
new-born babe yesterday.
William S, ("Hill") Hart, motion
plcture actor, and his wife, Winifred
Westover, screen nctress, met ever the
dradle of thelr first-born yesterday for
the first tline In several months.
The meeting occurred nt the home
of Mrs. Hart's mother in Santa Mon Men
ica, a suburb where Mrs, Hart went
after she and her husband hnd sepa
rated and where the child wns born a
week age.
It was Hart's first view of his son,
who has been named William S, Hart,
Jr. Hart went te his wife's residence
and asked te see the child. An the'babe
could net be tnken outside the house
Hnrt was invited inside.
"I tell ypu honestly, I believe that
Iltlle fellow' was glad te sce me." said
Hnrt later. "He vfally acted like it.
He laughed and giggled, We lied a
great time together.
"Say, that isn't a baby; taat'a a
man ! 1 11 tell you en the square, he
is that long. (nere Bill extended
his arms full length.) He leeks like
me, tee. no s get my head and just
my eyes. He's get his mother's nebc.
When he gets big he Is going te be a
long, tall chap like me, tee. He's mine
through end through."
Tears came te Bill's steel gray eyes
and his fists clinched as n queer little
crooked smile played ever his lips.
Friendsvwhe saw the first meeting of
Hnrt and his heir say the two at once
became the best of friends and passed
nearly half an hour doing things that
fathers and their sons de when they
first become acquainted, Before leav
ing. Mrs. Hart requested her husband
te write in her baby book the names
of the Infant's progenitors, se Bill In
scribed the various grandfathers en the
book and the meeting was ever.
Asked if the meeting might lead te a
reconciliation Hart shook his head.
"That's impossible," he said
The Les Angeles'Tlmes today printed
what It described as "the terms of the
settlement" between Hart and his wife.
These includehla establishing a tnut
fund of $103,000, of which she has con cen
JlJJ'hlle' n addition, he Is te pay her
$1200 a month uresumnhlv lnr?'nii
and jet up u trust fund of $100,000 for
It is stated Hart agseed his wife
was tp have the "sole care, nmtrel and
custody of the baby."
"They may take hlty frm me, but
thsy can't say he's met mine," said
Hart after seeing the child.
'I
The Gnnlntr xrfts seized In Snlte of
the fact that she Is of British registry
ami Trnii ua.TfJ miles off shore, accord
ing te the leg of Captain M. 0. Betts.
The ship is ene of the largest yet
seized by the New Yerk "prohibition
navy." Cnptnln Betts is said te have
admitted that it was in the whisky
carrying business, but only between
British ports. He denied that he .has
landed cargoes en American shores or
engaged in "bootlegging."
The raiders seized mere than ,100
rnses nf Hener nnd S56.000 in cold.
Captain Belts said that the geld was
for the purchase of u new cargo of liq
uor at Nassau, Bahama Islands. He
exrtlained thnt the 100 cases were re
jected by a purchaser who took 4000
cases. He has sold the liquor, he said,
In Neva Scotia. He was taking what
wns left back te Nassau, he paid.
When the "prohibition navv" inter
cepted him at night. Captain Butts
said, he thought at first that he was
about te be held up by rum pirates. He
elenred his ship for action and wns
ready te run the prohibition beat down
when the men aboard the smaller craft
turned their searchlight en their own
beet se he could Identify it. He then
allowed them te beard.
Prohibition agents are still working
Industriously nt Atlantic City te find
the hiding place of a cargo of 280 cases
of Scotch worth $30,000, successfully
landed near the retort from a schooner
which the rum-runners then abandoned.
The Mhoener was found near the Inlet.
The crew managed te get their valuable
commodity ashore in spite of raiders'
efforts. The Government men were
working en a tip, but failed te make
their descent in time.
The enforcement men have sworn out
warrants for the officers and crew of
the nbondened schooner, but have net
an yet found either the hidden whisky
or the hiding men.
MrTS.HARDING STEADILY
.GAINING, DOCTORS SAY
Condition Se Much Improved That
Bulletins Are Discontinued
Washington, Sept. 14. (Bv A. T.)
Further improvement in the condi
tion of Mr. Harding wa reported to
day bv Brigadier General C. E. Saw
yer, White Hoube physician. This Pres
ident's wife, he said, spent an excellent
night the best nlnce her illness became
critical. Satisfactory recuperative
progress, he added, Is being made.
Announcement was made last night
at the White Heuse thnt, In view of
the Bteady improvement In Mrs. Hard
ing's condition, no mero formal bulle
tins would be Issued.
Dr. Geerge T. Harding, Jr., brother
of the President, who hits been in at
tendance, teturned today te Columbus,
O. Clifferd Kllng. a brother of Mrs.
Harding, also has left for his home in
Marlen, O.
President Harding had no engage
ments for today, and it was expected
he would spend most -'f bis time near
his wife's bedside. The President, it
v nn cnid, Is doing n considerable amount
of office work In his study near the sick
room.
HAROLD 0. SKINNER,
ACTOR, DIES IN WEST
Nephew of Otis Skinner Was Sen of
Editorial Writer
San Diege. Calif., Sept. 14. (By
A. P.) Hareld Otis Skinner, thirty
three, nn ncter who became well known
through his work in "Meccu" In New
Yerk, died here last night of n -complication
of diseases.
He was a nephew of the famous
actor. Otis Skinner, nnd the son of
Charles Montgomery Skinner, former
editorial writer of the Brooklyn Eagle.
New Yerk, Sept. 14. The name of
Supreme Court Justice Leuis H. Mar
cus, of Buffalo, today was drawn Inte
a story of gny drinking parties alleged
te have been held In the apartment of
L. Lawrence Weber, theatrical and mo
tion picture producer, in a bearing of
an application of Wcber'a former wife
for custody of their three-and -a-half-year-old
son, L. Lawrence Weber, Jr.
Mrs. Weber's contention was that
the conduct in Weber's apartment was
prejudicial te the morals of the boy.
Testimony was Introduced te the effect
that, en one occasion, "Larry Junier
hed been present, at n drinking party
and raising a cocktail glass In his
chubby fist, hnd proposed a toast te
"the beautiful ladles' present.
Justice Marcus, who is the child's
guardian, wns brought into tne case
in the testimony of Anna Cannen, a
Negress, formerly employed in Weber s
suite, who told of drinking parties in
the Weber apartment.
"Did Judge Marcus ever meet girls
in the Weber apartment?" Weber's
counsel asked.
"YeB. I fixed luncheon for Judge
Marcus and a tall, heavy blonde," the
witness answered. "There was an
other little girl who used te come nil
the) time te see him. She was a blonde,
or red-headed."
The witnet-s gave the names of seven
perrens of mero or less prominence In
the theatrical world who she said had
attended the parties, and added that
there were "a let of ethers."
"Was the child ever present at any
of the dinners or drinking parties?"
she was asked.
"He usually was put te bed early,
but I remember one night the baby
picked up a cocktail glass, and raising
It, said :
'iicrc s te tne bcnutiiui laaics."
MORE RAIL
C3MLVB u -l' '
& i e7
1 " iMyWi
III1VC
! VA.
k I
v . t. fl..,,1 In nn nllesed "kid'
napping'' in Central Park, when the
Serf new Mr.. Edith H.ller ; DUlen
.-.I t,M,.n nn til ntflSO SB Edith HSl-
ler, dashed up in an automobile, "
ed the lad from his nurse and sped
VebeV who hid divorced Mrs. Dillen,
obtained an order for the bey'a return
te Him. Then Mrs. Dillen applied for
half-time custody ef: the child and Jus
tice Marcus was named guardian pentt-
"Veber? 'toeppoatng Mra. Dillen's
application, alleged she waa an unfit
person, setting forth that after he had
divorced her she had married
DlITen, motion picture producer, who
was corespendent in tne aiT,orce .
Deber, who Is widely known In bbth
legitimate nnd movie theatrical circles,
is best known aa manager of the Long Leng
acre Theatre.
The hearing was adjourned at neon
until Monday.
KING VICTOR EMMANUEL ILL
Italian Monarch 8trlekan en Jour
ney In Trentlne Mountain.
Naples, Sept. 14. (By A. P.)
"King Victer Emmanuel of Italy
la seriously 111, according te the
Mnttlne here, which announced today
that the Italian monarch would net be
able te attend the Naples fair because
of his rather gravu condition.
The newspaper states that King
Victer Emmanuel contracted his illness
en a journey In the Trentlne moun
tains. A high fever developed and the
King was obliged te return te his coun
try castle at Raccenlgl in Piedmont.
I The doctors think he will recover in
I time te nttend the closing of the fair.
nr te join
IN PUCLP1GTS
List Rises Above Fifty at Sv-
eral Reads Express Desire
te Sign
I
SEPARATE SETTLEMENTS ',
ARE BEING COMPLETED
S
LAST-MINUTE NEWS
TILDEN BEATS SHIMIDZU IN FIFTH-ROUND MATCH
Willinm T. Tilden, of Philadelphia, reached the Beml-flnal
round in the national tennis chnmipenahlps by eliminating
Zenae Shimldzu, of Jnpan, In straight Bets at the Germantown
Cricket Club this afternoon. The scores were 0-2, 6-3, 6-1.
ARMY DIRIGIBLE C-2 ARRIVES AT AKRON
AKRON, OHIO, Sept. 14. The army dirigible C-2 arrived at
the Wingfoot Lake aerial station, near here, at 11:25 A. M. The
big airship wns moored at the hangar there nnd the crew landed
for luncheon. It will leave Iato today for Dayton.
GUATEMALA REBELS SENTENCED TO DIE
GUATEMALA CITY, Sept. 14. The war council has sen
tenced te death the rebels Manuel Trinidad Keyes and Federice
Arts.
Shepmen en Chicago and
Northwestern May Resume '
Werk Tomorrow
BOARDS OF ADJUSTMENT
Heeper Declares Agreement
Reached at Chicago Accerde
With Transportation Act
55,000 Miles of Reads
in Strike Settlement
Chicago, Sept. 14. The mileage af
fected by the railroad strike settlement
is estimated at about 55.000 of the
250,000 miles in the United States.
The reads agreeing te settlement arc;
WUssa
Alabama, and Vlckiburr 11.5
Ualitmere nnd Ohie S.1&A.0
Buffalo. Rocheter and Plttiburch .. SS9.T
Cheiapak and Ohie ... 2,5ft.O
Ch ease and Northwestern ....'.... 8.463.0
t-oierjo and Southern l.oet.e
BTI.B
259.0
4S4.0
0.0
8.123.6
Omaha 1,741.0
Pase and Southwestern 4SA.R
Erie 3.404.0
Heekln Valley 8S0.O
uki K-ne ana wetern its.
I.eulelana. and Arkannaa S05.0
Mlnnenoelli and Kt. Leula 1,080.0
New Yerk Central Llnea 12.S13.A
New Yerk. Chleaice and St. Leula B3J.0
Norfolk and Western 2,108.1
Norfolk and Southern 944.0
Seaboard Air Line S.r.M.8
Trinity and Braies Valley 824.0
Virginia , B2S.S
Wheeling and Lake Erie Bll.fl
ioe.t
Southern ".".".'.'.'.".'.'.". fl'.STl'.
Della and Lnmsvllt flie.fl
Chlcace. Milwaukee and St. Paul..lO,Aif.a
Wichita Vat lev nallwar
Chleaite. Indlanap
rprt Werth and Denver City
Us and Ieulsvlll
ghtcaa-e, neck WnnA and pacific...
hlcam. St. Paul, irinneapells and
Ornihn
El Pase and Southwestern 434
International Matches
Manheim Features Today
1 P. M.
Court 3 W. T. Tilden, 2d, Phil
adelphia, vs. Zenzo Shimldsu, Ja
pan! 2 P. M.
Court 1 W. M. Johnsten, Cali
fornia, vs. Manuel Alonse, Spain.
3 P. M.
Court 2 1. N. 'Williams, 2d,
Bosten, vs. G. L. Patterson, Aus
tralia. 4;30 P. M.
Court 1 Vincent Richards, New
Yerk, vs. J. O. Andersen, Aus
trails. Veterans Singles Matches
2:30 P. M.
Court 6 Jehnsen-Beard,
4 P. M.
Court 0 Gere-Dewhurst.
5 P. M.
Court i Hoeker-Strawln8kl.
HLDEN WINS FIRST
I FROM SHIMIZU
Japanese Takes Opening Came
Through Champien's Wild-
ness en Manheim Courts
10,000 FANS SEE MATCH
William T. Tilden, national singles
te.nnLs champion, wen the first set of
his match with Zenzo Sliimlzu, the
Japanese, 6 te 2, In the round before
the semifinal this afternoon en the
courts of the Germantown Cricket Club.
The two luminaries were tied at two
games apiece when Tildrn opened the
speed throttle and wen the next four
games.
By EDWIN J. POLLOCK
America made its stand against the
invasion of foreign players In the fifth
round of the Xatlennl Lawn Tennis
Chnmplenshlp nt the Germantown
Cricket Club today. Four matches will
be played during the afternoon, nnd
every one of them is international.
"Bib Bill" Tilden wns the first of
the United States defender! te oppose
a foreigner. Ah 1 o'clock, he went en
one of the center courts ngnlnbt Zenzo
Shimldzu, the crafty biie-liiie general
frprn Japan.
The American champion was nervous
and highly excitable this morning, but
this wns because he held a "grand
Blam" hand In mictien bridge in the
clubhouse before the match btarted.
"Hew's your game?" he was abked.
"Oh, great," he replied. ".lust had
n wonderful run in hearts from the
ace down te the seven. Never played
better in my life."
Tilden Is one nf these cool athletes
who nfver get ruffled. One would im
agine be wns going te be a spectator,
judging from the nonchalance he dis
played this morning.
"Big Bill" has opposed the Japnnese
star en several eccasjans, and, although
he has been forced te hit best, he has
been able te pull through with vic
tories. Last year, In the Davis Cup
challenge round, the wee Oriental
player drove Tilden te five sets, and
had him within mntch point, but, In
the 1021 nntiennls, the Japanese was
smothered In straight sets.
Again, the crowd started te arrive
early, and, when the match started,
there were several thousand persons In
the stands. There were close te 10,000
persons, present yesterday, and Indlca Indlca
tieiu pointed te a large gathering to
day. Tilden was the first player te ap
pear, and wag dressed In the conven
tional white flannels, nnd his Interna
tional sweater with red. white nnd
blue stripes near the neck. His hair
Continued en !' Four, Column Twe
s c?ouulRklT,re5ap.rf7.
CHURCH MAY AC
T
AGAINS
T
KU KLUX
-Episcopal Convention Asked te
Denounce Meb
Violence
MARRIAGE RITE ALTERED
Pv Associated Prtu
Portland, Ore., Sept. 14. An attack
upon mob violence was placed before
the Heuse of Deputies of the General
Convention of the Protestant Episcopal
Church today, in a resolution offered
by the Rev. Dr. C. B. Wilmer, Atlanta,
Ga.
Though refusing te sav he hnd aimed
the resolution at the Ku Klux Klan,
whose headquarters are in his home
city, Dr. Wilmer said in bringing the
matter before the conventien:
Any organization based en n definl definl
tien of Americanism which excludes
certain races or religions must de
velop prejudices or antagonisms toward
Kf.frfl" 0tt?FO "Hffiens or races, nnd
must inevitably encourage the taking of
iilw.Lnt0 ene.8 own """di nnd ulti
mately the use of such an organization
forpurpeses of privnte revenge "
The resolution asked that the Church
Place itself en record ns "looking vUh
violence"!"0 "PD a" forms f ra"u
The Heuse of Bishops, which snent
J'.e,fnrdnL """"fin Pray er-toek rre rre
visien, adjourned In the midst of n
debate en the emission of n rubric w-hlch
erblds the saying of the burial service
in the prayer book ever the body of
unbaptUl or an excemmica ted per"
fcen or one who has aid violent hands
!!i hlnTi nisJ'P William L v.
renee. of Magsachusetts. argued for
emission of the rubric. urue ter
.1,1 n?.Il8bep, (,'pi,l'd te eliminate from
the marriage ceremony the words "with
nllTh.y n,rly 00d2 X th" Sndew." h
The Bishops voted against a sunnle-
mental marriage service and decided in-
s ead te add two optional prayers, te
with rilfc ""i1 0 hai 5 , e
with children and the ether was for a
blessing en the home.
fTlVLr5,ut,n wn8 enlivened by a bit
t "ftV Ve1". ?T 0tr DCJJU Wh'n
ii . ,.YDr' Charles L. Satterv ex-
Plained the reason for submltt Ingnw
a. ' th.tapt,i!r ! ,prcr for th"
in? that the old Adam in this
Hh'ldKn,B',be buried, that the new man
mn,y be raised up In him."
Dr. Blattery said emberrassment
sometimes was caused when I 'ie prayer
was used in the case of a glrlr
7.000,000 RUBLES EQUAL $1
Moscow, Sept. 14. (By A. P.)
Seven million Soviet rubles te the dol
lar is the new rate set by the Gov
ernment Stock Exchange Cemmie.
aleB which has jm begua operations.
Winsten-Salem Southbound
Bu Anertntti Pre
Chicago, Sept. 14. Leaders of tfca
Federated Railway Shepcrafts who t
day began negotiating separate set
tlements of the strike which started
July 1, in accordance with the agree
ment adopted by the unions' General
Policy Committee, announced that sev
eral railroads had telegraphed union
headquRTteTSntraTcntlhg willingness te
go into the negotiations.
These, the lenders said, were in ad
dition te about fifty rends which pre
viously had agreed te separate settle
ments. Definite announcement was made to
day that the Southern Railway will be
gin negotiations with its shepmen at
Washington en Saturday. Henry W.
Miller, vice president of the Southern
In charge of operation., In tanking this
announcement expressed confidence thnt
details of the plan whereby the strik
ers would return te work would b
worked out without dlfliculty.
The Chicago nnd Northwestern, one -of
the large Western systems, party 'e
the settlement agreement, was expected
te meet leaders of its shepmen seme
time today with the pesslbllltp that the
men would return te work tomorrow or
Monday. With that read as a party te
the general agreement it was the un
derstanding nt the general offices that
no pact would be signed with the union
chairmen, but that informal discus
sion would take place.
It. M. Jewell, head of the railway
empleyes' department of the American
Federation of Laber, did net issue nn
official list of the reads which had
agreed te the ecttlement plan. He- said
such information must come from the
railroads. Mr. Jewell wns expected te
confer today with members of the shop
crnfts' executive council.
The shop crnfts executive council,
meeting in a North Side hotel, was said
te be considering the instructions te be
sent te the system federations through
out the country relntivc te negotiating
with the various reads.
The inllenge affected today by the
settlement wns estimated nt about 53,
000 of the L'50,000 miles in the United
States.
Likes Individual Agreements
W. H. Ftnley. president of the Chl Chl Chl
coge and Northwestern Rnllrnad, was
one of the most outspoken of the execu
tives who announced acceptance of the
settlement plan.
"Our shepmen have asked us te meet
their committee here today nnd we will
proceed te mnkn nn individual settle
ment with our men," he snid.
"I think it is n geed thing that the
reads are new making Individual settle
ments InNtead of national agreements,
"It nuts these mntters back where
they belong, between the persons most
directly interested, the reads and the
men who work for them."
Efferts te verify published lists of
reads accepting the settlement drew
denials from the Erie, Burlington, Chi-
Centlnnrd en Pate Four, Column Twe
CHARGEFIVE IN BRIDGE
WRECK AT WILMINGTON
Waive Hearing and Are Held In
$5000 Ball Each
Wilmington. Del.. Sept. 14. (By A.
P.) Dnnlel B. Effany, Harry G. Set
del, Rebert J. Pratt nnd Demlnlck
Gregery, the four railroad strikers nr
rested yesterday en n charge of dynas
mltlng a bridge of the Pennsylvania
Railroad In this city en August 21,
were arraigned in City Court this
morning. Alse a fifth man, Lionel M.
Phillips, who was alleged te have pre
vlded the dynnmlte.
The 'charge against them waa ma.
llcieus mischief, there being no special
statute in this State against" empleylu
explosives for destructive purpesL
Punishment Is at the discretion of tba
Court, The Ave men waived a heat.
Ing and were held in 15000 ball m2.
Ne surety was offered.
Tin JOB YOU ABB UMMUNa FOB BUY
t found in h M.Ip Waelt4 column?!
vara 23 acd 28,; Av. "" "
Skt.l
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