. il W3 T EKaV mSafJaPagy& OPENS CLASSY CAfiD Annual Meeting at Media, With Full Program, Draws Great Society Crowd 1 CRACK HORSES ENTERED n With the Inrjegt program yet offered the annual fall meet of the Rw Tree Sunt Club opened nt 2 o'clock this afttmoen en the course near Media. In all the events except that for two-tr-elds there are large entries. In t'hlj excepted event, however, great stress hns been laid en what horsemen terra "quality." Samuel 1). Hlddlc'H Ilerraanunt, Ralph StrassliurRcr's Penllyn and Walter M. .Tcfferd'a Trlnce Itegent will have the racu te them sllvts. Eight horses hav been entered for the steeplechase. Among them Geerge Itroelc's Ormead, which recently hnn at- trtcted much attention. Mr. Riddle's The Swell Is ftlne In this race. Ter thh Tfnt Mr. .Telferd has announced the club will offer n permnnent challenge cup The cress-country race is te be n handicap. Among the horses entered for It are Mr. StraMbereer'n Wolver Welvor Wolvor ten II. Mr. Strnwbrldee'R ltlver Breeie and Mr. Clethler'B Bill Whnley. In the longer flat race, nt n mile and a quarter. Lclper'a Piraeus prob ably will be the favorite, although he is carrying 100 pounds. Mrs. Lewis Miles' In the Dark at 145, Mr. Fred Nichelson's Artrnl at 140 and Mr. Bldgway's Leve's Legacy at 14(1 nlne should be prominent in this. Mr. Whit ney hns brought ever u herw named Brether Compten, which In tu nt 142 pounds. He may be u dark horse in the event. The program fellows? First race, the Agricultural fUnkes Handicap, purse presented by ,T. M. McComb, blanlcetn by Walter M. Jef Jef eords. Second race, the Edgemont Plate, jlate presented by Mr. McMurtrle. Third race, the Bear Hill Plute, pinto presented ey itnipii nearer Htrnss Htrnss burRer. ' Fourth race, the Aspiration Plate, plate presented by J. E. Caldwell & Ce. Fifth race, the Mlddletewn Barrens Plate, plate te winner presented by William du Pent, trophies for second and third presented by Emnnuel Hey. Sixth race. Sycamore Mills' Plate, pint" presented by Alexander Sellers. The meet will be continued Natur dar. 'Asks Conviction of Mrs, Giberson Canttnnrd from Paxe On damned mad, its Uke waving a red flag before a bull." Slie also expressed regret that ahe had net burned letters which the prose cution hag since offered nt her trial. Pocketbook Net Found The question of what became of the pocketbook Mrs. Giberson says was stolen nfter the murder was net an swered by the State. Although a thor ough search was made by the author ities, they failed te locate it. Other pocketbooks were shown in court yester day, but Mrs. Giberson identified them as ones which had been about the house for some time, but hnd net been used recently. She said she bad bought u' new pocKcieooK ler ner nusDanu a few weeks before his death. The defense contends the State had net sufficiently established a. motive for the crime. They argue the relation ship between Mrs. Giberson and Mr. la Nun had sufficiently cooled soma months previous te the homicide, te preclude, it as a cause for murder. After the presentation of evidenct had been iinished, counsel for Mrs. Giberson again tried te have the testi mony of several of the prosecution's witnesses stricken out, but the Court declined te issue the order. Tcitlineny of Mrs. Petter Giberson, the dead man's mother, that about a month before her son was killed his wife had told her that "any one could commit murder In Ocean County nnd et anay with It" was permitted te remain en the records against pretests of the defendant's counsel. Party Lines Fading in Western States OentlnntJ from 1'mc One censln the conservative Itepubllcuns are openly supporting the Democratic can didates for the Senate. And the rndl cal Democratic farmers are getting ready te vote for the Itepubllcnn candi dates. In Minnesota the ltepublican candt ate. Senater KellugK is conservative, but it is expected thut the former labor candldnte, Henrlk Shlpstead, will give aim a close run. If the Democrats had nominated Shlpstend he probably would have wen. ,. Jn Michigan the radical sentiment of no farmers was revealed In the unex pected strencrtli nf ltnl.-e- in , i. Publican primaries. Hud there been but two ennd duti'H in th. raw. UnltPr probably would have wen. His fol fel IVl.1, l,roen,l'.v will vete for the Dem ocratic candidate, ex-Governer Fer ris, for the Sennte, making tlmt strong ly Kepuliliraii Statu clese. linker wilt of licanl from two years from new, wiien Senater Newberry's 'seat becomes vacant. He is the Uroekhart of Michl- , I", 01'10 there is the rame discontent liL f"1nle,' tlmt is breaking pnrtv innJinithwe et,l."r Stn,eR' n'"1 '"' " radical been nominated for the Senate Hi v ir Party the situation in Iowa M ebraFkn would be repeated there. iti,1". it is ,ene of tint States in Party 11 wel"urj' imw is breaking ,f" ,New Jersey and Missouri this is 5iT. t is n Pmlneut factor, but no no e tins It rauu-d se complete n rc jugnment as has the economic Issue in ? hP.n nbeV8 descrlCed. nC. ri lri,.U, 8e01"8 t0 )mve Kivpn ii ll "l rV11le" "r Ku KIux KIiiii a N1' L'h h,,,H It"tx-tc-iI party lines 4 completely there as it ban In Texas no Oregon. ftfS in.,i.t',in tcl w,lftt will come out ii.Sl ur.V liwtlH Section, which a ' m. ,n ft'ftined certain, is favors'. Uht bccnuse et tl10 new thlhn Hpnatr Imd the support of Jli.nT,Tm,",H vhe nru numerous In Missouri niu who favored him because M his opnetlt en te Wilsen. The Ku nw and rcllKleus Inkum nin hn nillT0 ?. nd'l mntcrlallv te the nfmden which prevails. The sit uatieu in jenrs. ene of the worst in many th r.lfi'V ,ins ,'"'ea InflniMMl lunger ever the religious Issue. A Ku KIux candl- tin.l 1 f.w nite livtll t V 1111 Nil - w iiii iinrirnnn in , It 1 . 'flf,t Hi''tner. The State Klui'SU"'0 Kh. K,ur. Qml n-K Si y .ferf,' nnd nnti-ferelgn, In he melee such old-fashioned thin .,. l ",""" democrat nave WSt ili'ltt of ikenniiM.in.t , ,1 . ". "- been ji, a. . ,f. i (. ' in, rtl I f ,n WVMW'iyH M" - Art,- ftrifipigiSj &$$' llllJj. Vv ROSE TREE HUNT CLUB I BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBWBBBBBBBBBt r v BrBBBBBBBB ..11 v i a 9L. I IHKi C ' if ' wtf v ,Mi, it r Hall Bex in Bank te Be Opened Today Continued from Tntn On the motive behind its issunnce. It probably will be nerved and the house of the Individual named in It searched, during the ceurse of the day. It Is rumored that the house te be searched in that of "nunkle" Stevens, nt Lavalette, but this has net been con firmed. Recter's Own Pistol Used The authorities have reconstructed the murder from a new point of view. They nre new working en a theory that Mr. Hall nnd Mm. Mills were killed with the minister's own pistol. Mrs. Hnll was asked jestcrday If she had net seen a pistol in the rector's possession en a trip te the church's summer cump nt Point I'lcnt-nnt, n short tlme before the murder. She denied knowing that he owned a pistol. As the authorities hnve worked this theory out, they profess te feel certain that the minister was killed first. There may have been a plot, they believe, te murder him and threw the blame for the murder en Mrs. Mills. They will net soy whnt leads them te this ap parently fantastic bellef. They say that It leeks ns though the minister had been lured first te the spot where the murder was committed llkelv the place where, the bodies were found, but net certainly and there confronted by n man who has been mentioned iu the investigation. Rccler Thought te Have Fought There wn n fight, the detectives be lieve, and In It blows were struck by the lector hnrd enough te tnke the feklu from his knuckles. Then, It is be lieved, he drew Ills pistol te defend him self, nnd In n deadlv hnnd-te-hnud struggle lest It te his mere powerful nd vcrM'iy. uc. nail, tlieugh n big man. was f?uL ".'.V1.."11'""',!.0' .A .CienJxc i of breath that made wilklmr dlstuxtpfiil te him, and would have been a severe handicap In n fist fight. He was shot with his own pistol In the struggle te regain thp weapon, it is believed, the one bullet killing him in stantly. Then, whlle the murderer was se disposing the body thnt It might ap pear Mrs. Mills had slain him, the woman arrived unexpectedly. She was shot with the same weapon and her threat gashed. The examination of Mr. Hnll .,i members of her family, te whom a num- ber of questions were sulunlited by thel0''1, '102 K,,,lt r0!ul Cynwyd, struck by prosecutors, ns the feature et the I nn ""te-mobile driven by Francis Shcr murder lnnulry yesterday. ' "ian Coeke, reii of James Francis When Mrs. Hall entered the Vm. cmer s eiuce a woman was sitting In n corner of the room, Mrs. Hall was greeted with a smile by Prosecutor lteekmnn and ankml n mm,... i,... hat and coat. She did se without say ing a word. The Prosecutor gnve her a gray ulster and asked her te put it nn and walk around the room. As she did se the Prosecutor looked inquiringly nt the strange woman In the room. Fer neuriy uiree minutes nn. Hall walked iy,?,nAni;i'l?.!p-0 en the aftPrnoen of tne m de " a I .....-... .. . ...........,,, ,,,,,, moil. rested en her perch. She said she be- uuveu me woman wjie Mrt. Hull, if ' Mrs. Hall was Identified by tbe woman Grilled "WILL1F." STKVKNS IIr)lll of Mrs. rranrcs hteteim Hall, iiiiight l) (he camera as he was lent lng the ( imiiIIioiise nl Ncw lSmimUtli, N. ,1., yesterda) lifter being questioned ntaln In the Hull Mil's minder nijlcr.v I yiwCtuiwaaaaaaaaaviPBMH I SaiaaaaBaaaBBaaaiK iPilP I aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWaaVBaaalr atf .tTnUki n aiaVJBBBaaaSBr 1 tl aaVr' anraaaVKKfia a i aaaW'iSBTaaBBiHabtl $ U BaaW"'; IVjaJiaaaalBaK U aaaK'MWhaaaaw va 1 ' t aHyVakBaBaK! 1 aaaaaaamlaaaaaaaiSS;-! .' aaWir YaaaVftfll p mm H?li l bbmHPs aaaaaaEi i I mM Hi i i aam;;A? aaW l-m m S aarj,',-T- vr s 1 n ww ,TLyafyRgarga3iCTyjiCTWaiii.a i c v wVjt , x t ,r Mr. GOUVERNEUB CADWAIADER the Prosecutor refused te make the identification public. Early in the afternoon Charlette Mills was sent for nnd nrrlvcd at the courthouse in an automobile. She ran lightly up the steps after waving her hand and smiling nt the newspapermen. l few moments later Timethy I'felffer, .Mrs. Hull's attorney, arrived and went Inte the Prosecutor's office. Within five minutes Mr. I'felffer, Mm. Hnll and the two maids left. Mr. Pfelffer nttcinptrd te shield Mrs. Hnll from photographers with his coat. The two Stevens brothers remained in the building. The examination of Mrs. Hall lasted one hour. Mrs. Hall seemed en thp verge of collapse a she was as sisted Inte her motercnr nnd Mr. -Pfelffer appeared angry, but Miss Peters, the buffer between Mrs. Hnll and the reporters, wnR smiling broadly. 2 Dead and 2 Dying in Accidents te Autes I'enttiiuril from Pace One. Is in the Bryn Mawr Hospital with :i fractured skull Hnd Internal Injuries. J. II. Emmens, of Merlen, driver of n speeding automobile that crashed into :i machine Watsen dreve from the gateway of the Lloyd home Inte Bryn Mawr avenue nt 0 o'clock this morn- nif. '" under arret charged with reck less driving nnd driving without a II- epnse Ceptnln of Police Sweeney, of Itadner Township, declares the car Emmens was driving went ahead 185 feet before he could step It nfter crashing into and demolishing tiie au tomobile Watsen was operating. J. II. Cummings. Jr., was in the ma chine with Emmens, who will be ar raigned before Magistrate Uueklund, in llryn Mawr, tomorrow. Child Hit by Aute vainnnne .MeiJcrmett, eight years ' ,0't('' President of the Theodere Press- er Foundation, was rushed from f'vn. wyd te the llryn Mawr Hospital this morning In the Coeke automobile nt the rate of sixty inllcs an hour. A motor metor moter cyclo patrolman went in front of the car nnd cleared traffic. The child was crossing the Cvnwyd bridge, nnd ran in front of the antnme bile, driven by Coeke, who is eighteen j ears old Patrolman Ttenf. e.l . r, . . - ! Vl' v irrrrX'iL k 'Tr VV;v:;v",Tf1'sUsl Man, m. KHM by Aute Ks. -: '- -5s v .! ' M ij &?tm??jSrJr MP ittt " m ft,ArfJ?.vHE"LER SCHLATTER DIED clilld Tn his r7 ""' " """ PmC l" I n ... iivui .1 me UUIUIDOIUIC. 1 Pent cleared traffic along the read viuie tne uttie girl wa rushed te the 1 man rn ukn i. . e t.. a . hospital. She has n frnetnre nt r)... left lower limb. At n hearlne before Mnir)Ntrnt. huh. j wagon, nt Ardmore. Ceeko was released Ien lils own recognizance te await the ' outcome of the child's injuries. MarJiIne Plunges Down Hanlt , Tlie woman, injured with two men when the automobile in which they were riding plunged through the railing along Thirty-third street, near Thompson, and down the embankment, dlsan 1 pea red. A policeman panning a short tlme W taxlcab, driven lS X. beneath the automobile. nleng the Pcnnsylwinlii Hallmad trnckn .'" ",w emiiankment te Thirty-first and Master streets nnd dis appeared. It h thought hhe hailed u passing taxlcab. The two men injured nre Hare Dal Dal eon, thlrly-one 3 ears ehl. of .'1231 I Woodland avenue, and William J. nedgers, twenty-nine, Thirty-fourth I and Chancellor streets. ' They were carried en stretchers alen? the railroad tracks te n patiel wagon I waiting nt Thlrtj -first and Master Urceta, and tnken te Lankcnuii Hes- I pltal. HedgiTH was chen lir-t-ald I treatnipnt, and nlleweif tn eue the I Institutleii H us arrtbted. Dnl-- ten h Injuries were mere serious, and ' hu ! Miii in me iiespital. Weman llees i-Vem Scene " ' "When the policeman and 1 lirtt.il them from beneath the machine," Goldstein Mild, "ene of the men, who was the driver, told us they had gene i ever the embankment while irjing te1 pass another automobile. Tim lights fieni tlm ether automobile blinded the I driver, heahl, and he Ien control ef1 ttie car. J he oilier machine did net , step te render assistance. i 1 lie woman km cniere.1 with bleed almost from head te feet, but she re. A nidltKK ATIII.KTK) HVSTI'.M ...i.hineJf ,!R" "' ""' UriUemlty of rena $.W. a ,f".ri.,1"'""r all'Ic'lP ln.lrJ 1 1 1 1?, i.. ...X.mi " "P. "liorle eritur of til IV :'C.i''?""r." U ' hi till- of thl i clik". ?',?i.1,utlIKt lttr0t "e "'y relrs te (.tin ' 1 1 if ' j ,fi aiu. Mr. RALPH B.STRASSBURGER even te rive her name, nnd ran down fused positively te go te the hospital or the railroad tracks. I suppose she get a taxlcab nt Thirty-first and Master streets. She was young. I "The only thing that prevented the car from being demolished and nil three people killed," Goldstein snld, "was the 1 fact that It struck several trees while going down the embankment, nnd these served te break the speed of the plunge, About ten trees were uprooted by the machine Hnd It net been for them the car would have certainly struck the railroad trnckt nnd been smashed te splinters. "The policeman called n patrol wngen te take the two men te n hospital, but the nearest it could approach te the scene of the accident was Thirty-first and Master streetn. We get the stretch ers out of it nnd carried the men en them te the wagon." At n henrlmr ,..fnr Mn.Ln.nt a,. ensen in the Thirty-nlnth s eet and ' Luncnster nvenuu nolice station. Hed cers testified that the name of the miss ing woman Is Dorethy Simmons. He eald he did net knew her address. Jledgers was held in $LTiOO ball for n further hcurlng October L'O, by vrblcli tlmp It Is thought the extent of the In juries buetulned by Dalten and Miss Simmons will be known. He Is charged wun rccKi(H driving Polie are IrvillL' tn lnentn rnlnttrpn I it JCW1' jlf&' T & 'f u ? .,na," ,au,,ut Nlxt' ycM eltlr who ' mlgrnnts from the Pnltcd States, and died in Polyclinic Hospital this morn- . iswrtlnir nnln the stand of the Legien ing from injuries he received when in opposition te the recognition by this struck by an automobile at Twenty-' Onveinmeiitt of So,let Hussla. nrst and Kimball streets Inst night. ' Outstanding among the development inn mnchine was driven by EarlJenes, jef today umeng the delegates te the a isegre, twenty-one jeare old, 8(1-11 American Legien was thp announce Cu bcrt street. I ment of Alvln M. OuMey, DnllaH, Tex., J. no dead man was C feet 8 inches a vice commander of the organization, tall nml weighed about 180 pounds. He that he was nn active cnndldntp for were dark clothes, and was well dressed, nntlennl commander of the organisatien LAFAYETTE DEGREE DE FOR CHAMBRUN ,, ,V, I V n;Pr.ei",ntlnl J" - churches In twenty fhc 1 aptlst a-so-Cnllearn Hnnnra rlrnr. rl-- iTnl .lelin A. I.lennn. whn inn hiun ... .. v . ,. .' . .:. " SS of Marquis at Founders' Day Exercises LEHIGH PRESIDENT SPEAKS Ili) Aaiesfattd Press I Easten, Pa., Oct. 18. The degree, of doctor of laws wrb today conferred I en Count Charles de Chambrun. net- I lug French Ambassador te the United States, and a great-grandson of the Marquis de Lafayette; Dr. Charles Hum Richards, president of Lehigh University: Rebert Lincoln Slnele. president of the Unherslty of Seuth Dakota, nnd Nicholas Deminic Mnher, r,,.t.i . ,.. . ... . -. ""'u",k VL -wneiK nnu ucstern Jtail- i read, nt the annual Fouuders' Dnv pt- ' crclsea nt Lafc, .tte CellcitP ! two tlwelUnB ,"UB,,H i"'1 stable, nnd had The. nrlneinnt n,i3 i i. , Hprend te a second stable, en the op-1 I he principal address v.nB delivered ponlte side of the alley. It was also by ur. Richards, who spoke en "Eve- ' owned by Manhall, nnd housed fifteen I Jutlen of Lnglneerlng Education" ; horses owned by hucksters living in the ,' i.UI llnnibrun spoke en "Friend- ' neighborhood. Firemen rescued but one ship, Personal nnd National," and Dr. 'of the animals before the building cel-, hlagle spoke en "Reminiscences." I lapsed. " ! During the exercises the alumni me- Celeman was en the reef of one of merinl tablet in honor of the late Rev I "ie "'n111051 an,l wnH knocked, te the Jehn Franklin Stoneceppor, I) D was I Creuni1 when n chimney collapsed. He unveiled In Van Wlckle Memerial Lt-Vvn" Crt8''t under the falling debris, brnry, where Dr. Stonecepper served but wne n'ckly i-ecued by fellow fire- ' s Nuniutwi iur neventren vinn I - FROM NATURAL CAUSES St. Leu 3 Police Still Seek "Nurse" Who Disappeared St. LeuH, Oct. 18.fBv A P ,- . I The death of Francis Schlatter, puta- tive divine healer," in a rooming house here was from natural coupes ' it was announced fc.iw.i,,. . -au'",', i was nnneunceel following an autopsy today. J lie autopsy was performed f.il. I lowing au assertion of Mrs. Schlatter who arrived here from Knneas City,' Me., last night, that she believed her i husband te havn been the victim of foul piay. .. The police, desplte the autewir nre 'W " - ,1 JSL hr bus- ,nas convicted In Les Angeles in 11)17 fraud In connection with VllC 1,1 ,,, connection with nelllng b mall handkerchief,!" te persons elief lrem illness. 'blesufd seeking relii Governer Sproul, who, two years aee , Several families living in nearby recprved the LL. D. degree when he un- I fl0USPS fletl m their homes fearing the veiled a statue of Lufayette' was a i flnmfl9 w-eitld spread. Three families at guest of the college durine chn .... . tempted te move out their furniture. VJSl-l. aaBBBBBBBBBBK "& aPaBBBBBBVa'J aaaaaaaa''V AaBBBBBBBy. CV aBBBBBBBBBBV' f aaiaaaaawfe'i :''"' (,'M aBBBBBBBBBBK ' V '?' V- '' Yi BBlBiaBW"l "' M BaaaaaaaaaaaaVi '' Afr. Anna Comur titJ'M r ,i ttHEeini 2 i7 HEAR FALUN CALL Great Parade of War Veterans Is Convention's Head liner BUSINESS SESSION BEGINS i tlu Aitecfaffd Fret New Orleans, Oct. 18. The Ameri can Legien, following a brisk business session, paraded today. More thnn .'10,000 men "fell In" for the parade, and the brisk autumn nir, a contrast te the balmy weather of the first two days of the convention, added zest te the event. Through miles of narrow, stone paved streets, down the bread concourse of Canal street, winding in and out along the tortuous courses of the "Vicnx Carre" (Old Town), established by the Spanish nnd French, founders of New Orleans, the veterans of 1018 marched today. Fluttering in the autumn air, borne by the men who carried them te victory four years age, went the nntlenal col ors, flanked by the silken colors of leg leg Ien pests from every State In the l'nlen, from Altfskn, Hawaii, the Panama Canal Zene, Perte Illco, the Philippine Islands, Great Ilritaln, Af rica and China. Today's buslnesa session was slew In retting under way. The announcement By Alvln M. Owsley, of Texas, that he weuki accept tnc nomination for Urn imtlenal cemmnndershlp, if it were of- '.?" nim, nppenreu te Dp crystallizing ,"!? n""?.enf .?5 J."' ?"?., -"w"- and chairman for" two years of tha Americanization Commission of the. j.ejenn ureugnt in n report this week, fiH sneKesmnn or Hie comm sslen. In which It was declared that a deliberate effort was being made te Inject a pro pre iirmiin nereunt of the World War Inte the school textbooks in many parts of America. The report nlfe contained n deelara- Mnn in tnvnr nt tntnl ...limln ,.e l. te succeed lianierd JlacMder. I Among these familiar with "chance" it was generally believed that the Seuth weuki name me next national com mander, and that, according te present Indications, the ehelre lay between Mr. Ousley and Matthew Murphy, attorney, of Tlirmingham, Ala. Kencsaw M. Landis, baBeball com missioner, was a sneaker en the morn- ' lng Msler.'i program, as was Oenernl nnI 4 til Infill il. .aAA.A.Mk.Af. L. of illness In his fnrnily. Among me committee reports ex pected were these en military affairs, constitution, li.ternal organization, nnval affairs and finance. The American Legien Auxiliary planned n brief business session te hear reports of departments and committees. Nine Firemen Hurt at S. Second St. Blaze CeatinarHl from Pa On it was necessary te carry the four children of the fnmil Inte the slrrct. Tliey are Hmrna. twelve ears old; Tlllie, sixteen years old; Helen, eight years old, and Carrie, four yearn old. His rescue work completed, the t til 4 r1t-n il tl tin ttttvrt .t 1m A Ti -. AAB - t -''."" i.ue.i.icu i, inc. i-uriivT aim rurned In nn alarm, but before firemen nrrlved the flamea hail enveloped the '"" tut were stepped by the police, who feered thev mkht be injured bv fnlllna- debris. In addition te the horses burned i forty-five chlckena and sixty-fire pig. cons were roasted alive in one of the stables, while six prize Pomeranian dogs, owned by Marshall and valued at $100, were burned In Marshall's home. ' ..." "i3cUL"?' .'"!. 1 ?y. "" ' cape from the burning stable. Most of fhc injured llremen received 'helr (niurs while attempting te rescue . two Negro men they were told were sleeping In ene of the stables. The I Negroes. hewcer. were net four.,1 nrwl nre thought by the firemen te have tied Tlun tbey llrst "scevercd th" st"ble " William Moere, caretaker of Shet Tower playground, which is nenr th scene of the fire, climbed into the tower eiwl played a flashlight ever the bunt ing buildings te aid firemen. Schoolboys Ferm Safety Patrel V safety patrol, composed of twelie Gloucester L'lty schoolboys, went en duty today for the first time. They will guard crossings near the public &i benis befeie and after sessions, Kacli .1 ' ' , it a . . .. ' hey lias an arm badge. Motorists who fall te obey ported nnd ndersen their signale will he re re sumeoned before Majer Meiubre8 Iferpicide Brings Out The Life and Beauty of Your Hair ...i Pr .WnwnK out tire natural tautyeniIIux. tirlanee f j ;ur h.ilr nnd rwiterlnu your cajp te a hemlthy condition, nethinif will eiiul Herulclile. i. lt y.1ur ''! ,r '" "et vyirty soft and luxuriant It mrtuis that Ue. nntiirnl sheen Is hidden. Hcrpl Hcrpl clde will hrliiif out Mm natural alieen nnd inakti your hnlr falrry jjlm.m tvltli llfeand teuuty. Th!, dayii of your fwlnl-etit Imklni? hulr will lm"e . Tli ".nd ieur ai'Jwaranee rtll he be Imtuuwd th t JJ?"J ."'i1 nnrlte te you sad t rovulatien te yeurlrlanas. NeuibreclerpIcIdc Rtmevtt Dandruff . Step Fatting Hair it i .'rplclde will net only mke your lialrbtaut-!i.-il,uAt nulckly removes all your urulehtly 5nJrff. stl your ItehlnK dealp and prevents i h J'r from fulllna out. Your clp wiu tenH SSi.?1. b,,)C0.nu' healthy ' healthy walp U Uit only true hair irrnwr (.tn. 'jnilclde has u meat dainty and rxuuUlt. oler. Many ladlui u) It as a perfume. .i.i. '"PlclilM I" ifuarantiHid te de r1 Umt Ij $'iar ,: y"ilr ri"l,,r wln ret u,lJ Purchaa" lur0n?Wr " ""'' A"" ""''' Sold By All Drug and Dept Stores Applications At Burlier Sheps 4m- SCENE 6t kVSWB PBUWCfte l''" - " f . - ui)U"X -x i'v;?:'"wM'irj.t..r'rir tm&:-t . :atpai tmmEmmx&mmmmmMwmangmjLam i Dlsgr&in shows hew ,i motorcar was wrcUrd when It went threugli Hie railing nt Thirty-third and Thompson streets, near the filrard avenue brldge, Injuring a woman and two men SEES CATACLYSM UNLESS CHURCH LEADS WORLD - Pittsburgh Paster Brings Message te Penna. Baptist Convention Unless thp Church takes u position of' leadership in the "moral and rwiul life" of the world, mankind i headed for another catnclysm that "will make ' the World War Icek like n kindergar ten." The K-v. Dr. Carl Wallace Petty, pastor of the Kim lt.iptlst Church in t Pittsburgh, brought that mnagc te the Pennsylvania IJaptlst general conven tion, last evening, nt its fifteenth nnnl crwiry In the Second llaptlht Church, Germantown meuitp and L'psal street, Germantown. Mrs. Charles A. Uroek' , of New Yerk, a niembpr of the Weuu ''.s Ameri can Baptist Heme Missionary Society, urged the Ilnptiit women t IVnniyl yunia tu direct their attention te th" religious condition of the Negro. Nearly flOO delegates nrp attending the convention, which represents 770 clntleim throughout I'punsjlvanin with J31,:i08 members. Dr. Woodhouse te Address Artists The Secletj of Arts and Letters will held its one hundred and twentieth meeting nt the New Century Drawing Heew.' thlp, c-ning. Dr. S. W. Wood Weed house, Jr., of the Pennsylvania Mu seum, will spcal. . Farmhand Jailed for Theft James Holllngwelf, n Negro farm- hand, was cemmilted te the Woodbury jail today en a charge of stealing four rings from hi employer, Jeseph Kuhn, or Hunmiie. :. .i TWO WORLD'S CHAMPIONS HTiV 'l'1TtTT'i-TtBt7BSMttStBtMtWMtWrJflr8aaMMawtvnriiawaiaiL"aMi .ujm j .al i lx f L "V & 'hn. BanaaMfi9BaTSffll9MlslSBMSHBal" i srat " ? ' nlw laaslPlsPTaiSpr TyTTiarTaaaTF i fit iiwrifTTriiii--"- -vpkAM3bMLta&.s-?aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaM PIKIbW t aaawaVatLlaW" '' ' ' i-l!Mnaaaaaaaaaaw-' . BaaaaaafBaaaaaaaVH ?y-v3BiCvgSaEv. V9KKfKmSm!afT9tBffnKiWtS9r' VVaTawaaVaaaaaaaiB Kj&-k- 7SaaaifBavaaaa7ft avapaBaataa' ' BaaaaaBaaaaaaaV Iiimi ' t : " 'TB-iSSliifnMHPff ialaaaaaaaaaaanRRl vjF? sfaiHMiWrim - V '''taaavBBaaaaaaaaiBaaaaaaaaT ' 'iBwaaaalwBBaaVH uBf 9aaaBT vaSaaH i- Jr 'aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaak -m aaC9aSIBBaaBBaal LaVapflaaaaaaaaV ?.?'.' jaraaYaa akw. aaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaL aaaaV aaaaaaaaa.aBaaaaaaB WsV ' awrSBBaaaVBaaaawVaaaaaaaT i'.' MaaaaaaaHam aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.aaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaB aaaaacl fTiE; aanaaaaaaaaar aaaVuaaaaaaaaWr.' AaaaVSTBu aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaal aaaaaaaaaaaarnal aaaaH BBBBKaSlBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBa BBBBBBBBBBraaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBS " I arjBBBBBBBrSBBBBBBBBBBBm aBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaVaBBBBBBBBBBBa aBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBK4V H lit LaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaSaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaTaavSaB?- aaaaaVaBaaaliJaiaaail iaaaaaaaaaaaalalaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMaliiJlJ'f5 rS?SllBBaal LaaaaaaaaaW iflnJHlS ' Va BBaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaVVBB.HBK HRaHBf ,flaaaHaP''BaaaaaaaaaaaarTZlas'lJ MaBaaaaaaaaV VaaaV iZlaBaaaaaai i)f'mHMnm wlaaaaaaaaaaaVaf aaalBBBaaaaaaaalaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa MR. GERALD L. PATTERSON The World's Champien Tennis Player THE ELGIN SIX World's Champien Light-weight Six Automobile Mi. Patterson is shown with his ELGIN SIX SPORT MODEL, which he purchased while in Philadelphia after hie five months tour, dunne )f th Id. e wer Come in and demonstration. PHILADELPHIA MOTORS, Inc. ELGIN SIX Distributor 1210 North Bread Street Poplar 9235 An Extremely Liberal Allowance en Your Old Car Seme Desirable Territory Open for ftespensible Dealer, 1 i rm rr-wrrrrnnwTmminmmMmwmimKMMtMttiii('tt'u mtm m AUTO KILLS BOY AT PLAY Lad, 8, Runs In Frent of Speeding , Car at 54th and Race Streets , When returning home from phoel yesterday, Franklin Vlckers, eight year old, 142 North Vewdnll strppt, was struck and nlrne-t Instentlv killed by u moteicar at Fiffy-fourth and Race streets. Frank Field", twenty jeurs old, of Third and McKean strpi-ts. driver of the car, carried the child te the West Phila delphia Hospital, but he vus dped upon airival. According te wltne.xcs the boy had been playing with sc-.f-ml companlenH and dashed Inte the lighway directly In the path of tin' approaching meter. Fields surrendcrpd te thp police, nnd will be arraigned for a hearing before Magistrate Penneelt this morning. CROWDER SEES HUGHES $50,000,000 Cuban Lean Mentioned In Connection With Visit VnhInglen, Oct. 1. Majer Gen eral I'necll H. Crowder. persennl rp respntntive of the President In Cuba, who i- here discus-ing Cuban uffulrx with State Drpartment nmVinN, con cen fcircd at length with Secretary Hugnes yesterday General Crowder had iust returned from tevernl days in New Yerk. It was net learned whether his visit there had te de with the S."0,000, 000 lean which Cuba proposes and which, it is believed in Well-informed quarters bore, w'll be made in the nar future. and which h rr.mnrr4 U. compared the v -- , a. , rf v e, a " ct the car he purchased and ask PfKiBBjH Hnrd Era of f'tmtlnutil fram l'ace On. I. normal balance between prices and of production." , PJ ine Kxecutive furtiicr ueewtMVjt great ueai nircauy nan Deen luw'.irM pllshed toward that end and added tWt i the trend was "strongly toward &t- 4, ter conltlens for the farmr.u if The farmer wan described by ikf" f. President as " n cnptnln of Industry,' ' the letter adding that ellmlnatiei f, .': competition among- farmers would M , lrnposslble wllheut Rncrltice of th Ul" , dlvldiiallsm "thnt still keeps the far'',: the real reservoir from which the VfAHtm, (iraw-H se many or tne linest cieanami cieanami ef its citirennhln." The President took occasion also W. I deplore any movement by the faraatt 1 looking toward doercase of preductlea. and said the natural result of such A movement would be famine price. lie commended Mr. Wnllace for the ftdrolB ftdrelB ftdrolB bitratfeii of the Department of Afri- I culture and said the department "In the last two years has rendered n particu larly notable service nleng a somewhat. new line." New IJepartniPiilitl Activities "There was a time." the letter con tinued, "when the Department of At ricullure was looked tinen as an lnatni-. . mentality far inducing ccmstantlr Urftr nnd larger production for the faraert. rather regardless of the question Of tnurketii and marketing, of trantport trantpert , tlen, of financing, and ether thlttfa 9t i thnt sort. Latterly we hare come npaa a tlme when these ether questions de mand attention, nnd I think the country ewes a great deal te the fact that We have had a new direction given te Im portant activities of the department. "I mean thnt these broader nutatiens have bppii given n consideration and at tention which formerly was net alwats recognized ns due te them. "The ether day n farmer ald te me that the farmers could themselves re habilitate agriculture very promptly If they would jur.t unlte en n program of reduced production. I replied that the fariixrs would never unite en such program because ' tne peculiar eco nemli eircumrtnnces of their lnduitry "L'very farm if an economic entity bv itself. 1'vcry farmer is n captain of Industrj. The elimination of competi tion among them would be impossible without Mierifieing that fine Individual Inn thnt still keeps the farm the real r'serelr from which the nation draws se many of the finest elements of Its cltbeiiHilp. Te Mothers Having Daughters Considering Employment Are ru lnW-it.x'. in rtit, naufhtrr employed tu a wiieletwa ; . t renmrnt an well 1ht(i, n .u. ear t'lnlty te rn te th lumlmura of ftil MllltJ 7 If te, w r lri gltd tn t.lh t, tlic-e ripperttinlttfi. nwcUlly run when tome icellD bricr sotltieai nre open. Thene pattlraUr mtlrieat rfqtilre no Drerletm iprtnc for Term only 41 henr wnk wltk Iiif hellrtiiy en Saturday. The Km Km t;.einr.t Oftlci will h, 09m from SiM iLr '" ,- P M 'Mlsaiae iBBcS HAVE YOUR DAUGHTER CALL AND SEE US, AND WE WOULD LIKE YOU TO COME WITH HER. MRS. PATTON Cc.tli ruUlialaf C. 04 flaMai Strt.t meter car values fsr a . I i ffl c 11 u j. 'E5S22553MBBBBBMBBBBaBaBBBBBBBBBBBB i !tU. ..ftV.v .,V,yl ..V JV'k'W ,l.J-iAi,V f J j . A fa ft J v 3i' ,j