Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 19, 1922, Night Extra, Image 1

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THE WEATHER
BUfhtly warmer tenljht and Friday
with llltly variable wind.
TEMt'KItATtffle AT BACH HOtB
pTTB 110 111 118 I 1 12 8 4 B
hrfarpMke 148 ir.2 ire i i r
gQL. IX.-N0. 31
Adjourns at Noen te Per
mit Judge te Attend Vare
Funeral
Pendant grows faint
IDER COURTROOM 5TKAIN
rslen te Death Penalty Ex
cises Many In Panel Called
for Service
JABY IS PRESENT AGAIN
jifant Held by Grandmother
f'and Smiles at Crowd
WatchinK Trial
jurors Chesen Se Far
n fnr the Rnxier Trial
AT.imKn li. ROBINSON.
W80 Hazel nvenue. carpenter, forty-
litttW years '" la"'""" ww....,
ill the first Jurer cnescn, nccemes me
fcrtman.
&-JAMES CHANDLER. 4HU
..i .tpf in reefer, rertv years
fiVK1 1n
1i1 mirrlfid
VIV, -
F. II. CREED. 7H7 wynne-
troed read, Overbroek. paper hnnger,
ititT years old, married.
..'-PETER BRUNO. 1123 Seuth
k'Bewnth street, real estate business,
forty-live years old. Aiarricu.
kSAMI'KL, BROWN. 10V3) Pep-
-lirstreet, tailor, forty-two years old.
Mimed.
JURYMEN
IE ACCEPTED
M ROSIER CASE
I .1
Mn. Catherine RnMer. en trial for .. . ...t,,...,
mrf before Judge Barratt lit Roem ' OUUUCO I UH I Uf HU I UltlpJ
Citv Hall, cane close te physical
Ititltpee fifteen minutes nftcr the sec
pd day of her trial began this morn-
I The young mother of e year-old baby,
filch smiled and cooed at her from his
m in tne courtroom, swayed in hoe
and would have fallen but for the
ilKtlng arm of William Cenner, one
ler counsel.
A court officer who had brought her
(rink of water but n moment before
Jwrjtd off and get her aromatic spirits
ffinmenla, which revived her.
iMrg. Rosier is en trinl for the mur-
of Miss Mildred Geraldine Reckitt,
Ity yenng stenographer employed by
tear Reslpr. nn mlveitlslntr man nml
Ut defendant's husband.
Mr. Re8i"r blew her husband nnd
Mtrry" Reckitt in his office at 1314
alnut street en January -1 last, be
ring there was :i love affair between
ttem.
.Court adjourned at 11 : 1." o'clock, en
BWien of Maurice Speiser, Assistant
District Attorney, out of respect te the
fctmer of Senater Vaie, whose funeral
teek plnce this afternoon. Judge Bar
tt attended the funeral. The trial
ill be icsmmcd at 11:30 o'clock tomer-
tw morning.
The trial Is still In Ihn im-v ..enL-Inf
lffe. This imirnlng the thlt'd. fourth
land fifth jurors were chosen.
Veniremen Are riialteugetl
The first enircmnu pxamineil today
?H Daniel MeUride. .11)07 Knirmeunt i ei; r V.,.- Teranv
0'
1 . "' ." . I M ITC ."I CL'VLTt JIL'i.lflin L'llllllll?r.
aaajrrr"""""'""". . .. i..- .... ... i.'ii,..
iVJamcs Manning
0aS SCriinlea llhellt mtlitnl mi..li.h.,.n,i(
I ltd declared hl opinion wns fixed and
Wild net he dia-igcd b the evidence,
"ecetllt al owed n rhnllciiiri. fn,. nnnne
ThOm.Ts P. I'lltrn.. .. .,.,...,-
K,,nm!' Lnst 'elllns nvenue. Chest
puuilll, ns pcued liemusn of deaf-
as,
Anether .lurnr Splcrfii
b3 next tnlesmnn PT.imlmi.l .. .., .
IfJ , il"lllllllll lift.- ft
P'M as a juror. He is F. H. Creed.
WlWr inniriir nt 7"r i- ,
IR?',9cr.bnek. He is in business for
BWBK1I, Id inirrnl l.i u. .. I
1M.. ---
XuC tnlPftm.nn nnnma.A.I 1. I
Im i """""J "! .'tin.
WLB. xt unn.. . i .. .
Ihm v i """s cBmuu te nesitnic
Ifcwlv . '"""" tnnt tile prospective.
Igier-had no children and sent out for
I5'' Uonner. wt. 1.0.1 i- .v.
IV. . --- '. i.uu Vlk ,J, riuiu. i
S?.:!?en8uJt,d. then Mr. Hcelt nn-!
.JS,nnt treed was fntisfueteri te
H til... i .' ' nun ""VsTl ll I llll IPO'S
(SLl !S th JUT box.
vcirnnf. niui i.,. ...-- i i.-i.
IKn oe0'vn.runer' terty Jars ad, n
"W0. 228 .North Fifty-sixth strent. nn
W, admitted te Mr. Spelser he
ifljcusscd the case with ether mem-
me panel, but snid he had net
KU an Oninleil Till la mal,1 n.l
ItSrilS1 Ji!!..""' W
I Si ' "f I'ruseqiuien.
ft. ' "" '1Ur0r AccPert
I fourth juror accepted is Peter
: rt-Vr t,1, ? stnt0 mn n"'1 the father
children. He lives at lli:t
ta uvcnt,1i Ane' wi Is forty-five
i. ."" replied briskly te the
UOnS nklfBfl r.. I l. 1....I
BtliM. ".., pi,j,b hi, ,mi ,n, i-uil-
-. , .,-...-. iii'iiiii l I1U1 iuii-
nt nnd would net b swayed In his
iraent by the fact that the defend-
' a Weimiii tte 1,1 i.i., ....
WrS tllHt llB linrl mm nlill.l '...n..l..l
Kenlh i i,h. frnnilfnther of a fifteen
l"n W ,Ln,)-v' T"' of his dnngh
Ki .V,X ecn ani1 tbe ether elght-
ny' - u, werKeu in his eflice, he
, A lnnirli ....it , .i
rlmr i r.. '""veiien ine preeaemngs
!.. ...i VV "nation et Jtriine. air,
' U'fced him if he knew any'mcu
Pi cnunnel
te
"v ,, ""nsei
-'"
tin i.il.l 1,1... i m
linn. iv ."'."' ""' et co rse, i
ward of them,"
l'tlnufd en Face
Twa, Celamn Tw
Entered aa 8eeend-CiaB Matter at the Peetefllce.at Philadelphia. Pa,
Under the Act of Mare . lift
Find Mrs. Rosier!
Tills photograph was taken today
when the prison van backed up
close te the tower In City Hall
teurtvarrt se Mr. Catherine Rosier
could pass from one te the ether
unobserved
SHOWS 40 DEGREES AT 7
Slightly Warmer Is Weatherman's
Prediction for Tomorrow
This Is the coldest day of the present
autumn. The temperature was lowest
nt 7 o'clock, when the mercury dropped
te 40 degrees, or seven degrees colder
than the same h(?ur .yesterday.
Although there is considerable chill
in the air, today is far from being a
record-breaker for fall cold weather.
On October 16, isSO, the temperature
dropped te 31 degrees. A temperature
of 30 was registered October 11, 11)06.
Fair and slightly warmer weather Is
predicted for tonight nnd tomorrow.
BODY FOUND BELIEVED
GLOUCESTER EX-OFFICIAL
Unearthed Half-Burled in Virginia,
Bears J. H. Boytan's Name
The body of a man. believed te have
been Jehn H. Reylnn, for eight years
Majer of Gloucester and for eleven
years previously police chief In that
city, wax found last night half buried
In a mmlflat outside Warwick, Fairfns
t'nuntv. Vn.
According te a report received by the
Ulenecacr police from the Fairiax
County iiuthe'ltles this morning, the
bedv had been bidden there for f-cvcrnl
weeks. I'artial identification was pos
sible thieugh a tag bearing Boylan's
name, jsMied by a shipbuilding company
that emplejed him during the war.
Beyliin whs for many years a premi
nent figure In all political battles in his
lien a Ite-
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ffnue, a dork, lie .,nld he had no' publican viter nt Jast turned him out
JWtcientieus Miruplrs ngainst mpitul f eflice he took private employment in
Vn. r . ' . , the sliinjnrd. bin shortly ntterwarcl
lUe lieltatcil n mninpnt hpfnr nn. ...n 1 .. ...., II... ...n
PBS limit Hie fact of the defendant eriei. te have him mere closely i
VaT fi. ..Vn Z V ",c 1""ur',v-' , untler the observation or ins physician
Mr: JI.Vfcm?,i '"l" le serve, but Mr TeTinu rr,uaded him te move te '
sKn,m..:r' '"''''"'l'terlly by tliu t inilnIeIliIn. They took nn apartment '
'en ituce street near Eighteenth. On?.te ,hat hf. 6aw M,r-JIn" and Mrs.
rtCn riiM,n!i i ?f .;H!W Sp,rin8 Mm IS Bnylan left the apartment for i
Xl: '. li'tiM walk and failed te retu'rn. Twelve ,
dnvs Inter Mrs. Bevlnn receied n tele-
ginm from Alexnndrin, Vn., asking for
iiinnex She went Immediately te Alex
andria, Imt failed te find her husband
She had no further word of him until
imi'iv I
t0,U- '
Women Resent M'Sparran
Slurs at Pinchot's Wife
sja-aj,,,. wcirii fn varum .
K.,Kt,XJS,fe!pSrMaS Effert t0 Picture Mrs.
of Nominee Arouses nesentment, Amuse
ment and Scorn
Jehn A. McHparrnn's effort te make
ii woman nn iesue in the cninpnign for
Governer and that woman the wife et
his Uemibllcnn opponent, Glffertl nn-chet-bas
angere,!1 Republican women
in Philadelphia and throughout the
State.
"Mud-slinging.'' "rldlciileus pre
posterous." ,rninuslng" and "horrible
Sre a few of the expressions used te
dwrlbP Mr. McSparran's surprlslnf
and unusunl tactics.
Mr. McSpnrran showed his attitude
during nn Interview with Charles w.
Wee a New Yerk World reporter,
who published it under nn eight-column
head in that newspaper.
"If Clifferd Pinchot becomes Gover Gover
eor, who will control the pe ticel ma
chine?" asked Mr. Weed. "Who will
become successor te Boies Penreas?
"Mrs. Clifferd Pinchot," replied
Mr. McBparrnn. "If you don't believe
it, read some of her speeches. She
told nn nudlcnca of women just the
ether duy what sh$ would guar
antee' that Mr.' Wwhet, would de.
When some women asked her wtmt
nssurances she could give that he
would de it if elected, she premised
that she would 'make blm.' '
Asked whnt she thought of the at
titude of the "dirt tanner from Lan
caster County." as Mr. McSparran
is called by his Demecratle aammt,
Euentnj public gjeftge
FLAWS IN STORY
MRS. HALL'S KIN
T0LDJFB1AL
Undertaker Controverts State
ment Slain Recter Was Net
Interred in His Vestments
CHARLOTTE MILLS "FIRES"
. YOUNG WOMAN LAWYER
Daughter of Murder Victim Says
Florence North Played False
in Selling Leve Missives
Bv a Staff Cdrreipen&tnt
New Brunswick, N. J., Oct. 19. A
flaw was discovered tedny In a state
ment by a relative of Mrs. Frances
Stevens Hall, widow of the Rev. Ed
ward Wheeler Hall. The rector nnd
Mrs. Eleaner R. Mills were found mur
dered September 16.
Edward Carpender, s cousin of Mrs.
Hall's, admitted that he had carried
some desk drawers away from the rec
tor's home six hours after the bodies
were found. He said the drawers held
vestments and net letters, as had been
reported. '
Mr. Carpender snld he took the vest
ments, including a cassock, te the un
dertaker's mortuary, where the rector's
body was prepared for burial: The
ueau minister was te be laid in the
grave in his church robes.
Jehn V. Hubbard, the undertaker
who prepared the rector's body for
Interment, was n6ked today what cloth
ing was placed en the body.
"I can't remember," he said. "Ex
cuse me a moment, won't you?"
The undertaker retired behind n glass
pnrtltien, apparently went te n tele
phone nnd called the number of the
Hall residence.
"I would like te speak te Miss Sallie
Peters," he said. Miss Peters is n con
fidante of Mrs. Hall, nnd hes been
her companion Ince the finding of
the bodies,
"Miss Peters?" asked Hubbard after
n few moments. "This is Mr. Hub
bard. I have been asked hew Mr. Hall
was clothed for burial." After another
pause he said : "Well, shall I tell them
he was burled in vestments? All right.
Geed -by."
The undertaker returned te his visi
tors and snld: "res, he was burled In
vestments."
Then lie velunteered: "New listen,
I want you te understand there were
no letters in the automobile that left
the Hall home the afternoon of Sep
tember 10."
Reason for Remark
Asked what prompted his remark, he
said he hnd heard rumors .that letters
nnd ether papers had been rushed nvny
from the minister's home.
Witnesses who were present when
an autopsy was performed en Dr. Hall,
u belated move the county authorities
long delayed in makinc. assert there
were no robes en the body nnd that
it was attired In ordinary civilian
clothes.
Mr. Carpenter's statement and the
care the undertaker showed in asserting
what a member of the Hall household
wanted him te say swung attention once
mere en the sin In rector's relatives.
Prosecutor Beekman said tedav, r
he has said repeatedly, that no one had
been eliminated in the investigation.
"Wc contemplate no arrest In thn
immediate future," he said. "The per per
ten we might nrrest has hewn no in
clination te leave town and we in
tend te clinch our evidence before act
ing." The entire town was interested to
day In the campaign visit of Governer
Edwards, who reached here early this
nftcrnoen. The Governer has been
urged te take the murder probe nwny
from the county officials.
Detectives here showed little inter
est in an anonymous letter received by
Detective Ellis Parker, of Burllnuteii
County, which had been mailed from
the Klngsessing station, Philadelphia.
rrnli Writ, tn P.ri,..
. tr"nh V V.,M ? Pnriter
'Ihe writer, believed te be a crank,
M1"s llTTfnng, nP'1 ,huat " retcer
?l&e.? A."!?" "5?t the choir,
singer, then sheeting himself.
Che unsigned lettcr follews:
"Mr. Pnrker, Dear Sir One after-
neon about three weeks age I Inv down
'" ,ur Bruw en u,e '"""! 'arm nnd
rantlnned an Pace nix pi. '
rentlnned en raae Blx. Column T,vn
-- - . .
Pinchot as Real "Bess"
1
"At the start
Mrs. Pinchot said
of the campaign Mr. PlncW ,i ,
decided net te become Involved In nnv '
pcrsennl controversies with Mr t. i
eimrruii. iiiereiere 1 have nethini;
te say." 'b
Xty fr,,ndS f MrS' Plnchet saiJ
Mrs. Altemus Aroused
"It's horrible." pronounced Mrs
Bessie Dobsen Altemus, nreidenf J
tl'e . Iwlf penult RepubllraHveScn et
Philadelphia County. "Muc.aHnin
seem, te be characteristic of tl D?S?
ecratic nominee. Republican r5
dates for eflice of trait ita-J!
u- nl .. . . ;ii"
Sl-iTrl.ii. W-ne te ach,e;
.... . .
Mrs. Ha relay H. Warburton iJthnt
chairman of the Republican stBte'Cemf I the
"".'.V.V WBS equany indignant.
"It's se preposterous that I don't
mm tn rnmm.nf at i It ' "Oil t
5;:!d.:7niwiirvi"rh,.,,Kn..i
he. aw. "I will My that by us nir
such methods Mr. MpHnm. "s-."8'.'!
admits he i, beBlnni"t eTtimatV the
slse of Mr. Pinchefji maJerlt7'
Mrs. Geerie Herace Lerlnisr, presi
dent of the Republican Weiien i of
Pennsylvania, said: "I knew for a faCt
Continued en faae .Twe, jnehimn v,
Cranlierrlca are Nature'e own
MSU.rt.,ctett,i KeonemlcJl?
eVKd-iiSB'. t8 ,k lw
PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1922
M'SPARRAN'S ATTACKS
ON CENTRALIZATION
PEPPY BUT SPECIOUS
Colonel McCain Analyzes
Chief Arguments of
Democrat
STATISTICS JUGGLED
AT WHIM OF NOMINEE
Empty Phrases Used te Score
Existing Laws by Harping .
en Slight Flaws
STATE HIGHWAY Bl)REAU
PUT UNDER FIRE UNDULY
Claptrap and Hokum Take
Place of Real Arguments
en the Hustings
"By GEORGE NOX McCAIN
HAVE noted in n previous nrticle
that one of Jehn McSparran's cam
I
paign keynotes is "Centralization of
Power."
He rings the changes en it with un
failing regularity in nlmest every
speech.
"Centralization of the Government nt
Hnrrlsburg with all nttended evils,
nre his words. These nre his evi
dences of "Centralization:"
"Yeu can't go fishing In this State
without getting permission from Har-
WBUU1 , IIUU IUj 1I1K 1UI lilt' lililtugvi
is his cry.
"Yeu can't go hunting unless you
get permission from some one in Hnr
risbif'rg; nnd pay for it."
"Why. de you knew that you enn't
even own n deg in Pennsylvania unless
somebody in Hnrrlsburg gives you the
right?
"After while it will be se that wc
will have te go te Harrlsburg te find
et.t jii6t whnt wc shall eat."
One cxneits n reed deal of clantrnn
nnd woolly hokum from candidates en
tne stump. It always lias been, It
alwnys will be se.
The above statutes which Mr. Mc
Kpnrran ridicules are known n the
Fish nnd Game laws of Pennsylvania.
Deals In Petty Hokum
They were passed by the Legisla
ture after tens of thousands of sports
men nnd fishermen, regardless of their
politics, petitioned repeatedly for their
passage.
They arc laws which thousands of his
own people, dyed-in-the-wool Demo
crats, insisted should be enacted.
Mr. McSparrnn would wipe out these
net. If he could. At least se he says.
But, and he knows it, if Mr. Mc
Sparran wre elected Democratic Gov Gov
ereor of Pennsylvania he could net, as
Governer, change one jet or tittle of
these laws.
Fer this reason such talk Is mere
empty phrase. It means nothing, nnd
ns candidate for Governer he should be
above such petty things.
He knows further that the farmers
of Pennsylvania are net required te
take out hunting or fishing licenses un
less they desire te enter en some ether
farmer's property te Indulge in the
sport.
There are two big bugaboos that be
hes in Ills box of campaign tricks as he
journeys te and fro around the State.
They are the Highway Department
nnd the Department of Public Educa
tion. The Highway Department, he pledges'
his word te his hearers, was established
originally, maintained exclusively and
operated solely by nnd for a gnng
of contractors and cement manufac
turers. They dictate every appointment, con
trol every centinet and collect millions
of the people's money for tending te
this business he says.
There are mere than 000,000 au
tomobile and meter owners in Penn
sylvania. Theyv w ill doubtless be amused by the
statements of Mr. McSpnrran.
If these statements were even partly
true, uiey weuiu u intensely inter-
eating.
Un'
fnrinnntelv for him. mnn, nt 1
McSparran's political assertions "are
open te serious question, te say the
most kindly tiling,
I have repented that when Mr. Mc-
Sparran quotes ngurcs en nny subject
they sound ns though they were man-
llfnJ.t,lrc,l en the spur of the moment-
ripped out nt random te nnswer his
Immediate purpose.
Quotes Bllhly But Inaccurately
At a recent Democratic mass-meeting
nt K i f t -first street nnd Baltimore uve
nue Mi . McSt'arrnn snid :
"The Highway Department has spent
between $S0,000.000 nnd $130,000,000.
and what have wc get te show for it?"
On the following Monday nt Laim
dale, while discussing the Highway
Department, he forget his former quo
tation of figures.
"The lllsliwny Department tins spent
between $80,000,000 nnd $140,000,000
and what have we get te show for it?"
he asked. "Ne rends, no nothing but a
big political machine."
$10,000,000 in two days,
The irresponsible chnr
Ue nnu wuoepeu up ine limit just
nctcr of such
Centlnurd nn Pas Fenrtern, Telumn Tire
WILSON MAY LOSE
N. J. VOTER'S RIGHT
Mercer Count Beard te Enforce
Election Law of 1920
Trenten. Oct. 10. (By A. P.l De-
clsien by the Mercer County Beard of
Eleetlen
CU'v'U'
V" "i'kS. " "..,"."" "'.m ihV ii:.le., of the l.ii.lB. in .''fiem the Mohegan helped the Concord's MKS. Kflbt HU M HUM
nn iuw ei iii-u, wi icii pnivuieu "l.","'.-. V ... ,,. ....-.;: ;. ."" pphw fiphl Mi. I,l.,i tn ... Iinur .- t-....j , ...
n voter must cast his ha let In v nninuer ei i-uini- iwiiiiiirnce mes- ' ,, """ ": """ , i iie.cu in urug oiere After
dW MrwUWSS? r ?..,. ,,, , ,. , I J?"3- Ptnv",rrfnS ';; Ut Cars Collide .t 10th .d Yerk Sts. Wife of Heme-Run Kln0 Injured by
Bides nnd net e sewnere. nrennb ' win ' ' .i'"i'nu, ., ...... , ;r- ..:. ..'"... .u,... rn . ,- siMHhn nt Aute
denrive former President Wondrew'Vll. M.vs nn nM'U'ed note, te ninKe this a I """" nuu me vvinu mew ins uiinj ...,, ...r v,,- m urni ieinv wuen a - ---
1 son of hlveMnV i.r vdleee li Nmv Ter qucbtlen of confidence. miles nn hour from the northwest. ! two trolley enrs collided at Tenth nnd New Yerk. Del. 10 - i Bv A P.
1 sc? this vear " " Ne one wns Injured. The cargo of Ihe Yerk streets. The injured men were Mrs. Helen Ruth wife of "Ban"
I Mr Wilsen formerly lived In Prlnp.,. Coelldne Sees N. J. Victory Concord, which consisted of silk. In- treated at a drug store and refused te Ruth. Yankee home-run stnr, was
ten!wlW vl v'T n n,nv v 7. v ! ""ll "l .nerchandlse. was go te nlmspi.a . They were . Eighth Injur. .1 ear y te.lit, when her
nnu voted in tne college town wniie lie , Vice President Calvin Cnelldge, who
was President of the Pnlted States. tWBK jn jfew Yerk tedav. predicted n
He cannot vete In the District of t Republican victory in New Jersey In
Columbia, where be new lives, nnd the i November. He will speak tonight in
ruling made yesterday bars him from Newark In the interest of Senater
voting here, according te the view of Frellnghujsen's candidacy for re
local efiielnls. election.
Mr. Wilsen's registration Iiiik nut -
ercil received unci lie mis until UClOUer
24 te make application te Vete.
. -.--. -- -.-- -v- i v- i
Held for Accident
MRS. A. C. YABNAU,
Wynncwoetl society woman ns site
faced Magistrate Renshaw today
accused of injuring a schoolboy
yesterday with her ntitomebllo
Society Weman Signs Own
$500 Bend for Aute Accident
en Market Street
UNAVOIDABLE, SHE SAYS
Mrs. Elsie L. Yarnall, wife of Alex
ander Coxe Yarnall, broker, of AVynnc AVynnc AVynnc
woed, -was held in $500 bail b Mag
istrate Renshaw tedny te await the
outcome of injuries sustained by
Charles Gunther, n schoolboy, whom
she hit with her automobile ut Twelfth
and Mnrkct btreets yesterday She xas
permitted te sign her own bend.
Mrs. Yarnall appeared nt the mag
istrate's court nbeut 10 o'clock, ac
companied by her husband, hut she was
compelled te wait twenty minutes be bo be
fere her case wns called.
The society woman wns attractively
dressed in a light brown suit with fur i
cellar, nnd were a lark brown coat,
trimmed with fur. and n speit hat of
steel color. She also were a string of
pearls and carried n geld mesh bag.
When her case wns called she walked
up te Magistrate Renshnw's debk and
gave her testimony briefly.
"I wns going south en Twelfth street
nt Mnrkct." she snid, "and saw a
crowd of children who nppenrcd about
te cicwj the street. I blew my horn
several Umes te nttinct their attention.
Suddenly one boy dnrteil out and
pitched forward. I stepped immedi
ately nnd saw he hnd been struck by
the back fender, se 1 took him fi Jef Jef
erseu Hospital. I don't spp hew I
could have nveided it."
At the conclusion of the hearing Mrs.
Ynmnll went into Magistrate Hon Hen
shaw's private eflice, where slip signed
her bend She departed from the hear
ing in company with her husband, who
was recently linen .. or ignoring u
1
YARNALL HELD
M
NURING
BY
traflu policeman's signnl nt Thirty-!werc
eighth iinu niniit streets, where n j ueiird of r.Uucntlen. that real conai cenai conai
pntrelnian wns piloting school children tlenu might be iiiude known nnd support
""ir.Vlnal'Vt the time that the s""u'" "", bmld.n,' ,.reB,.n
nntrnliiHin was "era?" and that "therp that lias been proposed bv the Supenn-
was plenty of loom for the children te
pass around the machine "
SHIP'S CAPTAIN DENIES
SENDING RADIO OF WRECK
wq Fanlnn'n M-ntr Rnli.
West Faraiens Master Replies te
Rebuke of Shipping Beard Official
les ngeles,. Oc. 111.- 1 1 A P.l-
Denial t lint lie hnd "written b radio"
au artiilcH concerning the recent de -
struetlen 1 lire of the liner City of
Honolulu was contained in radios re-
reived here tedny irem Captain II. V. i
Walk, innstti of the freighter West i
rnrnlen, whieli picked up the Cit, of!
Honolulu's passengers ntter they had
tnken le the sea In lifeboats
liimcs Shetdv, vice piesideiil of the
1'nited States Shipping Heard, re, ently
sent te local shipping boa id officials (
messngu saving thin the mnrtiing press
carried n signed story bv Captain Walk
In which he reported the (' of Mono Meno Mone
lulu te be si tiling, and suggestiiu tnfi'
he confine his liternr.v efforts le efllci.il
I reports. The story mentioned in Mr.
Sheedy's message wns net eanicd by
I the Associated Pi ess.
P0INCARE SEEKS TEST
1 French Cabinet Asks Vete of Con Cen
' fldence en Budget Issue
Paris. Oct 10 - ( B A 1
Cardinal Ileugliprtj urcr iid ('ullinllc te naa i
tw Bru..w .--. -.--- - .- "':' a" ubmb i
"iJnuat it rrajum. Murpny Ca, Oalte.
.rain bib a in tin iieiit urcra iaia a ibiiiiii iria an Ham .
"-" JM
Publlihed Dally Kicept Sunday,
Copyright. 1022. by
CITY OFFICIALDOM
EN MASSE ATTENDS
SEN. VARE FUeALUAlu
Hundreds of Autes in Cortege
Frem Ambler Heme te
the Cemetery
BISHOP BERRY DELIVERS '
ORATION AT THE SERVICES
Threrfjr. e Orc-.t r.t Residence
TY.zX Trprperc Arc Tkcr'etl
te Guide Lines
State Senater Edwin TI. Vare was
burled this nfternoen from his home In
Ambler, the funeral precession seeming
te cemprcs in itself nil the friendships
nnd leynllle- the deail lender hnd accu
mulated in forty venrs of pnlltii-nl life.
Philadelphia officialdom almost as
sembled en mn'HP nt the Senater's beau
tiful home nnd followed the bed in it"
sllvcr-brene casket te the West Laurel
Hill Cemetery.
The funernl service extremely
simple. Bishop Berry, of the Metho
dist Episcopal Church, preaching n
forceful sermon that touched pungcntly
en the ennter's political career.
The Bishop gave the late organiza
tion chief credit for easting the decid
ing vote for the nineteenth, or wemnn's
suffrage, amendment, nml aid that the
prohibition amendment would have
failed without the nid of him nnd his
friends.
Slew te Accept New Ideals
Dominant individual leadership hnd
marked the political school in which'
Senater Vnre had been tr.ilned, thei
Centtiiunl nn Yner M ( nlumn Thrrr
LAST-MINUTE NEWS
ABANDON EFFORT TO FLOAT STRANDED SHIP
JACKSONVILLE, Oct. 10. A thirty-mile wind, accom
panied by rough seas, forced tugs and ether vessels te abandon
all efforts today te float the Clyde Line steamer Lenape, aground
two miles t'lem the bench off Nassau Inlet, north of the xneu73
of the St. Jehn Siver. The 247 passengeis who were aboard tne
liner bound fiem Nexv Yerk te Jacksonville were taken off yes
terday by the lighthouse tender Mangrove and transferred te the
Clyde liner Aiapahee, which brought them te this city.
MEXICANS TO ENFORCE ARMS EMBARGO '
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10. Au embargo en importation of
arms and ammunition into Mexico is te be rigidly enforced by
the main government, said a telegram received today by the
Commerce Depaitmcnt from Acting Trade Commissioner Bush
nell at Mexico City.
BOARD INSPECTS
FIRE-TRAP SCHOOLS;
William Rew en President,
Takes C. A. Welsh en Visit
te Olci Structures
FIGHT FOR NEW BUILDINGS
Fire-trap school building' with narrow
stairways nnd dlnilv lighted classrooms
inspected by two members of the
tendent of hihoels Ihe nude their
visit without warning se that nothing i
would be cspecinllj hidden from them. I
William Rowen, president of the i
ll)(mru- ,00k Geerge A. Welsh, one of
the newer appointees, through some of
! the eldest buildings of the eitj , that i
1(, mjKht see for himndf the conditions
Minder which children were being tnught.
i Most of the buildings visited were in
i 'he crowded and poorer beonens of the
l'lt.v where, nccerdlng te Mr ltewen,
there should be the find schools, as
tney nre attended by children et for-
eigners, who first should be taught the
highest of American idenls
A school of practice nnd observation
beside the normal school nt Thirteenth
,w,d Spring Cnrden sticets sheuhl be a
building of model and modem tvpe, for
i'n '"""' en Vaar Tw tut si ( elunm Thrr
SAVE 116 PASSENGERS
FROM FLAMING SHIP
Freighter's Crew Gees te Aid
of
Steamship Concord
Providence, R. I., Oct 10 -(By A.
P.l One' hundred nnd sixteen pas
sengers were taken off the Colonial Line
sit inner Concord enrlv tmluy bj the
frtlghter Mehegnn. while u tire raged,
in i ni enrge neni ei tne pnssciiEer cur
rier. The fire wns controlled after men
Hlgh-Chalr Fall Kills Baby
Elsie Whlttaker. one year old, 1051
Fillmore street, died nt her home to
day from n fractured skull, the result
of falling from n high chair.
a ill' i mi i inn. ivn vim iiim ni iii-u
AUU UV l.UOUINQ nut in:i.r?
iikii a. ( ai iiiiim a . u a i iil ii i.iii a aaa
hapa the vary paraen ou want U dvr-
iu ery parien ion wlih i
udtr iroatlena en rat ST.-
! mil HIllfKllOUB On PBB Jil.-AWV.
Subscription Prley M Tear by ifall.
1'ublle l!(ter Company
ILLOYD GEORGE OUT;
CABINET
-f-i-r-w a w irrsmrw'T TH TT"! A T
f" ": w
.HmA
'. . fs J. i v '.':
KARL OF DERBY
Who may succeed Llejd Geerge as
British Prime MlnNrr
DEMANDS RELEASE
Says She Wed Haddonfield
Man, but Living Only as
Father and Daughter
MARRIAGE LICENSE MIX-UP
Mrs. Ellen Sherrerd. seventf en-jenr-
old daughter of Hiram G. Hates, head
of u Philadelphia 'lock ti.nnufnetimns
firm, who is being he'd in Morale t'eurt
while flip !egiilif if her marriage l
llnrry It Sherrerd lift-st cirs old.
is being investigated, tu'd e'irt of-
finals today the nlatien between her
nnd her husband nte tnat of n father
nnd dnujhter. rather than husband and
wife.
Her father cliarges su has net been
lawfully married te Slierieul. and after
"kidnapping" he- from her home in
Haddonfield. N. J., vesterdnv. brought
her te this elt in hi .mtomebile and
caused her arrest en charges if incur!
rigibility
Bates nnd Sherrerd were fn-ads for
several cars, and u was win., the
latter was calling at the Times' home.
ISIS North I'nrk nvenue, tlint
the gill. .,
nn t
Found Ne Itn-nrd of Marriage
"He took mj daughter from her
home." Hates said tedav, ' -ml ruined
her cnieer Win, she wns in hii.li
school He bought her i Ignrettp holders
nun iverv nice, i nat s nice isn't if
1 could find no record of their mat -riage;
that's why I haw taken ills
action "
Mrs. Sherrerd produced a i inrn.ige
license in Morals Court tins uinrniiu'
and demanded her release. The liceii--was
signed bv J. J. McCermiek. eh i Is
of court. City Hull. New Yerk, but . ,
nniinntien of the document ivwiiled t'i u
It bore no official seal
A telegram has been sent le the
r. .liurpiiy. .13.13 .uorien street, cuts
ever the right eye: Merris Cramer.
U751 Germantown nvenue, right leg
bruised; R. II. Rnbellium, .'IS Webster
nvenue, cuts en hnnd.
The collision was between a south-
bound Reuto -II car, en Tenth street,
nnd n Reute !10 car, going west en
Yerk street, Hesides the threu Injured
persons, several ether uaaaciiMeru en ...
ears vvpre ahakan nn Lr
cars were enaaen up. at
KIDNAPPED
GIRL
t'enllnunl en I'nie Twe, Column frn
UIIDT M TDni I C, nnieii
j. IIWIll 111 IhULLC onMen ..- -
NIGHT
EXTRA
PRICE TWO CENTS
RESIGNS;
10 AU
Prime Minister Quits Of-
fice as Conservatives
Desert Him
UNIONISTS VOTE
TO STAND ALONE
Benar Law or Earl of "Derby
' Likely te Head New Brit
ish Government
'RETIRING STATESMAN
MAY LEAD NEW PARTY
I Chamberlain, Balfour and Bir
kenhead Must Retire
1 Frem Ministry
Hu -Is eWnt'rt Pirn
Londen, Oct. 19. The Govern
ment of Prime Minister Lloyd
Geerpe resigned this afternoon.
The resignation was officially an-'
neunced this eveninrr.
After n brief audience with King
'I'eerge this afternoon Mr. l.lejd Geerge
returned te Downing street, where he
received n miners' delegation, but ae-
cording te Prank Hedge, who headed
i the delegation, Mr. l.lejd fJeerge snld
be could net consult them ns Prime
Minister since he had resigned.
Kins Accepts Resignation
Members of the miners' delegation
said Air. I.leyd Geerge hnd told them
the King had accepted his resignation
, The l.lejd Geerge, coalition received
its death blew nt the hands of the
Conservative party when the Conserva
tive members of the Heuse of Com Cem Com
eons antl Cevernment ministers nt their
meeting in the Carlten Club today,
voted, !(! te 7, te appeal te the coun
try as the Conservative pnrty.
Following ihe action of jhe Con Cen
scivatives Mr. I.le.vd Oeerge paid his
visit te King Geerge, who hnd just
returned from a helidny nt Sandring
ham. Several of the Vnlenist junior mem
bers resigned from the Cabinet imrat
diatelv after the I'liinu.s, meeting.
'I lii'se im hided Siunlev IJ.'ildwiti, prta-
ideni of the Beard of Irnde: Sir .r
' 1 1m i- Grilfith-Bescnwen. Minister of
i Agiieiiliuiis and rishetles; Lieutenant
i idiiiiel I. C M. S. Aniey. juirllM
nieiitnrv and fiiuini Inl sppretnrj te f
dmirnliv : Sir Philip l.lejd -Grenme.
Minister of Oerseis Trade: Sir Jehn
It.iiril. 1 niler Set retnrj of State for the
I Heme nhVc; Colonel Leslie Wilsen
punt pnrlinmentnrv secretary te the
in usury and chief I'nienlst whip: Cap
tain H I. King, another of the Union-i-i
whips, and Colonel Alb"rt Buckler,
.i- istant I'nlenist whip.
Tlie bienk-up of the coalition creates
n sittiatien of the greatest pnlltlcnl
I'ontiisien and unrertnlntv the teiintry
lin- known for mnnj je.ni.
Iteiiar Iavv May I pad
The ( ibinet resiptiatlnn carried Hh
. ii the ieignntiens of -three Irndlng
I uienists Austen Chnmberlain. coali
tion spokesman in the Heuse of Com Cem Com
eons; Lord Balfour and Lord Birken
head It is believed that Mr Lloyd Geerge
when In present! d his resignation sn
vs,.(l the King te summon u Conserva
tive leadi i te form n Government.
This course would be taken because
the C'enseivatlves hn-p the largest num
ber, of members In the Heuse of Cem
mens.
Tlin I'liiKiiri'ititn Irnrlni PTTlpptprl In
pjcpd for the task is Andrew Benar
Law. alibeuch his friends question
whether his health will permit him te
take office tven for i short time
Lord Deibv -penis the most probable
nlternative selection for Prime Minis
ter, although it is suggested that Lord
( hi 7.UI1 who gained gientlv in pretlee
hi his work In the recent Near East
ll"Seltiiliiiiis and i believed te have
hi en n nikewnrni Conlitienlst. might be
mimmeneil te form a Government,
Austen Chamberlain nnd some of th
'thei Cnbinet members conferred with
the I'n up Minister mum diatelv after
tlie 1 nt mist meeting
Atineuneetncnt of the ete of the
Conservatives was pieieded by leport lepert leport
frem the Cnilten Club that Austen
Clinmberlnln's stntemenf had failed tn
sat sf the meeting nnd thn Andrew
l ni'tlniiiil en Vntr Twrnlj ( eemii Tour
NEWSPAPERMEN BESIEGE
JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER. JR.
Financier, In Sanatorium for Rest,
Unable te Get Any
Battle Creek. Midi . Oct 10 fr
I i Jehn 1 Itecl.efilltr ,Ir , who
i nue lure a tw days 'lge te enter n
- ii ntei nml dented today his visit wi
lie, i ssjtut, d bv illncw
"I am net mi k 1 meielv enmn here
I'm a rest, but it ileisn't lei k as the.igh
I were going le get it," the financier
-nd
Mr ltd kefeller has been interviewed
HlMMiteillv by nertspiipcuncn since hi
.ii rival en subin'ts inngiug trem union
i-iu in industrj I" ' who w tlie rlclieat
h .in In the world?"
lie linnd s racer H
I'elham Parkwny.
Sh" suffered 11 miner abrasion of the
left hand nnd continued te her hemp
' tn New Yeik after the injured hand wan
1 diessed by 11 surgeon from Perdhum
Hospital. Her chauffeur was uninjured
land the cur only slightly damaged.
. till Mil M NT A Jim? IllKiti: aar.
Plenty of tntun mlvertlard In the JITly
-v.niBd Cetumnn today en ua 21 ,"
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