Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 06, 1922, Night Extra, Image 1

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VOL. IX. NO. 46
lntereifaa Heceint-cimis Matter at the rnnierflc at rhlldtphla. Te.
Under tn Act of March a, 18TII
PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1922
l'ubllilied Dally Kxeept Sunday. Hubxcrlptlun Price., Id a Year by Mall.
Copyright, lM'ja. by Public, lelgrs Company.
PIWCE TWO CEN1
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EXPLOSION ENTOMBS 90 IN MINE AT SPANGLER, PA.
Sad-Eyed Women Gather at Meuth of Shaft
NEW CLUE'SHIFTS
E
Postal Inspectors Confer Here
and Think Sender of
"Gift" Is Known
DEFECT IN TYPEWRITER
MAY DISCLOSE MURDERER
Mrs. Sterrett Still Suffering In
Hospital as Search Is
Kept Up
Postal inspectors bellex'e they knew
who sent the poisoned enke which
caused the death of W. W. Sterrett.
of Deven, and the. 6crleus illness of
h,s wife.
This was announced by Postal In
spector Hawkesvverth, stationed In this
city, at the end of n conference held
In the Federal Building today.
Hnwkeswerth refused te divulge the
nature of the clue, but said it seemed
te be the most important yt discov
ered. He and the men working with
him en the cafe bclcve that if properly
followed, the cine will lend te the per
son who addressed ami mulled the box
of cake, partaken of bv Mr. niul Mrs.
Sterrett. The wife of the victim Is still
In the hospital, but is expected te re
cover. Won't Predict Arrest
Mr. Ifywkcswerth was asked if nn
nest would fellow the finding of this
due. He refused te commit himself.
"Much depends en the way the new
flue is handled," he said. "Investi
gators are working en it new. They
will continue te work en it until we
get the result we are nfter or arc con
vinced that the e-lue is worthless. It
leeks very geed at present.
"We are working en it tip te the
limit. I regard it as the most important
lead discovered since the crime."
The inspector was asked if the new
clue eliminated Mrs. Sterrett from pos
sible suspicion.
"I cannot say at this time," he
aid, "I cannot say in se many weids
that she is free from all suspicions."
William Mullin. Chester County de
tective, made a positive statement to
day that Mrs. Sterrett had been elim
inated. He said there were two new
clues en which the authorities were
working.
"I believe they will shed light en
the case, but I cannot reveal what they
re," he said.
Seek Typewriter Used
Each typewriter has its own indi
vidual characteristics, and this knowl
edge, if justly and diligently applied,
should make it possible te solve the
Sterrett mystery, sa.vs Samuel II.
Farb, 1000 Chestnut street, an au
thority en typewriters and their pecu
liarities. The address en the package con
taining the cakes Kent te tbe Stcr
retts was typewritten.
Mr. Farb points out one netable
case where detective work of this tvpe
was successfully used.' It wns when
threatening letter was sent te Sam
uel Ren. president of the Pennsylva
nia Railroad.
"The sender was traced through the
peculiar motion of the typewriter he
need," said Mr. Farb. "lie was dis
covered way up in Alteena.
Mr. Farb pointed out two ways In
which a particular typewriter could be
singled out from ethers of the same
make.
"One, way would be te Identify the
Sotlen," he said. "The ether would
i te leek for even the slightest trace
of battered keys. Motion is the shlft
f, principle of a machine, when the
shift key li used, for Instance, for a
espital letter.
- M thf machine Is net exactly ad
justed, this will show In a slightest
nuing of the capital above the level
ii HB 0,.her letters. Or even in tlie
slightest lowering. A battered kej. of
course, would show in a fine Irregular
ity of a letter.
"The strength of the typist in strlk-
it.!-ty8 weu'(l net "ft'01 nn falHMe
ewe, because this would be changeable.
A.6?- e28 Pty vhe dld "et clean his
?5i ."! "?' mIsht' however, leave a
, e$- Pled e, for in
wnw. would show."
JSLi. rb ?bMed that a brand new
typewriter alone would be difficult te
FAMILIES FLEE FROM
SHORE HOTEL FUMES
Hundred! Leave Hemes at Unoc Unec Unoc
eupled Building Burns
AtUntle City, Nev. 0. Hundreds of
Mllle were forced te flee in their
Wfhtclethei with whatever available
Wing they could find when a lire of
ayiterleus origin suddenly ' broke out
ia.Mh".rearJ of. !he Savey Hetel, Con Cen
Xiil an,d ,Atlnlc aenues, shortly
nl 4.?cl0 this morning.
?." wl fased .f0,r mere than two
tetiliSSie!' h Mtlwated-"
hS',?.i.b.,aM .wf discovered sheeting
w,,nde; t the hotel, which
tot ?SEleduer the, lnt0 fn" '"' win-
fraii? i, i,rnn,enp,d a number of ethir
ST bnldni,"e.s '" tl)c vh-mitj. rir.:
taWllSSS"!" f ,u,t".r en tl,e bl:
w Dulldlng te prevent Its spreading.
Man In Trench Hit by Car
Frnnk,nn(Ila,ne n ,nborer' :,u'' Nrtli
ihiV, . n .b,rm Wllh ww-ielv Injuted
W,."2 0r. "" p-Mntlen in wl,el.
Memerial Huspltul.
POISON CAKE PROB
ON ANOTHER TRACK
Seeks Freedom
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" fc... Illllimillllrt. WW MVt.4 I
MRS. EUGENIA KELLY DAVIS
who eloped with dancer In 1015,
sues In Paris te annul marriage
RICH ELKTON BRIDE ASKS
PARIS COURT FOR DIVORCE
. i . . ,,
Mrs. Eugenia Kelly Davis, Who
Eloped, Sues Dancer Husband
New Yerlt, Nev. 0. Suit for di
vorce has been brought In Farla by Mrs.
Kucenla Kelly Dnvls, who seven years
age eloped te Klkten, Md., and wns
married te Albert J. Davis, professional
'dancer and riding academy empleye.
Their mm rinse, November 17, 1015.
fallowed long-continued publicity con cen
fcinlng efforts of Mn. Edward Kelly
te fepnrnte her daughter, then twenty
.tears old and heiress te n Inrge fortune,
from Din is. who hnd figured in sensa
tional Broadway nlght-llfe happenings.
A dherce decree granted te Davis'
first wife, which became llnnl the dny
before his marriage te Miss Kelly, for
bade M.s remarriage In New "Yerk.
Mrs. Davis took vi her residence In
Paris some time nge, niiil the transfer
of her country plnce en Leng Island te
her husband was reported prier te her
departure from this city.
Ne time appears te have been lest
by Mrs. Davis in bringing the divorce
suit after h$r husband's arrival In
Paris. The action Instituted Included
nlliduvits te show she had called upon
her bu-bnnd te resume marital rela
tions with her, and that he had refused.
1 'Hunt constitutes sufficient foundation
In 1 ranee for divorce.
75 ENDANGERED BY -MERCHANTVILLE
FIRE
Weman Fire Crew Aids Rescue in
Early Blaze In Inn
Lives of seventy-five person were
endangeieil In an earlv morning fin
which started from n defective flue in
the basement of the Mercbantville Inn,
nt Merchant Me, N. J., n four-story
flame stniee.
Mr". Elizabeth Llnderman, wife of
the chief of police of Merehantvllle, and
captain of the Ladies' Volunteer Fire
Department, was one of the first te
nrrive en the scene nfter Kenneth
IJeech, n tennnt at the inn, sounded the
ulnrm shortly before o'clock.
Mrs. Llndetmnn directed the work
of her crew and aided in lending the
occupants of the building te safety. She
then supervised the serving of coffee
te the firemen.
Beech wns nwekened when he smelled
smeke coming from the basement. By
the time he sounded an alnrm flames
had swept through the first fleer of the
building. Firemen confined the blaze
te the ground fleer. The less is esti
mated at $."00.
MANK1LLEP IN ROW
Shet te Death by Companion en
Way Heme Latter Arrested
Alexander Dzlnnl. S10 North Leith Leith
gew street, was shot and killed by
Frederick Gicvlddl during n quarrel
early teda nt Seventh and Berks
streets. The men hnd been together
several hours, and tinnlly became in
volved in an argument as they were
about te go horn.
They seen came te blows. Dzlnnl
was haviiiK the best of the encounter,
when Gievlddi drew a revolver and shot
liiin in the right side.
Dzlnnl wns tnken te the Roosevelt
Hospital, but died before reaching there.
Gievlddi wns arrested. He lived at
Ninth street and Montgomery avenue.
FIRES AT WIFE: SHOOTS SELF
Man Misses Her and Puts Twe Bul
lets In Own Head
After attempting te 'sheet his wife,
Annie, James Schuler, thirty-two years
old, of Perter etreet near Sixth, turned
the revolver upon himself and shot twice
through his temple.
Schuler is in n'serieus condition in
the Methodist lles-pllal.
Acceiding te the police of the Fourth
street and Snjder uveuue station,
Schuler has been out of work for some
time and was despondent.
The police, sny that in the rourse of a
dhpute at the bicakfnst table yesterday
Schuler rushed upslnlrs niul get u re
volver. His wife, seeing her husband
re te the necend Heur, inn from the
lifting room. Just as tdin i cached the
front deer lie enme te the feet of the
btnirs and shot .it her.
At the heipltnl hcliuler told the police
he hnd been shot by his wife, but
Investigation by Detective Peter Shelter,
of the niuuler sound, failed te confirm
his sterj. Neighbors who snw the
i hooting snj the pistol was tired by
the liiiiib'inil.
Mis, Schiller was held In M00 ball
us n iniiterinl witness nt n hearing
before Magistrate O'Connor at the
Feul lb St l eel mid Sll.vder livenili) police
station this morning
ark ieu i.oeKiMt run iin.r? rrn-
hapt tin tn r-i'.en ;en want I adver
tiling unJtr bUualluns en vuge 20. 4di.
RUSH OF TRAFFIC
SLOWS UP TRAVEL
F
V
Early Morning Service en First
Business Day Qets a
Rough Send-Off
PASSENGERS, CONFUSED,
JAM STATION PLATFORMS
Orthodox Street Station Scene
of Greatest Congestion, '
Due te Delays
First workday riders en the Frank
ford elevated laughed and Jested today
even when the service slewed up during
the height of the morning rush hour.
The rush en the new overhead line
began shortly before 7 o'clock, the big
gest crowds congregating at the Ortho
dox street and the Allegheny avenue
stations.
Passenger from FeltenviUc, Olney
nnd ether points immediately west of
Frnnkferd transferred te the "L" from
Ne. 75 line which cresses Frankford
avenue nt Mnrgnret street.
Even though the starting of the ele
vated had been expected for weeks
and mentliH, dozens of riders were con cen
ruscd about the location of the sta
tions. Transfer passengers leaving "feeder"
lines at Margaret street and nt Caster
read would start uncertainly north en
Frankford avenue, looking up nt the
elevated structure for a station.
BigJnm at Orthodox
Others strode confidently toward Or
thodox strict, starting n stampede in
that direction. By 7 o'clock passengers
were swarming up te the Orthodox
street platform.
The first "kink" developed about
7:10 o'clock as prospective riders peered
up the track through a light fog, hoping
te sec the headlight of u train'.
New arrivals clicked their way
through the turnstiles until the station
became packed with humanity. It
looked like the Fifty-second street sta
tion of the Market street aubway-clc-vated
en a very busy day.
"Net se geed tedav," commented one
veteran rider who had seen the fir3t
trolley run en Frankford avenue nnd
probably hnd seen the old steam
"dummy" line lu operation.
A northbound trnln skimmed past
toward the Bridge street terminal.
"Well, the line's open nnyhew,"
some one called out.
"We ought te start an agitation for
nn nir bus line," snid one young chnp,
who looked ns though he had tat up
late with his radio set.
Trains Run Past Platforms
Anether noithbeund train passed.
This brought a Heed of comment from
the waiting crowds by this time packed
from the back guard tail of the plat
form te the platform's edge. Men be
gan consulting their watches nnxieusl.v
when the third northbound train went
by, with nary a premise of ene town
ward bound. v ,
After n tcn-mlnutc wit the south
bound train loomed out of the fog nnd
eased te u slop at Orthodox street.
About half of the crowd tried te get
into the first of the four cars.
The conductor nnd the guard politely
reminded the passenger there were
ether cars waiting. There wns n
scramble then for the rear vehicles al
though few get into the last enr.
A scant dozen pnssensers were wnit
Ing at the Church street station, and
Continued en IVve Fourteen, ( elumn Twe
MAN IS KILLED WHEN
RUN DOWN BY TRUCK
Samuel IGeldman, 54, of 521 Snyder
Avenue, Victim Arrest Driver
Samuel Geldman, tift.v-feur yenrs
old, 521 Sn.vder avenue, was struck nnd
instantly killed by a niotertiuek driven
by Iadere Freeman, seventeen yenrs
old. shortly after 5 o'clock thU morning.
The accident occurred en Fifth street
near Mifflin. Geldman attempted te
cress the street in front of tlie truck.
At Mount Sinai Hospital, where his
body wns taken, It wes a!d that the
driver of the truck did net step after
runing ever the mnn, but th.it Freeman
was later arrested. He Is being held
by the police.
The truck Is owned bj T.euis Free
man, 2113 Seuth Fifth street. The
seventeen ,v enr-eld driver, (sadere, is
a nephew of Freeman.
SENSELESS, HANGS TO CAR
Sewell, N .J., Man's Skull Fractured
In Crash With Standing Truck
Charles Lambert, of Sewell, . ,L, Is
in the West .leise.v Hoineupntliie Hos
pital today with n frncluied skull nfter
his enr crushed into .1 truck tilled with
gravel, left standing en the Hell-Mnwr
pike.
Lnmbeit wns found earlv this morn
ing hanging en the dner of his automo
bile, unconscious, and wns rushed te
the" hospital. PhjMcinns said that he
would net live.
DIES FR0MJ3AS FUMES
Man Found Unconscious In Heme en
Elkhart Street
Unwind Powell, fmlj cars old. was
found unconscious en the iloer of the
kitchen of his home nt 2031 Klkhnrt
street nt SI: 15 o'clock this morning by
his daughter Mnry. He was dead when
tnkrn te the'Kplscepnl Hospital. Phy
sIcinuH snld his dentil was due te gas
poisoning. One burner of n gits stove
in the Md hen wns found open. Pevveli
is snld te have been despondent recent
lj. He was cmplejed at im engineer In
a Keukiugteu lull!.
RANKFORD
Pinchot Makes, Final
Plea for Big Vete
The finnl message of Gilferd Pin
chot te the people of the State before
they go te the polls, tomorrow fol fel
lows : ' j
"What (he next Administration
can de for the people of Pennsyl
vania will depend largely en the
Issue of its majority. There is no
doubt we are going te win. vvnat
is important Is te make the vlcterf
as large us possible.
"Let no geed citizen fall te vote
tomorrow. What happens then will
nffeet for geed or 111 every man,
woman nnd child In Pennsylvania
for the next four years and longer.
As lejnl citizens of the Common
wealth, as men and women devoted
te its welfare, I urge you te de
your duty en Election Dav. Jeur
vote is needed te make the Com
monwealth n better place te live in.
"Stand by Pennsylvania and
vote."
G. 0. P. DROPS Ft
TO ROLL UP RECORD
'Ne Knifing," Is Order Sent
Out by Philadelphia Commit
tee te Ward Leaders
APATHY IS VANISHING
UNDER LAST-HOUR DRIVE
Ward leaders In the Republican city
organization, united In harmony for to
morrow's general election, received ab
solute orders today from the big chiefs
nf i he CHr Committee te ete and
...,.-i. em k- cirnlt.li, Itennlillenn tlckc.0
These eiders. it was explained, were
qualltied anu mmiing. j.nejr menu n.-j
evcrv vote polled under the aupices e,
the organization will mean n vote, for
Gifferd Pinchot nnd the entire Repub
lican ticket. There will be no cutting
of the ticket or knifing.
Tl.- e.n.wl nt tlm iinllntl nri-niilzatlen
wnu made known te the ward lenders
who werp summoned te intermni meet
ings iu the headmmrters of the Repub
lican City eblBWIttee-, Eleventh sua
Chestnut streets.
Incidentally, when the leaders called
at headquarters their hearts were glad
dened and their wallets fattened bv .il-
iMhi.nla fiw.tii niirtKitltcn fllllflrf. KteC-
tien expense money, te pay watchers
anil te provide tne usual crnppniKs 'i
nn election where n big majority is te
be rolled up, wns passed out with a
liberal hand.
"Paj master" Is Popular
"Big Tem" Cunningham, treasurer
of the Stale Committee nnd chairman of
the Finance Committee of the City Com
mittee, is a popular mnn.
Councilman Hull, chairman of the
Campaign Committee, wns en the job
curly ns were Cilv Chaltninn Watsen
and "Congressman Vare. Mr. Vnre. It
is understood, is starting out en his
1ni.nl nntlllenl rnrerr. fellnvvlnt- nn his
brother, the Inte Senater Vare. by open
ing up tlie war enest, r rem an accounts
It is apparent that the "angels" have
net overlooked Eleventh and Chestnut
streets.
All of the lecnl orgnnlzntien lenders
predicted n reusing Republican majeilty
in the cttj of frem 150,(100 te 175.000.
This wns bnckrd up bv Councilman W.
W. Reper, chnirnian of the Pinchot City
Cemmittic.
rVn milt mfirfissinn of llnll in I he
Democrats' was that he was amused by
the statement of Kdgiir W, Lnnk. chnir
nian of the Democratic City committee,
thnt .Tnhn A. MeSnarran. Mr. I'lnchet's
opponent for Governer, would hnve
100,000 vetei in I'lilliuieipnin nnd tlint
the Ferester would hnve only nbeut
105,000.
'Mr Pinrlint." suid Mr. llnll. "nnil
the whole Republican ticket will poll at
lenst 250.000 voles. Mr. Lank mnkes
me smile."
W. Hnrrj linker, chairman of the
Republican Slnte Committee, conferred
today with Sennter Pepper. Beth weie
jubilant ever the reports of ltepubll
enn confidence coming in from alyparts
of the Stnte.
Apathy Ilelng Routed
rrim vlhijitlnn n. It Ik hniirlr ilenl.
eping, uccerdim: te Iho Stnte nnd elt
leaeers, snows mm iipiunj is ueinc snei
in nliinnt, niul Hint 1 hrnltchnn t l'enti.
vlvenin tomorrow the men nnd women
voters will i oil up nn ild-fnshleucd
uinierity for the Republicnn, ticket.
un me eve w urn fuuirii, unn tu
the most Important In decades, Repub-
., . , . it..... i .1...1 n .1. ..
Ilcan leatll'ia prcim-mi nun i mciiei
Continued en I'ure fourteen, Column One
REV. CORNELIUS" X. LEAHY
DIES OF AUTO INJURIES
Fermer Falls of Schuylkill Recter
Received Fractured Skull
The Itev. Cornelius X. Leahvj until
recently assistant rector of St. lliidset's
Catholic Church. Falls of Schuylkill,
died ,esteida afternoon in the I'ottb I'ettb I'ottb
vllle Hospital of n fractured skull te
celved In an nutomebllo nci ldeut lust
Thursday.
Father Leahy recently was sent te
Hie Church of Sts. Peter nnd Pnul
Tower C t.v. where he wns rector. He
was driving with a large part.v, In- ,
hiding Bishop Crime, of this cit.v. from t
Tower Cit? te Tieinnnt. wheie UMiep
i..,n.A a. nn ... 11. .. IHllllI Mtln.tnn I.ki.
1 lUllf M.1J1 Hi ,,111' '"Hill IHUllWM, 1II'II I
one of the enrs evertuined. The driver 1
of the iiutoiuetiilo wns Killed Instantly. '
l..i t li.i. t .mill u nu n ffrn.ltififn ,.f S!, '
Charles Horremeo's Seminary, at Over Over
limek, the ilnss of 1011. He will be
burled WimIihmIhj meinlng from St.
('aniens Chinch, Mnhuney City.
KVnilllt (-ItWni'.IIRIKli art
net eub teed lli(MnfHB tul Ihey
ini;k ether (uuila tat yoel.
liv.
UDS
PINCHOT MAJORITY
as Daring
KEIWTS IN NEW
DEMAND ASSUME
Declare Warships of All Nations
Must Ask Permission
te Enter
BRITISH TROOPS REFUSE
TO QUIT DISPUTED ZONES
Nationalists, After Seizing Con
stantinople, Threaten Trou
ble With Allies
Nationalists, having seized Constan
tineple, are maxing aemnnus
which threaten trouble -with Allies.
Kemalists assume control of Straits
and power te bar allied warships.
Demand for withdrawal of allied
troops from Constantinople is
made.
British. insist en keepintr Jroeps in
Constantinople and neutral zone.
Lausanne peace conference is post
poned. Sultan still claims right of office.
Kemalists invade neutral zone, Ro
tating Mudania armistice.
till Asse-iateit Prrss
Constantinople, Nev. 0. The Turkish
Nationalist Government has handed n
note te the allied High Commissioner'!
here te the effect that the warships of
all nations must nsk it for authoriza
tion te pass the Straits of the Darda
nelles, the Havas correspondent here
has been informed. They must also
salute the new government of Turkey.
The Nationalists are new seeking
fresh conquests in a manner that may
bring about trouble with the Allies.
after overthrowing the Sultan's gov
ernment and declaring him bereft of all
his civil power.
Last night, after taking ever con
trol of Constantinople, the Nationalist"'
demanded w Ithditrar'Tlf "tW "hilled
troops from the city and served notice
that allied or American bailers Would
net be permitted te land from their
warships at Kcmalht ports ercept by
special permission of the Angera gov
ernment. An cxtrnerdimry meeting of (he
allied commissioner., (piicl.lv nsemb'ed
te decide what stand they should take
In the quickly nltcied situation, nnd
determined that Ihey would refuse ca ca
tergerienlly the Nationalist demnnd ter
military evacuation of Constantinople
by the allied forces.
Alse Demand Railroads
Along with the demnnd for the de.
parture of Allied troops, the Turkish
Nationalist Government, iu nn addi
tional nete handed te the Allied Com
missioners by Hamid ltey. asked thnt
the Turkish rallwnvs in Kurepe. and
Asia which are under temporary Allied
control, he hnndrd ever te the Angreu
Government Immediate!.
Over the week-end the Nationalists
bucked up against the Allies, net enl
through wiltten notes, but with a show
of physicnl power as well. With a
deeming disregard for the agreements
in the Mudnnin convention thnt re
centlv brought nn end te armed hostili
ties in the Near I'tit, Turkish gen.
dnrnies have new moved into areas
known ns neutial.
The.v are advancing into the Chanak
aren, where only a few weeks nge the
British dug themwlves In te prevent
violation of the neutrality of that dis
trict. J
At rtuigns, a few miles from the
Dnrilnnillce. the Kemnlists have cstab
lulled nn administration.
Sultan Is Obdurate
The Allied Hish Ceuimlssiiineis hnve
accepted the new regime in Constanti
nople with Unlet I'asba, the Military
Governer of Thi.w, ns Governer of
the c.tv. nnd the Sultan's Government
luis aceipied Hi dewufnll. although
Melin mm' d VI still considers himself
Centliiurl en 1'aEe fourteen. ( allium Three
BANDIT ATTACKS BUTCHER
IN SHOP: STEALS $350
i
Rebber Fells Victim With Butt of I
Revolver and Lecks Him In Stere
l'sini! n black luck and a revolver te
make goon ins tn-manus ter money, a
v.i.F,. Lmii'ki'i! Ilnrrv Shiinn ti.i-.
two veils old. unconscious in hi-,
. ......I... I,,l,. "ll'l III, Inn
1M1II'II1-I t"'"'l, 7 , , ,,h'" cime,
short! ;ifl"r 'I e clock lust night.
Ilelere ine iwmm Miiieii vvitu -jH.il)
U.. .,it.nintiil til til IllM ti-itlm .. t.l. ..
rope ami 'Inn locked him in his shop,'
Mill lie loin i"' in- ', let- .MiH'icciltli
nnil (teru sui'ii-! Miiiiuii tniir lie went
te his meic te prepnte for tedav 's ttade.
As be emend the place and started
le close I be deer, the .Negro appeared
and pus-hid bis wny into the store,
wi.ne yMinne hepnn n ktriuvnlrt .. iti.
,,ii-ii Vi , -""-tv nun
him the lebhcr pulled a blackjack and
StrUCK !U ins m'-iiiii. .-ei sncceeilliiK
i .Ma In. ttirti ilrevi' n renl..,M .,.i i
bi ought U down en the butcher's bend,
Geerge Nex McCain's
Election Eve
Analysis of
The State Campaign
Will lie Found en
Today's Editorial Page
POWER ON STRAITS
Rescuers Explore Gas
Big Mine Disasters
of Recent Years
Location and Date Deatli Tell
Jacksen, Calif.. Aug. 23, 1022 47
Cherry, 111., Nev. l.'i, 1000... 2S1)
Butte, Ment.. June , 1017. . . 150
Cenl Creek, Teiin., Slay 10,
1002 l27
Birmingham, Ala., Slay 5,
1010 175
Abver Vullej. Wales, Slay 21,
1001 .se
Johnstown, Ph., Jul 11. 1002 S7
Hnnnn, Wje., June :t0, 100.'i. . 200
Harwiek, Pu Jan. S, 1004.. ISO
Pas de Cnlals, France, Slareh
10, 1000 1000
Canccn, Slex., June 1, 1000. .. 100
Teklo, Japan, 1007 470
Naemi, Bell Veineti, Dec. 1,
1007 31
Mbnengah, W. Va., Dec. 0,
1007 308
Yolande. Ala., Dec. 10, 1007. . 70
BALTIMORE LAWYER GUILTY
Baltimore. Nev. ('.. flly A. P.)
Hurry B. Wolf, well-known criminal
law.ver and former Congressman, today
wns found guilt of conspiracy te ob
struct justice in connection with the
held-up and murder of William B.
Norris at Park avenue and Slndlsen
street August IS last.
LAST-MINUTE NEWS
TWO DEAD. TWO BURNED TAKEN FROM MINE SHAFT
SPANGLER. PA., Nev. 6. The first tve bodies remevSd
from the Rellly coal mine shaft weie identified as Themas Legue
and Jeseph Fritz. Shortly nfter these bodies wet a removed, two
Tlvlnp miners, fenrullyf burned, weie bieupht up and rushed
te a hospital. The men were unconscious and their receveiy is
legarded as extiemely tTeubtful.
LATEST RACING RESULTS
PIMUCO First Few Wew, $13.70. SS.40, $3.70, wen:
Pettifogger, $17.30, $4.90, second; Whirlwind,' $2.50, third.
Time, 1.1J2 1-5, Segg-axtb Areen, Fat Casey, Neel, L-ustreus and
Biadluy'b Teney also ran.
5 HURT IN TROLLEY
Several Others Shaken Up by
Crash at Second Street
and Snyder Avenue
FERRIES AND AUTOS TIED UP
Five persons were Im, t this morn
ing when nn ent-beund Snvdcr
avenue trellc ctnthed into u Second
street cur.
A tlen-e fev prevalli'l ns the ears
nppreuched the inte-eiiien Beth
nviterinen ranv n vviinnu. but the
evidentlv misunderstood the signals.
The Snvder uveliue en,- n "otie "etie
mnn" trolley, truck the buck of the
Second street car. kti" k "C the renr
truck from the track In tb- rush from
the renr deer of each i ir the follow fellow
lug weie Injured :
i;. W. Kuth. HI" A t eh treet. ruts
and brulsi's of bmlv
Jehn O'SInllev, 420 V..lf street,
bend cut
Themas A. SIerrK -"1 4 Seuth
Dnrlen street, nrms hmt
Jeseph Sitclle, 700 "tnh Seventh
stieet, shock.
The nioteimnn who ej ei ited the one
man car wns nlse tiiiuii I 'ishtlv
All were tienteil at m Vines'
Hospital
Slnnv thnusnnds of weikeis were de
Inved in teichmg their pi ices of cm cm
Iile.vment this tiierulng bv ihe f ;
All irnihc had te move with nireme
cnutieu.
Beth shores of the IMnwnre River
were curtained b.v fog ter nin n s ini'es.
All kinds of river crult hiid-ti grope
their way histles were bhv n m
cessnntl .
The Camden fi 1 1 v lerm'ml wns
packed with pnwengers dtimu tlie
tail bout i of tin meining, as tin fns
knocked the icgtihir running -rli. ln ip
helter-skelter. Although eHii'l.lls of ihe
Philadelphia nnd C.imdeii Fenv Cem
jinny sav thnt thr.v weie ble te mini.
tain a tive-nutiule s liedule, ihe waits
en ench side of the liver seemed te hi
nt .least leu gr lifteen minutes betwem
bouts.
These who metered from the siihnrbs
weie compelled te cm speed nwuj down
below tieimnl and tuanv kept their
headlights burning until tbe get will
Inte the city. "
DIES UNDER BURNING AUTO
Trapped Man Fires Revolver and
Sounds Hern In Vain
Sprlnglleld, O.. Nev. 0. Pinned
beneath his burning automobile, W. II.
Smith, of Ztiuesville, lired a revolver
and seuudid the horn near his hands
In nn effort te nttiuet attention, lie
vwis burned te duitli beloie nil one
could cxttlcate him.
The aulouiehilc hnd sklddfr: and
turned ever into a dite.li.
COLLISION !N FQG
-par?glef
SfctlwoeJ
I
Colvtef
" .-tbertsburgj.
Voedbory
DRESS SAVES WOMAN'S LIFE
Falls Inte Mine Breach, She Lives
Four Days en Narrow Ledge
Pettsvllle, Pa., Nev. I) Sirs.
Leretta Kehler, of Llewelbn, told to
day hew she lived en n ledge four feet
wide, just ever a 000-feet mine breach
for three dajs. She was rescued bj
hunters last evening.
Sir?. Kehler, sevent -four yenrs old.
wandered from her home a week uge.
She became let nnd three dnjs. nge fell
Inte the mine breach. She thought her
Inst moment had arrived when she felt
herself fulling, hut her dress caught en
the ledge, nnd "he recovered hei
presence of mind nnd waited for her
rescuers, fully believing she would be
found before she died.
BULLETS SPRAYED
i
Philadelphia Lawyer Arrested
After 70-Mile Dash Along
White Herse Pike
OAKtYN CHIEF 'HET UP'
After being chased nlenz S lute
Herse Pike nt the rate of -ivent n Me
nn hour and witii his automobile Mghts
ttirncd off. Sl-irtln .1 Powers, nn nt nt
tertic.v. wiih etlices in the Heal Ilsi.ue
Trust Rtilldlng. nnd lis cliaiiffeur wire
'irrested in Camden late last night bv
Chief of Police Itaukin of U.ikhti
N. J. i
The attorney vv-is Inter held in Mnn
bail for court en a charge of ass.utii n.
nn officer growing out of the nrn-i
whiie his chauffeur, Martin l.nweii
wns llneil J..",0 and tots nnd a inmn inmn
inendfltien mode le the IVnnv Ivatiln
authorities that his driving liceun In
revoked I
"When I ariested l.a.vten Mi Towers '
tried te bluff me bv asserting tebe a i
personal friend of (iovemer IMwnrds, '
chief Untikin said today "lie mvihci,
te tlilnk because lie is n mini nt I
wenlth that hii can set .ivva.v with'
an; thing, hut he came te the wieni.1
iihue fm thnt wlien he came te Oak- I
1". '
Was Drinking. Chief Sa.vs
"Powers hnd been diiukiiig. ' ih" ,
chief said, "nnd abused ine when I,
finally ovirteok his miichltie in i."i'n- I
uen nnd arrested the i hu iffeur lie I
told the rhauffvur net le letnni te ihik-
l.vn with me nnd became sn hidligi lent i
I drew my blackjin k, fuiruu' tieuble I
Thev he seized me mid tiled te take it
nwav fiein ine, About that tune two'
Cnuiden iiliceinen c line up and ndvi-.il
linn he hnd usitir be in.i-e i.iiiftil about
assaulting an elhcer "
Acctiiijlug le Chief It'inkin the iliae
bivtii uftei Powers' inniliiie had i. '"
nei ed n tinlhc signal at Daklvn In
stead of stepping when i hiet Utanklu 1 1
Ulew Ills Whistle, lie said the mm bin
vped abend nnd nil the lights win.
tinned off.
11 red en .Mnihlne
"1 hailed nnnther innchine nnd nai'
id nftet the car." Itanl m ild " t
t'ldliiiuhweuil I nming r le pull alien
nnd hlepjicl, signnllliifi te Pemi-,
hnufteur te step, but he pulled out of
ihe tend and wuit en 'linn 1 shit
til revelvei nl the enr twice, thinking
It was a bandit nun lilne
"The elms,! len'lnued le i'miu'Ii'ii
Powers' car sped down lluddeii ave
nue' nt the i.ttn of seventy miles nu
hour. 1 shot twiesj mere, hoping le
f'enllnuril en lure Tmii rulieiui I inn
im, leL- want .urn? iiikiii; ai:-
l' niv of ttim hiI rt il ii it,, . u,
Wnntcil calutmis tias- or xmucs 2; un'i 'JU
I A ,1V..-
j iuiuune
A
Cresscrt I fb."7
Perlprp- I r, burs'
(3tJoriii9fewtt
I ' I
1 1 T
. -" J-
FLYING AUTOIS
ffllS
- Filled Pm
BUST VICTIMS
TIEN FROM PITi
Werk of Exploring Parties Hanrw
pered by Presence
of Cas
EXTENT OF BARRIER BEFORE
IMPRISONED MEN UNKNOWN!
State Cars Rushing at Mils 4
Minute .te Scene of i'
',
Disaster
500 OFFER ASSISTANCE
niBODIESOFTHBEl?
91 f
Trannefl tAlnrlmnn DnIU,..J Il '"'"ii
'"ri"-" "vini" uciioeu in
Imminent Danger of
Suffocation ,
Spangler, Pa., Ner. 0. A terrlW
explosion somewhere in the workings la
the Uellly mine of the Itcllly Ceal Com
pany here at 7:30 o'clock this morning
enteintied between ninety and ninety
five miners, who hnd gene te their work
scarcely half nu hour before. Superin
tendent O. J. Flanagan at enqe organ
ized a rescue party from empleyes I ft
the vicinity and entered the mine. f
The first rescue party-te enter tht
mine after the explosion reported St
neon tedav that they had found three
bodies and feared thnt some, lf net"
all, of the ether ninety men entombed
are dead. I
The rescue party entered the mtaa
under the direction of Superintendent?
Flanagan and had proceeded te 'tbe
third entry en the right of the msis
entry when they came upon the bedteev
The dend miners were- brought te tbst
feet of the shaft nnd the party tveuft
back for further cxnloratien. Whm
them came te the surface nfter their
second trip into the mine, tby
declined te give out any further
Information.
Volunteers and Rescuers
A second rescue party immediately
went into the workings. The rescuers
Siere composed of volunteers chosen
from hutidieds of men who had gathered
at the shaft. Shortly before the second
crew went under ground, word ws
leielved that the lescue car from
Pittsburgh would nrrive early this
nflernoen.
Silent .groups of wet-ejed women and
cliihlien huddled together close te tbt)
nniith of the shnft. mutely wnit Ing
gleam of hope fiem the miners who
winf down te search for (heir husbands
anl fathers. A steady lnln was falling,
bin the women, niuii of them bare
leaded, paid little attention te the
weather. After the first rescuers enme ill.
some of the groups moved toward tb
Miinpnnv s office, expecting that an an an
iieiineeiiient would be made. The rescmr
p.utv immiillaiel leufernsl with reni-'
inn.v nflit'inU regard in,: the ihnss of
debus which Ii-nl halted the,r progress,
lllie of ihe i r inner S'lid lie thought fti
fourth leil li'id Imcii found
The big fans which circulate fresh
air through tlie mine shnft were wrecked
b. the explosion and it wn mere thsB
two hours before thev wire rennired
se that fiesh -in- agni hv mrceil
into th gas. piled chnmbers. It is
t'.ind that tlie gis in iv lone gotten in
its dendl vvniK iluting the tune thus
no ait was i iri ulutiiig
l.'xlent of Itarrlrr Liikiiewn
Soen alter the explosion occurred
i loud of ."nil linnets ad been assembled
the i n hi t ) i if ihe mine and these'
i n ii fipupped with M innsk, were
seni mie the pit In re'nv and set te
"ik digging nt the hairier that WSS
thiiiwn in less tin shaft bv the ex-t
p "Mnn lie. aiise there was f.n much
gis mi the shaft, t In si- men were net
peinuttiil le temalii len in the pit.
liei digging for a few minutes, tne.T
were witlidrivvit and another cievv sent'
le ii place them, in outer lhat they
mlglit net be even eine Jlevv extent
slve is this hauler that was thrown Up
b ihe ixp'oslen and which ompletol
e-,s tlie shaft i'.iu en' be surmised.'
Aiceldttlg le lepteseulalhes of th
lieillv Ciiiapnnv iiiprexlmately nlnetyi
men weikul iii tlie mine h te nation-,
ulii.v tlie,v nie about crpmllv dlvldedl
nineiig Amerli atis Itu inns, Poles aud
S'nv f. ji wn said
Nene of tlie buildings nt the entranced
of the mine was damaged by the ex-'
plosien The tiiinein entered the shaft,,
ui 7 oMeck nnd the explosion occurred
i bout thirty minutes later, although ths
exni t linn I net known There was no
cvldiine of ihe explosion en the sitrfac
and the supposition was thnt men ar
iiiIuiiiIhiI in n i etisidernble distsnes
fiem the lnuiith
Most of tin nn n who went te work
( iiiitltiiiril un l'ii-n iitu Column Fewy
Al.l.Ni; KISTKU thought It
would b" easy te bienk Hie besrt
f the lunn who called her n silly
tlupper n pieduut of
"The Reckless Age"
Hut when
the lime for her triumph
came, i he I
her own he
new tv pc of
wlihli
fulfill Hint it only broke
urt iiiHtead This Is a
woman among the insnjr
Hazel Deye Uatcheler
hns drawn
se clearly und made te
true te life
JiiD story in which
Aline finds
begins today
her heart aud loses It l,
On the Weman's
faff
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