I s ma VGfff.ffe 'V. tar' M 1- t i i i 1. QiSM , i J PS fih'm r-lix: j. ein.,a themam Hut S Iff. SBH NemllH in tmm . SieirtjJ f hut tfM bttk'M iMTAM Tn I tv nrr '''ilUilHli III I HI Mil iPOLICE DOPE PROBE jVrfn' Let crtelyeu Sift Charges 0Mt D,ipit Mayer'9 ReqU8s. Jj$$P ' Intimation PJJWY REACH TRIAL BOARD mstrlct Attorney Hetnn will net take e initiative In prosecuting the twenty Policemen nnd detectives who were Suspended following charges ljivelvlttjf them In the dope trnffle graft. 1 Mayer Moere requested Mr. Retail ' take the charge under consideration and suggested that he tuke notion. In reply which lm is preparing te send the Mayer today, the District Attorney. It la intimated, ktccrs clear of the eon- ...Mn -.l .. u.i-a.. .1... .i..l'."' " i-viiinii iier kuibm-m, .miss r,ej u cuHBieis uriewy mill, mu police department clean up Its own iimlly nffnlr Mr. Rotan will point out. it 1, said, that the police bureau has ample fa- wiatrict Atternc s office. May Oe te Service Heanl It is evident by maneuver at Citv Hall today that neither the Department Of Public Safety nor the District At ternev's eflke i anxious te take the Initiative in the m-itter lm Mayer Moere conferred with City Solicitor Smyth regarding the actum which should be taken and it t under- teod that u nlan of nrocedme h.-w been Banned out te ire into effect a -.een -'s a decisive answer from Mr. Itetun la received. These conversant with the regular made attempts te ee the District At terney today, but their efforts were futile. Mayer Wants Action In explanation of his letter te Mr. ... .. M,, .i.i. imi.t,..,:, j. .,,"... '.(!,, . i, i.! 11 lis una imu- i tk,iu i' uc ki'ji needy and detailed report upon the charge which se affect the police force upon which they U-el: for pretcctimi. 1 netheds believe that the twenty accused i .. r "K ""-, wln "ryanr question ami lyiinmirg Mm sam Hcetlnn.l did net District Attorney Celes nnd Assistant policemen will be brought before the J"e mtlu of women into business mnde aim for prohibition, but clung for its DIstiict Attorney .Tenes disputed the police trinl beard in the regulnr way Lk?Z ,.!?'?tWl .' ifer ll. n11 of them 101"' ,0 fh" ,Ie" 1),len bi" which arguments of the defendants' lawyers.' and the responsibility will ultimately "eriew elnt wa tolerant. became operative in 1020. Thus each , They insisted the indictments were te te the Civil Scnice Commission. -n.iii,f viV i0.. .i tr,S"",J- borough can vote for no lieciibc. llmi- properly drawn. The Judge reserved e...ni .. ,i. .,rt,.,..,.i ni)...r,n penilent jeung in Scotland tee." he tatien or no 1 niltiitien. .'..ui..., " "r"v"-u S-.'-.-'0 ""' ' -nv 'r w K,-'"l..,!...ti..l... . ' ' charge wiucn se nuect tne police force unen which thev u-ek for tiretcctlnn f am net prejudging the cases of any of ,k- n1l....tw.., Tim,. ...Ill Itn.'.. ....... U7 J.Ui.V'- -fc.t,. 1. ... .til . V ..! opportunity te refute the charges, but there will oe no whitewashing done " Director Certel.um ald he hi Id the Mmc attitude a Mayer Moere and was anxiously awaiting the District Attor ney's answer te the Majer's letter. Frederick: T.ecsch. house sergeant ew at the Taeeny station, was one of a group demanding an cppnrtunltj te disprove the charge of Cardullo. 'The ethers who have asked for an imme diate hearing and protested their Inno cence are .lames J. Clark", acting de tective, nnd Detectives .Tar-ob (tern borrow end James H. Mulenc, all of, 'City Hall. ' worcCme Ceniy,5' members0'1 t! j group suspended who have come te him te assert their Innocence. Lecch vis- ited the Director jefcterday nnd made a long statement, ln which he denied ever receiving a cent trem unrmuie. On tha vitne4 st-ind ImfnrA .Tiw?in McDevitt. carduiie swore that LeeschtANTIS CLAIM PROGRESS Sui mm into uie uru; iniuie. ne said e had been in various business enter- prises fourteen years alter cnti.ing te S,1: Lna" ""r;V5: khewed him the profits 'te be made. He ' mt'n Wednesday afternoon In the Belle asserted that Lecsch was ln reality the I ue-Stiatferd te discuss method of central ngure in me uowmewn nar cotic drug svndicate. Meanwhile, arrests in the deps crusade are going along merrily. AllKele and Oreste Uetaccn. Tenth and McKean streets, charged with Belling narcotic drug, were e.icb held In Sf000 bail for court bv Mncistnt.. Rcnsbaw tedav. The im-n were nrrnst,.,! as the result of the statements m-nle bp Samuel Dlmnen nml .rniiii !i,tui,i. .'. ...;,i i,... i..,.i i,..., .... i.. i .' from the ltetncce brothers for the last ytar, . SP00NERS' NEMESIS MAY RFT Pfll IPP IOR ARAIM sw nvnm Fermer Chief Halllsey. of Haver ford, Banks en Weman's Vete Fermer Chief of Police IMwaid T Halllsey. of Haerferd Township, whose rlnshllght en summer openings trently disturbed unsuspecting levers and motorists parked along the high ways until he was "lm nut ' by the Beard of Commissioners, will knew te night his chances for reinstatement U iX i""" ,1 " V'!m,,,r ''!'", ,,Kllt ' 1 get back en the job 1 enwu s unnn . m . . .r ... , J ,; - ; ' tenights election et a president of 1 em llie leiiru. I As the situation imw stands Halliscy and his supporters an. cmmting upon ; the support et .Mi.- H.ininini, who holds the balance of power. The ex-chief and his friends ciintcnd thi j Inn- with them I three commissioners William It Cuels, , of Llaucrch : A. A. .Miller, of liroek- i line, and Herace 1. Jehnsen, of the southeast district Opposed te llnllisev are Iteerge . Iieaves, of Oakmont , Samuel H. Moere, of Eagle, and it S Dewees, of the I'resten district CHILD DROWNS IN CREEK Reebllng, N. J., Resident L.ese3 Sen Months After Daughter's Death " Reebllng, X. J.. Nm il. - Ni month 0 the day after hi. little d lughlir .Mcry wae burned te death when her clothes became ignited from a hentiie, Frank Bukuewitz lest another child jester day when his eighteen -months-old son, Frank, wandered awav and was drowned In the Knickerbocker Creek The body of the i iilld was leund last night bv Ills brother Wlndel after an almost nll-nlght search thiengh the Sveml members of the seiiivliin.. narty wnded into the creek and a f the Beard of Comni.ssie..r. A woman l volume of mall today since the start of j urK, ere internal Th ether ere - ''"""''n-V'ar-nui Agnes' iliemHS struclt will cast the deciding l,u..t She is ' the campaign. Mr. Wheeler n-ceMed pu', ,' RmbX ice and ".lurlngTar I" '"""i' in Jl";r'"nr-ef ,,Pr l,eny ".f" Miss Edith Hai.nuin. the first , l-'O letter- fiem JndiMduals and cer- ?..,"; t by flyius a'CP n,m ,,mr,nB car yrsteidav. A flood of gas was ignited ver appointed ten i emmissHinership in rations in all parts of the dtj . iP tL, a, ,.(t.i . .k i nnd the building collapsed. SSTO S UaIeT; HM '" ' 0pVmUM Ma"e m&ncV.t.7; .& .WUSg.ill! v rJST J2 tt' y .. , r ,0'1-"" '"."- I "We feci we h.te mini- piegnss Hospital and fifteen minutes after her cevery is doubtful. Nine ether persons r.-.7 minutes later jeuug Wlndt-U stuiiiblid ever the body. HOTEL GUESTS AROUSED jfin. '.O'Denneii Buuaing, ai nammonten, vwt r v?:. .. .... .. . N, J.. Damaged by Fire TWntv uersens sought safety in tin) street when tire damaged the O Dennell Mllding at neiicvue avenue unu i-gK farhnr read. Hllllimotitetl, N. J., at lt46 o'clock last night. The lower ter II occupied ny muits, me iscceini KI third floecs arc a hotel conducted ir Mm. James L. O'Hennell. tkt Arc was discovered In the cellar Fiur. ii uenneii, wne is cnnirman the Atlanlic Count v Ileptibllciiu icutive cemiiiuiee, lie retiseu tne r and all had time te dress before left, taking what valuables they earry 'tii tnem. 'ine two local panics exunguisnen tim name. -T ..III 1. akA.. COfUUl WtM W" "WIIV Tv"'. HIP FLASK TOTERS" SHOCK SCOTCH DELEGATE TO W.C.T.U. Miss Jane Darling Says Land of Haggis Has Its Flappers, Toe Edinburgh Hetel Owner Is First Foreign Delegate te Arrive for Meeting Here Miss .lane Darling, of Edinburgh. Is in Philadelphia today as the first foreign delegate te appear for the world Women's Christian Temperance i nien convention, which opens here Saturday. In n bit of a burr the visitor from Scotia called Americans "geed sports for tnkinc prohibition without growl tiff." She didn't say hew widely she '""I iraveieu in tee Liiltea stale M Itll ttrnv even cerneatlv cirlna alt..,.,!.... 1...1.I...J i i fli T waning admitted that te hear that young men carried flask en the hip ,0 dances shocked her a little, but the ""Vse'Tirst tilsTad'ce !? ,hJ n,Ji,,? J ".'?, il i I. Fm u"1? ever thing, the visitor from Edinburgh said that the dry forces in Scotland are """'"J8 "H -inene.i a n boe1 ulilld who '"'i'"'; something docilely , 'VA8', m11"', frnlilk ' a,lmils thnt A ,s ld-f.ishleiied and does net care line h te be either seen or hei.rd. 'Nil H her I i''ir,(1 , 'L Ameiicn, the Inst having I p" ,1' In Edinburgh sne s the i P,pr et' r off " ,?m het,!l w"lc" n bce,' ln ll flVnl,-v ,or ''"'' ! .,. tunR ' tin reception room of the Kellevue-Mratferd t!iN merttiiu he diiicussed ether questienj than thje of liquor. I-tappers, the servant question and s.tifl thniu-htfitllv "Tl,. r.(f!c vl,.. .,.. short skirts and" knew mere han their mothers. They were a natural reni.e. illlvlice of the war. I think. Hut. nfi.- i nil. can you blame the veiinif nnnntn? V "" A"1' '""l r. themselves wear, s.iert skirts nndtle things that .-ti-e a bit foolish what eUe Is there fes.Mli. Bills i , . , ' t0.Vrn but 'i ' i'.i . l "eu''' t lll:e te .see ' "nw jweeplnglj long, altl ,i,A ..t.t.. , ', '", '" -,-: "" - him - - ' . ,."V' 'n'j ""s. nuueugu i ue . !. 3 ,iaPV meuium timt ls coming IK'W. new." Although ln Miss Dnrllng's hotel she admitted eight of the servants alone held a fervice record of KiO years, she said that the servant quotleu wa get- FAIR BODY 10 MAP " Trigg Surprised at Proposal He Head ExDOSitlOII S , r Committee . . I - - . I The Wajs and Means Committee of '- ?-.i-v,,tcnnlal Association will raising fundi for holding the expo'-i- tien, Krnest T. Trigg, committee chairman, announced today. Mr. Trii.',- expressed surprise whijti i told that hi name was under censid-' ' cratlen as chairman et the permanent i inaiici- emmittce et the usmiclatien. ' T- Meesbury lecently resigned tli: ehrarmrihshln of that committee and . -I'-lin Ii. Masen said he would net fill ll": ??"; . , .. , . , .. . I t.in r "hen anj thought te that. ' said Mr. Trigg. i JJi- niattir ei appointing a cnalr- nan .s exceedingiv imp-Ham." Celeur i rianklm tt'Olier president of the Sen- ,,,,,.( .itiuuu! Asnociatien, sf.id tedav. j "The innitir will have te he decided i i th.? net mn'tiiig of the beard of rii- -ecti.r. ' The dutc fur the next ill- iccturs' mcetli.g has net been set." I.udhnm Becomes Director D.uul S. I.udlum, president of the Aiitucar iimpany et Ardim re, ted.i. in eptiM an invitation te be(eme a mem. her of the beard of directors of the fair. II W heeler, tifCsldetit of the Xer'h Phllnilelnlilii Miinufiii Hirers' A. - ' .'I J '"'';'' a"Jlw !' '.' the opposition te the fair. ald that the bedv ennnHlnit t, . , ', , , , . - th fair had received the greatest Wheeler '-It seems thnt nit we him. te de is te pet the fact before the people, let tl"m u-e (hilr own judg- men', and tln- d-cide against holding the fair " Leaders of it. f.i.r opposition are awaiting with interest n reply from the I'aik Cumiiii.sinn nn ipn-rli-s en the eir.iiilh.Iuirs etand regarding the fair I , i'he Park ('emm!-,f!un will meet Wed- neda aiternenn. Uay E Mm hen, reprtsentiiig the op- PLANS WEDNESDAY -'- ... -,,.. '... . v..' ' ' mult-, ....1 ,H . Ul.,,11, llil-lU KUVl' Ultlli IU U lUll-lltlllllU III tllilUHS lllIILN ,1 Ill IlllUBItf PlUULTCIl peiu-iit.s ei tin- ta.-, wen a debate m th" and Stiles streets, tlie driver of a miles an hour almost the entire din 'Lutheran Ch'iieh at Sit. -sei nnd and moiercnr put en speed and diove away, tnine, semetlmei getting a little be be .IciTfrseit -.tn-eis fiuin C. (Im'ui- Iie.is. Uuclinnan, who is fifty-four yeuts old. ! eiid that seeed le . nn a.t'jni" Tin- Mite at the ir'ngicgutmnai inciting was tin te Tn ter Ml .Ma- l.c'i s nrg.imenrs. Hi,, dili.ite wa- one of u series arranged b the North 1'hiliideiphlu Mumifactuiers' As As As socluiieu. ENDS LIFE IN HOSPITAL Mrs. Florence W. Maybury Hangs u k,..i.ii . Herself While Insane Mrs. rlevence V. Majbuxy, 54.12 Win no avenue, a natient at the Penn xUnillll Hospital for the Insane. hanged herself late Saturday night. A Coiener's luipic'st was held teda. Mrs. .Maybury hud been nt the hes unt Pirn ei iiia noiihe 10 a uenm nnd i - . . . . the ether around her neck. She wus the wife of William G. May ry and lived nt 0132 Wayne avenut bury Toothache Net an Excuse Samuel Lippmnn, 70." Kalghn ave nue, Camden, today was fined $10 for reckless driving nu the White Herse Tike Inte Sunday night. Justice of the Peace .lacksuu, of Magnelia, repri manded Lippmnn after the trial for be ing the first nrrcsted en the pike nnd for telling the court that his daughter had h severe toothache us nn excuse for driving at thirty miles an hour. - pital a week. Late Saturday night I rel of an automobile, when hhe tried ',:, vin,BV "1Hi,f? """ -""""v c" t Mss Augelus Huckley, her nurse te avoid n horse, and her machine nft" paying the chnuffeur'b fine of ..() Led Mr. Maybury (nm, h'er Si g feujyJgr ote. M.m Berth. $ l$$klffl't' hU fr'enU uV perch' Mrs MTburv'ffi"...,.?.'! ! " TMnUlvlKA , The party was returning from At- !!er 'hinnd S ,U' l&'' U t"r0,"", had jumped fiem a chair after fastening '"'nnfurv . v EVENING PUBLIC iiHHHjy iiBiBtKlX"..' , .Sgsgsgsgsgsi gggggfagagNsV- '.',-ggggggggggggggggl i ggggfgggg9ag9?MtSgsgsgsgsgaaSB MISS JANE DARLING The first ferelsn delegate te the forthcoming international meeting of the W. C. T. l te reach Phila delphia , ting te be nn alarming problem in bc?.1,., ', , . , , , I he labor bureaus are lilted with women wanting positions." she said, i '.'' none seem te want te go into domestic bcrvlee.' Heturnlng te the question of temper- n,u'" r.' Darling said because of the nnrmtitl lniluence of the war the W. t T. I". had had te begin much of its work ever in Scotland. Miss Darling tr. ,r.. .7i.,.tti .1, Kilv i.i-iiiri u JilUll III Edlnburg She said Scotland did net Many Delegates Coming Philadelnhia will he the nrnhlbitlnn ' eenfer nf hi wnrld u-lii-n "flllfl'M-nmen renreseiitlin eve.rv seetlnn nl tin. imi-1.1 will ussemblc here Armistice Day fur their union. An nn nnimliiu fwiiin-e ilm I Kli-inlntliam. Aln.. renreniintlt-.. u 111 -" ll.'V.J.VII. uy ie wiis euy in an nirpiauc. rue i ...ii in i.. ,.. i. ..... . i i-penine r.m.v win ee in me ncnevue Htrntieui Mitunuty nignt. Speakers during the exercises will in elude Governer Sproul, Majer Moere, Giftenl I'lnchet. Majer Rey A. Ilavnes, the Hev. Kloyd W. TeniUin.s, Mis .lime Adihms and Mrs. Gustel von Dlucher. of Germany. ONE OEAD, 17 HURT - Penna. Hospital Ambulance, Carrying Patient, Upset at Market and Eleventh , AGED MAN IS RUN DOWN i One man died yesterday as a result of Injuries in an automobile an-ident. nnd seventeen persons were hint in automo bile accidents ln the city. The most serious accident wa at ' Eleventh and Market streets Iat night, when an automobile struck the tun- . bulnuce of the Pennsylvania Hospital, Injuring nine persons, one seiieusly, and damaging the automobile consider- , eutv. ' The ambulance, driven by r;eers:e Maud, was carrying Dr. William . Downe and Dr. P. H. Roberts : Mrs. I ""nie Mesjey. 814 Lemhni-d -.treet. a patient, and her husband, Herbert. At Market stieet an luitomebile owned and drlvi-n by l-.dw.aiil Tli-inev of W10.1 Windmr street, with William I.awler, of ,ri."-JO Helmnr street, and .Ie9eph nenin-y. of .i.'.iO B rneimill si reel. n pasM-uci-r. struck the ambulanre with ternin.- fene. and both machines overturned William Deiis. of li.'33 Melen street. .had started te cress Market street, and , as the driver of the uutomebile nt- overturned tempted te avoid the nmbulnnce it struck Deris and the wheels ran ever I.N chest. I n0ris was talien tnllnlmemnnn Hes. r,i, ,. i.... i j,,r, a,,i i,,i i. .,-..,: ; "i ' .1 . . ... ' . ", JUlin illl.llt I1IH I'M 1 Itll I 111 II I'llllI'MI. jjcisiey, who was the most setieusly v..,-. .. .1 1.. -.. ... v.n .-! ikw 1. 01 meiu 111 iuv uiueiiiuuiic. wna fn't.vi tn , cm imvnltni tn in. h.iv. Mrs. W. E. Hubel. of New Yerk, wns badly brulf-ed when si fell fren. tlm sj, (.nr of n motorcycle dilven by her huband in a collision with a meter- cycle diiven by Steven Iielgcr, of TiO Crsgree street, en llellctield avenue. LolKer was arrested. j... c. .. -1 rui nj After striking .Tean Ituchannii, of 004S dreenwoed avenue, at Sixteenth was taken te St. Jeseph's Hospital. He was net seriously hurt. James E. Hyan, of -UOS North Ori anna street, his nutomebi was cut and bruised when, le collided with a trellev street and Lehigh avenue". ' nr nt Fifth He was treated at the Episcopal Hes-1 nltnl. Wulter II. Johnsten, of -line North Heese street, driver of the car, was arrested Mni'. f'oddlngten, eight years old, i IS Ot-bernc ftrt-et, was struck by tin I automobile driven by Ur. James U. Sdipnein. eun uoxnero avenue, nt " , , .' --.------. ... """"Iiit . . IN AUTO ACCIDENTS f'""" '"". '.lir.' 1..1 Yi"' i. i iV nuise language there. Ills arrest tol tel taken te the Memerial Hospital, Her lowed, injuries nre net serious I-est Control of Mnelilnn At Old Yerk read and Welsh read vesterrinv Mrs. Louls-e We sh est con- itui'u iiijurii ' v-;.v, ..i. u. tt..-i j. ' v'JVXT'hn ' E.,l "ial1 E. Chesterman, of Neble, was in cel- llslen with nn automobile tn which Mr, and -Mrs. h. .ludsen Williams, of Hey-Chester I'nrk, were riding. Mrs. Williams wes cut en the face nnd head. Mr. Williams was bruised. filBI. OF A THOUSAND rROI'O.S.iLS While there are a few maMani who. en h wltw-M tainl weuH h forcert te eon. ' thnt thfy tni nfver bfn urorewd te htr lit a atery ral, ouUinntle of a irl who has refuaeil mere than a theunanrt pre. "yr1,- . I!?ih t? will want te read this article In thi Maailne faction of the tuZ day 1'cr.i.ie J.KPqea. "ilalia It a llnhi"ir 4V. W-u; $ WW LEDGER-PHIUADE Lawyers for McConnell and 46 Others Charge Bills Are Ambiguous DEFENDANTS' NOT IN COURT A battery of lawyers argued before Eederal Judge Thompson tedny in an effort te quash the Indictments against William (.'. McConnell, former prohibi tion director for Pennsylvania, and forty-six ethers named in an alleged liquor conspiracy of huge proportions. Nene of the principal defendants were ln court, but twenty attorneys took places successively before the bench, nil giving virtually the same reasons for ineir motions te qunsii, Geerge Russell, counsel for Mr, McConnell, asserted the four Indict ments against the former director were ambiguous nnd uncertain and did net give his client enough Information en which te prepare for trial. William A. (Srny bpeke for Illram M. llcnner, former chief of the permit division, nnd Jehn V. Slater, former confidential aid" te McConnell. Mr. Gray said hi clients were charged with conspiring te withdraw liquor la violation of the Velstead net. He argued there is nothing in the net which forbids prohibition officials from withdrawing liquor. If there were irregular withdrawals, lie reasoned, the irregularities arose from regulations laid down by the pro hibition rommis'iener. Mr. Gray said thee regulation could net be written into the act itself. He also declared , the indictments were uncertain nnd am- UlfiUOUS Dlstr 90 Men Entombed by Mine Explosion Tentlnurd from l'axe One morning were married ana resided i I.. ,i.i.. ..i.. i.. :.. -i-i. i " "" .-um., te news ei me ex- inoien oreugnt tucir wive una clill- !ren te the shaft mouth, where they gathered in dumb horror, hoping against nope. The shaft, which is nbeut 20(1 feet deep, was net damaged by the explosion and the cage continued te operate. It was said h. mine authorities that one of the main entries wa blocked liy falling debris about 500 feet from the iwi in llie sunn. There i n "man way" which makes another entrance te the mine, but whether the entombed men hnd been cut off from It hnd net been determined. Pittsburgh. Nev. (!. (lly A. 1 A Pennsylvania locomotive, screeching through mist and rain at the rate of a mile, a minute, 1 en its way te Spang ler with a mine rescue crew. The special left Pittsburgh at 10:."1 o'clock and I due nt Crvssen, nbeut KMI miles from here and in the moun tains at lli:."il. Arrangement have been made te provide quick switching te the Spnngler line. Spanglrr is about twenty-two miles from Cn-ssen en a sharp upgrade. Itailread officials said the ear should reaeli Spangler about 1 :"0 o'clock this afternoon. .1. .1. Iteiirquiu, assistant te the chief of mine safety ear and stations in the Pittsburgh district. I in charge of the rescue crew, Kquipment include six cage of canary birds. The birds quick ly detect the presence of gas. Anether car was started trem este, Livingston County, X. Y., this morn ing, also manned with trained rescuers. Utireau of Mine Officials were net able te sny when it would reach Spangler. Private lni'i.rmntien from Spangler te coal companies here indicated that the '.xtjk'tlun had wrought havoc in the ,n'"e workings, but it wn regarded as tee cany te predict the late of the ninety entombed. .lehn Iteilly. general manager of the iceiiiv i eal cempanv. which has of- I'''"" '" 'he Fliinnee IJuilding, this city. l"ft at 10 :;.i this morning for Spangler. ' l'ci-ieci word timt seventy men w-ere entombed nt 7 :HU this morning and that the heMins nppaiutm was out 1 et eider. I "The cause of the accident seem te ' uneertain." said Mr. Ileilly, "anil 1 understand that there Is net very . " eiui-r , much gas where the men are." 15 HURT IN GAS BLAST " " Girl. 13 Years Old. Strikes Match I ' m - . ... w .... ,. . In Her Cellar turns, cuts and bruins. Bullets Sprayed en Flying Motorist LenllnuisJ frjm I'.ire lne step it, but the n.acliitic kent en eeinz. I watched the rpeedr.mefcr closely nil the wav nnd we were averaging seventy Calls I'ewers Abuslte ' I'tri.-illv. wlinn tl... lnn'n.L nini.1it,ie gut la tiallie and liad te slew down. I nabbed the chauffeur, but I madci no attempt te arrest Powers. His Ien- gunge wns nbuulvu but two companions he had with bini were mere senib'e, Thej joined in the argument a little, but ilian i go at, far as I'nwers. Although the attorney wns net ar rested in Camden, ha followed the cliauftcur buck te Oaklyn ami, accord ,l(t , chM inkin, continued his At a hearing before Mayer Walter i;. .Mc.Muucn, the attorney, wns acid I "' W b?i! , ?r1teaW r''are1 wltl """'."" '.""''"'-. " "" r WHAT PRICE HE WAS SOBER? Autelst Wante te Bet $100 Police 8urgeen Was Wrong W. Stanley Kempen, of Ardmore, drove past a traffic signal last night at Iiread and Spring Garden streets and teemed tn be unable te manage his ma chine. He wns arrested and tedny wus held In 00 bail for the Grand Jury by Magistrate Kenslinw. 1'ollce Surgeon Hrlcker testified that Kempen was intoxicated when arrest ed, despite the fact that Kempen of fered te bet $100 that he was sober. RAP INDICTMENTS OF EX DRY CHIEFS FOR COMING ORDEAL I Mnrgaiitnun, . a.. Nev. (I. J&SWiSfflfrfcW Mmasm&mS8im i. v.'J f r ' . MOKDXT. MRS. HALL DRILLED In Nightly Conferences With Counsel te Discuss All Angles of Situation MOTT READY FOR ACTION By a Btaff Corr-wpenclfiit Ncav Bnintwlfh, N. J., Nev. 0. Mrs. Frances Stevens I lull is preparing her self systematically for examination at the hands of officials investigating the murder of her Inn-band. the Ilev. Ed ward Wheeler Ilnll, and Mrs. Eleaner n. Mills, his choir leader. The interview Mrs. Hall granted te newspapermen last Wednesday, with stenographers present te record her nn.- .wers, apparently was part of a ucn nitc plan adopted by her counsel. Conferences nre held almost nightly In the library of the Hall home. De tective dl Martini, engaged by Mrs. Hull, i? always present, nnd Mr. Pfelf fer Is usually there. Newspaper clippings containing the latest leunwu details of the Investiga tion nre spread out en the table. Mem bers of the family report the gossip and rumors they have gathered during the day. A Barrage of Questions Using the published reports and the floating geslp as n basis, Dl Martini nnd Fr. PfeilTer sheet question uter question nt Mrs. Hull, covering every newly developed phase of the mystery. The unusunlly quiet, reserved widow of the rector is very animated during these informal sessions. It wbh sham, in sistent questioning of that nature which gradually prepared her for th inter view ordeal last week, during which she maintained an attitude of unruffled calm, answering queries promptly and with nn nir of perfect candor. Mrs. A. C. Fraley, who live in n house en Deruseys inne. overlooking the crabapplc tree en Phillips farm, where the bodies of the rector mid Mr. Mills were ieuml, was brought te the courthouse by State troopers today. I.ouife Oist, a maid in the Hall home, also was expected te be called for further questioning today. The (irand Jury will meet cither Saturday of this week or next Monday. irtunlly all witnesses wne novo Deen examined by Deputy Attorney General Mett as well as these seen by the in vest Iger who preceded him en the case will be called by Mr. Mett for re examination before the Grand Jury meet, lie exi'ect te have his case in shape by Thursday. Thursday afternoon he will go te Seiuervllle, the county scat nf Somerset County, for n conference with the fore man of the Grand Jury and with Su preme Court Justice Charles W. Parker, who has charce of .the Grand Jury in that county. Attorney General MeCr.in is expected te attend the con cen feience. The request of Mrs. Hall te appear before the Grand Jury, waiving all rights te immunity se ns te deny the story told by Mrs. Gibon will nlse be discussed nt the conference. Persons close te the prosecution snld it i very .doubtful whether Mr. Mett will consent I te permit Mrs. Hall te appear before the Grand Jury. Without hi consent, she cannot testify unless the Grand Jurv itself ee fit te call her. The authorities believe they have found one of the automobile' which Mrs. Gibsen said she saw near the Phillips farm en the night of the mur der. The car in question 1 net the one snld te have carried the "wemun ln grny" te the murder scene. It was said said that Mr. Mett would ask for the indictment of the woman named and identified b Mrs. Gibsen, even though he has been unable te identify the "bushy-haired man" or fasten the guilt for the actual sheeting upon any particular person. Mr. Mett is depending chiefly upon Mrs. Gib Gib den's testlmenj that she saw the woman in gray with her man companion in the light of an automobile headlight in Di-russej 's lane before the sheeting, and that she mw her kneclirg and sobbing by the rector's body in the moonlight at 1 e eleclc in the morning, lie expects te try te preM- also that the woman in gray had the motive of jealousy, that she spied upon Mr. Hall and Mi. Mills nnd that she obtained iiese-sl,i,i nf ti. 1 incrimlnatlni! l,.vc letters fiem the -liei.- ,, i ...1.1..1. . '. ." Mllfcl-l i" ill'- miui, ,ii,uii ril.' IOUIIU between the bodies. Although the prosecution star wit- I ness herself tell a story that shows I that the woman In gray apparentl) did' net fire the shot, but protested against 1 Although the prosecution s Mar wit- the Minuting, the authorities Justifv' tlieir intention of nskine for a first - degree murder indictment against the woman en the ground that she was an in cemplice and accessory, and that a crime committed under such circum stanics li.'i niiii.fi a Joint preposition, in which the peipetrater and the accom plice aie equally guilty. RAILROADS FORBIDDEN TO CUT RENTALS FOR LAND Must Charae Same Price as Private Owners, 1. C. C. Rules Washington. Nev. . fitv A. P. I-- I Tfnll. I- .. I.lnl. I.... 1...l ..1.. !....- , ,11 III .m.i-j ..iiiiii ,T--M- 11,111, IIIVII lll""ll 'right of way te private users muH charge rentals equal te the sums which private owners would charae for similar ,.,.., m.w ... .... .1... l.ni.ii.n.lnnD li..H....f..... i l.ii'l"!.,. , i in.- uiiiinm limn i.l'irili HT will be i-i nsldered by the Interstate t eiiimerce ( einmis.sinn ns a form of re- bating in iolatieu of law. I Concluding an investisratien Instituted b Itself ii. 1!H7 Inte railroad practices In tenting prepertj in New Yerk City, I'lesun, I'alf., and Sfiekane, Wash,, the- i-onunisslen held today that in some ' cases the tixiinr of a low- rentnl elmivn in leases of lands te large shippers had Ll-CIl "ill liiaftlc.il effect" ll redact Inn "' tiaiisportatlen charges amounting te n refund. , J he coiiimissieti based its conclusion, rnivii.v upon i.-ii-is oreugnt our uv tlie itivestlgatlen of londitlens at Sp;l..ini.. I wnere ine invesiigaters teumi that a ' vision-, reeuirl.nr the simmer ien, . .. dpbiaVv ii.. .i,.i,; ,V. . , e .i .'. ""','"" Saturday ouerneon en tiie go f course Lrl ;v uf, '" Nr l,0'' J'- nf the Philadelphia Country Club. r,in.S,f Sii1' i11 ',I,;uIt' t"', Mr. Grantham lUed at 17fi (jueen wiy valuable T ,'. "eemflsinn,l"TS' 1','- O'nnnntewn. and hla office wa" ei) vumable. I lie ceinmUsinn ills., ... Twenty-second street nnd v,...i,i.. rlt 1 1 ( il fit I tin !: m..ii ii iii, ...... tornado inclusion in t u leases nf m-n. '. ..,i .' .i.. !,-..; ",eiu unu.- imuiu mir uiL- laiireaii rc-ntltlB the land. TWO BRIDES HERE ON SHIP Immlarants Will Be Married tvh,., Twentv-eleht Aliens Ari- , . , , ,, , Twenty-eight alletiH who arrived nn tien house of the Itiircnu of Immlgra Immlgra tieti. The majority are awaiting rela tives. Sixteen nre women. There were two brides en the shin. They were released in the custeilv of relatives and will be married te'dnr One of them, Margaret Leve, thirty one jenrs old, who came freui Scotland is te marry Jehn Leve, li.'Ifi Middlesex street, Gloucester City. The ether is Mildred Preston, twent years old, a native of England, who is te marry William J. Fogg, of Scarhore. W. Vn. ...... ... ..w.. ... .... ...wM.rier eeren. APARTMKNTH TO SUIT KVRKV PURNH and meet every requirement may be feuna eulckly by reniulilnu the Apartment oeluras en rs SS. jIv tv ( NOVEMBliR: , IMS Deaths et a Dan H FRANK SMYTH Had een Mambtr of Philadelphia Stock Exchange Since 1871 Frank Smyth, veteran member of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, died Set urday at his home, ln Meadowbrook, after an illness of two days. Mr. Smyth was admitted te the ex change April 1, 18T8. Ue was an active Doer trader, specializing in odd lets. He had nn office nt 1H Walnut place. "Mr. Smyth will be burled at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon from his home. In terment will be in Laurel Hill Ceme tery. He is survived by u son. The Rev. Walter R. Whitney Funeral of the llev. Walter It. Whit ney, a retired Methodist minister, who died at his home at 6209 Jeffersen street Friday, will be conducted tonight &t 8 o'clock from the Mary A. Simp Simp eon Methodist Episcopal Church. Six- ly-nrst una jcttcrsen streets, inter ment will be in Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania. Mr. Whitney was clgbty-twe jean old nnd hed been n member of the Central Pennsylvania Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church for many years. During the Civil War he wai n chaplain in the Union Army. He Is survived by his wfdew, two sons and five daughters. The sons nre General H. II. Whitney, U. S. A., and Jehn A. Whitney, of Mt. Union, P. The daugh ters ere Mrs. II. O. Winder, Chatta nooga, Teiin.j .Mrs. Jehn E. Tewnes, Lexington, Vs.; Miss Mary L. Whit ney, Augusta, Ga. ; Mrs. David B. Geed and Miss Winnifrcd Whitney, both of this city. The Rev. Geerge Worrell Funeral services for the Hev. Geerge Worrell, pastor of the Intercession lie formed Episcopal Church, Twenty-ninth Mrcet and Fletcher avenue, will be held this evening in his church nt 8 Mr. Worrell died Saturday night after a short Illness. He was active in char ity work and organized the Hntbore, Pa., orphan asylum, of which he was superintendent for some time. He is survived by a widow and two daughters. He was ordained from the Hefermed Episcopalian College, Forty- ""u .urn Mi-Minn Eirceis, As grand chaplain of the Orangemen of the I. nltcd States he was active m ledge work. He also was n member of wia uiiiiam .loniiBen uilldlng star, R E. P.. and the Gcrmantewn Celder Star, h. O. I. Dr. Charles E. 8. Webster Dr. Charles E. 8. Webster, of 1707 lllttenheuse street, died nt the Lnnk ennti Hospital yesterday morning after a brief illness with septic pneu monia. At the time of his death Dr. V ebstcr was in the neurological division '!. M1? ,Y.,,t,';n3' Ilnrcau. Before the world war he practiced his profession in New erk. Dr. Webster wan in the service of the 1 rcm-li Army, the A. E. F. nnd the Ked Cr.ws in Moscow nnd Tlflis after the war, retiring from the army with the rank of major. He was a graduate of J.eliigh I nlversitv. rlnnu nC liana and of the College of Physicians nnd Surgeons, New Yerk. Interment will be in Ilethlehem, ids parents' home. Mrs. Clara E. Downey Mrs. Clara E. Dewner, wlft. n il.e Tlev. William Downey, pnsfer of East Montgomery M e t h e d I s t Episcopal Church, died tn the church parsonage yesterday morning. 7lrs. Downey wa sixtv-elght years old nnd would have celebrated her forty-eighth wedding nn-nivei-fnry llnnksglving Day. She had t-pent most of her life here, where her husband has, held many pastorates, and wns active in elnn-cl, imrli mm... ... nernl win be held Wedne-dny afternoon' 11 'J. n ninnl.' ft...... .1... -....,. I . - . ntei meat will be private. Besides her husband, Mrs. Downey is survived bv three sons nnd three daughters. Mrs. Henrietta Washburn The funeral of Mrs. Henrietta Wash hum, sixty-nine years old, wife of the llev Leuis (' Washburn, rector of Old riirist Church, who died Saturdav at her home. 1W.K) De Lancey place, 'was held this afternoon. Illshep (inrlnnd officiated at the tt;riV,,'e'"i . N).,,llch , w.Prp "lcted in Old ( hrist Church, Second sticct above Maiket. Intel ment wns made in the Heche.ster Cemetery. Iiechrstcr. N. y. 1. . .. , ' t.. " ...'.' "emic. MP-. VUshburn -V -,!" " lVl"' ,V""m('r'l' ln"Khter " "u .'rs. neergu .Miimfr, eei-ci, Mutiif..-.! ...- Iteehester. '"' "' She is- survived by three children ni1 hee Imslim, U,fi T iiiiurrn "? " J I,"'1 ",J w,' ;""; l);'" lector V.. ,1." tl " "trli-al churches ! ,, . period 01 liftieu JUM' Charles Yarnall Charles yarnall. nne of tin- best known farmers of Uelaware Count v who died at his home at Lima after -i Ions Illness, will be buried tomorrow In the Cumberland Cemetery. Mr. Yarnall was liffy-six jears ei( He had heen all his life a member of the Lima M. E. Church. He is Mir led by his widow. Charles Hansen Chsrles Hansen, fifty-eight vears eM fern.erly n house seigennt en the I'hlla- H-IIHIKI JIIIIII.-U illic-, iii-ii VOMiT, fH jn Chester. His home wns at Hl'H Hpnui- . . 1n .. . -.'.11.,- tnge street. Mnnnjunk. He Joined the r1,ee ,'"-' ,1(1 "atl 1,"t'n off '" klnce y" Qeerge H. Rlgby (jeeigs II. Itigby. n widely Known authority en the histety of rnrt. old book. and for many jears proprietor of a book store, lll.'t Arch street, died Saturday in Abington Hospital, Old Yerk read, Mr. Itigby wns n bachelor and was born sixty-three Sears ane In tl .' Hlsjby homestead In the Harrow-gate SCCtlen lienr Kensington fiveimi. inwl Hart lane. lie Irnu-s a sister. Mis. LlUabcth Heflianii, who lives there, nerecri i. uranmam Herbert T. Orantlmnt. vice nresi.lein of the Belmont Iren Works. f,.n .iA.i '""":." ti ;:..-"."""" ?." "ve"'""' "" "UB 'our years Dr, Carl von Ruck p.CT? cri teV'rhS: tJX Inlly known authority nnd siieelalist en treatment and prevention of tuhercntn. '" (llwl !'re jeeterduy after nn illness of several weeKs, ... ' IlHEXEt. 1111,1. nmr tiolteyi 18500. l.YNCH, Wl i m IJUEM;!, HII.I.-.N0W 2t-aii,ry d-turhi heirni 7 lneim: 1-car sarase; 73x100- Vm- trolley. l.VNClf, lrexfl Hill'. l,in.iew5 . 'KlCvL'MTEIl KKyA,K " HOL'HKWOnK Ooekltiic und dSttTaTF; work! no VMinhlmr; 1hip in: rcfertncn iiJk ;.aneui teuU7Ji5.s;L .12lh !. . IlKATHS " :'" (lAI.l.OWAV. danrn. 11141 V. nuiiui-niy. .Nev, ft, a. r.T. Iiutbanil of KUle 11 tirean mi.. .-iiiVMiu' . ..; ..' --.....j,.t . . r. Ilelatlvea anrl frlenJa n'r Inviiert tK luniml urvnn. Thnra.lu wl" .,n!'a te iiaiiuviay. in w L'7il sS?!J,5.iialffiS 1tment private. fitlmlA may call WednnJay evenlnt, T'enflJ wsmmmimmmsmsMmmMsmmBmi mmw&.&mm&&vmmrmmm OPERATE TO SAVE U.OFP.FRESHMAN Lane, Injured in Mereersburg Football Game, Ha Geed Chance te Recover NO ANESTHETIC WAS TAKEN After nn operation without nn anes thetic which lasted two hours and forty minutes, Andrew Lang, Penn freshman, who was injured In the Mercersburg-Pcnn freshman football wme Saturday at Mercersburg, is In tile UnlversllV TfnanMnl wlfh mnm chance fee l-ernvmr. It. 111M Mil morning. 1110 operation, te relieve pressure en tne spinal cord resulting trem a broken collarbone, was performed by Dr. Vhlrle J?-. Fowler, assisted by Dr. Ilebey Light, nt midnight Saturday after the football player had been rushed here in a train. His mother nasieneate the city from the family home in Blnghamten, N. Y nnd Is at the hospital. The injury te Lang came in the last period of the game in which Penn de fentea it ancient rival by a score of W-e. Lang was placed in the game in the third period te take Douglas' P. iFp A Mercersburg player had the ?" Ln dived nt him and swept him off his feet. After the mass of players bad separated, he lay upon the field. Fer some time It was thought thnt n bleed transfusion would be necessary, se n teammate remained In the oper ating room ready te offer his bleed should It be required. The transfusion was found unnecessary. The operation took two hours and. forty minutes. At e e clock the, plucky player was re moved te n private room and Dr. Frailer remained with him during the night. RABIES AT WEST CHESTER Four Children Bitten, All Dege Un der 30 Days' Quarantine West Chester, Pa., Nev. 0. Follow ing the biting of four children here hv a deg, which wns found later te hnve been suffering from rabies, a blanket quarantine was placed upon all dogs in the borough today by State and bor ough authorities and will be rigidly en forced for thirty days. Every deg found at' large is te be killed en sight by the police or ether officers. Several days age a small pet deg belonging te Nathan Knrmatz ran nbeut tnnt section nun mt two children of the Karmatz family and two of an Italian family. The deg was killed by a po liceman with a club and an examination of Its brain hns shown it te hnve been suffering from hydrophobia. ALDERMAN'S HOME BOMBED Political Animus Believed Motive for Attack en Chicago Official Chicago, Nev. 0. (Ily A. P.) A bomb explosion early tedav jolted Alderman William K. OToele and his family from bed and damaged their residence in West Gurlield boulevard. Tim Alderman snid he was unable te nssbjn a cause for the attack, although tlie police supposition was thnt a possible political animus nuiv have been behind it. A meeting of ward captains was held at the Alder man's home last night. GIRL DIES FROM FLAMES Brether Severely Burned Trying te Save Sister at Chester Chester, Va., Nev. . Marv E. Newiil. live-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick NVtlll, was burned te death today at the home of her par ents here, despite the effeits of her brother, Themas, a Itey Scout, te ex tinguish tlie names. Tlie bitter's hands were terribly burned. NEIGHBORS WILL BURY WIFE 0FAGED LAWYER Mrs. Samuel G. Derrlcksen Died In Poverty In Fourth-Fleer Rcem Funds raised by neighbors will nay the fuiieial expenses of Mrs. Samuel Gardner Derrlcksen, wife of a member nf the New Yerk and Pennsylvania State bars and n Civil War veteran, who died in poverty yt-steruay in a fourth-fleer room nt 13V New ureet. Herrickseii, who is seventy-nine years old, was found by ether occupants r the dingy hotHe. maintaining a vlxil eer the form of his wife, who was seventy-one. He told neighbors he nnd his wife had no Income except a small monthly Civil War pension. Hern of a prominent Philadelphia fnmllv Diierlcksen nttended l!w. nub ile schools of the city nnd was gradu ated from Mount Washinuten Iin-tltute. New Yerk, in 1S.1I1. At Lincoln's !irit call for volunteers in 1M11 he entered the M-rvice in the F.lglitecnth Pennsyl- Minla Kegiment et ininutry. lie was mustered out after four years' service. Next he earned his LL.I). from the Law Scheel of Columbia Cuivei-tlly. Then lie began te practice in New New Yerk, and was admitted te the Supreme Court of the I'nltcd Sintes In IS',10 en the motion of United States Attorney lieneral .Miller, anil in ipu (ioverner Odell, of New Yerk, appointed him a State Commissioner. He was admitted te the Pennsylvania liar shortly after his return te Philadelphia. Mrs. Ida Foreman Flelsher Tda Foreman Flelsher, wlfe of Lnn Flelsher one of the founders of the Flelsher Weel Company, died at hi r home, UOl," Gieen street, jesterday aftiruneu. She will be burled en Wed nesday. Her husband survives her. The Engagement Ring Jewelry silver tches Stationery 57 "Geedie!" Mether: "Willie, run te tht grocery ttere for a can of Heinz Spaghetti." Willie: (running) "Oh, goody!" Willie knows hew geed it is. Se does Mether. She also knows it is healthful, wholesome, economical and conve nient Ready cooked in adelicieus tomato sauce. Ready te heat and serve. HEINZ Spaghetti ilmdycoelfd, rmdy Iemtm HART RELATIVES NAMED BENEFICIARIES OF WILL Estate of Fermer Councilman la Ap praised at $55,000 Relatives will share in the $55,000 estate of Jehn It. Hart, Caster read, Frankford, a former Councilman, whose will wns probated today. He died Sep tember 10. Mrs. Jennie S. Hurt was named beneficiary with four children, one of whom la the Rev. Jehn R. Hart, Jr., head of the Christian Asso ciation nt University of Pennsylvnniu. , The will of Susan M. Nill, Les An geles, disposing of nn estate valued at .$-lil.Hll), alie was prnbatcil. A son and a daughter were made hervficiaries. Inventories were filed for the per per rennl estates of l'liztrbttli M. Hunting, S14.ffiKl.4S; Laurent Mnyllng, $21,022; Richard Duffy, $.1871.1)2: the Rer. Geerge 11. Tene, $23,309.01. CHANDLER TRIAL LISTED . Stock Brokere te Face Criminal, Charges Wednesday Trial of Frederick T. Chandler nnd ICnrl Mciidenhnll en criminal charges arising out of the failure of the brok erage firm of Chandler Itrethcrs & Ce., of which they were members, will begin Wednesday uiuerning in Roem 053 City Hall, It was announced tedny. Charles IMwiu Fex, Assistant Dis trict Attorney, will have chnrge of the prosecution. He has notified counsel ter the defense of the scheduling of the trial uud told all witnesses and ether persons interested te he present. The two firm members will be tried en four Indictments based en the com plaint of Abraham Sickles, a member of the jewelry firm of M. Sickles & Sen, IXX) Chestnut street. Sickles nl leges that he purchased stock from the Chundler linn which wns net delivered. ELECTION FREES DRUNKS Magistrate Lett Them Off en Prem Ise te Vete Tomorrow Four dozen drunks in all stages of recovery faced Magistrate Fitzgerald at the Eleventh and Winter streets statin today and pleaded for leniency. They were gathered in during tht last twenty -four hours at various spots in the Tenderloin. "We would like te net out te de our duty as citizens tomorrow," said one man. "What ticket will you vote?" asked the "judge." "Republican," the answer cant unnulmeusly. "See that you de." "And we'll de it as often as peisl ble," shouted one prisoner. "Once will be enough," laid tht magistrate, "and be lure te put the cress lit the right place. All dis charged." Shew your goods in your advertising by clever illustrations. "Your story in picture leaves nothing untold." TTie Cheteut Street Enoiwine Celas E.CeR.IIT-aCHEJTNurW: Hntmnce en 11th St. A diamond of quality, though small in aize; is a wise selection. It remains a source of permanent satisfaction, losing nothing of prestige by asio asie asio ciatien with the costlier gems which may be acquired in later yean. J. EGaldwell & Ce. CHESTNUT STREET BELOW BROAD W3 .uXv.v kJ2L s-t., Kite Lii ffv. ,Vi ,tHS ff'Jkfi KiV'.lA. jg