The evening world. Newspaper, July 21, 1922, Page 2

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Executive Quoted as Not Without Hope in Shop- men’s Deadlock. SENATE EFFORTS FAIL. Committee Has Midnight Meeting With Executives, but Nothing Results. WASHINGTON, July 21 (Assocl- ted Prers).—President Harding un- deterred by the failures of members of the Senate Interstate Commerce Committee to obtain from leading Eastern railroad executives at last night's conference a basis for settle- ment of tho rail strike, to-day invited Chairman Ben W, Hooper of the Railroad Labor Board to Washington for @ Giscussion of the strike situ- ation, The President, it was indicated at the White House after to-day's Cabi- net meeting, desired to obtain from Chairman Hooper information on several points raised by the railroad executives in their discussion of the situation with Senators Cummins, Towa, Watson, Indiana, and Kellogg, Minnesota, of the Interstate merce Committer. Indications were given after the Cabinet meeting that the President and his advisers regarded the indus- trial situation as serious, although not without hope. It was stated, however, that the situation in neither the cpal fields nor in the railroad cen- tres was deemed sufficiently serious at the present moment to require use ot Federal troops. CHICAGO, July 21 (Associated Press).—The strike of railway shop- men to-day bore increasing external appearances of a finish fight between the unior® men and the rail and speculation turned to what might be the next step by the Federal Gov- ernment to keep up transportation. As the strike of the 800,000 shopmen rounded out its third week, its effect on transportation was becoming in- creasingly evident, throughout the country told of annul- ment of nearly 300 trains and combin- ing of numerous others. On the one hand, however, were reports of addi- tional replacements of strikers with increasing efforts to safeguard them, while on the other the ranks of the strikers were sald by union chiefs 10 have remained at full strength and the number actually out has been {n- creased by walkouts in other depart- ments‘of some railroads, the latest of consequence being that by 3,000 clerks on the Chesapeake and Ohio. Numerous reports of continued vio- lence spread fram Fresno, Cal., to Worcester, Mass., and additional troops were ordered out, making seven States in which National Guardsmen now are on duty. They are Ohio, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Kansas, Strike ballots were ordered distrib- uted to clerks and freight handlers on the Chicago, Milwaukee ahd St, Paul Jtatlway, and clerks on the Chicago and Northwestern to-day were await- ing the outcome of a conference be- tween their chief, George A. Worrell, and Frank Walters, General Manager of the road. E. F. Grable, President of the Main- tenance of Way Men's Union, was tn Detroit to-day for a conference of the Gvand Lodge of the organization, The conferenee was expected to determine whether the maintenance of way men would follow President Grable's peace programme, . Troops were asked of Goy, Kendall]}roles until he was made chief com- to protect Chicago Gre property ot Oelwein, Ia. breaks at Concord, N. H., Governor to send State troops there. In Kansas State placed on guard at Holsington, North Carolina troops are on duty at Rocky Mount and Aberdeen, and plans to remove troops from Wayeross, Ga., were abandoned. One death was included in the re- porta of violence. It was that of a railroad guard at Burlington, Kan. Me as found dead with one shell of ils shotgun exploded, Two youths are dying in Buffalo after having been shot in a riot at the Erie yards, Three employees of the Texas and Pacific at Fort Worth were flogged. A non-union employee of the Erie at Rankin, Ill., was esco.ted out of town and told not to return. Six men were in jall at Augusta, Ga., charged with interfering with the mails, alleged they delayed -n Atlantic Coast ‘Line mail train by attacking car re- pairers, Restraining orders and injunctions were issued to the New York, New Hayen- and Rartford at New Haven, the Norfolk and Western at Cincin- nati, the Pennsylvania at East Bt, Louis, the Kansas City Southern at Fort Smith, Ark.; the Southern Pact. fic at Sacramento and the Union Pacific and Burlington roads at Omaha. CITIZENS DRAFTED t Western and out- FOR STRIKE DUTY] H'p the cause of the striking rail- American Legion Chamber of Commerce Members Selected. YREMONT, Neb., Fremont were deputized preserve order in the railroad strike. Police, a3 reports from], caused the}and the following season brought out troops were|then on he became a favorite, It was ANd] tion was July 21.—One hundred and fifty leading citizens of posted on every corner in the downtown district, accosted men whore names were taken from rosters nee Ome) SRIVRE, Css ss WIFE WHO SEEKS SEPARATION FROM DE WOLF HOPPER In Panic When a Heavy Swell Tilts Bath House at the Battery a & Wrecks Bridge Connecting Payilion Pool They Were In Wil. the Seawall, SCRAMBLE FOR ROCKS. thelr way through water more than hip deep to the bridge, only to find that tt had been carried away. he screams of tho women and cries of the kiddies drew a big ctowa to the seawall, among them be- ing Patrolman Patrick Dougherty, “Buck” MeNell, Dockmaster and hera of forty rescues, and Park Foreman Thomas Coleman. The three men Calmed by Attendants and] jinnged into the water and started to Others When Swell Subsides [orf yee ee eee men, were —One Woman Hurt. Former Elda Surry Won't Name .. ybody, Only Var- ious Times and Places. The fifth wife of De Wolf Hopper, who is Mrs, Edna Surry Hopper, hos set In motion a divorce action against her elxtyour-year-old husband, A summons had been served on the comedian although no complaint has as yet been filed. Mr, Hopper has already been divorced four times. The latest action will come up tn t Queens County Supreme Court, Long Island City, While the comedian and his wife have been separated for a year and her friends were not surprised at her action, Mr. Hopper said !n Baltimore, where he is playing: “It is @ bolt out of a clear sky. IT don't know anything about it and never expected it. I can’t discuss It. His friends do not expect him to contest the sult. Mra, Hopper said: “I will file a complaint alleging misconduct at various times and places, but will not name any person I will ask for an absolute divor the complete custody of Bill seven-year-old son."* She said if her suit were successful she would keep her stage name Hedda Hopner. She has been making her home at Douglaston, L. I, and Mr. Hopper lived at tho Lambs’ Club since the separation. She will ask a referee and for alimony and counsel fees pending trial. Mrs. Hopper, before her marriage to Mr. Hoppe In 1913, was Elda cilnging to the rocks in thelr airy costumes as the two women attends ants, Who kept their heads amazingly well, worked around among them tell- ing them that they were all right, and that the water wasn't more than knee-deep. Ambulances arrived from the Broad treet and Volunteer hospitals and the mpanying surgéons ran to. the ige wreck to lend aid to the res- cuers, The bathers were calmed when the swells subsided and they found that the water near the seawall wasn't more than Wa'st high at the greatest depth, Mrs. Sophie Gerber, No. 37 Henry Street, was the only woman taken to the hospital. She was on the bridge crossing over to the bathhouse when the wreck occurred and she went down with the wreckage to the rocks, fracturing her left ankle. None of the numerous kiddies was hurt. While badly ecared, most of them scrambled up on the rocks in better shape than their mothers, and were more attentive to the admonitions of the two women attendants, ACCUSED IN THEFT FROM PEGGY OYE ARANIS ARESTED Bank Teller Charge With About 200 women bathers from the lower east side were thrown Into a panio in the big pool of the free bathhouse off the Battery near the Aquarium at 10.80 o'clock this morn ing when a powerful aswell sent in by a passing liner tilted the bathhouse, throwing the shore end up on the rocks and sinking tho sea end, and wrecking the bridge connecting the pool with the seawall. The bathers thought there was an earthquake and, wildly screaming and unmindful of the kiddies with them, scrambled for the rocks. Margaret McMahon and Marie Hartman, the two attendants, sought to quiet them, but the succession of swells which followed the first big wave lent addi tional terror to the situaton. Many of the women were clad ar Venus was when she came up out of the sea, and in this condition fought ADJUSTING CLAMS 6a te) ethawlihi the! Goutuy girl Tole to assert that the strike of the shop- Lusitania and Other Losses in “The Country Boy," und followed machinists had not yet af- Ina Claire in the prima donna rote In| fected thelr train service appreciably, To Be Threshed Out Stealing $15,700 Is Locked By Commission. in Tombs. “The Quaker Girl." Then she met] tsough the strike committee at the RAILROADS INSIST STRIKE HAS NOT AFFECTED SERGE Union Heads Declare, How- ever, That Traffic Is Far From Normal. men ay and married Hopper and retired to} Hote! Continental stuck to its declara- private life for four years. Since then} jon that mon on the “inside' know she has appeared in nineteen motion plotures and two plays. Among the photoplays was the John Barrymore Sherlock Holmes." H was “Six Cylinder Lov the Sam Harris Theatre, For the last two weeks Mrs. Hop: per has been finishing a two weeks tryout of a new play in Atlantic City called “That Day." It will go on at the Belmont Theutre early in Septem- there is accumulating an increasing number of crippled cars and locomo- tives which hamper the regular move- ment of trains, The Pennsylvania Railroad the following statement: “Telegraphic reports from all por- tons of the Pennsylvania Railroad System giving conditions as of th Mr. Hopper, previous to his mar-| morning show 42,284 shopmen actually riage to Miss Surry, had been married] working. ‘This is the largest force at and dtyorced four times. fis first wife was Ella Gardiner, his second cousin on his mother’s side, Then he mar- ried Ida Mosher of Boston, a mem- issued BERLIN, July 21.—Germany to-day agreed to the American proposal for the establishment of an international court of adjustment to arbitrate dis- putes between the two countries, such “Jas indemnity for sinking of the Lusi- It com-Jtania an dother ships in which there 0 men Charged with the theft of $15, from the Fifth Avenue branch of the Metropolitan Trust Company, Nelson D. Basanko, former teller, and already g $12, Joyce, was er bail accused of ste work at any time since the shopmen' under baila from the account of Pere: arrested this afternoon in the office of strike was called on July 1. paces wih an average of 5 ber of the McCaul company, in which | reporting for week-day work tn nor-] Was loss of property and life, his counsel, George Gordon Battle, ho played a leading role, They had} mal times. The court will be comprised of rep- | Xo. 37 Wall Street ; ‘one child, a boy. ina Wallace, the “During the present week the/resentatives of the United States and When arraigned before Judge Man- dainty ittle singer, was his third] Pennsylvania system lins made A not choice. She became a member of her| «ain of 1,29 In the number of shop- husband's company and appeared] men actually at work, with him in many of his successes,| ‘‘All train Ce including “El Capitan. and freight, have been fully main- Then for the third time he appeared |talned throughout the entire Ponn~ in the divorce court. The following |#ylvania, system since the strike be- year Mr. Hopper married in Kensing- all shops and engine houses tion, England, Miss Nella Reardon] have been kept in operation. Rergen, the comic opera star and s0-| ‘The management is progressively loist for Gilmore's Band, who had}rebuilding its shop forces to normal also shared his success in the Gilbert |levels by the hiring of additional new and Sullivan operas. She divorced|men to supplement the lan him fourteen years later, and in the}tion who remained loyal. a+ same year he married the present/agement expects to continue this Germany and a neutral observer, probably a Hollander, and will meet in either Holland or Scandinavia, The difficulties arising from the Versailles Peace ‘Treaty will be threshed out by the court. ‘The plan of the Unitted States took definite shape to-daly when the For- eign Relations Committee . of the Reichstag approved it, The German Foreign Office and the American Em- bassy are to work out the details of euso in General S ons, bail o! $5,000 was fixed, Basanko being at liberty on a like amount in the Joy case. Ag he was unable to fun the second $5,000 he was sent to the Tombs. The charge against the former tel- s that on April 4 Ia $15,000 Jushgiatty bonds and $700 in cash from the bank’s funds. Tho tite) indye¢ment against Bas- anko anaed fhlf ‘Miss Joyce - had sent biti: $14jaopt for deposit, to her unt wna thht he deposited onl 009, both passenger ui e took Mrs. Hopper. potic the plan. ft SS : His parents had intended that he] ‘There were statements of similar] wasHINGTON, July 21—A Bil]DOR i RK SUIT should become a lawyer, but after}renor from most of the other torty ay’ R acting in an amateur performance of | wustern railroad to provide for the payment of all SET FOR TRIAL OCT. 15 American claims sguinst Germany has been introduced by Senator Underwood (Dem, Ala,). It is the first measure of the kind to be presented in Congress, It disposes finally of al) “Conscient at the Fourteenth Street Theatre, young Hopper de-}tne Baltimore and Ohio, New York cided to" become a professional. Hel division, waid to-day that the peace ora peor pea ane as terms offered to the shopmen of the riterion Comedy Company. W ; President C, W. Cal- It he mado his debut as Talbot | 8: # O by Vico Presiden General Manager V. B. Voorhees of D HEDTaRInEiao Allcnean a senalt ghter, Now Married, July 21.—Trial the $20,000 damage suit brought against Herbert Rawlins rm ‘ “ ” loway did not affect any one on his!German effects taken over by the] hal of Dorothy Cl dun dai led AE Rd 8 andthe division, He said the only B. & O-) alien Property Custodian. Mah Gp cerion: The by “mother, Mra ‘as engaged by Edward Harrigan for shops in this district were those of the American claims are to be adjusted | Ethel! 5. Clark 9 New ¥ A The Blackbird. Staten Island Rapid Transit Company by a commission and, unless other- set for Jan. <a i W2 ee e. eee’ After this he studied singing and]which are not included in the offer] wise satisfied, paid out of the German Manor cours Bt d 8 appeared in comic opera in minor|made by Mr. Galloway. property in accordance with the pro- Ria, Cdavi. alleges itawilnaon) ate ————— —-— visions of the Versailles Treaty and] tacked he t New York, Oct edian in “The Black Hussar." Mr. PR OOPS the separate peace treaty between] 15, 1920. TAKE HAND IN TROLLEY STRIKE Two Hundred and Vifty Ar- rive in Buffalo on Appeal of the Sheriff. BUFFALO, July ‘Two hundred fiity State troopers and the|tioned in Buffalo y, but. their and underjexact duty could not be learned, It law those selected) 1.4 pelieved they would be stationed Hopper first became a star In 1890, the United States and Germany, 15-Year-Old Unmarried Mother Is Permitted by Court to Return Home From Institution With Baby denied the «cha “Wang,” his first big succe From Among his successes are “Dr. Sy tax El Capitan," “Panjandrum, “Mr, Pickwick," "De Koven's Hap- pyland” and the tuneful Gilbert and Sullivan operas. = were sta- of the America: Chamber of Commerce provisions of a Stat were deputized Many of the the duty of guards under protest Excitement “This Girl Has Committed No Crime,” Declares Judge —Schoolboy of Fifteen Is Father of Child, It Is Alleged. tendent of the Lakeview Home, op posed the return of the girl to her father's home until he moved into « the trolley tracks of the International was intense ay eleven! Ratiway Company, as well as in the strikebreakers on the Chicago and] airoud car shops anid yards to pre- Northwestern, who were previously driven from the city, were bronght}vent further vlotting by strike sym- back into town as rt witnesses, | pathizers. Supreme Court Justice Edward R. inch to-day allowed Minnie Mandel- , 1922, 200 Women Bathers and Children {SAYS G(V ALLEN AND EDITOR WIT ARE BOTH WRONG Emporia Publisher Had Defied State Executive to Prose- cute Him, TOPEKA, July 21.—"Henry” and “Bil are both wrong, W. L, Hug- ging, Presiding Judge of the Indus- trial Court said to-day, The Judgo suid-that Gov. Henry J. Allen was mistaken in asserting that the railroad strike sympathy card hung up in the Emporia ‘Gazette by William Allen White violated the in- dustrial court orders. ; Furthermore, the Judge sald, White was in error in declaring “the industrial court order.is an infamous infraction of free- press and” free speech,’ and sald he was going. to Emporia to have a tal with White. The Governor had authorized the arrest/of the editor and the warrant w's expected to be issued to-da: “No distinction will be made as to individuals, no matter what thelr standing may be in the State or Na- tion,"* and ‘certainly we cannot make any exception of Mr. White's case.” Gov. Allen declared. Ho has turned the prosecution of Mr. White over to the Attorney General, White had displayed placards in the Gazette windows supporting the rail- Wo: shopmen’s strike, He alse car- ried a front page editori-t '~ Ga- actte Wednesday, invitine Gov. Allen ito prosecuty » for advocating the ©7549 of the «tris railroad em~- ployees, “The controversy is, not between Gov. Allen and me, nor am I opposed to the Industrial Court," Mr. White said. “I believe in Gov. .Jlen's integrity and his sincerity and I Delleve in the Idea of the adjudication of indust disputes. I am strong for the Industrial Court, This matter in ‘which the Attorney General and the Governor are trying to stop men from expressing any opinion about the railway strike ts entirely a matter of free utterance, I believe in free speech “nd a free press in industrial disputes. Freedom of utterance is only v uble when it is In danger of suppression. “A number of Kansas merchants have put placards in thelr windows reading thus: ‘We are for the striking railroad men 100 per cent. We are for a living wage and fair working con- ditions.’ These were ordered out by the Governor and the Attorney Gen- eralas incendlary, violating the Antl- Syndicallsm Law, “As a matter of fact I don’t be- Neve in the striking rallway men 100 per cent., althuugh I do believe in a living wage and fair working condl- tions, I belleve the men have a just cause and are taking a bad time to express ity So T put in my window a card reading ‘We believe in the strilr- : working men 60 per cent. We in a living wage and falr working conditions." The Attorney General seems to feel that any amount of sympathy for the strikers is inciting und rebellion, It does not, and so long as the fundamental right of free utterance is questioned I feel It an old-fashioned American duty to stand up and be counted for free utterance. ‘ t scems to me that {f we cannot have frée discussion of industrial dis- putes when they are acute, Intelligent settlement {s {mpossihle. That ts ail there 1s, 80 far as I um concerned, in controversy. living wage for the unskilled should be the basis of all wage adjust~ ment and that is the first and most important contention of the Kansas Court. That Is {ts important con- tribution to industrial questions.”” ee SS UNKNOWN POISON FOUND BY DOCTOR IN JACKSON DEATHS Medical Examiner Testifies to Mystic. ous Odor in Trial of Fumigator Man. Trial of Albert J. Bradicich, vermin exterminator, for second degree man- slnughter in connection with the deaths last April of Freemont Jack- son and his wife at the Hotel Mar- baum, @ fifteen-year-old unmarried mother, to leave the Lakeview Home called by Sher- obtaining sane- different neighborhood. She declared that she realized her opposition was TELEGRAPHERS PLAN | ff Waldow, without BIG STRIKE FUND ton of Mayor schwav or Chiet of] for Unmarried Mothers at Arrowehar,/a social problem only and had no al ara Police Burflend, Waldow, in a tele- |S. 1. and return with her seven- nonding ee ae oe law. 80,000 Asked to Con-|eram to Gov. Miller, said; months-old baby to the home of her ane Nee ee pec Bees ceie tribute One Day’, ‘tla order to protect life and prop- | parents, Mr, and Mra. Nathan Man-)icoog that the father of the chibi is ribute ne erty, I believe It necessary that ald x lhe Pav Ie sent ua at once.” delbaum, at No. 67 East 109th Street. samuel Siegel, a schoolboy of fiftecn ies Gov. Miller immediately complied. “This young girl has committed] years, who formerly lived in the ST, LOUIS, July 21 (Assoclated — * Tao crime and there is no reason why Mandelbaum home until the birth of the child. Mandelbaum failed in hix effort to get the Siegel youth to marry his daughter and caused his arrest. The boy was released uft. a trial in Children's Court and young mother sent to the Lakeview Home. oe MACHINE GUNS FIRED IN STRIKE DISORDER Sor d mies sueeene| RAILROADS FLAN to-day addressed an appeal to the 80,000 members of the order, asking 7 that each man give one day's pay to orthwestern Lines Sends Out Defiance to Inter- national Brotherhoods, ST, PAUL, July 21.—Railroad exe- outives of the Northwest to-day took she should be committed to an insti- tution with her child against he: will,’ ruled Justice Pinch in granting the lttle mother und her baby theli treedom. ‘Oliver Cromwell and sev eral other great men, as I recall, were born under just such circumstances and rose to fame as history shows, the Court sald, road men and striking coal miners. Mr. Manion stated his organiza- the first of the railroad unions to take action along this line, He expressed the belief that the ap- the proce: the girl's| caards Silent on of Mine peal would bring in at least shores: tae Wp orsenise thelr own: workers petra not bearer deers duuive sourt Fu . fo —— in defiance of international unions, 11> take his daughter's child back into] poPLAR BLUFF, Mo., July 21.7) ENDS LIFE BY INHALING GAS, “We are going to have our own] his home, but said he wanted DiS} ratte of machine-gun f Neal ‘ie to-day tol non ued Lexington Atenas: somata: | organisation of employees, which willfdaughter so she could help his Wile] yound of rite shots was heord to- lay sutclde to-day by inhaling gus at hig) not be controlled or dictated to py fm the rearing of their six small chil- | from troops guarding ratiroud propest “| home. outside influences—men working for} dren He sald, however, that he heres: Phe firing dled down after a poy ———_>-— other lines or other interests,” Ralph} wouldn't refuse to allow the infunt)™ ee oficiales vefuecd % 7 FATHER JOHN’S MEDICINE| 8yd4) President of the Great North. ]to return with his daughter. cause of the shooting, but said nu cas Wards Off Bummer Colds—Advi, ern, Mire. Sarah L, Eidier, superite yalties resulted, * garet annex, Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, was continued to-day be- fore Judge Haskell in the County Court, Brooklyn, Assistant District Attorney Joseph V. Gallagher placed ®everal witnesses on the stand to ex- plain the circumstances of the fina- ing of the bodies and the result of an autopsy. ‘The rooms immediately under those occupied by the Jacksons were fumt- gated on the day the couple died, and it is charged the fumtgating material caused death. 5 Medical Examiner Charles Wuest, who stated that he bad performed 4,500 autopsies in the twenty-five yeurs he had been connected with the Coroner's office and as Medical Ex~- aminer, said that when he performed an autopsy on the bodies of the couple he found traces of an unknown pol- He stated that’ he was of the opinion that Mr? Jackson had died first and that Mrs, Jackson died shortly afterward. The couple, he aid, had been dead about ten hours when their bodies were discovered oy, Wuest stated that he was as- wisted by Dr. Willlam W. Hale, who was a witness yesterday, Dr. Hale, the witness stated, during the autopsy spoke of smelling bydrocyanic acid, son PUBLIC SCHOOLS ASSOCIATE SUPT. WHO DIED TO-DAY SAY MRS. Pit, PURCHASED PISTOL PROR TO MURDER Los Angeles Paper Gives Record of Sale of Gun, LOS ANGELES, July &1.—Mrt, Clara Phillips, whose trial for the murder of Mrs, Albert Meagows has been set for Sept. 18, is believed to have purchased an automatic pistol two days before the young wid¢w was beaten to death with a hammer, ac~ cording to a ‘story the Los Angeles Times published to-day. The Times located a record of thé sale of the pistol and found the sales man, John H,. Raney, who said the woman who purchased the weapon = sembled in every detail the newspaper pictures he had seen of Mrs. Phillipse Tho Sheriff's office declared the purohase of the pistol such a short, time before the slaying of Mrs, Meadows ‘‘was considered additional evidence of premeditation.'* The purchaser signed her name as CITY WAREHOUSES “Mrs, A. L. Phillips." The initialy are the same as those of the husband of the defendant The use given was twenty-seven e years, differing from Mrs. Phillips’ —— statement that she was twenty-three, * Commissioner Drennan Acts | Mrs. ohiines fusing quoted ri rs by Sher Jepiities as having told as Result of Greenwich Vi [them tis wite, who was bora in Texas, was an expert shot, and ‘eo. apple in two with a tral hundred fue Id cut an, six-shooter at sev. lage Fire. Five hundred uniformed firemen sinan sald the woman asked, Will be detailed to-morrow morning ssaertl Ue HOt at nine o'clock, Fire Commissione: a ee Drennan announced to-day, to make] LOGIC OF PSALMS a careful inspection ftom roof to sub Z cellar of all buildings in the city useal MAY FREE LAMAR for the storage of merchandise to], discover the aharacteric? thelr con-JOourb Reserves Deeisioir tents. E When Attorney “If any violation of ordinar “ALL Men Are bidding inflamma! Commissioner be issued on the ance In Magistrate's Court, i the storage | The ma a yrlals illegally stored will be confis- cated summarily and removed of explosives or je materials is found said, “summonses will “t for an appear The * wae the swal of th indictinent Wali grand Lamar, onco ugainst Day “This is a warning to all thoae who] Steet operator, charged with for uw few paitry dollars of gain ave }larceny, wi Jel was made to-day before willing to jeopardize the lives of fire’| Judge Mancuso enoral Sessions by men and the lives of residents in the] sounor iudse Lonard A, bnitkin. He nelghborhood of such huildings."* The Commissionef's action was| held that the evidence did not justify, noon the report of Acting Chief ot a crime, Martin and the Fire Marshal likelihood of the’ repe explosion as chi Allisun, of She claim the building of he had defrouded her of $4,300, whtei Transit Company he gave him on his representation death of Fire Lieut, Schoppmeyer and] that he had to give it to the directors the injury of x than a e of of an oll company for thelr co-opera firemen and residents of the neighbor-[ tion in his efforts to sell elt wells hood. to the Italian Government. Sage cS Judge Smitkin said that the worst ’ » to be made of it was that Jt was, a M’MULLEN’S LEAD lie, the us of which was not 4 209 IN NEBRASKA} reiony. te then quoted the Paulma —_ ind added that @ master: judge of }uman character had said that to be as tho world gocs was to be an picked out of ten thousand, ison could hold those who he asked. The Judge rgerved Republican subernatorial Nomination in Primaries Still Undecided, OMAHA, July’ 21 (Associated Préss).—Adam MeMullen of Beatrice. to-day led Charlés H, Randall of Randolph by 209 with fewer than 100 precincts missing in the only doubtful contest from Tuesday's State-wide primary election, that for the Republican Gubernatorial nomin- votes ation. Senator Gilbert M. Iliteheock's three-to-one indorsement for renom- Ination on the Democratle ticket and the victory of R. B. Howell, Repub- can National Committeeman, and a) Progressive, over Congressman Albert W. Jefferis, who ran on an Admin- istration platform, will bring together in Noyember two of the State's out- standing political figures. Once again a Bryan has become a candidate as a result of the victory of Charles W. Bryan brother of Wil- liam, in the Democratic Gubernatoriat race. ‘Trede Mark Advt.on page 4 ' ‘THE WORLD'S | Harlem Office VOLCANO OMETEPE BREAKS OUT ANEW Now Located at | Flaming Rocks and Molten 2092 7th Ave Lava Rained Over a Near 125th St, r Large Section. MANAGUA, Nicaragua, July 21.— A renewed eruption of the. Volcano Ometepe has broken forth, and the people In that vicinity are fleeing in panic. Flaming stones and lava are ruin- ing in the neighborhood, and large|t areas of woodland are being sct on fire. ° CAMPY H, Saturday, —ORLAND SID ERAL CHURCH Li FU. 10 A. M, Y, CANPBELY riday, 6 P. BI. FUNERAL DIRECTORS, THE FUNERAL CHURCH ‘Americas New Burial Custom” Call Columbus 8200 FRANKE.CAMPBELL “Ine Funeral Church ‘in (MOM=SECTAAAM ) Broadway at 66th St. N Vacation have Th World follow you. Mailed WORLD SUMMER RATES Per Week Month Morning & Sunday. .35 $1.00 Morning World 25 85 Evening World 185 Sunday World 10c, per Sunday Bubscribe now for any length of time, Addresn changed as often ue desired geen at any of Your newadealer will arrange “Lost and Found" advertieamont® Mt for you, oF remit direct to can be left at any of The World's ' World, Advertising Agencies, or can be Cashier, New York World, telephoned directly to The Worlds Park Row, New York City. Cali 4000 Beckman, Brookiyn Office, 4100 w York, oF fain.

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