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‘ CONGRESS LEADERS | ARE AT ODDS OVER TARIFF BILL'S FATE estas Simmons Says G. O, P. Seeks Delay but Mondell Predicts Early Passage. WASHINGTON, Aug. —The Republican members of he confe ence committee +) the tariff are now settling party policies" satd Senator Simmons last evening. “They will not Invite the Democratic members {n un til they have definitely decided what they will do about American valuation and other questions of policy. “From observation and talks with Senators 1 am satisfied the Tariff Bill will not be sent to the Presi- dent before the fall elections, un- less the lpaders in Congress can get the advocates of protection to Permit a whittling down of the rates to the point where the public will submit to them without a big row The Republicans would not offend the protectionists who put up money for the last campaign with the un- derstanding that they were to high tariff duties, but they fear the People at large, “{ understand they have not taken up any of the amendments of the bill yet.” Representative Moore (Dem,, Va.) took Majority Leader Mondell to task for trying to rush the House through to an adjournment. He said he was surprised at the Republicans for “running away from their duties at a time like this." “More legislation than that pro- Posed in the two strike bills pending is needed,” he said I ask if the leader of the House 3 expects to do more than put these A two measures through." “sdme days ago,” replied Mr. Mon- dell, “it looked like we might take a Fecess, but the situation has changed. It looks now as if the tariff con- ference would complete its work much earlier than we anticipated, With this condition confronting us we do not Want to quit have Scarcely More Than School Mr. Moor ided he thought it was wrong to be marking time when the| Harriman, niweteen-year-old son of Mr, and country ts in such 9 crisis, He de- Miss Alice A, Laidley, also nineteen, a nothing like it has been wit- nessed in fifty years. It seems to me we ought to speed up this legislation," he added. “The people of the country are losing con- fidence in the Government.” of Chicago, on Aug. 12, at Port Cheste’ proved the union. The bride is a ward M Christy has been acting as» ‘After seeing the President Mr os Ned - Aaa Mondelt said he expected the House |suardian for the bride for two years to remain in session until the tar f'| because of the absence of her mother was out of the way, taking a few)in Europe. It was in the Christy days off between now and the adop- studio that the young couple, scarcely tion of the conference report. more than school boy and girl, met ast spring Mr. and Mrs. Oliver DOUGLAS'S ILLNESS _|itarsiinn, who tive at No. 142 East HALTS LEGAL FIGHT ]55t® Street, are intimate friends of the Christys 4s te? tcher| Mrs. Harriman has been studying F 2 ants Pitcher Borman inns music and ballroom and theatrical Suffers Nervous dancing in New York, und Mr. Har- Breakdown. riman has been tutoring for Prince- ton, His orginial idea was to marry A temporary Jull in the active fight to tna take his bride to Prince- get Phil Douglas, former star of thelion while he pursued his studies. But Giants’ pitching staff, back {nto the} the couple were,so much in love they ranks of organizer baseball, has been| slipped away to Port Chester, accom- panied by Mr. Harriman’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carley jr of Florida, and had the ceremony brought about by thgelliness of the ban- ished pitcher. Douglas is at present confined to his Washington Heights home suffering | performed by the Rev. Stanley Kil- from a severe nervous attack and 18]hourne of St. Peter's Episcopal under the care of a specialist, Douglas! oyirch, Because of the death last has been advised by his physician tol si) of his maternal grandfather take a complete rest, and not to assume any active part for the present at least in the attempt to have his case brought before Commissioner Landis. yelled Seok LOSES WEDDING CASH HE DREW FROM BANK young Harriman's parents were not present, Mr. Harriman has two brothers, Oliver ©. and J. Borden Harriman Mrs, Harriman has a brother, Har- old, who {s general manager of the General Electric plant in Chicago. ‘The bridegroom ts well over atx feet, broad shouldered and pink cheeked The couple told the story of their marriage in the Christy apartment, Life Savings, Vanish Within If Ho of No. 85,300, Harry Asmus, 2002 Palmetto Street, Brooklyn, a clerk In the offices} where they will live until they go to of thé Mutual Lite Insurance, Com: | morida to reside In St, Petersburg, pany, drew his life savings of §$3,30) PANY, aretnk yesterday afternoon and| Mr. Harriman has ahandoned the idea me | of going to collere and will enter the wee Hale ath NGG dt rat ie y land development business in Florida ‘Asmus was planning to be married| with his uncle a week from to-day and to take ais] The bride, a vivacious brunette bride to Germany to surprise his/explained that Mr, Christy nad be- mother, who lives there, After draw-| come her guardian because for many ing his money from the bank he| years he had known her father, Shc boarded a subway train to go to Brook- lyngand reached in his pocket to se {f his wallet was safe. It was not there. He does not know whether It slipped out ef his pocket or was stolen by a plck- pocket. said all her plans were in the hands of her husband “But we ere going to be terribly 1appy, I know,” she added. They met one night when Mr, Har- PANTOMIME tor, and nad been living with Mr. and Mrs, Christy at ImMRS. . JOHN HARRIMAN Avner Jonnaat, Noa Boy and Girl, They Met in Studio—“Close” to Love at First Sight— Gives Up Dancing Career. Though many friends learned to-day of the secret marriage of John Mrs. Oliver Harriman, and daughter of Mrs, William H. Laidley r, N. Y., it was said both families ap- of Howard Chandler Christy, illustra- . 1 West 67th Street. riman went to the house to attend a swiinming party. If it was not love at first sight it was close to it, they admitted. By simmer they were en- gaged. They told both familles and obtained consent to marry. “Honeymoons can come later,” Mrs. Harriman said, ‘Jack has to get down to work and make some money.” "Are you going to make your home ew York later on?” they were rd and the bride answered: “E don't know. Apartments are so fright- fuly expensive here!" Mr, Harriman merely smiled boyishly t's so funny, no one knowing ut Jt." Mrs, Harriman laughed, ‘we never tried to keep it secret and no one found us out. If we had been trying to hide away or had eloped every one would be reading about it long ago. We just decided that we would get married and away we went, Neither of Jack's parents nor any of my relatives were there, and only uunt and uncle came along. Mr, Christy and his wife were to come, but he was taken ill and she couldn't leave him." The few before start South will be spent in “visiting at Mr. Harrimin's mother's house and at the home of Oliver Charley Harri- man at Mount Kisco, N. Y., where the young couple stopped for a few days recently Mrs had had Christy’ "No, J she suid ch tugs of me ROEBLING’S RAISES WORKERS’ WAGES Big Firm Follows Lead of U.S. Steel Corporation. Another the Jack's days the couple Harriinan was asked if she een a model for any of Mr amous drawings, been a we never model,” though Mr. nade several little draw. laughingly far-reaching increase in wages of steel workers was to take effect on the month. The John A, Roeb- Company gave out an an- in whieh it an- nounced to-da first of the ling's Sor nouncement that th declared had duplicated the Valted recent action of the States Steel Corporation. The Company, many subsidiaries, i Roebling with its one of the larg- est employers of labo No estimate of the affected by th in the country, number of men increase was had, however, an official in the local offices declaring over the telephone that that information will huve to come from the executive offices in Trenton The co iffected are: John A. Roeblinus = Sons Co., Trenton; John A. Flueblins ms Con. of New York Tohn A. Koehling's Sons, Chicago; John A, ¥ Sons Co., of Call fornia; New J Wire Cloth Co., Trenton, and Durable Wire Rope Co., Boston Coincident with the wage Increase the company announced a compre. hensive lif trance and pension plan, Thi will be effective on Sept. 1, Th trance will be writ. ten by the kyultable Lite under its group plan THE EVENING Young Harriman’s Bride, Ward of Artist Christy, Tells of Secret Romance WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST NEW YORK IS BEST PHONE MATERIAL ITALIAN CITY, SAYS } COST LIST CALLED CHARLES RANZINI| ABNORMALLY HIGH eae Went Across to Have Good]$5,500,000 Time, but Didn’t Dare Leave Mother’s House. > Difference Book and Reproduction Value Quéstioned. in His visions of a beautiful home] A difference of more than $5,500,000 visit in Italy shattered, Charles Ran-}in the book value and reproduction zinl, proprietor of a photograph stu-|Valur of the long-distance telephone dio at No, 221 Bleecker Street, re-| lines of the State, as testified to by turned to-day a passenger on the} Jim A. Villlad, engineer in charge Furopa which docked at Wert $7th] of this branch of work of the Ameri ree can Telephone and ‘Telegraph Com Twenty-five re ago Ranzini| pany, was questioned to-day by attor came here a boy and he looked for-|neys for the cities and the State at ward to the day when he could He] the continued hearing into State-wide back to his old home in Genoa vite: before: SubhexetenGise “Soxveta sailed six weeks ago intending to stay 4 : in Italy at least three months. To-| Stoner Blakeslee in the Commission's day he returned and said he stayed] rooms at No, 80 Chureh Street in Genoa 25 days, the most of the] yiy pijtiad was the only witness time shut up in his mother’s how#e.|..4 confined himaelt to figures bear- There was nena strhe on and the |” ie Fascisti, Communists and Socialists}! on the long distance leases of the Vure shooting up ons another im the]company. He gave the book vulua- streets. He didn't dare to leave theftion of these in the State as $9,131, Tous, Sil, but a report submitted by one “Relieve me, New York is the best]ot the State attorneys gave a repro Nalian city I know," he remarked. [duction cost of $14 98. This re Mrs. Angelo Rocco Was taken tof production cost was of Dec, 31, 1920, Rellevue Hospital in an ambulance as(but it was said that reproduction soon as the ship arrived. She lives! would not be begun for three more She is} years, or at No. 19 Eust 29th Street five suffering from a severe attack of|given in the report heart disease. Mrs. Rocco had been! In making his appraisal, Mr. Pillatd visiting her parents in Naple said, hie rejected certain figures which There were ten brides-to-be to-|le deemed too low, but Assistant At- gether with their chaperones, who|torney General W. W. Chambers, rep fame as cabin passengers, but owing] resenting the cities, brought out that to absence of passports were ordered certain figures which were to Ellis Island, The passports will/be too high were not be here on Thursday. Among the known to rejected. items which Mr, Cham ———=< ber pointed out as “abnormally WHEN CARS COLLIDE)} viiue tue cost of materials is egti lated at close to $4,000,000, whic ts . a) nearly half of the total. One Driver Held on Charge |" CAR WAPEG egeakaa late. Chaanbers , neers Thile i }brought ont in Mr. Pilliad’s testi of Driving While Drunk. fees OO HL ob Six persons were carried to Bushwick Hospital, Brooklyn, last night suffering Ame Compu can y at lephone and Telegraph 12.675 cents a pound, but from injures sustained when two auto-/in the reproduction cost it is placed mobiles collided at the corner of Bush-|at 19.5 cents, Lead likewise, is ‘tab wick Avenue and Halsey Street, many high according to Mr iooliyh Chambers. ‘This is listed aetually at ‘An automobile owned and driven by 4.70 cents a poung, but it is given In Albert Singer, of 1 Kast Third Street, | the report us vents a pound was travelling cast on Bushwick Ave The land value of the long-dt hue when it was struck by the automy-| properties in the State in the nook bile of Frank Salla, of No North | yalue is 7, but it wasn represent Ninth Street, Brooklyn, who was driv- ing north on Halsey Str ‘The automobiles came together with ed in the reproduction cost as $27,052 | Buildings were placed in the reproduc such force that Singer's machine was| tion values ab ag 682, but the vook turned completely around, while Salla’s | Cost was only $86,497. And Mr. Cham car was overturned, throwing out its| bers brought out that all these ap passengers. pruisals were made by employe ‘i Helen La Rocca, eight, of No. 31|the company, and not by real estate Skillman Avenue, 18 suffering from in-| men or others qualified to do it ternal injurte: Her ‘condition Assistant Attorney General Fertig, serious. in cross examination, F ight out that Sea eddie; anger ob shi Ment iand do since 1920, and that reproduc conte middle finger of his right hand, eet Iie 19 0, rt 1 that I ‘Others who were injured are Charlex| ton costs should be considerably Ridner, thirty-two, of No, 686 Bast | Smaller Seventh Str Brooklyn; Mrs. La a Rocca, forty, wife of | La, ARNOLD DALY MUST PAY ner gnetta, fourteen, $500 TO MANAGER ‘Salla was arrested at the Ralph Avenue Station charged with reckless | New Arbitration Umpires Give De- a@riving, and with driving while in WRakea Sar Cane: ahs Arnold Daly, aetor, and Joseph M —- DRINKS JERSEY HOOCH, PICKS FIGHT WITH BEAR tration law providing that otherwise w suttled otlon for umpires i Wd go to court will Animal Takes Plece Ont of Hand | 7) mnie Ee de ad in Theatre. th report with the County Clerk Wille Blythe, thirty, No. 403 Ber-} oyun quclae : genline Avenue, West Hoboken, was] The actor must pay the manager $500 fined $10 by Recorder Hauenstetn Inst} advanced, ‘The counter claim of the night following his arrest on a charge of} actor for counsel and advies to the disorderly conduct manager is disullowed, ‘The manager's Tt as alleged by the policeman who] claim for money expended for printing arrested Wim that he was intoxicated] &e., is disallowed, the umpires feeling and engagdd in a hand-to-hand battle} these should be charged to profit: and with a trained bear used in a vaudeville | loss act at the Lincoln Theatre, West Ho-] ‘The personal differences between Mr hoken, drawing a crowd and creating «| Daly Mr. Guites, the umpires de disturbance. Man and bear struggled | eld e no bearing on the case in for some time before Jack Allan, the} question and is not for them to handle animal's owner and trainer, finally man aged to separate them, The bear had bitten a piece out of Blythe's hand _ HIT BY AUTOMOBILE, — ACCUSED OF STRIKING WOMAN 80 YEARS OLD Maspeth Man Abusive When He PHYSICIAN DIES) Contant rind Wite. In « Dr. James Dunn, forty 14,] Edward P, Chanter, twenty-one, em years ¢ ' pyed in a und Hvin Brooklyn department at No, 19 tore prominent physician of nklin Ta near New Brunswick, N. J., died carly] Maspeth, Queens, w to-day following an automobile seciient| Court to-day on ‘ etruek prittecd Mr in which he suffered a fractured skull, | SEK & ee ae ae Dr. Dunn had just alighted fren 4h! Street, Rrooklyn automobile in front of his home ani| It Was alleged that Chanler went t started to cross the Lincoln Iilshway| the Alnsile Street aslir and asked on foot, accompanied’ by a friend, Dr.| for his wife. He was toll by Mr E. Le Loblein of New Brunswick, when] Waldmeyer she was not t nd hy he was struck by an automobile iriven| struck her and knock rodown, ne Robert MeMullin. of Philwtelphty. | cording to the pol Dunn ts survived by his wife or Chanler was held in 81.000 ball for ex e children, No charge w amination Sept. 9. H ito mak against McMullin, “a statement Dead Girl Pictured in Mirror Nine Months Alter Her Burial Figure at First Dim Grows More Distinct and Throngs See the “Miracle.” NATCHITOCHES, La. A A month ago a youn worn named Trichel looked into t er dresser, ‘The f st who had died nine mon 1 bAUk, The image was faint, but uni ——————— — able, and ever since it tus | ture, whieh res Hold growing more and more med dagucrrent tthe til now a clear, well define eeeaete Rides pes of the dead woman's body ut ihe GUNeUatceie te ha) laid out before burial ts Investigation has tt the glass. The flowers in r Was in the et the boards on which ti san | Ge NOUN in t rested, the composed feut fo Weare reproduced in the eight y ' ' ror wd Terrified by this sup pai ho whet ism, the family tried to ' 29, 1922, For a Perfect Honeymoon, Work a Little Every Day, years from the date] She and Jack Pickford Tried {t Out and It Was a Great Go--Haven’t Quarreled Yet and Will Work ome More--Oh, Ziegfeld? Well-- By Fay Stevenson. Me NN MILLER and Jack Pickford tripped into the Ambassador Hotel yesterda ir new Alvedale But of course when one comes clear one's plains upset a trifle the latest “romance of the Uckle Dickie under the chin just t , one beautiful heavenly Sunday, this couple wer married in t Mary Pickford and Fairbanks © it is less than a right again! At Jack's been with a Angeles, So puppy from Last July home of “Dour” and | and t work month, ye back ready least’ Marilynn working for is and right alton picture out in you you see really ean work, combine a honeymoon and Marilynn is going to rehearse at the New Amsterdam, where she is the star in all the rest of this week, then the show will open in Boston Sept. 4, with Jack In one of the front boxes and the next day he starts for Los Angeles, lick to the studio “Or course it's going to be hard, sighed Marilynn, “but we'll Just have to manage soi how. Jack will come on to see me every month or se, and per haps in time my show will work out further West." ‘But we've had a wonderful honeymoon,” laughed Jack W-o-n-dee-r-feued {echoed Marilynn And bride and ench other as bri only know how. ‘oom Jooked at s and grooms The bride is light, the groom dark. Marilynn wore a pearl gray moire silk tailore suit and a chic little gray felt hat turned up squarely in the front to exhibit her golden bobbed locks and cles blue eyes. Jack wore a blue serge suit and an Alice blue cravat “How do you feel about going back inf ‘Sally’ after the way Mr, Zlegfeld acted about your marryin Miss Miller was, asked, “Well, you know he finally sent a telegram congratulating 0 plied Miss Miller, “but really did upset me an. little gloom over my honeymoon, vat—it 1 cast a You see this thing has been going on for almost a year ever since I met Jack. Mr 1 seemed to think I ought n single but after ET omet J well, I didn't see things that wa “Anyway,” cont 1 Marilynn, now smiling agin, "I'm goin right back in the play and stick out my role until ¢ ally’ econ tract ends, Mr. Zir 1 and I will carry on business transac- tions through jew und. pre ably not have to mect ut all “And we don't ca that now,” Interrupted he “Because we've had a wooer dee-r-f-u-l h-o-n nom! they “And worked Trojan declared t morning Jack x off to the studio 1 F ture, * rrison's |i M and Doug were als | ng pletures, #0 T felt it wis ip tom to get busy. T filled Mare ings taking dancir from, ‘Theodore Kosloft , the tin ans 1p Then in the afte swim in Mary's 7 and in the evenir ui dance, a party o Or had “war * interrupt: Doesn't thar estic ) Marilyny that's what ' und then oughly laughed nh toget wether “What “nee did you ter ask We haven't | fessed Marilynn afternoon just tive hours later than they planned, The fault was the train's, not Marilynn's nor Jack's nor Dickte brides and grooms never care how late a train is and Hollywood to New Then too, movies York one expects to have Marilynn's and Jack's marriage Is 4o they had to smile and laugh and keep things going them before we were married, but not one since," Both bride and Hemoatie wood,’’ Dickie barked and Mari- lynn said: "Far be it from me to advise newlyweds, but it seem’ to me if you want a deliz happy honeymoon, it's 1 idea to work a few hours each day. You never sat tsar ne aqel other then, do you, Jack?* “You bet you don’t! pees = td Jack ae BANK TELLER IS HELD FOR THEFT OF $1,000 Pacific ank OMetal Sald to Mave Confesned. Charged with grand larceny on com+ plaint of an oMetat of the Pacife Bank, No. 470 Broadway, Thomas J, Leonard, twenty-nine, of No, 157 South, Tenth Street, Newark, N. J, a second. teller, was locked up in Police Headquarters lust night Leonard wan arrested by Detectives trojahan and Kemp of the Oak Street Station on complaint of Frederick Kerr, casistant to the Presldent of the bank, who ¢ onard with the theft of $100. Strojahan and Kemp safd about $1,000 wns Involved, ‘They assert Leo- hard has confessed > CONDUCTOR SIPS EROM CAR AND IN RUN OV angendorf, thirty years rison Street, Newark, conductor employed by. thi itral Railrond of Now Jersey, slipped ind fell from a box ear of a) moving freight train in EHzabeth, Nv, early to-day. His right leg was cut off and bis left wriat fractured. At the Elizabeth ral Hospital ttle hope ts held for Lidarrr & Myves Tonacce On \ KINGS GRAND JURY MAY ASK MAYOR ynn Some Recipe LETTER TO RUSTON To Comment on It When Through Investigating Graft in Market The Kings County. Grand Jury re- sumed its investigation t jay of the conditions surrounding the collection of fees in the pushcart street markets of that borough and the failure of any of the money to find its way into the hands of the Comptroller of the city until just recently The letter of rebuke to District At- torney Ruston sent by Mayor Hylan when the District Attorney suggested that, because of the facts presented in Brooklyn, the Mayor have the Com- missioner of Accounts impound the books of the Market Bureau in other boroughs, it was apparent, had not pleased the jurors who have been un- covering this alleged theft of hun- dreds of thousands of dollars by politi- cal henchmen District Attorney Ruston it was said to-day would not reply to the Mayor but would continue doing his duty in the premises. It 1s considered likely that the jurors may ask for the letter and make some comment upon it in their presentation when they have finished thelr investigation. Charles 8. McCourt an Inspector of Markets spent an hour before th Grand Jury being quiestioned by As- sistant District Attorneys Hemstreet and O'Neill, Patrick Malone, a Supervisor of the Fifth Avenue Mar- ket, also was a witness, and several men who have to do with the Browns- ville pusheart market have been sub- poenaed, ‘The men examined to-day refused to sign ¥ rs of immunity PUSHCART EXPERT i CALLS ON HIRSHFIELD Bat Comm toner Is Out ant He Teld to Call Again, M. J. Racusin, pusheart peddler ex pert of the New York Tribune, called at the office of Commissioner of Acec David Hirshfeld in response to an in vitation issued to him last Kk that hie ubmit to questioning on statements of illegal exactions dlers by supervisors under the » of the Department of Markets, Hirshfleld was not at his office. Mr, Racusin was, Invited to come back Sept. 7, as the Commissioner did not wish to go into the charges of the peddlers until District Attorney Ruston of Kings had finished his Grand Jury investigation of the matter. Mr, Rus- we his published ped- jority Mr ton has said that nothing Mr. Hirah- field could do would hamper him and has invited the Commissioner to so uhead without consideration of the Grand Jury proceeding, agen Ed Se TEN WOMEN DRUNK IN ST. GABRIEL’S PARK Wouldn Tell gWhere They Got —cet 5 Bays to 4 Months. Ten women arrested for intoxication Inst night in St. Gabriel Park were sent to the workhouse to-day by Max Istrate McGeehan in Yorkville, Mrs. Margaret Devlin, who assaulted Patrol- mun Nolte, recelyed four months. The sentences of the others ranged from five to thirty days each, None of them would tell where they obtained the “hooeh.”* f St. Gabriel ever blows his trum pet in that park named after him and women rise 3 up I'm afraid he will quit blowing for the rest of us,” said the Court, lecturing them on the sad spectacle they presented for the rising ‘ation, Over 7 billion Chesterfields are smoked every year— 20 million every day — America’ c fastest-growing cigarett: (hesterfield CIGARETTES $