The evening world. Newspaper, September 6, 1922, Page 19

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NEW RULES VIRTUALLY BAR $250,000 and to Provide 40,000 Seats at $2 Each With $1 as the Top Price. By Ed. Van Every A world’s heavywelght championship boxing coniest in the State New York between Jack Dempsey and Harry Wills may be regarded as dream that will never be realized. that will be imposed by the New kings into the same ring: Forty thousand admissions at not more than each; arrangements to comfortably seat not less than 100,000 persone; security of $250,000. These surprising stipulations were & outlined for The Evening World by who entertains ide mooted “ring battle of the century,” gilistic feast that makes the tn- ftatr pacity will bring a financtal of only $80,000. Wtih a low price $2 the balance of the admission wou! most likely range from $5 to $15, an average admission of $7.80 f 60,000 person: not over $ $550,000. A gross receipt of $550,000 i hardly likely to appeal to either the promoters or the world’s champion and his manager, Jack Kearns. Dempsey drew down nt ernational between Dempsey 1 Carpentier seem like potatoes,” “On the outcome of the Demp- sey-Wills bout, if held in New York,” declared Muldoon, “the fu- ture of the boxing game rests, not only ia this State, but in every State where boxing is coun- “very small 50,000, or a total laranter 2 his ent eciared vacated by champlo not a New York t t But the bigk of And St xer sroblem of this Dempary- must it sich a way as Ruxine ory of this ce PATTERSON CHAMPION, all Wi not tie & AMIssion. mst oe handle su PARIS, 8 Th izes € pt. 6 (Assoclated Press) nis Federation Patterson of Austraila Rrass vourt la a Davis Cup mat Willa T. ‘Tiden It wn The 1 sidur champion by this suinmer The Vedera raed | action with rezwrd : rece made Ul on ch the n tennis champ! s defeat In Forest Ul of Philad of the world pn $280,000 wt t de on also will ct het ns the hard irlue of his victory big to the nhs vnd cha hip ely in Amerie Davis Cup matehe every four years, It this matter be referred national Lawn Tennis F a EBBETS FIELD CLUB L to nh owil w play Ws of such to comfortably provid 1 less then 100,000 to bt gested Ul the ration th “And that there will be no sus- picion of a hold-up of the public nsibility of the st title was that of Danny Frush DEMPSEY-WILLS BOUT HERE Boxing Commission Would Require Promoters to Give Bond of 5 ef a Here ate the paramount conditions rk State Athletic Commission upon the Person, or persons, who would essay to bring the white and black pugilistic $2 : of $2 is idediy something else William Muldoon, Chairman of the|again, Hoxing Commission, in an exclusive} TeX Rickard, or any other promoter interview In which the writer endeay- Gk ates ie Ue Alto tent — ey Dempsey-Wills fracas in this city, ed to learn just what te retarding | wit) figure something like this: ‘40,000 (he consummation of the much] admissions at $2 each means that al- most half of the entire seating ca- return of 1d or or . which would figure up of tenanced. New York is the Em- $300,000 for his ena from the bout pire State, and it pugilism is vane Sirpens = year aoe lsat a duly at joyle’s irty cores, RC WAGs ile EEL Jersey City, on which occasion game is killed in the leading the gro ceipts were $1,626,580. State it will not live long else- The conditions of the New York where, Commission may drive the Demp- “dite ange sey-Wills fight to this same Sines the challenge filed by Harry Sank ahiehoe ‘ats 90,000, Wills for the right tc eting with] Troweyer, Mr. Muldoon ts not in- Jack Dempsey wa L by this] terested in the purse dreams of either commission and ed by the [Dempsey and Kearns or Tex Rickard Signing of an agr ment netween or any other promoter. pair some two months ago, a score his commission has but one pur- of reasons have been uavanced as to} pose,’ said Muldoon, and his light why everything in connection wit e eyes glinted as he drew himself the time and place of meeting be ind William Muldoon js. still tween Dempsey and Wills has not y much @ fine, upstanding figure eady been definitely settled of a man, in spite of his seventy- It has been hin that Dempsey | seven years, “Our purpose is not to {fs not a for a meeting with the]e'evate boxing, but tu keep it clean colored n; that political rea-] And it ts a hard business, still we fons balk the match, and many other|are getting results wild rumors have en ctreniated “Two days of each week T spend blaming the Boxing Commission. eight to ten hours a day in the offices "Only two conditions wait en lof this commission: during the two final arrangements for the match |iloys | try to do six days’ work, and bona fide bid from a respon- [the only recompense 1 take for my sible promoter and the assurance | trouble is tny car fare from my home of safeguards as will guarantee to this office. Many nights [ lay that the match can inno way re- [awake struggling with the many fleet on the good name of boxing [problems that I face as Chairman of or leave any ill-flavored after- |thie New York State Athlet n math. migsion—no one knows the haif of The ta that Demy 1 say 1am opposed to the in ter a per ce terests of the colored race in my amd that y here, notwithstand at 1 f ry W a chance to y in one bout tha feriit. ‘This commissio the white dence tof any sie ruin Mleng ‘ i y that New ¥ ghters are 1 favored here tor the titles we ns a who were lax in the defense of thet t honors, and yet one of the first chal- : c yenized for the feather will be within SAY FRENCH SOLONS recos hy ta, rt rly alte d vat Tnter= TO BE UNDER BAN si th for pre the ly this commission will insist that there will be a general admission er not leas than 40,000, and that The club license of the Wbbets-M: ‘ese 40,000 spectators will not ba Keever Corporation, operating ab axed over $2 each for the priv: | ing organization at ts Field loge of witnessing the contest.” lyn, was au J at yeat # condition the club privit~]qay's meeting of the State Athletic Ce eyed to hold the Dempsey-Wills natch | rjeston, ponding an Investigation of must provide a 00 seating ca-|etub's dof dlatributt hacity narrows down the scene of bat-| priced tekets, Chairman Willa tle in this city to just two sites, the | loon of the commission announe iaceanene cre the Republic] suspension, which, he asia, would take er ist heen licensed to con- | eftect following the Willie Jacksr« duct boxing matches, or the new | Marks bout scheduled for to-night y Kiyn plant. Only the fact that Yankee stadium, now in course of 1 completed all arrangenents uuction as the hor the New | (o-night's card, and a desire on th York American League Baseball fof the commission not to interfer Chib, which has not yet applied for] the bouts on the eve of the contests icense and. probably will not bef Yented the commission from making 8 license and probably will not be) rite suspension effective immediate eady hefore next spring, paws: her of these sites would be S4t-] copgy ery oPLYER DERAL 204 ASE ARG SMe TRO ee : WRACKPERS BLAMED, Beare mo seL ESE JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Sept, 6.—De- Hane onan ectistactary to, the inves. | Milment of the Southern Hallway Royal ‘ 5 an.| Palm Limited, northbound for Cinein gations of the Hoxing Commission 8 i$ vatehte dee [here last night, resulted from the actt would not ben urmountable deities of wreckers, local offtcluls of th mand, But the stipulation that 40,000] sectnern anno: tedaae: i spectators would be permitted an eve-Jcars left the nm but remained up ful of the big bout for the small sum’ right, No one was injured, Two Foreign Invader: Turned RUMSON, N. Sept. THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, R SPORT NEWS 5.—Thunderous polo marked the second day's matches for the open champtonship of America at Two Meadow Brook four defeated the bi cott team by 9 goals to 4, representatives the of goals to 4, As a ro! invaders single foreign team rem: play, and the Argentinians, best of the Inv strc day ader: ne team here at were back by American combinations in furt- ous and spectacular matches. The crack Rumson Country Club yesterday foretgn turned while the Orange County quartet vanquished the All-Ireland by 7 It of these matches only f# is in the title 4 o'clock will be called upon to face a im for Amepica’s highest pole onors when they Hne up against the helburne to- ‘The game should be # corkor, for each team has a reputation to sustain ‘The meeting between the Mendow Brook and the Eastcott combinations was one long to be remembered. It brought forth the most furious, and In- cldentally the roughest polo that has tournament been seen at Rumson. The great and burn gave a spectacular performance of daring riding and brillant stroking, No one at Rumson ever hit one ball as hard as Milburn hit twenty yesterday ‘And it was Milburn's horsemanship and his poun: into submission. Milburn's speed was needed, for the usually Drilllant Hitchcock was abit off stroke. anything and handled none too well, did not. On the other hand the British majors team. Lockett and on Hurndall, Hopping «é the Eastcott played only, in the present It was a battle for blood. ereux De came through. Mil- ing that forced the Englishmen Bacon had vew chances to do those chances while sonietimes Von Stade came through and sometimes Milburn atwa scorching polo while e an astounding exhibi- tion, particularly remarkable because of the send fact by that one he was struck on of Milburn’s ‘Khanders in the very opening period the dynamic and laid low for eight and a half min- utes, Sanford, unfortunately, Worse than useless to his team, Back In Polo was ONES GARDNER MATCH ALL EVEN AT FRSTEGHTEE Sweetser Leads Hunter 5 Tn the fourth period Miburn started! Up; Guilford 6 Up on Lewis ai attack that swept even the reliable 5 het and ever present Lockett aside. in the Title Play. koals wore scored in three furious ee periods. 4 It of Milburn's un- believable. ple ce ehe great Amerienn STANDING AT 18 HOLES. back drove anything anywhere near him, even with a broken mallet. Robert T. Jones jr. Atlanta, and In the face of Milburn’s severe strok-] R. A. Gardner, Chicago, all evert. ing, Lockett and Hopping, and even} Jess Sweetser, New York, 6 up on dall had to forsake the Lika Willie T. Hunter. y that had stood them tn ate! J Gatiter and ci trate on defensive | po 0°" en rd, Boston, €§ up on ots to the sid boards. ‘They were Rinald Lewis, Greenwich . Whipped then and the only question still] H.R. Johnston, St, Paul, and W. F to be settled was the size of the score.| McPhail, Boston, all even The line-un follows J. A. Godehanx, New Orleans, one MEADOW BROOK, | * Pap Satay up on C. V. Rotan, Houston. pa GLIA TRI Stephen Anda) Charles FE. Evans jr, Chicago, eight bevG, Bacon No. 3.0. W. Hopping [up on W. C. Fownes Jr. Pittsburgh, Sivereux. Mithun. Bie ajor Locke secre, WC nach, Posto p Goala: Meadow Brook—Hiicheock, & Mil-| George W. Aulbach, Boston, 1 up ‘otal, ®. burn, 2; Vonsiade, 3; Bacon Murndall, 4 Ja; Eaatcott—Lockett, on Cyril Rudolph H, Tolley, British, Knepper, Stoux City, 1 fi GoALa BY PRRIODE: up on Francis Oujmet, Boston, Meadow Brook.....0 10 2 2 8 0 1—® eer erate Cenk HL 1 Holmes, Ureie| COUNTRY CLUB, BROOKLINE, Harry Haat, Timekeepor and Scorer—Will- |Mass., Sept. &.—Four former hold- The all-Ireland combination gave an|ers of the- national amateur golf ing game. Orange County Riders eigners could pace of their American opponents and lost, 7 goala to 4, after a hard-fought struggle. The Ine-up follows: RELAND. » Harriman ellent account of Itself in the morn- In fact, the team work and stroking was superior to that of the But the for- not stand the sustained Goulding title and the present champion were among the sixteen contestants who remained in the running to-day for the 1922 championship. Two of this select company, W. C. Fownes of Pittsburgh, who eliminated F, W. Dyer of Upper Montelair by a com- fortable margin yesterday, and | Charles Evans of Chicago, who was hard pressed to defeat John G. An- Rumsey. IA. Trench on of Now ¥ Mi Revenan y. L@l ve" Douglas derson of New York in the first round Morgan Belmont B Capt tas A. an were paired for the second round, Orange County — Tarriman, 5; venthor ‘ y dio Blevsbaone 4: Total : Ideal wenth rr conditions prevailed All-lreland—Douglas, Gul, 1;]to-day, The last of the casual Goulding, 1. Total, 4. water which lay on several fatr- coi QAhs OY, PPRIODS, 9 97] Wave yesterday as a result of Mon- ra 1 1 0—4|day's rain had been absorbed and Umpires the greens were like velvet. n It. Rocap. Fistic New BY JOHN $ ru.cceand Gossip The boxing card scheduled for last Mond) y might at the New York Velo- drome has been postponed until next Monday night. The card consisted of two tiwelve-round bouts between Kid ger, Sammy Nable and Danny Lee; two six-round Sullivan and Sammy + bouts uy ou tween Terris Matehn amilton, Louis Flourn between Murray Phil Rosenber Layton , Jim Montgome and Gugilelinint anno stage th Jarden Sept ani ody and nd four-rounder id Sid aterday how at ‘on which fo the whiners of next. Monday will be the pri Tt was other clubs trking up the balance of the dates and the two days of cycling Mie Wbbeta-Me Exhibition Com, pany anr @ to-night that the prices for the Sid Marka-Willle Jackson — bout would range fr to three dollara. ty stead of one to five, Holders of Box nents who pald five dollars will have two dol Wars refunded. Manton had practicnlly matched 1 8p dobn Viova meets Billie AL eae Vaut 1 ea Webel har t in Rocurtii, matehes soon. Eds miata Cite is mapping. 6 whieh. proba with Jack Britton f four rou 7 Knocks Ou to-night Murphy Olympia AL A of a ten B for has he Btaie are Johnny a bla LONG, LONG DRIFT IN elson. Ttme- The largest gallery of the forenoon trailed Robby Jones and Robert Gard- ner. Gardner, first away, drove into rough, but Jones was in the middie of the fairway, Gardner's second was just short of the green and he chip- ped to within ten feet of the hole, but was short on his putt. Jones’ third was close to the pin and he holed out In four. Jones one up, JOINT YACHT CRUISE} Gaviner outdrove Jones on the 805- — yard second hole. The Chicagoan lu 11 was a long drift from Manhasset] within ten feet of the cup with his Bay to Indian Harbor yesterday, for the| second but Jones electrified the gal- first day's run of the Joint yacht crutse. | ery with a thirty-foot putt for uw It had been planned that the start| birdie three. Gardner Just missed o should be made at 11 o'clock, and that} Chance to liaive. Jones, two up. Mehta. choutl -be. thacd after 4 | 8 the 438 yard third Gardner's BeY y ® a hae drive was in rough. He played his o'clock in the afternoon, but both of| second through the trees. Jones's these rules had to be suspended. second also lay in the rough beyond The start was delayed an hour be-[the green. Gardner's Iron shot was cause of lack of wind, and because of {lost and it was found after long the late start and light airs all day the| Search in the marsh to right of the other rule was waived for the day. Srseh. Ho: chipesd gysrthevengen Bn hatioet gathered Off tHe Mactiassel (oie tore tank teen cet: Erem 3 the cup on his fourth. Jones played Bay Yacht Club on Monday evening.|hack to the hole carefully and won Sixty-eight yachts were entered, but]5 to 6, Jones three up. the sovking all hands and the sails got| On the 00-yard fourth both were cn Labor Day upset things so that only}on the green easily and then halved twenty-one yachts raced with fours H. FL. Funke managed the races Tanhty OutdrOVe noun ne the : ‘ 12-yard fifth, Thetr thirds lay with- from Capt. I. M. Wainwright's power see eewiaboe Tie tite rare oes | in Ave feet of the hole, Jones missed ved ac LBS, and it took some of tre {an easy putt, but Gardner sank his to fleet more than four hours to sail eleven |Win the hole. Jones two up. miles. ‘The sixth was halved in par fours rhe Georgla, sailed by On the 200-yard seventh Jones's and ow irive was on the edge of green and ! won in was down in three. Gardpor's by 2 pH Prntany chi) was short and he overplayed the In the handicap eloss C. A hole! Agnes Chvee Up land's Azor won easily from Young] Cardner found the vough and Jones also short on the 38-yard y atars were able to hold close}righth, but Jones chipped to three to the larger yacht because of the light| fect of the hole, while his opponent's weather, aad Dawning won by 1 sec-}ccond was ten feet from. the pin TRIO Ne |} The hole was halved a par fours VO Ve neeee ULURR iney, Amnaits rdner won the nmh, when Jones Hoe eed ee ee ited gas short with his second putt Hdiitee. eeeanoonnatsiesh W | Bobby's lead was two up at the turn Buck's Victory sloop Muadclon.. The] Gardner took three putts on the Liris, one of the sinall Southampton| 190 yard sixteenth hole and lost his class, was third Land the hole 4 to 3 —— Gardner dropped his iven shot KING WATTS SCORES within four feet of the pin on th 50 yard seventeenth and aank for UNEXPECTED VICTORY |) birdie three and a one up lead , HARTFORD, Conn 6 a} On the 400 vara cighteenth Aleta started i opening day's Grant | Gardner reached (he odge of the Cireult. rwees at Charter Ouk Park{areen in two but 8 Was at trifle a cAnee WiGMCRIO OS, a Lies eceaia He played up well, howeve furnished plenty of excitement, and an fen sank for a four, Gur mixed aduditional thrill was contributed py «| t four foot chance to halve and lost AER HEN Se fous lead, the pair finishing all Re ee eee a cal can uve at the end of the forenoon when he drove King Watts to viet teon hole play over THM Sharen and the great Volo.! On the 385-yard tenth Gardner was favored in the 2.08 trot. Pluto Watt! oiiiged to moshie out of the rows fa full brother to King W lipoth payed: to avithi na Cow feet of an expected vietory in the Fatih Ms With thelr thirds and halved trot in a diel with jin pa rfour Fred Ednaan hie} Gardner's second wa son alt sully when I King the green on the clevent for the svor He pitehed to within four feet of the 10 trot fla a birdie four, Jones just —2- ve a half a ten-fout ST. PAUL TEAM HAS A, #. | putt. Jones one up PENNANT ALMOST WON]. ‘isniner evened the maton wit 9 two on the Lit-yard ST. PAUL. Sept. 6 Ba Jropped hia drive within American Aasoctution pennant {Ne BIA nind sani cbs: putt ¢ Bt, wal dy 14! pa of Minneapolis dts . was in 4 ahead ar 1 ipetk and Mt teenth tee. 1 1 wane prebab t of the green in tires At A pete ; atom iat Baltimore, International ! SEO S RED ERG AMC aante 0 aSiOn , 4, halving the holt INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. Ha iin pel Wo. re Woot. 1 C SeHIA. clan Balto 99 47 678) Toro'to 69 78 465 ’ Roch’er 91 57 y15 Rea 3 43 ; ‘ Buffalo 88 .2 583, Syra’e 58 92 .25 J.City, 7770 Se4\New'k. 45 100 410 GAMES YESTERDAY Newark, 4; Jersey City, 0 (first) Newark, 10; Jersey City, 6 (second Reading, 6; Baltimore, 0 (first). Reading, 8; Baltimore, 5 (7 in., 2 Rochester, 14; Syracuse, 3 (first) Rochester, 11; Syracuse, 6 (7 in. <d Buffalo, 7; Toronto, 2 GAMES TO Jersey City at Newark DAY. Baltimore at Reading Syracuse at Rochester MACMILLAN ARRIVES AT NOVA SCOTIA PORT Haploration Party Returns br Yenr in Aretio Regions. ) SYDNEY, N.S, Sept. 6—"The xillary exploration schooner Rew. carrying Donald B. MaeM 1 party, arrived in hor ng from Baffin 1 expedition set out 1 Boston jrowtons ince that time 1922. bid ‘Takes the Knock Out of Autos, (ives Them Greater Mileage Wonder Worker New Compound for Gas Predicted a for Motors. weTs Experiments that iH, Sept. 6 Will increase the eMfctency of gus ast nigine operation and give the automobile tw any miles per gallon of gasoline as are now possible, were d here by Thomas Midgely jr and ‘T, A. Boyd, of the General Motors meseareh Corporation of Dayton, Ohio, After six years of experimenting até “anti- the Davton laboratories an The effictency of the automobile knock"? compound has been devel-[has been limited heretofore by the oped which will permit changes In} fact that gas engines, when operated the denign of pas engines that will re-[4t extremely high compressions, de- sult in material increase in the efli- velop gaseous detonation, which the cleney of these machines. motorist knows as a "knock,”’ ac everal chemical compounds } cording to Mr. Midgely. This ‘knock’ been devel which will accomplish: in engines of present design is due theso results, the most satisfactory |!argely to carbon deposits inside the being “diethyl senide” and “tetrac- | cvlinders and to lime deposits in the thyl lead." ‘These have not yet been] Water Jacket surounding the cylin- placed on the market, Mr. Midgtey | (ers said, as the full benefit cannot be de-] A high compression gas engine In- rived from them until gas engines| stalled at the convention demon- lave been redesigned to operate at| strated the possibilities of the new higher compression, Three Sick Cops Drank Hooch; Here Are Their Alibis at Trial Scenarios of Their Downfall as Laid Before Commi sioner Leach. liquor taken as a remedy for illness played havoc with three police- men brought before Deputy Police Commissioner John A. compound. Leach to-day on charges of Intoxication, preferred by thelr superior officer after the men had been declared unfit for duty by police surgeons. Decision was reserved in the case ® of each of the trio, consisting of Gerald Morrissey of the 135th Street Poltce Station, Bernard Murphy of West. 68th Street and John Donnelly of Morrisania, ‘The policemen sketched a scenario of thelr downfall for Commissioner weak from work on late tour, Aug. 21, and, after saying, “Man, you look sick,” preseribed dose from hip pocket bottle, Took one draught and remembered nothing more until Lieut Morris of the West 100th Street Station dragged him from the back 1oom of a former saloon at No, 840 Leach's information, which, briefly] Amsterdam Avenue, stated, was as follows: DONNELLY—Called into a base- MORRISSEY—Felt sick Aug. mentat No, 826 East 1h0th Street Aug. and consulted family physician, who] 27 by man whose wife had died sud- prescribed whiskey and pareworic, /denly and told by superior officers to which he took faithfully until Sergt.Jramain until medical examiner ar- John P. Horan found him stag-|rived; he became sick In the stuffy kering at Seventh Avenue and 137th atmosphere of the place, Dead wom- Street on the night of Aug. 17 andJan's husband gave him drink of pre- took him in tow. MURPHY--Picked up by unknown automobilist, who found him pale and Volsteud stuff, and after one swig he knew nothin gmore until Sergt. Gor- ham took him In charge Milwaukeo and Springfeld, Il} 4 per HMENT cent. In Indianapolis, Peorla, St. Louis and St. Paul; 3 per cent. in Chicago, Kansas City, Manchester, Omaha and Philadelphia; 2 per cent. in Baltimore, Bridgeport, Buffalo, Detroit, New Ha- ven, New York, Providence, Rochester and Washington; 1 per cent. in Dath Los Angeles, Portland, Me., and Rich- mond, and less than five-tenths of 1 per cent. In Little Tock. HORE WAKERSIN (Continued from First Page.) would use the power of the Govern ment to maintain the open shop. “This injunction has not only vio lated freedom of speech, assemblage and the. press, but lias made the De- partment of Justice and the Mederal Courts easories to the erlme of union smashing which of railroad executives perpetrate at the expense small group are seeking to of the Na- tion, Such conduct cannot and must not go unrebuked by an outraged people.” “General Strike Committee, Metro- politan District “JOHN POWD, Chairman." William Kehoe, s¢ iry of the Central Trades and Laber Council, tel graphed to Samuel Gompers, Presi dent of the A, Fo of I, at Atlan City to-day a pre 10. come to New York to address th ger fl [ite I meeting of th itral Council at Reethoven Hal! » 810 Rast higth . toemorrow fils Mr. Kehoe slso wired to Rert M. Jewell, head of the striking shopmen, to attend and widress the meeting whieh is scheduled to be the largest held in thi. city In many year The Central Counetl is made up of 400 unions with about 809,000 mem hers, The re in addition thousand f unionists in the A. F LL. who are not in the Centr! Council, 133 ynto 1 Cirveater New York not being rep esented in the Connell The meeting to-morrow might wit! A take definite action on the resolution ndopted by the Bx Committee of the Central Council last night, That Kition among ot thir ipon every trade unionist tn this city to donate one day's pay to the cause the atrikin her Mr. Kehe explained to-d tt ernge ph of a union mm A ay. At thin ra i ihe merbe ! perhaps other ntitled tatty It isan intensely human document that disregards ve vaccutivelf] cconomies, finance and reparations and deals directly Q Someta with the minds and hearts of war-torn peoples. N MISSING Lost want N } N Lak t ORDER YOUR COPIES OF THE WORLD IN ADVANCE FROM § Lape Ave Now YOUR NEWSDEALER p a A 0 “Elmor Helk Some PTT A OPEC TO ALL A ALT LE You can buy four newor used BUICK outright or turn your present car in \ you deal with the GLIDDEN MOTOR & SUPPLY CO. Authorized Buick Exchange Dealers 239 West 58th Street, New York at Broadway HAS WRITTEN NEW SERIES ON LIFE AS IT IS LIVED IN EUROPE IN THE AFTERMATH OF WAR. Commencing Sunday, September 10 Ly ie NeAGanh 40k ffors This latest work of the brilliant is RRC Pe : ' : Mayfair to Moscow" and Seat mttie the WILL APPEAR DAILY IN PROFTER RATE FOR COAL IL NAY BE CHECKED ,000,000 Tons Mined Be- fore Cold Weather, a Coal Field Promise. 15 (Spectal to The Evening World.) =~ POTTSVILLE, Pa, Sept. 6.— Threatened action of the Pennsylva nin Coal Commission to give Pennsyl- vania consumers first choice of an- thracite coal should not result in the people of New York and New Jersey allowing coal profiteers to extort big prices for fuel, coal experts here say. ‘The declaration of Chairman W. B, Dainey, of the Pennsylvania Coal Commission, that the anthracite short- age is more imaginary than real, corroborated by the circumstances at the mines here. Operators say they have supplied all demands for anthracite steam sizes up to this time and there will be a tre- mendous production of the domestic sizes as soon as the mines open, as the miners had large amounts loosened, ready to load, when the suspension took place last April. At least 15,000,000 tons of coal will be produced before real cold weather seta in and If railroad of- ficials carry out thetr plans, as an- nounced to-night, all this coal will be promptly distributed to consumers, The only shortage will probably be to Northwest and Canada consumers, although the people themselves, by, ordering more than they need, may, produce a panicky market, and coal may be bid up to a high price, re« gardless of regulations, The long line of idle railroad loco« motives, which have stood here tn white lead for nearly half a year, were to-day belng placed in order for immediate use. The Philadelphia and Reading Railway gave orders for the placing of its locomotives into shape for use and boiler inspections and hydrostatic tests, es required under the law, are being made. As all the shop men of this come pany refused to join the strike hera, the offictals say they will have all the rolling stock in good shape for trans- portation of an immense amount of coal, The type of locomotives ordered into service are those of the 1700 class, which haul the terminal coal trips. Yard engines and colliery lo« comotives are also included in the ore der. Car inspectors of the Pennsyl« vania Ratlroad have been concene trated In this region, placing the roll~ ing stock into condition for coal haul« ing and ordering all defective cars Into the shops for immediate repairs. The collieries cannot produce coal ta such an extent as to congest rtilroad officials say, after present plans are carried jnto effect, part payment when | fil fii ml CL LLL CLARE SHERIDAN author of “From My American Diary VELLA LAL LALLA LMM VALLE HLIALEDYY

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