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J If .rt- - ii.it of will .r on j II Mm iui'U hl\n i I I 1 ITST THE THE STRANGE EVENING MONO ROMANCE F A mm m. JAPANESE GIRL WMIM Bix JOHN PARIS - AXD A BRITISH TODAK STARTLING RtVELATIONS IN A FASCINATING NOVEL Q NOBLEMAN. Viather TRAIN AND COOLER. Weather RAIN AND COOLER. WALL STOEET ED TON BY RAIL UNION c If INJUNCTION ' irnonu , ,. II niLiuiuun , VOL. LXHI. NO. 22,180 MRS. SFIGHT BEGUN ON nrrnnr mnnr utrunL JUUbL Attorney for Strikers Argues for Dismissal of Writ on Ground It Was Granted in Defiance of Constitution. Government in Us Demand for Permanent Restraint Has Two Carloads of Evi- dence to Prove .Violence CHICAGO, Sopt. 11. Arguments on tho Government's motion to make permanent the temporary injunction against the rail strikers opened at 10:30 o'clock this morning before Federal Judge James H. Wllkerson. Blackburn Esterllne, Assistant lo the Solicitor General, opened for the Government with the formal reading Ipf tho list of defendants on whom personal service had been obtained. Donald R. Hlchbcrg, attorney for M. Jewell, President, and John f Scott, Secrelary-Tieasur- er of the trailway employees department. KAtnerlcan Federation of called attention to tho motion he Iflled Saturday asking dismissal of the injunction so far as it relates to (his clients, ami said it should take precedence over the Government's llmotion. .ryair. Esterline objected after Mr. uciiucrg iiuu biaicu . ma ijlu moved the court proceed to consider the Government's petition. Judge Wllkerson ruled there wa3 a distinction between a motion to dis-fml- ss tho bill and a motion to set aside tho temporary restraining order and said he would hear the striker's attorney on tho tormer question. Xfyv\1 tltlllJi;ib ill ilia u)ji;if Ug aiaiemeiit 'imii. iuu uuia uivuiveu Id the calling and conducting of tho etrike were entirely lawful. The re- - fatrainlng older, ho said, was one tho court had no powor to Issue, because, ho maintained, it is unconstitutional rand violates tho Clayton Act. If tho fblll Is stripped of its conspiracy allc- - igations, he continued, all that Is left JijJ a bill to enjoin criminal actn by lBknown persons who may or may t bo members of tho strikers' Tho bill, Mr. nichberg said, is based OH an assertion that tho defondants ro under a legal duty to obey tho decisions of the United States RaJl- - rAnrt Ho.irH. Therft Ir nnthini. An the Transportation Act creating the I.abor Board providing uny hnethod for enforcement of its do r (Continued on Second Puge. ) It's Good Advertising That Leads and Grows IWorld AdtertUluc, Week Kndlnr SrpUmbrr V compared with corresponding week Urlatt jear. i ,, W.400 More Agate Lines. More Help Male Ads. , ,1.263 More To Let Ads. ; , 1.230 More Help Female - ,'378 More Heal Kstatc,Ads. More Business Opportunities More Boarders Wanted More Automobile Misc. More Summer Uesort WORLD ADS. .262 LAST WEEK. 11,258 MORE Than Neit Highest Newspaper DAILY. u Ciicttlntion Books Open o -- AW.\ J Coptrlihl Ihtw 1'ublWilnc HARDING EE II mil DAUGHERTY HARD COAL PEACE SIGNED WORKERS GO GAYLY Td WilNES of Troop to Pits Singing, Ac- companied by Wives, Be- fore Actual Signing. ' SCRANTON. Pa.. Sept. 11. The contract that sent 153,000 mine work- ers back to wcrk at their old wages after being idle moro than five months, was formally signed y by representatives of the miners and the operators. v WILKES-DARR- Pa., Sept. 11. In striking contrast to the idleness of the last five months, the anthracite coal fields to-d- wero scenes of fever ish activity, when most of the 135,000 mine workers who responded to the suspension oruer or tnelr union on April 1 returned to work. Many of them did not wait for the formal sign- ing of the agreement which was rati- fied Saturday by their con- vention, but were waiting at the mouth df the mines when the whistles blew at C A. M. Singing, laughing and shouting, the miners returned to the pits Throughout the hard coal district, be- fore daybreak, the beat of hobnail shoes was heard on the roads At Baltimore Collie ry, No. 5the wives of the men accompanied their husbands to tho pit. Hero tho occa sion was celebrated by the blowing of sirens as the miners, with picks on their shoulders and their lights flick- ering from their caps, arrived. Shouts of joy went up at this mino as tho first cageload of men way lowered. The men struggled to bo nmong tho first load to go down. Seme of them did not oven wait to be lowered as usual, but sprang Into empty cars as they were speeding down tho slope. Little or no coal will bo mined for two or three days, most of the col licrles planning to use their entire forco in placing new timbers and clearing tho mines of water and gas. By the end of tho week, however, it is expected that production will bo well under way and that several hun- dred thousand tons will be on the way to market, lending operators said the normal output of 2,000,000 tons n Week probably would not be reached before the last of this month. IHO FliAOKS lli:olK \WITH ixritKA.si:i coal, supply. OUNUSTOWN, O., Sept. 11 A marked improvement In coal supply, permitting the resumption of more blast furnnccs and other units, wns announced y 'by independent aleel operators her. CAR LOAUI.1GN COTIM'll TO OIMlASi:. WASHINGTON, Sept. n. -- Cars loaded with coal totalled 28.487 curs last Friday, uccordlng to reports to railway executives, an increase of 249 cars over tho preceding day. NATIONAL Yrk World) b frrM NEW Cetnpnnj, igtt. Loot and Burn Shops and Homes in Pera, Killing SeVeral Policemen. 'HREE TOWNS BURNED. Brusa, Sokia and Avelonica Destroyed by Retiring Greek Army. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 11. Christians were attacked by n horde Turks who invaded Pera, tlx: Eu- ropean quarter of Constantinople, to- day, pillaging and burning shops and dwellings. Several police, overpowered by tho onrush of Mohammedans, were killed trying vainly to defend the Christians. French and British shops were loot- ed nnd destroyed. \Down with Greece mt.y all things Christian bo wiped out,\ was yelled by throngs hero who were very apprehensive lest excesses be drunk with the Moslem victory. Chris- tians were very npprehcnslve lest ex- cesses be committed against them by the Turks, and expressed greater fears for the safety of the 200,000 Christian refugees who are known to be In Smyrna. HOME, Kept. 11. A despatch to tho Glornale D'ltalla from Smyrna y declares Brusa was set on fire by the Greeks and the ancient Turkish capi- tal destroyed by the flames. (The report regarding tho destruction has not been confirmed from, other sources, but a Constantinople message Saturlay, in announcing that Brusa had been occupied by the Turkish Na- tionalists, said tho town was in flames.) The newspaper's despatch reads : \Tho Greeks during their retreat savagely devastcd the counttry. Brusa Soghia (Sokiu, southwest of Alain?) ajul Scalanovn (on the coast south of Smyrna), wero set on fire. The first two were completely destroyed, tho last only partially, being saved by In- tervention of sailors from Italian tor- pedo boats, who rescued numerous Mussulman notabilities who had been locked up by the Greeks in burning houses. \Mustapha Kemal Pasha has issued an edict under which whoever takes tho llfo or the property of a Chrlstlun will be immediately shot.\ ADANA. Asia Minor, Sept, 11. Triumphant entry into Smyrna of Mustapha Kemal, whoso Turkish armies have taken possession of tho city from tho routed Greeks, was planned for uccordlng to word received here. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. U d Press). Groups of celo-brato- ra puruded tho city throughout the night, and tho French and Italian Legations were serenaded. During the demonstrations u Greek was stabbed to death In front of the Amer- ican Y. M. C A. Sailors' Club and a British ' despatch bearer was held up and his revolver taken. Preparations for a more elaborate celebration began early ATHENS, Sept. 11 (Associated Press). Tho first troops have reached Piraeus from the former Greek front In Asia Minor In a mutinous mood They paraded tho streets in a dem- onstration against King Constantino, many of them Bhouting Insults. SMYISNA. Sept. 11 (Associated (Continued on Second Page.) LEAGU - 6 - 7 FIHST GAME AT POLO OBOUNDS Boston 000000042 Giants , 202 0 02100 Batteries Marquard and O'Neill; Barnes and Snyder. BOX SCORE ON PAGE 16. YORK, MONDAY, PE ARtNECKLACE WOR I W $20,000 LOST ON L ORRANE Mrs. Davidson Also Com plains of Insult From Negro of Crew. GUARDED ON VOYAGE. Patrolled the Deck Qutside Her Stateroom, She Declares. The loss of a pearl necklace, valued at from $10,000 to $20,000, and grossly Indecent behavior by a Negro member of the crew who, she de clared, had thrust his head and arms through tho porthole of her stateroom and said things for which my hus band would have killed him,\ woru reported by Mrs. N. A. Davidson, ono af tho passengors of La Lorraine, which came to this port y from Havre and Plymouth. Following the theft, she said, the quarters of the crew and Its person- nel wero thoroughly searched without discovery of the missing necklace. Tho cabin passengers offertxl to have themselves and their staterooms searched. When the alleged insult to Mrs. Davidson was perpetrated she said that a guard was detailed throughout tho voyage to patrol the deck outside her stateroom. Another passenger, a woman with two daugh- ters, who declined to givo her name, corroborated Mrs. Davidson's state ments, saying that there had been some unpleasant experience with members of the crew. Mrs. Davidson, whoso homo was originally in Indianapolis, but who has lived nearly two-ye- ars In Paris, tho wife of an Englishman In British Government service, reported both her loss and the treatment of her to Purser Vlllar of the Lorraine. Sho said that when sho went to bed last Monday night sho placed the necklace with a valuable brooch and some rings in a reticule, which she left on her bureau. Sho did not lock the dour of her stateroom and when she arose the following morning tho necklace was gone, but none of tho other Jewelry (Continued on Tenth Page.) TRIES TO IMPEACH DAUGHERTY; FAILS Minnesota Member Causes Uproar in House WASHINGTON, Kept. 11 Im- peachment of Attorney General Daugherty wus attempted In the House y by Representative Kel lcr, Minnesota, Independent Kepubli can, who, rising to u question of the highest privilege, declared: \I impeach Harry M. DaugherU.\ There was so much confusion the rest of his opening sentence was not heard, and he was forced to .stop on a point of order that there was no quorum. WANTS NEW BOARD FOR RAIL LABOR Proposes \Disinterested Tri- bunal to Settle Disputes WASHINGTON, Sept. 11. Abolition of the Itailioad l.al)r Board and tho settling up in lis place of \a disinterested tribunal\ for tlio settlement of railroad dis- putes proposed In a bill Introduced y by Itepresentuyvo Hovh, of Kansas, Republican m'inlor of the committee which framed then Transportation Act crcatlug tho ' board, ' SEPTEMBER 11, Swims Blazing River With Wife And Two ChJdren as Explosion Traps 153 in Passenger Ship Princeton Professor Battled Dying Men to Bring Fam- ily to Safety. FIGHT IN FIERY WATER. Prof. Kemmerer, Back in , New York, Describes Va- cation Experience. ' Survival of an explosion of thou- sands of gallons of gasoline which toro a vessel to pieces In nn Argen- tine river, scattering blazing oil upon tho water for yards about her; a fight with passengers and crew to gain the deck and then a daring plunge over- board and a swim under water until the flro zone could be escaped, was the experience of Prof. Edward Kem-mei- cr of Princeton University, his wife and their two children, Ruth, a little girl of twelve, und Donald, their flftcen-ycnr-ol- d son. Had it not been that all four wero expert swimmers, P.of. Kommerer said y, all might h.ivo boon lost. As it was, he added, he believed thay were the only ones of the thirty-eig- ht tlrst cabin passengers who got out of tlu experience alive. The Kcmmerers arrived here y on the Grace Liner Santa Teresa, which brought them up from Val- paraiso. They had had time to from their perilous adven- ture, but all showed in some way the effects of it. Mrs. Kemmcrer's neck and shoulders were scarred frmn the blazing gasoline through which she had to swim. Tho children were pal- pably nervous during tholr father's recital of the Incident. Prof. Kemmerer, who has a chair In economics and finance at Prince- ton, was on a vacation trip to South America with his family. One part of their travelling was undcrtuken on small Argentinian steamer, the Vlllafranca, nn old vessel, built In 1S76. She was carrying 5,000 gal lons of gasoline. \We wero going along (ho Alia Parana Rlvor in tho Argentine at 2 o'clock on tho morning of July 4,\ Prof. Kemmerer said y, \when we were flung from our berths by a terrific explosion. We dashed out on deck and saw llames rising fifty feet in the iilr out of a great hole which had been torn In the vessel. The flumes wero so bright it was possible to hcc the shore, which was less than 200 feet away. Wo were passing the little German settlement of Hohenau. \The vessel suddenly lurched and (Continued on Tenth Page.) 527 WERE SAVED FROM HAMMONIA Three Steamers Heard From With Rescued Passengers. LONDON, Sept- - 11 (Associated Press). Despatches received heie y sTiow that 527 persons fruni the German steamer Harroma, whlrh foundered 80 miles off Vlgn Saturda) while on a voyuge to Cuba and Mex-i- c , have arrived ashore or are on board rescuing sleameis. (A Vigo despatch Sunday announced that the Kp.inlHh naval uutl.orltleH rcpoitcd th.it all the passengers on board the li.imiiiotilu had been saved.) Despatches to the Union Castle Line y stated the steumer Kln-(.ini- is CuHtlo hud on board 255 pas- sim,'' is fror.i the Ilammnnla 150 in n, tl!l women und 36 children and 122 of the crew. A Gibraltar message annnuncid that the Prince Line steamer Soldier Prime had sent a wireless that she bringing In sixty-on- e of the and crew of the Hummonla, while a Vigo despatch s.ild the steamer Euclid had arrived theio with elglity-nin- o survivors of the foun- dered liner. The of the disaster to the llaiiuniinia bus not yet been made knimn. tin; oiu.i travki, in itr.ii. An id', i'ulllxfr (World) Hnlldliif, Mm 1'irK Ho\'. N. Y. city. likmn 41MH1 Check room for bavv.ti;i) mid purceta biu day Biid nlzht. Muney ordra and trclr' thtcki fur tale Advt. to \Circulation Books Open Rntrrrri m 1922. Tout Office, SCHOOLS REOPEN WITH CONG E N BARELY V Heavy Registration Indicates 1,000,000 Pupils Only 16,000 New Seals. With tho congestion of recent cars not noticeably relieved by tho addition of five new schools buildings, the public schools of tho city y with an estimated enrollment of 1,000,000 pupils, many of them on part tlmo and many without seats. Tho mmblned seating capacity of the new school buildings is but 4,018 pupils, although when schools last closed there were 110,000 children on part time. Additions to old school buildings and the erection of por-tabl- o school buildings however bring the new seating to appioxlniatcly 16,000. J Board of Education officials are optimistic that the shortage will bo lessened. According to Dr. John A Ferguson, Chairman of the Cnmrnltteo on Buildings and Sites, forty-fiv- e buildings now in tho coutsp of con- struction, and some In various stage. of completion eventually wilt make available 40,000 additional seats. Registration returns will not bo made public until Friday, but unoffi- cial reports indicate they nro unex- pectedly heavy, especially In some out lying districts wheie many small homes have been built during the It spring and summer. This brought ho piedlctlon that there will bo congestion In unexpected Quarters ns well as In the better known crowded j.ectlons. There is reason to believe that there will bo a big Increase In tho number of children to who will have to be put Into buildings already occupied by two or three times as many us they are Intended to accommodate. All high schools. It Is believed, will have to woik on double or triple sessions. Great congestion is expected at Boys' High School mid Commercial High School, both In Hrooklyn. Man- ual Training High School will send 2,200 pupllH to Its new quarters. Do Will Clinton High School Is ex- pected to have n rrglMcr of 8.000 stu dents. This is probably thu most con gested high school in the city. Supt. Ettlngcr has directed Princl. pals to report on Wednesday to tho Bureau of Rcforencc. Reseuiuh und Statistics tho total registration, tho total attendance und tho total number of children on purt time. Ho hus ulso (Continued on Tenth Page.) HAD TO MEET WIFE, SO SCHOOLBOY IS LATE FIRST DAY Principal Lafi'in of Continu- ation School (Jets New Ex- cuse; Finds II True. of An original excuse for Ulng late was offered by a pupil In the a West Bldo Continuation School, No. 20S West 13th Stnet, con- ducted fur lioys and gills under seventeen who go to business but are oliiiged by law to put In four hours of study. to The phono rang In t lie office of at Principal Charles W. Laffln, uho lifted the receiver and was greeted by a youthful voice. \I won't Imi down until lute to- day; I'm sorry Principal.\ \What's tho matter now?\ of \I'vo got to go to the train to meet my wife,\ wus the surpris- ing statement of the boy. Investigation showed the excusti was a legitimate one, and the pu- pil's tardiness was inimtd. Two thousand eight hundred pupils wero registered nt the opening. SeeoiifCln Mntter Nrw York, N. T. wall WSM STREET Mil CLOSING Ui TABLES. 'T'lflV EXPECTED TO RECOVER I . HARDING MUCH BETTER AFTER HER BEST NIGHT YET AND AN PRESIDENT UNABLE H 0 WORK IK WEARY VIGIL BESIDE WIFE Business Virtually Ceases as White House Awaits Pass- ing of Crisis. By David Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) WASHINGTON. Sepl. 11 (Copy- right). Tho wheels of government' have vhtually stopped, except for routine. Tho Illness of tho First I.ndy of the I.and has detached President Huidlng from all executive tasks. Officials In all the departments and members of Congress considerately refrained y from bothering tho President. Inquiries pour In over tho Whlto House swltchliouid Ince- ssantlyeverybody Is worrying nnd hoping. Bulletins Issued Sunday and Mon- day give hopo of ultimate recovery, but whllo operntlvo procedure Is (In- ferred from day to duy the general opinion is that a surgical operation cannot In tho end bo avoided und that will bring the real decision. Tho optimism of the medical bul- letins has sent cheer throughout Washington, but at the White Hou io there appears grim fenr that the real crisis Is yet to come. An Indomitable will which so often enables a jiutlciu overcome seemingly Insurmount- able obstacles gives Mm. Harding a fighting charier. Tho President has tried to keep up with his work, but finds he cannot. His engagements arc Indefinitely post- poned. Morning, noon and night the Chief Executive maintains his weary vigil. Tito White II.niHo offices nre deserted. George Christian, private secretary, Is almost us much on the wntch at the Executlvu Mansion us the President hlmsrlt. Next door neighbor for a , Georgo Chris- tian nnd the other members of the little Marlon colony In Washington feel the Impending crisis as Kinsfolk would. CLUE TO LOST SON IN ODD NEWS ITEM Man Shocked to Memory May He Brooklyn Youth. In the strange cae or Herbe.t Newman, a letter carrier of Windsor, Canada, who was so shocked when ho saw a woman In n ihotor car plunge oer Niagara Kails that ho recovered his memory, t ho parents Herbert, Elmer Newman jr. of No. 711 Ocean Avenue, Hrooklyn, missing since Oct. 23, last believe they havo clue to their lost son. Tho young man was reported to have li'en washed ovorlmanl from the Westbrook In tho 'orth Shi, but the family refused to consider his deuth In the nbsenco of tho liody. They have asked tho Klutbush police communlruto with tho authorities Windsor. DISASTER AVERTED ON IRISH RAILROAD BELFAST. Sept. II A flying column HepiitillcaiiH al Cresnlough. County Donegal, demroji'd a wetlon of rsl' ijr track yegterdiiy Just before a train was duo currying 'M exrtimlotilata from I.oiidnnileriy. uiiiong t hem many women und children. The ti\ckmn gave warning In time, however' and the train whs ktupped, averting a dlimkjk-r- . PRICE THREE CENTS IS DEFERRED Patient \Brighter Stronger\ and White House Be- comes Optimistic for First Time Since Beginning of Crisis. President Is Greatly Cheered and Dr. Sawyer Is Quoted as Declaring Chances Arc Favorable for Recovery. WASHINGTON, Sept 11. Improve- ment In the condition of Mrs. Hurtling, which begun yesterday, continued throughout the night und tho, fore- noon , und physicians In attendance deferral tho operation which hus been under consideration. An official bulletin Issued shurll after 10 o'clock y said: Mrs. Harding's condition ut 9.3U A. M. : Temperature, S! pulse, tlfi; respiration, 30. Night, lei-- s restless. Elimination inci cased. Complications subsid- ing. General uppeuranccs Indicate Improvement. Opcratlvo pioceil-I- I i e deferred. C. E. SAWVKR. Brig. Gen. Sawyer was understood to have Informed somu of tho Presi- dent's close friends that Mrs. Hur-dln- g was \brighter and strongor. and then i. - clianro this .i, mi I; iiukIii clear up as the previous attacks,\ The impii'sslon gutheied floiii Dr. Sawcr, these friends said, was that the chances \lather fuvorcd President Harding was reported to be greatly encouraged by the'seeming lmproeriU'nl lu his wife's condition. An iilr of optimism pervaded the, White House, those lu intimate touch with the patient appearing lo bo In better spirits than al any time In the last three days. Refreshed Mimrwhiit by a night's sleep, the President continued to keep In constant touch wlthh Is wife be- side and wl'h the attending physi- cians. The relict' felt by tho President at the turn for tho lietter was shown shoitly before noon, when be loft tho Executive Muuslon for a wulk about the White House grounds. It was tho first time he had left the Executive Mansion since Inst Friday, except for a brief visit Saturday to his othco ad- joining tho Whlto House. He wn,s Accompanied In his walk by former-Pos- t master General Will H. Hayes und Edwnnl B. McLean, publisher of tho Washington Post. After spend- ing more than twxj hours with the President, Mr. Hayes left, saying a feeling of optimism had descended upon tho Whlto House, although Mrs. Harding's condition still was critical. Business at the executive offices was practically at a standstill, only nmtluo mattcru being transacted by tho clerical force. The Prcsldont re- mained away from his office and Sec- retary Christian, who arrived at the Whlto Houso eurly, remained during tho morning near the President in- stead of going to his office. Tho presence ot the White House of tho cntlro consulting staff, made completo yesterday by the arrival ot Dr. Charles Mayo from Rochester, Minn., seemed to strengthen the hope that Mrs. Har- ding would successfully pass through the present crisis. The temperature of the patient t 9.30 o'clock y us noted In the of- ficial bulletin was 99 as compared with 100 2 at 9 o'clock last night: her pulso wus 98 as compared witn 116 last night, und her respiration wus 30 as compared with 36. The) figures wero said by medical experts to be Quito Uidlcutivo ot an improve- ment. 4 An endless Krm nt -- -