1 J . . V Omaha DAILY' Bee i" HE x t VOL. 60 NO. 82. fUn ai SaaMf-CtaM Mittw Mir 21. ISM. (I Oatka P. 0.' mtf At at Mwth a. M7S. OMAHA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1920.( By Mill (I r), Kile 4tk rm Dally t . Ml 0ly Only, W: !. M OrtaM 4tb Zmi (I mD. Oilly Smity HSiD.ll Oily. $12: 0l. M. THREE CENTS T... J V Ml vJ Ml SP 1 5) A, Biff Parties DodgeH.CL. Lane Sys ; ; . : Biggest Issue Before People Completely Ignored by Both ' Candidates, Former Cab- . inet Member Says. '' ause for "Optimism! . i New York, Sept. 20. Franklin K. I Lane, former secretary of the inte rior, today issued a statement mak ing public a summary of what he call "the first cohiprehensiver- care-fully-made and approximately accu rate picture of industrial, agricul- ural, financial, and political condi tions throughout the United States." It discovers in the foreground, he jays, that both major political par ies have overlooked the greatest is sue in the public mind, which is the cost of living, - It also shows, he states, that the country is on a sound economic basis, with the wave of ex travagance subsiding, saving increas ing, wholesalers and .retailers opti mistic over the winter outlook and a growing disposition for hard work, although the individual productivity of labor is not yet showing much evidence of increase. Mr. Lane's statement summarizes a survey made through 900 field rep resentatives 'of the Fidelity and De posit company of Maryland and cov ersevery section of the country. Manufacturers,' merchants, chambers of .commerce, bankers, lawyers, business, men and farmers were ques tioned in the-effori to mirror th'e im mediate econpmic ad political situ ation and obtain a consensus of rep resentative opinion as to the future. The replies from all localities' were made simultaneously by telegraph. , Uncertainty Js Felt. In a preface to his analysis of the survey, Mr. Lane says: " . "With the presidential election but six weeks away and Jhe winter rap idly approaching, many, thoughtful people. stand be silant arid undecided, having difficulty because ot the gen eral tick. of knowledge of business. conditionsJoutside their. own locality! r interests. I he general tendency lias been to eee what the next nvajf thinks, with the uncomfortable feel ing that hit guess is no better than another's. I believe for-this reason ine picture presented in ine iaou lated analysis made b the Fidelity and Deposit company is of interest to every business man and other voter. While ft is not, of course, perfect in detail and exact in proph ecy, it is as clear and valuable a con spectus of present Conditions as can " be gathered." Under the heading of industrial conditions, Mr.yLane says: "Eco nomically, the United States is i . , ... rr . i. - . . . ... ;. i t.. other country in the world. There is no evidence of idleness. Our peo ple have the opportunity to work and are at work. a ; Plenty of fcaw Material. "There is no shortage of raw ma terial sufficient to curtail production reported from any of the nine geo axanhical districts ; into which the country was divided for the purpose of the survey. Only in the district including Minnesota, the Dakotas, Iowa, Kansas, ' Nebraska and Wis consin isHhere evidence of a lack of orders. New England industries report a number of cancellations, but there as elsewhere, manufacturers are well filled" with calls for their products. v "Transportation conditions are im proving everywhere and a substan tial reduction in the freight car shortage is reported in every district except in the Rocky mountain states, in the southwest and m the district including Kentucky. Tennessee, "Alabama and Mississippi, aitnougn an improvement is noted in the lat ter district. ' ' "A shortage of coal and the failure of labor to increase individual pro ductivity appear to be the only two unfavorable aspects in the immediate industrial situation. The 'Rocky mountain and Pacific states report a sufficient supply of fuel. All other sections of the country 'are eeling the shortage, but-it is apparency least felt by south Atlantic states. Wages Show Increase. "Although labor is . costing stitl more than it did-last year, it appar ently is producing no more. Wr?ges have advanced from 10 to 50 'per cent in the last 12 months and yet nowhere is. there reported increase in productivity per man. I am not expecting that the, cost of labor will tall off even in the worst of times to its prewar stage, for I believe that the real differential between 'direct in labor and manual labor will never again be as grcafas it has J been. v "So far as the "distribution of la bor is concerned, the situation na ' ttonally -appears to be well . equal ized. A shortage of labor is found only in the middle and south Atlan- lie siaics, aiiu, una is idigciy vi un skilled workers. In the rest of the country the demand and supply ap nea balanced. Only in some sec tions of the middle Atlantic states is any unemployment reported, and this is in certain of the skilled trades, chiefly the building and shipbuilding trades. " n I ' "An .important - disclosure of the survey is the seriousness .of ahe housing situation. . In manjr of the larger industrial centers where the shortage has been most acute, the investigation of the Fidelity and De posit company has, disclosed build- Buehler Metacalf Is Appointed Assistant s To Attorney.; General rx: 7i4 Cap?.3.yfefaf Washington, D. C, Sept: 20. (Special Telegram.)-Buehler Met calf," sen of R. L. Metcalf of Omaha, toho has been "in Washington n general staff dutf since the signing of the armistice with Germany, to-. day -was appointed Assistant to the he nil attorney general to have charge fl criminal and civil cases dealing wit the settlements war contracts an war materials. " : Captain- Metcalf- served in. the Sixth Nebraska infantry at Cody, New Mexico, and later was instruc tor in oth " infantry and artillery, his efficiency being attested by his superior officers. After three years and five months service he was dis charged from the army lastSatur day. - . ' - . v- Body Found ija v River Is That of Tekainah Farmer Police .Identify Man by Card In Pocket- Suspect He Was Victim of ;, 3IurdeK t 'oris1 Robbers. The body of a m3n found in the Missouri river 4ast night near Gib son, was identified yesterday by police as 'that , of James S. King, farmer, Tekamah,-. Neb. Identification was .made Possible through the discovery of a water soaked card from the Arcade hotel, Thirteenth and Douglas street!?, in the pocket of the overalls in' which the decomposed body was-attired when found on a sand bar in the river at Gibson. y' f Polite advance the theory Kjng was the v ictim ot murderous rob bers. . , - v ' Investigation fhto King's affairs while in Oiriaha disclosed the fact that he has been missing from the htftel since August' 15.;.; King's ef fects were found in his room at the hotel. The key to his room was in one of the pockets of the overalls. Police are endeavoring to get in touch with relatives, in Tekamah. Had Large Sum' on Him. King war-known to have a large amount " of money cm him when he left the hotel early, in the morning August 15, police say. -71 ' tie dio not "return to the hotel. He wav dressed in good clothes when he disappeared. " I hese two tacts, coupled witn the fact that the body was foufld dressed in overalls and the key and card were left in the pockets, lead police to advance the theory that King.was' lured to a lopely spoUut up a fight to protect his moneind was killed by the robbers, who took his moncyt and threw the body; in the river to cover up their crime. Red hair on the head of the body aided police in their identification. They are .. now investigating tfce movements of King while in Omaha in the hope of arriving at some clew to the men who may have murdered him, - . Body Badly Decomposed. -C - The body was badly decomposed when found Sunday night by James Green, 1603 Archer avenue: Dawson Thompson, 4977 South Thirteenth street, and barl Stoley, 1419 Arcper avenuei They notified South Side police, who recovered 1 the body in a row boa?. , v , - This makes the third body found in the Missouri river at .Omaha dur ing the last week. ' . "v The other two were those of U. G. Bridenbaugh( retired - Coleridge banker, who leaped from the Doug las street bridge last Monday, and Miss Carrie Boutelle, Omaha school teacher, whose bod.-was. found two days later. . .1 ' Poll on G.A.R. Train Gives Big Majority to Harding Chicago. IH Sent 20. (Special! Telegram). Results ot a poll taken today among Nebraska men on the . . a n sneciai train xo mc u. a. k.. cncaniD- mcnt at Indianapolis' were told to- (icy by F, B. Corrick of Lincoln. The poll showed 204 for Harding, 20 for Cox and 20 noncommittal, but not for Cox. Oi those who commit ted themselves, 10 out of 11 were for Harding. Mr. Corrick, who was in eharsre of the Wood . nreconvention campaign in Nebraska, predicted pe brau would gq repubUcajj . " ' v Gh arge (Jmaha Gunman Asserts That Marshalltown Jeweler IsJMis takefi in Identifying liim as Diamond Thief. yife Trusts in Husband Des Moines, la.. Sept. 20. (Spe cial Telegram.) "It's a dirty frame up. That's whatsit is," Beryl C. irk today told newspapermen re garding identification of him by Wil-lian-Hodges of Marshalltown, la., as the man who last December robbed him of nearly $6,000 worth of diamonds. VI was in Marshalltown only once in my life. That was when I was Wheeler to raise Kirk's bonds "from S4,000 to $25,000 will be heard by Judge . T. L- Sellers in municipal court . 'tomorrow, morning. At the pnesent time Kirk is being' held, in the Polk county jail without bonds. Kirk's identification by Hodges, according v to Sheriff Charles Save-v rude of Pelk county, means that Kirkwill not be taken back to Ne braska, but will be tried in Iowa for robbery. ' v -' Hearing. Today on Bonds, the hearig on a motion filed by Assistant Attorney General Mason to raise Kirks bonds from 4,UUU to $25,000 will be heard by Judge T. L. Sellers in municipal court to morrow morning. At the present tjme Kirk is being held in the Polk county jail withouf bonds. Mrs. Kirk -stated that Hodges' identification of Kirk as a robber is all a mistake. "I know that he will clear himself of this charge, -it seems to me that police are trying every effort to railroad my husband to the penitentiary," said Mrs. Kirk, j Identifies Gunman. Kirk's picture has been in Iowa and Nebraska newspapers in connec tion with the" story of his release and capture. Hodges saw one of these pictures -Sunday and recognized the face, he said. " He hastened-to Des Moines and f entered the sheriff's office. " '"Let 'me see this fellow. Kirk, he requested. , , Kirk was brought into the room. That's the man," he said exe'it-ff edlv. 'and told of the robbery, which is alleged to have taken place in De cember, but a lew days alter Kirk s release from the Lincoln prison -on furlough signed by Senator B. K. Bushee, September 8. in the ab sence of Governor McKelvie and Lieutenant Governor P. A. Barrows. "He walked into my store and said -his - ixanie. was Petersen," Hodges told the Authorities, "and asked to see some diamonds. -"He said he' wanted to buy sev eral of them. I-laid out two tray (Continued ra l'are Two. Column One. BQmbTheory Scouted By Grand Island Man -( Who Saw Explosion Grand Island, Neb., Sept. 20. (Special Telegram.) Lieut. Floyd Thompson, head of the Grand Island Aero company, until recently,' and son of Wi.H. Thompson, national democratic committeemen, returned today from New York. He was in a conference with presi dent C. M. Keyes of the Curtis com pany in New York, on the 16th floor or the 26-story building at 60 Broad street at the time of the- ex plosion last Thursday. The moment the. window of the room was shat- j .1 j.i t..:.. .,n lereu, nicy saw uvuna njmg ui past the opening. After 15 seconds, some of it fell straight down again, but much of it "went over the top and landed on the roof of the Singer building a block and a half away. Thompson immediately descended to the street, where there was a seeth hig panic. '. 1 i Thompson ridicules the idea that the explosion- was that of a bomb, on the ground rfiat.no single bomb has ever! been invented that. could contain jso jniwfh ocntuD force. Di agonally across the way7 from the Morgan building, lie declares, me vork of cavating for a new sky scraper is in progress, and many high powered explosives have been used in blasting. He credits the theory, that a DtiPont wagon, laden with high explosives, was carrying a delivery for the next niglit's blast ing when trie entire load exploded. . i - Vive President to Take 1 -Stump for Democrats .- New, York, Sept. 20. The addition of -Vice" President Marshall, Secre tary of State Colby, Senator Oscar Underwood. Senator Joseph Robin son and 'Bourke Cockran to the list of sneakers campaigning in behalf of ihe democratic party, was an A Frameup Says Kirk norfneed here today by Senator Har-j-tie rison. chairman ot tnespeaKers on .. .... , reau.of the democratic hational com mittee. - x Vke President Marshall will spealc. thisvweek in Iowa and his itinerary is being made up at mid dle west headquarters in Chicago. Secretary Colby will be ready for active duty, Senator Harrison an nounced, on October 1. ' Predict Gulf Storms. Washington. Sept. 20. Shipping in central and western portions of the Gulf of Mexico was advised by theeather bureau late today to be prepared for dangerous wind condi tions iajhii.Joutfcfc, gfehy Lft the Punishment Jit Montevideo, . Sept. 20.-Morris Fox. the young man detained here on. the supposition that he might be Eugene Leroy, the alleged perpetra tor of.thd Detroit "trunk murder." is not Leroy, police officials of this ycity announced la,st night. Finger print record showing characteristics of Leroy's Bands arrivtd from Bue nos Aires during'' the day arid es- foKliclii1 nmn1if(i nrnnf ef Fnv'c innocence, there being no semblance! of identity between, them and His finger prints. Fox will be. released today and probably will go to Buenos Aires to rejoin the British ship Dryden, from which he was taken. Ajiother Bomb Plot Warning Is Given in Mail Postcard Sent to Collector Ed wards Says Attempt Will e Made on Customs House. ' . ' By The Anoeiated Fretf. ' New" York, Sept 20. A postcard warning that an itternpt would.be made tomorrow to blow up the cus toms houfse, 'after the Wall street ex plosion last Thursday, was received. in the majl today y Wrilliant B. Ed wards, collector of internal revenue for this district. ? '- This postcard, signed "A Citizen," was turned over to the custodian of the building by' Mr. Edwards, who ?.lso notified Postmaster Thomas G. Patten. The Depigment of Justice, too, was inforfned of receipt of the postcard. . " The warning id that the customs house, alreaoy under heavy , guard, would' be blown up at 2 0, m. Mr. Edwards said that a preliminary in vestigation ha,d shown no evidence f,f a plot and he was inclined to re gard the warning as a hoax. 'Last Body Identified. A few minutes before the warn ing postcard had been received by "Big Bill" Edwards, who is a for mer Princeton foot ball s tar,..Edwin P. Fischer, ex-tennis player, who stent warnings of the first explosion on- the strength of an alleged tele- athic "tip,". had declared at ; police headquarters on his arrival here from Canada that "more win hap pen ,in the future." "Unseen powers had communi cated that to me," he said. S ' . i Fischer, in July;' 1916, annoyed President Wilson with a series of letters demanding that heend the war) , v . . " . These letters urged the president to put an end to the slaughter Of hu matt beings and asked that the Sjrit er be allowed to visit Washington to confer with Mr.-Wilson at Jhe White House. t ' Harmless Crink. Fedcralagnts admitted that these letters had been turned over to them nnd that they had traced them to lischer.. . ' v At that time Fischer-was reported by government agents to be a harm less crank and a religious fanatic. No action was taken against him on his promise to stop pestering the president and to keep away from Washington. The record of the iif vestigation is preserved in the- ar chives of secret service headquarters in the "custom house.' The body of the one victim of the Wall street explosion which had re mained unidentified was recognized at the morgue today by Mrs. Qlive Kehrer of Brooklyn as her son, Elmer Wallace Kehrer, 21-year-old chauffeur. Kehrer had been' out of work and looking for employment, Mrs. Kehrer said."'- ' ' i " Grand Jury $o Probe. The September ' grand jury was convened today to investigate the explosion that shook thcr financial district last Thursday and exacted a toll of 34 lives and injury to near ly 300 others. Subpoenas were is sued for the appearance of scores of eye witnesses of the blast T ' -Included among those to oe ex amined was Edwin P. Fischer, ar resfed in Canada; Fischer sent warn-N insr's of th disaster in 9 nnriibrr of Mriends here, but authorities attach little significance to his story be cause of his recognized eccentricities. Interest was attached to the further examination of Alexander Brailovsky, a Russian journalist, the only man in New York who has been detained by the, authorities, who has already testified to having been in-the vicinity when the explo sion occurred. He is held without tail as an undesirable alien. Can't Find Horse' Driver. Efforts to' identify the owner xf the horse which drew the wagon supposed to carry the infernal ma- 5 'nine were continued. Although ohn Haggerty, a farrier, identified the shoes of the dead horse as those had attached twoweek's ago, he (Contlnned on Face Two, Column Five.) Aberdeen Newspapers Are Shut Down by Strike Aberdeen,, S. D., Sept. 20. Be cause their demand for a wage in crease was refused, the press forcesJ ot ttve Aberdeen Daily American and Daily News, morning and eve ning papers, respectively, walked out causing suspension of the regular is sues. A stwo-pagc paper, printed ,on a job press, will be issued as long as the men are out, in order to main tain the papers' status as legal pub lications, according to th raanaae ---o o -d'-o-o-o cv : V' - ) h V KM' ' Solons May Again Expel Socialists Special Session of New York Legislature May Repeat Action of Last April. Albany, N. Y., Sept. 20. Interest in the housing shortage throughout the State, which the' legislature has beeh called to Consider- in special session tonight, was subordinated at thescapitol today to a' general dis cussion 6f what action, if any, the assembly would take regarding the five expelled socialists, re-elected at special elections last 'v week to fill their own vacancies. - ' the socialists, Louis WaldmanJ and August Claessens of New Samuel A. Dewitt and Samuel Orr of the Bronx and Charles Solomon of Kings, were found guilty of charges of disloyalty last April by an assembly committee. ' ', Some members of the assembly who voted to unseat the 'socialist have let it be known that they have not changed their views,, notwith standing the re-election of the- quin tet. Some of them, it is said, are prepared to offer resolutions tonight to deny agaip Jb.e socialists their seats just as congress did in the case of Victor L. Berger., . It would be a different proposition, they point out, had the socSalist party elected other men to fill the vacancies. ' t New York, Sept. 10. Officials of the board of elections declared that no certificates of election had been issued to the five socialist assembly men, who were ousted by the legis lature last winter, and were reported to have taken the Oath of office in Albany today after having been, re elected in Thursday's special elec tion. - ' Omaha Bankers Are Back From Wyoming Convention Omaha was well represented at the meeting of the Wyoming State Bankers' association in Casper last we'ek. Eight bankers attended from here, only three from Denver and two -from Kansas City. Members ofhe party who have returned re port a condition of prosperity in that state, although living costs are very high. A great deal of building is going on there, especially in the oil districts, which they visited. Omaha bankers attending the con vention were: W. L. Pier, H. M. Nicholson, "C M. Hitchman, Dale Clark, O. T. Eastman, John L. Kennedy, W. E. Rhoadcs and E. F. Je'ppson. . - ' . - , $18,000 jn Missing Bonds Are Recovered San Francisco, Sept 20. Missing bonds of the Cumberland Telephone and Telegraph company of Cum berland, Tenn., the Slashville Light and Power compan and an Anglo French war loan, to -(he total value of $18,000, were located in a lodging 1 . . r nousc.nere xouay wnn yie arresi 01 Less Accidents Since Launching ' Of Safety Drive Judge Foster Makes Recom- mendation at .C of G. Meet ing for Traffic Regulation Mentions Signals. Fewer automobile accidents have occurred since the campaign of pub licity: and law enforcement began. Police Judge Charles E. Foster told the traffic regulation committee, which met in the Chamber of Com merce at noon Monday. Public sup port of the movement for safety in the streets is a most valuable -asset to the authorities, he declared. Judge Foster has recently sent many care less and intoxicated drivers to jail. Suggestions for motor traffic regu lation, gained from observation on trips to other cities, were made by Judge Foster. One great need is for a system of signals by which drivers can indicate a turn to the right or a stop, he said. In Los Angeles the drivers crook their arm at the elbow to indicate a right-hand turn. Should Show More Courtesy. -t"I would like to see drivers more courteous," he said. "No one should denend on the pedestrians being fa miliar with all the rules of the road. Cars should always slow down whenJJS'isconsin Ex-Convict children are playing near the curb or in. the street, for they have not the wisdom ot an adult. The man who has just bought a new car has no right "fo take it on abusy street until he, is thoroughly able to -control it. There should be some, sys tem or examining drivers." . Night-classes for truck drivers were advocated 'by the judge. He called attention of the business men to the fact that whistles on trucks are forbidden by law. , The foe w safe ty zones were praisefl, -but it was said that -many motorists get the impression that they can create imag inary safety zones ot their own 111 the outlying districts and pass street cars taxing on or leuing on passen gers. f Use of Dimmers Necessary. v No automobile lens is made that can be satisfactorily used with bright lights, the committee was told. The compulSory use ot. dimmers is nec essary, Judge Foster believes. v For the comfort of motor tourists, he advocated more, places near the center of the city' for them to camp. No action was taken on the recom mendations of the judge. The com mittee has under way an intensive campaign to end reckless driving, and wHl take action later. Arnstein Ordered Jo Jad. New York, Sept. 20. Federal Judge Manton today issued an order directing that Jules W. (Nicky) Arnstein, putative "master mind" in New York's ."$5,000,000 bond theft" be placed in Ludlow street jail until he ooeyed a court, order to answer questions in bankruptcy oroccedingJ t.: - -the Crime Blown From Tank Car by Explosion Newport Man Crawls Into Gasoline Container With 'Lighted Lantern. . Norfolk, Neb., Sept. 20. (Special Telegram.) Erl L. Keck,' 22, crawled into a railroad gasoline tank car at Newport' Sunday evening with a lantern to see f the carcontained gasoline. A terrific explosion fol lowed and Keck was blown out of the manhole. , Pie was brought by Dr. Ganguer to Norfolk in a Northwestern big gage car Monday morning and sur geons at the Campbell hospital an nounced . that he may die. He is terribly burned about the face' and upper part of the body. Details of the accident are lack ing. Keclc merely told the surgeons that he crawled into the manhole of the car with his lantern to see wheth er the car contained gasoline. It is believed he had just entered the tank when the blast came, shooting him straight upwards and out of the car. Northwestern-officials had no report of the- exDlosion. exceot that a telegram was received asking that Keck be taken to Norfolk in the baggage car. It was stated in rail road headquarters that he is not an employe of the company. Breaks Into Prison Waupun. Wis., Sept. 20. Officials at the state penitentiary were -con-frontrd with their first case of its kind when William Chouchick, re leased convict, broke into prison. Chouchick, convicted of burelarv. served three years and nine months, ana was oiscnarged September 0. He returned Saturday night. Using a rope, he cliinbcd over the wall and hid (himself in theJtwinc room. -Chouchick explained that during his imprisonment he has been work ing on a perpetual motion invention. He asserts hat he has nearly per fectedLa theory, and that he can com plete it within two weeks' time. Earthquake, Registered. - Wsfeingtojr; Sept. 20. A very se vere earthquake was recorded today on the seismograph at Georgetown ; !a ti 1 a university, inc aisiuruance Degan at 9:58 a. m. and continued until about .12:30 p. m., with the greatest intensity at 10:40 a. m. It was esti mated that the disturbance occurred about 3,300 miles from Washington. The Weather Forecast , x Tuesday fair; not much change in temperature. Hourly Temperature. S a. a. T a. S a. m. 1 ....... e m. s m. II m. ....... .SI 1 p. m. 1 p. m. t 9. m. T7 ....V...X ....... .15 8S P. P. ( a. 10 a. -m. IS p. m. 18 to. Tp.ro. ioo Spotlight Is Turned; On "Stars" Chicago Grand Jury Subpoe naes Witness and Will In vestigate Charges of "Thrown" Games. No Stress on "Pools" Chicago, Sept. 20. Grand jury in. vestigation ef alleged gambling b? base ball players in last year's world series and in games between Chicago and Philadelphia National leagu clubs August 31, will start Wednes day with a score of base ball offi cials, players and writers subpoenaed to testify. . Subpoenaes were issued tonight for the following persons to appear before the grand jury: B. B. Johnson, president of ths American1 league, John A. Heidler, president of the National league. Wm. ("Kid") Gleason, manager of the Chicago Americans. 1 Charles A. Comiskey, president of the Chicago Americans. Wm. L. Veeck, president of "the Chicago Nationals. Jacol? ("Rube") Benton, pitcher for New York Giants. Bert E. Collyer and Frank O. Kline, both of Chicago, sporting writers. - Will Subpoena Playert. ( Harvey Woodruff, sports editor of the Chicago Tribune. Sam Hall, sport editor of the Chicago Herald and Examiner. I. E. Sanborn and Oscar Reichow, base ball writers for the Chicago Tribune and the- Chicago Daily News respectively. Subpoenas for additional pjayerj probably, will be issued before the investigation begins, said R. A. Rep logic, who is .working as prosecntoi under direct orders from Chief Jus tice C. A. McDonald of the criminal court. He declared that Hal Chase Lee Magee and Heinie Zimmerman, ! all former major ' league -playert, probably would be called. Charge, of alleged gambling which have been voiced against McGee and Chase ' would enter into the investigation ;'ni'm' said. . , '. When asked why Benton was the, only player called thus far, Mr. Rep- v logic said he "believed Benton had- t information the grand jury needed," and Benton would be asked "to tell what a certain player, asked him to do." r v. Investigate "Stars' " Record. The grand iiry will not be giv vet) it - any quantity of evidence concerning ase ball pools, he said, but every 1 attempt would be made to got into the real gambling the throwing ol games bv star plavers. 1- Officials and writers subpoenaed, who are now in Chicago, unanimous- ly voiced approval of the subpoenas, and declared they were ready "to go the limit in furnishinz any infer- knation they possessed." Mr. Johnson of the American league declared the league's re sources would be at the jury's dis posal, andthat he believed the inves- tigation vuld be of great benefit to base ball generally. William Vecrek, president of the Chicago National league club, said "it was just what he had been hop ing for." . President Comisky of the Amer ican league club, could , not dc reached, but his son, J. Louis Comis ker, treasurer of the club, isaid the clul would, co-operate "to the limit." . Writers Probe Failsji 'It became known toriight that the committee of base ball writers ap- pointed to investigate charges that the Chicago-Philadelphia National , league game referred to by the grandN jury had been "fixed" for Philadel phia to win had d6ne little thus far. Sam Hall refused to serve as chair man, saying he could not spare the time. Messages, were, sent tonight to President Heidler &nd Benton, order ing them to come before the jury Wednesday. The Philadelphia-Chicago . game was won by Philadelphia, 3 to 0, aft- . er Manager Mitchell had switched at the last minute irom Hendrix to Alexander in making the pitching assignment Just before the game President Veserek received a num ber of telegrams and telephone call. , telling ' him the game .had been "fixed" and that large sums of money were being bet on Phila delphia in many cities. ( In a stRtement Vcerek said the switch to Alexander was made so as to present the strongest lineup possible. Alexander pitched good ball, but lost primarily on errors by Herzog and Barber. ' Chase Charges Old. N Charges that Hal Chase was im- 1 plicated in . gambling were made several years ago when he was a member of the Cincinnati team. Benton was a member of the Cin cinnati club then Prosecutor Replogle said. v The. American league will ask con gress to enact a law at its next ses sion making betting on a baseball game a penitentiary offense. Presi dent Johnson said tonight. He laidy the league would ask that this law bemade as severe as possible and worded so as to eliminate all base hall nnnlc Ontw 111 tliic n eiA could gambling be definitely elimi nated, from base ball. Mr. Johnson said the American league still was investigating charges of- gambling in Usf year's world series and expected to make onblic the result rf u.ut;.t. wirkin 1- r VrW'afw('((