MOTORCYCLERUNS INTO AUTOWilliam McKean Is SeverelyInjured Yesterday Afternoon in Collision’ SUSTAINS BROKEN KNEENEW TARIFF WILLHELPTHE FARMERBy Placing Farm Machinery and Necessaries He Has toBuy on Free ListDEBATE IS NEARLY OVERMcKean Was Pacemaker ofMotorcycle Races, Leading Last Man to FinishDemocratic AdministrationUses Public Funds to Pre-vent Financial StringencyWhat might easily have been a fatal accident occurred yesterday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock, as the motorcycle racers were coming down Heron street to the finish. William McKean, who was the official pacemaker and patrol, was leading in the fourth and last rider, going at a speed of about 30 miles an hour, he ran into the automobile driven by Mrs. Ed. Larkin, crushing his motorcycle and the windshield and fender of the auto, and was himself severely injured.The accident occurred at the intersection of Heron and H streets, and McKean was taken into the store of the Aberdeen Drug Co., where a hur ried examination was made. An ambulance was called and he was taken to the Aberdeen General hospital, where his injuries were found not to be so serious as was at first surmised, a broken knee cap being the extent of his injuries.Mrs. Larkin in- her car, in which were Mr. and Mrs. A. Emerson Cross and baby, were standing on Heron street near the corner of H, watching the motorcycles come in. The street, while crowded, was kept clear in the center until three of the racers arrived. The crowd appears to have thought they were all in and that the race was finished and commenced to gather in the middle of the street. Mrs. Larkin, thinking the races over, started up her auto, and turned to go up H street, when theWASHINGTON, D. C., August 27.— (Special.)—It can be stated on reliable information that the tariff bill will pass the senate in the early part of September. Some of the republicans have been making the ridiculous charge that the bill discriminates against the farmer. They are doing this in the hope of winning the farmer from the Democratic party at the next election.Bill Greatly Favors FarmerThe fact of it is that the farmer is one of the greatest beneficiaries under the pending tariff bill. It places every piece of farming machinery and every farming tool on the free list which were heavily taxed under the Payne-Aldrich bill. It also places his clothing and all manufactured food that he uses on the free list. The tariff on farm products has always been a sham and has never helped him for the reason that this country is an exporter of foods and not an importer, and the tariff on beef, for instance, has merely helped the beef trusts to make its monopoly effective as they name the price the farmer gets for his cattle, and* the price that the consumer must pay for his beef steak. So the tariff on beef has simply been an aid to the beef trusts in shutting out foreign competition. This is largely true of the tariff on all farm products. The new tariff bill will be an unmixed blessing for the farmer.Crop Moving Moneygltafaliesolitwlnf