wpw wmmmmm NIGHT NIGHT EXTRA. fceJaUUs ; yoii. i-no. si i J iTim.li i PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1914. PRICE ONE CENT Coetsiani, 1014, tt ins Pcsuo Ledou Courattr. Bia BANKERS FROM ALL PARTS OF D. S. : FLOCKING INTO CITY Sletor .:. WITH PEN AND PENCIL AT THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR. CONVENTION SAILING VESSELS WILL CARRY OIL ACROSSATLANTIO Exporters, Unable to Charter Steamships, Engage Schooner Fleet Flying American Flag. m,'i 1 M fenotif ssit-"1 sjnsewa iJ 1 fcrtpU Kt mm . f ,nSS!-i i- on wjjf .. ; t wot: une o IhtlS 1 Ifcl r' ru & Jlnita roth Co ItOB ftw-yBP Mft OCa EMor "fit '" Convention Will Discuss Im portant Questions of World Finance Sir George Paish a Speaker. Members of tho Board of Governors of tho Investment Hunkers' Association of America will meet at 2 o'clock this af ternoon In the Bellevue-Stratford and con sider matters to be put before the third Annual convention of the association, Which opens tomorrow and will continue luntll Friday night. . "Widely known and Influential bankers from all parts of the country aro flock ing Into the city today to attend tho convention. The delegates will register this afternoon at the hotel to obtain badges, credentials, banquet tickets and information. Indications aro that the convention starting tomorrow will be the most Im portant In tho history of the association. Jn' addition to numerous Important ques tions of Investment, which will come up lor discussion, the delegates are expected to discuss the question of railroad rate Increases, war taxes and other matters of Importance In all lines of business. ' Sir George Palsh, the noted London financier, who Is In tho United States for a short time, will be one of tho prin cipal .speakers. The effects of war on belligerents, banking systems and the operation of tho moratorium will occupy much of his attention In the addresses lie la scheduled to give. The convention will be Important as ft place for appraising the situation In world finance and tho effect of the war on the United States. In addition there Will he a definite summing up of pres ent business conditions. The Federal reserve bank and Us ef fect on investment securities will bo dis cussed by H. Parker Willis, of tho Fed eral Iteservo Board, 'Washington: IIow anj S. Graham, of Philadelphia, will speak on tho English moratorium, and tlia International trado and foreign ex change will ba tho subject of addresses by John J. Arnold, of Chicago; William H. Cloverdale, of New York, will talk en railroad maintenance and deprecia tion. Public utilities and their aspect as an Investment field will bo discussed by An drew J. Frame, of Wausesha, Wash., which Is in tho centre of the long-distance powor plant section supplying Pa cific coast cities. "The Modern Gas Company and the Security for Bond Issues" will bo tho subject of a paper by Itufiis C. Dawes, of Chicago, closely associated with the Chicago Gas Company. There will be many trips and other events to amuse the delegates between cessions of the convention. There will be a luncheon at the Curtis Building and & trip of Inspection through the home of the Saturday Evening Post, tho Ladles' Homo Journal and the Country Gentle man. Members of tne Board of Governors of tho association" arrived In Philadelphia 4nrinv trt rnmnl.t. iLrrflYifiremntn. Rea- Blons will be held In the ballroom o? tho Bellevue-Stratford. CHICAGO, Nov. It The Western dele gation of members of tho Investment bankers' Association of America, left here today at 10:50 a. m. on a special train over the Tennsylvanla Railroad to attend the third annual convention of the associa tion, to be held in Philadelphia, and will nrrive at North Philadelphia station at 7:W tomorrow morning. SI 99.055.32 INCREASE ASKED FOR WATER BUREAU Councils to Get Bequest for $1,405, 006 Appropriation. Councils will be asked to appropriate 31.465,066.66 for maintenance of the Bureau of Water in 1315, an increase of $199,055.3; over the amount appropriated to the bureau for the current year. The budget of estimated operating ex penses designating the above amount for Ml! will bo considered by the Water Committee of Councils at City Hall to morrow afternoon. Items, for wages and maintenance com XrJa the greater portion of the budget. Extensions to mains, construction of the new sedimentation basin at Torresdale and the permanent Improvements are provided for In the $11,300,000 loan ap proved by the voters at the last election. Among employes formerly paid from loan funds and which Councils are asked to pay from appropriations in 1315, are four assistant engineers, $6000: three In spectors. 3C00; three rodmen, $2400, and tranaltman, $300. EXPECT POISON TaTTLI. BE PATAI, Btomaeh Pump of No Avail After Man Swallowed Tablets, William I Better, Appletree Btr$t, a Federal meat inspector. Is itt $h ' Roosevelt Hospital after swal lowing several poison tablets and physi cian virtually have given up hope of saving Wa life. Beerer walked up to a policeman at o'clock this morning at American and Poplar streets and told Jilm he. hod swallowed the poison. ' The only explanation given by the man is that he had met with "lots of trduble," At the hospital, physicians used the stora nflli pump, but found the poison had dissolved and this method was useless. Beerer was stationed at Boesch's Meat Abbatolif. $3t North ?d street. He went Jnto the Ice box at that establishment thJ pwrnlnj! and swallowed the poison, JfeUew employes say he has been ill and ls"bu ha domestic dUneultles. Mns. Cora Beerer. tn man's wife, ar rived $ tfce hokpitai this afternoon with Keir daughter. Miss Fern Bearer, IS years oIJ. Bb denied that there had iieaa s-ny dwetie dlfflpultlea. and es -Mtrit the opinion that her husband's JIKIJ w o,.yfcw, w- -r - .v- remi days ago. Me nsa seen lii jOMe montiM!, ttewwojfis vr. jars. fcaprTfl WWI Ketbe I 9usf , Wsg B1L s4M Oititr. mm m. r m n- mvm wmf&t tey tor mtimS wttti Kta w ike ieli j-, -" tae, ut k Umm e . ' Tjf l-fjirjf Hs . A- '"' ' -: M JfV iK v5! wxM mS mJ&$1 ''y-'-H-.- sSsim. ' - V W mm 3SlsVVvw rK- -.,-, a a. M .-..-, a e;.'Jis-o:.;:.i ,W ' ." . . : -h '-A ." .Vi; .tMV . ? f4 xh-:l?z O i x j-1 aafc a&Mfltiiai ,av. V'-4 ;-i: w";tak- COvtn-t T0C13TICX. KOD CA.TSRIX.R5 xnrioir. NEW YORK PILGRIM ENDS VISIT HERE IN POLICE STATION Blows Tin Whistle, Asks for 42d and Broadway and Is Taken to 11th and Winter. Henry Hard man, of Now York, with a fine fall suit and nearl-top shoes, blew into town with a tin whistle. He was Im mediately attacked with a feeling of ennui when he tossed his magazine aside in the Pullman and stepped on the hard boards of the Broad Street Station platform. He had never been hero before. So he started out to give Philadelphia "the once over," and then purchased a drink or two, perhaps more, to get his bearings. But tt appears that he lost them soon after his arrival and finally lost him self. While at 13th and Market streets he asked several mere Phlladelphlans to direct him to Hi and Broadway, "where the world lived." Some laughed In his face, others were sorry. Finally, Mr, Hardman went out in the middle of the car track and blew a tin whistle. That was about 3 o'clock in tho morning. Policeman Archdeacon hap pened along, nnd, true to his name, talked to Hardman in soft tones. It was use less. Then he took the visitor to the Uth and Winter streets station. Magistrate Tracy listened to him this morning and then sent him back to New York. AXES USED TOO FREELY Han Gashed and Saloon Window Broken by Beckless Wlelders, Axes used on. a man and a saloon win dow resulted In one man being sent to the House of Correction today by Mag istrate Morris and another being held n $S00 ball for court. The axes were pro duced in .the hearing room as evidence. The man held In bail for court is Au gust Coy, 2113 North 18th street. He was accused of attempting to hit Harry Goodie, 2439 Cleveland avenue, over the head with an ax a aondle stepped from a. saloon at Broad street and Susque hanna avenue. Gondle threw up his hand to ward off the blow and received a gash In the wrist. He was treated at the Women's Homeopathic Hospital. Follcemun Thumb disarmed and arrested Coy, The other man was William Foulkrdd, 2 McKenna's court. He played the part of a Carrie Nation at 21th street and lllds avenue, the police say, hurling an ax through the window that narrowly roieijed a number of men in tbe place. Fciulkrod's motive was nothing like that of Carrie Nation, however. The bar tender testified the ax was thrown be cause he refused the man a. drink. ASOHKAS WIM, PBOBATED fSSOO Distributed to Private a ' Bequests. ne will of Godfrey Asehan, late of tt GaUrlo street distributes an estate of S,-0 in private bequests. Other wills adaUed to probate today are those of Sate X. Rink, H'i North FraakMa street, 3,; Patrick Bynw, mi Bast Curaber Um . tmm; Aasle H. Sowan, mi CjailMuritM street WW; 4bb P. Marks, lOJ GfeefeUaa aueet. MW; Patrick J. dlsMititc, ITU W'. TtwmpjoB HrtH, tMAK Wvmmmi refy s jaa Gscftir baa ttM apsmiiMd t m.toi, 44am Kamnhto, Wit. mma$. Gmm, m, aaa Aii Statatifcar, tQKIt, FACTIONS PREPARING FOR WAR IN A. F. Battle Expected on Question of Changing Form of Organ ization From Craft to Industrial Lines. Although the two warring factions in tho American Federation of Labor have thus far envlnced little evidence of their struggle on the floor of the convention, that struggle is manifested in the heated discussions which take place In the lobbies of the hotels where delegates aro Btaylng. It will later be carried to tho floor of the convention In the discussion of the probloms of principle and organi zation which are expected to take place. Already n resolution has been Intro duced for tho reorganization of tho American Federation of Labor upon in dustrial lines, which means the reor ganization of the federation on the basis of Industries, Instead of crafts. A long and bitter debate Is expected on this resolution. Tho radicals, con sisting of the progressive element In the federation and the Socialists, maintain that "craft" unionism has outgrown Its usefulness, that it has become Impotent in tho struggle of organized labor against organized capital because It Is no longer capable of wrestling with the complex problems of Industry. OPPOSED BY CONSERVATIVES. The conservative element, with Presi dent Samuel Gompers at the head. Is not inclined to nccept this theory. Although Gompers himself admits the wisdom and necessity of Industrial unionism, the radi cal element contends he has stood in the way of its practical application now. There are three or four large organiza tions within the American Federation of Labor which are organized on industrial lines. Among these are the United Mine Workers of America, with a membership of 400,000; the Western Federation of Miners, with a membership of 0,000, and the United Garment Workers of America, with a membership" of 100,000. The International Association of Ma chinists, the dgarroakers and the build ing trades are also organized to a large extent industrially, and a strong attempt was made for the unification of all the metal trades organized Into the Metal Trades Department of the A. F. of U at HELD AS "BLACK HANDER" Samuel Itosensteln Accused of Tak ing $1000 Decoy. Samuel Rosensteln, 912 South 4th street, was held today - in J1C0O ball,fora further hearing November IS, by Magistrate Mac Farland at the 2d and Christian streets station, on suspicion of sending "black hand" letters to Meyer Margolla, T3 South id, street. Maraolls told the police few days ago Tie bad been receiving letters regularly for some time. The last demanded that ilOOQ be placed under stone steps in an. alley at the rear of J19 FlUwater street Special Policemen Fields and Wirt sehafer put a' deooy package of paper un d tbe stone. BJarked "1000," and they declare they saw Rosensteln takfrig Ifc The man loitered about the place frpm a o'eleek yesterday morning until late last night, the police say. BTKD IN PATS OF 3?gAJN Pennsylvania Eallroad Employe's Bide Ends Patally. Stepping directly In the path, of a pas senger train he alighted from a ffeigbt ' train. Herbert Mayall, 29 years olii, an employ of the Pennsylvania KaJicead, was lasjawtiy kiUed last night, Rear Wright street, Manayuak- MaxaU. who was employed la tft ftaigbc station at Manauak, -boarded tbe freight to ride to Wright tret wliit b Uvea. Am the train slowed duwn, Myatt WapeU tittm it. Tke Mtte Uitm v4aawvr iu j L. CONVENTION the convention of tho department In this city the latter part of last week. The subject was referred to a committee for investigation and report. The entire progressive clement of the American Federation of Labor, however, comprises only one-third of tho member ship of the A. F. of L., the other two thirds being organized along craft lines. The "progressives" accuse President Gompers and his followers of maintain ing a backward policy of economic action nnd political lobbying; the Gompers ele ment contends that the progressives are visionaries and would llko to bring the millennium by a single stroke. The progressives, aided by the Social ists, contend that Mr. Gompers and his school are "phrase mongers," that be yond writing eloquent reports and dis cussing problems which, In many cases have nothing to do with the labor move ment, they do nothing; that under tho leadership of Gompers and his school of "pure and simple trade unionism" the American Federation of Labor has made no strides for the last 15 years. Mr. Gompers replies to this that the American Federation of Labor is not to be Judged by European standards, that it Is a distinctly American organization and must follow American lines of or ganization and propaganda. DIFFER ON POLITICS. There Is also a wide difference between the Socialist members and "the Gompers school" on the questions of the political organization of the working class, and Gompers adheres to a theory of "reward your friends and punish your enemies," The opposition contends that the workers Bhould ba organized In a political party of its own, having a distinct economle policy and platform. Mr. Gompers maintains that politics Is a private matter and should not be in jected into the unions. The progressives or radicals are repre sented by such men as Adolph Germer. Duncan McDonald, John Walker and Frank Hayes, all of the United Mine Workers, and Joseph Cannon, of the Western Federation of Miners. Tho con servatives are represented by Samuel Gompers, James Duncan, James O'Connelj and John B. Lennon. EX-MAYOR SMITH'S BIRTHDAY Three Banquets fpr Hornier Executive, 70 Tears Old Today, Colonel William B. Bmlth, former Mayor of Philadelphia, Is celebrating hla 70th birthday today. It Is a day of feasting for the former' Mayor, three banquets having been arranged In honor of the occasion. The first banquet was held at noon and was attended by the employes of Scot tish Kites JIa.II, Broad and Itace streets, Which 1 under the supervision of Colo-, net Sin.lth. Ha friends and associates in the Fire Marshal's offlee, the Public As sembly Inspection and tha Bureau of Fjre Prevention tendered him a banquet at S.nellen.hurg's this afternoon. Another more elabprate function will be held to night at Scotish. Bites Hall, 'Colonel Smith waa born In Olaigow. Bootland. November II. JM4. and came' to Philadelphia when he was 8 years old. He was the Mth Ward's representative In Select Council In 1631. and In 1SS3 and US3 was president of that body. He was elected .Mayor In ISSi and served until ls$M Since April, 1801, Colonel Smith has bsen Assistant Fire Marshal. He Is a d degree MMon and grand secretary In the valley of Pennsylvania. BSWEHTTE SOIiiaOTOR NAMED i H' mi '' Sx-Kayo SPasptaa, of Brtdgetea, Appoint jd n Rrst N. J. District. , WABHiwiSTUis', Nov. 11. - Sx-Mayor Ilainpwn, Brttiaten, N. J , was named liMmv la a reucea apj4ntm?:: Ior o0ijec. luf t,l ltutrem.1 ISvuue tu' tht t ijtriu FUTURE OF PUBLIC UTILITIES, THEME OF CITY OFFICIALS Theorists Will Also Express Views on Subject Before Conference of Municipal Heads. Mayors of a hundred American munici palities, other city o file Us from all sec tions of the United Stntcs and Canada, students of municipal economics from utilities commissions, public service cor porations and universities ore arriving- in Philadelphia today to participate in dis cussion of the nationwide problem of the relation of municipalities to corporations dealing In public utilities. Tho city executives, with the theoretical and practical men, have been summoned to this city by Mayor Blankenburgr, Mayor John Purroy Mltchel, of New York; Mayor Carter H. Harrison, of Chi cago; Mayor Newton D. Baker, of Cleve land, and Mayor George W. Schroyer, of Dayton. The American Academy of Po litical Sclenco ha8 co-operated in the call. A formal reception in the Bellevue Stratford will open this nrst conference of American Mayors tomorrow' nlsht The consideration of tho board, practical prob lems will begin on Friday morning and Will contlnuo until Saturday nluht. It Is expected that more than BOO dele- pates will be present. A number of the Mayors and other delegates arrived yes terday. Twenty universities, including Prince ton, Tale, Pennsylvania, Chicago, Mon tana and Leland Stanford, will be rep resented by men of theory, trained on the question or public utilities and rein forced by bulky statistical data. AgalnBt them will be ranged the practi cal managers and operators of public Bervlce plants, who will present their views In tho free, broad discussion on public policies affecting the corporation they represent. OBJECT OF CONFERENCE The Mayor and city officials -will handle the problem In the Interest of the municipalities. The ultimate object of the conference is to formulate stand ard principles that will be adopted in all cities and will bring into co-operation municipal officials and officers of publlo service corporation Jn determining proper rates and service facilities for vault Jliuflivipamy. Tie morning and afternoon session of the cony? ntlon will be held at the Bellevue-Stratford. "Practical Utility Prob lems" will be discussed Friday morning and (he "Regulation of Utilities" will be the toplo of Friday afternoon. In the evening at the Central High School, the speakers will consider "Local and State Regulation of Municipal. Utilities.", MUNICIPAL OAVNERSHIP. Discussion of "Municipal Ownership and Operation' will be taken up Saturday morning, apd Jn the afternoon the Mayors and delegates will go Into executive ses sion to consider "Element In a Con structive Utility Program." At the final session of the conference In Witberspoon Hall Baturday night the subject to be discussed is "Holding Com panies and Publlo "Welfare." Addressee of welcome to the delegates at the opening session will be made by ex-Oovernor Bdwin S. Stuart and Mayor BlapHenburg, Response for the Visiting Mayors will be made by Mayor Oconto IV, Sehroyer, of Detroit A women's committee, of whleh. "Mrs. Blankeaburg Is honorary chairman, and Mrs. Cornelius Stevemm la acting chair man, will extend hospitality to the ladles attending the conference. The privileges of the Civic Club. New Century Club and Acorn uiuo wiu do extended to tho femi nise guests. BttWrtsuunent, Including Inspections, lunoheons at tbe clubs, c tea at Bryn Mawr College, visits to Independence Hall, VaJtoy Forge una -sinant P?gk itc 4ren i'uuwiij mi USs iiiBiUu- t. Kiyy fAKOA-R.ET C. T5AX-V JTA.TIOWAI QRCrATl'Z.'EK. GAKCEKT VOR1CER? JUDGES GOT MORE VOTES They Beat Other Candidates in Oje Division. Returns from tho Eighth Division, 36th Ward, as recorded in tho olectlon com puting court today, showed a voto pe culiarly heavier for tho Judicial candi dates than for tho candidates for tho other offices. This has not been notice able in any other division so far com puted. The returns gavo Frnzor, for the Su preme Court, 100, and Kunkol, 171; Clark, for Superior Court, 171, and Troxler, 161, a total of 332 votCB for the Judicial can didates, 131 moro than recorded In tho senatorial light In tho division. For senator tho returns wero: Palmer, Demo cratic. 8; Pinchot, Washington, 25, jjull Moose, 3, and Progressive, 1; Penrose, Republican, 160. Tho Socialist candidate got ono vote. A total of 193 votes thus wero cast for tho United States senator ship. Tho voto for Governor was about the same aB that for Senator. As all tho return sheots appeared to agree and there wns no protest, Judge Davis, presiding at the time, took no cognizance of tho unusual figures MISSION GUARD FALLS Charles Smith Gets Five Days for Intoxication. Charles Smith, fighting custodian of the Galilee Mission, Darlon nnd Vino streets, tripped over a whisky bottlo today after keeping tho pledge for three years. Smith wnB found Intoxicated, Btretched on tho sidewalk before thormitalon at 3:50 o'clock this morning by a. policeman of the 10th and Buttonwdod streets stn tlon. Tho policeman vainly tried to nrouso him. Smith was then carried to the station house,. The Rev. Mr. Tromley, superintendent of the mission, told Magistrate Belcher In the 10th nnd Buttonwood streets sta tion he thought he could Induce Smith once more to try reform. Smith got Ave days In the county prison. PASSED CIVIL SERVICE TEST Only One Bucessful Applicant for Bu- pervision of Teaching Service. Abel J. Evans, of 6215 Chester avenue. was the only applicant for the JlM-a-montli position ofsupervisor In teaching service of the' Board of Recreation, who passed the recent examination of the Civil Service Commission. His average was S0.6. The applicants qualifying as stenogra phers and clerks in afly department at salaries ranging from $600 to $300 a year are; Everett nowlsnd, 102. S. Cecil t.. 00 a Edward W. Cooper. 7120 N. Ureul sT 85.4 Horrls Sorkln. R N. Franklin sU sots. Herry M. Orowroen, 3140 Wilt at.. 77.4. T5.B, ....,., v.. now, ias uermantown ave., KNIT IN THEATRE BOX Washington Society Leaders Start New Belief 3Tad. WASHINGTON, Nov, lt.-Mrs. Thomas F. Walsh. wldOW Of the Colnmrtn m,r,(,. millionaire, and the wife of Secretary of War Garrlsqn were acclaimed today as leaders of a new fad of the "400." They sat in a bojc at a theatre last night and. armed with knitting needles, spent Inter missions making .the needles c!5k knit ting socks and mufflers fdr Belgian war refugees. Other women of the relief corps here are urging women to use their spare time on street oars knitting or sewing for the relief supplies, S7J301DE CHEMIST AN INVENTOR H Hi la iun ii mi Thought He Had Discovered Method of Making Oxaiio Acid. After the Coroner, ascertains yio nature of the poison taken by Herman O. Pann, a Brooklyn chemist, to end his life, the body will be taken home by the dead man's son. WHllaro F. Dann, m Uneoln place, Brooklyn. Dann was found dead yesUnlay after noon In a Filbert street boftl. He had registered early In the morning. For a number of years Dana had been employed by t Janufaetrring chemist in New York. H gave up bis position two months ago when be bettered that a had discovered a formula,, fw making oxallo acW, K left bis hone Moult, stating that he wa going to make a thort business trip. A letter waa ..f by Dean, asktju,- tho Coroner to turn hia ejects, toialsiius of Jli lu mh mni u vlicc I -ivy, ,lJsl to Ilia h-Jti. . Old days along tho river front are to bo revived. Within a few weeks n. fleet of schooners will snll on trans-Atlantlo voyages carrying oil In barrels. Tho de mand for this product from Scandinavian ports la so heavy, nnd the supply of avallablo steamship- tonnago so light, that oil exporters here, rather than Iobo tho business, are making Inquiry for the exportntlons of It in sailing ships. The rates tho owners of tho schooners aro asking is considered high, but It Is believed shippers will bo compelled to accept it. Plans for tho londlng of at least one schooner wero made today. In anticipation of the voyago across tho Atlantic, masters of tho schooners aro obtaining from tho Hydrogrnphlo Office charts of tho sailing tracks, the Dover Straits nnd tho English Channel. They aro spending hours each day over them, studying so tho navigating of tho "big Btickers" will not be difficult when tho buslnoss starts. It lias been nearly a quarter of a century slnco a Schooner left here bound, for a European port and none has como hero in tho laBt decade. Tho principal work of schooners has beon tho carrying of catgocs along the coast from Novla Scotia to Gulf ports. This trado in tho last few months has been stagnant. Vessel owners wore fac ing a poor season until tho call camo tor trans-Atlantic voyages. At first they wore skeptical at accept ing any such voyages, as tho risk was considerable. Tho skippers of the ves sels now In port havo importuned tho owners to accept tho freight. This, it is belloved, will bo done. Captain Olsen, of tho American ship John Ena, ono of the biggest square rigged vessels under tho American flag, has been approached for a trans-Atlantio voyage. Ho haB wired tho owners at San Francisco and Is now awaiting a reply. In tho mearitlmo he will carry the cargo of sugar ho brought hero front Hawaii around to New York. Tho ships William P. Fryo and the Ed ward Sewall, which have been rivals of ".... ... lujuuca io ana rrom this port to the Hawaiian Islands via the Capo Horn route, have been pressed Into to England. W3t Cat t0 carTy BraI" One of the -features of the sailing of n h?A0fr,flC0twln b0 th0 Prominence of tho American Hag on the sea. It will recall tp mind the days when the Stars and Stripes wero supremo upon the seven scaB, because of tho courago and fear lessness of Tankeo tars and Yankee skippers, who sailed regardless of weather conditions. Following tho Civil War the American merchant marine bocamo pas sant and tho American (lag disappeared almost entirely from tho oceans. Why Oyamn. Objected Franklin Matthews represented a newspaper during the Russo-Japanese war, and one day succeeded in break ing through the news censorship and reaching Field Marshal Oyama. The Interview was brief, but extremely courteous, and the Jubilant correspond- cj.i. mwu uaoi io prepare the story for his paper. In the course of it ho , used this expression: "Marshal Oyama V .v1"0 . , ras 9uy Psed along to tho official translator, and presently Captain Kanaka, of the Marshal's per sonal staff, called upon too correspond- "Marshal Oyama presents his com pliments," said tho captain suavely "and regrets to inform tho esteemed correspondent that his honorable letter cannot be forwarded as written." 'Why. what's wrong with It 7" cried the amazed war scribe. Captnin Kanaka explained with do. lite gravity. "Marshal Oyama," ho said, "objects to having the great American public regard hlra as baked mud." For that Is what the extremely literal translator had mado of "brick" Ex change. THE WEATIIER Official Forecast WASHINGTON. Nov. lt.-For Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey: Fair to night and Thursday; moderate southwest to west winds. A disturbance of moderate energy Is central north of Lake Huron and over spreads eastern Canada, the Lake region New York and New England this morn ing. It has caused light rain or snow over most of that territory during the last U hours, and the temperatures have risen considerably under its Influence. Prt!v cloudy weather has prevailed elsewhere westward across the Rocky Mountain, while light reins are reporfcd fronsouth ern California and ArizonaVandTomthe PaclHo Northwest. The temperature" am lower in the central plains stnTl! ? most of the upper Lake gi0SanlI V, S. Weather Bureau Bulletin OWttons made gj ,. , Mra Hi.tin- o last Rata. Veioo- Allantlo -. jta jS fi. Cloudy AlUntla City... 46 40 aBH N. D. 50 21 goaten. iiau... 40 SO guaalo. N. X... 48 40 Chtaaso ni 40 40 CJevaiaad, O.... 38 Rover. Co.... 82 30 t)ea Moines, 14,-40 ja Datralt. utihAA'ae is Delate, MfiS.: 3 Galveston, Taias ot ft Hatteraa, N. o.. S3 40 Helena, Mont... 4 W 10 P.nloi-J Ifk rttZZ7r JO Cloudy' .01 IV .. vr o Cloudy ?i "Cloudy iwiifc w ii HtJj: BW SB gvV s I ;Slr 4 &' 6 Cleaj J2 Ctoudy 1 9!" Jacluonytiia ... M 18 Ja. City, Me. It u Memphis 5Voa. 48 Kw Orteaiai..,. M a E . sent .... 42 as fSiS-pw, ...as 41 w is ZZ??r i S i? WMu. CIS leuia He.. lg ei lt' J ru. MlM d. emT as ssxpP" 8 8 6 B i cw "Tarn? m 14 tt XSgJ 8 S 4 f ti X a Maali.j RS an tv 1 JS--a -,. .BSriTr,- 11. f;iPfr"-iifJ. Altfj" Jj3JJJ)n:. - aa&htaifafiSiftM&Safasj,, - --? 3 5s "" """" A