gt v-np. tv FINANCIAL EDITION lleiaier NIGHT EXTRA Jcimttn NIGHT EXTRA :crr WW!j(p'I9'l!jH.,l!IW"i mw-rint!' vol. n NO. 95 PIILLADJSIiPIIIA, MONDAY, JAtfUAKY 3, 191 G. Corimani, 1018, t ini Pnito ttvaa Commht. PRICE ONE CENT THOMAS B. SMITH TAKES OATH AS MAYOR OF PHILADELPHIA - - v "'iSi'SK, fjfwi'MPRfllME V & X ""edHNL.JIFrv. - JSMK&I B i ' MiMfflW tfili i Mm v Win llTlBIBWliii In iff "f p-r-p ilwml mrm, iff nr TTIff liiiiii illh1' H n i MBBffTMM M iiM 'liiiBlpir ' MiTrlTrH W ' TrTi iiiT n Mir 1 Ttwinffirlr TgnB 4 IliiniiWW " MM IllflWH i ll ' ! nil ill nimiUBilffi JW M I i 1 1 1'W i i i I ' IIM iiii , m lil H ! v:Mii: BHHJraimfflWmffill3HwK tiff '" TTWrMrr''wiuwM ;!1a.3BP'3ClHlMHlHK'ttiHI VHH3CTBKwai9mSmx. fa-, ;VyffligiHmWtfSlSaffffCTlLilW'i'ii H , V I ll Iwiiiih 1 Hi II H i li 'I hi Iff "nil ' I IMilW I i I MMIII1MHH 11 JIJ?:S;?--":i Bh;'sMSM;liHaK Mayor Smith is shown with his hand on the book ns Judge John M. Patterson reads the oath. Just behind the Mayor is Governor Brumbaugh. To tho left, partly concealed by the cluster of lights, is Rudolph Blankcnburg, tho retiring Mayor. The scene took place in tho Common Council chamber. SIM INAUGURATED, SEES . HIGHER TAX RATE IF PEOPLE iET "CAKE -AND PENNY," TOO Costly Improvements, He Says, Made Possible Only by Big Loans, Must Be Paid for and the Situation Should Be Met Bravely MAYOR SMITH OUTLINES CITY DEVELOPMENT IN HIS ADDRESS Loans and increased expenses may mean increased tax rate; the people cannot have both tho penny and the cake, and if the "penny" means a tax raise, action must bo promptly taken. Demands that site on the Parkway should be promptly-chosen and a real municipal auditoriunVbuilt thereon, delay having lost to the city ?450,000 in interest, sinking fund and State tax on loan. Favors Park site for Museum of Art. Court decision and legislation present conditions which compel imme diate action in regard to Parkway condemnations in order to complete this improvement at earliest time possible. All new large municipal buildings should be located on Parkway. Northeast Boulevard and South Philadelphia development should be completed with all reasonable expedition. Work should be pushed as rapidly as practicable upon the Broad street subway and the Frankf ord .elevated. Wharves and river terminal facilities should bo developed to foster commerce. Need of modern method of sewage disposal and increase in capacity of filtration system. "Above all, there should be a proper and liberal provision for our helpless poor." Urges upon Councils to earn the confidence of the public by candor and open discussion and investigation, in all measures, thereby attacking former cut-and-dried methods. TWO DEAD, TOLL OF W-YLIE STREET APARTMENT FIRE i Second Victim of Blaze a Woman Whose Husband Tried to Save Her SOME DARING RESCUES Former Occupants of Building Eager to Search the Ruins for Their Valuables One more death was added today to the -list of fatalities which marked a lire that last nlKht destroyed tho Ilellevuo Flats, a flve-story apartment house at 1SH Wy Ilo street. The second death Is that of Mrs, Emma Gray, 27 years old, who lived on the second floor. She succumbed at 3 o'clock this mornlns at St. Joseph's Hospital. Her husband, William Gray, 29 years old, who was Injured while try ing: to save her, la ut the same hospital. He Is burned on tho face and head. The woman who lost her life while fire, men were fighting the blaze was Mrs. Kllzabeth Ostrum, 63 years old, of 1543 North 10th street. She was visiting her daughter, Mrs. Lewis Davis, on the fourth floor. Her charred body was found near the window sill. The Identification of tile body was made positive today by a lone tooth In the upper Jaw. Assistant Fire Marshal Gallagher Is conducting an Investigation today to de termine the origin of the fire which oc curred shortly after 6 o'clock. Accord ing to Gallagher this Is the tlrst serious Are In an apartment house In Philadel phia In years. After questioning several occupants of AUSTRIA BI4F0R SINKING' OF iERSA WITH LOSS OF 250 LIVES; 3 OTHERS TORPEDOED Death of American Consul on Liner Makes Situation Acute President Hurries to Washington Pas sengers on Glengyle Safe Three more steamships were today added to the list of submarino victims. Following tho sinking of the liner Persia, with a loss of life esti mated at 250, including Robert N. McNeely, an American Consul, it was officially announced that the big British steamship Glengyle had been torpedoed in the- Mediterranean. It was reported that tho Glengyle had a number of Americans aboard, but a dispatch from her captain at Malta said that all of the 100 passengers were safe, but that 10 members of the crew were lost. Tho Glengyle was a 9000-ton ship and is the largest liner sunk by a submarine, with the ex ception of the Lusitania and Arabic. The other victims of submarines were the Japanese steamship Reukon Maru and tho British steamship St. Oswald, a 3810-ton vessel in the service of the British Government. , President Wilson has decided to cut his honeymoon short 'and will hurry back to Washington as the .sinking of the Persia adds a new angle to the already strained relations with Austria. Dispatches from Alexandria place the blame of the attack on the Persia upon an Austrian submarine. Continued on Faze Seven, Column I"lv LONDON. Jan. 3. Responsibility for the destruction of 300 lives. Including one American, was placed upon Austria ttouay in tiispaicnes from Cairo. These brought the first Mayor Thomas B. Smith took office at wion today. In the chamber of Common -. -"ui, in vny nan, aeiiyenns ma i t sural aaress to tne assemuiea mem v il ofPect and Common Council, after j fvtns taken the oath in their presence vl slmP1 ceremony. His. demand for prompt action to de lop pending Improvements, and his Im plied criticism of councllmanlc methods Hi X pa8' met wi,h varied response, w Organization members applauding git feebly these indications of the new payor's expressed Intention of con WJIns the ideals of the Btankenburg .Mglme, while Independents received with .Slasv,re what seemed to betoken an en--2f0r ,0 B'Ve the city an honest and -.."nt admlnlBlrnllnn AJP'ere was a shiver of apprehension at many considered the most aenniuj aS' a higher rate of assessment or a - u rate was Imminent. The city . not nave both the penny nd tno 51 the Mayof said; if it was to havo "Mostly Improvements to be made pos-, & big loans, It must pay the piper, J . the "penny" meant a higher tax Jw new financial situation must be f(. bravely and tho tax rate raised, li Tcr Sm'th committed his Adrolnlstra Dtii ff01"ts for the prompt completion 4. i? Br01"! street subway and the p fwl elevated, of the Parkway, of a "WenUon Hall on the Parkway and of H Southern and Northeast Boulevar4s. 'pred the Park site for the art wuiil He demanded a modern system fch.'y88 tf'aposal. Improved streets. Sn?r "4 tlver terminal development J"9 M increase in filtration facilities. .1,1 S! "XMit Important and significant of Si t ttemeiit was the implied warn 2. , Councils, to tha ear of Organlia 17aa"' Councils, he said, must be S ""A pen with the people, earn Z cOnJWn;e q( jhe pubHft by Qpen dls waslon, a.a(l ola r?raarit8 0 tbia subjec Mowed BJalclv hn i. n-at -1uvaT wan JwtTins jiwAdu ,xZ. .t,t....i- ... GIRL DEAD, MAN DYING FROM EFFECTS OF GAS Oyercome in Lodging House in West Philadelphia Tragedy Believed Accidental An unidentified young woman and a man were found overcome 'by gas In a rooming-house at 3218 Lancaster avenue, shortly before X0 o'clock this morning. The woman died in u patrol wagon on the way to the Presbyterian Hospital and the man la dying. The man Is John Hughes. 38 years old. who Is.b'lleved to be em ployed at the Standard Roller Bearing Company's plant. The police believe the traitedy was accidental. The couple was discovered by Mrs. Hester McKenile. who conducts the rooming house. Mrs. McKenzle smelled gas coming from under the door of their room on the third, flao?. She attempted to open the door, but, finding t locked, she called to John McGrearty. another roomer, who broke Into the room. The girl, who was very pretty and 15 years younger than Hughes, was lying on the bed clad only in her night dress. Hughes was lying half In bed and half on the floor. The gas was flowing from an open jet and all the windows were closed and locked, McGrearty rushed to the street ana stopped the patrol wagon from the 39th street and Lancaster- avenue station, which happened to be passing. Both were Continued on la TChttt, Column Two Names Wilmington Park Heads WILMINGTON, Del., Jan. 3. lUsIdent Judge Herbert I Rlee today aamrt Wil liam P. Bancroft and Irenes du Pont to be members of the Board of Parjc UowbUs- loei. JJotk we reapolatsp 'DEFECTIVE' BABE'S LIFE HANGS IN THIS BALANCE Parents to Decide Whether Op eration Shall Be Performed. May Not Save It Physicians at Jefferson Hospital are awaiting the word from Angelo Strolll before they operate upon his Infant daughter, which has been pronounced "a defectlve"chlld. In the meantime An gelo and his wife, Caroline, both natives of Holy," are trying at their little home at 813 Fltzwater street, to make up their minds as to' the better course of action. They know that their baby will die In a few days. If It is not operated upon. The city's first "defective child" was brought to Jefferson Hospital on Satur day, It was then less than 13 hours old. The family physician, noting the child's condition, referred the case to the Penn sylvania Hospital. The children's ward of this Institution Is under quarantine because of an epidemic of typhoid and the case was vent to the Jefferson. Dr. Samuel Blaugrund, an Interne tn charge of the receiving ward, with Pr. Robert Pratt, chief, resident, diagnosed the case as one of meningocele, a' malfor mation of the spinal cord. Anselo'Stroll carried the baby to the hospital, accompanied by friends. He pleaded with Doctor Blaugrund not to operate upon the baby until he consulted with his wife. He said he feared the news would kUl her. He auHcred a men tal collapse after fee was Informed that an operation wm the only heP9 for his child. "I gm9 tJure ba. w Beak, k crtal ;sin and again. UNALTR0MASSACR0 NEL MEDITERRANEO Dopo il Persia, con 250 Vittime, Anche il Glengyle E' Mandato a Picco I sottomarlnl teutonlcl pperantl net Medlterraneo, e devono essere parecchi a gtudlcare'dala loro attvlta', contlnuanoad affondare plroscafi appartenentl alle na zlonl alleate. Gloved!' scorso essl affonda rono 11 plroscafo Inglese Persia, uccldendo 250 persone che si trovavano a bordo, ed oggl glunge notljla ct)B un alro plro scafo inglesei il Glengyle, e' stato pure affondato nej .Medlterraneo. Npndlmeno 11 centlnalo dl passegterl che pi tro Vavano a bordo dl questo plroscafo sona Btatl salvatl o Bono etatl portatl a Malta, o soltanto dlecl uomlnl deU'cqulpagglo annegarc o. II generale Cadorna, annuncla che aul fronte ltullapo si sono avutl deb,oll at tacchl degll austrlact che sono statl facllmente resplntl. Vn telegramma da Atene al Glornale d'ltalla dice che le autorita militarl alleate a Salonlecq hanno rlflutato dl mettere In llberta' 1 consoll teutonlcl. bulgaro e turco che esse aVevano ar restato in quella cltta' perche" avevana Bcopertp cheMBEeltavano to splonagglo a danna degll wtati. (Leggere in 132 pagtna- le ultlme o pit) dettagllate notizie sulla guerra, in ltallano, ;' War Shoe Factory Burned QUEBEC. Jan. 3,-Tb. factory of the oclt Sh Mangfacturlng Company, which has ben tumlng- out shoes for the - U3B, iwy, sugered a. loss of JS0.00Q tBHr1 tod;-, jro hujire4Eem n? 1 STSfeA IhMunt n. nt .t1 1 Jt - kwWM wh.fe v & definite Information that the submarine which sank the Persia in the Mediter ranean last Thursday was an Austrian Vessel. , Ofllclal announcement was made by the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Nalga tlon Company today that the Persia car ried guns. The dispatches also reiterated the charge that the Persia was torpedoed without warning. Only marvelous dis cipline, they stated, prevented the death of every man, woman and child on board. Six boats were launched and the occu pants of four of them, stated to number from 153 to 13S, reached port safely. Two of the boats have not been found and there Is little hope that the other sur vivors will be picked up. Robert N, McNeely, the American who was proceeding to his post as United States Consul at Aden, was given up for lost today when a dispatch from Alex andria said that he was stilt on board the Persia after the sixth boat was launched, A place had been found for him In the ntth'boat, the dispatch added, but he had refused to take It, a woman with two children replacing him Jn the 'boat. Baron 'Montagu, of Beaulleu, who held the rank of colonel In the British army, was placed among the-dead'in a list com piled here today from-the fragmentary dispatches thus far received. Both Baron Montagu and Mr. McNeely were seen by the survivors struggling. In the ater after the Persia took Us final plunge. Colonel Clive C, Blgham, son-in-law of Lord Mersey, who presided over the court which investigated the finking of the Continued en Fate Six, Column Two THAW LOSES ESTATE APPEAL Supreme Court Refuses to Order Re lease of Father's Fortune The Supreme Court today, In an ppjnlon by Justice Stewart, dismissed the excep tions of Harry K. Thaw to the adjudica tion of the estate of William Thaw, de ceased. Thaw sought to have a trustee pay pver to blm the entire Income coming to him from his father's million-dollar estate, contending; that, notwithstanding be had been confloea Jn an asylum at ih time of tiling the iietlUon, he was sane and, capable of nanssmcil affairs. QUICK NEWS GERMAN SUBMARINES SUNK OFF BULGAR.PORT AMSTEBDAM, Jail. 3. Two German submarines nro reported to havo been sunk in the Black Sea, off the Bulgarian port-of Varna. No official confirmation lids been received. 350 ENEMY CIVILIANS ARRESTED AT SALONICA'bV'LLIES ATHENS, Jan. 3. Uuder Instructions from General Sarrail, Auglo-Ffciich troops at Safonica have arretted 300 Germans, Aus triaus, Turkish nnd Bulgarian civilians, despite the protest of the Greek Government ngainst the seizure of Consuls of the Central Empires. JAPAN NOT TO SEND FLEET TO MEDITERRANEAN WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. The Japanese Embassy does not expect Japa nese warships to be sent Into tho Mediterranean to aid tho Allies in retalia tion for tho sinking of Japnncso steamers by submarines. "Wo havo hoard no rumor of such n move. It Is distinctly improbable," on Embassy ofllclal declared today, discussing tho report. FRANCE TO RELEASE GERMANS TAKEN FROM U. S. SHIPS WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. Tho French Embassy notified tho Stato Depart ment today that the French Government had given orders for the immediate release of the Germans tnken from tho vessels of tho Now York and Porto Hlco Stcnmshlji Line by tho French cruiser De3cartcB. ROOSEVELT'S NAME TO GO ON MICHIGAN BALLOT LANSING, Mich.. Jan. 3. Colonel Itooscvelt was placed in tho race ns a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination today, when petitions henrlng enough signatures to instiro that his name will go on tho Michigan prlmnry bnllot were filed with the Secretary of State. The petitions wero circulated In Gcneseo County by former Progressives. GENERAL HUERTA STILL ALIVE EL PASO, Tex., Jnn. 3. General Vlctorlano Huerta was still nllvo early today, although reported to bo In a dangerous condition following Saturday's operation for gallstones and the unsuspected discovery of complications of tho liver and bladder. WASHINGTON, Jnn. 3. Subpoenas for about 100 witnesses are being pre pared ut Sun Antonio, Tex.. In prepaiatlon for tho Grand Jury this week to. Investigate the activities of General Huortu. Besides points In Texas, includ ing El Paso und Sun Antonio, New York and Philadelphia will bo drawn on for witnesses. These will Include Americans who had had financial and other dealings with Huerta, as well ns his Mexican agents and former officers. FIRE SWEEPS VIRGINIA TOWN GOUDONSVILLE, Vn., Jan. 3. Flro swept through, thobuslncss section-' of Gordonsvllle today, destroying "scvernl bulldinBs"ond causing damage esti mated at $150,000. Calls for help wero sent to surrounding towns, and the ilnmeH wero finally controlled. For soveral hours tho entire town was threat ened wl''i destruction. Mrs. W. T. Helton, wife of a Chesapeake and Ohio dispatcher, was made critically ill from excitement following tho loss of all her household effects. "BILLY" SUNDAY TRAIL HITTER SLAYS HIS MOTHER SYRACUSE, N. Y Jan. 3. Ed G. II. Buchenau, prominent Syracusan, killed his mother with a hammer' this morning whllo suffering from religious; mania. He was a "Billy" Sunday trail-hitter. TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 3. "Billy" Sunday refused to comment upon th Syracuse tragedy enacted by a crazed "trall-hltter" in that city today. VON PAPEN ARRIVES AT FALMOUTH FALMOUTH, England, Jan, 3. Captain Franz von Papen, recalled mili tary attache of the German embassy at Washington, D. C, arrived hero today on board the Holland-America liner Noordnm from Now York. Captain von Papen kept to his stateroom for the most part and will continue to Rotterdam on the Noordam, FRENCH AIR BOMBS RAZE TURK MUNITIONS DEPOT LONDON, Jan. 3. Steady fighting continues along the Dardanelles front still held by tho Allies. Tho Turks claim a general success. An Exchange dis patch from Athens reports, however, tho bombardment of Taskloy, a suburb ot Constantinople, with great damage, by a French aeroplane. The suburb was set nflre and a munitions depot blown up, the dispatch, says. An earlier ofllclal dis patch from Constantinople reports tho repulse of an allied aeroplane by Turkish seaplanes. KAISER GRATIFIED AT POPE'S GREETING BERLIN", Jan. 3. Replying to a New Year's greeting from Cardinal von Hartmann, Archbishop of Cologne, Emperor William thanked tho prelate for his message, adding: "I was especially gratified by the greetings sent by you In the name of the Holy Father." The Cardinal recently returned from the con sistory at Rome. WILHELM HAS UNSER FRITZ MALADY, SWISS SAY GENEVA, Jan. 3. Travelers arriving from Germany today reiterated reports that Emperor William of Germany was seriously Jll. They said it was common report In Berlin that the specialists caring for the Kaiser had disagreed ove the nature of his malady, but had Anally agreed that a severe operation wat necessary. Ills ailment, they asserted, is of a cancerous nature and affects tha throat and mouth, making it Impossible for tho Kaiser to take solid food. On report in Berlin, according to the travelers, is that a cancerous growth has attacked the Kaiser's lips, making necessary an operation that' will scar him for life. " " ' " ' ' ' v BRITAIN TO END ALL TRADING WITH ENEMY LONDON, Jan. 3. The Foreign Ofllce announces tho opening, under Its con trol, of a new bureau to be known as th'e Foreign Trade Department. This de partment will put into effect the new powers recently conferred by Parliament with the object of preventing enemy p'ersons or Arms established in neutral countries from trading in Great Britain. The head of the bureau is Laming Worthington Evans. M. V. for Colchester, vice chairman of the National Unionist Association. THE WEATHER This is a crucial day. It Is easy to keep, a resolution the firpt day you make it Nobody need break one on Sunday. This Is the first Monday after that New Year's Eve and there are a' whole lot of boys who will be out of the trenches by tonight, ba,ck among the slackers for another year And there are many, Inany scraps of paper lying In waste baskets, thrown there, without a culver' by fellow citizens who were, ready to flBht Germany over the Belgian Incident a "ar or 40 ago. Which has nothing to do with, today's weather, put we made one resolution that has not been scrapped yet; (t's not to talk about the weather until we can print some thing about it that won't coat us our job. Don't think If you receive a letter -a. year old today that the. trouble Is with the postofflce. FORECAST Caw PhMattelnhisi and njittiit Fair tviitjht aid Tuesday; nomewhat cote? ' Uminkt; mai&rate, westerly, Two Men Escape From'Jersey Prison TRENTQN Jan. sT Joseph Thomas, serving 16 years, and Fred Wilson, serv Ing a sentence of from S to SO years, es caped from the New Jeruey State prisoir' early this morning by scaling the htW wall with a rppe ladder- The men we,c over the wall a( a point that was witlin 50 yards of the wa,tch tower, in .hlcl fw a guard with a repeating: rifle. LOST AND FOUND BINO-!-Loat. lady's d'atooa4 ulng-. . WUlALtM kisdl-r return umel Lat Saturday sMsttg, between tha hours o 8 and i o'cjoes.'ta M r.shU)rlioo.l a! lUrktt H., JSlU lu tltb. from Areh t. 17th to 13th. heac tat Mar ket. lieajrJ 11.JA. D.. a-lSSJfcJWfc-rtT BHACKLET-Uwt FrUavTaK. 31. jmCcwt? bracelet, eolus from Sttt and CBtiJBtj 11th mid . MlrWt. nard it rBTOJr" J E. Cald a til feO S03 Chetnut ptTtSE-tost, Jsuuaw J.Hrrt ,t -bum 3 a. SvntH-maQ's puvat, feotatoiuuc luci...... .. anil II Tt ticket. rftdt4 W tas a&J ,j ..i are ntiurnn.1 no -uuftloniri j U, ii t'un-. wiii4 &nsu? ws9 iwxmmtr& 3- is !- ti Thatr mnumwl 42jk " " "SHI" jj jt si j. Other CSzzsQtd JJiti Jassw - I