lSVMlftft .LKDGEBin3lLAlH.PfrT;A FRIDAY, JAUtVATl? 21,-1016. r TWOTPY-F1VE MEN, CAUGHT IN GAMBLING RAID, ARE RELEASED Attorney Prothcr of State Sen- tor Snlus Wns Locked Up After Argument With Patrol Sergeant PLAN FUllTHEIl HEARING Trtcnti-flvc men, cauehtplaylnK crap nnd poker In n Tenderloin RnmbllnK bouse. Which war milled by tln pollro nt 2 o'cock this morninic. werp iflmsc) on copies o' the clia'-ftc UniI by Mni'slrale Maxwell Sfiermon little more tlwn nn Hour nftT thev licrc nrroiteil. When srrttlsncil later for n henrlim by Mnsr lutntte Colllnt thev wie Informed the evlflence ngnlnst them wns not siifrir'ent to hold them for court The prisoners weto held In SWW bnll for a further hr-nilim tomorrow, nnd were nt 16we.il to slpti their own bail bntiils. The evidence oRiimpt them un. in the form of testlrvjoni from pohcenwii who pnrllrl pdtii in the rttlel on the Arnholt Club. 117 North Stli street, nnd n ll'tle pile of curds and dice, wlikh Were eonHBtnted. All itte'dent Which followed the mid U causing sevrnt policemen of the llth and Winter streets -nation to jrcmi'" with fear for their loh, It ns Id the airest of Herbert salus, an attorney nnd brother o State Penntor Samuel W. S'.ilus. a power in Organization circles Kulus was locked In n cell accused of Interfering with an officer nnd wns Inter released on i a copy of the cIuukc. 11" did not upp'-nr ' at the heailnft with the other prlrtnrra. ; Most of the men nirested nnv ad dresses in the Tendnloin. When the hear tut was ISeRim in the tntlnn lmio toda.vt the ini was clouded In tH , limit with spectators It wns estimated that SW peisons weio present, nml most of them were described ns ...plcfll n-pu- I centutlvcm of the iiPlKhhnrl'.nvl Included j In the precincts of tin- police district. LiloU'jii.nnt ninlockcr. In comtunud of J the ill It let. led the mlil hlmsrlf. Willi him were District Detcit vei Martin nml jlarri.n and a ciitiiul of policemen. Thev ' cncpunteied little resistance when they entered the fourth "nm or the luillillni: at the northeast corner of stli nnd Apple tree stiects wh"ie the Arnhnlt t'lilb has H3 quarters. i It 13 said. Imwewi. that sevctiil men I esonpid. ! Tha pr3onis were put In cells. It tonk only a few moments for the raid news to spread Then tho., Temlcrlo'n Inlluence , Sot to work pulling wires In tup effort to nullify the work or the inline. Herbert Hnlus was notlllcd unit he np- i piled for tuple.i of th chnrRc, and the j men weie ivlnifctl. to appear Inter he- I fore Mufilsti Mo folllns. j Lieutenant MlniocKcr asked to Imve the ! men bold fur lutift. but Magistrate- t'nl- , UriM (Wild thcio wns Insulllcleut evident- , There was no ciMoine to show, In- .ad, trho was piiipnetor of the aliased Bum bling house, liml n me of the prlinnt'ia Were ii lllns tn iiul:c this secrpt.' In ( order to gv the i .'I hours to inwa tlgnte he held the irisoncis fur a further j heniing lixnurrow . . The arrest of Herbert Salus c.une nftei i a lun-ln with I'ntrol Sersonnt Trcsion. Ticston said that he oidered Snips tn I leave tho station house and Unit Snlus refused I Mal.-ttrnte Steiemmn, when asked Inter i today whethei he bad signed copies of ' the bnrgc. icdli-d: - I "I riun't kn.nv ''I! have to look It up." I He H.ild un one hnd a right to obtain I a copy of the chn '.s. but Inter admitted that he .oulil rove ti-ru'nl to" Issue then. ! I'ltl ou know thew men'." be was i asktd 1 1 ' "''MVI " Ibeui," i'i- replied. Ilia on'y explunation for slgrjlng th copies when he wa. awnhcneil during the night bv the mil fiom Senator talus' of fice nan thut any one bad u right to ob tain 4 ccp) of tin- ilmric against lilm. PORTER DENIES j PENROSE. DEAL t'onttmird fruhi Pngc Ore caging a Peniose tiht nguinst the Vnios. The plan, nccording to political objprv ers is that IViunse, Potter and the former Independents rnlse the Is.me of "uplifting the city" by lighting "con traqtor rule." McNIchol would icmalii ttulet while the light between Penrose nnd his tilllca and 'the Vines wan going on. Senator Vilre feald tho Ppiter-Peuroiie Klltanee was foimed in tho oftlcn of Thomas t'unnlngham, cleik. of the Couit of Quarter Sessions He said: "I knew that i.n .I'linnce had been made between Ecjiato- McNlehol rtnrl ev-Hlrect-or Porter in Thomas ('unnlnnhnm's otrice In City Hall, where they irlct on two dif ferent occasions last week, so It doesn't look as if Porter Is er much against McNIchol. "These meetings, of cuurv. wme prior to the meeting In Piioec'o otfico on Sat urday, and thq nrrniiKe,incnta for this meeting wero then made. "According to Penrosn's statriuent to day, ho has been consistently against contractors, forgetting that my friends throughout tho city have been largely responsible fpr the winning of most of the contests In the last 10 years." Senator McNtihol said: "The meeting with Porter In Cunningham's olllce was purely casual, Wo talked South Jersey politics with David Halrd. We did not discuss the local situation." Senator Penrose was unwilling to dis cuss former Director Porters visit to his olllce jesterday; but In answer to u ques tion aa to whether he would lead a tight against "contractor bosses," said. "I have always been consistent! against contractor busses. I took that position in 1911 and I have that position now. He. ctntly Mayor Smith came out in a state ment In which he agreed with that posl tion against contractor bosses. I may nuv0 something tu say further on the matter .In q few days. ' THREE BOY CAMI'EIIS TIJUX FQltAGEllS AND LAI) IX JAIL Raided Milk Wagonsind Bakeries for Daily Provisions A. rnldwlnter camping- party arranged by three smalt Germantown hoys was brought to an abrupt cloe early today when, tho police catted upon the boys to explain where they had procured their supply of provisions, A largo quantity of broad, milk and small cakes which the boys adpitted taking from bakeries and milk: wa irons led to Uielr arrest. They will be arraigned In the Juvenile Court. TI16 lioya are John IJower, 12 years old. pf I939 East Chelten avenue; l-eo I,epez, Y "yeara ojd, 1038 Kast ghelten avenue. J rA John Lepez, 9 years old, of 6113 rfchwood street The attsntlon of the BaWee was brought to the camping party wfcea House fieigeant Miller, of the Oer nptown police station, received a tele- ptuinn can from Jonu uagieisn, or 2137 Medary street, a driver for Abbott's Palrles, that he was holding three thieves in fl. saloon at Woodlawn avenue and tJoyer street As iagleish failed to say that the thieves were very small ones, Sergeant Milter rushed a wagonload of patrolmen ii! tha scene. AVJifiii captured th? boys had two quarts .of' fliiUc taken from the Abbott wagon. af, Juvvs ft bread, a bas; of cakes, taken H1 upon a bakery wagon, and se- eMd faanketa taken, they said, from their (tcUy homes. Urklyn Club Buys Johnston titCW VOKK Ua. S -OUarln H Ktatu. , Jitm or 4b. llfooklvu Natlci04l ljguo -. 'ft 1i.I. ttsun BMnlin4 (roai Harry If -i U:e f-vrwrr wftrut tsJtue UMSH4te rvtSi iit 4H4lH44sK Jujtm. Jotyi4t(l, fine t v in fmfu Ifirtfl icgue. Th ''1 w .ife tfl mtyr '4 nut ap. - -i. 1 WHEN ROOSEVELT SPOKE ON "FEAR Ik ilk m,iiA w (A ?w 71 i $ry I I JdK) i 'COME HALF WA Y TO MEET ELEPHANT?' CRIES ri R. "YES, AND KILL DONKEYS!" RorvevultfFnn llml bintiRlit tlown t Iio house: "The thnirmr.n rnys I would ro half wny to meet the Klcphnnt (rticitniiiK thu G, O. P. Elephant). In addition. I would tiny I hnvc Rone hnir wny to rncot Bull Moose nnd I on;c hilled sonic very wild Donkeys. If thnt'r, not a tcouI for ncnpnrtisnnship. I ilon't know what In." "The man who loves other nations ns he docs lm own country stitnds on mi oxtui mornl tiar with the man whn locs other women as much nt lio tloen hin own w!fe." "We need u 'lip: navy and a trained aimy of 'JfiO.OOO men. Moit im portant of nil ia a syakm-of universal, compulsory military trnininir. If a man wouldn't nerve, I wouldn't lot h'm vole." "Wc rhoultl have a protective tariff ndministcred in n purely luinincss fashion.' "Wc should at ontu bopin fioverhmcntnl cncournircmcnt anil control of our munition plants." ''Social mid induFt'-ial efficiency pro hand in hand with military ef ficiency. The I. Y. W. (!oo.n't flourirh in Get many." ''Wo must deiclop nn intrno Americanism." "The hyphen is incompatible with patriotirm." "There was a dav when it was paid tht3 country coild not endure half filnvo and half free; today ,it in true tlint it cannot endure hnlf American and half foreif;n." "If a man comes here nnd after a little experience decides he doesn't like us. send him hack." "Treating a man justly doesn't mean only that each of us is to treat him justly, but that wc demand that no one treat him unjustly. The same is true of nations." "When wo rit idly by while Helgium walks through he valley of tho shadow of death and. rolling up our eye, prattle with unctuous cclf righteousnesr. about the duty of neutrality, wc r.how r.n fear of God: tin tho contrary, wp rhow an odioin fear of tho devil and n mean readiness to servo him." "Asked by quavering voices. 'You wouldn't go to war?' I say, 'NTot unless tho offender piofcir. it. That's his choice.'" "A tr.n of talk weighs less than nothing nut nothing, but Ic3s, I fay if it isn't backed by action." "The longer I live the more profound my disgust for words that arc not translated into dcedf." "I'll cry, 'Peace! Peac!' only if there is peace." "If you put peace above righteousness you're not fit to live in a democracy." "When I Witt, a I'cputy Sheriff out West and carried a .-15 'navy' re volver I wouldn't hire lellshcd people saying, 'Oh, yes, prepare a little; but not too much. Take a ,2'J-cnlibre gun.'" "To the amiable pacifist creatures of my own res (in so far as 1 can ascribe ces to them) 1 say. 'You're trying to put this country in the condition out of which tho new Chinamen are trying to get their country.' " "There can be no preparation in time of war unless we do our duty by ptepnring in t:me of peace." 'The man vho an't take his own part in a community is a nuisance." "I want to s-cc the day when the son of the richest man in the Innd gets military training in the rumo dog-tent with the son of a day laborer." U. OF P. SOPHS 'SHELL' ! FRESHMEN'S PHALANX ! Both Sides Claim Victory in , SnowBSiU FiRht Photo Pro ceedings Interrupted Tho weather goiU smiled on the efforts nr ho fieshman clnos at tho I nlvorsity of Pennsylvania to have its picture taken today nml the event nunc off almost us per schedule. If the sun., ind not been molted by the rains and warm wcalhel. It Is thought that tho frcshme.i would not have had a chnnce to pass their Ilk tiuW't) to future generations. The fresh men gnthered on the library steps nnd wen- looking llielr picitics-i tor mo lain- -... .... .!.... ..I....,, li ri'mit . eia lllllll. wuu nun iumiiw ii...... ... .. c....t.t..i. n u.,.-.'l,ill ilrnntioil 01 iiieiu. CTiiuiiciiij 11. f.i....t ...... ...-.-. out or the blue sky right onto tho Inno cent head of a freshman. He blinked, but bravely held his )op. Soon another snmv pellet descended, mill then nnothei. ami another, till the ulr was full of. them. "The sophs-up and ut 'fin! ' shouted ,1,., in,iii7nniit rieshmen. and wianihlcu for ammunition. Tho eopliomoies then I iiririoMrpd iirnunil the corner of College Hull and tho snowball light wns on. Hut li soon dragged foi laik of iiinmunit'on All the snow was melted except two ridges where tho snow had been denied oft the walks The freshmen muiched back and took up-their posh once moie on tho libiury steps. Hut suddenly the shower of tniuvlulla wns lenewed. Thiee bos bad hidden behind stone pillars ne.irliy during the fight and had collected great nllea of smmunitlou. Annoyed that the debt hud terminated so quickly, they Hrcd ' away at the freshmen. It took tho ) ; freshmen nearly tlie minutes to dislodge the "enemy" with a counter-attack of snowballs and compel the young aillllery men to "cease tiring " Tlie right toda was the lesult of a snow ball tight yestetduy, when the fieshmen unsuccessfully tried to break up the group picture aspirations of the sopho. inorea with a bombardment of snowballs. They were not lery ,uccessful. but the sonhomores carried titil their threat made at the time to be piesent toduy when the j iresnmen were 10 nave meir mm wnt v. n....,Aru llitl, sMwb f.liilm vietnrv in today's battle. ----- - j C0MPTI10LLEB WILLIAMS AFfEIt I AA b IHAUt Iftu IJOimi .. n..io n ; Ifo Hn ' tens nouse uuies -oiiiiimn;- ii- may . Sue to Revoke Charters i WASHINGTON. Jan. !1 -Sulta tn for feit the charter of national hanka which are charging uauriou- inlerktutc rates , inaj be biousht by the Comptroller orj the currency, (.omptroiipr n pnams idiu the l!oue Rulee Committee today hu office Is cousWeringr the mlvliollIt of., bringing -tieh suits a:ilnMt certain na tional bnks which are chargliur an aver age rate of 40 per rnt. or more on all loan. Th Coihntrolter supported the resolu- tUvj of Kepre-eniiitive Honard. of CJeor gla, authorizing- an investigation of na lional bank lnteratate rutts He said usurious practices are not general among national banks. Southern and J-'outhweut era one being the principal offenders In Montana and the Northwest, where ' 1ilh Interest rates prevail as high as U per cent the banks get the legal rate. I "IiullvtduuU who are fleeced.'1 be con tinueil "do. not plead usury for fear of Willi; blacklisted.' Ua,i(at(J iujluul, no enitdj asutrsi banio , pjctwln; usury sxcept eancct their I cb.yteni. X. SCARLET FEVER AGAIN HITS U. OF P. HOSPITAL Gordon Smyth, Hurt in Rowl Fight, Stricken Nurse Also 111 Another outbreak of scr.rlet fever, tho disease which caused the death of Mal colm Ward, son of ex-Pres'.dent Waul, of Hie Hiooklyn l'edernl l.engue bandialt clun, nnd n Htudent at the lnlvcislty of . Pennsylvania, has occuned at the I "til erslly Hospital. Two winds haie been uuaiuullucd and t(le students' ward is under strict sur- ..piin.lt.(, Milium.. Two ciiSPB of the fever caused this action to be taken, and It Is said that' moil" drastic meiisutes will he taken If tticte is the slightest Indication of further Infection. One of tho patients Is lioidon Smith, the freshman whose skull was badly In- Juied In the bowl light. January I:', In which William I.lfson. iinothrr fresh. man. wus killed. The other Is a nurse In 0110 of the wards now under quar antine, rihe wus taken to the Philadel phia Hospital. Young rimlth, who was cllsuhuiged as cured of his Injuries Wednesday, almost Immediately was stii:ken by Hie fever. Ho Is now at his home, 01-3 til erne street, tiermantowu. wheiu it was said this moinlng his condltinu was as good as could be expected. He Is being at- tended by lr. Itobert I'errj I'umuillis, of 5T36 Oieeue stieet. 1 Physicians at the hospital and health officials said today that there was no doubt but that young Smyth contracted the disease while convalescing In the stu dents' ward. Two other stuilentB are now under surveillance there, one with ade noid trouble nnd the other suffering from grip. The epidemic In which young Ward lied caused a stringent quaiantlne which was lifted shortly after the close of the Christmas holidays. Blows Off Son-in. Law's Face The molher.ln.law of William Shaw. W , -hKS' r,"R 'Xl ! when she snot most or his face away with a shotgun. Shaw is blinded and '"- otAhe '00,1.our Hospital, and the , woman, SIrs. Charles Uauby, la locked up In tli Woodbury Jail. Shaw went to see I lild wire, tlie ponce sqy, irom whom he In sepai ated, yesterday, and encountered her mother. Both live at Woodbury raK'-T-E-Ti r'";::u. SUN DAY R OUTINGS N fHOM Min SttCIT WM 1 nn AtUntU City. WlldJ, H.ll, M I i-U B.h,An,l..i,WIK.dCrt1t. AIUalaiy71Q WUdwooUBr 7 501, H fom Bun smut srTia4 o nn -iumtp Tb Mtaumeat' City 7 8541 S3 Sri w.ifcmtiri Vfl'' TB,N!-( CpttU SMiufiyt, Jnury JJ, Ittruary Zt d 1 1 T 1 arennsyiyama k, a. q ry tb a i Ma:jnr.t,Tf.30 f GOD AND TAKE YOUR OWN PART" 1 . . X3 I I NUN'S MOTHER BLAMES VILLA AUTHORITIES FOR HER DAUGHTER'S FATE Mr?.. Anna Hegarty Says Delay in Revealing Sister Rita's Disappearance Caused Present Situation HAS NO HOPE OF RETURN "1 not onlj thlnlt thnt my daughter ulll wander admit till she comes to her dentil, If she Is not already dead, hut I am convinced that her body will never hn , found," said Mis. Anna Ilegurty tidu. ! She Is the mother of Sister Itlta VlnccuV who disappeared from St. .1'iieph's Villa, , a home for Invalid nuns near Cheltenham. 1 on Januaiy I, while In delirium as icsiill Of tlllKI'lUtl)l3. i "Kor everything that has happened I put tin) direct hlnine on the villa and Mother Superior Ignatius," said Mis. llcgurt. "They waited 12 dnys till they told of tlie disappearance, to the news papers, and even I was nht told until ".'I liouis after It hnd happened. livery oriort at secieey was nvi'lo and the newspapers did not havo an inHlint,' or what wan j nmi in (Itl tlin int imiu 1 ! 11 Ml Itrwl 1 iriiit "'li tin iit v. 1 i nun u.i iiiiimiimi ...i. .i 1.. ,i... ,i :....,. nr. fuit.j were iiiuile to veil the matter In mystery. "If this had not been tho case, theie would nm luive been tho naluial suppo sition of scandal (hat bus been nhioad I am lonvliiced that If n clean bicait had bi-eu ninde of my, dnuglitei's escape the stm y and pleturo'of her In tho im pel' would have result! d In her being irc ognlzed while. she wutt w.inde.'ing about helplcsBl from fever. Now who can tell wbut has lieon her fulo? "Another thing thnt vexes me Is that tho Mother Supeilor lefusnl to :cl mc take my ihtughter home when she vn 1 so slik, but liiblsted ii keeping her from 11 mother's care. And why weien't we notltled when she dlsappeaied? V couid have helped as well as any one elso to Hnd her. I ulso blamo I'atber Plielan, of St. Tliomns' Church, neur hole, for mil telling my otnci daughter, whom In mei on Ilia afternocn of thn dlsapiieaianee. John Hageri, of UUI Wulklns sheet father nt the missing imn. said today that every possible attempt to find hei had been made. He expressed the In'llef Hint she left the villa while delirious fiom feier nnd died of eNhaustlnn some where nenr the Institution. Hugerty said Hint his daughter was contented at the villa nnd had 110 reason for wandering nivny, He expressed his thanks to the newspapers for the aid they g.iie In hope of dlscoveilng his daughter's whereabouts. Despite the fntt that the countryside in the neighborhood of tlie villa has been Homed dilly since the dlsiippenriiiice of Sister Itlta. swnmps scinched and the Tamil frcek dragged, no tracn of the ghl h.is Leen found. Shu hua virtually been given up for lost. 1IA.UMBHSTEIN A BANKRUPT Court Acts When Impresario Kails to Answer $5000 Claim M'JW YOltK. Jan. a-Oteur Hauimcr steln. opera Impresaiio. was toiU nd Jiulged a bankrupt hy Judge Mayer, act ing on the petition of the American Soat Ing Company, of Chicago, which pie sented a claim for J50CO for opera chairs Hammuislotii failed to answer the corn plaint of tho petitioner. Social Worker Is Buried Funeral services for Mrs. Miriam McCarroll Patterson. 1M South llroad street, who died on Wednesday fiom uwiwuin. in loner 01 me puor. were held 0",!v erTl''". lWcLV,al,ll"h,ntnt of ?E Lp SS "ft V Presbyterian Church D'e"an 'nurcti. M Wch WchardFll m a nB Wllilli HIi!r vi II l'ic e(itona pase treat' li P HMlf ffl!ILf a et'1 ,he pi'ca' iur- S M Mil iWfvrrjfk k on' while the advertising iHl gwl SM5Si Pae tc"et'1 us w',crcon ifylg H'm wrTH 9 we s ' ine' xwh IS Ma f mm l-3 1 s li ' ?reater imPort to ,,s' il '.. -r" ' ! JACOB RIIS' "VOICE FROM GRAVE" MOVES COLONEL TO TEARS Late Philanthropist and Author Foretold Roosevelt Would Lead United Party in 191G PUT PRINCIPLES FIRST "I am if Hie opinion tlml the PrngrrMlie and Krpiilillrmi pnrtleo will merge h 1010 no crrtnln lonilitlnni and that the people will fone Tfililj In run again. "If the Itrpnl.lliun Purl snallimn the l'nmrrlir plntfnrm, nnl, rop nml nil, there Is it rlrmre for It. The KepiilillrillH are nt Hie tnll end nn.inuy. 'I lii'lr mil limine l t follow n. II dne not ni.ikc mi illfrrrriuc nliul 11.11110 11 p:irl gorx I1.1 .o lung as It li.i the prlnelplet. We would nut iire If the merged party 11m nlleil Krindilliaii or rrogrrwiie 111 long at we lulle tlie plnlforin. "All the people whn nrr ullriiMli lielnni In Hie l'roarrlie I'nrty." fii.m t)ir (fil tiiti-iilcii ihiiiimI bu .niuli Win, iiuliif iMMnffcnilf nm' nsMior, hi lo.'irr. MtJ. A voice from the ginve. Such wns thl.i message of Jncoli tills, 'the huiu.'iullpiiun, to Theodore Iloo-o' ell as the Colonel icnd It .veslenlny with tcnr-il, mined ces nt the home nT his linsl. Dr. J. Willliim White. The 1111111 who has thundeied denuncia tion of capitalists ami corporations wnv cird as he icnil the words In a half wh's pcr. Thcie was no tiace of the fiiinnus liroail smllo ns the PiojiossIVo lender lead the massage ginvely. It was brought tn him b n repirhPiitn tlve uf the Kvcninii I.Knnnii, who hnd the oppnitiinlty of oblnlnlng Ihe last In terview of the well-l:nown phllantliroplsl nearly tluee years ago. Tho message icvlvcd memoiles of the sliemious dnys when Ilooscvilt. as Police t'cmmlsjloner if New Ynrh. nnd Klls, ns a iciioiler 011 the New Voik World, woilied together for hotter housing enn dlllnns and mole sunshine for the "otlier litilf." It wis the I'lihmrl who tlrst gave nils coiir.ige b cal'lng nnd leaving u card tor him stilling thai he icad his , .. . . . 1 book. "How the Other Hnlf Uvcs. and bud come to help, I Tim Colonel wns dining and chatting merrily with friends nt Imctor whites home when u leqiiest for an Intel view wan sent "from one whn hnd a message from .lacnti Itlls." .Mr. llnoseveli excused himself qtilcklv nnd greeted the culler with u smile. He was then given the message from the man whom he had so giently adniiied. Ills hand trembled as ho lead tho words which prophesy n combination of tho two politico! pai ties mid his entrance Into the tight ns tho standard beaier. "I am deeply touched Willi this," lie inuiingeil to say In uncertain voice. "I cannot tell )ni how much Itlls meant to mo or how glad I nm to have had the opportunity of knowing him Mr. Itlls was the finest type or Anieiicanlz.ition of the foreigner who comes to mil shores." Tlie Colonel's nttentlon wu.i tailed to the piedli'tm which was made cum em Ing himself personally. "lint, please. I cniuiot comment on whnt he has to say," he taut. "Truly . on tlint I I do not want to bo Interviewed. Not nt this time. I cannot talk about that." Again Mr. lioosevclt paused nnd read tho words. "Hut I divwant In talk nbfiut Mr Klls," ho added, "1 am glad to take this oppor tunit to pay him the tribute thut Is due him. Jncoli Itlls was and Is today an ; n m pie of the ilnest typo of Ameihun citi zenship. I do not know of any fmelgncr who over on mo to this country who is a better example of what nn American ought to be, a better example of Aineiliau citizenship. The wolk he did was of the kind which counts. He wns Iruly a mi ll ei till map." It was a husky good-by that tho strenuous Progiesslve leader gave. Thcio was little tt Indicate by his bowed head us he returned to his host thnt he was the strenuous wlelder of the "nig Stick" which bowled over i looked politicians and corpoiutlous. It is possible that the mommies aroused by the Itlls message were tnineuh.it re sponsible fur his masterly talk on Amcil cdiiizutloil last night. For frequently In the interview no sain mat mis was an : example of the tinest type of Ameilcii'i I citizenship. ' j Jlan Hadly Beaten by Thugs John Smith, 35 yeiir nlil. of IBiS llnlf ner ntret, l In serious cundltloti in St. I.uke'a Hospital to -.y aa a iokuII of Injnileu hp rri-elveil eurly toilay when nttackeU In an nlley near (loinianliiwn nvenuo nnd -tier etrects. Smith was fouivl vfanfleiliiB ilazeil ami vtiniconvcluiiu hIoiik Ootinaiitown avenuo shortly befoio J o'clock tlilu morplng. Ho wan pent to the hospital. vhoie ho toil a rumbling gtory of belne UruKKeU Into an alley uml beaten. I "HYPHENS" REPORTED j BV ATTORNEY GENERAL o,tir-ftii-on Tnrli'virhials nnd ucTvn.j-""' Several Corporations Indicted for Violation of Neutrality W AfUMNCiTON, .Ian. 21 -A list of T3 Individual!, nnd three corpotntlonfl and one nltanTlilp. Indicted under the neu trality laws In connection with Hiiioponn war pints, wns sent to Chnlrninn Wobh, of the House Judiciary Committee, today n Attorney General Oregoiy. The list wns In response to recptests In resolutions now befoie the lloue committee seek . Ing details of the chnrges against "hy phenated" Ametlcnni mftdo In President Wilson's address to Congress. The lisl included these corporations: O. n. Hunker & Co., miliber and fluaynle lueiu't Company, Northern and Southern Steamship Company, Hnmburg-Amerl- knnlschu I'ncket-fnhrt-Aktlen Ocscll j -nhafl, Sway tie & Hoyt nnd the Steamship ' Odenwnld, which wns libeled. , Among the 7.1 Individuals reported weie , FPVrtnl whose foreign extraction wns ' ilcml e'Mdenced by their names, the list ' Including such Jnw-twlsteis ns "Savo ! OJoumschkovlih," "Jovo Mnlnnovlch," "A V. Kefornvirh." etc.. hut the largo ma jority hnd ordinary appellations, the list Including Paul Kocnlg, AVcnier lloin. Hepresenlntlio Huphannti. Edwnul Wohe", Paul Schmidt. Hlchnrd Wohlhcig. Mm. Annie Dekkeis. tt. K. I.yendecker. K .1. Ju.'the, tJtiBtnve Trnilbe. nllns Mc.iers; Hustnvp Stnhl. Knrl Ilueni!, Krnnk Hln lelen. l-'rank nuchnnnn. II. Itoheit Fowl er, llcimnn J. Rclniltcls. David t.amnr, Henry B. Mattln. V. S. Monelt, Jncoli C. Tnyloi, Atuliew H. Meloy, Itlctinnl I'. Stealer, Vincent Cook, Ulcbnid Mndden, Arthur W Sache, August II. Meyer, Her man Wegener Walter Fuller, Itobert Fnv. Mr. Heibert O. Klnzle. Wulter I.. Scholz, Piiiil Haeche, Ma.v Hreltung, C. C. Ciow lev. Hat en tienige Wllhelm Vnn 111 lurk en, Mis. Mnigniet V. Coincll. Ahtnhnni Cuinnilngs, Hurry Snloinnii, Albert Sulo inon nnd Albert It. Newmitn. iliegoiy did mil tinnsmlt the unmet of pel sons conni'cteil with Mexican conspir acies, mistiming these weie not requested. "It Is Incompntlble with the Interests of Jnstlie to give the mimes of all per sons nneitPil." sold Oregon, ulso ex plaining thnl many Indicted weie still fugitives nnd otheis nt rested weio mere ly held ns witnesses. JIAXV IIATJIIAKBItS STIUKK AT II KID & I'O.'S I'l.AXT Men Walk Out Because Union Isn't Kccopnlzetl, They Assert Mom thnn :n employes of Frank P. Held & company's hat nnd enp factory. J.inlper nnd Vine streets, went out on strike (Ids iifteruiioii, liecausi' of senernl dlssntlsfilctlou with winking conditions. A gilevauce of the strlkeis. It Is snld, was the lefusnl of the 111 pi to lccognlze their union. The union wmi oignnlzcd a week ago. Acconllng In the employe, a committee ieirsentlng them sought to Intut view members cf the firm nnd nsk for better wnues nml conditions. lU'picscntutlion of the concern refused to lecognliti' the conunltteo ns icpreselitn- , !.... nr ,1 It... 11 In .nlil .....1 .. r-. I ,,. n tii- iiiiyi.i, ii II. ,i,,,, tiiii, ,.. . wus given 10 ihiikc. .iccoiiiuig in me strlkeis, nil hut 5H or III) employes left the place. The strikers have sought thn aid of .Mrs. Kin lleeie Minor, u prominent suf frqglit nnd general nr'tiiniitcr of the In tcriiatloiinl Hat and Cup Makers' Union, to help them. At n meeting ut Nnrth nth stieet this afternoon Mrs. Hloor tulilitosvil tho strlk ei.i uud sent out u large number of ploki'lH to wot It near the factory. It wu predicted by the strlkeis Unit ovcry employe of the coniein would Join the strlko tonight. When Siiper.iilendnit Hsteji, heiul of thu faelory, wns questioned concornlng the strikers' assertions, lm leplled: "We have nothing to say." Rei. YiIH:im W. Campbell Dead WII.MIN'C.TON. Del., Jan. i'l.-Tho Itev William W Campbell, a native of Union- town. Pa., died here lust night. He was a piomlnenl rot I red Piesbyterlnii mill- I Inter. Mr. Campbell wits hi yeais old. ' TOO LATE FOH CLASSIATION hki.p i ivrKniiAf.i: i ! Ni, Ml N". niMtt uitpcirnn e, cuoil t.ilUi'rr, ., i. -i ii, mii jtii'i MiiiiontiiHle lil-.llult'-Tcani ' Ilorui. t'ull in .'I'.IO", WalllLU t. lefii.e 11,1111 : I ,i,i. mia, Sj 1.11 ly. mm J H "Woo her with ift if the recpect not words," raid tho bright Mr. Shakos pearo. Then Rive her candy for if she's a Iailv the won't daro eny "no" with her mouth full 1 AriBfoCAiNDYSHOP SIX FEET BELOW BROAD ST. IN THE LINCOLN BUILDING BROAD AROVE CHESTNUT OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT L-.i. n. .n :. ---l-l,--UJdlliilmM'Jg JiMAfS jpJWWlfcVi fihl Viitl Yftx America's First Great Actor Rests in an Unknown Grave Lewis Hallam, long the leading expo nent of Shakespearean roles in America and the Garrick of his time, rests in an unknown grave in the burial ground of St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, Though not a native of this country, he yas: thq "Father of the American Stage and had it generally been known that Hallam's remains were laid in St. Peter s, some memorial would have been erected to his memory, Joseph Jackson tells the story of America's Garrick in Sunday's' Public Ledger. liyjWIf "Ti i ' LTnumiiB wit ' RARE RECORDS SA j IN FIRE AT 0. ofl Blaze Started hv ri.u.n J -- - -'diueiic u uuuow" ni"i creates riniiflttM ii.ii s .. :-.m IIuch Excitement miuiy vHiunoie repnr.ia -.j . si replaccahle. were saved uZ. V. M tfJ this morning In a flro starir.i i. ' !"c!l!l rette at Houston Hall Tho flr wfw In tho room next to Itecorder nll Nltzsche's omce. on the third fZ. J the ilocumcits nnd other data of th. tv?. ",rll "v siorcn, and thresthj H sweep the building. ,nrttetid tf 8tudents who weie waiting tof ',3 classes rushed to lh ihli ..0T "! with employes, nnd while some atl.Jf''l to beat back tho names others 3ll the books nnd records to the crof.?2H When the tesciicrs were unabl-i i v-'l tho blnze, Hecorder NUzir i.,1 in fin niarm, while the remolnlng 3 nnd paintings of historic value ? moved from tho walls and hustled : i$ safe place. a wi The blaze crenled great ex-ii.JJ nniong the stmlenls In the var&l pnrtments. on the enmpus nnd ,. i nelghborhood of the University In s eial. " "5f n nn alarm, while the remaining ??7. The nnlinl of the n,cmeii resul(fll the extinguishing of the llame-. ,fl;i'? short but linril ncht Thn .u .."' K tlmated nt about $aa -g Poultry Show on nt iMcdla The Delawnie County Poultry Mm "u '" nuitiiiiM nn iiiinuni snow In i usually complcle, fowls of very ifM1 every known breed being on dlsrliv il fenturo Is tho "utility expoilllon," hm .ii.- H'""i"" 'luvn?, kccic, turkcru &M other fowl of what Ir chnracterhMV! the ment nnd egg type The shoir urai Assorted Claocolates special at 29c pound lhese are an unusual quality to sell at anything , near this special price. The i quality of tho creams and. the variety of the pieces make them a very remark-, able oflering at 2!)c lb. 'I. ...... 1.. 1 1 11 vuuiwiciii;-i.uvci uu iltiuey- js comb. A delicioualy crispy jjl candy nioutluuls with cells of molasses as delicate as those waxy cells which the bees make in which to store their sweets. 31c lb. ' Assorted Hitter - Svects;J vuiuiiiiii ouuuuiuLus;. iuu win marvei ai tie iow prices of this assortment when J you consider their delicious J character, ,'ilc lb. Cream Cncoanut IJloctV A smoothness and richness , 'of materials and delicious making give this combina-J iinn confection a rare cood-i "... m.l .. ..tmM I1CSS. iltlJlilSUS UUtUrtllUl.I with cream centre. 27c lb.; ssorlcd Nut Fudseofai .superior quality. Several j kinds of nuts in a rich, smooth fudge. 29c lb, Our 38c Ppcciai ( ho:olat ; n nil I5onbo-is, n luality that i nn.vnr vnrioi. .18c ill. ! .Mr?. I-ce'ti lltiino-tr.id? Cara-tj mcla ami 'irllcc, 10c lb. I'is3's Celebrated Choeolatci ' A larse variety of Um's in de- lieinus combina'toii' (30: lo. Si ilox fontai'i-K'-'t lb'. lt , of line chocolates. Pastry cf ow own fine making I'lmii'mrti Hn.'i 18- ll) Mlxi-tl Ire Cream Ca cJ. Ilac lb. , .. Mnlrn ir-"it T'COKirS 21 l Bcrivirk Sprntje Cahcs. 10. ca. KnRli'It M"Iimx. -' - .....ii..,, in. ..! h 'otnr-m-d? ( nil! rs. 1-' & I'fiui'' Ctilie. a.ic IJ. ! Pulled Rrc.i'J. 15c U ! -c '. lb.; SO.- lb. Thos. Marlindale & Co, fCth & MarkJt ,'. ll.lll.r.l 111 tOll .,...-H-l'lll..rt 3170. Ml'fS ve,i.liim Kbit .-'. Bw '1 4lj Hell 0iX n .i ,iv. s tt r1iirltw'tas v