w CHURCHSEXTONHFXD FOR THEFT OF CHECK t mn ii '' Overbrook Man Accused bf Forg ing Name of Rector to Collect $300 CtMTged with obtaining money under MM pretense from St. Paul's Episcopal Cftbrch, OverbrooR, William II. Sdraln, 1612 Arnao& Btreet, Its sexton, was arrested Pi hut night by Seville, nn employe ,ef a do-'"fc-UMiw agency. Scroln Is said to have t&kan and cashed a check for $300 belonging iS (He nr William n. Turner, rector of lh chllrch. According to the police, on Aprlt 28 Ac counting Warddn Davis, of St Paul's, placed three .checks In the sncrlstry, Intending to ret them later on. Mrs. Scraln was In the church at the time, It was said. According lo Detective Seville, she took two of the ZhJtkit. one fob $86, which was her hug- j bend's pay. and the other, which was the nAlary-or ire cuuicu munuiwa. ju, ocrtiui, It was learned, gave the checks to her husband and the laundress. On April 27, It was revealed, Scraln cashed his personal check In a downtown tank. On the day following, the pollco say, he took tho check for $300, made out In the name of the Rev. Mr. Turner, and cashed this also. It Is alleged that Scraln indorsed the check with the rector's nnmo and underneath It wrote, "for painting 'church," together with tho painter's name, w. J. nay. Pi Scraln was questioned by the agency's night Seville was sitting on his porch at 67th and Master streets when he noticed ficraln enter a. ualodn nearby. Tho de tective arrested the sexton and took him to City Hall. Although Scraln denies It, the police say the handwriting on tho rec tor's check corresponds to that of several' letiers found In the sexton's possession. Ecraln wilt havo n hearing this morning. ," b ! If IK i 1 I OARSMAN DROWNED AS PARENTS LOOK ON 'University Barge Club Members,' Back From Regatta, Tell of Accident' Membora of tho University Barge Club returned to Philadelphia from New York' today, but they did not tell of their prowess In winning some of tho races In the annual regatta of tho New York Rowing Associa tion on tho Harlem nivcr yesterday. True, the local .club made n good showing and won cosily In the race with clubs from Boston and Flushing. N. Y. But the occasion was marred by a drowning' acci dent. Tho story they tell Is ono of how a mother and father saw their son swept to death almost In the fnco of victory, and how cheers along the water front changed suddenly Into prolongod cries of alarm. Melvln McKcnna, 18 years old, of Flushing, stroke oar of the Wahncta Boat Club's four-oared crew, lost his life. Tho University Barge Club won, but Mc Kenna made a valiant effort to overtake his rivals. .At the finish his boat was swept by the tide under n rovonuo cutter, was overturned and the four men were thrown Into the river. McKonna's parents and relatives were only a short dtotanca away. MqKenna sank almost immediately and every .effort was mado to rescue hlni. Men dived Into the rlvor time and again. Ills companions wcro saved. FREED AFTER CAR KILLS BOY ,. W. Rawle, of J. G. Brill Company, Released After Motor Hits Boy Scout TRENTON, N. J., May 31,,-J. W. Rawle, of 02d street and Woodland avenue, Phlln dolphla, assistant general manager of the J. C. Brill Company, of that city, has been freed by tho county officials, following the death last night of Alvah Williams, 11 years old, of 82G Beatty streot, this city, whom Rawle ran down while driving his automobile on the road at Scudder's Falls yesterday afternoon. Tho lad died In Mer cer Hospital In a few hours, but tho county authorities, after hearing tho stories of eye-witnesses, decided that tho accident was Unavoidable. Death was duo to a fracture at the base of tho skull. Williams -was one of a party of 23 boys from Boy Scout Troop 3. of the Broad Street Methodist Episcopal Church, on a hike from this city to Scudder's Falls. They were accompanied by Leon A. Rentner, of thlB city, as scoutmaster. Williams and another lad left the detachment to get a drink and while crosslrlg tho road the boy was struck. He was taken Into tho auto, mobile and driven to Mercer Hospital. Three U: S. Seamen Drowned WASHINGTON. May 31. Drowning of three seamen of' the collier Hector- In Ocoa Bay, Santo Domingo, by tho capsizing of a" whaleboat, has been, repprted to the Navy Department by Rear Admiral Caperton. Nino other men who were In the boat were 1 rescued by the destroyer Reld after being i In the.water 14 hours. The dead men are EdwarcTBrenan and William Mariner, Quar termasters, and George Sancunls, fireman. Killed WhenHc Faints at Wheel NEW HAVEN, Conn.. May 31. While driving his automobile last night, accom panied byhls wife, their two daughters and a girl friend, Hicks Grlllln, of Bridgeport, Is bellevfcd to have fainted or to have suf fered a stroko of apoplexy. He failed to keep the vehicle in the road at ft turn and It crashed, Into a fence and turned over. Gr!fflh,wa killed and the others were se verely 'cut and bruised. i SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES ORATORY Xlocution Salesmanship, Jourriallsm Dramatic Art blind Building Authorship Summer Session of Seven Weeks Day and Evening. opni June 11. Yru, pall r phono .Spruce 8218 tor literature. NKI'T'Ldl.HiUl. 11SO fhtnut Ktrtxt 5TPAV1JDH! The Bt Uuln" - School O vrt. X EM. O eoi.807 'CbMinut Bttl SWIMMING Central Natatorium and Batha S. 1UI .Arch Strwt. , Unllrolttd. u. Ill yjarlyi 3 nuuuhit and 2o-2.S abav ratea: boya under 18 t.S abova ratea; alngte awlin roomtera I 10: raducad ratea to sroupa. Elecirle. hoi and ateam batha "f, "". nmmrilaniu ratea. - Water la cool i chanced dally. Aik for detalla. yABET AND OABDEN ' i ' It GARDEN AND LAWN FURNITURE Pergolas, Garden Seats, Arbors, Trelllse. Gates, Porch furniture. Window Boxes Ornamental Fencing. Catalog on Bequest, F, R. GERRY CQtl JWJ Mark! 8-. Fbllaaatofel. - -niljimpii i HJi """"- i'1' niBimtaasinrTBTirTmiiieTiiii U-BOAT SCARE COSTS $8000 EVENING LEDGfeEr--PHlLU3ELIfiIA, WEDNESDAY, MAT 31. 1016. X Italian Liner Hushes Through McdL terranean burns Extra Coal It was ngured that It cost her l Sift n in "l;.aJ"l before she reached Gibraltar Napier" U2 " t0n '" 1My " K itft The Italian liner had 1830 passencers, and she headed out Into " the Mediterra nean with every light out ftt night and her crew on watch lo see that not a port was uncovered or that any one even lit ft cigarette on deck. No wireless calls were sent, but her wireless ears were kept open constantly. Captain Lulgl Zannonl deolded to uso Ijls vessel's speed and race for Gibraltar. She was soon reeling off 19 knots. Mean time her gunners .stood by "tho pair of 3lnch guns on her nfterdeck, but they saw nothing to shoot at. THREE, ON PJCNIC, INJURED Woutdbo Rescuer Cuts Artery in Foot, . Girl Falls Over Stump and Sprains Wriat Anthony Sabolo, 21 years old, of 28S1 East Somerset street, Is at tho Frnnkford Hospital In a serious condition from toss of blood. Sabolo Is a member of the "Honeysuckle Social.'' Testerday the mem bers celebrated Memorial Day by a trip to the country, one of the girls of the party fainted, Sabolo, while seeking water for her, stepped on a broken boltle. The glass penetrated his shoo and cut an artery In his right foot. Sadie Goddchlld, 21 years old, of 4102 Orchard street, a member bf a social circle which also spent the day In the woods, had her right wrist broken when she felt over a stump. This happened early In tho day, but she refused to return to tho city Until her companions did so last night. At 9 o'clock she applied for treatment at the Frankford Hospital. BREAKS AVIFE'S TOMBSTONfe A3 MEfMORlAti DAY OBSERVANCE Milloraburg Man Says She Should Havo Given Him Motley HAltnisntinG, May 81. James Cole man, of Mlltersburg, wa arrested last night and brought to the Dauphin County jail at Harrleburg on a charge of celcbral ing Memorial Day by breaking his wife's tombstone, preferred by the Mllleraburg cemetery Association. Coleman's wlfo saved money out of her XrfMft a m ten tkfinrtria&li m t$$ 1 of the eltirie on Mr Mv W mofiey ttt A friend? wJ4 ewiw ww- wisnes. . . AJt ti Coleman told the pollea hw " SoeejeW have given mm we rnoijey ' ' : TT ,u -m 500,000 RabbHs to Bft Foe4!W mi ttonFOLK, Vft., May 3l.fTim jwwartm thousahd rabbits,' which Will fufhtsh ftswti for tne Allies; armies, comprinon & the cargo of the British steamship CwtOTejry ;j land, whlcH arrived here yesterjy w veiungton, new ainu. i; bound for Ltverpool. ' i ING a paean of American Bigness and Achievement ! SUCCESS the richest land the freest land the land of BIG OPPORTUNITIES! Think of it! A hundred million people the largest and most populous republic in history. with the highest annual income of any nation in the world. (Not less than 25 or 30 billions of dollars. The mind can't grasp it.) More than that of any other two nations, more than Great Britain and Germany combined! The greatest production of GRAIN, COTTON, IRON, STEEL, COPPER, OIL, and I aps of other things. More railroad lines than all the rest of the world put together. An internal commerce greater than the whole world's international trade. More steel buildings than on all the rest of the globe. Twice the banking capital of any other nation, almost as much as all Europe combined. More automobiles than all the rest of the world put together. More farm tractors than on alPthe rest of the earth. More motor-boats, more telephones, more magazines and newspapers, more miles of .telegraphs, more public libraries, more school houses, more sewing machines, more phonographs ! The first real republic in the widest, freest sense I The only nation that spends more on education than on armies and navies nearly 500 millions a year! And all this from a slender colony of farmers fighting for existence on the shores of the Atlantic less than a century and a half ago ! Nothing like it in all the world's history. How did it come? Because of that act of Massachusetts Colony in 1674 which gave to the world the first example of universal and free education. . And along with all this has gone the other big fact the United States hasv bought more BOOKS and paid more for them than any other tyo nations in history, 1 and for one single great work of reference it has paid more than 60 million dollars the work that from the days of George Washington to the present time has been the f ore- mSorkSiSSSi,in anylanguage-THENCYCLTOPAEDIA BRITANNICA. The astonishing sale of the Encyclopaedia Britannica in the United States the fact that not less than 14 or 15 million volumes of this great work havo been sold here cannot have been without a real and decisive influence in American life. It is still more remarkable that f orihe latest issue, the new Eleventh Edition, a larger sum has already been paid by the people of the United States alone than for all other large encyclopaedias ever printed in the English language. IN theears bf Dick WHirnNGTON"sang the Bow Bells of old London calling him ! And in the ears of most every American boy (and many American girls, too) has rung the same call to achievement, to adventure, to a larger life, to the American ideal SUCCESS. It still rings. It is calling to twenty million boys and girls of fifty' states s- eager to carry on the true American tradition: High pressure, high wages, high deeds, invention, resourcefulness the bound-to-get-there determination. What has been the mainspring behind this American VIM? One great factor has been the wide dissemination of education, knowledge, books! Universal education," paid for by all the people is an AMERICAN idea, and America's GREATEST contribution to civilization; for it was the pioneer idea which led to the foundation of the American Republic. This American idea-has now spread all over the world; but America is still far in the lead. No other nation has ever spent such tremendous sums on education. Nowhere else is the general average of intelligence so high. In no other countrv on earth have so many books been sold. Or Shakespeare, or Macaulay, or Darwin, or Herbert spencer, or jjicicens, oi r,oraarycg in America as in all nractically every creat English writer five or ten times as many volumes have been sold " -- 1.. -Hit. 1.-Z.M XI.-. .-U - I uiu rest ui mu vrurxiu A Wonderful Bargain Soon' Closed So lone as the new Eleventh-Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica was to be had onWUx the expen sive Cambridge University issue there was ample excuse why many homes should go without it Now there is none. We believed this splendid work ought to be In every wide-awake family In the United States and we were so convinced of the possibilities in a cheaper edition that wo arranged with the pub lishers of the Britannica to make for us a new issue, absolutely the same as the Cambridge University issue, unabridged, unchanged, except for the size of pago and type. And wo con tracted with them for a hugo printing, probably tho largest single printing order ever given in this country. - This Issue' we offer now at one-third the price charged for the Cambridge University Issue; and we send you the complete work, the entire 29 volumes, upon receipt of a single dollar-the balance in small monthly payments. But this is not all. Wo knew there would be a great number of people who could not believe that wo could offer the complete new Eleventh Edition at such a price and on such terms. There was only one way really to "convince them. That was for them to see the books. Therefore wo make this offer: Wo send you the books when yu havo paid a single dollar and you may then keep them three weeks, use them freely, examine them and find out their worth to you. Then, if for any reason whatsoever, you do not wish to keep them, you may send them back, and without any question, we will refund the dollar you1 havo paid and shipping charges as well, But you must take advantage of this offer now if you wish to obtain this new "Handy Volume" Issueon these prices and terms. Wo had hoped to go on selling tho Britannica at these prices indefinitely. But the w&has come aTd brought tf great scarcity Into many lines of trade and forced prices to prohibitive fibres! The publish" rs now noUfy us that .they cannot supply us with any more sets at these prices nf ipp those which we have contracted for are delivered. Britannica and our new Issue, ,We Still more remarkable has been the unprecedented diffusion of works of universal information encyclopaedias and the like. Of a single work more copies, with a total of a larger number of volumes have been sold than the combined sale of all other large works of reference in every language on earth, since books began to be printed. Needless to say what work has had' this amazing distribution, for there is . only one work like it in all the world THE ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA. In the 148 years of its existence, the Encyclopaedia. Britannica has had a total sale, in volumes, exceeding that of any other book ever published, save the English Bible, and perchance Shakespeare. This total, for the leven editions since 1768, now reaches the staggering figure of more than a million sets.-or far above 20,000,000 volumes. And the total paid for them exceeds a hundred million dollars! Of the total sale of the Britannica since 1768, more than two-thirds has been in the United States alone. And of the new Eleventh Edition, more than three-quarters, to date, have been sold in this country. Its million schoolhouses, its 1500 colleges and universities, and the wide distribution of the Britannica and countless other smaller compends of knowledge have made the American people what they are the most resourceful, the most inventive, the most progressive people on earth. MM Booklet No. 2 . IrTorder to give a clear idea of what there Is to interest bright 'boys and girls in the Encyclopaedia Britannica the publishers have prepared a really beautiful book of 72 pages, as big as a magazine. It contains overlOO half-tone illustrations. It shows how the Britannica makes school work easier and more profitable; how to make children uso their eyes and ears and eager minds to good purpose, and how to find out for what kind ofwork a child should be trained. .r There is a series of stories about some real boys and gfrls true stories and some of the interesting things they discover for themselves. , ., The book might almost be called a miniature,, encyclopaedia, it is so packed with information. Do not fall to send for it. It is a complete and unfailing test of their capacity to enjoy the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Only a limited number printed. Man tne coupon to-oay. There is Just tim.eto send for tho beautiful 130-pago book about the new 3 advise you to send your name without fall to-day. Sets may be seen and orders left at f 1 1 O 4LAMA Market : Chestnut UimDei oruuiei-d . Eighth and Ninth It--- A 130-page' GUIDE BOOK FREE! The publishers of the EN CYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA have prepared a richly illus trated book of 130 pages to tell you all about this great work and the new "Handy Volume" Issue, and its usefulness to you. It is full of interesting stories, clever dialogues, beautiful pic tures a book packed from cover to cover. Some of its contents include : 100 interesting bits of knowl edge revealing the ENCYCLO PAEDIA BRITANNICA from a hundred different points of A little history of the BRI TANNICA from tho days of King George III. An interesting dialogue tell, ing of the interest of the BRI TANNICA for women. A clever story about tha way children get interested in it. Nearly twohundred half-tone Illustrations, color plates, spec imen pages and the like. Whether you are interested in the BRITANNICA or not, you and every member of your family will thoroughly enjoy reading this book, as big as a msgaxlae. V .- ' f mmmmmtmmmmmmmmm -W Street sat Kizabir. V asiJnTiii.'at.irtjiipfif j '