Tl? I N A N CI AL ' E D I T I O N AV-MS rw NIGHT EXTRA uenina Ilrtrger vol. h.-jsto. ops EUTONS BEGIN - EVACUATION OF HALICZ FORTS r -n in a q A n sfri n n R. Iff UC1'"UI .v,.w.. l Turks and Russians . in Battle I&RGE PART OF CITY J, "WRECKED BY SHELLS Mi h . 1'Czar s Forces Advance a Steadily in Carpathians Toward Hungary ffiULGARS ROUT ENEMY flr fnlttvn TTmiv Triwrio florinnna VAiVUib v,m AVikj - ...-..; Push Big Drive on Bucharest - PHttiADISLPUIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 101G Constant, 1010, st tni rcauo I.trwra Courixt. jCTiwMiiriiiii EVANS LEADS CORKRAN IN SEMIFINAL WiK'SSKSJaWBBJfflifST'lKB y55Jjyj.." in V Petrograd reports that the Austrians h&vr- hpmin to evacuate the fortified tfw nf Hnliez. nt the functions of thn . til ." l , r Dniester ana me unna jjipa tuvers. ' tho fortress, which is under the firo of the Ciar's artillery, may be expected i, at nny moment. (Troops of four nations, Germans, Austrians, Turks and Rus , Hans, are engaged in the battle around Halicz. The German-Bulgar drive against Bucharest, capital of Rumania, Is progressing,, according to tho German ' War Office. The Teutons and their allies arc endeavoring to cross the Danube for a drive northward. Great ' jubilation reigns in Berlin as a result . 'Bucharest. The capture of four Ru manian townsj, Dabsie, Balchik, Ca Tarna and Kaliakpa, is reported by i Sofia. , On the west front four attacks in dense formations' were launched by the Germans south of the Somme last night i. oeiwecn vermanaoviucrs and Chaulnes. ,7..ono ot the attacks succeeded in reach ing any i?rencn positions, and tho French, took 200 rrioro prisoners, the wwiea-iyat oiiicof announced to,day. rjne uerraans attacked heavily ?ainst new French nositiona Between Ijsfny, and a point south of Chaulnes," ywg ncavy losses, worth ot the sime there was ereat artillerv" KfWftty, "ut no infantry fighting. The Italian have reDulsed a violent "Austrian jittnMt on Tieif Mnnla rii,.,- i ., , - .. - le position, in Val Sugana, and havo irraca an Austrian trencii on the 'ana Mountains. Hrr" - - -. (sssssssssbsbJL dfssssBntoavS- 9k 5,Aai & 3- 'vJSsf? 4st-.vf iisii) i 'jk "" ! & J bsLbbk ?? K vlLTsZi i ' Lssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssh - .ssssssssssssssssssssebsf''k jt. . aLssssssssssLssssssssssa skRkt v jwt jssssssssssssssm t l LbVi bsssssssssssy v sssHk sss : nB y ' J 'Kiss '"ssssssssssBF&sinsyssssssssssssssssssPsssssssssssss: assasssnk Ift. r jJkBssMSa1 g Kfc?IIPIx--BBBBBBHr ... af. ...ssssssssssTBlBSMssssssssssssssssMWjaTssssssssssB ssslfBBBB BBMBaiaBBBBBBBBBBSfc-vi' isssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssflss!Ms5B?yK! b TBwSiiB-- Lsssssssssk ssssssssssflPwH fc-- i . . . ,.". " ' - i QUICK NEWS PHILLIES, 1st G.. 0 0 0 1,1 0 0 0 NEW YORK 2000S0H Out at the Mcrion Golf Club course at Haverford the Chicago champion is shown in his contest with Corkran, of Baltimore, in the semifinal round of tho nationnl championship tournament. Clarko PARTISAN MOTION BEATEN BY VOTES OF SUFFRAGISTS Resolution Favors Candi dates Pledged to Anthony Amendment CONSTRUED FOR HUGHES Wilson Coming, Suffragists Down Hughes Resolution W3Y excitement broke out in tho convention ot the National American Woman Suffrage Party today: Mrs. Raymond Robins, of Chicago, introduced resolution favoring Hughes for President of the United States. With President Wilson's 'visit and address beforo the convention only B' matter Or hours distant, opponents of stbe .resolution sprarig,ti"thefr feet to denounce it. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw pro nounced if 'lanti-Wilsom',' Two " hours of ' heated debate followed. . Tho resolution was crushingly defeated. SftlSTRIANS REPORTED TO HAVE pEGUN EVACUATION OP HALICZ; ' Tnwxr Timrcni.'rr rtv oiinim Autiii ivivniiriciLf ui an&LiijS 5 PETIlOCinAD, Sept. 8.,- It Is reported tr mat tno Austro-lluntarian troops sfendlng Halicz In Oallcla Have begun to 'acu&te thn rltv. Th iiroat.- na allci that has not been wrecked by the or the Russian artillery has been irned. " Thfl'. Tlllnn lln r h Jll.l.. m nallez la hif hv a .. tr.. i .. man and Turkish troops and there lias been Moody nghtlnjf In that district. . .More prisoners' have beert captured by the HUHBlnnn if. nollln nj .' t ?.!? are be'nK Indicted upon the German nies. . In the Carpathians the Russians are ad- U t?,I "wthpdlcally from height to height In the wooded district. .'! LM been announced oradally today J?, ,he Russian offensive In Oallcla con- Ji..! BUCC"fuy despite, tho stubborn resistance ot the. German allies. Inivlri?an, co.u"ter-attacka on the Dvlna and w yolhynla have been repulsed. The war office Issued the following state- nt on operations today: . Oerman counter-attacks against our Positions on the western bank of the tn WVW. A" attack In the region of Velltsk, In the direction of Kovel, was also repulsed, On the Onlla fj..r!ivr .'" aall:la ou- offensive con tinues despite the stubborn resistance of th! hXUK. w? 'bombarding us from " right bnk of the river. w.m caa..ul front; In the direction of "hl and Ognot there, trflerco fighting.- ,ftANS REPORT GAINS N RU3IANIAN FRONT; ADMIT i' , BUSSES IN SOMME FIGHTING uSlu' S?.pt ?"" Qrmah8 have auto ?ction' te th French In fighting So7rtLth8 .Bomme weBt Be-ny arid fJo;Mtheast of Souvllle. on the Verdun m U wbji oniclally admitted This It?. 1v,L".nJwlcl 1iuman(an troops have been ?yn back north nf iha num-ni.. ;X?jV1 MUs after the rnuii nf .r"'rt,u.r"."1 k against Dobric the nm-TirSZ: nautj, i t - ";: iw 'sw)1 "'K Ctal report follows; U Western fpnt--North of the Sommi ITi CoBtlnned q Tsse Hte. Column Twe '.-THE VEATHER - '1 ' I I I 1 I I M Fnniur.AfiT . Kor Philadelphia and Dltxnity-r-Thun- """vf mm afternoon or ,to. M, MlowedbtieooUf.' .r1j., ,1 . pooler; tMierttU southerly winds mmy yvtaicny. I.KNOTH OF PAY v seu,'"': 53i5.-Z.-HEa ZZtl-'l K- BsXAWARir HIVKK TJBK CHANOIW l.niiBlJIIIT MTSJB.PP wmxwr , oao ft.aa UritXOMft.ni, iIKXiUr::, S5: TKHPXKATVRK At HACM HftUM IltSig ATLANTIC CITT, Sept S. The Na tional American Woman's ' Suffrage Asso ciation In .convention here was shaken to Its foundations today by a debate which followed the Introduction of a resolution by Mrs. Raymond Robins, of Chicago. This resolution would have virtually pledged the support ot the convention to Charles Evans Hughes for President. The debate went on for almost two hours, with charges of antl-Wilsonlsm being hurled at the backers ot the resolution and charges of what virtually amounted to anti-suffrage being hurled at the' oppo nents of the resolution. When the vote finally came, at 1 o'clock, the resolution was decisively defeated, though the debate at one time indicated a chance of success. The resolution provided that the dele gates in the convention urged suffragists of America to support for national-office in the coming campaign' only those candi dates who pledge their .support to the Susan R. Anthony amendment. This was plainly coming out" tor Mr. Hughes, for he h'aa already expressed his favor for the Federal amendment, while GARDNER AND EVANS LEADING AT END OF THE FIRST 18 HOLES Amateur Champion Is 4 Up on Guilford and National Open King Tops Corkran by 3 Up LARGE GALLERY ATTENDS Morning Round Cards GAnDNEK-GUILFOKD MATCH Gardner Oat 4 ft In 4 4 Oullford Out 4 S In 4 4 Gardner 4 up. a 4 3a 4 7 SO 17 4 4-Ul 4 4 3 70 EVANS-CORKRAX 5IATCII Kran Oat 5 A ft 4 ft In ......... 4 4 S 3 S Cerkran Dot 8 4 4 4 3 10 4 4 3 fi 3717 In 4 Etans S up. A R 3 4 543 3 8 8 4 4 3K SI K Continued en rate Fear. Column One By SANDY McNIBLICK MERION CRICKET CLUB, HAVEIt FORD, Pa.. ept S Jess" Guilford, touted, as the longest solt ball walloper In the world, was outslugged time and again by the American champion. Bob Gardner, de fending his title in the semifinal round here today of the United States amateur golf championship. An enormous throng packed at the heels of this pair, and Gardner fin ished the first eighteen holes 4 up on Gull ford, Gardner pulled his drive to the home hole of the first half Into the woods.. From the ambush of bushes and trees he. failed to get his drive out It landed in a pile of hay. Rather than move the hay, he tried to lay. His ball got lost fit the haystack and 'he conceded the hole to Guilford, who had strung out his drive nearly 360 yards down the slopei It was one of his longest wallops. Guilford smashed one 340 yards to the? fourth hole. The moving field of more than 3000 fans thundered with Joy whenever the Now Hampshire farmer lad really laid his giant frame Into hts tee shot. They liked to seel tins iar-ramea wauoper nnisn behind a pin dot carry far Into the gloaming. . Chick Evans, United States open cham pion, had his hands full with D. Clarke Corkran, Baltimore machine and last hope of Dixie Land, Chick waa 3 up at the end of 18 holes. Chick was la his most no torious of putting moods. America's "eras-, lest putter" sank them in turn from wild corners of the green and then. missed them front six Inches' range, Ho misled the simplest of his life, almost o,n the home hole, to the delight of the morbid watchers, when he failed to bottle a twenty-Inch roller CONGRESS CLOSES ITS LONG SESSION; WILL MEET DEC. 4 Rush to Get Away to Polit ical Battles Follows Adjournment PRESIDENT SIGNS BILLS Continued on rase Twe, Column Two WASHINGTON, Sept 8. Tho first ses sion of the Sixty-fourth Congress cama to an end at 10:02 today. The most momentous session of any Congress for a generation closed as President Wilson signed tho Ad ministration $200,000,000 revenuo bill, last of a long scries of Important measures which have occupied the attention ot the nine months' sitting. Ten o'clock this morning was fixed as the hour of adjournment by a Joint resolution adopted by both House and Senate, and tho fall of the gavels of Vice President Marshal and Sneaker Clark dissolved JCpn gr'eW until -TJccerfiber 4, The drop, of tife gavels was a signal for a general scramble to get away from Washington, and Senators and Representatives hurried, to get into the political campaign. PRESIDENT'S STATEMENT Immediately after adjournment the Pres ident Issued the following statement: A verv remnrknhlA itpnalnn nf con gress has Just closed, full, as all recent sessions of the Congress have been, of helpful and humane legislation which constitute contributions of capital Im portance to the defense, tho economic . progress and the wholesome llfo of the country. It Is to be regretted that the session could not have been continued long enough to complete the program re cently projected with regard to tho ac commodation of labor disputes between the railways and the employes, but It was not. feasible In the circumstances to continue the session any longer, and therefore only the most Immediately pressing parts of, tho program could be completed. The rest. It Is agreed, have merely been postponed until it can be more maturely deliberated and perfected, r have every reason to be lieve It Is the purpose of the leaders of the twtf houses Immediately on the reassembling of Congress to undertake this additional legislation, u ts ev: dent that the country should be relieved of the anxiety which must have been created by recent events with regard to the future accommodation of such disputes. In his roorn in the Senate wing, the Presi dent at OilB began signing the bills await ing his signature. Senators Simmons and Hughes were with him as he sgned at 9:30 Alexander, vOaoJtgr, KHUfor; Twrwiu, Hrim. ,Klcni nnd Entsllc. i - i NATIONAL LEAGUE BROOKLYN lf1 0 0 111 V -V BOSTON, 1st E...-..0 OOIOOO rf offer and Jj' Meyers; Tylor nnd Gow'dy, V- :v RAINTRE VENTS ATHLETICS' GAME v '. .. .Today's tlown)our.mado It Imposflble for the Athletics nnd New York Yrinke to meet this afternoon at Shibe Tafk as scheduled. TODAY'S RACING RESULTS Hist Belmont race, 2-yoar-olds, handtcniv 6 furlonfi-s Yankee Witch; 121, Schuttlngor, G to 1, 3 to 2, 3 o 5, won; Milkman, 115, J. McTnggnrt, 2 to',1, 7 to 10, 1 to 4, second; Harvest Kin&, 112, HaynM, 0 to 2, 4 to '5, 1 to 3, third. Time, 1.12 1-5. Tlrst Montreal race, purse $500,' 3-yenv-olds and. up,- foaled In Canada, selling, 7 furlongs Exiher, 'j07, XMcXenzie, $0.30, $5.10, $3,00, woiij Irish Heart, 112, Fturiugton, $8.80, $Q.C0, secondjUiiUb. leen H., 107, Metdnlf, $3.20;, third! . Tiine, 1.32 1-5. ..-- '. ' : RUSSIANS" TAKE OFFENSIVE IN RUMANIA LONDON, .Sept. 8. The Russians Jiavo taken tho offensive against the Germans and Bulgarians all along the line" in Dobrudja province, says a Homo wireless dispatch, and a great, battle is raging on a -lCO-milo front,' ? . X - VA. ALLIES' PLANES SHELL AERODROME NEAR GHENT LONDON, Sept. 8. An air attack agaiust the Oerman aero drome at St.DeulE-Westrem, fivo miles from Ghent, was reported by the Admiralty today. One British aoroplane failed to .return. Continued on Ta Two, Column Four ERRORS MINGLED WITH CLEAN IIITSEijrT ALEX IN-THE FIRST fiATfLE Stock, UieriofT and Luderus Make Miscues'.That,Result in ' Scoring tho Great Hit Hard BANCROFT BANGS HOMER By CHANDLER D. RICHTER POLO GROUNDS, NEW YQItKr Sept. , Alexander was very Ineffective 4galnt the' OlanU In the first game of -today's double-header, tfot only that, but the Phil lies fielded miserably, ably assisting Alex In Joslng the contest Tesreau was on (ha Mound for New York. " PIRS.T INNING, Holke made .a sensational gloved hand catch of Fletcher's throw and Paskert was -out Zimmerman threw out Nlehoff. Burns made a great catch of. 'Stock's long drive. No rurif, no' hits, ;ro errors. . Burns fanned. Herteg (ned a single, to right Robertson al, singled to. right and when Cravath fumbled the ball Hersog reaebed third and.Hebertaon seoondi ztm merman '" im f Luerua. Fleiotw smashed trHtf WMlle'a head, aeor lng HW as4 Robertse. KauR fouled to l.uderu. ' Two' nuts, tfcrrfe, hits, one error. ' i SBCOND INNING cravam jw r, iih wgiea to jttr. LmUrue Wt !, a astride play," 31m, - tj Murux U JfaMta. Ma ruu Am Itlt ftft errors. '' Malt sluM to Qir, II&rMaa hat lata. SHOWERS AND WIND BREAK DAY'S HEAT Weather Bureau's Promises Ful ' filled When Rain Brings ' Relief to Qity Promises of the Weather Bureau were fulfilled this afternoon when heavy showers, were ushered In with a thlrty-flve-mlles-an-hour wind. During the shower the wind blew blew twenty miles an hour. From 1 to 3 o'clock, Just before and during the shower the thermometer registered a drop of E de gress. It was 9! at 1 o'clock, 91 at 2 and 87 at S. Intermittent showers for the afternoon and evealng were phophesled by the weather bureau. Weather -conditions will remain cool tonight and tomorrow, with probably a decline of twelve degrees in t emperature tonight Clouds hung over most of ihe, Atlantic coast states today and showers fell many plaeea. Fair and cool weather obtained throughout the Ohio valley, Indiana and Illinois. Rurlng the first thunderstorm what ap peared to be snow whirled over the central section of the city. The Waather Bureau said it could not be. It was explained that prUp papers -were being burned in tha fuHwoea of seme office building and the. strong wind whirled them about like a stage www storm. Hlgto tnpratre were regMerH tktt rami, a maximum of 9 Jww havfe tefk refrtaa U 11 o'eloek. T)u wlnhvmM wa ft aiarm, NiUr4 at t 'iaok. GIRL WHO RECOVERED FROM PLAGUE OFFERS BLOOD TO AID OTHERS .Child Offers Aid in Letter to Doctor Dixon Was Paraly sis Victim When 3 y ears-old ' OTHERS VOLUNTEER HELP An rfer of blood for serum for the treatment of Infantile paralysis was made by a fifteen-year-old girl to Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, State Health 'Commissioner, today, in Tespon.se Mo an urgent appeal by the health authorities. The girl, Oladys Christine Douglas, had the disease when she waa three years old, Bhe Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Douglas, of 2847'Gerritt street. Her let ter was one of two received' today by Doctor"Dlxon, who withheld the name of the other volunteer. Gladys Deuclas's letter reads aa follows: The" glrl'a tetter reads aa follows: 'Dear Doctor Dixon I read In the papers today pf Dr, .0, Y. White call for im munlxlng utrum. and I wrte to tell ou that T had Infantile paralysis when I was three yeare old. (and I am now IE)' and was curedjby Doctor Bronaon, of Rosemont, I lived at Radnor at the -.tme, ' Mrs, D(xon waa vary kln4 to my little alate Hlta. -who died 1 y Mawr Hospital, and she will renumber hm. "As I sjo fully developed an m-feedy health Pad4y an. 1 thought tWTlf uy EXPLORING ENSIGN REPORTS "CROCKER LAND" A MYTH WASHINGTON. Sept. 8. Ensgn Fltzhugh Green, who went on the MacMlllan "Crocker land" expedlion this afternoon made his first official report on the trip to the Navy Department,, statins that the expedition had proved there was no "Crocker Land." A complete written report will Jater be made to Secretary of the Navy Daniels. , P. R. R. SUBSIDIARY LINES MERGER APPROVED HARniSBURG, Sept. 8. Merger of the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washing ton, the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Central, the Elkton and Middletown and the Columbia and Port Depost Railroad' Companies was approved today by the Public Service Commlsson. The application was made by the Philadelphia, Baltimore and WnsMngton Company for the consolidation several months ago and had since been under consideration by the Public Service Commission. All tho lines are subsidiaries of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The capital stock of the meiKer is $29,900,460. U. S. CARES FOR RUMANIAN INTERESTS IN TURKEY CONSTANTINOPLE. Sept. 8. The United States Embassy has taken over tho protection of Rumanian interests in Turkey and will look after them during tho course of the war. INDEPENDENTS MEET STANDARD'S CUT IN GASOLINE CHICAGO, Sept. 8. The Texaa Company and other independent oil concerns have met the Standard, Oil Company of Indiana's one cent reduction In gasoline throughout the West by making Chicago tank wagon basis sixteen and a half fcinti a. gallon. Texaa Company's naphtha price remains unchanged at alxteen and a half cents M Tt ,- 94eW,Mlr BRITISH LqSE TWO MORE' STEAMSHIPS LONDON, Sept. 8-The Ellerman liner Tagus, 987 tons, has been sunk. The British steamship Strathoy has been sunk; all members of the crew were saved. -.-- . HUNDREDS SEE WOMAN SWALLOW POISON AT TERMINAL Mrs. Elizabeth Sleslik. 25, years old, of 410 Wellington avenue, Haddonfleld, N. J., wallowed several poison tablets In the waiting room of the Reading Ter minal today while hundreds of persona looked ,on In amazement ' She was re moved to the Jefferson Hospital. Jler condition la. considered serious. She told the pollco she wanted to die because her husband left her following a quarrel last night SEVENTY-FIVE KILLED BY ALLIES' AVIATORS IN AUGUST BERLIN, Sept 8.'PurlnB August the Allies' artillery and aviators killed thirty-one men, twenty-seven women and seventeen children in Belgian and French territory held by the Germans. FOURTEEN GUARD REGIMENTS TO BE MUSTERED OUT, WASHINGTON, Sept. 8. The War Department, today issued . the following revised list of troops to be mustered out of the Federal service: Third, Fourteenth and Seventy.flrs New York Infantry; brigade headquarters and rirst and Fourth New Jersey Infantry; Fourth Maryland Infantry; First and.Seapnd Illinois In fantry; First and Third Missouri Infantry; Fifth California Infantry: Third Oregon Infantry; Second Washington Infantry) First Louisiana Infantry., BERLIN HEARS OF BLOODY OUTBREAK IN MOSCOW 'BERLIN, Sept. 8,Ths Overseas, News Agency quotes the Stockholm DagsWad as rsWMng a bloody outbreak at Moscow In which a he number of person were VUW4 or wounded. A crowd surrounding a train pf Russian wounds pro tests acalnst ths lack of, ears beinc shown tits rosn, Trooj wo r4r4 U flrs on the orowd but rsfussd, a4 tfe BuJa polio waio ttisrtmmn orders in oitas. slwurslng U WhL 7"". b A 4$ NIGHT EXTRA ritiou onjej ojmsnr 'DOPE FIENDS' USE DOCTORS TO GET DRUGS Handful of Unscrupulous Physicians Evades Fed eral Statute DRUGGISTS BREAK LAW Peddlers Supplied by Smuggling Syndicate Sell 'Goods' on the Streets ARTICLE IV The preceding article on the menacing tprtad of the narcotic drug" evil have dealt ivUh Ut general effect!, the crippling of the Harrison net by court decltlom, the emug gltng o "dope" In greet Quantifies info the city by a criminal syndicate and the degra dation of young men and women by Ten derloin dwellers co-optratlng with this vn dlcate. Today' article reveals the danger from untcrtipulons doctors and show n need of more drastio regulation of drug dispensing. The inquiry by the livening Ledger was, undertaken at the request of Dr. Horatio O. Wood, Jr., and with the ac tive co-operation of United Btatet District Attorney Kane's ofIce. By HENRY JAMES BUXTON When the Coroner of Philadelphia looked Into the facts attending the death ot a youth named Tony riova, less than a week ago, ha was led to exclaim that if no other remedy for the cancer called 'The Arsenal could be found It should be burned down. From Uie little Tenth street pie shop, two or threV blocks north of Market, the boy had been carried suffering from the effects of heroin. He died In a hospital a few hours later. A special policeman calmly observed at the Inquest that "dope parties" were fre quently held. In "The Arsenal" and that in a recent raid twenty-nine persons were re moved from tho place, all but two under the influence of narcotic drugs. ' In cases like these the hand ot the "dope syndicate" la clearly seen. Through an .Intricate smuggling system It Imports Into this city many 'rmndrod pounds of mor phine, cocaine and heroin monthly and dis tributes them through Tenderloin agents and even from autos that pass through various sections on schedule time: This syn dicate was facing extinction under the Har rison act, which forbids the sale of "dope" 'except on a -physician's prescription. It gained a new lease qf life through the re- .cent' decision, invalidating 'section 8 ,of.C& act. for this, prevents the conviction, of those found with the drug In their possession,. declaring that the mere possession of largs quantities of a drug is not evidence pre sumptive of guilt. - HOW 120 "FIENDS" GOT DRUGS Legislation is required to stop this enor mous leak In the wall raised against the flood ot evil sustenance for crime and degradation. But tt-'moro difficult problem presents Itself In the evading of the law by unscrupulous physicians. ' Dr. Frank M. Hendrlck, a negro physi cian, of 1912 Dickinson street, was arrested qn' A'ugust 8 by Deputy Internal Revenue Collector McDevltt, accused of supplying 120 young "dope fiends" of South Phila delphia with heroin, the most vicious of modern habit-forming drugs. McDevltt and Glovanl, a detective In the employ of ths State Pharmaceutical Department, testified that Doctor Hendrlck wrote heroin pre scrlptlons for tha drug addicts under ths pretense that, he was attempting to curs them by the ''reduction method." During seventy-eight days Hendrlck wrote 1000 such prescriptions, and tor each, one he obtained a tee of $1, making a total of 11000 In a little more than two months. The prescriptions were filled by two drug gists, Samuel H. Toplan and Solomon Bay llnson. These two druggists were also placed under arrest, accused of having made illicit sales to drug victims. Tbplan and Bayllnson received 81 each for the prescriptions tor heroin filled by them. That -makes a grand total ot $2009 paid by the group ot 120 for their supply during seventy-eight days. McDevltt testi fied that the addicts who patronized Doctor Hendrlck and the druggists ranged in ag from sixteen to twenty-Ova years. One of them was an eighteen-year-old boy, a high school graduate, who was employed In ths plant ot tbe Remington Arms Company at 116.60 a week. This boy waa giving $14 of' his salary eaclweek to Doctor Hendrlck and the two druggists to fe "cured" of the heroin habit. A mother In South Philadelphia told Mc Devltt that her ' boy had become useless sines he acquired vtho heroin bablt He, too, went to Doctor Hendrlck. OETTINO THE EVIDENCE Glylng a fictitious nams and address, Glovanl called on Hendrlck, and -asked hiss to write him a prescription for 10 grain ot heroin. Doctor Hendrlck asked how long he used the drug. ''Six months," was ths reply. Ths physician asksd If he desired to be cured. The detective .ril4 la U afrirmatlveXand recslvsd a prsosriptlon, for 20 grains ot heroin after he h4irnsd hi name In a little reeerd ,bko4evanl hud the prescription filled -without 'awdtfrVeuHjr . -at Bayljnson's'drug store, . The experience of Joseph Brow whoa'b eaHed on the 'pfcyslelan .ws oUaatlr del. . ferenL Brown testified that be tsW1 Jt drljsH he vs a odealns addict, "lis, ssM he ootkt not give aw anas I in," said Brown, "but wt be wotri rst sss) apKsoriilir ' "DH Dootor look. ai,your U aaslnaWon ot'yowf -Ms d imk. .n sts sisjsgi i hU. rsoerf k.sl ts. aMss Ut ste t Ms, band r what b ba wrtttssi & sanosal H. b aaksd as ,t asssi my at MM wsss t M I tear pfs itptisn for Sid tl" Ova swss'i bb wbs ' s mmmmn immtmrtmtj.. ' Ws i 1 say Msm and,m tbssi SmS Wh, for wasi btnUk, Me