V EVENING LEWEft-PmLADJBLPHIM THURSDAY, OCTOBEB 12, 1916, GIMBEL SOLDIERS HONORED UPON RETURN c - HClifcliBBrvV t 1liswB ' I "'"T TV 1 p flf 7"jL r5Y wPHBfB Klnmft JmW M HTWMTm aAP jlV f TjswJT sswJswM filS "-JM nsnwJsN! Lr ' '-.L BBBBBBlH Jki1 'EHHHH LwM9 T Y''iBBBBBBVai P aT JwJswJsnfT - fl WB tV- .awlV flawH;lf ZA HrTVA I - H ' MBwaBgaaMWB 1 11 . .; ...r,).; v , ..t-o. , JL- . t a ,-- . -. .Mylol Company H, First Regiment, N. G. I, fa composed entirely of mm In tho employ of Gimbcl Brothers. Jncob Gimbel Is soen shaking hands with Captain William II. .Williama just before the banquet given by the store in honor of tho troopers returned from tho border, 'KNOCKERS" TALES OF GUARDSMEN ALL FALSE, SAYS OFFICER OF THIRD City News in Brief -. "Stay-at-Hbmes" Anger Leader With Stories of Troops' Hardships None Would Desert SERYICE BENEFITED MEN Considerable resentment 'U being' ex pressed by omcers of th First and Third Regiments because of the frequent criticisms which have been aimed at .the efficiency of' the National Guard by ''stay-at-hoihes" and others who have Joined the' various factions In the preparedness movement They are angered because of statements that the ma jority of the national guardsmen were dls igpsted with their experience on the border, 'ahd' would desert or find other means of 'severing their connection with the guard an Boon as possible. An officer of the. Third Regiment Bald to day; "Certain persons have taken advan tags of every opportunity to attack the effi ciency of the ''Notional Guard and to other wise belittle tho organisation In the eyes of tho public ;: . "In lS98f,,coh(3tlonln the guard were rather bad;;and''hUndrd of troopers died from bad i sanitation ond from eatlnr bad food. ThAvguard tnjs93 was also badly trained; Officers Issued) -orders, and tho' men did not Wbow enough about military disci pline to obey those ".orders. "But. we have an enj'fely different situa tion the National Gukqjt today. Take the Third JBsglment for Instance? this regiment wtienlt went to tho 'front was composed of SL-lot of pale, lanky boys. "We have brought them back In better condition than when they went' away. They are no longer boys, , tut seasoned, hardened men, ready for any t emergency, "And yet -tho. publlo as a wholo seems against us;, seems to have little confidence In the, National Guard. On the way to the border alse tales were circulated concern ing us. It was. reported that we had In sufficient camp and artillery equipment, and ' that we were In a deplorable state of dis organization. On. the way back homo the fa(pe report was circulated that our food supply 'was Insufficient, and what there was of It warbad. "The facta are that the Pennsylvania - guardsmen are In the pink of condition. We did not have, one death from disease all the tlmo we were on the border, and from a military standpoint we' made a rec ord of which wo are proud, Thesa stories about the guardsmen being discontented .and that they would desert It they could are absolutely false. We have not a dis satisfied man In our regiment, and I have yet to hear of one In any other regiment that Is dissatisfied. "In the matter of preparedness the cltl- , lens of 'this, country can have two things a large standing' army, which means com- pulsory military service, or a citizen sol- , dlery. It strikes me that the National Guard is the nearest thing to a cltlien soldiery we can have hero. A large stand ing arm with compulsory military service I not to be thought of, because It would entail too great a burden upon the people, . "The National ..Guard has proved Its effi ciency by Its record on the bolder. It's time s that the. Knockers threw away their ham mers and gave us a little appreciation. The first real bit of preparedness enthusiasm I have' witnessed In Philadelphia since the beginning of the European War was ex pressed when the First and Third Regl tnenta came marching home from the border this tweek. We need a lot more of this spirit." It Is expected that the membern of the First and Third Regiments wilt be mus tered out of the UnlUd Btatrs service about October 2 J. $41 jll VERDICT AGAINST P. R. R., Bulah Coal Company Recovers From Railroad Business Restricted TJnluat discrimination was charged by .the .Bulah, Coa) Company In )ta suit against 'the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, and damages of 4,711.Z9 were awarded the plaintiff this' afternoon by a Jury before Judge piaklwwn In the United States Dis trict Court The cl eomtM&y charged that through the railroad's practice of coal cor distribu tion It lost Jorge rots on contracts for the sale et ooal which It could not ship to market and bad to shut down Its col liery frequtetiy. It was also contended by the plaintiff that excessive cost had to . be paid for the tiealted wining and prodno vtten at ooal, and that on account of fre epeftt Mlenesa Ma working force became esaetevUced. A MOHTKI) OIOAItKTTi: unil.r a feather bed Is supposed to have started a slight Are In a lodging house, conducted by Myer Wlilkln, at 929 Ixcust street Two men wero In' the house In bod. Officer Itawley of tho Fifth Districts discovered ivnoko coming out of the second-story win dow and rushed Into the house and got1 both men out of bed. Tho damage was trifling. Patients In the Jefferson Hospital, a squaro away, lined tho windows and balconies to look at the fire apparatus passing In the' street. , ".A HORSE FALLING Into a hole In the str?t at Fifteenth and Race streets block ed the cars on Fifteenth ntreet for twenty minutes shortly before noon today. A heavily loaded wagon belonging to Hender son Brothers, Twenty-sixth and Spruce streets, trying to get out of the car track, turned too sharply and the nearside horse fell Into an excavation dug by a plumber, Tho crew of a repair wagon of the Phila delphia Rapid Transit Company got the horse out. AOTINQ I.IKUTENANT JOHN J. PUF FY, of tho Twelfth and Pine streets sta tion, has been presented with an eighth son. The newcomer and his mother aro doing nicely at the Duffy home, 1920 Wolf street. ANOTHER IIOnHH was stolen br Kple Super, a Philadelphia youth, a half hour after he had escaped from the House of Detention at Chester, where he was com mitted for stealing the horse of Mounted Policeman John Story, of the Upped Darby police, last Sunday, Super managed to escape from the Institution and drove awfty In the horse and wagon belonging to C. M. Hnrdman, of Chester. A policeman arrest ed him and returned him to the House of Detention. CAUGHT HETWF.nN TWO TKOMiKY cars whllo ho was washing windows In the Fifteenth and Cumberland streets car barn, Robert Phillips, 152S Oakdale street. Is In the Northwestern General Hospital suffering from Internal injuries and several broken ribs, STKUGK. 11Y A MOTOHTKUCK which came from behind a southbound street car at Ridge avenue and Twentieth street, Mor timer H. Miller, eight years old, 216C Rldge avenue, Is In the Woman's College Hos pital suffering from severe Injuries. Lewis Benham, 20S1 Kast Chelten avenue, driver of the truck, was arraigned before 'Magis trate Pennock and hold In (000 ball for a hearing. AN ArAUTSIi:T ItOUSH to cost S800, 000 is to be built at 1B33-35 Spruce street. Plans for the building, prepared by Fid erlck Webber? call for a fifteen-story struc WIM.IAar II. VAN LOAN, a Mind broom manufacturer, fell dead Ubt night on Mar ket street near Fifty-eighth. He was sen to the West Philadelphia Homeopathic Hos pitals where physicians said heart disease had been the cause. Van Loan lived at 18 South Redfleld street THH NINTII ANNUAL OONVKNTION of the pastors of, the 777 Baptist churches In this State will convene n the Chestnut Street Baptist ' Church, October 16. Plans will be discussed for adding l,000.000"to the membership of the churches during the next five years. ' Till! FIIANKFOIID Uiislneas Men's As sociation will recommend battleship gray us the most suitable color for the new ele vated structure, according to Henry 8. Dornoman. president The Kensington Business Men's Association has also de cided to ask that gray paint be used. TIIK PHILADELPHIA Masle Clab Is planning the Introduction of community singing In Philadelphia as a method of winter entertainment It Is planned to hold itha gatherings. In recreation centers and allow musicians from among tho people themselves to volunteer to furnish the music. Other expenses will be borne by the Musla Club, which has headquarters at the Aldlne Hotel. THH BUM OF 15000 will be contribute by Rumanians in this city toward the nation-wide movement to raise 1500,000 for the Rumanian Red Cross. A meeting will be held Sunday afternoon In the head quarters of the IJanatlana Beneficial So ciety. 229 Brown street, when the cam paign will be put In full swing, A COLLISION lir.TWiniN a motorcycle and a trolley car sent Mr. and Mrs. George Nagle, of 3528 Kast Gordon street, to St Mary's Hospital, where they are suffering from Internal Injuries. Nagle drove Into a trolley car on Kast Columbia avenue, last night, trying to avoid hitting a dog which had run In front of his machine. MILK HIGH IN WINTER CHEAP IN SUMMER, IS PLAN OF CITY DEALERS Sliding, Scale Suggested as Solu tion of Dispute With Pro ducers Adoption Probable MAY ARBITRATE MATTER "MUaKFAiT MATIKKE" DRAWS " ' ' h i jBofdrm'Ti sri Meaning Attdlenea at the .;" Hay, -"gxperiewee" Many men.of th$ First nd Third Regl Mt slrd their return from the bor der at a theatrical novelty today, when a Msftstatr)fcriteee'Ve 'the 4ey "jfaperl- Lmmr M,'geM at ltata'tteek at the UUtefcl Theater. v m ffsSiahtaet matlniee" Mve been rare, Meer Tafto M lat oe being a MM stat psrlsrmanoa ot the beer ILa Mew .York run aearlv l , saf Its MrtSltraUweteeVM many that smwaa ras sen an several nunr. i were turned away. CAMDEN n HUGHES WITHOUT TO EUROPE'S WAR Disdains to Answer Charge That He Represents Alien Voters HIS ALTITUDE AMERICAN Resonts Jockeying Designed to Align Him With Entente or Teutonic Allies i WMk K Praia . i a week alter Mebert Kllleugb; a oon- ' af aiM Oreene street Germs ntown, lauruej ear lor iiiiu, it was : sjfgbt vaile he was INFANTILE PAKALY8IH suffers, re. celvad-a donation of 116 from Mr, and Mrs. Frederick Bolstman, 918, North Fifth street, whoso son was discharged as cured from the Municipal Hospital. The money was sent to the hospital with a note asking that it be used to help other victims less for tunate. 108 CBKAM HVTd expensive te Frank Lerenc, of It Hudson street, today. He wsa Aaed tit by Reeorder Stackhouse for vMevliag the ordinance which forbids' the .MweWi of tee.oream salt and water on tYnt Me pleaded Igseranee of the A SAMAOK HUIT agates David Balrd k Oe., lumber dealers, betas; tried before Ju4e storle had an aauaval eadtnr today, WUsVuej O'Srien was hurt on May II, III, after he had been employed by the firm uaty three hours. He was paid IB a week msttlMuoe.Jl, 1K1I, under the oomaeaeatles law and Med when payment was atoaiked. tar a Maawr ttata thaa aeaeeearr and waat, A strong-probability that the milk dealers of Philadelphia would agree to pay the ad vanced price asked by the farmers during the winter period with tho stipulation that the price be reduced In tho spring nnd summer when thero Is an overproduction of milk was Indicated today from several authentic sources. C. It Llndback, president of the Abbott Alderney Dairies, said ho thought that tho dealers would agree to such an arrange ment, and Charles S, Calwell, chairman of the agricultural committee of the Phila delphia Chamber of Commerce, hinted at such an arrangement when he said: "It seems certain that the dealers cannot af ford to pay five and one-halt cents for milk all the year round. Especially In the summer when tliere Is always an overpro duction of milk, It would be disastrous for them to pay that price. The market would be glutted with milk, and It would spoil on their hands." Mr, Llndback said he was certain that the points at Issue between the farmers and dealers could 'be successfully Arbitrated by a disinterested party, such as the Agricul tural Commlttoe of tho Philadelphia Cham-' bcr of Commcrco. MAY BOOST PRICES, "Of course," said Mr. Llndback, "If the farmers as a unit demand six cents for tholr milk, we will probably have to pay It BuUwe have not given up hope that there will bo a reasonable settlement I think that the dealers would agree to paying the price asked by tho farmers during the win ter months, when milk Is scarce. If the farmers agree to drop the price In the sum mer, when there Is a decided overproduc tion. We hope to Induce tho conservative members of the farmers' organizations to eeo tho light There nre many fair men among the farmers, and we aro certain that they do not wish to work any Injustice upon the dealers or public Wo wish to avoid a milk strike If possible; but, of course, the dealers will stand by their rights. The Chamber of Commerce, we are con vinced, will arbitrate this matter." Tho agricultural committee of the Chamber of Commerco heard the dealers' side of the case yesterday at a secret con ference In the board room of the Corn Ex change Bank, and Mr. Calwell, chairman of the committee, stated today that officers of tho farmers' organizations would be asked to present their views before tho committee within a week. At this meeting It Is expected that tho matter of raising the price during tho winter months, and lower ing It In tho summer, will be presented to the farmers as a basis for arbitration. SKTTLKMENT IN SIGHT Hope of an amicable settlement between the farmers and the dealers was expressed today by Mr, Calwell , "I am of tho opinion' ald Mr, Calwell, "that the farmers should havo a higher price tor their milk how much higher, I don't know. I think that most of the milk dealers realise that the farmers must have 'a fair price In order to keep up production. They "don't want "to do anything to dis courage, production of milk, "The milk dealers claim that their .profit oa milk Is only a quarter of a cent So It Is certain that It tho farmers raise the price the retail price will have to be raised to give the dealers a profit "Representatives of the farmers ore com ing before our committee within a week, and we will hear their side of the case. The function of this committee Is merely to conduct a fair Investigation, so that both sides may be presented to the public. The farmers are sensible men, and we believe that they will show a willingness to do what Is right" C. P. Preston, director of the Chester County Farm Bureau, and one of tho organ izers of an association of farmers In Chester County to boost the price of milk, declared today that the farmers In he entire Phila delphia milk zone would within three or four weeks demand 6W cents per quart from the Philadelphia dealers. He said that the farmers would also Insist that the freight charges be shifted from the farmer to thf dealer. The freight charges amount to about one-half per cent per quart and this means that Philadelphia dealers will be asked six cents per quart for milk. FARMERS BELLIGERENT "If the dealer attempt tofiiold up the farmers and refuse our price we will give them a showdown in short order. There will be no dickering with the rollk dealers of Philadelphia. We are perfecting fighting organlsaUons In Chester; Lancaster. Dela ware, Bucks and Montgomery counties, and similar unions of farmers aro being formed In South Jemey, Maryland and Delaware. In a short time we will be able to present a seHd frent to Philadelphia dealers. "There are apfxexltaateiy 49,000 oows In Chester County, and the milk from every eoe pf these awp at preeent goes'toThlla1 detohla, If the dealer won't meet this prise they cannot have our mHk." Asked what he thought the dealer of Philadelphia should oliarge the consumer to meet the advance In prlee proposed by the farmers, Mr, Preston Midi "The fanner are wiling to concede It will ooet about four cant a quart to deliver By PERRY ARNOLD PIKESVILLE, Ky Oct . Charles E. Hughes Is determined not to make any an swer to the charge that he represent the Herman-American vote. He regarls him self as potentially a President He holds It his duty neither by word nor deed to walk Into any trap which shall seem to commit him, n man who may bo chosen in November to dictate America's position to ward the world, to any specifics course of action with regard to European policies. This explanation of the candidate n atti tude Is presented by permission today. When Hughes discusses and condemns the British blacklist It is further explained It Is not with the Idea of an animus against Qreat Britain. When he hits at the subma rine warfare and the Wilson Administration handling of that Issue he does not speak with a mind biased ngalnsfQermany. He speaks as one who regards America'! op portunity as the greatest otrneutral na tions, the most momentous to America her self and to the other nations of the world In establishing firmly the principles of neutrality. ' MR. HUOHES'S POSITION To those with whom he talked on the subject, Oovernor Hughe has added to this statement of pcsltlon the following: America must leave no stone unturned to onforce against any nation her rights as a world Power. By so doing, the United States not only maintains her own dignity as a nation, but she establishes more firmly the principles of justice contained In Inter national law. International 'law, the Oov ernor holds. Is not a fixed code. It Is a collection of principles to whlcn nations subscribe. Thoee principles become fixed only when some great nation establishes their justice and fairness by demand, un flinchingly maintained, for their fullest observance. If the United States can ac complish this fixation of principles of In ternational law by holding all nations strictly accountablo to the spirit of the now only nebulous principles of International law, America will have her opportunity to become foremost among world Powers. RESENTS "JOCKEYING" The Republican candidate, It la said for him, feels very strongly the delicacy of his position as a presidential candidate in this time when International law Is 'In the mak ing. He Is extremely resentful of any jockeying by either his friends or his polit ical foes, which ntempts to align him with either the Allies or the Central Powers. He doe not desire In any utterance to mention the name of a single one of the warring Powers, lest some incorrect deduction be made from that mention. But In ev speech from now on he expects to reli ate In cmphatlo language his disavow' that he has any understanding or agree ments or intrigues with anybody. owW BOY'S LISP BETRAYS FATHER AS SLAYER Mnino Widow, -Trapped in Homo on Desert Island, Beaten to Death ELLSWORTH, Me., Oct 12. Arrested on the strength of a story lisped out by his flve-year-old son, Ouy Small confessed to day to the murder of Mrs. EmmaTurnbull on August 4, according to the authorities. The boy told of his father coming home and burning a pair of blood-stained trousers. Mrs. Turnbull, a widow, was trapped In her home on Desert iBlnnd, and fought for her life, but was finally beaten unconscious. She was then dragged to a nearby patch of woods wherd her head was crushed with a flatlron. RETURNED GUARDSMEN REGISTERED FORNOVEMBER EUJXflwg , JSBBJSHSMSJSBBBSaSSaMaJgg MBMSBBllsBlBBBIlBBtx?5PI 'R issM iry--MS,-'','5 '""J )' 'aflsUNm Hi;' ) VlHftkA' BaKW BstfssB I '''imnSV7llfttJ!mr',LSR efraLst sbbbbbbb1 ' Ws--jrtsssssssssssawsssssssav mBBKBKSKmMklOtMtKiK'-lt'' tBSlmmnr't' , S 1BSsbbBMbbbbbbbbbbbbI Bk wMWflHHHHslBBwSHfl!BBBBSBBBBWBnlBHBBBBBBBBBSB liBrlJsVHrWBBBBBBBBBBBBBfJ BBBsWklMBIBBBIBmtlKrtsSsBrWlBSBWy " tWjMK !'' rMSW3?L3Ti-Jrg JW'...lJilBSSSSSlSSSSSSSSSSSSSsl B ' H;' KSmSUk wflsMflanwMWswvKawW aBtsffiamSyJaflfcBlB BBBBBBBBBBsGsBmlBWSBBBBBBSHB'IF' nwnmnVas nwSCwT '' JBswhrrfUaKl&9lnnwPH : 'Ber1nwMknWBaWBswnwnwnwnmwl SBBBBBBBBBbHIBBbSsVwVj'' " UeBBVBBBsDBISBBBMsLM- swnanwlswnaflr?' Ai.tiKKlFmKOttWtM. ;jw9swnwswl r., ' V xiaassBSssBsssl9ls. ysBBBSBBBBsBBBsPsKP'srWv't' '' 'js5HsbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI LwBanwBanwr-V' "l t3S'tiiuKBBlKmiKt4 igMHH aBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsf r aW. VsBBBBSwlM-HBSWBSBBBBBBKaSTWBSBBSBr . WV ' HfaHH WWS1BSSSSSW',,'''?3-J,T t BBBB'v',,WF77B23EBBs6BBBBBBBnS HfrKwnwflnwMLwnwJ wnwnwnwKsnwnvJnw7Tn 4f S''VT&wnwBwnwnmnwl SaanBBBBwSsmBwJsnwawasrTJC w- .IaJV - r-v MMSreisBBaSggsBBsBssBBasasaaaaaaB For tho benefit of tho member of tho Flrt and Third Infantry, a ipccM meeting ' f ReJttratf . Commission was held In City Hall today to permit the so Idler, to tret elr n,!"gJB " . tbt . cxtmcrc right Is Hampton S. Thoirias, recorder, and 'next to him Georgo G. I leric, registration commissioner, 0TT0, BAVARIA'S MAD . KING, DIES AFTER LONG YEARS' CONFEffllENT Insane Ruler Expires in Castle. Ordered Soldiers to Attack Wall in Franco-Prussian War WAS LOVER OF MUSIC COPENHAGEN, Oct 12. King Otto of Bavaria, a "mad king," died suddenly at the Castle of Feurstenrled, where he has been confined, Insane, for many years. The "mad king" of . Bavaria, about seventy years old at the time of his death, .1 .rt !! Rurons bv his eccentricities be fore he was declared Incapable of rullng- bn November S, 1913, ond succeeded by ms cousin. King Ludwlg HI. He had nominally succeeded his brother. King Ludwlg II, In 1816, when Ludwlg committed suicide by throwing himself Into a lake during a fit of Insanity. His uncle, the regent Leopold, was however, the real ruler of Bavaria. During the Franco-Prussian war Otto first showed Insanity when he called out a squad of cavalry to make a charge against a straight stone wall. The stone wall, he said, was a body of French infantry. Later he was summoned by the Kaiser to head quarters and It was reported letters wer.e found in his possession offering to make ceace with France. He was then put under a medical escort Several years ago the "mod king" was Imprisoned In tho Fuerstenrled Castle. Though In the midst of rich furnishings he Is reported to have lived like a savage, re fusing to have his hair or nails cut and .avoiding water and soap. For days he would retuso food. Imagining It to be poisoned. His attendants Anally persuaded him to eat by pretending to hide food about the palace. The "mad king" then "discovered" tho food and, believing It had been hidden by the servants to satisfy their own appetites, ate It with the greatest relish. He was passionately fond of grand opera, summoned well-known singers to his castle prison and often spent days listening to operas. On April 27 of each year King Otto was examined by a Government commission charged with the duty of reporting on his sanity, A few years ago he became seri ously 111 from a carbuncle on his' neck and was believed to be dying. News at a Glance LANCAfiTKR, Oet It, Illness ef An drew, the twelve-year-old son of Isaad Mil ler, near Roherstown, developed Into infan tile paralysis today, the twentieth case for Lancaster County. ,i LANCASTER, Oet IS Clsrenee Mohn, a regular army soldier here on a fur'0""' was arrested today on tho charge of robbing a money drawer of the Imperial Hotel. WASHINGTON, Oet 1. To aeqnalnt Latln-Amerlca with the position of Belgium In the European war and to arrange ror commerce between Braxll and Belgium after peace Is declared, the Belgian Legis lative Congress has sent a commission to Rio de Janeiro, according to consular dis patches reaching here. The commission will pay Its respects to the National Con gress of Brazil and will then make a tour of the country, remaining at least a month. nnLOHADE, Oct. 12. The food supplies of the American Red Cross Relief Commis sion will bo exhausted by the ena oi o vember and the commission' relief work In Serbia will then censa. according to Dr. Edward Stuart, director of the commission. Rumania's entrance Into the war; making It impossible to get food, and lack of sup port on tho part of the people of the United States are given by Doctor Stuart as the responsible causes. OTTAWA. Ort. 1. Advices by the Canadian Government In 191G tor seed grain and equipment in Western Canada totaled more than $11,000,000. and to date twenty per cent has been paid back. Nearly all the advances were made In Saskatche wan. . rilOVIDENCE, It. L, Oct It. Oovernor R. Livingston Beeckman. United, States Senator Henry F. Llppltt and all the present State officers were renominated by the Republican State Convention here. NEW YOIIK, Oet It. One. bet ef S4000 to 12800 on Charles E. Hughes to defeat President Wilson was made In Wall street yesterday, nnd Hughes money Is reported by the commissioners as getting scarce. An offer of 810,000 on Wilson 'at 1 to 2 found no takers. Edward McQuaae. a commis sioner, made only one bet, of 8100, at odds of 8V4 to 5. Odds of 10 to 7 on Hughes to carry New York State are quoted, and of 10 to 7 on the re-election of Governor Whitman. BAY0IM OH STOKERS KILL YOUNG BRIDE JWj SEIZE RAILWAY'l All Police Driven From Oil PI District Except 100, Who! Are Powerless Against Mob EFFORT TO BURN FAMILt JOHNSON ORDERS LANNIN TO GO COP SLAYS MAN; MIX-UP OVER AUTO; WOMAN HELD Continued from r One 1213 North Fifty-second street William Boyd, a cigar dealer at Fifty-second street and Qlrard avenue, notified the police that three men were trying to remove a machine from the place where the owner had left It Hart notified Mackln, Brawloy and Po liceman Thomas, whose beats take In the vicinity. They went to the place and say they saw three men, who ran at their, ap proach. . The policemen gave chase and the fugitives separated Mackln pursued Schank, who entered an alley leading off Qlrard avenue below Fifty-first street The two other men took refuge In an Intersect ing alley and one of them escaped. Brawley captured Ryan, while Mackln fol lowed Schank to Fifteenth and Stiles streets. At this point tne pouceman nrea, ni aunrry being seventy-nve reet ahead o: him and gaining with every step. The bul let entered Schank back and passed en tirely through his body. He fell to the pavement and was pronounced dead by Doo tor Downey at the West Philadelphia Home pathlo Hospital a few minutes later. The poltce, after the affair had been In vestigated by Lieutenant Hwlng, placed the woman under arrest They nre not posi tive, they say, whether Schank was one of the three men first seen by Mackln and his companions, or was in the alley and took frlzht when he saw the police approach ing, An alarm has been sent out and the arrost of tho fugitive Is expected. Schank's mother Is critically 111, and the death of her son Is being kept front her. The dead man was a car inspector on the Pennsylvania Railroad. He was unmarried. CAMDEN JURY OUT 20 HOURS 1B0 Ballot Taken to Decide Fata of Saloonkeeper , ti -K mUk. That ttestuaea the proat of the aealar, ieaaewt llaaan, vjw MMwil More than IB0 ballot wore taken by the Jury which disagreed today In the case of Jacob Haefele, a Philadelphia .saloonkeeper, of BS North American street, who has been on trial In the Camden -County Criminal Court accused of maintaining a disorderly saloon at 3510 Farragut avenue, Camden. The Jury had been out since 4 o'clock yes terday afternoon, and Is said to havo been deadlocked at eight for aqquital and four for conviction, At noon the Jury had been out twenty hour. The proceedings against Haefelo were Instituted by Counetlman Von Nelda, of Camden', on August . Th ease was tried before Judge Boyle and nearly seventy wttnesee were heardKar than halt tes tifying In favor of the saloonkeeper. I i Twe Detective Radiwad te Ranks District Deteettves WlWaan H. Tyson and John Varrett. e the. rrankXord police j.ttmi. --i of aoUeaMeg money from Harry B. PeVl. a, iwwnefte ef fair, were today reduced to street duty and trans ferred to the Belgrade and Clearfield streets ana nana , w r fww. wa uu ana dared both Continued from I'ase One price for his franchise and will, be obliged to accept ' LANNIN TO Fiairr It Is whispered, that Lanntn will fight any move by Johnson to oust him from Boston, but It will be remembered that Just after the 1912 series, when the Red Sox won the world's championship by defeating the Giants, Jimmy McAleer was forced to sell the Boston franchise because of the ticket scandal. At the" time McAleer also declared that he would fight Johnson to the limit but It appears that there Is some arrangement In the American League which makes John son absolute boss. Johnson has been called the "Cxar" of baseball becauso of the manner In which he has bossed the Ameri can League, and those on the Inside de clare that he will get away with hla plan to oust Lanntn. -f DENIALS EXPECTED Until all arrangements" have been mail. to transfer the franchise It Is likely that a denial will ,be made by Johnson and the American League magnates, but we got our Information from a source that Is authentic, and the fan can depend upon It that Joe Lannln will not be the owner of the Boston Red Sox when the first of, the year Is here. There Is no attempt to deny that Car rlgan will retire, and BUI said to us that nothing can Induce him to change his de cision. He say that It I not a matter of money and that he Is making no attempt to hold up the owners for a larger salary, but that he merely has tired of the worry and strain. Carrlgan claims that he has saved a great deal of the money he ha made In baseball and has been lucky with his Investments In Lewtson, Me., and will devote his entire time to looking after hla home interest, LAST SEASON, SAYS CARRIGAN "Win, lose or draw." said Carrlgan this snornlng, "this I my last year in baseball, and today will be my last day In a baseball uniform, I believe and hope. I am not a hold-out, and If they put 810,000 on top of my present salary It would be Just the same wim ma 'mere naa been no friction, and Jo Lannln always ha treated me great but I am tired of the game and am retiring because lt' a matter of preference. "I wltl not beoome retired farmer a has been reported, but I will be a business man. I would rather get up at in the moralng. working at another business, Just a I did when I ran my grocery store In Lewleton a few year ago, than to go .through the worry I have In recent years, v "I have aged a great deal for a fellow so young, but that I because I take baseball too seriously. Some fellows forget the game as soon as they take oil their uni forms, even when they are managers; but I eeuld not do It Bill Carrlgan I throu for good, and you can't aaake It tea strong. Today will be mt last day la a baseball uniform, I believe." Burns Prove Fatal to Baby A blazing ember from a stove fell on the dress of three-year-old Louis De Nardo, of Blue Anchor, a suburb of Hammonton, N. J late yesterday, while he was waiting for supper, and burned him so severely that he died this morning In the Cooper Hospital, Camden. The boy, son of Joseph De Nardo, also Inhaled some of the flames. His father brought him to tho hospital early this morn ing In a long ride In the automobile of Dr. J. C. Brtckley, but It was too late. London Stock Quotations LONDON Oct 12. Closing quotations on American securities on the London Stock Exchange today follow: Atchison, 11PK ! Baltimore and Ohio, 91 : Canadian Pacific, 184U I Chesapeake and Ohio, 69 Vi i Oreat Western, 13: St Paul, 99H; Denver and Rio Orande, 18; Erie, 40H ; Erie first preferred, S&Si ; Illinois Central, 112H: Louisville and Nashville, 143; New York Central, llS'f, Reading, 112; South ern Railway, 29ft ; Southern Pacific, 104T '. Union Pacific, 185 ; United States Steel, 116. Gerard Has No Peace .Plea, Paper Says BERLIN, Oct 12. Commenting on the denial that Ambassador Oerard carries an appeal for peace from the Kaiser to Presi dent Wilson, the Vesslsche Zeltung remarks ; "When Ambassador Gerard ha left America without having handed President Wilson any appeal by the Kaiser, then this rumor will evaporate. Until then the people on the other side of the ocean may gloat over a picture of their own creation." Girl Slips on Rug, Breaks Neck NEW YORK, Oot 13. Adelaide Winter, the seventeen-year-old daughter of Charles A. Winter, of Elm Point Oreat Neck, U I., died early today In her home, and l U reported that death was due to the break ing of her neck when she fell on the hard wood floor of the dining room of her home. The sliding of a rug from beneath her on the polished wood threw he? violently. Cornell Student Hangs Himself ITHACA. N. Y Oct , A few hours after he had registered as a sophomore In the College of Agriculture at Cornell Uni versity, Edison C Hicks, of Rushvtlle, N. Y committed suicide by hanging him self to at tree near the' college grounds. He left a letter addressed to bis brother, In wnicn no cam ne couia not neip it. BAYONNE, N. J, Oot 12, One has been kilted, four strikers Injure haps fatally, four policemen wound! : more than thirty men wounded by buSttj thirty-six hours In the "hook" die where striking workmen of the big I ard Oil plant rule today. Chief of Poltce Michael F. ReUly that last night was the worst he had I In twenty years of handling strlkeu.i firemen answered thirty alarms during I night Hearing that Samuel Greenburg, a ' loonkeeper, waa conferring with breaker, a mob stormed hi place early day and broke in tho doors as ureti with his wife and children In their : clothes, fled to the roof. Or fastened tho hrtch and the mob set art 1 the building. , DETECTIVES TO RESCUE A squad of detectives charged the drove them off and brought the famllyd ladders as firemen put out the ore. strikers returned later and wrecked Duiiaing. . A fireman was shot by striken while attempting to attach a hose te ! fireplug with a view to turning oi water on them. " At 3 o'clock this morning InsTfector'C and fifty police drove off two boatload i men, said to be strikers endeavoring to i nre 10 we piani oi we Tidewater uu t. jwiy. - 3 Behind their "dead line," which cats I the lower end of Bayonne, striker wk I complete control, and gradually werei ping all industrial operations In . . plant today by preventing loading at l and turning back all who attempted to I the ltne. , One hundred policemen, quartered Is l .engine house opposite the plant of the . water OH Company, were the only.p below the "dead line" today. They sUi to protect the plants, but failed durfsx I night when a mob of several hundrtd I ers held up fire apparatus going to a k the. Lehigh valley yards, strikers opt i hose as fast as It was unrolled. The I charged, and In the fight which to! Mrs. Sophie Torek, a bride of three ' was killed as she leaned from an upper i dow, two strikers were probably fataBy J Jured and more than a score received l wounds. As the striker dispersed another engine was held up and turned back a i distance away as It responded to an I of fire from the Standard Oil plant ' nluckv eniinemen tried to force their ' through and pleaded 'in vain that a atej the plant might W'PS out a large part mi city should tt spread to the big tanks of i OtT,TtJ TTTirAT OTITIftVr id t?E.l,, tWVAAJlVAXS ?(". Strikers seized the Twenty-second i station of the Central Railroad of New my and threatened a fall delivery-' turned back by Michael F. ReUly.V" of nollce. veatrdaY. Bavonne nffl.cta.lfl announced shortly I midnight that they would not National Dunn! aid. Nelson B. Judge Advocate General of the N Guard, sent here by Governor n Investigate the strike situation. today he saw no need "a yet", for'o troops. ' VraiLANTES RECOGNIZED A vigilance committee consisting f'j residents or Bayonne who have Deeaw organising ever since the close of taeN oil strike a year ago to protect and families, today was officially nixed by the city authorities. rtnA t,l,nArA,e anif flfttf vnllnr' meS-.J ber of the committee, were rBxJjj sneclal Dallce. The committee was .tl the authorities, however, that no vr would be countenanced. The au asked their aid In efforts to restor Victrolas in alLstyles and finishes $15 to $200 ' .- KA8Y TBSMfl uieady for immediate deltvery, wwww A,TTAI9" S, ropUTKTWQlMSirWA.Tmi 1 J MATHS tSBBTJttmVSTmJff. linwxVw)Mrw ymmim ONE-DAY OUTINGS: f1" m.rkt aaarr WMw. , AtMJttM OI), It"w-, $1.00 An(wwM fasten Is Ofkesr , tea , -Jl : ww- OtMR wtMve4 anoeh Oitar Sevens - eJTanariTsSTJOj W.W jtftesu .. ! f -.J.A aala' .. .. .:- ..'- 11 wNf VjwV H, IHf 14 ws t 'feet at, t.muiWm mt, 7-H $t,M Ke. Ytrti istri let It sat ' t.T.4L' We4 J9n- JWwsi TStftfV NmiylvpBiaR.R. v