FINANCIAL EDITION Mu. STRAv NIGHT EXTRA NIGHT EXTRA VOL. .TIL NO. 81 PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1916 CsrtiMttr. 1910, at tm rcsite I.imii Ceur.st. PRICE ONE CENT Jl rC "tkyA''A vT -A iLiuruiuu mm ' i . -i - " GERMANY SEES BLUFF IN PEACE STAND OF FOES K Allies Really Anxious to End War, Teutons Assert ACTION BY NEUTRALS EAGERLY LOOKED FOR Door Still Open for Diplo matic Parley, Is Opinion in Britain MAY DEBATE SECRETLY Central Empires Willing to Com promise, Embnssy Officials Here Aver By CAM, W. ACKERMAN ni:iii.t.v, Dec. io. Germany regards tho speeches of states men tn England, Franco nml Itussln as a bluff lo Impress Ilcrlln with thu Kntcnte's determination. Tho Kntenlo Governments cannot do othcrwlnc. In view of their past italment. although they arc renlly anxious now for peace. This was tho view reflected In all walks of life today following Premier Uoyd George's answer to tho Imperial Herman Chancellor In his speech of yesterday. Berlin Is not pessimistic, desplto this I.on don statement, ndded to the previous pro. nunclamentos from Potrograd and I'nrls that tho Allies nro determined to continue ' the war until their objects arc nttnlncd. The general view was that these speeches are not to be taken seriously when welshed against Germany's progress In Itumanla. Not only was this the public view, but officials coincided. One such olllclal de clared that no bclllcerent would ever aiSc a neutral nation to begin negotia tions nevertheless, steps by n neutral now would not bo regarded as unfriendly to the Central Powers, He ndded, however, that the public stato of mind Is not such now that American Interference would be welcomed. , "If Premier Lloyd George means lo post ' porta peace until the Allies conquer, the war will be eternal unless tho German army suc ceeds In terminating It at nn earlier date," declared Iokal Anzelger today, according to Dtrlln dispatches here, "Tho phrase Reparation' la completely valueless," tho newspaper ndded. -" ,v" " - - ', The Tageblatt observes: "Uoyd Ocorge'e, .speech Is apparently composed nccording to prescription 'On one hand and on the other.' " T "Uoyd Qeorge's assertion that whoever wants only lo prolong tho war Is criminal Implies a strong self-condemnation If i:n gltnd rejects negotiations," the Vorwaerts luerted. ALLIES MUST FORGET PAST, GERMANS SAY WAHHINOTO.V. Dec. 30. "Peace In Europe cannot he reached If the Entente Is not willing to forget the past. Oermany la now concerned with tho future. She is ready to make pedce on equitable terms and meet her rivals morelfhan half way " German diplomatic circles here today made It plain that this Is the position of their Government. Incidentally, thero was a growing belief here that, while the end of the war prob- Centlnaed on !' Two, Colnnin Two SKEFFINGTON'S WIDOW ELUDES BRITISH OFFICIALS Reaches New York and Vill Tell Amer icans of Husband's Murder NBIV TOIlIv. Dee. SO. Htmlln? Ilrltlah authorities. Mrs, F. 8. Skefflngton. widow f the Irish editor who was executed dur "K the Dublin rebelllpn. gained passage o a steamship and arrived here. She Is topping at a. local hotel, fine refused to reveal the nam nf ih vaI t.nt .if.i xhe had engaged passage under an assumed name and disguised herself before going aboard. "I was determined to come to the United States nd tell the American people about my husband', murder, for that is what It , she said today. Mrs. Skefflngton an nounced that she will go upon a lecture lour. Hobson to More to Illinois. CHICAGO. no. SO .In nnlir In ,a nur 'What he considers Die center of lh most Important prohibition fight In America, Cap taut nichmbnd Pearson. Hobson, Spanish War hero and a leading temperance advo , Mte, will move to Evanston, III., It Is an- Bouncea today. Captain Hobson has leased Dome and Will hrlnir hla fnmllv hra from Tuxedo Park, if. Y., after the first of the r. v THE WEATHER FORECAST , For Philadelphia and vicinity jmsw tonight and Thilrsdaii; warmer iZ lotytai uoom jj ucjrcu, vmuiini; tauin to tai winus. I.KNOTIl OF JJ.V ,f rUu. 'teuu . TllS A-Hn I laart rlMtm. ; J a.m. i if p.m. I Moon souths. i.tJ.-m. DKLWVAUK BIVEU TTOH CIIAXGJM tUKftTMrr STBKKT &w.u 411 a-sa. I I-8 water. .. wr 9 Si a. m. I JJUb w.Ur 10:U p ta. tJl'CH,VTDKt; AT WACU UOUR VI 1 111 Ml II SI 31 41 a SAD DAYS FOR THE DELIVERY BOY wmmmm&mi . libra. flilgMl' s& ( r s jMlmm& few lWKv ITVea. k Teatk sm e.. .1 w I With his basket full of Ciinstmns goods, he is n conspicuous feature of life in the central shopping district theso diiys. MACKENSEN WINS Russians Compelled to Sur render More Positions in the Dobrudja SEKETH FRONT IN PERIL I1KRLIN, Dec. 20. On the cast bank of the fiolden Baristritza USvcr (in the lower Car pathians) the Russians have continued their attacks-, but without result, Ihe War Office stated today. In Rumania Ihercjfl nothing neWi., ,.. -kwe'n BERLIN, Dec. 20. In Isolated sectors of the Somme. Alsnu and Champagne fronts and cast of the Meusc (Verdun front) there have been only patrol activities and artil lery fire of varying strength, the War Office reported today In Its official com munication. HKIU.IN. Dec. 20. Tho llusslans and Kumanlans In northern Dobrudja have nlundoped a new fortified line before von Macltenseir forces, which are approaching the lower Danube, according to a statement Issued by German army headquarters: "During the last two dajn "in local en gagements," continued tho otTlclnl state ment, "moro than 1000 llusslans and Ku manlans were brought In as prisoners and many vehicles, most of them laden with provisions, were captured." The continued Oerman advance In Itu manla, aside from straightening tho Hue and reducing the length of the front by several hundred kilometers, has freed large num bers of troops. The aermana are watching with Interest the foreign situation as t where Field Marshal von Illndenburg will employ these forces whether against Italy. Itussla or tho Entente forces on the Mace donlan front, nut even they themselves are Continued on Page Four, Column Threo GIVES PARTY TO FRIENDS, THEN TAKES OWN LIFE Skilled Mechanic Buys Piano and Entertains Neighbors Ill Health Causes Suicide There had been a tittle party at the home of John Uradbury. at !t East Harold street. The Uradburys had bought a new piano and Invited friend's to enjoy the muslo with them. The young husband-he twenty-one year old-had been rather prosperous and enjoyed a ood Job In a dyehouse. The scarcity of dyea had made his service as a skilled mechanic valuable and he had Just received an Increase In wage The central attraction at the party wa. Ilutb, the ten-months-old girl. While It r. Lradbury played the piano her husband ana several neighbor, were making toy. far the baby. When the guests went home W"n.f been " il tgr yoUl l'Mle-'' h. said. yw lv. me downstair, far a wblU to Palt tin. doU." Jlr U.adbury tlred apd about S o'9 W nHrpli' The wm awaked by "I- She detected the odor of ga. and went to T tot Toor. wher. .he found Tver bus band dwd. with a ga. tube, In hi. mauth, Tn. ohlW. toy. Uy on the Coor bWe hU '"Jputy coroner OreeobaUth wa. called to liS' ffllM S5 ftav - 4,.- swi w - J"- ,Jqr SUBWAY MISHAP HALTS THOUSANDS "L" Stations Crowded in Rush Hour by Waiting ( Patrons MANY DELAYED IN TUBE ThnuMimla of persons were lata for work and thousand of slioppern were marOonrd In thi' subway on the elevated lino curt whnn tho tnilTle was tlwl up this morning by lai'U nf pov.-er. At all tho stations on tha Inbound Mile of the elevated passengers were Jammed so closely together that hun- drejIJifuV'ta- waJir.UiotaJrjyiCfeil The bloru, which hislcawqr nearljtwo hour, on thHetar end o7 tlie tube, from Clly Hall to .Market street forry,rwna caused by the dhpfacement of 100 freY.ot third rnll nt City Hall. The rail on the oast bound track was torn up lu Ibese sections by nu Iron shoo on one of tho pnesenger cur.. Tho damage waji caused about 8 30 o'clock. I'AHSKN'OKItS UNI.OADKD Congestion was gnsMeet at the Thirty stcund and Market htrccts station. There passengers from tho elevated lines were unloaded by thousands and transferred to the Market street surface Hues The crowds wero so great that thero wns no time to Issue transfers. Street nupcrln tendents ut this point did tho best they could to tako rare of all. Mut West I'lilla dolphin patrons, on learning of tho tie-up. used the surface lines from point, a. far west ns Sixtieth street, and when the stir fueo cars reached Thirty-second street inoirt of them were ulready crowded Hundreds of pae.icngera then fled to Chestnut street only to find that these car. uer tonded. A small army of passenger, walked In to work from this point. To mako matter, worse, the"llght. went our while numerous trains were stalled In the subwuy. All of the ear. were Jammed, but nothing .erlous resulted, as incut of the passengers seemed to take tha lie. up Continued on I'sio Nine, Column Dim, WIFE SENT TO ANSWER " MAN'S LARCENY CHARGE Pretty Woinun Turned Over to Montgomery County Authori ties After Hearing Here i Mr.. Sadie I'age. a comely woman, was turned over to the Montgomery County authorities today to .newer her husband'. BBousatlon of breaking Into liar own house and committing larceny. IIw husband Is Jaaob Page, of Huntingdon Valley. AseJtaat DUrtrlat Attorney Frank n nlnger, of .N'orrlstuwn. whu was at th hear ing, whksh wa bfr Jlaglntrute UeatoB, said a, wlf WJ ut lie KUllty of either elvarge whM the oomplalnant was the hus band. DeJietiv Parrel arretted Mrm. page Mon day nlgkt at III itouih Hlxtletlt alrMt. WU4I4 sfcs wa. living. Tb. oret wa. mad. en a, warrant .worn opt by ber hiMhand be fore Jiwtle KektU at Uethayre. Aoaordlsg to M UeUctlve, Mr. Page as cus4 Mra. IB of breaking Inta tlurtr born t Jtuftllagdon Valley and stealing a dla Qajul ring and wun. other . aitJcUs (W0 week, ago, which wa. six week, after u left him. Mrs. Page said the diamond ring wa. her. and -fn other article, were hr clothing. She wa. very much annoyed at having to leave Philadelphia and wanted to know now long it would take t cWar liUnga up. Vfc loW a day would do, sfce aia4 pur. wltofleA Uka tAJ bsa Ufiar to obUJn baK, 5 $49,425,000 CITY CHRISTMAS BILL Flood of Gold Released Where "Spug" Once Cast Baleful Gloom MONEY IS LEAST FACTOR Wlmt Philadelphia Spends for Christmas Gifts Department stores . . S27.230.000 hpeclnlty shops llnbcrdnshcry and men's furnishings j Jewelry Automobiles . Rooks 2,500,000 2,000.000 .1,000,000 1.000,000 l,2."i0,000 1.000,000 noo.ooo ,-wO.OOO noo.ooo 200,000 000,000 500.000 500,000 100,000 3.000,000 1,000.000 n.ooo.ooo 1.000,000 25.000 Cnndy Flowers Furs Tobacco Klcctricnl appliance Mats Gloves Shoes I.cnthcr goods Christmnn food stu Its Wines and liquors Pinnos Tnlking machines Tots Totals , .$I'J,J25,000 Ily M'S.ISS This Is n story sbatlt Money .Money with n big M. Mors, money than the nxernge dreamer nf pipe ilrenms ever sees. It Is ntmott fifty million dollar., the money that I'hllnilelphlau are spending to demonstrate their happiness that there Is pencn on this side of tho globe and their feeling of rooJ will toward men. When tho hut shop door Is closed on Snt urd.iy night nr.d the tired ensh registers arc put tn rest Philadelphia, according to onreful calculations, will hae spent JI9. 1:5.000 Htntltlrlans put the figure nt that but It Is not nt nil Improbable that somu thing In excess of that sum will liavo b;en spent. There Is no w.y of computing th money gifts Hut the continued business after Chrlstmsi always shows that money gifts nre heavy. Mammon Is running riot Wealth seemi the lot of eery one. Jewelers report that never before liav so many precious stones been bought by the average person. "A man who onte bought his wife n !& present came In and ordered n 1300 lamp the other day," one. Jeweler sa'ld. Quoting the Incident ns typical of the high plane to which spending had ascended, OPUMJNCK AIIUOAD If the prosperity of the nntlon Is to b ganged by the prodigality with which It l "opening up" for this Christmas, the country reached a hlghwaler matjt tiol touched be- tire-Chrtfro"as' perSjCTpJd seems there -wilt bo dlrujfwSsBnM' gilt, for all. Home poverty, they say, .till exists, but just ns soon n. they begin talking about It lu concrete Instances It disappears, because some plutocratic stenographer or clerk who tins hud her ealarj Increased twenty per cent produce, a greenback and opulently ile dares: ' "Huy them a turkey nnd dolls with that." The high cost nf lllng has been knocked Into n cocked hat by the high cost of spend ing. The manager of a department store said Daily: "Without a doubt when the Christina, fig ures are tabulated n fifty per cent Increase ocr last year's business will be shown." The Hpug, that shortlived being who nprnng Into exlattncn from force of neces s ly, the creature whose nume means that he In or was a member of the Society far the Pretention of I'selesa OUIng Is now almost eitlnct. "Hive, give gle," Is the cry. "give useful gifts nnd when you have exhausted our Imagination on them, give useless ones. II he angora cats and gUe uutoniD. biles, give ship, unit shoe, and aejllng wax, and pearls and lluulau sable. " Kvcry body's doing It. Pur dealers report that business lu pelt, ha. never been mur yluiirlalitng "And Ihe Joy of It all Is." one raid, "our biggest business Is dune after Christmas. Ceiitlnufil on I'.se Sfvrn, Cutuuiii Tho WOMAN NOT GUILTY OF MURDERING SUITOR Mrs. Murcasa Said She Wns Goaded Into Committing Crime sirs. l.w.nhln,. MnrrMii . founuU not Kuilty of the murder of Sebastino Csprino this afternoon by a jury in the Camden Court, The jury deliberated but one hour. Josephine AUressa went on trial today for her life. Still. It wasn't so much her life a. that of tier three.month-old baby and three other small children, for f It hadn't been for them, .lie said, she would never 'have, .hat and kUled KelMStlno Ca prlno. th. admitted tha killing; b admitted tuvlmc run sway from Imt )iuband with Caprine, but .be said, very slowly, that sf. bad been forcd to do It. Pack under lb. blue kl. of Italy, Jom pkln and Caprino Iiad known ejeh other. Tblr. wa. no rojoane. Just an acquaint anfMhlp. But after she had com to this ooinlry. he had followed and ruud hr Jn PWladelphla llvldf hapjilly with Jujr hu bad at T37 Leeds strt. Cprino same a. a boardw, fc-rew lck and wa. nureed through hW IllnftH through her close attention. He mistook klndaaw for love and grew per sistent In hi. affection Through vision, or torture he Impressed her on a trip to Trenton last summer. She escaped and went back home On the day before her baby wa born in September, be appeared at ber mother'. hou at Fitter's Point and asked that sJm rua away with huw. Oa a arete c of gettioK oJotb., site wM laKu the houw for a revolver, uUced 11 VMM iba ltb of 6m of Us c&Mrea aiJ--s, IT, S QUICK BETHLEHEM STEEL FALLS $72 A SHARE NEW YOniC, Dec- 20. In the late trading on the Hew York Stock Exchange totlay Bethlehem Steel sold nt 9300 n share, n dllm of ?7a ns compared with the closo yesterday. The mnrltct wns weak. SENATE FILIBUSTER BLOCKS CAPITAL "DRY" BILL WASHINGTON, Dec. 20. A determined filibuster conducted by "wet" Senators blocked tho way to vote on tho Shepunrd District of Columbia prohibition bill In tho Senate, this afternoon rtnei threatened to sidetrack the measure until after the holidays. IOWA MAYOR SEIZES COAL TO RELIEVE FAMINE LIES MOINES. In., Dec. 20. On tho gtound or public ncuaslty li.t'ie face cf n co.tl famine, Mayor 3ohtt MacVicnr today so I Bert n cni lund or cunl bvlotiglnir to the Illoomilcld Coal Company. Tho company will bo paid tho market price. The coal will bo delivered by city teams nt coat to homctt without fuel. mj FONT'S BOOST SALARY BONUS TO .10 PER CENT Wtt.MlNdTON, Del., Doc. 20. Tho dn I'ont I'owdor Company today announced that tho twenty per cent wilury bonus which It has. bven pitying for tho last year to salaric.l oiiiiliyo.i will bt Increased January t to thirty per cent. It wns recently announced that tho twenty per wut bonus being paid lo payroll employes In tho plants would v nindo n part of tho regular pov for 1917. NBW YOltK, Dec. 20. .1. H. ititcho & Co. arc distributing bonuses to their em ployes amounting to twenty per cent of their nniiuul salary. Compared with llflcen per cent dlNtilbtitrd Juno I, It. M. (Irani : Co. tiro distributing Ion per cent on yearly salaries lo nil einiloes In their New York, Huston nml Chicago olllcos. MERGER OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA LINES APPROVED HAIlltlSIII'ltfJ. Dec. 20. Tho merger of tho Pennsylvania lines west of Pitts burgh under tho title nf thu Pittsburgh. Cincinnati, Chicago nnd HI. Louis Hallrond Company w.is approved ut noon today by tho Public Service Commission. Tho objections previously llU-d wero withdrawn. LOCAL RESERVE BANK PAYS FIRST DIVIDEND An lnltl.il dividend of six per cent has lieen declared by tho Federal Itoservo Hank of Philadelphia, payalilo December 30. Tho dividend declared covors tho period from November 2. 1914, to Juno SO, I9IS, as for tho llrst eight months of operation tho stock Is entitled to cumulative, dividends up tn six per Lent per annum. U-BOAT SINKS BRITISH SHIP FROM SOUTH AMERICA LONDON, Doc. 20. -Ttn llrltlsb slonmshlp Fllmstou him beon sunk by n nul marine, nj. a illspiitch received hero today. Hor enptnlu nnd first cnnlnccr wore taken prisoners. Tho crew was rescued Tho vessel, of .1192 net tons, sailed from lluenos Aires November IS for London. P. R. R. SUBSIDIARIES PAY LARGER DIVIDENDS Two subsidiary companies nf the Pennsylvania Itnllroad declared larger dividends today. Tho. I'lttsburKh, Cincinnati, Chlnifio and HI. Louis Itnllroad declared a dividend nf threo per cont on tho preferred stock nnd llvo per cunt on the common, both puyablu January 15, 1917, to stork of record December 30, 1910. Hlx mouths ago two per cent wns declared on tho proforred, Iho present dividend making llvo per cent on this class of slock for the year. Tho Vandatla Itnllroad declared u dividend of ,four per cont, psyablu January 15 to stock of record December 30. Two cenj.ivnH.pniii.tiY Mjiggminiiiiy last February. , Jf UJcroinber, 1912, rrnd 1913, four percent dividends wnrtKUd, but tn December. 19H, no dividend .wa? puld. $210,000 APPROPRIATED TO PHILADELPHIA MINT "WASHINGTON. Dec. 20. -FncliiB n rompleta shutdown of tlio Philadelphia Mint on January 10 because the appropriation for Its operation bad been ojchnusted, tho llousn today passed tho urgent deficiency appropriation bill, reported yesterday, which gives nu appropriation of $210,000 to ho used during tho remainder of tho fiscal year. It Is provided that $110,000 shall ho spent ns wanes to workmen und 1100.000 for contingent expenses. BRITAIN TO RAISE RAILROAD FARES 50 PER CENT LONDON. Dec. 20. lncrcii.it of nil railway faros In Great llrltaln fifty por cent, beginning January I, was nuiiounced by tho Hoard nf Tindo In tho llouso of Commons this afternoon. SOUTH PHILADELPHIA HIGH MAY GET ATHLETIC FIELD South Philadelphia High flay hnvo an nthlottc Meld next season. At tho pres entation of tho Kills A. (Umbel trophy to tho Houth Philadelphia High oleven, scholastic champions, this morning tho donor of tho cup, Kills A. Olmliol. enmo out strongly In favor of an alhlotlu Held for tho winners, und mild ho would mipport any movement In that direction. Congressman William 8. Vnro, who was lu ntlend-aui-e, utpresseil his willingness tn nlil In building un athletic Held for Koutli Phila delphia IIlRh. PRICE OF RAILS ADVANCED $-1 A TON PlTTHIllflldH, Dec. 20. Tho Carneclu HteerCompany today udvunced the prloo of IlKht rails 4 u Inn to ISO a ton fur sections welRhlnK twunty-ftvo to forty-five pounds. This Is an Increuso of $7 n ton In tho last thirty days. A premium Is offered for spot delivery.- BRUMBAUGH HAS NOT ASKED SMITH TO RESIGN HAIlltlHIIURG. Dec. 20. Governor ilrumbaugh denied today that ho hud 10 iiuested tho resignation of Btato Hanking Commissioner Smith. Hinlth wa. closeted with tho Governor at Iho Kxocullvo Department for somo lime. When ho left tho Governor was asked If thu Commissioner had texlKned. "No, he has not," was Ills reply. "Have you asked for his reslKnatiun?" tho Governor wns asked. "Certainly not," ho answered. ANOTHER CHILD STRICKEN BY INFANT PLAGUE Another case of Infantile paralysis has tietm reported to health authorities. Dorothy Hrewer. twenty-on mouths old, of 301 North Klghteenth street, . tho - 'atest victim. Tli omni was lemovwt in been quarantined. $12,000,000 CITY BONDS OPEN TO PUBLIC JANUARY 8 Twelve million dollars m olty bond, v. Ill b offsrod to tbe public on January 8. It wa. announced today, following a mettlr.fc of Mayor Kmlth. City Bollaltsr Connelly nd ControJIer Walton. Tho money 1 m-odtid by tho olty to meet payments on contract, for Parkway property., Another JlJ.JOO.OJw Issue will be sold In July, ucoordlnjr to the present program. TWO BATTLESHIPS HERE FOR OVERHAULING ' llluejackela on the IJ lilted Htatu. battlwhliw UkihlHH and ConnMtlout will spend th.lr Christmas at I.eagu I.Uitul. Tins lw battleship nrrlved today from Hamp ton Itoads, Va and will b thoroughly ovrlaull for target praettee later In tho Wt Indie " HALF OF STATE'S IMPORTED QUAIL FREEZE HAHHISUUrta. Dec . State game oflk-tate r chagrined at Iwviivy been compallad to ngb.t cold ualiier and snow Just after landing 0W0 Mtvctaan quail In Pennsylvania. Tbr thousand of tbe little WriW already have iwaaumbed, and Dr. Joseph Kulbfus, secretary of the Stale Game Cenunuudon. has small hop, for the remaining half of the stUpmeiit. STATE WILL GIVE AWAY 2,000,000 TREES IIAHHIHHUHO, Dec. M- lejnylvaal will give away !.leM.0v young trees this winter In aacerdAaee with lu ifau far refareetgtlon land, la thu state. Of Ike tree. IM9.W9 are white pise awl NEWS, uio iuiioimi iiospttui Jtie house has tke xeat bi' war na$, Vrh and j TRANSIT LEASE ' DETAILS TO BE KNOWN TODAY . -- A it Complete Plan Submitted tb Conferees for Formal Acceptance FOR MERGER WITH CITY P. R. T. Company Agrees ta Squcozo All "Water" Out of Stock A complete draft of the proposed Agree. tuent between tha clly and the Philadelphia, Itaptd Transit Company for the equipment and operation of tho entlro system of clty bullt hhth'speed subway nnd elevated line will be made public this afternoon follow Inr n conference In the office of ajayor Smith. v Tho ngrectnent has been worked out lars-oly by tho Philadelphia Ilnpld Transit Company Itself, but representatives of the city have been consulted from time lo time In reRard to various points. The Agreement or lease lit Its present form has already been pubmlttcd to Mayor Smith and to former Transit Director A, Merrltt TAylor, nnd It Is understood to have tha tacit ap proval of both. ' DirTAILH Oh- PUVN Kvery precaution has been taken to Kiwtr the details of the ni;reente.nt nnd up tn the time of the meeting little was known Of the tlonnlto terms which the transit, com pany will ask. It was learned, however,, thnt the company hnd signified Its willing-', ness to squcozo the "water" out of both) P. It. T. nnd Union Traction stock and ton put tho former on a purely Investment; basis with n present market value, of about 42. It In also known thnt the lenso will pro vldu for tho operation by tho company, of tho entire system ns a unit. Including the Darby elevated and tho Northwest subway elevated, work on which I. to bo begun promptly. ' The Hapld Transit trust certificate, soared to n now high mark tthortly before 2 o'clock thin nfternoon, when a block of 1 000 share, .old for 3 J M, the highest price reached since 1909 and Mi point, above the closing- price yesterday. , The market opened today at 31. The price roso to 33 ',4 nnd subsequently dropped s. fraction, remaining below 31 until noon, when It rose gradually until 33 H was reached, Tho total sales today up to 3 o'clock reached only 26,000, which. Although! much larger than nomavqjjcojunerrtbbj; below tho'hlgfi niritTn .ale. yesterday and Monday. The sales for tho 'lasUJlire'B , dnya, or silica the tip of tlif Ti'Kreemen first went out. have passed the 100,000 mark or moro than one-sixth of tha total o'trt standing shares of tho company, Later trie stock dropped lo 11M, but soon gained strength, and was at 33 Just before the market closed, imucTortH in srH9ioN The big developments today began wllh a meeting nf tho executive committee of tho Philadelphia Hapld Transit Company early this afternoon. This meeting: was followed by a meeting of the board of directors of the company, which began at 3 o'clock, Mayor Hnittli, Colonel Sheldon Potter nnd William Hancock, who are the city's transit representative., were present at the latter meeting, Tho proposed agree ment between tha city and company wa. the solo business, Immediately after this meeting H. T, Stotesbury, chairman of tho company's ex ecutive committee, and Thomas n. Mitten, president, will proceed to the onica of Mayor Smith, where the formal conference wilt e held. Iteprescntlng the city will be the Mayor, Mr. Hancock, Colonel Potter, Cty Solicitor Connelly, Chairman Gaffney, of Continued on I'.ie Tito, Column Three ' U. S. GUARDSMEN FIRED ON FROM MEXICAN SIDE Oklahomn Infantry Attacked but None Hurt Returns Volley BAN UBNITO. Tex., Dec. 20. Company Tl, Plrst Oklahoma Infantry, on guard a the tfantu Maria pumping station, wa. fired upon by Mexicans from serous the Jtlo Orando last night. Two of the fifty shot, passed through, onl of the .heltor tent, but no one was' In jured Tho. American soldier, returned the n. but owing to the darkness could KOf" tell whether many of the .hots took eReet, - An armed guard ha. been patrolling the,,.. the Mexican .Ida of the river for several " days. , Colonel Itoy V. Hoffman, of the Vlrs Okjahoma, began an lmpieulate Investlsa. lion. Senate Agrees to Christmas Hecesi WASHINGTON, Dee, 10 The SeWs this afternoon adopted the IIbum resoluna At recess Friday until Janua.ry 3. DOWN WITH FAMILY rORTJttAITS says Miss Georglanna King, pre fessor of modern art at Dryn Maw,, in. an interview wijh M'Usa on th WOMAN'S PAGE of TODAY'S Euentjtg Htb$t wiQ&Mmmm"-,"V,uwMp'&- f f gogiri atwMBOZx: j f