f ;PT. BOY-ED ggpORTS PUT CAPTAIN BOY-ED . UN J5J2.jjjiin ' ...It from rr One wiuon In December, 1016. Is In hid n Philadelphia suburb to direct the " ' -lots against this country, accord. "..? .ments coming from high official M W ' WTl -n.-m.ehes today have It that Boy- ?'", "he German capital. fl '. Ar Ambassador Gerard, on his way VS!SMm after arriving In America M nVrmany, said hat uoyi'.u wan in ""!!. iecentlv." which wodld menn at , ,h-e weeks ago. when the American "f't ami his party left. Mr. Gerard JjjEftW? he "ot know whero Doy-Ed t now. OARBARINO 8IKKNT '---.v L Onrbarlno, chief speclat ngent .Department of Justice In Phlladel '."'.;... to admit or deny that he Is f rVar a search for noy-Kd. k K. Alexander Mackny-Smlth. widow of relate Bishop Mackay-Hmlth. of the ' tw ., rtioio nf Pennsylvania, whose Prtter was reported engaged to Boy-Ed 5rhofe homo was under surveillance by m 1.:....l.l ,!nlr that Rov-Kd linn Ui'rf her home since he was recalled by ".,i .h.e' mntradlctory statements today mti a tangle of huge proportions, Into k vVT). sprret Service agents nro delving """. ...... K.llnf thai llov.Et lins hppn rm in " y-..v. "- ------ ---- -.;-- : ' ,li. .it., rllr,ilrl wild n. full hiNnrrl Ma in mm "":-:".-. ::.i .: nnse-cut Chestnut street attire sub. i.d for the stralght-Jacket effect of . mter den Wnden I A submarine suppqsed to have itnuttu i fur- .i.h.rl the means of noy-1-.u s re-cm entrance ... tht' country A dispatch from Amsterdnm today said Wlfh 150 members of his paity Count von Bernstorn" has "arrived kome" In Berlin Dispatches from the German capital today said he was met inn welcomed back by representation of the Foreign Office and numerous per ianal friends, Including Captain Hoy , Ed' former naval attache In Washing tun' and Dr Bernnrd Dcrnburg. once, chief German press agent In America. Only one comment was nttrlhuted to Bernstorrf In dispatches received here today, That was a Quotation which the former Ambassador to Washington was said to have given to tho Ham burger Fremdenblatt and which read American piainncuiK mmui .iciiuaii hitrlfues In Haiti, Cuba .and Colom bia are fairy tales . we strictly refused, to ml In politics of the American Con tlnnt." BISHOP'S WIDOW DENIES The report that Captain Hoy-Ed had se. crttly lslted Miss Virginia Mackay-Smlth ii branded as "positively untrue" today It the Mackay-Smlth home, 125 South Tirenty-second street Tk utatement was made by Mrs. Mackay- I i Imlth's" neero butler Horace Jackson, rep- resenting Mrs, Mackay-Smlth. who was 111 In bed, and her daughter, who declined to i oomment on the matter. "That Is posltlvely'untrue." ho said, w hen i told of the reports that Captain Boy-JJd aid visited tho house and had been In hiding V there. , f "I have been butler for years and I know " irery nook and corner of this residence. V No man could conceal himself In thin house ) without my knowing of It. i "I can swear positively that Captain Boy- El has npt been hero to see any member 01 In lamiiy since ma uepariuic iui nci imny In' December, 1915. I bellevo he Is till In Germany and not anywhere on thl lrtn nf thp Atlantic He was last here , ilfhteen months ngo. "Mrs. Mackay-Smlth takes this position Fhe hai decided to let events take their tourse. If the newspapers and the Federal Government wish to practice espionage over W her.home In tho hope of capturing a German agent, mat is tneir privilege. Mrs. .naciiay ' Smith, however, realizing the absurdity ot t a German agent hiding in her home. Is not Biarmca ill liio iiruapeui ui epicn mwuv inn bouie." MENACE TO GOVERNMENT Boy-Ed's reported presence In America Is If vital interest to the United States Govern ment. The Goernment. regretting that pre- l mature publicity was given last night In one - vtwtnanat. frt tha eiicrtlilnn thdt 11 1 a nrfunrA ? here was a matter of inquiry, deploring that patriotism should not be the monarch and newspaper enterprise the Bubject in time of national crisis, admitted ftankly to the Evening Ledger representative who viilted the various United States depart ments In Washington that the Hoy-Ed cas U'of momentous import to these sub-i-rtsljms of the United States Government: The State Department. The War Department. , The Navy Department. The Postoffice Department. The Treasury Department. -.The Department of Justice. All these departments want to know all Jbput Boy-Ed They want to know how ltot Into America, wljero he arrived, the m of his arrival, hnw h mr-mm-pd to tret fi from his port of arrival Into the Phlladel- pia metropolitan district, who gave him sylum here, where he went, whom he saw, hat correspondence he Eent and what he received, who his visitors wrfl nnd what these visitors discussed with -the ex-Attache J, '. German embassy. t. , ENDANGERS DEFENSE SECRECV. ' K We war Department wants this Informa J nJ?ecaU9e tne War Department fears rj, to $ defense and preparedness plans. ' -.. Navy Department wants this Infor- i"w " 1110 name reason. The State Department wants this Infor- n4tl0n bePailRI. thA CtntA nannMmBnr nn. i tUeri' Boy-Ed's presence here a menace to wncan diplomacy. BOY-ED ASKED KAISER'S 0. K. TO WED When Boy-Ed first came here he had a ""J o wnai corresponds to tne American r-'" w.uiuaiiuer. o utf ueiuro lie wbd bcih ,"" nej was maae a captain. "i v orOKe out aia i-nna- -vuii uegin to evince a particular inter" ; t In him. Then thin rommiinltv heran l3to read about him with especial zest be- w ms name was being coupled with that t M Mlts Virginia a. Mackay-Smlth. daugh (ter rf Mrs. Virginia Mackay-Smlth, whose ' BUSband wan thA latn TllcrVit 71mr A1v. r' May-Smith, former Bishop Co- i."w or me EplBcopal Diocese of Penn- 1 Detll&lS Of nnv aneiiv.n..nt ..amtt t ByUedlyrrom the Mackay-Smlth home at 5S Wt nobody believed, them The gen- r "TV 'u was mat an engagement did ratt and that WBR vhv If won an hanl HitL?4'! the truth & the rumors of plot- t"g tgalnst this eonnl-v' n.ntrallt nhlph P WtP contlnually being alleged against IiiniiZl -j . "" ' '" lo marry an 'uiwncan Ctrl. SUrelv hm wmtMnU la l.l Woi ? 1 reca'" People said. Bui the wov report, came so thick and fast that tvk(Jn! Eubllc soon came to be con sSevMf.w' he wa as Kul'ty In this a allUtM . u .fc" ... '" ".? "'."" WB fcrM.... " wr- ui wnereis TOb-?!00" chrined, he had to answer: V i? ."' refused me nermisalon to wrt " iffl ,Jn tory came put as Boy-Ed toiTti. lo co.ra9 out A Personal rep imm 1 J1"!? "PRolntee pf the Kalier, ', na had to obtain hnt nnln-ll,i. 'r?' ,Zl wa" du'y a8lte, for, asked , carefully hv 'snmo) .. ,uir.i... ftTOmmu'"c.t.10" the, German, em. "'n"a,nwn(naa matnuintd with oinca, tnat -.... r.'wvi ' '' 4 REPORTED IN wv JfillLjAUJjjLFHIA nnThS.7nur DePa"nient Is Interested In 1,"J,,:M through Its Secret Service. hJm?.. aJ?10' Dnartment Is Interested Mcelv'd y"Kd has eent nnd tT.!l?Ae?B1;l.m.ent,ot. Ju,tlco ' mo8t In ' ! ' ,or U '" a,d ,0 ,he Depart ment of Jus Ice that all the other depart ments appealed when there came the first reports from, authentic sources regarding counfry.'1 f ,h Kalser's hta in.?Jf c,ommon.conent of the departments nterestcd tho Department of Justice, which is the department which would prosecute Boy-td In tho event of his capture, was given complete charge of the elaborate Investigation which the Government at once set on foot. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT ON TRAIL, Tho task fell to A. Bruce. Rlelaskl. chief of the Department of Justice's Division of Investigation. Additional Secret Service agents wero sent from Washington to sup plement the force here under the command of Frank (larbarlno, special npent of the Department In charge of the Philadelphia district. The Government was vitally concerned In finding Hoy-Ed'for these reasons, furnished the Evenino I,nDOEn officially in Washing, ton with the understanding that they were not to lie published until such a time as the suspected presenco of Roy-Ed was generally known. The Evenino LEDOEn patriotically kept this confidence. The first publication of Boy-IM's activities in this vicinity was made last night EVENINO LEDGER. KEPT FAITH Tho Evening LEDosn therefore Is now ablo to say authoritatively. That the presence of Boy-Ed In this country would give rise to an extremely delicate International situation. That the Information ns to his presence In the, Philadelphia territory comes, on tho Government's own word, from an ex tremely reliable and authentic source, n source which this newspaper Is not now at liberty to diMilge. That agents of the Department of Jus-" tlce were prepared to search a house on Twenty-second street below Chestnut street, tho moment they established the truth of Information furnished them that Boy-Ed was hiding therein. TRAILED IN PHILADELPHIA That automobiles containing Depart ment of Justice agents have followed other automobiles which left the Twenty-second street house. That tho house of George W. Boyd, general passenger agent of the Penn sylvania Railroad Company, at 126 South Twenty-second street, which he leased to Mrs. Alexander Mackay Smlth. widow -of the Blahop of the Episcopal dloceso of Pennsylvania, for the winter, has been under constant survolllance This watch has boon a twenty-four-hour watch. That his place of concealment is now believed to be ono of the .suburbs along the Main Line of the Pennsylvania Railroad a house wltn grounds about It, with a garage, leased already fur nished. , That Boy-Ed'a captuie will gie Into the bands of tho Government the bead nnd front, the brains and money source of all plots by spies and "hyphens" nil over the nation. That he is suspected of complicity In the BernstorfT-Zlmmermann plot to align Moilco and Japan ngalnt the t'nited States In tvent ot war with Germany , LEADING SPIRIT IN PLOTS That ha Is suspected nf being the leading spirit In the smuggling of goods on and' off the Interned German raiders at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, work ing In conjunction with Adelbert Koert Ing Fischer, relative of F.mpeior Wll helm, through a morganatic marriage That all pled lo far discovered or which will be unearthed will be traced to him If large turns of money are necessary for their preparation and ac complishment. That Boy-Ed has even arranged his defense in event, of capture, calculating that Americans art an easy-going peo ple with an Ingrown love of romance and gallantry, a people about whom Boy-Ed was once tuoted to have said: "It's so easy to fool the American public." This defenso will be that he came to America not to plot, not to engineer plots, but to be near the woman he loves ; that he came secretly because he had been dismissed officially from this country and no other way was left for him ; that he should not be punished for seeking out the woman he seeks to persuade to marry him ; ' If lt be a crime to love, then punish him for that, but of no other crimes Is he guilty. That he expects the senti mental quality of the American public to create suftlclent public opinion to gain him his freedom. That this pica would be falsi. Captain Boy-Ed being a Arm believer in "The end Justifies the means," and tho end In his case being the success of Germany, all else being subservient to that and all pleas merely subterfuges to enable him to proceed with his "work" In the United States. MAY HAVE COME IN U-BOAT Captain Boyd-Ed Is believed to have come to America in a submarine. There were two submarines on which lie could have Arrived. He could have arrived on either one of the two trips of the merchant submarine Deutschland when It put Into Baltimore on Its first trip and into New London on Its Becond or he could have been a passenger on the U-53, a German war submarine, which ran unexpectedly into Newport on October 7, 1910. MISS MACKAY-SMITH "His Majesty graciously accedes to your request." A zealous young American Army officer was. guarding the , neutrality of the Say vllle wireless the day this message came. He read Into It some secret code that he felt tho German Embassy oughtn't to get. So he resolutely threw tho message Into the waste basket, Boy-Ed went home alone, and then he packed again and found his way back here to Philadelphia to ba near Miss Mackay-Smlth. Up to now, and even now, the engage ment of Captatn Boy-Ed nnd Miss Virginia Mackay-Smlth has never been admitted. Heretofore whenever any one of the family condescended at all to listen to a question there was a denial of any engagement. Mrs. Mackay-Smlth personally gave her authori tative 'denial, so did one of the daughters, the eldest, Mrs. Charles Lester Marlet, of Washington. Virginia, Captain Boy-Ed'a choice, Is the second daughter, and the other daughter is Mrs. William Bell Wat kins, of this city. ' Virginia Is a granddaughter, of the late Commodore Stewart; U, S. N. She was presented to Washington society In 1901 when her father was rector of the fash ionable St. John's Church there. After his death ere In 1911 she lived In Washing, ton with her mother. There were rumors of her engagement to the German naval attache In 1913, when he was so popular in the bachelor set. but. so the story goes. the Kaiser really did frown on the match then. That, of oouree. was before the 'war. So the Kaiser frowned. One of the things which was repeatedly charged against Boy-Ed after the war began waa that he was sending spiea Into France and Great Britain, getting American passports for them. German reservist wero used as the agents tq go abroad. R. P, Stegler, k German reservist, who gave .way tho scheme, eaid It waa Captain Boy ,Bd who sent Carl II. Lody to London, Lody fwJlfktliM of th flr.tll.UlvUutfcrU v rfv fo vfetflm ; Kjsrnt jhxtwdMk. inw5 ''apMietfi THIS PLOTTER AND GIRL WHO MAY HAVE ' i W -LllllllllllllllllllllllHiLllllllllllllllllllllllltLlHIllllllllllllllllHIH Mviu, i&MnHll miss A44i.J6MHBMH VIRGINIA v Xmmmmil mackay-smith i 4ykMBPtS ' AND I WmfmmmtfB captain VmfSfcralHIVAvv HOY-ED III MENACE OF U-BOAT GRAVE, BUT OVERDRAWN BY GERMANY Comparatively Little Effect on Volume of British Ship ping, Says First Lord of Admiralty Many Sub mersibles Sunk Grand Fleet on the Job. ll'Httrn for tr Kvrnlva l.rdgrr By ELLEN ADAIR LONDON, Feb 25 The' U-boat menace, though no one would belittle Its gravity, has so far had but little effect on the volume of British phinnlne. "The arming of merchant chips Is EO'ng on better nnd be'ter each week." said Sir Edward Carson. Klrst Loid of the Admiralty "Ot armed merchant ships nttacked by submarines, seventy to seventy-five per iTiit escape " Although It Is not w I d e I v known, a considerable number of submarines have been nunk by the British. Only a few days ago a British de stroveV attacked an i:ui:n adair enemy submarine, nnd. ns events showed, killed the captain. The submarine dived She was Injured In a way that compelled her to come to the surface. She was cap tured and her officers and men taken prls oners. Two British patrols reported they had engaged two German submarines nnd sunk them both. There were no casualties in the patrol boats nnd no survivors from the submarines. Hardly a day passes without some re port of Injury to German submarines. But the world at large, and particularly the neutral world, only hears continuous ru mors of the havoc wrought to tho British by the blockade, and tho reverse side ot the picture In but little known. BRITISH NAVY'S VIGILANCE As a matter of fact tho people of Great Britain have suffered less privation than any other combatant nation. For this the British navy, ceaselessly vigilant amid the bitter gales of tho North Sea, must be thanked "The Grand Fleet, though never adertls. ing. has never done working," said the First Sea Lord the other day In .the House of Commons. "The great volume of trade In and out of this country has gono on un ceasingly and unremittingly, while the ereat mercantile fleet of Germany still lies Idle in its harbors and her ports are deso late and deserted." The extravagant German accounts of the BOY-ED'S AMERICAN TO CREATE Captain Boy-Ed is superlative In alt his pursuits. Just as he Is In love. The country at large came to know- him soon after the war started In the summer of 1914 as the most aggressively partisan of all proponents of the German cause. But before that official and social Wash ington knew him as the most delightful of all men in the dlplomatlo Bet and in the clubs ho was the nicest of all club-fellows He gave the most enjoyable dinners ; he was the best entertainer, the ablest dancer. There was no doubt of It, what ever Boy-Ed figured In ho dominated. So It Is easy to understand how the people who knew him socially had o gasp when his name came creeping out so con sistently In one plot after another as soon as England entered tho war. "Surely not Boy-Ed. Not Captain Boy Ed that superbly attractive man." But It was fact all the same. It only showed how true to form he ran. When It was his Job to play and entertain he played and entertained with all his might. When it was his job to do more serious things for Germany and that, of course, waa why he was over here he did them with all his mlBht' - , , Tho war was not very old .when there came demands by the press from all sections of the country for his recall. He was al ways seeming to get Into hot water. Every thing that happened when It should not have happened waa being traced back to his door. He didn't seem to bo able to cover the traces, and yet this waa his big Job, too. For when you get right down to essentials Boy-Ed was over here aa a press agent. Ills wai the task of Influencing public senti BOY-ED MAY HAVE COME BACK ON DEUTSCHLAND OR U-53 Captain Boy-Ed is supposed to have re turned to this country in a submarine. It would have been easy for him to land as a member of ths crew and never repor. back. The -world's first merchantman submarine- V,Jrrl-In AjjMwkiuisraUrj anchor!. Inl - v l rBrWT? CITY-GERMANS QUIT BAPAUME lT-boat campaign accounts chiefly In tended or American consumption were also commented upon, particularly tho fol lowing extract from German wireless: "At first tho Increase In sinking will not he very great, for the submarine scare has been thrown Into the English with paralyzing effect, and the whole sea was as If swept clean by one hlow." To this statement a flat contradiction wn elver In the House of Commons "Twelve thousand British ships went In and out ot port In the first eighteen days of the "iithlees t'-boat campaign'," said Sir TMwnrd Carson dryly, admld much laughter. "1 am lettlnc neutrals know the truth " he rontlnued, "and hiding no losses In face of all the sinkings and their accompanying sacrifices and trials and heaven known It is earylng to read of the boats with their frozen corpses from vessels torpedoed without warning by a nation that states It will not shrink from sinking our hospital ships and drowning our wounded I am encouraged by ono fact, and that Is that I have not yet heard of one sailor who re fused to sail ! "That Is what Is going to win this war. And, howeer neutrals may have been nervous and frightened, you will see how our example spreads. Vou will see as days ko on thnt the neutrals will resume their salllngB" "BLOCKADE" OLD GERMAN WORD A distinguished German philologist has entered Into a dissertation on the exact meaning of the word "blockade." He states that "blockade" Is a "good old German word," nnd In Its original form denoted a thing used to punish criminals. The military censor did not allow the writer to pursue tho analogy to Its logical conclusion, namely, to point out that the British blockade of Germany Is being car ried out with tho Identical purpose repre sented by the "ancient high-German word." The discovery of the meaning of the word "blockade" was made because of a contro versy as to whether or not It was "pa triotic" to use tha hated English word. It was finally decided by German students that Its derivation came from "bloch" or "block" a piece of wood used for gagging or bind ing wrongdoers and lawbreakers and that the term, having been in common use In "ancient high-German" long before the Eng lish blockade, the Italian "blaccata" or the French "blocquade," may be Indisputably regarded as patriotic for all good Germans to use In the form "blockade." JOB WAS LOVE FOR GERMANY ment In favor of the Germanic allies; what ever else he could do on the side was well and good his chiefs thought, but primarily and principally he was supposed to be a news Influences He had a good record be hind him, a record made when he was chief of tho news division of the Naval In telligence Service in Berlin. It was in 1910 while he ,was doing that work that the Reichstag put through a $100,000,000 ap propriation for the navy, and the success In obtaining this tremendous budget tremendous then, anyway was due to his work In preparing public sentiment In its favor. Of codrse, Admiral von Tirpltz got the credit, but Boy-Ed did the work. He fed the newspapers and magazines with pamphlets such as 'The Coming Naval War," "Germany and England," and no where more than in England did he get the due recognition that was coming to him. Boy-Ed came tq Washirgton on March 22, 1913. He had entered the German navy October 4, 1891. He was nineteen then; that makes him forty-five now. He was at sea almost' twelve years, and after that until he came. to the United States he was In the Naval Intelligence Office, where he made his great record for originality and enterprise. His chiefs figured that he would be an admirable aid to Count von Bernstorff in making American officialdom like the Germans, and they sent him here. What ever conclusions may b drawn now, It must be said that until the war broke out the choice seemed perfect There was not a man In Washington's diplomatic circles better liked, or even as well, Many a proud perron went, to humiliating lengths to get an invitation to the dinners he gave. est of the German merchant submersible. She steamed slowly up the Patapsco from the Chesapeake and anchored at quarantine at 11 o'clock that night, near where the North German Lloyd steamship Neckar was tnA,n-l.v ,,,', . TW.jiarWeyUaAtUa mwaoKr wwz9:,mrui DRAWN HIM HERE ' tons of dyestun's and chemicals Mounted in her conning tower were two small (tuns of three-Inch cnllbei. At the time It was leported she carried a messago from the Emperor Willielm Boy-Ed may have been that message. The craft was .115 feet long nnd thirty feet wide. On her nay to America she was chnsrd by French nnd British warships, nnd only eluded them by going S00 miles nut of her course. Her cargo wan lonslcned by A Schmaacher & t"oi agents p', Baltimore for the North German Llo)d Company. The longest trip previously made h. any submarine was from Kiel t( Constantino pie, made by tho l'-boat that sank the British ship Majestic For her return trip the Deutschland took on a cargo of rubber and nickel so sorely needed by thn German Government. When the time came for the departure of the neutschlanit the Go eminent announced that no stops would hn taleu lo delay her clearing State Department nfficlals said they could see no violation of International rights If tho boat crossed the three-mile limit on her return trip submerged, pro vliled the submarine's movements were not a menace to navigation. At the same time Hrltlsh naval vessel commanders announced that they would treat the submersible an a warship and would fire on sight If they saw her perl scopo above the surface of the sea. Following this It whs Intimated that the Imperial German Government would ask for a convoy for the Deutschland. On July 22, five minutes after the United States Custom House doors In Baltimore swung open Captain Frederick Hinsch and rhlllp Voltz, of the Eastern Forwarding Company, filed clearance lfapers for the sub. marine On Julv 27. sho was stilt at her pier and Government officials gave up Rue.ss lng when she would take her departuie. On August 1. the boat started on her re turn vojage. She safely dodged the Brit ish and French cruisers walling outside and, after s. voyage of twenty-three days, reached Bremen. The'arrlval ot the Deutschland In German waters was celebrated with great pomp, and Emperor Willielm personally congratulated the captain and crew. The undersea-boat flew tho United States flag when" she anchored In the Bremen harbor, according to eye witnesses. Hardly had the first e-.cltement In mari time circles following the Initial arrival and departure of the Deutschland subsided when shipping men were electrified by a second arrival of the boat In the harbor of New London early on November 1. Captain Taul Koenlg said his craft had left Bremen on October 10 nnd had made tie trip without special Incident. On November 17, one hofr after leaving her pier at New London, tho boat, rushing at full speed tow-aid the open sea, rammed nnd sank the tug T S. Scott, Jr., which was convoying her to the open waters, drowning five persons aboard the tug and being so seriously injured herself that she hail to crawl back to New London and undergo repairs that delayed her sailing several days. She finally left New Lonclui on Novem ber 21 and arr'ved off tjie mouth of the Weser at noon un December 10. She car ried a valuable cargo home. Commercial men were startled finally on October 7. 1916, when the German sub marine U-53, a warboat, ran suddenly Into Newport, remained three hours and de parted. She had crossed the ocean In seven teen days. Tho next morning the world re reived the news that six steamships had been torpedoed off Nantucket Shoals. Cap tain Boy-Ed may have been landed from the U-53. When the U-boat left Newport she car ried provisions and supplies for a three months' cruise, and also eight torpedoes. The suddenness with which the bsat began her operations startled those who upon her arrival had speculated on the nature of her visit with some misgivings. On February 8, some months after the arrival and departure of the merchantmen U-boats and the war submarine, the Provi dence Journal published an article that pave serious misgivings to thoso persons who had the Idea that the United States might be struck a blow by way of Mexico should German diplomacy be successful In planting a port of Intrigue In that country close to the border. Said the Frovldence Journal; If Germany succeeds In dragging the United States Into war her first blow against this country will be struck through Mexico. For tho past two weeks the German Ambassador work ing among his own consulates all over the United States as well as those of Austria-Hungary has been superintend ing the departure of over three hun dred officers of the German army, both regulars and reservists, from various American ports and railroad centers to Mexico City, where orders governing their future activities will await them. It has not been generally known that a large number of German army officers who have been captured by the Russians during the present war and have made their way here at various times through China have been held In this country without any attempt be ing made to smuggle them back home. The Department of Justice has had Information for several months that several of these officers have been with both Villa and Carranza In Mexico. Since last Saturday there has been a wholesale exodus of those that have remained to Mexico City, and at least two hundred officers of reservists have accompanied them or gone In small parties by various routes to the same ultimate destination, ' Retired Gunsmith Dead William Stein. Jr., retired gunsmith and prominent in sporting circles In Camden, died at his home, 308 Arch street, today from hardening of the arteries. He was born In Camden In 1861 and succeeded his rather In the gunsmith business In 1891. Ha returned In IBIS, He was a Mason an a member of the Philadelphia Rifle Club. The funeral services wll) be held Saturday. after noon at-S o'clock at his lata-Mhsml'''. ELLEN ADAIR ALGONQUIN, U. S. VESSEL, ContlnoH from tur Ono ALLEN HOPKINS, Isleworth, Mc. ' I Each of the men received a war bonus for making the trip, amount ranging from $25 to $100. The Alganouln was a three-masted freight steamship and was placed In the American registry last December by tho American Star Line of New York. John D, Step hanadlr, the actual owner of the ship. Is a director of this line. The Algonquin was 24K feet long, with a beam of 40 feet nnd a draft of 20.6 feet. Her gross tonnage was 1806. She was built In 1889 at the Glasgow ards of Napier, Shanks & Bell for the Port Colborne and St. Lawrence Navigation Company, Ltd. The vesel was a steel-screw steamship, with three-cylinder triple-expansion engines .-r-v-r--r-i-'.- ,.-. n.nnm 4 . WILL BE WASHINGTON March 14. Sinking of tho American steamship Al gonquin by a German submarine simply has brought the United Slates "closer to actual hostilities" That Is as far ns official, would go to day The loss of the Anierlccan Star liner has been expected. Sinking of half a dozen other craft will surely come. Hut nono of them are armed Thy do pot In rlude In their sailings the "armed neutral Ity" which President Wilson has outlined will be the reply of the I'nlled States to "German Hggresslon and luthlcssness." Germany must accept responslbllitj for the next move by this Government When she sinks nn armed American lUier arnird under International law- for defense she will commit an art nf war Officials mnde this very plain today They pointed out thai up to tho present the altitude nt the I'nlled Slates was one of tolerance, That tolemnre will end when American vehels protected by American sailors are attacked Secretin y of Ktnte Lansing, when ns!,rd today whether the sinking of School Election Trickery Charged Continued from Tsice On mask his chagrin at the board's nctl-ni in Ignoring him lolall In the appointment of Miss Punchhenn's succesoor. under m phtln soplilcal acceptance of a situation he can not niter. "The hoard has elected a "person."" said Doctor Gather with nn Inflection on the world 'person' that revealed more eloquent ly than any tirade his private view ot the matter, "and for me to Issue any state ment or criticism, now that the matter Is settled, would her In ft way, to undermine his work at the high school, which I have no Intention of doing. "I made" no personal attack on Doctor Gowlng How could 1?" A thin veil of Irony shaded his tones. "I know nothing whatever about him. He hss "never been ronnected here with the schools. My ob jection was in regard to tho method of filling the resignation. Hul the hoard has decided now. I nm merely' the superin tendent cinplojed by them and I shall do all In my power to foster the work ot the man whom they have sele6ted T made my statements to the board yesterday. PLEASED WITH HORNOR PURCHASE At Doctor Gowlng's office lodaj. In tho Stephen Glrard Building, It was said that he wa.' out of town and would not return until the end of the week Doctor Gowlng. who Is the agent for the D. C. Heath Pub-4 llshing Company, was at one time pi evi dent f the State Teachers' Association of New Hampshire and principal of the Rhode Island State Normal School. General satisfaction was expressed nt the purchase of the Hornor Building for a new administration building, the other Important business settled by the board meeting yes terday William V. Deakyne an expert on realty values, said today that the Board of Edu cation acquired a bargain In purchasing the Hornor Building for $600,000. Before the board voted to make the pur chase there was strenuous opposition be cause Edwin Wolf, one of the members, said the building was only worth $500,000 and In a neighborhood that was "going down " Mr. Deakyne said this view was wrong "If I was again a young man looking around I'd buy In East Chestnut street," he said. "It will come back. Merchants will soon find that they can't crowd around a little huh from Thirteenth to Broad streets, and they will take up Chestnut street again. "Merchants' rent in Chestnut street near Broad Is now so high that single merchants, thoso with simply the small stores, are find ing It hard to pay One of them told me re cently that when he moves he, is going to move east. Now he Is near Juniper. "The only thing that holds some of them back Is on account of tho class of buildings on tho south side of east Chestnut. The location is good, really fine. But the build 'Ings are not modern and the old estates which own most of them seem to be In no humor to make Improvements. If only a group of men get together and put up some modern shops east Chestnut street will be come the most popular business street in town." MYSTERY IN SHOOTING OF VIRGINIA STUDENT . e Young Man in Critical Condition and Professor in Polytechnic Institute Under Bond RLACKSBURG, Va., March H. Mys tery still shrouds the shooting of Stock ton ellth, Jr., In the home of Prof Charles E. Vawter, of tho Virginia Polytechnic In stitute early yesterday while eHth, who re sides near here, was a guest In the home. Bernard Williams, Virginia Polytechnic In stitute student, who rooms In the Vawter home, refused today to make any state ment In regard to the affair. Vawter and his wife are equally reticent. Vawter Is out on $1000 ball bond pending Grand Jury action, having waived preliminary examination. Mrs. Vawter Is a beautiful young woman and a native of this section. Heth, who Is at n Roanoke Hospital, con tinues In a critical condition vvlth three pistol bullet wouds In his abdomen. His father, who was In California wlwn the tragedy occurred. Is reported to be hurry ing back to Virginia, Want Pet Horse Humanely Killed WILLIAMSPORT, Pa., March Is. -In her will filed for probate, Mrs. David Bly directs that the executor of her estate humanely put to death her pet horse In order that the animal may not fall Into the hands of some one whoVould not care for It properly. She bequeathed J500 to the Trinity Episcopal Church, and left the remainder of her estate to relatives. Confer, on Roberta Murder District Attorney Rotan, Coroner Knight and several other city officials today held a conference In the Tllstrlot Attorney's' of fice with the Intention of selecting compe tent wltneesea to be heard In tho 'Qraee Roberts murder inquee t on Friday, ,U. waa. .I.,-.' k., . H.'Mlal'kl JUIH .J -J,1-,V.,V . . -, SIJNIVIJNU U-b'ilKST AKIYlJjJU UK AFT ' ivramtmi'i m taw sW.w W a x ON U-BOl? TORPEDOED; ALL SAV Despite th fact that the news frS London reports twenty-seven persons ab the steamshln. tho o filters of the line h state positively that there were but twentjF- threo persons on the ship. The chMf - I-... U ll..Hn.,l. ...... V.- C-.I...II4. fHKIllctr ui Ilia iiisviiiuiu wan Ft DCIluiqrr, M H. unlive ui ueiiiiauy, uui it naturalized ciiii ..r, nf thn tlnltort h'tnfM. Mnll nf tka'i ' crew are said to be naturalized Americans- ' , ' M,-t- . ,L. , , . I . '. uiucisus oi ine jwiieni:iiii nmr juine www . -- congratulating tnemseives upon tne sate ar- i.1; .r.jn rival of the Kredonla at Genoa at the tlr8r"W when the cablegram from Captain Norbeff'ii., reported the loss of the Algonquin. """"P. fl V V - mn r 1 nm ' CALLED ACT Ofr WAR,S vffi the Algonquin meant any sudden actios ..'ft by me United States, characterized It an additional straw to the camels backV fl That Is the attitude i of the United Stata'jo There can be no deviation from the planet", J , ns niitllnM fnr th. 17nltr1 K(Ati hv Pi-m! dent Wilson. The policy of the United! "Yd States absolutely hinges on Its enforcement! of its plan of armed neutrality. Support ,vU of this plan is indicated by the action ot(;i !r China in breaking off diplomatic relations' Js54s with Germany. Other neutrals will shorUr" , Vi'.-I do the same. Information reaching hers says. And the outcomo will be far-reach- '"?. v$ ine oniy siguiiicance seen oy legislators In the destruction nt the Algonquin Is thst Germany has no Intention of abandoning her announced Intention lo conduct ruthless ' suniuarine wariare. ami mat a clasn ot ."vw nuns between the United Stales and Ost". whs many Is Inevitable. Within week it Is, -13 expected that the first American merchant- Om man with an "armed guard" aboard wilt bo In the barred zone, and that the first meeting with German submarine will re sult In an exchange ot shots. TELLS OF BRITISH SUBMARINE LOSS lJlll.v;ui Ul JllaUll5l tOtV.Cs.IIl ship Says Boat Was Crip pled While Maneuvering ENTIRE CREW PER'lSHED English Admiralty Hunts Ger man U-Boats With Own Fleet of Undersea Craft The loss ot a British supersubmarintyj'u with Its entire crew of close to 100 men,. ' was disclosed In a letter received bv Chief Engineer Renthall of the British steamshlDiJiiElS Doonholm, which until today was tied Up nrr jo auuiii, j.ne communication xeu J, Ing of the disaster was sent bv a close S-Sul I.I...J r..uni i.t , -i-i- t '. iiiT-iM, in jvtriiiimii. nunani a. cme enginetjr "v, rtf atl t-tlfT!l1, ft......! mln..lr r' u. . u,.,,,,-,. ufMiiici nvdiiiaiiit. , J- The letter told briefly of the sinking nt the big submersible, which the writer in formed Chief Engineer Renthall was as long ns tne Doonholm, which measures close to 375 feet. He told of the subfna rine's successful launchlng'an'd of her m neuvrlng In the River Clyde. Then the operation of sinking- the new submarine rshe failed to make her eappearance It .--? whs uicoveren mat sne nan Become crip- Pieo wk; 1 anirs were nnaiiy attacnen fo the sunken ' Maft and she wan hroui-ht in fh mirfnrjt. Every member or the crew had perished, the ,ifjj letter stated. The writer did not malts A, known the purpose to which the British Admiralty was putting the big submarine nor did he say whether any others were being built. He did mention, however, that the British navy In hunting the German submarines with submarines nf their own. President Names New Tariff Board Continued from reite One sympathy with that party, though never active in politics; Roper. Lewis and Kent While Kent was campaigning for Wilson last fall his wife was on the stump In Call-. Ms lunun urKinK tne election 01 (.naries is. Hughes. . tW: fomla urging the election of Charles B. W& As a matter of fact there are no out-and-' out high tariff advocates, so called, on th,SJ hn.nl r,.,.H.Iht I, Innl.lJ. n ,a..A ...' ?jls Democrats, two Independents, one Republl- ' Jj can and one Progressive Republican, giving ffl tne commission a complexion regarded as ) very elastic on the tariff question. Professor Taussig Is designated as chair- ,yM man 01 tne commission, tie is a menmer ot j the farultv of Harvard llntversitv. but , has obtained a leave of absence from his fi post until September, 1918. He Is n,,v'i2 nuinoruy on economics ana nas written ex- jt, tensiveiy on tne larin. 'Sij T?nrtAi- thn Tr M-tnl' i,rnil nnmlliM. J& ..V,.VI. .... ....fl... . ..-..v....... .v,....w..p has had much practical experience in dea!- inK Willi me luriu qucniiuii. -tiie-r serving f in tne soutn Carolina legislature ne De- came Identified with the census bureau in jV' the rollectlon of cotton statistics, malting a ,'',?( trip to Europe to study the question. When V the present tarltr law was framed Roper- was connecteu wiin me Mouse ways ana v Means Committee as an authority on stalls- V tics. Until last fall he was First Assistant Postmaster General, William Kent was a Representative in jw congress irmii . aiuuriiit uniu -uarcn , when nla Irm evnlrpn. Hfl wan not n. rnn.ni .tlit..,.. In. .L.U.IInn t"-,t .a,, a V.A-... ( UlUttlD IWI iD-tKvlluil, &,, naa uuui -," Chicago, but has spent most of his- llfefai! In California, where he has had extenslv'1,J.ilN experience In banking and other forms ofi'sj nusiness. lie was elected to one congress ' 'A as an Insurgent Republican and for two..T terms ns an- Independent. He BupporteeWfilj President Wilson during the last campaign VhJ and headed the Wilson Independent Leasrua.V1.-l. Costigan Is a Denver lawyer. Ortglnallyfj'u ne wps n jvciiuuiii;iii. uul 111 ri unu again , ; In 1914 was the Progressive candidate forK,!3 Governor of Colorado. He waa one of ths " m fminrl-m nf the Pro&Tes-tve nart in 'hfai home State and has taken a leadirlg taW'! In the campaign for social and eoonomsg-i reform In the West 5 David J. Lewis, who waa defeated - election to the United States Senate 'fr Maryland, is a lawyer or consmeraoie re tatfen and enjoys a lucrative practice. . Culbertson, who acted as a tarlft ex for the Senate Finance Committee ur the consideration of the simmons-unoer tariff act In 1913, has made a careful Mu4& of the various tarlft systems of the orgLl He was connected w(th the former vtaHifW board and' wrote tne nrst volume ot-Jts report 6n the wool schedule. -. Bimrr employe's $fi4'y CONNELLSVII-I.H. Pa-., March v-'U sieve siabbr. a laberer at tne West powerhouse, who was kllHetf y a tratoj week, naa sues in m swim, wes-m 1 burned by the powerhouse sasow they, were torn aml-sott. with airt, - - -..""'. gisMMfr " Wfl H ' m 8K; Jitixr, '!! sMS. OgJ