Germans to Join Forces With Bulgars HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH LXXXIV— No. 286 PAN-AMERICANISM, PREPAREDNESS AND PUNISHMENT FOR HYPHENATED AMERICANS, ARE POINTS IN MESSAGE President Wilson Urges In crease in Standing Army and Training of Citizens to Resist Possible Invasion COMPLETE BIG NAVY IN NEXT S YEARS fax Incomes, Gasoline, Auto mobiles, Steel and Bank Checks; Ship Purchase and Philippine Bills Again fl.v Associated Press Washington. D. C., Dec. 7.—A doc trine. of Pan-Americanism —of full partnership between the nations of the Western Hemisphere in world affairs — was proclaimed by President Wilson to-day in his third annual address to Congress. the theme of which was pre paredness by the United States to de fend not only its own independence but the rights of those with whom it has made common cause. The mes sage was read by the President to the .Senate and House assembled ii\ joint , session in the chamber of the House. Every recommendation embodied in ihe document had to do with compre hensive plans for strengthening the national defenses. The program in cluded the army and navy plans already made public by Secretaries Garrison and Daniels, legislation for sovernment-owned merchant ships, a rural credit law. the Philippine and Porto Kican bills which failed of final passage ai the last session, conserva tion legislation, a law giving federal aid to industrial and vocational edu cation, and the creation of a commis sion to inquire, into the transportation problem. K 1 Naturalised and native-born Ameri " ;i» who. sympathizing with bellig erents abroad, have plotted and con spired to violate their own country's neutrality, were scathingly denounced iv the President, and Congress was irged to provide adequate federal laws o deal with such offenders. Internal taxation was proposed as Hie means of providing the money [C ontinued on Pasc (!.] 250-lb. Husband Says 90-lb. Wife Spanked Him Special to The Telegraph Sun bury, Pa.. Dec. 7. —John lleim, r>f Herndon, who weighs 250 pounds, was before the court here yesterday, charged by his 90-pound wife with desertion. He. pleaded guilty, hesi tated and asked the court to make his wife "behave herself In the future." Questioning the defendant, the i-ourt. learned the wife was in the iiabit. of spanking her husband when he misbehaved, which caused the separation. SHAIV TEI.I.S U. S. TO SPEMJ TWO BILLIONS FOR DGPBNSCI Special to The Telegraph Xew York, Dec. 7.—George Bernard Shaw's advice to the United States is "to build thirty-two dreadnaughts in stead of sixteen, and to spend $2,000,- 000,000 on its armament program in stead of SI.000,000,000." Mr. Shaw's ad vice is contained in a letter to the In tercollegiate Socialist Society. "The pacificism of America," he wrote, "is the hope of the world: but It is because America is powerful that she will be listened to." He recommended "a Pacific navy cap able of resisting an attack from Japan and an Atlantic navy capable of reslst i»ig an attack from England, with Zep pelins on the same scale, a ptoportion ate land equipment of siege guns, and so forth." NO OPERATION" ON MISS ADDAMS By Associated Press ''hieago. Til., Dec. 7.—Miss Jane Addams probably will not he operated on, Dr. James B. Herrick said to-day, in announcing that the widely-known peace advocate and settlement worker is suffering from a hemorrhage of the kidney. CKUISKR HAS REIUGGES By Associated Press Cananea. Crete, via Paris, Dec. 7. — The United States cruiser Des Moines has arrived here with 344 refugees who were expelled from Syria. This number is made up of 2t<6 French, 69 Bussians and 9 Greeks. THE WEATHER For Harrlnburg; nnd vlelnltyi Part ly cloudy to-night and Wednes day; not much change In tem perature! lowest temperature to night about HO degree*. For Kaatem Pennsylvania: Pnrtly cloudy to-ntght nnd Wednesday) rnot much chance In temperature) light variable Hindu. River The Suaquehanna river nnd al Ita tributaries will fall slowly or re nin In nearly stationary. A stage of about .1.7 feet la Indicated fop Harrlsburg Wednesday morning. tieaeral Conditions Barometric pressure Is high east uf the Mississippi i-lver and nest of the llocky Mountains. It I" 1 to 10 degrees colder In south ern districts east of the Mountains. Temperature: K a. m.. 3-. Sun: Pises. 7:16 a. m.l sets, 4:31t p. in. Moon: F|r»t quarter, December 13, fli 3R a. m. River Stage: 3.S feet above loir. water mark. yesterday's Weatfcer Highest temperature, 30. t.owest temperature. 2S. Mean temperature, 52. Normal temperature, 35. WWWWWWWVWW.WWW.WySWWrtW.WVWVTOi • HIGH POINTS IN l MESSAGE TO CONGRESS TODAY J UKGICS preparedness for national defense and eo-operation of every- Ji body nnd nil Infliipinrs to that end. Internal tnxatlon proponed to meet expenacN of putting the i, country on footing to successfully resist Invasion. "Hyphenated American*** pronounced m peril to the natloa nnd f Ntrlagcnt Ibwn urged to punish those who plot and conspire to violate the ■ country** neutrality. "We have been put to the tent In Mexico, and have stood the teat** «' and "our concern for the Independence nnd prosperity of the States of i ( Central and South America I* unaltered/* the President nay*. i, "The Stntcm of \merlca are not liontlle rival* hut co-operating [i friend*,** he *ald In defining the natlon*a attitude on the Monroe doctrine. ( i War In America I* regarded only a* a mean* of n**ertlng the right* i 1 of the people agalunt nggre**lon, "hut war haa never been a matter of men i| and arm*,*' our people "must know how modern fighting 1* done." i I'rewents War Department'* plan* for ntrengtlienlng the army a* S ••fir*# ennentlal step," and for the prenent nufflclent. ( i Does not doubt the patriotic devotion of young men *o neceaaary to make plan workable. i 1 Would increase ntnmllng army to a force of 141,843 of all services and entabllnhment of 400,000 dl*clpllned cltlsens, to undergo short train- % Ing period* for three year* of six-year enll*tment. *i Plan for lncrea*lng \av.v advoeated by Secretary Daniel*, "Involve* only nhortenlng of time within which plan* long matured *hall be carried out and nowhere formally adopted.** I'rges IVavy be put on footing recommended within five year*. Announces he will a*k for pn*»age of a governmer.t-onneil merchant " marine bill, "similar to that nulnnltted to the last Congress but modified J In some essential particulars.*' J New revenue raisers recommended-—lowering of Ineome tax limit of i exemption: one cent per gallon on gasoline and naphtha* 50 cents per horse i power on automobile* nnd Internal explosion engine*; ntnmp tax on bank i cheek*; tax of 25 cent* per ton on fabricated Iron and *teet. i May tiad It ndvlsnble to call Into connultutlon with him transpor- 1 tat lon, manufacturing and other expert* to a*eertaln how w hole nation ) can join ft* force* Intelligently and efficiently for the national defense. J Hints at another message on commercial conditions and advises Con- i Kress to ascertain If there is anything else "to he done to better the con- i dltlons under which the railroad* are operating." i Program for legl*latlon aside from point* mentioned. Rural credit 1 law, Philippine and Porto Kico bills which failed last session; conser- 1 vntlon of natural resource*; federal aid to Induntrlal and vocational edu- 1 cation; creation of coinmln*lon to Inquire Into transportation problems; 1 extcntloii of present tariff on sugar nnd continuation of present so-called ! "war revenue law*," »%W.\%W.W>V-W.W-VA"ASW^VWV.VAV.W.%-AWA%V.i WILSON READS MESSAGE WITH DEEP FEELING With Sharp Words He Arraigns Americans Who Endanger Neutrality of Nation By Associated Press Wasliington. D. C.. Dec. 7.—Presi dent Wilson in his annual address to Congress to-da.v laid down the admin istration plans for national defense end told his hearers it was necessary for the new and broad doctrine of Pan-America. With sharp words he arraigned American citizens who by their sym pathy for the foreign belligerents had endangered the neutrality of the United States. "America never witnessed anything (Continued on Page 12.) TELLSGERMANY RELEASES DUE TO ACTIVITIES U. S. Declined to Go Into De tails of Ousting of Boy-Ed and Von Papen By Associated Press Washington. D. C., Dec. 7. —Secre- tary has replied to Germany that the American government's re quest for the withdrawal of Captain Boy-Ed and Captain von Papen. the naval and military attaches, respect , ively, of the German embassy here. I was entirely because of their military and naval activities. , Neither was there any indication of | whether the renly would meet the con . tention of the German government, ithat it should know the reasons for the request for the withdrawal of its officers. It was broadly intimated to the State Department that if the request was ; based on something else than the de velopments of the Hamburg-American Line conspiracy trial or the case of James F. J. Archbald, the American war correspondent, who secretly car ried dispatches for Captain von Papen. Germany would decline to withdraw either of the men. The general Impression was that Secretary Lansing's reply at some length repeats that the two officers have become persona non grata be cause of their military and naval ac tivities and that, further, under the diplomatic usages existing between na tions. it is unnecessary for one govern ment to do more than intimate to an other that the presence of a diplomatic officer is distasteful. The Department of Justice is still" investigating reports that German agents were back of alleged plans for a counter-revolution in Mexico, to be headed by General Huerta. Attorney General Gregory said to-day. however, that no new information on the sub ject had been called to his attention recently. One reason why the American gov ernment will not furnish Germany with specific reasons for the request for the recall of Captain Boy-Kd and Captain von Papen is its determination to keep secret the sources of its in formation. Reports involving other men in this < ountr> are under investi gation and these the government does not desire to disclose until it is ready to take further action. HARRISBURG, PA., TUESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 7, 1915. GERMANS TO AID IN MESOPOTAMIA AND MACEDONIA Will Aid Bulgars in One Cam paign and Turkish Allies in the Other By Associated Press London, 7. The campaign against the main Serbian armies hav« ing been closed, it is expected General von Gallwitz with his German forces will join the Bulgarians in Macedonia in an effort to crush the French and British armies before they become much stronger. Information from Berlin indicates that the German forces engaged in the earlier movements in the Balkans have now been detached for the purpose of sharing in the attack on the Franco- British forces along the southern TContinued on Page 9] DECLARES STRIKE INSTIGATOR WAS DOUBLE-CROSSED * Teutonic Agent Spent Hun dreds of Dollars to Incite Riots By Associated Press New i ork, Dec. 7. —United States Attorney H. Snowden Marshall de clared to-day that Franz Von Rintelen the German agent, who is accused of coming to this country to incite the strikers in munition factories, armed with a large corruption fund, was "double-crossed" by the labor men he tried to corrupt and, despite the ex penditure ot several hundred thousand dollars, failed to accomplish his mis sion in any effective manner. Mr. Marshall gave the major credit for Rintelen's failure to the stand taken by high officials in labor organ izations. "Rintelen only succeeded in cor rupting some subordinates," Mr. Mar shall said, "and he was beautifully double-crossed. The real labor lead ers took prompt steps to check his activities. Save for a few small strikes, none of his efforts was suc cessful and all the strikes he did Insti gate were quickly killed by the good men a tthe head of the unions. T am not prepared to state just how much money Rintelen expended, hut it ran into hundreds of thousands of dollars. He had $500,000 to his credit in one bank." Mr. Marshall refused to comment on David Lamar's activities in the scheme beyond saying emphatically that he would not be called as a witness be fore the grand jury, a proceeding which might give him Immunity from prosecution. "If sufficient evidence is obtained it is expected indictments will be sought against the labor men who accepted Rintelen's money. Mr. Mar shall stated that these men could be prosecuted under the Sherman law on the ground that they had conspired to restrain the trado of the United States in munitions. Rintelen is at present a prisoner by the British authorities in the Tower of London." IIKPUBUKANEB TO SUMMONI > Allentown, Pa., Dec. ".--The Re- Dublikanor. a German weekly, pub lished in this city and which made its first appearance 105 years ago' [will cease to exist after December 21.* $160,500 PART COST TO MAKE SUBWAY WIDER Figures Will Be Submitted to Council With Plans and Specifications PEN NS Y SHARK $87,500 j Measure Not to Be Introduced Until Next Tuesday; City's Liability $73,000 Widening of the Market street sub way and the construction of the pro posed approaches ,'rom Fifth street will cost approximately $160,500 ex clusive of the consequential damages incident to condemnation of abutting property and the sharo the Harrisburg Railways Company will necessarily be required to pay. Figures to this effect will be given j to City Council, it is understood, when ' the plans and specifications are sub- j milted to that body. City Engineer M. B. Cowden had expected to present the i data to Council this afternoon, but he ! said to-day that a few minor changes ] had been suggested, which will delav j presentation until next Tuesday. The cost of the changes amount to ' $73,000. This does not include the j proportionate share that must be borne i by the trolley company, the Philadel phia and Heading or other utilities. The Pennsylvania Railroad's share, it ts estimated, will total $87,500. Re construction of masonry, etc., is not included in the cost. The plans call for the widening of the street from forty to eighty feet, with sloping approaches in Market I street, approach from Fifth north as far as Strawberry and south as far as the Union Station shed. A flight of steps will lead down from Cowden street. i Council Hears About j City's Liability Under Workmen Compensation I The extent, to which the city is lia i ble for injuries to all its employes in cluding policemen, tire drivers, street | cleaners, stenographers, clerks, etc., (under the recent worKinen's eompen jsation act by the ruling of the com /pensatlon board was explained to City | Council this afternoon by Gordon D. Adler, a well-known insurance repre sentative. He urged Council to insure j itself against the risks. J. W. Hart- I ley had been expected to speak, but a late telegram from Pittsburgh an nounced his Inability to make train connections in time. New ordinances offered includes: By Mr. G org as —-The assessor's salary measure; appropriating $32.1 from the general paving fund to pay city's share of damages incident to opening Front street from Harris to Maclay. By Mr. Lynch—Providing for assistant as sessor at SI,OOO salary. By Mr. Bow man—Appropriating $1,500 for con sulting engineer's service in prepar ing Walnut street bridge plans: city treasurer's salary measure. By reso lution of the mayor, $l2B of the $250 left from the sum appropriated for the salary of chief of police will be ex i pended In obtaining photographs of the I seventeen mayors of the city. Com missioner Taylor submitted a petition | from the lire drivers asking for an | increase in salary. This was Hied. Following the session Council went I into executive session to confer on j the jitney ordinance. City Assessor Salary Ordinance In; Provides $2,500 For the Head I An ordinance fixing the salaries of | the city assessor and his assistant was : offered in City Council this afternoon. I The measure provides for the choice of I one assessor at a salary of $2,500 and | a male assistant at SI,OOO. The num l her of assistants may he increased for I triennial assessments. At present the | assistants are paid $1,2 00 and S9OO, re spectively, and the assessor gets $900; ; sir! clerks set SSO per month. The | measure will likely be amended next : week, as City Commissioner W. H. I believes the salary for the as | sensor should be $2,000 and the salary I of tlie assistant SI,OOO. | Council will elect the assessor and his assistant at the reorganization, Monday, January 3. It is said that Howard C. Townsend and Horace A. Chayne, present assistant assessors, I are likely candidates for assessor and | assistant, respectively. Poultry Exhibition Opens at Kelker Street Hall The Seventh Annual Convention of the Pennsylvania Branch, American I Poultry Association will be held to morrow afternoon in the Kelker street I hall, where the third annual exhibi tion of the Central Pennsylvania Poul try Association is being held this week. The txhlbitlon opened this morning at 9 o'clock, with more than a thousand entries in the many pens. Hundreds of pigeons are included in the display. An egg-laying contest was started to day to be continued until Saturday evening when the exhibition closes. The judges began awarding the other prizes late to-dav. Judges of the con tost are: A. W. Newcomer, Glen Kock: I!. (). Umholttf, Sacramento, Pa.; J. It. Hoffman. Saratoga, Pa.; E. E. Hrubaker. Bird-in-Hand; G. W. Webb, Rochester, N. Y.; Theodore Witman, Allentown. French Submarine Is Sunk by Battleship Paris, Dec. 7. 5.20 P. M.—"Accord ing to a German radiogram, the French submarine Fresnel was de stroyed on December 5 by an Austrian warship." says a communication is- Kuetr to-day at the marine -ministry. "Two officers and twenty-six men were captured." The Kresnel. built in 1909, was 107 feet lons, of .192 tons displacement r.bove water. She had six torpedo tube*. Her nprmal complement was i twenty-four men. J CONFESSES TO HELPING HURL WIFE TO DEATH Salesman Says He Aided Hus band to Pitch Woman Over Cliff After She Got SOO,OOO THEN CRUSHED HER HEAD Westerners Climbed Down and Smashed Her Skull With Roek; By Associated Press Chicago, 111., Dec. 7. After con fessing, according to George W. Arm strong, prosecutor of /lennepln coun ty, Minn., that he aided Frederick T. ! Price, of Minneapolis, in hurling j ! Price's wife to her death over a cliff, Charles D. Etchison, a traveling sales man, of Washington, D. C., is due in j Minneapolis to-day to face legal ac tion. Mrs. Price wiu killed November 28, 1914, one day after she hart been / given $60,000 by her father. Etchi-I ! son was arrested in Washington Sun- I day. ! Etchison, according lo Armstrong. I said he and Mr. and Mrs. Price went I for an automobile ride. Price, the j alleged confession narrates, stopped I the car near a high cliff and asked Mrs. Price If she did not want to give her pet dog some exercise. When the woman stepped out, Etchison and Price, according to the confession, | pitched her over the. cliff, and Price I threw the dog after her. They then climbed down the em | bankment, Etchison, it is reported to! I have said, and found the woman still i alive and Price struck her head with a stone. I "We told everybody that she step- I ped over the cliff to save her dog," the i officials said Etchison confessed. ["Price cancelled my notes for SI2OO j he held and gave mo $3,500 to boot." j HUSBAND DENIES CRIME I Minneapolis. Minn., Dec. 7.—Fred erick T. Price in a cell here to-day said the confession alleged to have been made by Charles D. Etchison that he (Etchison) and Price had I murdered the latter's wife was untrue. Price said: "There must be some mistake. Etchison and I were stand ing near my broken automobile, twenty feet from the spot where Mary fell to her death. I do not care to say anything further." Strikers Picket War Order Plant at Sharon By Associates Pres. Sharon, Pa., Dec. 7.—One hundred striking machinists to-day picketed the plant of the Uriggs-Seubury Ordnance Company, where a combined lockout and strike is in progress. Ireaders of the men said the pickets were simply on guard and no violence was ex pected. The Driggs-Seabury Company re cently passed into new control in order that it might, nil contracts for $30,000,000 of war munitions. John Stevenson, former president of the company, had refused to accept war orders. j Taylor's Clerk Will Remain in Park Dep't Under New Commissioner j Announcement was made to-day that I Miss Anna S. Cubblson, clerk to the 1 park superintendent and the City Plan i ning Commission, will be retained by l Commissioner-elect 10. 7.. Gross, whom, it is expected, will succeed City Com missioner M. Harvey Taylor. Miss Cubbison has been clerk in the park department for the last three years and recently accepted a position on Capitol 11111. She has since been asked by the Park Superintendent-elect, it is said, to remain because of her familiarity with the work. STA N I>EY IS AUCiU It AT EI) By Associated Press Frankfort, Ky., Dec. 7.—Augustus O. Stanley was to-day inaugurated ' Governor of Kentucky for a four-year J term. |( "Vi-oU I i Merely lo refresh your memories, we I rrprlul (he lint ot prises Hint nrr of : rereil fur the best live lists of discov ered sourer* of the quotations. After to-night there Mill he hut tMo more Instalments. The correct list Mill he ! printed n Meek from to-iilght, with the ; mimes of the winners. Ist prtae—Hooks to the value of fl3, i to he selected by the winner at any of I the four hook dealers mentioned below. ! Offered by the Telegraph. ad prise—A complete set of Alil- I worth's "Tennyson," In thirteen vol { umes. hound In limp leather. Offered | by Dives, l'omeroy mid Stewart. 3d prise—A biographical edition In I six volumes, of the complete works of | James Whlteomh Hlley, bound In light i unite green cloth, with gold-stamped I lettering. Offered by David t'ottercl. Ith prise—Full, leather-hound eilltlou of Webster's rimbrldKcd Dictionary. Offered by the Central Hook Store. sth prise—Complete set. In seven vol umns, of Shakespeare's works. Offered by the lOvangellcal Hook Store. The quotations for this last week of the contest Mill be confined to the works of the following writers! Itos i well. Byron, Carlylc, Dante. <;ray, i.old i smith. Kipling. l.ongfelloM, Milton, j Shakespeare, Shelley, Spenser, Thomson. j 41—"The enrfew tolls the knell of part ing day, 1 The lowing herd winds SIOMIJ- o'er the lea. j The ploughman humennrd plods his Meary way, ! Anil leaves the world to darkness and to me." | 12—"And the hyacinth, pnrple, and white, and blue, I Which flung from Its hells a sweet peal anew i Of music so delicate, soft und In- j tense. I II Mas felt like an odour wlthlu the sense " | 13—"llell Is paved with good Intention." | 14—"All the slor'd veiseaiee of heaven i fall on her ungrateful top." | 13—'"Come. gentle Spring. ethereal j mildness come 1" i ACCUSE NEGRO IN JAIL WITH OF AGED WOMAN Thomas Smith, in Dauphin 1 County Prison For Bur glary, Formally Charged With Slaying of Mrs. Ella Albright on Night of June 30 REFUSES TO LOOK ON DEAD WOMAN'S PHOTO Old Slouch Hat Found Behind Lounge in Home of Victim | Clue on Which Police Based Their Work; Asked Wo man For Money to Get Out of Town on Night of Kill ing | Thomas Smith, colored, in jail j awaiting a hearing in court on a J charge of robbing a Mrs. Levin, 707 | Stale street, late this afternoon was ! formally charged by Harry White, city detective, with the murder of the aged I Mrs. Ella Albright on the night of jJune .">0 at her home in North Fif | teenlh street. When confronted with the evidence • at the jail this afternoon by the de- Jtectives Smith denied everything and I said he was not in Harrisburg at the j time the murder was committed, i "Pulling a picture of the murdered woman from his pocket. Detective White asked: "Smith, don't you know this woman'!" The colored man with a yell jumped from his chair and began sobbing. His sobs were heard throughout the jail. Asked a number of times to examine the picture, Smith covered C . , New York, Dec. 7.—Publication of the, Presidei 1 | m sage was followed by further strengthening of the stock I . C market. U. S. Steel led the moveme i by a rise from its I C • early price of 86'< ito 88*. 4. Railroads and other investment ' % hardened percec I • } ORATORY % lay destroy- ' 11ms College. ' 0,000. A valuable library, a % quantity of metals and chemicals which cannot be replaced % on account of the war, were destroyed.- % SENATE AND HOUSE ADJOURN . J se adjourned at \ The Senate adjourned at 2.18 r Chicago, 111., Dec. 7.—The Panhandle and Pennsylvania J Railroads were each found guilty on eleven counts of rebat » ing on grain shipments east of Chicago in United States 9 I Court to-day. The two roads face fines of $440,000, i 1 l * GOVERNOR PRAISES CABINET I I | Govern Brumbaugh seemed to be I 1 well pleased to-day with the cabinet of Mayor-elect Thomas C ' B. Smith, of Philadelphia. "It's a good cabinet and com- « j I posed of representative and capable men," said he. The if' I « Governor appeared to be gratified that William H. Wilsoq P ■ had been named and spoke highly of Messrs. Datesman and K j m Webster, who have proved themselves in long and faithful | % service. The cabinet was praised at Washington last night 1 I ¥ by Senator Penrose and by a number of representative Phil j m adelphians. I | 1 FORD WANTS SUPPORT OF CONGRESS M On board steamship Oscar II at sea, by wireless, via ' # Siasconsett, Dec. 7. —Henry Ford, head of the party of C J peace advocates now enroute to Europe, has sent a wire K £ less message to Congress, asking support of his .plans \ M end the European war.. C # Washington, Dec. 7.—The First National Bank of Cas- 4 # selton, N. D., has been closed by order of the comptroller X J of the currency. » J MARRIAGE LICENSES % ! f Kuy I" Kliuifpr, loonhco, ami I'nullne Dm hoi Ik, likens, j m Oeorge R. McC'inna and An aa M. Dinger, city. J* POSTSCRIPT— FINAL 16 PAGES MRS. ELLA ALBRKIHT, The Murdered Woman hip face and positively refused lo look at it. Then the quest ion was asked again, "Smith, were you in Harrisburg on the night of June 30'."'. "I was," he weakly admitted, and then refused to talk any further, lit; was taken back to his cell. At the jail this afternoon when I Smith was confronted with the charges were Detectives White, and Murnane, James Walters, county detective, and Captain Joseph P. Thompson, acting chief of police. At 4 o'clock the war- I rant was formally served. lie will be given a preliminary hear ing before Edward 11 iit on, alderman of the Fourth ward, some time next week. Victim Clioked to Deutli Mrs. Albright was found dead in bed, having been choked to death. {Catherine Gillet, aged 14, of 71 S North Nineteenth street, noticed that a win (Continued on Page 12.)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers