2 LINGUIST AND TEACHER AT TWELVE. ■. ! \ XP yfr 'tfjsk y) f _ ',4, V . v / |t / | Winifred Sackville Stoner. aged twelve, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. James B. Stoner of Pittsburgh, is an educational marvel. She has passed college examinations, having mastered eight languages and courses In the classics. ! She is instructing another infantile prodigy at Carnegie institute. Her mother is at the lefL SUFFRAGISTS' LUNCH WAGON CAMPAIGN. * Photo by American Press Association. The converted lunch wagon is called the roving shop by the Women's Political union and is being used in a unique campaign in New York city. I v w THE KAISER AND OFFICERS OF HIS ARMY. MARSHALL FIELD 3D. Grandson of Late Chicago Merchant and His Bride. Photo by American Press Assoclav>#. SEA RAIDER REMAINS Kronprinz Wilhelm's Commander In terns Ship at Newport News, Va. Washington, April 27. —Announce- ment was made at the treasury de i partment that Captain Thierfelder, commander of the Kronprinz Wilhelm, the German converted cruiser that put into Hampton Roads some time ago, has decided to intern his ship and men until the end of the war. The news that the German had de cided to tie up instead of putting to sea for a possible combat with the British cruisers lying off the capes | was conveyed to the department in a telegram addressed to the collector of customs of Newport News, Va. ! While officials decline to intimate what time limit was placed on Cap tain Thierfelder's stay at Hampton I Roads it was believed that the time was about to expire. It is understood j that the German commander acted under instructions from Berlin. One ot Rae Tanzer's Lawyers Charged With Conspiracy Photo by American Press Association. DAVID SLADE. OLD DOG BITE FATAL Woman Dies After Fifteen Years of Suffering—Grief Kills Father. Miss Ella Frances Hobby died in her home in Far Rockaway, N. Y., of tu berculosis of the leg bone, the result of a dog bite suffered fifteen years aga when she was sixteen. During all these years Miss Hobby had been an invalid. The teeth of the dog, which sank into her right leg, touched the bone, and tuberculosis developed. The young woman had been in twelve different j hospitals, in each hospital there had been an operation, and she had been under the care of forty different sur geons and physicians. Her father. Thomas J. Hobby, a city marshal, spent many thousands of dol lars In an effort to relieve her constant suffering. A week ago he was told by the doctors that all hope of saving his daughter's life was abandoned. Many times the infected bone had been scraped, and part of it had been re moved. "Further operation is impossi i ble," he was informed. Mr. Hobby died that night, and the doctors agreed that hi 3 heart was oroken. After his death Miss Hobby failed perceptibly. I HUERTA'S RETURN UPSETS MEXICANS | All Factions Keep Close Eye on Former Dictator. DECLARE HE IS POWERLESS But Firmly Believe That "Personal and Family Business," the Reason He Gives For Coming Back to America From Spain, Foreshadows Attempt to Regain Authority In Mexico. When General Victoriano Huerta. thq expelled dictator of Mexico, landed at New York he denied that he had come from his refuge at Spain to seek to re gain his former power. He had come merely on personal and family busi ness, he said. All the same, many of his friends aeem firmly to believe that he is back for the purpose of re-entering the Im broglio in Mexico to try to re-establish himself now that he is sure Carranza has lost the backing of the United States and has failed. But if that is his Intention Huerta had not been long in New York city before be found him self completely cut off from affiliation with any of the four most important political organizations in Mexico —the Villistas, Carranzistas, Felicistas and the Clericals. i "There is no chance for him to re establish himself in Mexico," say Carlo 4e Fornaro, Carranza adviser and chief publicity agent, and Colonel Al ' fredo Breceda, General Carranza's pri vate secretary, who is in Washington en a diplomatic mission. "If he goes into Mexico and Villa catches him the same thing will hap pen to him that happened to Lieencia do Bonales Sandoval—Villa will shoot him," declared a prominent Villista. Has Alienated Strong Men. "He has alienatel himself from every strong man' in Mexico," said the most Important member of the Felicista par- ty now in New York city. While all Mexican political faction tats agreed that General Huerta could not start a revolutionary movement in Mexico that would assume any impor tance, they were all, with the excep tion of the partisans of General Felix Diaz, uneasy about bis presence in America. Detectives were set to watch the one time dictator in the interest of the Carranzistas, the Villistas and the Felicistas. Only the Clericals seemed to take lit tle interest in General Huerta's pres ence. Carlo de Fornaro said no one knew positively what General Huerta's "personal and family business" here might prove to be, and there were many who thought such a term might very well cover an attempt to regain i the presidency of Mexico, since that was a very "personal and family" af fair for Huerta. Agents for the department of justice were also sent to the Hotel Ansonia, where General Huerta is staying in New York with his companions, Abra ham Z. Ratner and Colonel Jose Del gado, the deposed dictator's secretary. The general paid little heed to these attentions. Whenever he passed the men on his way to go for an automo bile drive about the city he smiled at them genially. Diaz "Not Interested." General Felix Diaz happens also to be in New York, but did not appear to be worried by Huerta's arrival. "He is not at all interested in Gen eral Huerta or what General Huerta can do." said one of General Diaz's Important men. "He knows that the one time dictator can do nothing. He has alienated himself from every man who could help him. Nobody will have anything to do with Huerta now. There is no man of importance in Mex ico who would affiliate with any Huerta movement" "General Huerta came here in an ewer to an appeal from a certain hen nequin grower of Yucatan," Carlo de Fornaro asserts. "He was asked to head the Auguemedo revolt and was on his way to Yucatan. When he ar rived in New York city he found that j the revolt had been quelled. "The scheme was to buy munitions In the United States, purchase a yacht or a small schooner and make a land ing at Belize or somewhere along the coast of Guatemala. They hoped to gather an army sufficiently strong to break the Carranza power in Yucatan. I Campeche and Quintana Roo and to i form a small republic of those three states with Huerta at its head." Friends of Villa admit that they re gard the Huerta trip to the United States as menacing, so far as Mexico was concerned, but say they hoped that be would go into Mexico I THIEF TOOK COAT AND FEVER Police Watch Health Reports to Fine? the Criminal- A good mackintosh and a million more or less, full sized scarlet fevei gc-rms was the extent of booty ob -1 tained by a sneak thief who entered : the home of Dr. Preston Steele of Greenville. Pa., and took the coat from a bag hanging on the back porch. The garment was used by the physi cian exclusively in entering the sick rooms of patients suffering from scai let fever The police are watching the board or health's reports. * CROWN PRINCE IS RUMOR'S VICH. I I He's Been Dead, Disgraced and Insane Several Times. EVERYTHING BEFALLS HIM. —- But After Being Buried Twice Kaiser's j Heir Is Still Very Much Alive Back at Front From Cheering Princess Ce cile In Berlin on the Birth of Their Fifth Child. If the Crown Prince Friedrich Wil helm has kept a diary of the various things that have "happened" to him since the war began parts of it must be amusing reading to him. As gathered from the dispatches his diary must run something like this: | Aug. I.—Appointed to the command of the First division of the Imperial guards. Aug. s.—Attempt made to assassinate him in Berlin. Assailant both succeed ed and failed in bis attempt. Aug. 19 —Seriously wounded in bat tle; taken to a hospital in Aix-le-Cha pelle. Aug. 20.—Shot in the leg in Berlin when a second attempt is made to as sassinate him. Aug. 24.—Because of bis growing pop ularity with army and nation he is ex iled to the Russian front for the re mainder of the war. Aug. 24.—Leads his army in the de feat of the French at Longwy. Aug. 25.—Killed by a mysterious nt- J "it is thought by frenzied Ger j mans." Aug. 20.—Decorated by the kaiser with the iron cross and becomes in ternationally famous by the "Fapa Wil- j helm" letter of commendation for his I work as a soldier. He Ccmmits Suicide. Sept. 4. —Commits suicide after men of his command lire on and kill a large number of men in a German detach ment. Sept. B.—Leads the Imperial guard on the western part of the French front when the Germans meet defeat at the hands of the British. Sept. 11.—Appointed to the command of the German army on the eastern battle front to drive the Russians from East Prussia. Sept. 12.—Leads his army in a furi ous assault on the defenses of Verdun In France. Sept. 13.—Dies from his wounds in a Brussels hospital. Ills brother Adal bert dies in the same hospital. Sept. 14.—Directs his army when it opposes a strong attack by the French in the Argonue. Sept. 15.—Leads another attack on the outer fortifications of Verdun. Sept. 10.—Dangerously wounded in East Prussia by Russian shrapnel while he is watching the battle. Sept. 28.—His army loses 100,000 men in France. Sept. 28.—"Authoritative report" that he had been seriously wounded in ac tion on Sept. 0. Sept. 30.—Looted the chateau in the Argonne belonging to the Baronne de Boye. Is Twice Buried. Oct. 2. —Dangerously wounded in a battle near Nancy and the crown prin cess and her children hurry to the front to be with him. Oct. 11.—Meets the crown princess in Luxemburg, whither she has gone to confer decorations. Oct. 24.—Berlin mourns at his funeral. .Nov. 2.—His funeral procession again passes through the streets of Berlin. Nov. 4.—Killed in a battle near the Franco-German border. Nov. 6.—'Worry of the campaign has brought on insanity and he is sent to one of the royal family's remote es- I tates. Nov. 11.—Commands the German cen ter army in an advance against the Russians. Nov. 12.—Appointed commander in chief of the allied German-Austrian armies operating against the Russians. Nov. 17. —He is lying seriously wounded in the Strassburg palace. Dec. I.—Receives an American news paper man at his field headquarters in France and talks of the war. Jan. 10.—Crown princess accompa nies him from Berlin to the front. Retired In Disgrace. Jan. 16.—Identified as the masked pa tient of royal rank who is lying in a critical condition in a small German base hospital. Jan. 30.—Sends a formal message to the United States asking for fair play for Germany. Feb. 9.—Appointed to command the Fifth German army on the western front. March 3.—Removed from command In disgrace and retired to a secluded I family estate. March 19.—Killed after a quarrel by ! a member of bis suit. March 19.—Takes part in a war con ference attended by the kaiser and the German gei-or d staff. March 25.—Suffering from a nervous breakdown in a private nursing home near Pots; 1 , a in. March 29.—Leaves the front for a stay with the r wn prir -ess in Berlin. April 7.—The Crown Prince s Cecili* presents heir to throne with their fifth child, their first daughter. Prince hur ries to Berlin. April 12.—Crown princess sends hus band back to war and congratulations of his army. I - - Photo Shows the Italian King and Kaiser i W | ■ "T. AMBASSADORS SUMMONED Italy Recalls Representatives From Paris, London and Vienna. Rome, April 28.—The government has summoned the Italian ambassa dors at Paris, London and Vienna to Rome to confer with Foreign Minister Sonnino. The announcement of this fact is regarded with the greatest ap prehensions. Signor Tittoni, ambas sador to France, who arrived at Paris only a fortnight ago, has already reached Rome. The ambassador to Petrograd, Marchese Carlotti, will not return owing to the great distance and the difficulty of travel, but a messenger has been sent to him with instiuc tions. The ambassadors to London and Vienna are expected at any moment. The German and Austrian ambas sadors to Rome, according to reports in diplomatic circles, have united in sending copies of Italy's latest d< - mands to Vienna with a statement that an answer is required immedi ately. The nature of the newest con ditions upon which Italy is willing to remain neutral is not known as yet. Too Deep For Him. A Britisher was announcing hJs views on things in general and sum med up his own position by the state ment, "Well, I've seen life." "But," said his American friend, "one of your own bright poets has said. "Life's a " The Britisher is still exploring Mt-% remark —New Yoik Times. QUEER LEGACIES TO MAN. Such as the Furrow In the Upper Llf and the Appendix, Run your forefinger around the rim of each ear. You are almost sure to find in one of them and quite possibly in both a tiny hard lump. It is only a relic of the days when. Innumerable hundreds of centuries ago* man was only one of the animals of the wild and had a pointed ear, like a wolf's or dog's. What good is the little furrow that runs down from the nose to the middle of the upper lip? None. But it, too, has a history, it is a legacy from the time when the human upper lip was in two parts—a hare lip, like that of the rat tribe. The split has healed up long ago, but the new skin is so recent in the history of the race that hair re fuses to grow on that furrow. When a fly settles on you anywhere can you serenely twitch that patch of skin and shake him off? Probably not. But once these old skin muscles, now almost dead after centuries of clothes wesring, were as active as those of a horse. A few—a very few—people can twitch their ears like a dog and do so instinctively when startled, and cases do occasionally occur in which the scalp can be moved at will. In one very interesting case mention ed in medical books the man could hurl books a couple of yards away simply by twitching the muscles on the top of his head; but, generally speaking, our skin muscles are even more dead nowadays than our ear mua* cles. We've neglected them. The only set still in use are those we employ when we want to raise oyi eyebrows. The appendix is another thing we could do quite well without It is a relic from old vegetarian days. It has been workless ever since mankind start ed meat eating and is apt to get in tha way. The large Intestine, too, is a thing we really don't need nowadays. Tha many coils of this long tube are, ac cording to the doctors, quite unneces sary, now mankind has become a flesh eating animal, and merely provide a resting place for germs. Surgeons have often cut out a few odd coils and stitched the ends together. We don't really need to carry a great intestine about with us. Another thing we don't need much nowadays is the instinct to walk on i hands and feet together. You think walking upright the only natural way for man? It isn't. If ever you have to make your way along some narrow plank or some narrow, dizzy mountain ledge, you will find the old instinct ttrong in you.—Philadelphia North American. 1