THE WEATHER CLOUDY TO-NIGHT FAIR TO-MORROW Detailed Report. Pace 8 VOL. 77—XO. 92. ESTABLISHED UF.f. 4. LIEUT. COM'DER BRICKER, CHAMBERSBURG, DROWNS AT THE TURKISH CAPITAL Franklin County Navy- Officer and Three Seamen Perish In the Bosphorus Off Con stantinople When Gale Capsizes Small Boat in Which They Attemptto Reach the U. S. Converted Yacht, Scorpion BROTHER MET A LIRE FATE Mark Bricker, Several Years Ago, Was Drowned in the Dela ware, at Philadel phia, When Rowboat Upset—Young Offi cer Had Assumed Command of the Scorpion Only a Few Days Ago, Having Been Transferred From the Embassy In Paris Lieutenant CommandeT William Franklin Bricker, 1". S. Navy, of Chain bersbiirg, Pa., was drowned with three •American sailors in the Bosphorus. oft' Constantinople, on Saturday night when a rowboat capsized in which they were heading for the United States con verted yacht Scorpion, of which Bricker ■was in command and which was anchor ed near the Dollmabaghoheh Palace. This information was conveyed in a cablegram received by the -ociated Press this morning from Constantinople by way of Berlin and London, dated at London et 10.24 a. m. to day. Lieutenant Commander Bricker was the son of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Bricker. of Queen street, near Second] Ftreet, Chanvbersburg, and by remark able coincidence, was the second son of! the family to lose his life by drowning.j His older brother, Mark Bricker, was \ drowned when a rowboat in the Dela-' ware river capsized off Philadelphia, a few years ago. He at that time held a responsible j>osition in the office of a Philadelphia traction company. Still I another brother, the eldest of the fam-! ily, is Edward Bricker. who is a gradu ate of West Point and is now serving as an officer in the I'nited States Army, j Recently Stationed in Paris The Constantinople cable message gives the names of the three sailors who perished with Brieker as Ford, Dowell and Leverings. The four were drowned on the night of March 20 while attempting to reach the Scorpion with a rowboat whieh was swamped in a heavy sea thrown up by a south Lieutenant Herbert 8. Babbitt and one sailor, who were in the boat, were saved. Lieutenant Commander Brieker ar tived at Constantinople only on March 16 to succeed Lieutenant Commander Edward McCauley, Jr., in command of the Scorpion. The Scorpion is a eon verted yacht purchased for the Navy in 1596. It has a displacement of 850 tons and has been stationed at Con stantinople for some time. Lieutenant Commander Brieker, who formerly was naval attache at the American embassy in Paris, left the French city on February 28 for Con stantinople to assume command of the Scorpion. He *tes born January 18, 1879, in Chambi\sburg and appointed to the Naval Academy from the same State on September 19, 1896, after having been graduated from the Chani bersburg High School. Brieker's Parents Informed Brieker was graduated from the Annapolis Academy where he stood verv high. He had served much of his time since then in the ordnance department of the navy. Both his parents survive, the father, Mr. W. H. Brieker, being a retired traveling salesman. A telegram from OhamberSburg this morning said the [>arents were advised by the Navy Department in Washington of the death of their son. Washington, March 22.— Great re gret was expressed by naval officers >ver the death of Lieutenant Com nander Brieker, who was well known 'ere. .Seaman Irven Dowell was from \nnapolis, Md., where his mother lives, harles Ford's home was in Oxford, Miss. Naval records here show no •ailor named Leverings. She Star- Jtikfeitknl MRS. CEO. W. REILY. JR.. DIED YESTERDAY MORNING After Several Weeks Spent at Seashore In an Endeavor to Kegain Strength She Was Taken to Philadelphia Where Death Occurred Mrs. Louise Harrison Roily, wife of George W. Roily, Jr., banker, of Front anil Reily streets, died at sunrise yester day in Philadelphia where her husband had taken her for expert medical atten tion. Several weeks ago Mrs. Reily went to Atlantic City, hoping to gain health i an l strength there. Few of her friends realized her critical condition, but for ' the last few weeks her husband had spent almost his entire time with her. taking her from the shore to Philadel phia a few days ago. Mrs. Reily was Miss Louise Harri son, of Baltimore, and was born in 1878 in that city.. She received her education in the private schools of Bal timore and in St. Timothy's school. Ca ' tonsville, Md. She was an accomplished musician, possessed of a remarkably sweet and cultured voice and she sang frequently in entertainments for the benefit of the Sunshine Society, the hospital, the Visiting Nurses and sim ilar charitable organizations. Mrs. Reily was an associate member of the Wednesday Club; a member of the Board of Directors of the Visitiug Nurses, and a member of the Advisory Board of the Central Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association. Since her marriage fourteen years since she had resided in Harrisburg making her home in the old Reily homestead at Front and Reily streets. Almost from the first she identified her self with church and philanthropic work. She had been a member of Mar ket Square Presbvteriau church since 1906 an»t noon on Ajwil 7. CONVICTED AUTOIHOBILIST MAY OE POT ON PAROLE Court Suspends Morrow's Sentence Un til June and Continues $2,000 Bail—Case of Hargest, Cleared by Orand Jury, to Be Resubmitted Samuel Morrow, who late Saturday evening was convicted on a charge of involuntary manslaughter, growing out of an automobile accident in which Ralph Witmer, 9 years old, was fatally injured, will not ask' for a new trial, so C. H. Backenstoe, his counsel, an nounced this morning. The Morrow case is the first of its kind that has been decided by a jury in Dauphiu county. Further than to suspend sentence until the June Quar ter Sessions .ludge McCarrell made no anmmncepient as to his intention re garding the final disposition of the case, yet there is belief among lawyers •that Morrow will be paroled in the custody of tJounty Detective .lames T. Walters. The Witmer lad was a passenger in a machine driven by Edward Miller. This car and tho Morrow car collided at Seventeenth and* North street# on the afternoon of November 6. last, and the youngster died from peritonitis caused by the injuries. After the jury's verdict in the Morrow case was brought in District Attorney Stroup asked and obtained permission from Judge McCarrell to resubmit to the Grand Jury, at the June court term, an indictment charg ing John J. Jr., with involun tary manslaughter. Hargest was driv ing the auto that crashed into a Valley Railways Company trolley, at Trout and Walnut streets, on January 1, last, resulting in the death of Miss Grace Maugans and serious injuries to three ether passengers. The March grandl jury ignored the manslaughter cparge against Hargest. At the direction of Judge McCar rell Hargest and Morrow furnished bonds in the sum of $2,000 each to ap pear at the June court. RUMORS PUT BURPEE AND O'NEILL IN CAPITOL JOBS Reported on the Hill To day That They Are to Become, Respectively, the Heads of the Agricultural and Highway Departments A story afloat on Capitol Hill tp day was that 'he resignation of E. M. Bigelow, as State Highway Commission er, has been written and is all ready to be placed in the Governor's hnnds when the Governoi says the word, and that Mr. Bigelow 'a successor will be J. Denny O'Neill, Commissioner of Alle gheny county, who is noted for his tem perance crusades through the State and his annual picnics to the school chil dren of McKeesport, his home. Mr. O'Neill was here a short time ago 1111 d had a conference with the | Governor, but it .vfls said at the time but only local option wan discussed. It is said that when Secretary of Agriculture Critchfield leaves office, his 1 1 ommisgiou fiuving expired on February 27, he will be succeeded by W. Atlee Burpee, of Philadelphia, noted as a dealer in seeds. It is also said thai should the Agricultural Department be reorganized Mr. Burpee will occoine its head. HOTEL FOLKSPAY SIOO,OOO That Amount Already Changes Hands to Bind the Bargain for Site at Third and Walnut Confirmation of the purchase of the site at Tiurd and Walnut streets by a "western hotel .company was n.mie to day, when it was learned t'hat the first payment of SIOO,OOO. on the lot had been made to the Weightman heirs, of I'hiladelphia. owners of the lot, by the Hamilton Hotel Company, of Indianap olis. The site will be taken over this week. It is said the hotel company will put bonds in the hands of financiers for sale so t'hat there may be a local finan cial interest in tiie enterprr.->e. The company has constructed and leased ho tels that are beinll tin III',I on Fourth Paice WALL STREET CLOSING By Associated Press. New York, March 22.—Reading's continued weakness was the feature of the final hour, losing over a point, while obscure specialties were advanced. The closing was steady. Substantial gains in specialties, with backwardness in leaders and heaviness in Reading, comprised the main characteristics of to-day's market.