LEM AN HASSLER, Bc. Sl , constant repetition of deliver- . We handle Lehigh Valley asd Conl, Hard and Soft Weed AT “FAIR RK HARVARD’ President Roosevelt at Oam- bridge on Visit to Son, SPEAKS OX TRUSTS AND ATHLETICS Great Assembly af Students at the College Club Are Warned That They Must Not Be Mel. Iroeddies. BOSTON, Feb. 25. — "RaflfWEy cor porationa™ said President Hoosevelt in bis address at Harvard nslom, “will gain and vot lose Ly adequate federal control. Most empbatically it Is both the duty and the loterest of our people to deal fairly with such corporations and to see that a premium is put upon the bounesi management of them and thit those who invest In them are amply protected. But those who ia- voke the docirine of state rights to protect state corporate creations in pre datory activities extendled through oth- or states are a= shortsighted us those who ounce lovoked the same doctrine to protect the special slaveholding Inter ost. = “The states have shown they have not the ability to curb the power of syndicated wealth, and therefore in the interest of the people it must be done by national setion™ ~The visit of Theodore Roosevelt, who came not as president of the Unit ed States, but as a “grad” retnming to meet his fellow Harvard men, includ. ing his own son, Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., developed into one of the busiest days of his potable career. President Roosevelt was constantly moving to and fro. Beth In Boston and in Cam- bridge there were few if any moments for real rest Harvard bospitality was showered upon him during his two dis- tinct visits to the university city dur ing the day, and In Boston his personal friends claimed all his spare time and did all things to make his trip to Mas. sachusetts most enjoyable. The principal event of the day, how- ever, was President Roosevelt's ad- dress to the Harvard studsuts at the unjon founded by Major Henry L. Higginspon, the Boston banker. as an institution which all Harvard men could Join and ss one which would serve In a measure to destroy the so cial barriers which ordinarily divide students in college life. Two thousand Harvard men, mostly undérgraduoates, gathered in the great living room of the union, ind they gave the president & magnificent reception, a geguine and forceful Harvard welcome, so sincere and so hearty that President Roose velit frequently bespoke his apprecia- tion. Only to the extent that the pres ident’s speech at the union had been given out for publication was Pres! g [font Roosevelt's visit bere In any way 9 lot a public character. Mr. Roosevelt sald: “Asn [ emphatically disbelieve In see- ing Harvard or any other college turn out mollycoddles lustead of vigorous men, I may add that I do not in the least object to a sport hecause it is rough. Rowing, baseball, lacrosse, track and field games, hockey, foot- ball, are all of them good. Moreover, it is to my mind simple nonsense, a mere confession of weakness, to desire to abolish a game because tendencies show themselves or practices grow up which prove that the game ought to be reformed. Take football, for In- stance. The preparatory schools are able to keep football clean and to de- velop the right spirit in the players without the slightest necessity ever arising to so much as consider the question of aboMshing it. There is no excuse whatever for/colleges falling to show the same capacity, and there is no real need for considering the question of the abolition of the game, If necessary let the college authorities (aterfere to stop any excess or per- version, making thelr interference as little officlous as possible and yet as rigorous as Is necessary to achieve the end. But there Is no justificaMon for stopplag a thoroughly manly sport because it I= sometimes abused, when the experience of every good prepara- tory school shows that the abuse is ia no shape necessarily attendant upon the game, “We cannot afford to turn oot of college men who shrink from physical effort or from a little physical pain. in any republic courage ia a prime necessity for the average citizen If he Is to be a good citizen, and he needs pliysical courage no less than moral tonrage, the courage that dares as well a8 the courage that endures, the cour- fe that will fight valiantly altke against the foes of the soul and the foes of the body. Athletics are good, especially in thelr rougher forms, be- cause they tend to develop such cour- age. They are good also because they enconmge a true democratic spirit, for in the athletic field the man must be judged not with reference to outside and aceidental attributes, but to that combination of bodily vigor and moral quality which go to make up prowess" Ford Moore Sanitariom Destroyed. KINGSTON, N. Y., Feb, 25 < The Ford Moore sanitarium, uear Kerhouk- sou, Ulster county, was destroyed by fire. It wax built two years ago and wis luxuriously equipped, its pationts being principally wealthy New York men And women. The patients fu the riuin at the time of the fire es without injury. The loss will be about $25 000. Street Car Barns Ablase, Feb. 25. Fire here THAW MURDER CASE. Jerome Has Only Paved Way For Real Cross Esnmination. NEW YORK, Feb 25 -The trial of Harry K. Thaw openssl bere:this morn- ing. and it is asserted that during today and tomorrow Mrs. Thaw will be put through sueh a grilling as is sekiom wituessed In 8 court of law, Photo graphs of her will probably play an important part before the cross examl- pation is ended. As hax been sald, Mr. Jerome has only paved the way for the real examination, snd before it Is over there is reason to expect thad wonder will be expressed that counsel fur the defense ever permilted her to £0 on the witness stand. In regard to the rumors current that Mr. Jerome will apply for the appeint- ment of a commission In Innacy to ex amine Thaw as soon as he completes the cross examination of Dra. Bings- man and Deemar, A Russell Peabody of Thaw's connsel sald: “1f Mr. Jerome makes any such move as that, either at the reconvening of court or later, Mr. Delmas, supported by other counsel, will fight against it to the last ditch.” At present there Is no likelihood of counsel for the defense making any such move, as Mr. Jeronie has no im meslinte intention of taking sny action along those lines WANT INTERVENTION. President Zelaya Claims Four Vie tories Over Army of Honduras. SAN BALYADOR. Feb 25 Public opinion In Central America i= In favor of the friendly intervention of Presi dent Roosevelt and President Diaz in the existing trouble between Hon: doras and Nicaragua, and the press of these two countries [= expressing the hope that the two presidents will ex- ert their powerful influence to end the War, A Managua dispatell sags that Presi dent Zelaya has issued a proclamation an follows: “We went to war because the Hon duran forces attacked our small gar rison on the fromtler, looting. burning and killing. We demanded satisfac tion and It was denied us. We agreed to &ctept whatever decision the arbi tration court might render. but Presi dent Bonilla of Honduras dissolved the court by withdrawing the Honduran arbitrator. “Nicaragua bas triumphed in four combats over the Homduran forces without sufféring obe defeat. Our forces are today in the territory of Honduras.” Cubans Want! Their (oekfights. HAVANA, Feb, 25. A procession led by ex-Senator Monteagudo and com- posed of 500 horsemen, many carriages and bands of music, paraded the streets. A halt was made in front of the palace, where the bands played pa- triotic airs amid much cheering. Gov- ermor Magoon, in response to cries of “lLoug live Governor Magoon!" review ed the gathering from a balcony of the palace and afterward received a com- mittee which presented a petition sigu- ed by many thousands of persons in Havana and other cities requesting the abrogation of the military order’ of General Leonard Wood prohibiting cockfights, Piqua Man Dead at 100 Years, PIQUA, O., Feb . ~ Alexander Green, who last December celebrated his one hundredth birthday, is dead here. Mr. Green was a descendant of the aristocratic German family Vou Greenfeld. His father, Baron von Greenfeld, was master of the house of Hanover and Brunswick. Mr. Green was an officer In the Austrian wars fn southern Spain and Italy, in the Gre cian revolution In Turkey and in the German revolution of 1848-51. He came to Piqua In 1851. po “Monkey Girl From Yacatan" Burned COLUMBIA, 8 C, Feb 25-"Wik Rose, the Monkey Girl From Yuca tan,” a fread which bas been on exhi bition here LY a carnival company, was burned so badly during the night that she died at au early hour. Bhe was forty-five years old, ignorant and idiotic, making her wants known by inarticulate sounds. She was left alone locked up In a room. A dog's frantic barking attracted attention to the fire. Noted Lawyer Burned to Death. MEADVILLE, Pa, Feb, 25 Patrick (*. Sheehan, aged forty-eight years and one of the best known members of the Crawford county bar, was burned to death at an early hour at his home in Conneautville, Sheehan went to the library of his home In his night robe Apparently he wos stricken with apo plexy and dropped a lighted lamp. The whole lower portion of his body wax horribly burned. Bomb Wennds fineshery ST. PETERSBURG, Feb 25. A bomb was thrown in Odessa at Colone! von Guesherg, prefect of police, who was slightly wounded, as was also au alddecamp. The explosion caosed much damage, bat nobody was killed Colonel yon Guesherg amd his ald