aoiition 78 taxi thugs get amui1 tjy fqtj lats ''! i pujotools and the chauffeur....

1
THE WEATHER FORECAST. Fair and colder to-da- y; probably fair to- morrow; 'tut moderate west winds. Detailed weaihsr reports wil1 be found on pane 1J. VOL. LXXX. NO. 183. NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1913. VipyrioM, 1913, bU the Sun I'rlvtlnv ami PiiMlanfiio Aoiition 78 PAGES. PRICE FIVE CENTS. TAXI THUGS GET BROADWAY GEMS Hold Up .Jewelry Store in Midst of Theatre Crowd. THEY SEIZE $9,000 LOOT Tistols and Ammonia Gun for the Proprietor of the Shop. GETAWAY IX TWO AITOS ilose Bnek Fifrhts Witli Il(libtr J on Street ns I'oliee Conic Kmiiiinu t'p. Cnmnirrcr, nceepled. Commerce Secretary Jnsephus Secretary Commerce: Albert hlgliwaj men with volvcrs and ammonia guns up and Secretary Labor. Slnse Hack, Jeweller. Doubt Increased 1553 midnight day over likelihood Col. night J0.001) Just as' Goethals. the Panama Canal after theatre crowds were thronging being named Secretary the sidewalk" Times Square. was learned it that the Presi- - two two expect entire bers successful escape, Cabinet him they that the March and car which transferred now this econd 7.0aO 'juM Charles 19.000, loot, ammonia gun, burglar' Crane being tools and the chauffeur. Gc.tgo ,.Vr. fur thl post. Kilson. jcar old, Kat 123d street. bi now tie Wc.'i Pol 'eveiUll street station Hack's Wolry stor the min.,11 fiom the northwest comet Fort), street, half block below Churchill's restaurant, lie was cinslnc up shortly before 12 o'clock night nnd was putting his goods largo safe the roar his store In which he was alone. As everything had been timed Just as the Jeweller becan put- - tlng the trajs and drawers Into the sfe nlsht hawk taxicab enme acrss eighth street from the direction Hlghth avenue, turned and went to the curb, pointing westward the same; time acros the street nun another taxicab which the same tactics and mopped, both engines go luff sttomr. Two smooth, youm; mn dreeJ dark clothing mid overcoats, ore' wearing derby hat and the othc slouch hut. jumped out the taxicu.i and walked swiftly to Hie Hack heard the door open and he turned from his .safe man Jilm with two weapons hand, one revolver and other an ammonia gun. lust behind was the other in. armed. Nut wurd was .i!d. Tho first man pull-- J the tr'gg.-- r his ammonia gun and1 the con.ent sp-i- t oip toward Jeweller, who dodged, and then nt-hl- forward 'li ills head down grabbed the man the waist. Th"re was struggle. Although the Sidewalk outside the ;oiv w.i- -t this moment Jammed with people and light' within were burning one saw that tight, the Jeweller pushing with all his mlnht, Hie nun wliovo him strilcinK with lUt ami butt his revolve!. The second man paid attention this ifiisiiinir th.. ireiin men he ran the snfe which was open, and grabbed large drawer In which were watche- - rings, bracelets diamonds and other precious stones, the chief wares the little shop, thru. ihem under hi coat and brushed by inn struggling men analn, culling "All rlKlu" his companion. this the first mini tluew the Jew- eller back against the partition ran swiftly the door, jammed shut and started fm th, I'orty-elght- h corner, where the first automo- bile vvas alreadv on the move Hack, the Jeweller, with the tenacity of bull- - ......i.. i..i,i.,.i nui,, uiiij mit-iiii- i ing he went. Just outside the door the first turned and shot twice the Jeweller. Lieut. Frj the Wci street station was patrol duty half block from scene. 'f' WiTlhelnier I11..i,..n and Heiliy Inspector Dw'yer's staff were nearly as closi- - and Policeman Hudson was out the street on fixed post. All heard the nnd made rush for spot. All detectives saw they arilved was screaming man struggling through the crowd. They knew nnlh- - Inir nf Ihe thev "rmbbeil Jowelhr. him several minutes u'lml Hn,l linnnnne,! that time the taxicab which had lnen siiindlng the corner was under h,ij, mid vvas one across streei two beaded for Kighih avtnue. the police, who had ih's tlmo learned the truth, wete them Th,, ueenrnl I'nll m'Mlli darted second machine, cut off by bile stopped, police Into Instant. illsappt'tred nfle" llml enli'" shnoled Vrr. pointing Mi' eimlnes stnlleil." said ehuuf. Continual T7i(t't Vtivc AMERICA' CiltKAl IIF.Mtlll iioi.Tiv ami mm: hi. el'Ttrle trains. 'Iliru PUifhurn, Soulhcrn I'lnrj, t'nnnlrn, loluinhla, Atlanta, lllimlnslioni. Memphis, Jarlc onvllle, Klorlrta, Cuba. llooUlets, list AM. TO APPOINT REDFIELD. "''!" m rprrsentn ne locretarj Wahhinoton. Starch has boon n shifting in President-elec- t Wll son's Cabinet ilnn! within tost twonty.four hours, and unn Icarnort'CHIZPIlS StVMI'lll to His Home that Representative William C. Rcdlield of Hronklyn will he Secre- - tnry Commerce. The understanding here that post has heen tendered to Mr. and that he has Personally he declined to comment on report, his colleagues the House were congratulating him ull the afternoon. The selection of Mr. ltedtlcld for Soctotnry here meaning that l.ouls D. Rrandels Hoston, who up to tills lime 1ms heen regarded ns rensonahly certain for n Cabinet luce, .has been shunted to one side. As to the following selections, Mr. Wilson's closest friends In are entirely greed: J. Itryan, of Stale: G. SIoAdoo. Secretary TteiiMiry, .lames SloRoynolds. Attor-- j Daniels, Secre- tary the Navy; William Itedtield, DIPPEL INSURES HIS I S. armed re- - ""ii. t'ostmastcr-Oenorn- l. and William held j Wilson, of rohlcd a In hi in Washington Uroadway at ast ' the of George of worth of Jewelry W- builder, of War. of Fslng autonuililhs tr- rob- - dent-elec- t to have hi made a but so ' with breakfast on the iloscly were pursued In morning of I. ln'ituu?h from they to the Goehals Is In I '.ma inn machine they left of the i seem ollniiua'.o him. an of Is again G. ' mentioned prominently "f of 22 - a In ty J is of sixth a last In v In of if ' a P'or- - t of I At diagonally followed faced In a a of jewelry-stor- to free a In ftont of In hl n the in simi- larly ,i of the i first a of little he bright no hi th of no r. nr.Mi n rn - to a of of to U of m it stret a j... "n-- i . f,,. u ns man at e of Fui'ty-secnt- h on n t 'o )e. Is'., line, H' of bv on "hots a the the as a rnliherv iinil the It took I, rran .,,,1 un.l I., at so the the The taxlcibs and b after nn i vim 'I tn I,., The it ill an wo nn 4 to Havanusli, WILSON j 11 v r n in of I the I It of Is the I Rcdflcld the hut In of Is Interpreted ns of Washington u William William of the C. of C. of Hurle-Taxica- b ,J- - at as It at as to VOICES FOR $1,267,000:; , Philndelpliin Opera .MHIiager, Take Novel Kind of Policies Vlti'.inii hnc immied their precious fliw.Ar. n,,.l nli!.l. H.,-.- hj'.i.n iLnUai- prwa ,,lln' "Ba",!" ,Q"- ,"" cori' "r M" l'ntlrr o)ew eompan huvc neivr been Insured until the Chlcago- - Philadelphia Opera Company started last Weli on its Western trip. That organ!- - ' nation was insured for any loss that It niishi sustain ih oagh the failure to ?th a performun.'e Andr-'a- Hlppel, inaiuse; of ih. com-pa- and .1. S. I tir-si- .i" tin llroadwa.v lone been llgiirtng for some time on a policy might pioleot the organiza- tion against loss through Its inabil : in ghe a performance w ide ,.n Its Western tour. Sir. Dlpnei was with :hf Sletr.ipoli- - tan Grand opera Company in San Fran- - c'"0.i dt tile lime of the enrlfiqinik. when lloinrlih and the opera company tin in lot Slua.onn of thl- - more than tlOO.nOu w. s refu.tded to sub- - sorlhers who had paid foi seats in ad- - vante. According to the lenn of ill. polices wnli'h .1. S. Ilirsh arm Hired the corn- - s'liiv is n:,'jiih! nnv i aue vviiu n uiiiriu prevent en uuvoiiiseo ptr fo. ni..iH . T.i npi.li Is tn give sixty-- , tile ImO'I.iI 111, ,11,., 4 hetW'eell Its IIOenlllL.' in ., ; . ilall.ii. , , ,,,ii m.--L i" i i'j iiii,ii ill inrinndi. mi April uu1 av. ijo Kiiai.iniee is iu.uiju irom tile local iii.in- -' n1'' "' ,'"1"' l" 1'" visited. Hefore j thetout began tlin Cliiiuigo Opel a Com - ' " " " - "ll,T "' '' i;s transportation, had to pay nit ;'.'u.i i Y. . . if a rmiii i. ins. :so u vvaH liniinrtutii ror Sir. Dlppe. in take every precaution loss t.irouitn uihsing the guar- - anteed perinrmanres. Hie polities cover possible con - uiiKeiii j. .iioiini .viury ii.inieu sprain nei sTinnio.r nun inns uie (nn Vellatlnn of a due the company will be reimbursed to the extent of lft.0V0. wei.ije.1 u.iiiis nr uinthiim ni ideas. quarantine, legulations, tire, strikes, ..... ...... .. .. .... ..!...- - ..n I ,.11 1.1.. .1 t... ""'' l "'- -' i Insurance. The total amount of Insurance is S47,uuft. so that In case of any accident which might happen before the first perfcitmaneo and compel the abandon- ment of the whole tour the eompmy would receive the full amount of Its xunrantees. The premium on the poll a""" UTi.OOO. SCION OF ANCIENT N. DIES. l.li.enBe of Mrs. I'nrirrhlll Itrached neL to loan. .Mrs. Frances II. Fnderlilll, who came of a that here In K.38, whose husband vvas a descendant or a Illilll Wboril GOV. Kllllleott millle 11 Call- - Commissioner New with a the vehicle. The two macoln s ' .s they ran came clo'cr tog, titer, utit.l J ",,l"rl"" Hi" of finally the middle block the'''."1"1 ""' PMo onitnls-chailffeur of first machine waB "''''r of th, Neiv ork city, who seen to b an backward and open Ills ,l l 'V11" ih" f"wlnK ,p R "ll P'T'onally his men in the '."'"f door toward side of m,.. " ' !" 1 Va- - She was a the vvliL'l. i chine, of wns already desfi niliini of Hans Hergen, ( oj) country In 1638 and was not ";;'". The first machine ahead. The '.'l'", """!" ""':? .Shl coining toward II, were The I men had "C!M tile WIMKIC si:aiii)ahii uttrl llchtfd wrvlce U'way which Cunrled between 1ms axai.ist eiery "",7 ',ci''!' Y. family arrived was born in the old Hergen homestead on Hie .hfire ilowaniiM Hay. The land that 1:1 now was p.iit ,,f xhr. family estate. .Mrs. Fnilerlllll WIIS S yearn old. A,l1" 'TO sh married to ,v 1'hdu'hlll. w ho to New ... mii .it n i spitiNc, iv i m: Hit Mart' Jlllil Anrll ,l. l.n.l nt .lin.hln. Fntoy benitii nlra.iirp, ilcllrhtfiil bracing nhrrr nf Mrftern North and South Carolina, and SS... .'.r1.', rrsorta beat rrarhed ,ivjSii"i rl" "v itAll.M'AY. Thromh illnhqr car service N y Offlct.JJI llflh Ay, WIT CAM DTTtQ AMUI1 TO PRINCETON FOLK as nnl Present Silver l.ov-in- . a: ('tip. TALKS ON" PATRIOTISM He Says Its Kootnjrcs Are Local the nnd Promises Never to For- get Neighbors. ' I'KlNc-BTO.v- , Starch I. President-elec- t Wilson took godspeed fym the citizens of Princeton. They came In great numbers to his home In Cleveland lane to greet him as a "plain, untitled cltlr.cn" of whom they were proud and who. they hopid, would not forget them In the new Held to which he N about to depart. Then they shook hands wlti and bade him good-b- y In a per- - fectly neighborly way Long before the hour set a crowd be- - , gan to In front of the cottage. About the lawn and hung In nearby trees were lighted paper lanterns. A company of Hoy Scouts stood on guard Then acros the sky there came the Hush i of red tire the sound of mulc nnd faces appeared at the windows. The crowd grew larger nnd as a long line of marchers bearing torches nnd lanterns SP turned the corner Into the street Mr. Mopped out on the porch ' In They gave him cheer after cheer. Sirs. Wilson looked very happy ns she came to the door saw the gathering about The students ii of the had Joined the cltl.eni.. The an I m ut rl view he not a he looked on every side moved the future Pr.'sl- - la dent to smile his nuwt fetching snide i If he ever had nn doubts n to the he holds In the heart" f these oplc it must have been dispelled right and there. David Klynu stepped foi ward and expressed the sentiments of the townspeople. Just l!hlnd stood A. i M l.eigll, WHO 18 a Democrat, ntm I. P.oblnson, the postmaster, who l a Re-- , publican. They both hnd hold of a ' f'lvcr lovln? cup It stands eighteen Inches hUh and boars upon its obverse Hide the rot of arms of tin I'nlted Stales and on the reverse the old seal It of the borough of Princeton. There waji cheer as ihey hold It high in the air. .Mr. leaned down from the packing box on which he was standing toTccelvc It. Then he told thefi'. perhapt for tho llrt time, Juet hnn- - mwh 1. i. v i..... ' He was apparently deeply moved. In- fold in them that bo had alwiiyw believed the teal rootage fit pitrlotlsm were lo- - Ml and thoucht th.it lu- would lie n ' If poor President If be fotgot the years lie; had spent 111 Prlne.-tun- . lie said. "'ol Fl nn ind .M follow Citizens . I feel er deep!) inliipl ineptert that yoa should ha,-- , gaiheied l to re to say a good-h- v tu tin- - ami hid me Koodsp.id I have fell ,i very iiitliiu.ti Idi ntlilcction with tli's town 'I sUppo.-- e ti..it sou,. nf oil tlllllk that there is ..,; ,,f ills, iinne.-tlo- between the unlv.-r.si- t and the town: and perhaps some nt ..u siippi.ae that It Is only slme I be. ame Governor of this State that I have been keenly aware of the impulses which liavo come out the ranl.-- s of the citizens of this pim e to touch me and inspire .in- - but thai Is not line i iiiiuiv you will bear me witness that I have had rin.ni frlM(W In IHIm . ... 1...... ,,.- - I . in-ii- . nun inni inn. fir nn i.i,i..wr :p.Thnct'f I lutv.' hail day by day lia been the aiasp i,f the hand and the! familiar salutation which I have met nt ' evei v hntid. i experienced ouiy one moiiincation j m this town. I went Into a shop one1 ur,'r "ecnni.) president of th"' i , ... , .. ...i. I uti.n i n..i, iii.-.t',- i .iiii.ll l Ul It- - j an, a,lUi: 'Won't you kind enough t , -- (,n( ,,. , h;i(1 ,,urch,ised I' of a nun wlt,, wno fHCP , ,.ul been f,imlliir lllr y,.Hrs, ,,,,,1 he said: 'What Is your name, sir?' P, ... ... .... . -- . ,,, u,at w tl. if.m,Ml kml of mortitlcatloii bHC,iUst, lf ther ls ()!U! ,, a man 1()V0S )eter than It ls helm; known bv Ills fellow citizens. "Now, my ft lends, I said the otlui j lay, and I said it most unaffectedly, that I was going keenly to enjoy these three days as I was, and I admit Col. Flynn used very appropriate words, I am both a plain and nn untitled citizen. I have ndmitted my plainness many times, "1 said that I was going to enjoy these days and I am enjoying them. Not because they are days when I am not particularly responsible for any- thing, but because they are days that remind me of I he man years 1 have ll.nl In II, iu nlflna i.n!fiD In nn.l n... .. .. ' ' '"'"" . ..H , until, i .niiiriiwn iiuniner. nun i warn till to believe me when I say that I shall never lose that consciousness. I would ea very poor .President if I did lose It "vv hiwb.vh oeueveo uiai tne l rOOtllgeR of patriotism Were local, tllllt In order to love them. You have got to feol ns thoi do In order to have' sympathy with them. And any man would he a vny.poor public Korvant who did not regard himself as a part ' of the public lite, No man can Imagine how other tire thinking. He can know only by what Is going on In' ills own liend. and If that head Is not connected by every thread of sug-gestl- vvitp tho heads of about him he cannot think as they think. "I am turning away from this place In body, but not In spirit, and 1 nm doing with genuine sadness. The real trials of life, are the connections you break, and when a man has lived In one place as long ss f have lived In Princeton and had as many experiences as I have had here lit nt as an undergraduate and then as n resident he knows what It means to change his residence and Io go Into strange environments and stir- -' rqundlngn. I have never been Inside of onttnurct on Second Page. tain ot troops in .Massachusetts in iii.p1".' ones ot lonlal Hnies. and the daughter of thej" Intimate touch with persons who, Police of York who were watching him a knowledge put down the draft riots at the time of .of his character. the civil war, died yesterday of liron-- 1 "Vou cannot love country nh-rhl- trouble at the home of her son, stracllj , .vou have got to love It con- joint (!. Fndeihlll, lino Dean street, i cretely. You have got to know people' swifter "'" daughter in of the the IIiimi the the dour Hansen HiN What transpued then ,Hl.Hn'1' an autumn at Greenwood Cemetery wti Fran- - had come iiiuipsiurc, south. 711)1 In almost fammia skcnlng him gather and Wilson and towns- people university Col. briefly htm hearty Wilson to of Til., be another people people If SIX REVOLTS WAIT ON WILSON latin American ItrtnlntliinlsU neet "ItnniU Off" IVillcj. .lACUsoNvtu.it, I'la.. March 1. De- spatches from Central nnd South America Indicate that six revolutions In many Latin American republics are ready to blaze forth as soon ns Wood-ro- Wilson becomes President It his policy Is "hands off" In Latin America. I'nlted States secret service men have Information Knowing that the port of Jacksonville has been the rendezvous of many filibusters and smugglers during last few months. More than 10,000 stands of arms and hundreds of men have been shipped to Latin American places. Mobile also has been used by the Illlbiisters. It Is known that fruit streamers have been carrying muskets, cannon, machine guns and other muni- tions of war from this port for several months. MADERO'S VERSION OF SON'S MURDER Quoted Us Sn.viltg Mexico's Kx President IIS killed jjj nn,pe ip'nal fati'r llctW.rh to Tnr M v Havana, March 1 t raneiBco .Maoern, father or the slam President or , :.lco. and Krnesto Sludero, his uncle. who arrived In Havana l ist night, kep' all day but the lot.il papers quote Kranelsco, Sr., as mying that Ambassador Wilson was In mine way responsible for the death of son. It .tli tne elder Modems Were very iviiri n' and even the statements made the myt could not be verified. Humors current In the hotels were to the effect that Krnnelsco Sla dero. Sr. had declared in private coin ersatlon with Intimate friends that Ills i"Ou and Vtce-Presl- nt Suarer.. utead of meeting deith In the t voar of the penitentiary, as the I cSow rnment explanation had It. wer i .....li,at. .,,,1 tilei- - bodies terr lil mutilated in the National Palace. This verflon of the affair was also ghen h , Krnesto Sladero, une'e of the former President and of Finance of .Mexico, according to the current gossip nai Impojslbl., however, to verify t'.ifke rumors. The Staderos denied lliemselk-- io all newspaper men. As the Sladeros are quoted, the jlag ."etllng for the killings was curcfutly ariBngcd. The lvo tap- - tlii ' wer set upon late nt night th palace and tnurd'red Thflr bodies were maltreated aud then r,i.e.i h. mi ., niomoblle. bolt unriahi. As stlil a, He. .hlle the nuchlll" waj eni dahl!ig aro ind th. corne - of tli pr son where the fike effort at rcscua .vas made. After several s'ot.s had been fired, th Sladeros siy, the bodies weio thrown out Into the court yard of the prloii. TY.e guards in front of the prison vv. re n': informed that an attenip. had been mad., by a pirty of SIaderista- i,i selre Fra.:cisi.'o on, I Snare, and t'.ia tl.o pair hud been sho: to death durlnw the tight. To i.ir.v o it these details of this plot and aver: all suspicion th" Government -- t..r:ed .in official invest.- - , jutlnn of the affa' the nevt da v. To sjostatulate their I'alin tnat tho niuider was committed In a room of in,,, nnlace tile .viaiieros are iiuoteii in . n. ui rer.t tumors as navlng that i t t .... t..., - pnwner iintiiin i.-..- - i, nn. i i i.tu- - ,, ..lu-r.'- ttml i rn in iiin ni' burned by the llflinr fioin n revolver. II is understood her.' that the Hueita , novernnient will make an effoit to so- - i enre the ex tt adit loii of the ent.re Slad-r- o r.imliv wno are nere anil since ti,ls could not be done on a political! charge, criminal allegations again', ...n, i. . t ei. . i. II1III1 Will uf num. I .ir.f .lltllf.- - said to be that t'iy attempted to bribe the .apatlstix not to acknowledge the Government of PVieitii and Diaz. Piovi.s'.olial President Hlierta has IV- - quisled the Cuban authorities to detain M,,,ir ,,ar,.. tIl tntern:itl,.n,.l adjudication of th'lr cas- - can be had. Th MBU(.rltni, here are Franci'co. Sr., .be f.itber. Krnesto Sladero. Rafael Hernandez, a Minister In the previous Cabinet; Frederlco Gonzales Garca. former Governor of the Fedeial district, un To-d- a) Consists of Seven Sections, as Follows : Tit FIRST -- General Newi - . 14 SECOND -S- portim . . . . THIRD Rf! EiUtf, lininciil SchooH ...... 8 FOURTH Pictorial Miftiini . . 16 FIFTH Foreign, Fiihioni.Rewti, Dooki, Queriei, Gamn 12 SIXTH Children's NUtjaiine 8 SEVENTH Society, Drama. Miuic, U Ttltl 78 Reaitrt or nticsdeaUrs uho Jo not rtctite all of thtit tcctioni ieill confer a fator en "the Sun" by noilfylm tht , publication Dipartmcrl ot once by tht phone (2209 Bteaman), and Ihe missinn ircd'ori! will be promptly forwarded, if possible jJJJjj Tjy QpgJJ JJJQ fQtJ NEW YORK SALOONS Wagner Committee Favors This Plan and Tlie.v Will Crge Such a Law. THK HILL IS XOW PKNIHNO Will Not Advise Segregation of Social Evil for Fear of Hostile Criticism. The Wagner legls'atlve committee, which Is Investigating police condition! In the city, will recommend the passagu of the Walker bill, now pending, which permits saloons of the city to open on Sundays between the hours of 1 P. SI. anil 11 P. M. In all likelihood it will not rccom ; inund that the nodal evil of the city bo segregated or that gambling and kindred diversions be licensed or regit. J lated. There may be amendments to the Walker bill, so that local option by dls. trlcts shall be permitted, but that Is not probable, as the opinion Is that to shut down In one Assembly district and open up In another would simply re- - Ive the old eraft conditions, whereby ,J0 m,.n n the closed district's ' would pay for the p'lvllege of opening. B..Ilnl0I. Wasner chairman ol the committee, would not talk nlout ihe ilutermlnations the committee hail at-- i rived at ho far, and he declared that all must await the secret session of the ' committee, next Ktlday. when a decision will be announced, 1 In; information , came authoritatively, however, from other members of the committee and 'with It came the additional new that many changes may come atsiut within the week. District Attorney Chailos S Whit man is to lie n witness on Wednesday nnd no man In the city has more in- - lormatton about pollen grafting than he. It has been flowing Into his office for the last two years and icoently Uu !inmel th rironortlnns of :m avalanche. Sir. Whitman has digested It ni. personally and Is in a position no only to tell what the trouble Is but to I suggest a his time and is clrcuin-- I people police stances. he Gen. Theodore UitiKham. once Police Commissioner, Is to follow Str Whitman. (Jen. Utngham has opinions on the sub-J- of the' police founded upon very experience. 'It Is not known wliat measures Mr. Whitman and Gen. ningham will suggest but Gen. Iling- - ham. if understood. Ins said privately m times jusi mat me otu way io enm lnate graft from the social evil in New York is to adopt the system in vogue in almost every big city In the ex.'ept New ork and Hoston. The Wagner committee not able to work Its courage up to the point of recommending an act which would cutely arouse the protests .of a consid- erable portion of the I'ommunltv The members of the committee have said privately that their witnesses, many of them well Known men, did not go far enough on stanu to warrant any committee in bringing a city's wrath n in n Ah f(I. (hi) t,S( question the com mittee praotlcallv Is unanimous and it Is made all the mote determined bj the IllMl'lll.Slll'e.I ,11 I n IV 111'.., II,.. .n i.i.n ,i, ,,. i,,.,... i ... ,.f ,.r.....' .'...,. . .. ' .' . - ' . Ii- - teseiuatives for years. All witnesses agreed that Sunday closing has been a f.,mn unri Hn.i ,. 'i..m. ii. i '. ,.. .. m ,,i,i., ,.MIctlon. u n,- - ,,. iu, . ji,. Wyoming em-'a- n '""st that ' t dlrcctlv to n admit prompt prosecution and pun- - ishttietit M.ei l r. tl.i, tral Dealers 'Assnclaiion. went the I'lty Hull yesterday lit head of delegation to net ideas nf Slnvor Gaynor on Walker bill. The was at St. .lames and yulnn lint see llltll. On they will to a with Sulzer. Sir. a , wanted i Informed .... . ...i.. . .. . .. lnp "The Dealers Association see in cases SIcGriith ....... i,i.l ... M,.ol,,r,l" r..... l,II ..... l flitlt... t, ,,,,,, i.. ,,,, n..l of state affairs l ho '.Mayor referred to ho proclaimed his famous order and decency.' "We n ounpact to against law keepers and cooperated with of fourteen last with re - sorts, We have 100 such places on. business. "We shall public and Gov- - ernor that lire selfish In - mantling a Sunday opening law really a dosing for wo will not tolerate violations, saloon will tight In prohibited BRYAN IN ACCIDENT. In Car Hlrfl.es n CnrrliiKc. Coi.cmbu, .March - .1 Hryan In an iiutonioblle In but escaped unhurt, Mr. Hryan, who delivered a lecture In a theatre was riding station to a car got Into with a carriage by a negro and by a woman The woman Jumped nt moment of , collision nnd escaped Injury. The driver under cnrrlage and tallied brutiies no serious Mr. rtrynti Ids seat In tho auto mobile. He refused go to hi hotel H that driver of was burl, A . I FELIX DIAZ LATS KILLING. 1 I'l.ll. Tlt. Xni." 'Hint Mndero's , Men In In cxtlfinteil. In reply to a cablegram from Tub Kr.v, nsking him If he had any message to convey to United States regard- ing the death of I. Sladcro, (Jen. Diaz sent the following despatch, which whs evidently delayed In trans-missio- having been received only yes- terday: "Vou have already been Informed by press of the of I, Sladcro, which I ntot sincerely lament. The have begun a rigid Investigation of this sad event in order that the guilty purlieu may be punished. "Kixtx Diaz," HOLLAND'S PRINCESS IS ILL. Contracts liiHnenui Moinilnln Where I'nthrr In HentrratlnR. Sittcittl I'able ttfialci In Tin: Sun Tub JIaoxb, Slarch 1. The Prlncnus .lullana, who with her mother. Queen. Wilhelmln.i, has Joined Prince Consort Henry In the Tnunus .Mountains, whtxe lio Is rocupr-ratin- at lwulth resort, Ik lit Tlu, r,Mi- n1ii'.alitt.n ui.fu aUn le 'ncring from but that thtrii are no complications. The Princess Is the only the. Queen. JOHN W. KELLER AFTER PLACE. Srnntor OMioniimi ItiieU Hint for rimtr. Washington, March 1 John W. Kel let- - Xew York, former president New York Press Club one time editor of the llnnrder and ex Commissioner of Cha.-Itle- s New Yot lc city, formally entered sec tetary Senate y itnder the patronage Senator Doorman. He in Senate corridors adjoining the Senate Chamber and held h levee Senator O'Gornian Intro- - duced Senators President-elec- t Wllsnn brother Joseph Wilson of XnshrCle. also came in y and Inttxiduced to Senators by Senator I.ea of Tennessee, CARRIES PRISONER TO STATION. lntt Metirnlb .Shows irrnlli When HpRHar llrfose to Morr, Policeman Slatthew SI cf! rath Is champion hammer thrower of the world. When lie isn't hammers he Goldstein 23 Cherry street begging alms. Him he arrested. But go to station house. He down and refused to move.. Bo there was nothing the champion hammer thrower of the do but carry Goldstein to police station, where he still linger. KAISER TOUCHES WAR CHORD. nn IlrenilnftDghtn firemedt In This llonr.' "pfcm ablf Despatch tu Titr. Si v Hkiilis, Slarch 1 The Kaiser, who was present at t lie launching a dmulnoiigh' Wllhelmshnven made an address In which he said that the of such battleships was the emplie's greatest need In tlu-en- ' pre; serious hour. WYOMING REPORTED DAMAGED. ltiHrt CoIIiivts 'I'mimfer of Iteiir tilmlrnl IBnUvrrM Nnr.roi.K Vn . March 1. Accordlinr to ports in navy circles Hear v.hniial llaiiiror. commnndlnir the At- - I.i nt le fleet now In Cuban waters, v ! i rnnstVrred lus flan from the biittleshin Wvmninir to the liattleshtn Connecticut. former tlnKshlii fleet when com - m.iiiiled be Hour Admiral osterhiuis. ft Radnor assumed command Hoot Ihe transierreii nis nag ironi uu; ii.n - nectlcut to Wvomlng. The latter "hip. he said had better nconniMnda , "" ' "'' 1,1,1 "P in ,ll( "ro1' A report sajs one f tne gnus on i ne Wyoming was .i......u,i ,i,., uhi ...,.,., i n .... a target. . . . .Mil. rtrtTWl n n OIT ('1,11,1 lltj, ' Himiii.vmto.v, N. Y., .March 1.- - An- - .tiller eh.'lllter veils U'rllleil ln.il.lv In 111., hlstorv the light of Harris I). Coll, !a Now York law.ver, and his wife Kllt- - way out. If In his opinion spends taking drunk dls-the- one under present orderly to a station, Imm night came across arduous Is country is tile all the the M''' In favor met with IMJo. vice with. In the her the N'H f'e about in Penal Law could the the that 'n class, can Sir. A- lbany Wiiiiin nan irom ino.jotto, IVlUWArs AliAIK. who said he to more about scope of rU Wife members Liquor the 'donee the when doctrine have Into proceed two to do away put of do law every be AUTO He Hscnnea hurt When Ills S. William accident Columbia tho hotel when collision was the but Injury. to assured the the seriously ft the Krnnelsco the Kran-clsc- o ol Wrrlnry the race appeared while throwing sal tor Are eril "Srrlnns at the nig Abraham tlint ear-ol- d two men. her one. niory put him Into and at reports speeding mountain roads Pennsylvania, west naisteaii, with Deputy S. F. Rltui; In pursuit. With ," man his name A. Flood of New York, lad, The- troubles Sir. and Sirs. New York In 1910. u prominent lawyer, 'of Provost Colt, sued for a separation on the ground that wife of mid liquors, and sought custody the boy. The Fmiy In 9 11 the kidnapping occurred Sirs. tho boy land ran away with to LIU 'gallon and Sir. Colt recovered Hie December, he was kidnapped In London. linn when up tele last night had not the ITIs boy was Hinghamton, but he ay whore. LINK'S SPECIAL Seaann l lorlda's Finest Train, VIM S TrMn rally: :lti A. 11.. 3:04, p. XI, Superior ltoadway aud Service, I'ilSO'wty, AJ. WTUD MVpP PUT I Ul MUZZLE ON PUJO MeMorran, in Minority Re- port, Publicly Exposes Lawyer's Tyranny. TONGUES WERE TIED Committee's Abject Sur- render Its Functions Amazes Financiers. PHEJIDICE IX INQUIRY Heimlilican Kepresentative At- tacks Hcport as Heing Un truthful and Destructive. Thc the, Pujn trust. Investigating committee of Congross byr Samuel Cntcrmycr and the abj;ct man- ner In which committee and Its In- vestigation had been bound over to the lawyer, as publicly revealed tho first time In the report lteprcscntativu Henry StcSIorran, of Stlchigan, formed the one chief topic of amazed comment In the financial district yesterdny on PuJo report. This remarkable surrender by a Con- gressional committee of all its functions, both inquisitorial and legislative, to an outside lawyer had been no secret those who appeared before committee. But Incisive, Sir. SlcSIorrau. stating the exact by which entire committee wns bound over hand nnd foot to Sam Untermyer, so that no member the committee appeared to have to nsk a a witness, the financial community. Here ore opening of Sir. McStorrun In minority report; "I that the method tlin Investigation han been of unusual char- acter, different from anything that I have ever witnessed during my . experience In Congress. refer to the agreement under which no member ot the committee has been permlttd to In- terrogate witnesses subjects ma- - y terlal to the Investigation." Thl.s statement Is first clear .tUlL- - and authoritative that Con- gress In the PuJo Investigation had handed Itself over to a New York law- yer who. not hesitate to carry the investigation far afield from its purpose of developing the for ref- ormation the banking system of the country to prove the assumption that he had up for himself and the com- mittee In the beginning, namely that was a money mm. Instances nf Domination. Instances were cited In the llnancial district Illustrating how pto-- i foundlv Samuel I'ntcrmyer had con- trolled the committee and biassed the Investigation a degree. When SI. president the Continental and Commercial Hank Chicago, was a witness he was asked he believed .concentration of cretin aim money a menace, He answered that he I'lm his reasons." was quest of Congressman mem- - ber of carefully wrote the out on paper and tent uu Samuel Fntermycr and 'lueiilly during the examination Nw " " "J" -- -. Fntetmyer's coat j to Interrupt hini propose a question. only tossed In Irritation. The predominant opinion among bankers and tlnnnclal men Is that the report committee was an lincorreiateii uouBepouue in Irrational ' iir,iii,is.-ils- . sn extreme and radical and liieiidatlon of segregation reported that the Chairman The question vvas per-o- f there may be a suggestion luvldent during target practice . emptorlly swept aside, bodied later a bill that whole big gnus. Hankers said yesterday that one of question be taken out of felouv "ff's'lal confirmation of re- - t'' noticeable things the part the and law's port be obtained hut conduct of th,. committee was con-b- e substituted which will mike the of-'w- stated that WyomniT vvas tempt and resentment Sir a misdemeanor, in the nuisance route up the coasi and would pr. b- - mver appeared to show when a member which lie handled and ably come Norfolk. Admiral attempted to propose Fee of l.lqunr to the a the the .Mayor did Wednesday o for talk Gov. wiin nun letter BUH Governor, lie fully the P i,ilw-rr- Carrie of the of ... of which of 'outward entered breaking snloon have the committee for the jears undesirable tell the the we not which means and closed hours C, 1 was Columbia from his driven occupied the thrown bus- - Kept until rtage not t Hi dtath Senor authorities In lnlluenza, child nf of nf the of for of the of the H. was the of Goldstein would not the world to the of laiinihlng e of the of the of work- - bets llowne toll, nr,a be their twelve-- v son. This wns the summary of tho Sirs. Colt, opinion the leading bankers the iu front of oily ns by Theatre, high ts easy to be 'pro powered last ls over of or I'nlted States Marshal marshal Is who gave as T, II. tutor of the of Colt began In city The '! husband, member the firm of SInllet, & Ills was addicted to use drugs the of husband won Hie Milt. first when Coll got lilm followed, ram. In 1912, agnln Is I), Colt called by plume said that heard ot Incident. ,near could not !cxnctl nusr "FI.OKIDA 58th of noon, oilier Ltd. D;S0 11 of muzzling of money for striking oiinorlty by the to bankers the the word'i of agter-me- nt the uel of power question ot as- tounded words his recognize of entirely I upon the statement did basis sound of set theie yesterday to despotic George Reynolds, of of if that consiituieu did. "Al lie re- - SlcSIorrau. the who question it to or '" "" sleeve to to be oft' of (lie PuJo ao the now Fnter-fenc- e When question, car-- . completely devoid of practicable I, J l.i.r ,1,-,- , If ... !,..! Itltlk tflll' 111 lltll' full s ror the possession mutter would aniotlierecl in j ' accompanied by of of kidnapped the Ar- - ospivssed a , "ft 'progressive' if iiutonioblle the the the Virginia. ' he committee, ' 1 .",. . . "... ... ..M,, ..... ' meastirv It would so tie up credit, bank, lnK, business and prosierlty that prog- - ress would be Impossible. The maze of destructive limitations ,, finance enunieratcd by the report was ,.Knrded so prepnnierous by eml- - ....... . , .' neiii niiiiiiers nun nicy reiuseo io coil- - L,,t,,. t, sopiiriite proposals on their ihoiIih and ridiculed the whole affair as jrreHslvo' moans, destruction, It Is the simplest thing to destroy what exist. These variegated proposals are In vvho'n and In part simply destructive. They do not afford a vcRtigo of constructive betterment or reform. They cannot be taken seriously. Sly opinion l that the fantastic reign of Sir. Fntermycr and tills strange committee, using the veil of the reformer to cudgel nnd make lurid headlines, Is nt nn end. Congress will have no more of It. They recognize that the country hns tired of such deceit. "Such a progrnmtne nn this will be Impossible of accomplishment In the body of Congress and the rebuke to the methods of this committer In selling the birthright of the Congress to n rank outsider which will be administered n the rejection of those measures ought to be a memorable ." I nteriuer's Stuiiin Speech, Another hanker characterized tho PuJo report as ,"a stump speech ot Samuel Untortuycr." The report wu described as a rehash of the speeches the lawyer had made before the flnancu forums of economic clubs, without an attempt even In the wording of tV! t-- ( port to base th? views upon the of the investigation. The report put la the mouth of the cornmlUte was simply . ''J

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Page 1: Aoiition 78 TAXI THUGS GET AMUI1 Tjy fQtJ LATS ''! I PUJOtools and the chauffeur. Gc.tgo,.Vr. fur thl post. Kilson. jcar old, Kat 123d street. bi now tie Wc.'i Pol 'eveiUll street

THE WEATHER FORECAST.

Fair and colder to-da- y; probably fair to-

morrow;'tut moderate west winds.Detailed weaihsr reports wil1 be found on pane 1J.

VOL. LXXX. NO. 183. NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1913. VipyrioM, 1913, bU the Sun I'rlvtlnv ami PiiMlanfiio Aoiition 78 PAGES. PRICE FIVE CENTS.

TAXI THUGS GET

BROADWAY GEMS

Hold Up .Jewelry Store in

Midst of TheatreCrowd.

THEY SEIZE $9,000 LOOT

Tistols and Ammonia Gunfor the Proprietor of

the Shop.

GETAWAY IX TWO AITOS

ilose Bnek Fifrhts Witli Il(libtr J

on Street ns I'oliee Conic

Kmiiiinu t'p.

Cnmnirrcr,

nceepled.

Commerce

Secretary

Jnsephus

Secretary Commerce: Alberthlgliwaj men with

volvcrs and ammonia guns up and Secretary Labor.Slnse Hack, Jeweller. Doubt Increased1553 midnight day over likelihood Col.

night J0.001) Just as' Goethals. the Panama Canalafter theatre crowds were thronging being named Secretarythe sidewalk" Times Square. was learned it that the Presi- -

two two expect entirebers successful escape, Cabinet him

they that the March andcar which transferred now this

econd 7.0aO 'juM Charles19.000, loot, ammonia gun, burglar' Crane beingtools and the chauffeur. Gc.tgo ,.Vr. fur thl post.

Kilson. jcar old, Kat 123dstreet. bi now tieWc.'i Pol 'eveiUll street station

Hack's Wolry stor the min.,11fiom the northwest comet Fort),

street, half block belowChurchill's restaurant, lie was cinslncup shortly before 12 o'clock nightnnd was putting his goods largosafe the roar his store In whichhe was alone.

As everything had been timedJust as the Jeweller becan put- -

tlng the trajs and drawers Into the sfenlsht hawk taxicab enme acrsseighth street from the direction

Hlghth avenue, turned and went to thecurb, pointing westward the same;time acros the street nunanother taxicab which the sametactics and mopped, both engines go luffsttomr.

Two smooth, youm; mn dreeJdark clothing mid overcoats, ore'

wearing derby hat and the othcslouch hut. jumped out the taxicu.iand walked swiftly to HieHack heard the door open and he turnedfrom his .safe manJilm with two weapons hand, one

revolver and other an ammoniagun.

lust behind was the other in.armed. Nut wurd was .i!d.

Tho first man pull-- J the tr'gg.-- r hisammonia gun and1 the con.ent sp-i- t

oip toward Jeweller, who dodged,and then nt-hl- forward 'li ills headdown grabbed the man thewaist.

Th"re was struggle. Although theSidewalk outside the ;oiv w.i- -t

this moment Jammed with people andlight' within were burningone saw that tight, the Jeweller

pushing with all his mlnht, Hie nunwliovo him strilcinK with lUt ami

butt his revolve!.The second man paid attention

this ifiisiiinir th.. ireiinmen he ran the snfe which wasopen, and grabbed large drawer Inwhich were watche- - rings, bracelets

diamonds and other precious stones,the chief wares the little shop, thru.ihem under hi coat and brushed byinn struggling men analn, culling "AllrlKlu" his companion.

this the first mini tluew the Jew-eller back against the partition

ran swiftly the door, jammedshut and started fm th, I'orty-elght- h

corner, where the first automo-bile vvas alreadv on the move Hack,the Jeweller, with the tenacity of bull- -

......i.. i..i,i.,.inui,, uiiij mit-iiii- i

ing he went.Just outside the door the first

turned and shot twice the Jeweller.Lieut. Frj the Wci

street station was patrolduty half block from scene.

'f' WiTlhelnier I11..i,..nand Heiliy Inspector Dw'yer's staffwere nearly as closi- - and PolicemanHudson was out the street on fixedpost. All heard the nnd maderush for spot.

All detectives saw they arilvedwas screaming man strugglingthrough the crowd. They knew nnlh- -

Inir nf Ihe thev "rmbbeilJowelhr. him several minutes

u'lml Hn,l linnnnne,!that time the taxicab which had lnensiiindlng the corner was under h,ij,mid vvas one across streei

two beaded for Kighihavtnue. the police, who had ih'stlmo learned the truth, wete them

Th,, ueenrnl I'nll m'Mlli

dartedsecond machine, cut off bybile stopped,police Into Instant.

illsappt'trednfle" llml enli'" shnoled Vrr.

pointingMi' eimlnes stnlleil." said ehuuf.

Continual T7i(t't Vtivc

AMERICA' CiltKAl IIF.Mtllliioi.Tiv ami mm: hi.el'Ttrle trains. 'Iliru

PUifhurn, Soulhcrn I'lnrj, t'nnnlrn, loluinhla,Atlanta, lllimlnslioni. Memphis, Jarlc

onvllle, Klorlrta, Cuba. llooUlets, listAM.

TO APPOINT REDFIELD.

"''!" m rprrsentn nelocretarj

Wahhinoton. Starch hasboon n shifting in President-elec- t Wllson's Cabinet ilnn! within tosttwonty.four hours, and unn Icarnort'CHIZPIlS StVMI'lll to His Home

that Representative WilliamC. Rcdlield of Hronklyn will he Secre- -

tnry Commerce.The understanding here that

post has heen tendered to Mr.and that he has Personallyhe declined to comment on report,

his colleagues the House werecongratulating him ull the afternoon.

The selection of Mr. ltedtlcld forSoctotnryhere meaning that l.ouls D. Rrandels

Hoston, who up to tills lime 1msheen regarded ns rensonahly certain forn Cabinet luce, .has been shunted toone side.

As to the following selections, Mr.Wilson's closest friends Inare entirely greed:

J. Itryan, of Stale:G. SIoAdoo. Secretary

TteiiMiry, .lames SloRoynolds. Attor-- jDaniels, Secre-

tary the Navy; William Itedtield,

DIPPEL INSURES HIS

I S.

armed re- - ""ii. t'ostmastcr-Oenorn- l. and Williamheld j Wilson, of

rohlcd a In hi in WashingtonUroadway at ast ' the of George

of worth of Jewelry W- builder,of War.

ofFslng autonuililhs tr- rob- - dent-elec- t to have hi

made a but so ' with breakfast on theiloscly were pursued In morning of I. ln'ituu?h

from they to the Goehals Is In I '.ma inn

machine they left of the i seem ollniiua'.o him.an of Is again

G.' mentioned prominently

"f of 22

- a IntyJ is

ofsixth a

lastIn v

In of

if

'

a P'or- -t of I

Atdiagonally

followed

facedIn

a aof

jewelry-stor-

to free a In ftont ofIn hl

n the

in simi-larly ,i

of

thei

first

aof little

he brightno

hith of

nor. nr.Mi n rn -

toa

ofof

toU

ofm it

streta

j... "n-- i . f,,. u

nsman

ate of Fui'ty-secnt- h

onn t 'o )e.

Is'., line, H'

ofbv

on"hots a

thethe asa

rnliherv iinil theIt took

I, rran .,,,1 un.l I.,

atso the the

The taxlcibsand b

afternn i vim 'I tn I,.,

Theit ill an

wo

nn

4 to

Havanusli,

WILSON j

11 v r n inof

I

the I

It

ofIs the I

Rcdflcld

thehut In

of Is Interpretedns

of

Washingtonu

WilliamWilliam of the

C.

of C.of Hurle-Taxica- b

,J- -

at

as It

atas

to

VOICES FOR $1,267,000:;,

Philndelpliin Opera .MHIiager,

Take Novel Kind of

Policies

Vlti'.inii hnc immied their preciousfliw.Ar. n,,.l nli!.l. H.,-.- hj'.i.n iLnUai-

prwa ,,lln' "Ba",!" ,Q"- ,""cori' "r M" l'ntlrr o)ew eompan huvcneivr been Insured until the Chlcago- -

Philadelphia Opera Company started lastWeli on its Western trip. That organ!- - '

nation was insured for any loss that It

niishi sustain ih oagh the failure to?th a performun.'e

Andr-'a- Hlppel, inaiuse; of ih. com-pa-

and .1. S. I tir-si- .i" tin llroadwa.vlone been llgiirtng for some time on apolicy might pioleot the organiza-tion against loss through Its inabil : inghe a performance w ide ,.n Its Westerntour. Sir. Dlpnei was with :hf Sletr.ipoli- -

tan Grand opera Company in San Fran- -

c'"0.i dt tile lime of the enrlfiqinik. whenlloinrlih and the opera company

tin in lot Slua.onn of thl- -more than tlOO.nOu w. s refu.tded to sub- -

sorlhers who had paid foi seats in ad- -

vante.According to the lenn of ill. polices

wnli'h .1. S. Ilirsh arm Hired the corn- -

s'liiv is n:,'jiih! nnv i auevviiu n uiiiriu prevent en uuvoiiiseo ptrfo. ni..iH . T.i npi.li Is tn give sixty-- ,tile ImO'I.iI 111, ,11,., 4 hetW'eell Its IIOenlllL.' in., ; .ilall.ii. , ,,,,ii m.--L i" i i'j iiii,ii ill

inrinndi. mi April uu1 av. ijoKiiai.iniee is iu.uiju irom tile local iii.in- -'

n1'' "' ,'"1"' l" 1'" visited. Hefore j

thetout began tlin Cliiiuigo Opel a Com - '

" " " - "ll,T"' '' i;s transportation, had to pay

nit ;'.'u.ii Y. . .if a rmiii i. ins. :so u vvaH liniinrtutii ror

Sir. Dlppe. in take every precautionloss t.irouitn uihsing the guar- -

anteed perinrmanres.Hie polities cover possible con -

uiiKeiii j. .iioiini .viury ii.inieu sprainnei sTinnio.r nun inns uie (nnVellatlnn of a due the company willbe reimbursed to the extent of lft.0V0.wei.ije.1 u.iiiis nr uinthiim ni ideas.quarantine, legulations, tire, strikes,..... ...... .. .. ......!...- - ..n I ,.11 1.1.. .1 t...""'' l "'- -'

i

Insurance.The total amount of Insurance is

S47,uuft. so that In case of any accidentwhich might happen before the firstperfcitmaneo and compel the abandon-ment of the whole tour the eompmywould receive the full amount of Itsxunrantees. The premium on the poll

a""" UTi.OOO.

SCION OF ANCIENT N. DIES.

l.li.enBe of Mrs. I'nrirrhlll ItrachedneL to loan.

.Mrs. Frances II. Fnderlilll, who cameof a that here In K.38,whose husband vvas a descendant or aIllilll Wboril GOV. Kllllleott millle 11 Call- -

Commissioner New with

a

the vehicle. The two macoln s '.s they ran came clo'cr tog, titer, utit.l J ",,l"rl"" Hi" offinally the middle block the'''."1"1 ""' PMo onitnls-chailffeur

of first machine waB "''''r of th, Neiv ork city, who

seen to b an backward and open Ills ,l l 'V11" ih" f"wlnK ,pR "ll P'T'onally his men inthe '."'"fdoor toward side of m,..

" ' !" 1 Va- - She was athe vvliL'l. ichine, of wns already desfi niliini of Hans Hergen,( oj)

country In 1638 andwas not ";;'".The first machine ahead. The '.'l'", """!" ""':? .Shl

coining toward II,were The

I men had"C!M

tile

WIMKICsi:aiii)ahii

uttrl llchtfd wrvlce

U'way

which

Cunrledbetween

1ms

axai.ist

eiery

"",7

',ci''!'

Y.

family arrived

was born in the old Hergen homesteadon Hie .hfire ilowaniiM Hay. Theland that 1:1 nowwas p.iit ,,f xhr. family estate. .Mrs.Fnilerlllll WIIS S yearn old.

A,l1" 'TO sh married to,v 1'hdu'hlll. w ho to New

... mii .it n i

spitiNc, iv i m:Hit Mart' Jlllil Anrll ,l. l.n.l nt .lin.hln.Fntoy benitii nlra.iirp, ilcllrhtfiil bracing

nhrrr nf Mrftern North and South Carolina, andSS... .'.r1.', rrsorta beat rrarhed

,ivjSii"i rl" "v itAll.M'AY. Thromhillnhqr car service N y Offlct.JJI llflh Ay,

WIT CAM DTTtQ AMUI1

TO PRINCETON FOLK

as

nnl Present Silver l.ov-in- .

a: ('tip.

TALKS ON" PATRIOTISM

He Says Its Kootnjrcs Are Local the

nnd Promises Never to For-

get Neighbors.'

I'KlNc-BTO.v-, Starch I. President-elec- t

Wilson took godspeed fym thecitizens of Princeton. They came In

great numbers to his home In Clevelandlane to greet him as a "plain, untitledcltlr.cn" of whom they were proud andwho. they hopid, would not forget themIn the new Held to which he N about todepart. Then they shook hands wlti

and bade him good-b- y In a per- -

fectly neighborly wayLong before the hour set a crowd be- - ,

gan to In front of the cottage.About the lawn and hung In nearbytrees were lighted paper lanterns. A

company of Hoy Scouts stood on guardThen acros the sky there came the Hush i

of red tire the sound of mulc nndfaces appeared at the windows. Thecrowd grew larger nnd as a long line ofmarchers bearing torches nnd lanterns SPturned the corner Into the street Mr.

Mopped out on the porch ' InThey gave him cheer after cheer.

Sirs. Wilson looked very happy ns shecame to the door saw the

gathering about The students iiof the had Joined the cltl.eni..The an I m ut rl view he not a he lookedon every side moved the future Pr.'sl- - ladent to smile his nuwt fetching snide

i If he ever had nn doubts n to thehe holds In the heart" f these

oplc it must have been dispelled rightand there.

David Klynu stepped foi ward andexpressed the sentiments of thetownspeople. Just l!hlnd stood A. i

M l.eigll, WHO 18 a Democrat, ntm I.

P.oblnson, the postmaster, who l a Re-- ,publican. They both hnd hold of a '

f'lvcr lovln? cup It stands eighteenInches hUh and boars upon its obverseHide the rot of arms of tin I'nltedStales and on the reverse the old seal Itof the borough of Princeton.

There waji cheer as ihey holdIt high in the air. .Mr. leaneddown from the packing box on which hewas standing toTccelvc It. Then he toldthefi'. perhapt for tho llrt time, Juethnn-- mwh 1. i. v i..... 'He was apparently deeply moved. In-fold

inthem that bo had alwiiyw believed

the teal rootage fit pitrlotlsm were lo- -

Ml and thoucht th.it lu- would lie n' If

poor President If be fotgot the years lie;had spent 111 Prlne.-tun- . lie said.

"'ol Fl nn ind .M follow Citizens .

I feel er deep!) inliipl ineptert thatyoa should ha,-- , gaiheied l to reto say a good-h- v tu tin- - ami hid meKoodsp.id I have fell ,i very iiitliiu.tiIdi ntlilcction with tli's town

'I sUppo.-- e ti..it sou,. nf oil tlllllkthat there is ..,; ,,f ills, iinne.-tlo-

between the unlv.-r.si- t and the town:and perhaps some nt ..u siippi.ae thatIt Is only slme I be. ame Governor ofthis State that I have been keenlyaware of the impulses which liavocome out the ranl.--s of the citizensof this pim e to touch me and inspire

.in- - but thai Is not line i iiiiuiv youwill bear me witness that I have hadrin.ni frlM(W In IHIm . ... 1......,,.- - I.

in-ii- . nun inni inn. fir nn i.i,i..wr:p.Thnct'f I lutv.' hail day by day liabeen the aiasp i,f the hand and the!familiar salutation which I have met nt

'

evei v hntid.i experienced ouiy one moiiincation

j m this town. I went Into a shop one1ur,'r "ecnni.) president of th"'

i , ... , .. ...i.I uti.n i n..i, iii.-.t',- i .iiii.ll l Ul It--

j an, a,lUi: 'Won't you kind enough t

, -- (,n( ,,. , h;i(1 ,,urch,ised I'of a nun wlt,, wno fHCP , ,.ul beenf,imlliir lllr y,.Hrs, ,,,,,1 he said: 'WhatIs your name, sir?'

P, ... ... .... . -- . ,,,

u,at w tl. if.m,Ml kml of mortitlcatloiibHC,iUst, lf ther ls ()!U! ,, a man1()V0S )eter than It ls helm;known bv Ills fellow citizens.

"Now, my ft lends, I said the otlui j

lay, and I said it most unaffectedly, thatI was going keenly to enjoy these threedays as I was, and I admit Col. Flynnused very appropriate words, I amboth a plain and nn untitled citizen. I

have ndmitted my plainness many times,"1 said that I was going to enjoy

these days and I am enjoying them.Not because they are days when I amnot particularly responsible for any-thing, but because they are days thatremind me of I he man years 1 havell.nl In II, iu nlflna i.n!fiD In nn.l n... .. ..

' ' '"'"". ..H, until, i .niiiriiwn iiuniner. nun i warn tillto believe me when I say that I shallnever lose that consciousness. I would

e a very poor .President if I did lose It

"vv hiwb.vh oeueveo uiai tne l

rOOtllgeR of patriotism Were local, tllllt

In order to love them. You have gotto feol ns thoi do In order to have'sympathy with them. And any manwould he a vny.poor public Korvantwho did not regard himself as a part '

of the public lite, No man can Imaginehow other tire thinking. Hecan know only by what Is going onIn' ills own liend. and If that head Isnot connected by every thread of sug-gestl-

vvitp tho heads of abouthim he cannot think as they think.

"I am turning away from this place Inbody, but not In spirit, and 1 nm doing

with genuine sadness. The real trialsof life, are the connections you break,and when a man has lived In one placeas long ss f have lived In Princeton andhad as many experiences as I have hadhere lit nt as an undergraduate andthen as n resident he knows what Itmeans to change his residence and Io goInto strange environments and stir- -'

rqundlngn. I have never been Inside of

onttnurct on Second Page.

tain ot troops in .Massachusetts in iii.p1".' ones otlonlal Hnies. and the daughter of thej" Intimate touch with persons who,Police of York who were watching him a knowledgeput down the draft riots at the time of .of his character.the civil war, died yesterday of liron-- 1 "Vou cannot love country nh-rhl-

trouble at the home of her son, stracllj , .vou have got to love It con-joint (!. Fndeihlll, lino Dean street, i cretely. You have got to know people'

swifter "'" daughterin of the

the IIiimi

thethedour

HansenHiNWhat transpued then

,Hl.Hn'1'

an autumnat

Greenwood Cemetery

wti Fran- -

had comeiiiuipsiurc,

south.711)1 Inalmost

fammiaskcnlng

him

gather

and

Wilson

and towns-people

university

Col.briefly

htm

heartyWilson

to

of

Til.,

be

another

people

people

If

SIX REVOLTS WAIT ON WILSON

latin American ItrtnlntliinlsUneet "ItnniU Off" IVillcj.

.lACUsoNvtu.it, I'la.. March 1. De-

spatches from Central nnd SouthAmerica Indicate that six revolutions In

many Latin American republics areready to blaze forth as soon ns Wood-ro-

Wilson becomes President It hispolicy Is "hands off" In Latin America.

I'nlted States secret service men haveInformation Knowing that the port ofJacksonville has been the rendezvous ofmany filibusters and smugglers during

last few months. More than 10,000

stands of arms and hundreds of menhave been shipped to Latin Americanplaces.

Mobile also has been used by theIlllbiisters. It Is known that fruitstreamers have been carrying muskets,cannon, machine guns and other muni-tions of war from this port for severalmonths.

MADERO'S VERSION

OF SON'S MURDER

Quoted Us Sn.viltg Mexico's Kx

President IIS killedjjj nn,pe

ip'nal fati'r llctW.rh to Tnr M v

Havana, March 1 t raneiBco .Maoern,father or the slam President or ,

:.lco. and Krnesto Sludero, his uncle.who arrived In Havana l ist night, kep'

all day but thelot.il papers quote Kranelsco, Sr., asmying that Ambassador Wilson was Inmine way responsible for the death of

son.It .tli tne elder Modems Were very

iviiri n' and even the statements madethe myt could not be verified.Humors current In the hotels

were to the effect that Krnnelsco Sladero. Sr. had declared in privatecoin ersatlon with Intimate friendsthat Ills i"Ou and Vtce-Presl- nt Suarer..utead of meeting deith In the t

voar of the penitentiary, as the I

cSow rnment explanation had It. wer i

.....li,at. .,,,1 tilei- - bodies terr lil

mutilated in the National Palace. Thisverflon of the affair was also ghen h ,

Krnesto Sladero, une'e of the formerPresident and of Finance of.Mexico, according to the current gossip

nai Impojslbl., however, to verifyt'.ifke rumors. The Staderos deniedlliemselk-- io all newspaper men.

As the Sladeros are quoted, thejlag ."etllng for the killings wascurcfutly ariBngcd. The lvo tap- -

tlii ' wer set upon late nt nightth palace and tnurd'red Thflr

bodies were maltreated aud thenr,i.e.i h. mi ., niomoblle. bolt unriahi. As

stlil a, He. .hlle the nuchlll" wajeni dahl!ig aro ind th. corne - of tli

pr son where the fike effort at rcscua.vas made.

After several s'ot.s had been fired, thSladeros siy, the bodies weio thrownout Into the court yard of the prloii.

TY.e guards in front of the prisonvv. re n': informed that an attenip.had been mad., by a pirty of SIaderista-i,i selre Fra.:cisi.'o on, I Snare, and t'.iatl.o pair hud been sho: to death durlnwthe tight. To i.ir.v o it these detailsof this plot and aver: all suspicion th"Government -- t..r:ed .in official invest.- - ,

jutlnn of the affa' the nevt da v.To sjostatulate their I'alin tnat tho

niuider was committed In a room ofin,,, nnlace tile .viaiieros are iiuoteii in .

n. ui rer.t tumors as navlng that i

t t .... t..., -pnwner iintiiin i.-..- - i, nn. i i i.tu- -,,..lu-r.'- ttml i rn in iiin ni'

burned by the llflinr fioin n revolver.I I is understood her.' that the Hueita ,

novernnient will make an effoit to so- - i

enre the ex tt adit loii of the ent.reSlad-r- o r.imliv wno are nere anil sinceti,ls could not be done on a political!charge, criminal allegations again',

...n, i. . t ei. . i.II1III1 Will uf num. I .ir.f .lltllf.--said to be that t'iy attempted to bribethe .apatlstix not to acknowledge theGovernment of PVieitii and Diaz.

Piovi.s'.olial President Hlierta has IV- -

quisled the Cuban authorities to detainM,,,ir ,,ar,.. tIl tntern:itl,.n,.l

adjudication of th'lr cas- - can be had.Th MBU(.rltni, here are Franci'co. Sr.,.be f.itber. Krnesto Sladero. RafaelHernandez, a Minister In the previousCabinet; Frederlco Gonzales Garca.former Governor of the Fedeial district,

unTo-d- a) Consists of

Seven Sections, asFollows :

TitFIRST -- General Newi - . 14

SECOND -S-portim . . . .

THIRD Rf! EiUtf, lininciilSchooH ...... 8

FOURTH Pictorial Miftiini . . 16

FIFTH Foreign, Fiihioni.Rewti,Dooki, Queriei, Gamn 12

SIXTH Children's NUtjaiine 8

SEVENTH Society, Drama. Miuic, U

Ttltl 78

Reaitrt or nticsdeaUrs uhoJo not rtctite all of thtittcctioni ieill confer a fatoren "the Sun" by noilfylm

tht , publication Dipartmcrlot once by tht phone (2209

Bteaman), and Ihe missinn

ircd'ori! will be promptlyforwarded, if possible

jJJJjj Tjy QpgJJ JJJQ fQtJ

NEW YORK SALOONS

Wagner Committee Favors ThisPlan and Tlie.v Will Crge

Such a Law.

THK HILL IS XOW PKNIHNO

Will Not Advise Segregation ofSocial Evil for Fear of

Hostile Criticism.

The Wagner legls'atlve committee,which Is Investigating police condition!In the city, will recommend the passaguof the Walker bill, now pending, whichpermits saloons of the city to open onSundays between the hours of 1 P. SI.

anil 11 P. M.In all likelihood it will not rccom

;inund that the nodal evil of the citybo segregated or that gambling andkindred diversions be licensed or regit. J

lated.There may be amendments to the

Walker bill, so that local option by dls.trlcts shall be permitted, but that Is

not probable, as the opinion Is that toshut down In one Assembly district andopen up In another would simply re- -

Ive the old eraft conditions, whereby,J0 m,.n n the closed district's '

would pay for the p'lvllege of opening.B..Ilnl0I. Wasner chairman ol the

committee, would not talk nlout iheilutermlnations the committee hail at-- irived at ho far, and he declared that allmust await the secret session of the '

committee, next Ktlday. when a decisionwill be announced, 1 In; information ,

came authoritatively, however, fromother members of the committee and

'with It came the additional new thatmany changes may come atsiut withinthe week.

District Attorney Chailos S Whitman is to lie n witness on Wednesdaynnd no man In the city has more in- -

lormatton about pollen grafting thanhe. It has been flowing Into his officefor the last two years and icoentlyUu !inmel th rironortlnns of :m

avalanche. Sir. Whitman has digestedIt ni. personally and Is in a position noonly to tell what the trouble Is but to I

suggest a his time andis clrcuin-- I people police

stances. heGen. Theodore UitiKham. once Police

Commissioner, Is to follow Str Whitman.(Jen. Utngham has opinions on the sub-J-

of the' police founded upon veryexperience. 'It Is not known

wliat measures Mr. Whitman and Gen.ningham will suggest but Gen. Iling- -ham. if understood. Ins said privatelym times jusi mat me otu way io enmlnate graft from the social evil in NewYork is to adopt the system in vogue inalmost every big city In theex.'ept New ork and Hoston.

The Wagner committee not able towork Its courage up to the point ofrecommending an act which wouldcutely arouse the protests .of a consid-erable portion of the I'ommunltv Themembers of the committee have saidprivately that their witnesses, many ofthem well Known men, did not go farenough on stanu to warrant anycommittee in bringing a city's wrath

n in nAh f(I. (hi) t,S( question the com

mittee praotlcallv Is unanimous and itIs made all the mote determined bj theIllMl'lll.Slll'e.I ,11 I n IV 111'.., II,.. .n i.i.n

,i, ,,. i,,.,... i ...,.f ,.r.....' .'...,. . ..

'

.' . - ' . Ii- -

teseiuatives for years. All witnessesagreed that Sunday closing has been af.,mn unri Hn.i ,. 'i..m. ii. i '.,.. .. m ,,i,i.,

,.MIctlon.u n,- - ,,. iu, . ji,.

Wyomingem-'a- n

'""stthat ' t

dlrcctlv to n

admit prompt prosecution and pun- -ishttietit

M.ei l r. tl.i,tral Dealers 'Assnclaiion. went

the I'lty Hull yesterday lit headof delegation to net ideas nf SlnvorGaynor on Walker bill. Thewas at St. .lames and yulnnlint see llltll.

On they will toa with Sulzer. Sir.

a, wantedi Informed

.... . ...i.. . .. . ..

lnp"The Dealers

Association see in cases SIcGriith.......i,i.l ...M,.ol,,r,l" r.....l,II .....l flitlt...t, ,,,,,, i..,,,, n..l

of state affairs l ho'.Mayor referred to ho proclaimed

his famous orderand decency.'

"We n ounpact toagainst law

keepers and cooperated withof fourteen last

with re -

sorts, We have 100 such places on.business.

"We shall public and Gov- -ernor that lire selfish In -

mantling a Sunday opening lawreally a dosing for wo willnot tolerate violations, saloonwill tight In prohibited

BRYAN IN ACCIDENT.

I n CarHlrfl.es n CnrrliiKc.

Coi.cmbu, .March - .1

Hryan In an iiutonioblle Inbut escaped unhurt,

Mr. Hryan, who delivered a lecture Ina theatre was riding

station to acar got Into with a carriage

by a negro and by awoman

The woman Jumped nt moment of, collision nnd escaped Injury. The driver

under cnrrlage andtallied brutiies no seriousMr. rtrynti Ids seat In tho automobile. He refused go to hi hotel

H that driver ofwas burl,

A.

I FELIX DIAZ LATS KILLING. 1

I'l.ll. Tlt. Xni." 'Hint Mndero's ,

Men In In cxtlfinteil.In reply to a cablegram from Tub

Kr.v, nsking him If he had any messageto convey to United States regard-ing the death of I. Sladcro,(Jen. Diaz sent the following despatch,which whs evidently delayed In trans-missio-

having been received only yes-

terday:"Vou have already been Informed by

press of the ofI, Sladcro, which I ntot sincerely

lament. The have begun arigid Investigation of this sad event inorder that the guilty purlieu may bepunished. "Kixtx Diaz,"

HOLLAND'S PRINCESS IS ILL.

Contracts liiHnenui MoinilnlnWhere I'nthrr In HentrratlnR.

Sittcittl I'able ttfialci In Tin: Sun

Tub JIaoxb, Slarch 1. The Prlncnus.lullana, who with her mother. Queen.Wilhelmln.i, has Joined Prince ConsortHenry In the Tnunus .Mountains, whtxelio Is rocupr-ratin- at lwulth resort, Iklit Tlu, r,Mi- n1ii'.alitt.n ui.fu aUn le

'ncring from but that thtriiare no complications.

The Princess Is the only the.Queen.

JOHN W. KELLER AFTER PLACE.

Srnntor OMioniimi ItiieU Hint forrimtr.

Washington, March 1 John W. Kellet- - Xew York, former president

New York Press Club one timeeditor of the llnnrder and exCommissioner of Cha.-Itle-s New Yot lc

city, formally entered sectetary Senate y itnder thepatronage Senator Doorman.

He in Senate corridorsadjoining the Senate Chamber and heldh levee Senator O'Gornian Intro- -

duced SenatorsPresident-elec- t Wllsnn brother

Joseph Wilson of XnshrCle. alsocame in y and Inttxiduced toSenators by Senator I.ea of Tennessee,

CARRIES PRISONER TO STATION.

lntt Metirnlb .Shows irrnlli WhenHpRHar llrfose to Morr,

Policeman Slatthew SI cf! rath Ischampion hammer thrower of the world.When lie isn't hammers he

Goldstein 23 Cherry street beggingalms. Him he arrested. But

go to station house. Hedown and refused to move.. Bo there

was nothing the champion hammerthrower of the do but carryGoldstein to police station, wherehe still linger.

KAISER TOUCHES WAR CHORD.

nn IlrenilnftDghtn firemedtIn This llonr.'

"pfcm ablf Despatch tu Titr. Si v

Hkiilis, Slarch 1 The Kaiser, whowas present at t lie launching admulnoiigh' Wllhelmshnvenmade an address In which he said thatthe of such battleships wasthe emplie's greatest need In tlu-en- ' pre;

serious hour.

WYOMING REPORTED DAMAGED.

ltiHrt CoIIiivts 'I'mimfer of Iteiirtilmlrnl IBnUvrrM

Nnr.roi.K Vn . March 1. Accordlinr toports in navy circles Hear

v.hniial llaiiiror. commnndlnir the At- -I.i nt le fleet now In Cuban waters, v

! i rnnstVrred lus flan from the biittleshinWvmninir to the liattleshtn Connecticut.former tlnKshlii fleet when com -

m.iiiiled be Hour Admiral osterhiuis. ft

Radnor assumed command HootIhe transierreii nis nag ironi uu; ii.n -

nectlcut to Wvomlng. The latter"hip. he said had better nconniMnda

, "" ' "'' 1,1,1 "P in,ll( "ro1'

A report sajs one ftne gnus on i ne Wyoming was.i......u,i ,i,., uhi ...,.,., i n ....

a target.

. . ..Mil. rtrtTWl n n

OIT ('1,11,1 lltj, 'Himiii.vmto.v, N. Y., .March 1.- - An- -

.tiller eh.'lllter veils U'rllleil ln.il.lv In 111.,

hlstorv the light of Harris I). Coll,!a Now York law.ver, and his wife Kllt- -

way out. If In his opinion spends taking drunk dls-the-

one under present orderly to a station,Imm night came across

arduous

Is

country

is

tileall

the

the

M'''

In favor met with IMJo.vice with.

In the herthe N'H f'e about

in Penal Law could thethe that

'nclass, can

Sir.

A-lbanyWiiiiin nan irom ino.jotto, IVlUWArs AliAIK.

who said he tomore about scope of rU Wife

members Liquorthe

'donee thewhen

doctrine

have Intoproceed

twoto do away

putof

do

lawevery

be

AUTO

He Hscnnea hurt When Ills

S. Williamaccident

Columbiatho hotel when

collision

was thebut Injury.

toassured the the

seriouslyft

theKrnnelsco

the Kran-clsc- o

ol

Wrrlnry

the race

appeared

while

throwing

saltor

Areeril "Srrlnns

at

the

nig

Abraham

tlintear-ol- d

two men.her one.

niory put him Intoand at reports

speeding mountain roadsPennsylvania, west naisteaii, withDeputy S. F.Rltui; In pursuit. With

," man his name A.

Flood of New York, lad,The- troubles Sir. and Sirs.

New York In 1910.u prominent lawyer,

'of Provost Colt,sued for a separation on the groundthat wifeof mid liquors, and soughtcustody the boy. The

Fmiy In 9 11 the kidnappingoccurred Sirs. tho boy

land ran away with to LIU'gallon and Sir. Colt recovered

HieDecember, he was kidnapped

In London.

linn when up telelast night had not

the ITIs boy wasHinghamton, but he ay

whore.

LINK'S SPECIALSeaann l lorlda's Finest Train, VIM

S TrMn rally: :lti A. 11.. 3:04, p. XI,Superior ltoadway aud Service, I'ilSO'wty, AJ.

WTUD MVpP PUTI Ul

MUZZLE ON PUJO

MeMorran, in Minority Re-

port, Publicly ExposesLawyer's Tyranny.

TONGUES WERE TIED

Committee's Abject Sur-

render Its FunctionsAmazes Financiers.

PHEJIDICE IX INQUIRY

Heimlilican Kepresentative At-

tacks Hcport as Heing Un

truthful and Destructive.

Thc the, Pujn trust.Investigating committee of Congross byrSamuel Cntcrmycr and the abj;ct man-ner In which committee and Its In-

vestigation had been bound over to thelawyer, as publicly revealed tho firsttime In the reportlteprcscntativu Henry StcSIorran,

of Stlchigan, formed the onechief topic of amazed comment In thefinancial district yesterdny on PuJoreport.

This remarkable surrender by a Con-gressional committee of all its functions,both inquisitorial and legislative, to anoutside lawyer had been no secretthose who appeared beforecommittee. But Incisive,Sir. SlcSIorrau. stating the exact

by which entire committeewns bound over hand nnd foot to Sam

Untermyer, so that no memberthe committee appeared to haveto nsk a a witness,

the financial community.Here ore opening of Sir.

McStorrun In minority report;"I that the method tlin

Investigation han been of unusual char-acter, different from anythingthat I have ever witnessed during my

. experience In Congress. refer to theagreement under which no member otthe committee has been permlttd to In-

terrogate witnesses subjects ma- - y

terlal to the Investigation."Thl.s statement Is first clear .tUlL- -

and authoritative that Con-gress In the PuJo Investigation hadhanded Itself over to a New York law-yer who. not hesitate to carry theinvestigation far afield from its purposeof developing the for ref-ormation the banking system of thecountry to prove the assumption thathe had up for himself and the com-mittee In the beginning, namely that

was a money mm.

Instances nf Domination.Instances were cited In the

llnancial district Illustrating how pto-- ifoundlv Samuel I'ntcrmyer had con-

trolled the committee and biassed theInvestigation a degree.

When SI. presidentthe Continental and Commercial HankChicago, was a witness he was askedhe believed .concentration of

cretin aim money a menace,He answered that he

I'lm his reasons." wasquest of Congressman mem- -

ber of carefullywrote the out on paper andtent uu Samuel Fntermycr and

'lueiilly during the examination Nw" " "J" -- -.

Fntetmyer's coatj to Interrupt hini propose a question.

only tossed In Irritation.The predominant opinion among

bankers and tlnnnclal men Is that thereport committee was anlincorreiateii uouBepouue in Irrational

' iir,iii,is.-ils- . sn extreme and radical and

liieiidatlon of segregation reported that the Chairman The question vvas per-o- f

there may be a suggestion luvldent during target practice . emptorlly swept aside,bodied later a bill that whole big gnus. Hankers said yesterday that one ofquestion be taken out of felouv "ff's'lal confirmation of re- - t'' noticeable things thepart the and law's port be obtained hut conduct of th,. committee was con-b- e

substituted which will mike the of-'w- stated that WyomniT vvas tempt and resentment Sira misdemeanor, in the nuisance route up the coasi and would pr. b- - mver appeared to show when a memberwhich lie handled and ably come Norfolk. Admiral attempted to propose Feeof

l.lqunrto the

a thethe .Mayor

did

Wednesday ofor talk Gov.

wiin nun letter BUHGovernor, lie

fully the P i,ilw-rr- Carrie

of theof

...of which

of 'outward

enteredbreaking snloon

have thecommittee for thejears undesirable

tell the thewe not

whichmeans

andclosed hours

C, 1

wasColumbia

from his

driven occupied

the

thrown bus- -

Kept

untilrtage not

t

Hi

dtath Senor

authorities

In

lnlluenza,

child

nf

of nfthe

offor

of theof

the

H.was

the

ofGoldstein

would not the

world tothe

of

laiinihlng

e

of the

of

the

of

work- -

bets llowne toll, nr,a betheir twelve-- v son. This wns the summary of tho

Sirs. Colt, opinion the leading bankers theiu front of oily ns by

Theatre, high ts easy to be 'propowered lastls over of

orI'nlted States Marshal

marshal Is

who gave as T, II.tutor of the

of Coltbegan In city The

'! husband, memberthe firm of SInllet, &

Ills was addicted to usedrugs the

of husband wonHie Milt.

firstwhen Coll got

lilmfollowed,

ram.In 1912,

agnln

Is I), Colt called byplume said thatheard ot Incident.

,near could not!cxnctl

nusr "FI.OKIDA58th of noon,

oilier Ltd. D;S0

11

of

muzzling of money

forstriking oiinorlty by

the

tobankers the

the word'i ofagter-me- nt

the

uel ofpower

question ot as-

toundedwords

hisrecognize of

entirely

I

upon

thestatement

did

basis soundof

set

theie

yesterday

to despoticGeorge Reynolds,

ofofif that

consiituieudid.

"Al lie re- -

SlcSIorrau.the who

questionit to

or

'" "" sleeveto

to be oft'

of (lie PuJo

ao

the

now Fnter-fenc- e

When question,

car-- .

completely devoid of practicable I, Jl.i.r ,1,-,- , If ... !,..! Itltlk tflll' 111 lltll' full s

ror the possession mutter would aniotlierecl in

j'

accompanied by of ofkidnapped the Ar- - ospivssed

a , "ft 'progressive' ifiiutonioblle

the

the

the

Virginia.

'

he

committee,

'

1 .",. . . "... ... ..M,, .....'

meastirv It would so tie up credit, bank,lnK, business and prosierlty that prog- -ress would be Impossible.

The maze of destructive limitations,, finance enunieratcd by the reportwas ,.Knrded so prepnnierous by eml- -....... . , .'neiii niiiiiiers nun nicy reiuseo io coil- -

L,,t,,. t, sopiiriite proposals on theirihoiIih and ridiculed the whole affair as

jrreHslvo' moans, destruction, It Is thesimplest thing to destroy what exist.These variegated proposals are In vvho'nand In part simply destructive. Theydo not afford a vcRtigo of constructivebetterment or reform. They cannot betaken seriously. Sly opinion l that thefantastic reign of Sir. Fntermycr andtills strange committee, using the veil ofthe reformer to cudgel nnd make luridheadlines, Is nt nn end. Congress willhave no more of It. They recognize thatthe country hns tired of such deceit.

"Such a progrnmtne nn this will beImpossible of accomplishment In thebody of Congress and the rebuke to themethods of this committer In selling thebirthright of the Congress to n rankoutsider which will be administered nthe rejection of those measures oughtto be a memorable ."

I nteriuer's Stuiiin Speech,Another hanker characterized tho

PuJo report as ,"a stump speech otSamuel Untortuycr." The report wudescribed as a rehash of the speechesthe lawyer had made before the flnancuforums of economic clubs, without anattempt even In the wording of tV! t-- (port to base th? views upon theof the investigation. The report put lathe mouth of the cornmlUte was simply

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