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THE WASHINGTON HERALD TUESDAY JEBEITAEY B2 1910 I t f 2 0 Ii w S i I 4 = Alliance of Races Cemented- at Initial Banquet UNITED POE A COMMON CAUSE Carroll Institute Hall Resplendent with Colors of Both Coantriea Prominent Speaker Mutual Washington Revered Union of Celts and Teuton Celts and Teutons mingled fraternally last night when moro than 300 Irishmen and Germans broke bread together at the Initial banquet of the Washington Ger manIrian Alliance The brogue of old Erin and the quaint twang of GermanAmericans who have not yet lost the accent of the Fatherland was a friendly medley rarely heard Songs of Germany and lilts of old Ireland were alternated and for each address by a man of Centic blood there was a corre- sponding toast by a Teutonic descendant For Common Cause At each end of the hall were crossed the red white and black flag of Germany and the green banner of Ireland bearing its symbolic harp or shamrock Each speech was an optimistic tribute to the alliance- of the two standard races Every toast sang the glories of Gorman union for a common cause personal freedom There were two toastmasters Dr Kurt Voelckner introduced the German speak- ers and P T Moran performed the same office when the name of an Irishman ap- peared on the programme We are showing tonight said Mr Moran our reel patriotism We couldnt wait until tomorrow to celebrate the birthday of the father of this nation we love so welL We Irishmen and we Ger mans hold JH our hands the reins of rule of this same nation for we are S3 per cent of its population We the power to do great good for our people This is not an Anglo Saxon country It Is rather a Teutonic Irish country and the perfect American will be the result of the union of those races Way of Public Good There is nothing in the way of public good that we cannot do together and this is the first gathering in the country of the kind A gathering that is only a fore runner of the many and one that will foretell the future friendly love between- us throughout the land He introduced Representative M E Driscoll as the first Celtic speaker The member of Congress from New York as serted that population of Irish and Teuton descent is the brain and brawn of America Hs said they have fought side by side from the days of Washing ton and that their union is a significant commentary on the future trend of typ- ical Americanism- It was a happy thought ho said this union of the Germans and the Hiber nians And It Is appropriate We who love the memory of our fatherlands make the best citizens of this nation and it is we who carved out Its destiny Representative Bartholdt of Missouri declared the Irish and the Dutch run the country anyhow He said the banquet Is historical and that though Teutons and Celts may dlffer 1n blood language poli- tics and religion they are working toward the same right of every man to govern his own home A Mutual Aim We have much common ground he asserted to become good American is our mutual aim and our common ambition The fatherland must ever be a sweet suit tender memory but we who are here tonight representing our races through the length of this beautiful land lIre hart and soul Americans When I get in trouble in Congress I go to my Irish friends to help out A GermanIrish constituency sent me here We of the spirit of freedom one thing together It is that we keep that sacred circle of our personal liberty intact Every man has the right in this country to draw that circle around his own home He is allowed by the Constitution to say what clothes he shall wear what he shall eat and what he shall drink When that circle is infringed upon he has the right to unite to de- mand lila rights for once personal liberty is assailed there is no ending John A Joyce the poet laureate of Washington read an original poem Two of its ver follow TJw Celtic and Teutonic raw Must jota for freedom everywhere And tot the world Ha awriag pies As tnHT nal as Uw air Aid as the ass glide away The JemaiHlrtsh n e shall b- Xte prop o truth fmM day ts ajr To bobtar all Ware awl Mr McXulty Honored A double quartet of the Saengrbund sang and they were called back for re peated encores Thomas F McNulty of Baltimore sang The StarSpangled Ban- ner in a rich voice that brought every dIner to his feet with a cheer On behalf of Ancient Order of Hiber nians Mr McNulty was presented with- a handsome traveling bag as a testimo- nial of their regard Representative OConnell of Boston de- clared the day of the Anglomanlap Is over and that we np longer bow down to British ideals and follow English hab- its of life He said England with all her diplomacy comes to America only to Fijpk her aid when she needs us and not modern warehouse of- fers every safeguard for the storage of valuable furniture pianos luggage and works of art Private Rooms 2 Up Estimates on Request Merchants Transfer and Storage Co ERINS SONS JOIN GERMANS AT FEAST AimGeorge I the have to- gether endthe me de- mand the free tenor the STORAGEAbs- olutely Fireproof- Our 920922 ESt W Phone M 6900 Laud it 1 A have cit- izens L ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ because she loves Americans He salfl the Irish are in New England commerce and predicted the Germans will march hand In hand with the Irish in the commercial development of the West Committees in Charge The German committee follows Kurt Voelcknor Paul Brandstedt Rev George Brodhoge Gustave Bender Charles B Gernes Martin WIegand W Ruck daeschel A W Brlnck Carl Hammell and Rudolph De Zapp The Irish committee P T Moran P J Haltigan J T Sullivan J Frank OMeara H J Mufry P F Droney L Kerney F OSullivan T J Casey Will- iam Collins and M J Shehan MRS GILMORE ILL Wife of Retired Army Officer in n Serious Condition Mrs Gilmore wife of Brig Gen John C Gilmore who is recovering from a serious attack of heart disease is her- self dangerously 111 of pneumonia with but slight chances for recovery Mrs Gilmore has been ill for some time at tho Portland apartment house Gen Gilmore is well known In Wash ington having served on the staff of Lleut Gen Miles He retired from the service in April 1901 with the grade of colonel and was subsequently advanced to the grade of brigadier general ADE WOULD OMIT ALL EDITORIALSCo- ntinued from Page One hood who by his happiness and humor illuminated the world and made men and women bear the burdens ot Ute with bravery and fortitude John Randolph Tucker of Richmond spoke interestingly on Siff of Old Dominion while The Sig In college was handled by Earnest R Eaton of this city Judge Hamilton Douglass of At- lanta Ga gave pleasing reminiscences of the fraternity and its work in George Ado began his address with a thanks to the members of the fraternity who stood by him when some years ago he tried out The College Widow in Washington and saved the day when the future of the play was fearful Mr Adas remarks were in u humorous vain and furnished merriment He said The afterdinner speech bears tho same relation to a dinner that the edi- torial does to the daily paper The con sumer has to take one to get the other Of course there is this difference The reader of the daily paper may take the editorial or leave it alone while the man woo attends the public dinner Is stung unless ho happens to sit near the door A few years ago two great American newspapers suspected that the reading public did not hunger for heavy editorials- so they began cutting down on their edi- torials and the more they cut down on these editorials the mora they jumped on circulation and advertising The world is waiting for the man who who will have the courage to print newspaper without even the suggestion of an editorial page and likewise it is waiting for some Napoleonic pioneer to rise up an organize a dinner at which the first man who arises In his place and starts to clear his throat will have SXOOO volts of electricity shot Into his person and be carried out on a shutter Cnme from Florida I came from Florida to attend this dinner I would come from Australia to attend a dinner which was riot followed by a toast programme If you boys will advertise next year a dinner at which no oratory will ba tolerated you will have to run excursions to accommodate the crowds The afterdinner speech Is a good thing when it emanates from an after dinner speaker but there are only about twelve afterdinner speakers In America Gus Thomas Pat Murphy and Simeon Ford aro three of these Four more are associated with me on the programme this evening and my predecessor in office Charles Ailing IB the other five You have in this city a largo and worthy person who has found it embarrassing to try to follow in the fooUteps of an Arabian acrobat who moved from one to another by over hurdles and turning flipflops Yet his job was easy compared with mineThe man who Is on to himself is Just as useful a citizen as the man who is truly gifted My first impulse when I receive an en- graved invitation to attend a formal gorge Is to sidestep I love nourishing food and I delight in the society of my fellowman but I am always haunted by the fear that if I attend the dinner and draw my celebrated Ingrowing voice on the assemblage and separate myself from- a few Incoherent remarks the brothers will make the same comment that was made by an undergraduate brother out in Kansas City a few weeks ago Scored lib Speech He came all the way from Colorado- to got a look at the new comical con- sul he had read In the papers about Peter and after listening to the brief and rather gloomy observations which I had to offer at that time he turned to another squab member of our noble brotherhood and said I wonder who that guy got to write the plays for him I am from the Stata of Beveridge and Voorhees and I have no valid excuse for not sailing up to the roof of the vaulted dome plucking the stars of heaven with both hands and sprinkling them in golden benediction on thIs chosen brotherhood I know exactly what to do but I cannot do it I am sorry to disappoint you but I am not going to make a speech at all I am simply bringing you the assurance from all the Sigs I know I know that we jtejolco in our membership in this unique organization that we hold the spirit of youth to be the most valuable asset that the older boys may possess and that we are glad we wandered into tho right camp I thank you Representative James F Burke of Pennsylvania was unable to be present because of business that detained him at Plttsburg During the evening the Sigma 5hi Glee Club the George Washington Uni- versity sang topical parodies on popular songs The festivities closed at midnight with the singing of Glorious Sigma Chi and a final toast to the prosperity of the fraternity The committee In charge of the banquet were Morris F Frey chairman Dr John D Thomas S S Hempstone Clar ence A S W Fitzgerald and RIsley G Hunt To Cure a Cold in One Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets Druggists refund money Jf fails E W jp each bos 25c supreme The South- ern colleges a jump- Ing Consuland o Hens place ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < ¬ ¬ < < THE DELICIOUS FLAVOR OF Apollinaris WITH ITS PERSISTENT EFFERVESCENCE And Valuable Digestive Qualities Accounts for its r t r WaterCOMB- INED Ever Popularity Increasing PRATT ARRESTED MILITIA PROBABLE Continued from Page One at a table with John J Murphy presi- dent of the Central Labor Union Peter Drlscoll president of the Amalgamated Union the organization that Is on strike and one or two others Placed in a Cell They took Pratt to the central In the entered him as a boarder frisked him for his valuables and thrust him Into a fairly commodious cell The episode was farce comedy the sin- gle amusing circumstance of a troubled day but its results In the opinion of those who have carefully analyzed a dan gerous and ominous situation are more likely to bo anything but funny Pratts arrest has furnished him with an asset he lacked In the strika last summer and which he tried vainly then to get and which he did not have n the present strike until jfonight the satisfaction of being a martyr Now that he has been put behind the bars the command of the strikers de- volves really upon John J Murphy whose importance lies in the fact that be has power to call out from 75000 to 100000 labor union men and paralyze every important induetoy in the city of Phila- delphia Will Inline tile Call Murphy announced tonight that he is going to Issuo the call He said that his hand had been forced by the action of the police heads in arresting Pratt but that there seemed to be nothing else left There is just this element of hope so far as industrial establishments are con- cerned that Murphys call may not get an enthusiastic response Director Clays totally unexpected ac tion has rendered the whole situation more acute even than it was earlier in the day and things were not exactly sun- shiny than People are afraid that It will have tho effect of unifying disgruntled elements among tho strikers and that it will lead to further disorders tomorrow Washingtons Birthday a holiday that will send thousands of meijjdly upon the streets Murphy DriscoU and others hustled around town trying to get ball or at lease a copy of the charges against their colleague They received promise of more than enough security but they were not able to put their flngers a copy of the charges It plainly Indicated by Clay that Pratt would not be released tonight that he would be held without ball and that nobody was to ba permitted to look at the charges Militia Will Be Next It looks vary much as If the tramp of the Pennsylvania National Guard will be heard in the streets within a day or two Tho happenings of the past twelve hours which included the dynamiting of street cars scores of encounters between the police and gangs of strikers and strike sympathizers the Invasion of the downtown district by the disorderly and the apparent helplessness of the police to stamp out the rioting led this afternoon to a conference between Mayor Reyburn Brig Gen Wendell P Bowman commander of the First Bri- gade District Attorney Rotan and Direc tor of Public Safety Clay Gen Bowman was asked how soon he could assemble his soldiers in their armories and mobilize them for service Under the act of 1SSO the mayor has power to call on the militia to put down riots The mayor and Gen Bowman ad mitted the seriousness of the situation and said that arrangements are being made now to assemble the guardsmen Gen Bowman called his staff together this afternoon and outlined a possible course of action He sent instructions- to the officers of the regiments to hold themselves in readiness for Instant serv ice x Undoubtedly the course of events tomorrow will determine whether the city is to be put practically under martial law and the street cars defended wRit bayonets Spirit of Strikers Shown While the rioting today was less wide- spread than on yesterday and though there were fewer persons shot and beaten the spirit of the strikers remained pre- cisely the same The disorder was general and touched for the first time the business and fine residential sections of the city For the first time also dynamite was used to destroy cars is a feeling of among citizens generally that has cut down school attendance 25 per cent and has cut into the business of merchants enormously Gov Stuart arrived in the city this and put up at the Union League The understanding is that the governor- is ready to act the minute that Mayor ReyburP gives the word The first of the fighting that the busi- ness section has seen took place this afternoon in front of the Reading Terml neal at Twelfth and Market streets A car ran over an explosive that had been placed on the rail and there was an ex- plosion that shattered every pane of glass in the car hurled conductor against d cross seat and shook up a dozen passengers The police say that a small dynamite bomb had been secured to the track and exploded by a percussion cap Motormnn Badly Beaten The passengers having picked lip from the floor where they had been dashed by the shock of the ex- plosion ran for their lives Some of them were hit by the strikers before they could gat tree A riot call was sent to the city hall and two auto mobiles loaded with police arrived The did not get there in time to save the motorman He was so badly beaten that he was taken to the Jefferson Hos- pital unconscious Tho police cornered half a dozen men who seemed to be directing the fight and clubbed and choked them into submis- sion The cars which the Transit company tried to keep moving on a short sched- ule over the lines in the northeast sec I station city hall I o was tile ele- ment Th re appre- hension after- noon th officers them- selves ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ tion of the city were in trouble con- stantly From the first hours of day light until 6 oclock tonight when the company withdrew all cars mobs eddied and swirled In Kensington often wreck ing cars and beating the crows It was seldom that the police ever arrived in time to save operatives from a blow of a fist or a smash on the side of the head with a brick Rioters Not Released The satlon houses were crammed with prisoners before noon all of whom were held on charges of rioting On this point District Attorney Rotan has taken action He notified the commanding officers at all police stations not release mon ar- rested for rioting unless their bail bonds were signed by a magistrate William Maloney a strikebreaker Im ported from New York was running a Frankford and Lehigh car north oh Ken sington avenue today when a brick came from nowhere and fractured his skull There were 1000 mon and women In the mob and they yelled delightedly when they saw the motorman was badly hurt A woman deliberately threw a stone at the unconscious man The conductor ran forward and dragged Maloney back Into the car It enraged the mob Dozens of mon luaped aboard the cart hammered the conductor over the face fad head with their fists knocked him down and kicked him and left him senseless for the police to take care of They wrecked the car and got away before the police came charging up Another strike got Into serious trouble also at Sixth street and Lohlgh avenue He was the conductor of one of the two Glenslde cars that wore brought to a halt by a barricade of iron pipes that a mob had erected across the tracks The motorman saw tho barri- cade when he was a block away brought hte car up with a jerk jumped off and ran like a coyote The conductor stuck Tho mob caught him Here Ill give up he cried and laughed He was still grinning his hands In the air when a brick struck him on the right temple His skull was broken Around His Xeck A mob of 2000 In which there were at 200 women shrieking like harpies pulled William Wills a nonunion man from the motormans platform of a Frankford car Lieut Sykes galloped up with a squad of cavalry and charged the crowd The police had their revolvers out and it looked as If there would be shooting Three of the mob had thrown a rope around neck had noosed it and were preparing to swing him up to a lamp post Tb p4 to48 geared them off and the policemen rescued the shaking motorman- A crowd Mid an American flag over the rails of Kensington avenue tracks When the motorman of a car ran straight over the flag they yanked him off and beat him While a car was passing Ute Baldwin Locomotive Works at Sixteenth and But- tonwood stMots a bolt whizzed from a window of the factory smashed through a window of the car and hurt a girl badly Her name is Ethel Godlshall of 4215 Baltimore avenue In twentyfive or thirty serious fights In all parts of the city there were twenty people hurt seriously today and at forty or fifty more who got away the police and took their wounds home The Rapid Transit Company reported that 170 cars were wrecked and that 1169 window panes had been smashed Ac- cording to its own figures the company ran today a maximum of 730 cars be ginning garly in the morning with 600 cars and gradually increasing the service up to noon The number in service under normal conditions is 1900 Say Few Cars Are Running The deny that the company had so many cars In operation They said that the that ever ran at any one time was SCO and that about 160 was the average All cars were or- dered off the at 6 p m and every line in tho city was dead when darkness fell The only part of the Philadelphia Rapid Traction system that remained in operation was tha subwayelevated line D T Pierce for the company said to- night that 1200 carp would be operated- if there was sufficient police protection but the police officials will not let any car leave its barn without at least two bluecoats on the platform The continues to assert that from 2000 to 2200 men remain loyal but the best In- formation cuts the number of loyal men to 1200 and fixes the number of strikers at 5000 Pratt charges that tho company has brought In at least 2000 strikebreakers The company denies It flatly and says that about that many were carefully schooled in camps of instruction in prep aration for the very trouble that broke out Little save noisy speechmaklng came out of tho labor meeting at Labor Ly ceum Hall this afternoon Pratt made speech In which he accused the T of bringing on the strike delib- erately and declared that the company had spurne J all propositions leading to arbitration and fair agreement Bring Ball at Midnight At midnight John J Murphy and others of Pratts friends appeared at the city hall with ball In the amount of 9500 which had been fixed by Magistrate Gor- man and an order for Pratts release on ban Turnkey Banner refused to honor the order Murphy tried to get to to Superintendent of Police Taylor Assistant Tim QLeary but the orders were that nobody bo admitted to their offices Murphy had to leave city with the magistrates his Magistrate Gorman has advised us that we have grounds for a criminal and civil suit against the city said Mur phy When a general strike is called somd of these puppets at city boll will crawl you bet t The attitude of the Philadelphia Rapid Transit lies In these statements issued by two of the directors Jeremiah J Sullivan It Is an ugly situation to be In but we Intend to meet It and to a finish William H Shelmerdlno The company will positively refuse to compromise Largest Morning Circulation oo c least I lest mot company a- long Clay r the hal just breaker Will strikers streets p fight ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ House Passes Conference Re- port on Urgent Act CONTAINS ITEMS FOR DISTRICT Debate on New Custom Court of Ap peals End In Giving Judges 7OOO Year Salary Immigration Commis- sion Get 9125000 and Will Until December 1 The urgent deficiency bill the District appropriation measure will be the first of the big bills to go to the President The District appropriation- bill was taken up by tho conferees yester- day as planned but very few pages of it were discussed and of importance was done The urgent deficiency bill being before the House for an agreement on the con- ference report was approved after de on two Items These were the sala to be paid to the judges of the new Customs Court of Appeals which wore settled on at 7000 as in the bill and the item of the Senate amendment to the bill providing 156000 for the Immigration Commission which was agreed to Two Icemaking Plants Tho bill as passed contains appropria- tions for Icemaking plants at the Treas- ury and Interior departments the amounts being 5 00 for the Treasury and 62CO for1 the Interior Department Many oUter of interest to Washington- and noarlji are included in this measure latter being an of 5000 for rental and mov ing expenses of the postoffice and court- house at Lynchburg Ya Among the other items are To reim burse the District government for of printing the building regulations which carries with it ptrntte elon to the Commissioners to Issue at 16 per cent above cost price copies of the building and other regulations of the Dis- trict the Industrial Homo for Colored Children for maintenance is granted MO For the proposed monument to Gen Count Pulaski SCM For the proposed monument to Gets Thaddeua Koscluszko For clerk hire and oxpoase at to defend Indian degradation Generals Offlc not ex 1480 Customs Court Personnel United Court of Customs appropriation pro- vides for one presiding and four aseo elate judges at J7COO each marshal J3fiOO clerk assistant clerk J4600 flvo stenographic clerks 1909 each stenographic reporter SIG messenger S4 rent of quarters in Washington and elsewhere traveling expenses of the its officiate and employee pay of c J1SOW oa Assistant Attor- ney General under the Department of Justice TSOOO one deputy assistant at- torney general 7 OQ four attorneys JSCOQ each employes pay traveling ex- penses c 33000 For folding speeches to opntinue avail able during the fiscal year 1 Tho vote to give the Immigration Com- mission J12SOOO was a strictly party one of 145 to 127 It wa decided to extend the life of the commission until her 1 The House wanted to commission only 5000 but the Senate in conference Insisted on the other amount and finally the House capitulated al- though Representative Robert Bruce Macon of Arkansas recently charged the commission and particularly tive Bonnet of New York members with squandering government money in junketing about Europe VEST VIRGINIA WINS Supreme Court Decides Against Maryland in Boundary Case The longstanding controversy between West Virginia and Maryland over the location of the boundaiy line between the two States was settled by the Su preme Court yesterday by finding that Preston County W Va should re main a part of that State and not be transferred to Maryland as the latter Commonwealth contended The controversy turned on which was the west fork of the Potomac River as set forth in the original grant by Lord Baltimore The however brushed aside this took the ground that as the people of Preston County had been so long Identified first with Virginia and afterward West Vir- ginia and had their taxes there for IK years of prescriptive right had accrued by which the of the disputed strip should not be The court the appointment of a commission to run a new boundary line between the States taking as the starting point the Fairfax stone which with the exception of a small tract that will go to Maryland will fix the boun- dary as at The cost of the suit which pending since is to be divided between the two States TILLMAN GAINS STRENGTH Physicians nt Midnight Say Senators Condition In Improved Hope Is entertained for the of Senator Tlllman who has b between life find death as the result of a stroke of paralysis since last Wodnos day Reports from the Senators physicians- at midnight Indicate that he is rapidly improving Dr Pickford Issued tho fol- lowing bulletin Senator Tillman continues to make progress and his condition is improving He rested well In the afternoon and at night His mind and memory are the same and his condition Is ingThe Senator was sleeping when Dr Pickford loft him last night After a consultation yesterday afternoon Dr Bab- cock left Washington for Columbia S C The Senator was able to move his right arm and leg yesterday although the re turn of his power of speech is looked upon to be the most hopeful feature No formal test was made last night of his he spoke a few words to a family Indicating that his memory is in an excellent state The doctors are of an opinion that Sen- ator Tillmans trouble is due to pressure on the nerve centers of the brain The cells are not destroyed the doctors basing their hopes for the recovery of his full power of speech on this belief At the Homeopathic Hospital it was said last night that Senator Smith o Michigan who was operated on for ap- pendicitis on Friday la doing well AGREE ON DEFICIENCY I Can- t nne andnot m ney nothIng lao Item point a the cst chum ee State curt Dee Repent the court with pak inhab- itant order present rover abut spec but ap- propriation I- To SUN Wash- ington Ap- peals MO ISO I ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > l For accommodation of bur friends and patrons this store will J IIeadtoF oat Ninth and the Avenue T e the remain open until 1 oclocktoday- r Outfitters 1 ruii1ij Christian Xanders H OF VIRGINIA n PORT A famous American g wine of lovely in blood 75c full qt Only at THE FAMILY QUALITY 909 7th St No branch bouses Dividend Day First Monday in Each Month MEMBERSHIP FEE 25c Economy CoOperative Society inc 429 9th Street N W WEATEEB CONDITIONS U S of ARiKwlture Weather Bweau Mwd y Feb 21 1913 p HL The uppar ctesmtion at Mount Mon- day showed shore surface wind msttttr wtate and Wsfa temperature extoadfee j- pUr to tMPQ feet At which tltittMte the tempera tu wo a degrees This tradition tes a coa- OMMtton of uaMtUcd weather in the Easnt States Uuwtsb a period of fartrdght hours cr longer UnMttted waelxs prewib owr the pmter duties the Jut twasty ir oocuW in prwfc Hy all dwtrfrts of- UK Mfahtaipp Ricer except tbo LOS region where awre MOB Local MOWS are also reported Item Middle Uteetetn VaUey UH Northern Plates Sfeta sod tte llecky Mountain region A tam U aortas KrtheBtnrdiy from the Bocky Mountain TeStes and will moss unsettled weather of the districts eatt af the Ilcdtf Mountains dnriw TMddar sad WcdtMtfer with snows in the Upper JUwUipfri V llf the Plates States and the Middle Heckjr Maintain and UK region md the Ohio Valley night or Weteetdajr and raise ia the Eastern States WedjHvdar and it will be follow br fair weather mat of UiMfedppi Hirer Wednesday The tevaveiatare will fall somewhat over the Mid- dle Atlantic and North Atlantic States the Ohio Talky sod Ihc Lower Lake region Tw4ajr lot BO- unoRtaUjr low tcmperatores indicated for the Eaatena States daring UM next Sunmmf deyartfog Tuesday ports wits haws moderate vartebte winds Uy northerly sat vnttUkd weather to the Grind Banks Local Temperature Midnight a m 33 4 a HL 3t 6a rn 31 S a 10 a 36 12 noon 3 2 p a 41 4 jk 6 p a tt 8 R as 43 M p m 4L- Maxfanua 4 wtofcww JX- TfelaUwj bi ty3 a 08 2 p B S28pi W- L JUtefcU B U 8 p nU OIL Mourn at- MiMfclnn 16 Per e t of pcsaiWe swsWi- TaHajptjaUrc same date test year Maximum SS Temperatures In Other Cities Tefstafs in Mfcr eWes tocethtr with the i oaBt C aMisS for the twelve ended at p Tvstordar an as fattens Rain Mar Mte SPW falL Abflaae Tx M S 82- Ariwville N a 56 36 44 B2S Atlanta Oa 43 91 48 076 Atlantic Citr X J t 48 S3 42 916- Ithwaich N flak Kv BM Brutes Maw 16 4U r 50 40S Buffalo X 1 3 S 601- XasMQt TWB fp r Charieatm S a 53 S T ChSeaso L 1 SS 35 T CineuMti OM 43 Chaenne Wjo S- SOereland Ohte 33 56 S OK Davenport Iowa 31 2 T Dearer Cole M 33 Pea iloteet taro 5Q t W T Mink 2t 21 T Duluth MiaM 6 V- BaMport Me 44 36 40 L6- GalTstOB Tw S 43 69 Hatteras X 0 M K 001 H t ea M t v 12 It 16 006 Huron S Dak 6 14 4 61I- ndtonapalte Ind 36 M S- OJadnocrilk Fla jS 43 7 Jupiter Fla 3 K B- Kanaas City Mo 224 22 T Key West Fta SO 70 7- 4UUle Rook Ark 46 35 4J 002 IXB Asgetoe Cal 56 48 W- MarvieUe hick It S S T Meapfei 41 33 33 T X r Orleans La 73 52 T New York X Y 45 012 Norfolk Va 55 tt S 0 North Pktt Xebr K 4 25 Omaha Xte IS 3 16 PatestiM Tex 56 16 PhOadeJpMa Pa 6 42 014 Pittabars Pa 4Q 40 002 Portland Me 50 42 Portland Ore 12 36 42 8 at city Utah 4E 25 St Loote M 23 fg 26 001 St Mian 40 3 Sea Frawsisao CU 91 4 50 SpdngflaW I1L ffi M 26 Taooaw Wesh M 3 0 Tawpa FIe 7S 53 6S- TOfedo Ohio 26 4 S3- VJdtsbws Miss 66 M 54 Title Table Todjr Hlgh tide 7iS a m and 713 p m low 113 a m 1 2 iv m TtHnor wIJis 730 a m and SS5 p m tow tide f i a n and 210 p m Condition of the Water Special to The AYashbwtoo Herald Harpers Ferry W Va Fob 21 Path liters are roT muddy IT6H GONE INSTANTLY PROOF AT 25 CENTS What eczema sufferer would not cents to cure that terrible agonizing ItchSince our repeated recommendations failed to Induce some Eczema sufferers right in this town to try D D D Pre- scription at 100 a bottle we arranged with the D D D Laboratories of Chi cago to offer a special trial for the pros ent at 25 cents for this special bot- tle This nominal is made to assure a trial by every skin sufferer The remedy convince you Instantly for it taUas itch away the very mo- ment you start to wash the skin and it we KNOW Evans 1006 F street N W Peoples Store Seventh street and Massachusetts avenue N W FUNERAL DIRECTORS J WILLIAM LEE Funeral Director and Kiabolmer Livery in connection Commodious and Modem Crematorium Modest prices SK Pennsylrania are nw Telephone Main 13- SGEOEGEP ZUEHOEST- SOI East Capitol Street FUNERAL DESIGNS FUNERAL FLOWERS or Brery DoacripUoa Moderately Priced GUDE Funeral Designs Funeral Designs GEO C SHAPER Beutiful Semi designs very reasonable in priM Thom 2116 Min JitU EJD ate nw f I PRIDE i a soluble Iron t n I HOUSE i uuumm- WH Wet pr- o I Tar fog a I I heron I II it t rIB Ii 4 Detroit M 10 it Tense 2 4 41 4 10 040 T Lake 4 T T T r tide and tide spend- S m curesas Chapel u u u enriching Debt air the of and east were lbs Northern region Lake the sea u 2 p m 35 m at 5 33 30 3 64 Paul 4 I ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > == = = = SPECIAL NOTICESOF- FICE COMMISSIONERS OF THE DISTUIOT of Columbia Washington Fetaary 21 1910 No- tice is hereby given that in conformity to law the pamphlet containing a list of taxes in arrears on real property in the District of Columbia oo 1st day of July 13Q9 also all asaasedeots subject to sale has been printed A cowr thereof will be delivered to any taxpayer applying tkerefor at the office of the Collector of of the District of Columbia If the tax or assessments together srtth the penalties and mats that nay hare accrued thereon ball not be prior to the day named for sale namely the UTTH DAY OV MAJIOH M the property involved will be soW under mi direc- tion at pubHc auction at the office of the Collector of Taxes of the District of Oohmbta oewuaenciBg- on tho 15th day of Mareh 1 9 between the hears of 10 oclock in the forenoon end 4 odoe in the afternoon and ooatiBuing each following day Sundays and lepl holiday accepted until all such cieHuquent iireperty is soOth CUNO H RUDOLPH JOHX A JOHNSTON WILLIAM V JUDSON CommtedoMTS of the Platelet of Columbia feQftdC- ARPBXTEItS OPT2f MEBTING All rariwaters ia UM District of Columbia irre- spective of whether the eontneton or Joonw men union or nonunion art eqpeefey torited to at- tend pen HHfutteg and sMber which will be given at the National Rife Amory Hall G ct between 9th and Wta aw on WEDNESDAY NIGHT Febraarr 25 and let u bus a hearttoheart talk No charge everything free Speaking to commence at 8 oclock fr263t 1 NEVER DISAPPOINT My Patented Type writer Letters are the greatest businesspulling adrertitemeot you can employ BYRON S ADAMS PIUNTER- Pb ne 930 512 llth street AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE- Get Our Rates Commercial Dank Building 700716 14th STREET N W Phone Main 2048 ENGRAVING FOR SOCIAL FUNCTIONS- W ROBERTS CO Inc PRINTERS ENGRAVERS STiTIOVEaS 1413 New York Avenue Washington D X Where Briefs and Motions Printed Best The Big Print Shop otters printteg service that is supreme in merit Legal printing is festered promptly correctly Judd Detweiler Inc THE BIG PEIXT SHOP 43 2 lira ST DIED AUTHOn Sunday February 20 1910 at 215 m SANTUS beloved husband- of Regina Auth aged sixtyfive years Funeral from his late residence Bla densburg road D C on Wednesday February 23 at 9 oclock a m Re- quiem mass at St Marys Church at 10 Relatives and friends Invited Interment at St Marys Cemetery COLLINS On Monday February 21 lilA at 115 a m beloved wife or William P Collins aged sixtyeight years Funeral from late residence 630 H street southwest Wednesday at S30 oclock Mass at St Dominics Church at 9 a m Relative and friends to attend this life on Sunday 181ft AUGUSTUS FIELDS the beloved father of Au- gustus Fields Jr Fields Mrs Ida C Dorsay Beatrice Fields and Morton Fields Funeral will take from Vermont Avenue Baptist Church Wednesday February 23 at 1 p m All friends in- vited FITZGERALD Members of Division No 2 Ancient Ordep of Hibernians are notified of tile death of our lamented brother JOHN FITZ GERALD Funeral will bo held Tuesday morning February 22 1910 at S30 oclock from residence S3 M street northeast thence to St Aloyslus Catholic Church requiem mass will be said at 9 oclock Members should attend P J CON LON President CHARLES J CO LUMBUS Recording Secretary FOSTER On Saturday December IS 190 in Manila P I Maj ARTHUR B FOSTER U S A Funeral from 2036 H street northwest at 2 oclock Wednesday February 23 In- terment at Arlington Sunday February 2 1JW ANNIE E widow of James H Fow ler aged sixtyeight years Funeral from her late residence 1308 Wisconsin avenue northwest on Wednesday February 23 at 2 oclock p ra and friends respect fully invited to attend Rockville Md papers please copy GOLIBART On Sunday afternoon Feb- ruary 20 1910 at 339 oclock daughter of Mr and Mis S R Goli bart of 1933 Calvert street northwest in her fifteenth year Funeral notice later PAGE CATHERINE LHOMMEDIEU daughter of William and Mary Anna Pago at Friendship Heights Md Monday February 1WO six years and Notice of funeral hereafter BalUmoro and Frederick Md please copy WASHINGTONDeparted thie life on Monday morning 21 1910 at 130 E WASHING mother of M Louis Washington and Kate M Jickson and sister of Maria Funeral Wednesday February 23 at 2 V daughter 1127 Twentyfirst street Friends invited WILLIAMS Departed this lifo on February 191 at 1230 a m- at his residence 1806 Vermont avenue SAMUEL WILLIAMS beloved husband of the lato Emily Fisher Funeral at Fifteenth Street Baptist Church Wednesday February 23 at oclock p m Relatives and friends invited to attend Baltimore and Alexandria papers please copy Monday February 31 1910 at 240 p m at her 1735 New Hampshire avenue MARGARET WILSON only daughter of Petor Francis and Margaret Reed Wil- son and beloved mother of and Marie G Young Requiem masp at St Pauls Church and V streets Wednesday- at 10 a m Interment Taxes and due paid aft I RALPH W LEE I Wedding Invitations Are e J FIELDsDeparted t hereb J where FOWLERon BLANCHE the dearly J aged papers clock from the residence or her Williams YOUNGOn t the ask are 1911 ewe p invited MAY Mon- day ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬

Ii T Apollinarischroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045433/1910-02... · THE WASHINGTON HERALD TUESDAY JEBEITAEY B2 1910 I t f 2 0 Ii w S i I 4 Alliance of Races Cemented- at Initial

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Page 1: Ii T Apollinarischroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045433/1910-02... · THE WASHINGTON HERALD TUESDAY JEBEITAEY B2 1910 I t f 2 0 Ii w S i I 4 Alliance of Races Cemented- at Initial

THE WASHINGTON HERALD TUESDAY JEBEITAEY B2 1910

It f

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i I 4

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Alliance of Races Cemented-

at Initial Banquet

UNITED POE A COMMON CAUSE

Carroll Institute Hall Resplendentwith Colors of Both CoantrieaProminent Speaker Mutual

Washington ReveredUnion of Celts and Teuton

Celts and Teutons mingled fraternallylast night when moro than 300 Irishmenand Germans broke bread together at theInitial banquet of the Washington GermanIrian Alliance

The brogue of old Erin and the quainttwang of GermanAmericans who havenot yet lost the accent of the Fatherlandwas a friendly medley rarely heard Songsof Germany and lilts of old Ireland werealternated and for each address by aman of Centic blood there was a corre-sponding toast by a Teutonic descendant

For Common CauseAt each end of the hall were crossed the

red white and black flag of Germany andthe green banner of Ireland bearing itssymbolic harp or shamrock Each speechwas an optimistic tribute to the alliance-of the two standard races Every toastsang the glories of Gorman union for acommon cause personal freedom

There were two toastmasters Dr KurtVoelckner introduced the German speak-ers and P T Moran performed the sameoffice when the name of an Irishman ap-peared on the programme

We are showing tonight said MrMoran our reel patriotism We couldntwait until tomorrow to celebrate thebirthday of the father of this nation welove so welL We Irishmen and we Germans hold JH our hands the reins of ruleof this same nation for we are S3 percent of its population

We the power to do great goodfor our people This is not an AngloSaxon country It Is rather a TeutonicIrish country and the perfect Americanwill be the result of the union of thoseraces

Way of Public GoodThere is nothing in the way of public

good that we cannot do together and thisis the first gathering in the country of thekind A gathering that is only a forerunner of the many and one that willforetell the future friendly love between-us throughout the land

He introduced Representative M EDriscoll as the first Celtic speaker Themember of Congress from New York asserted that population of Irish andTeuton descent is the brain and brawnof America Hs said they have foughtside by side from the days of Washington and that their union is a significantcommentary on the future trend of typ-ical Americanism-

It was a happy thought ho said thisunion of the Germans and the Hibernians And It Is appropriate We wholove the memory of our fatherlands makethe best citizens of this nation and it iswe who carved out Its destiny

Representative Bartholdt of Missourideclared the Irish and the Dutch runthe country anyhow He said the banquetIs historical and that though Teutons andCelts may dlffer 1n blood language poli-

tics and religion they are workingtoward the same right of

every man to govern his own homeA Mutual Aim

We have much common ground heasserted to become good American

is our mutual aim and our commonambition The fatherland must ever bea sweet suit tender memory but we whoare here tonight representing our racesthrough the length of this beautiful landlIre hart and soul Americans

When I get in trouble in Congress Igo to my Irish friends to help outA GermanIrish constituency sent mehere We of the spirit of freedom

one thing together It is that wekeep that sacred circle of our personalliberty intact Every man has the rightin this country to draw that circle aroundhis own home He is allowed by theConstitution to say what clothes he shallwear what he shall eat and what heshall drink When that circle is infringedupon he has the right to unite to de-

mand lila rights for once personal libertyis assailed there is no ending

John A Joyce the poet laureate ofWashington read an original poem Twoof its ver follow

TJw Celtic and Teutonic rawMust jota for freedom everywhere

And tot the world Ha awriag piesAs tnHT nal as Uw air

Aid as the ass glide awayThe JemaiHlrtsh n e shall b-

Xte prop o truth fmM day ts ajrTo bobtar all Ware awl

Mr McXulty HonoredA double quartet of the Saengrbund

sang and they were called back for repeated encores Thomas F McNulty ofBaltimore sang The StarSpangled Ban-ner in a rich voice that broughtevery dIner to his feet with a cheer Onbehalf of Ancient Order of Hibernians Mr McNulty was presented with-a handsome traveling bag as a testimo-nial of their regard

Representative OConnell of Boston de-clared the day of the Anglomanlap Isover and that we np longer bow downto British ideals and follow English hab-its of life He said England with all herdiplomacy comes to America only toFijpk her aid when she needs us and not

modern warehouse of-

fers every safeguard for thestorage of valuable furniturepianos luggage and works ofart

Private Rooms 2 Up

Estimates on Request

Merchants Transferand Storage Co

ERINS SONS JOIN

GERMANS AT FEAST

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because she loves Americans He salflthe Irish are in New Englandcommerce and predicted the Germanswill march hand In hand with the Irishin the commercial development of theWest

Committees in ChargeThe German committee follows Kurt

Voelcknor Paul Brandstedt Rev GeorgeBrodhoge Gustave Bender Charles BGernes Martin WIegand W Ruckdaeschel A W Brlnck Carl Hammelland Rudolph De Zapp

The Irish committee P T Moran PJ Haltigan J T Sullivan J FrankOMeara H J Mufry P F Droney LKerney F OSullivan T J Casey Will-iam Collins and M J Shehan

MRS GILMORE ILL

Wife of Retired Army Officer in nSerious Condition

Mrs Gilmore wife of Brig Gen JohnC Gilmore who is recovering from aserious attack of heart disease is her-self dangerously 111 of pneumonia withbut slight chances for recovery

Mrs Gilmore has been ill for some timeat tho Portland apartment house

Gen Gilmore is well known In Washington having served on the staff ofLleut Gen Miles He retired from theservice in April 1901 with the grade ofcolonel and was subsequently advancedto the grade of brigadier general

ADE WOULD OMIT

ALL EDITORIALSCo-

ntinued from Page One

hood who by his happiness and humorilluminated the world and made men andwomen bear the burdens ot Ute withbravery and fortitude

John Randolph Tucker of Richmondspoke interestingly on Siff of OldDominion while The Sig In collegewas handled by Earnest R Eaton of thiscity Judge Hamilton Douglass of At-

lanta Ga gave pleasing reminiscencesof the fraternity and its work in

George Ado began his address with athanks to the members of the fraternitywho stood by him when some years agohe tried out The College Widow inWashington and saved the day when thefuture of the play was fearful Mr Adasremarks were in u humorous vain andfurnished merriment

He saidThe afterdinner speech bears tho

same relation to a dinner that the edi-

torial does to the daily paper The consumer has to take one to get the otherOf course there is this difference Thereader of the daily paper may take theeditorial or leave it alone while the manwoo attends the public dinner Is stungunless ho happens to sit near the door

A few years ago two great Americannewspapers suspected that the readingpublic did not hunger for heavy editorials-so they began cutting down on their edi-

torials and the more they cut down onthese editorials the mora they jumped oncirculation and advertising

The world is waiting for the man whowho will have the courage to printnewspaper without even the suggestionof an editorial page and likewise it iswaiting for some Napoleonic pioneer torise up an organize a dinner at whichthe first man who arises In his place andstarts to clear his throat will have SXOOO

volts of electricity shot Into his personand be carried out on a shutter

Cnme from FloridaI came from Florida to attend this

dinner I would come from Australia toattend a dinner which was riot followedby a toast programme If you boys willadvertise next year a dinner at which nooratory will ba tolerated you will haveto run excursions to accommodate thecrowds

The afterdinner speech Is a goodthing when it emanates from an afterdinner speaker but there are only abouttwelve afterdinner speakers In AmericaGus Thomas Pat Murphy and SimeonFord aro three of these

Four more are associated with me onthe programme this evening and mypredecessor in office Charles Ailing IB

the other five You have in this city alargo and worthy person who has foundit embarrassing to try to follow in thefooUteps of an Arabian acrobat whomoved from one to another by

over hurdles and turning flipflopsYet his job was easy compared withmineThe

man who Is on to himself is Justas useful a citizen as the man who istruly gifted

My first impulse when I receive an en-graved invitation to attend a formalgorge Is to sidestep I love nourishingfood and I delight in the society of myfellowman but I am always haunted bythe fear that if I attend the dinner anddraw my celebrated Ingrowing voice onthe assemblage and separate myself from-a few Incoherent remarks the brotherswill make the same comment that wasmade by an undergraduate brother outin Kansas City a few weeks ago

Scored lib SpeechHe came all the way from Colorado-

to got a look at the new comical con-sul he had read In the papers aboutPeter and after listening tothe brief and rather gloomy observationswhich I had to offer at that time heturned to another squab member of ournoble brotherhood and said

I wonder who that guy got to writethe plays for him

I am from the Stata of Beveridge andVoorhees and I have no valid excusefor not sailing up to the roof of thevaulted dome plucking the stars ofheaven with both hands and sprinklingthem in golden benediction on thIs chosenbrotherhood I know exactly what to dobut I cannot do it

I am sorry to disappoint you but Iam not going to make a speech at all Iam simply bringing you the assurancefrom all the Sigs I know I know that wejtejolco in our membership in this uniqueorganization that we hold the spirit ofyouth to be the most valuable asset thatthe older boys may possess and that weare glad we wandered into tho rightcamp I thank you

Representative James F Burke ofPennsylvania was unable to be presentbecause of business that detained himat Plttsburg

During the evening the Sigma 5hi GleeClub the George Washington Uni-versity sang topical parodies on popularsongs The festivities closed at midnightwith the singing of Glorious Sigma Chiand a final toast to the prosperity of thefraternity

The committee In charge of the banquetwere Morris F Frey chairman DrJohn D Thomas S S Hempstone Clarence A S W Fitzgerald andRIsley G Hunt

To Cure a Cold in OneTake Laxative Bromo Quinine TabletsDruggists refund money Jf fails E W

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THE DELICIOUS FLAVOR OF

ApollinarisWITH ITS PERSISTENT EFFERVESCENCE

And Valuable Digestive Qualities

Accounts for its

r trWaterCOMB-

INED

Ever PopularityIncreasing

PRATT ARRESTED

MILITIA PROBABLE

Continued from Page One

at a table with John J Murphy presi-

dent of the Central Labor Union PeterDrlscoll president of the AmalgamatedUnion the organization that Is on strikeand one or two others

Placed in a CellThey took Pratt to the central

In the entered him as a boarderfrisked him for his valuables and thrusthim Into a fairly commodious cell

The episode was farce comedy the sin-

gle amusing circumstance of a troubledday but its results In the opinion ofthose who have carefully analyzed a dangerous and ominous situation are morelikely to bo anything but funny Prattsarrest has furnished him with an assethe lacked In the strika last summer andwhich he tried vainly then to get andwhich he did not have n the presentstrike until jfonight the satisfaction ofbeing a martyr

Now that he has been put behind thebars the command of the strikers de-

volves really upon John J Murphywhose importance lies in the fact thatbe has power to call out from 75000 to100000 labor union men and paralyze everyimportant induetoy in the city of Phila-delphia

Will Inline tile CallMurphy announced tonight that he is

going to Issuo the call He said that hishand had been forced by the action of thepolice heads in arresting Pratt but thatthere seemed to be nothing else leftThere is just this element of hope so faras industrial establishments are con-

cerned that Murphys call may not getan enthusiastic response

Director Clays totally unexpected action has rendered the whole situationmore acute even than it was earlier inthe day and things were not exactly sun-shiny than People are afraid that It willhave tho effect of unifying disgruntledelements among tho strikers and that itwill lead to further disorders tomorrow

Washingtons Birthday a holiday thatwill send thousands of meijjdly upon thestreets

Murphy DriscoU and others hustledaround town trying to get ball or atlease a copy of the charges against theircolleague

They received promise of more thanenough security but they were not ableto put their flngers a copy of thecharges It plainly Indicated by Claythat Pratt would not be released tonightthat he would be held without ball andthat nobody was to ba permitted to lookat the charges

Militia Will Be NextIt looks vary much as If the tramp of

the Pennsylvania National Guard will beheard in the streets within a day or twoTho happenings of the past twelve hourswhich included the dynamiting of streetcars scores of encounters between thepolice and gangs of strikers andstrike sympathizers the Invasion of thedowntown district by the disorderly

and the apparent helplessness ofthe police to stamp out the rioting ledthis afternoon to a conference betweenMayor Reyburn Brig Gen Wendell PBowman commander of the First Bri-gade District Attorney Rotan and Director of Public Safety Clay

Gen Bowman was asked how soon hecould assemble his soldiers in theirarmories and mobilize them for serviceUnder the act of 1SSO the mayor haspower to call on the militia to put downriots The mayor and Gen Bowman admitted the seriousness of the situationand said that arrangements are beingmade now to assemble the guardsmen

Gen Bowman called his staff togetherthis afternoon and outlined a possiblecourse of action He sent instructions-to the officers of the regiments to holdthemselves in readiness for Instant service x Undoubtedly the course of eventstomorrow will determine whether thecity is to be put practically under martiallaw and the street cars defended wRitbayonets

Spirit of Strikers ShownWhile the rioting today was less wide-

spread than on yesterday and thoughthere were fewer persons shot and beatenthe spirit of the strikers remained pre-cisely the same

The disorder was general and touchedfor the first time the business and fineresidential sections of the city For thefirst time also dynamite was used todestroy cars is a feeling of

among citizens generally thathas cut down school attendance 25 percent and has cut into the business ofmerchants enormously

Gov Stuart arrived in the city thisand put up at the Union League

The understanding is that the governor-is ready to act the minute that MayorReyburP gives the word

The first of the fighting that the busi-ness section has seen took place thisafternoon in front of the Reading Termlneal at Twelfth and Market streets Acar ran over an explosive that had beenplaced on the rail and there was an ex-plosion that shattered every pane ofglass in the car hurled conductoragainst d cross seat and shook up adozen passengers The police say that asmall dynamite bomb had been securedto the track and exploded by a percussioncap

Motormnn Badly BeatenThe passengers having picked

lip from the floor where theyhad been dashed by the shock of the ex-

plosion ran for their lives Some ofthem were hit by the strikers beforethey could gat tree A riot call wassent to the city hall and two automobiles loaded with police arrived The

did not get there in time to savethe motorman He was so badly beatenthat he was taken to the Jefferson Hos-pital unconscious

Tho police cornered half a dozen menwho seemed to be directing the fight andclubbed and choked them into submis-sion

The cars which the Transit companytried to keep moving on a short sched-ule over the lines in the northeast sec

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tion of the city were in trouble con-

stantly From the first hours of daylight until 6 oclock tonight when thecompany withdrew all cars mobs eddiedand swirled In Kensington often wrecking cars and beating the crows It wasseldom that the police ever arrived intime to save operatives from a blow ofa fist or a smash on the side of thehead with a brick

Rioters Not ReleasedThe satlon houses were crammed with

prisoners before noon all of whom wereheld on charges of rioting On this pointDistrict Attorney Rotan has taken actionHe notified the commanding officers atall police stations not release mon ar-

rested for rioting unless their bail bondswere signed by a magistrate

William Maloney a strikebreaker Imported from New York was running aFrankford and Lehigh car north oh Kensington avenue today when a brick camefrom nowhere and fractured his skullThere were 1000 mon and women In themob and they yelled delightedly whenthey saw the motorman was badly hurtA woman deliberately threw a stone atthe unconscious man The conductor ranforward and dragged Maloney back Intothe car It enraged the mob Dozens ofmon luaped aboard the cart hammered theconductor over the face fad head withtheir fists knocked him down and kickedhim and left him senseless for the policeto take care of

They wrecked the car and got awaybefore the police came charging up

Another strike got Into serioustrouble also at Sixth street and Lohlghavenue He was the conductor of oneof the two Glenslde cars that worebrought to a halt by a barricade of ironpipes that a mob had erected across thetracks The motorman saw tho barri-cade when he was a block away broughthte car up with a jerk jumped off andran like a coyote The conductor stuckTho mob caught him

Here Ill give up he cried andlaughed He was still grinning his handsIn the air when a brick struck him onthe right temple His skull was broken

Around His XeckA mob of 2000 In which there were at

200 women shrieking like harpiespulled William Wills a nonunion manfrom the motormans platform of aFrankford car Lieut Sykes galloped upwith a squad of cavalry and charged thecrowd The police had their revolversout and it looked as If there would beshooting Three of the mob had throwna rope around neck had noosed itand were preparing to swing him up toa lamp post Tb p4 to48 geared them offand the policemen rescued the shakingmotorman-

A crowd Mid an American flag over therails of Kensington avenue tracks Whenthe motorman of a car ran straight overthe flag they yanked him off and beathim

While a car was passing Ute BaldwinLocomotive Works at Sixteenth and But-tonwood stMots a bolt whizzed from awindow of the factory smashed througha window of the car and hurt a girlbadly Her name is Ethel Godlshall of4215 Baltimore avenue

In twentyfive or thirty serious fightsIn all parts of the city there were twentypeople hurt seriously today and atforty or fifty more who got awaythe police and took their wounds homeThe Rapid Transit Company reportedthat 170 cars were wrecked and that 1169window panes had been smashed Ac-

cording to its own figures the companyran today a maximum of 730 cars beginning garly in the morning with 600

cars and gradually increasing the serviceup to noon The number in service undernormal conditions is 1900

Say Few Cars Are RunningThe deny that the company

had so many cars In operation Theysaid that the that ever ran at anyone time was SCO and that about160 was the average All cars were or-

dered off the at 6 p m and everyline in tho city was dead when darknessfell The only part of the PhiladelphiaRapid Traction system that remained inoperation was tha subwayelevated line

D T Pierce for the company said to-

night that 1200 carp would be operated-if there was sufficient police protectionbut the police officials will not let anycar leave its barn without at least twobluecoats on the platform Thecontinues to assert that from 2000 to2200 men remain loyal but the best In-

formation cuts the number of loyal mento 1200 and fixes the number of strikersat 5000

Pratt charges that tho company hasbrought In at least 2000 strikebreakersThe company denies It flatly and saysthat about that many were carefullyschooled in camps of instruction in preparation for the very trouble that brokeout

Little save noisy speechmaklng cameout of tho labor meeting at Labor Lyceum Hall this afternoon Pratt made

speech In which he accused theT of bringing on the strike delib-

erately and declared that the companyhad spurne J all propositions leading toarbitration and fair agreement

Bring Ball at MidnightAt midnight John J Murphy and

others of Pratts friends appeared at thecity hall with ball In the amount of 9500which had been fixed by Magistrate Gor-

man and an order for Pratts release on

ban Turnkey Banner refused to honorthe order Murphy tried to get toto Superintendent of Police TaylorAssistant Tim QLeary but the orderswere that nobody bo admitted to theiroffices Murphy had to leave city

with the magistrates his

Magistrate Gorman has advisedus that we have grounds for a criminaland civil suit against the city said Murphy When a general strike is calledsomd of these puppets at city boll willcrawl you bet t

The attitude of the Philadelphia RapidTransit lies In these statements issued bytwo of the directors

Jeremiah J Sullivan It Is an uglysituation to be In but we Intend to meetIt and to a finish

William H Shelmerdlno The companywill positively refuse to compromise

Largest Morning Circulation

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House Passes Conference Re-

port on Urgent Act

CONTAINS ITEMS FOR DISTRICT

Debate on New Custom Court of Appeals End In Giving Judges 7OOO

Year Salary Immigration Commis-

sion Get 9125000 and WillUntil December 1

The urgent deficiency bill theDistrict appropriation measure will bethe first of the big bills to go tothe President The District appropriation-bill was taken up by tho conferees yester-day as planned but very few pages of itwere discussed and of importancewas done

The urgent deficiency bill being beforethe House for an agreement on the con-

ference report was approved after deon two Items These were the salato be paid to the judges of the new

Customs Court of Appeals which woresettled on at 7000 as in the bill and theitem of the Senate amendment to the billproviding 156000 for the ImmigrationCommission which was agreed to

Two Icemaking PlantsTho bill as passed contains appropria-

tions for Icemaking plants at the Treas-ury and Interior departments theamounts being 5 00 for the Treasury and

62CO for1 the Interior Department ManyoUter of interest to Washington-and noarlji are included in thismeasure latter being an

of 5000 for rental and moving expenses of the postoffice and court-house at Lynchburg Ya

Among the other items are To reimburse the District government for

of printing the building regulationswhich carries with it ptrntte

elon to the Commissioners to Issue at 16

per cent above cost price copies of thebuilding and other regulations of the Dis-

trictthe Industrial Homo for Colored

Children for maintenance is grantedMO

For the proposed monument to GenCount Pulaski SCM

For the proposed monument to GetsThaddeua Koscluszko

For clerk hire and oxpoase atto defend Indian degradation

Generals Offlc not ex1480

Customs Court PersonnelUnited Court of Customs

appropriation pro-vides for one presiding and four aseoelate judges at J7COO each marshalJ3fiOO clerk assistant clerk J4600flvo stenographic clerks 1909 eachstenographic reporter SIG messenger

S4 rent of quarters in Washington andelsewhere traveling expenses of the

its officiate and employee pay ofc J1SOW oa Assistant Attor-

ney General under the Department ofJustice TSOOO one deputy assistant at-torney general 7 OQ four attorneysJSCOQ each employes pay traveling ex-penses c 33000

For folding speeches to opntinue available during the fiscal year 1

Tho vote to give the Immigration Com-

mission J12SOOO was a strictly party oneof 145 to 127 It wa decided to extendthe life of the commission untilher 1 The House wanted tocommission only 5000 but the Senate inconference Insisted on the other amountand finally the House capitulated al-

though Representative Robert BruceMacon of Arkansas recently charged thecommission and particularlytive Bonnet of New Yorkmembers with squandering governmentmoney in junketing about Europe

VEST VIRGINIA WINS

Supreme Court Decides AgainstMaryland in Boundary Case

The longstanding controversy betweenWest Virginia and Maryland over thelocation of the boundaiy line betweenthe two States was settled by the Supreme Court yesterday by findingthat Preston County W Va should remain a part of that State and not betransferred to Maryland as the latterCommonwealth contended

The controversy turned on which wasthe west fork of the Potomac River asset forth in the original grant by LordBaltimore The however brushedaside this took the groundthat as the people of Preston Countyhad been so long Identified first withVirginia and afterward West Vir-ginia and had their taxes therefor IK years of prescriptiveright had accrued by which the

of the disputed strip should not be

The court the appointment ofa commission to run a new boundaryline between the States taking as thestarting point the Fairfax stone whichwith the exception of a small tract thatwill go to Maryland will fix the boun-dary as at The cost of thesuit which pending sinceis to be divided between the two States

TILLMAN GAINS STRENGTH

Physicians nt Midnight Say SenatorsCondition In Improved

Hope Is entertained for the ofSenator Tlllman who has bbetween life find death as the result ofa stroke of paralysis since last Wodnosday

Reports from the Senators physicians-at midnight Indicate that he is rapidlyimproving Dr Pickford Issued tho fol-

lowing bulletinSenator Tillman continues to make

progress and his condition is improvingHe rested well In the afternoon and atnight His mind and memory arethe same and his condition Is

ingTheSenator was sleeping when Dr

Pickford loft him last night After aconsultation yesterday afternoon Dr Bab-cock left Washington for Columbia S C

The Senator was able to move his rightarm and leg yesterday although the return of his power of speech is lookedupon to be the most hopeful feature Noformal test was made last night of his

he spoke a few words to afamily Indicating that his

memory is in an excellent stateThe doctors are of an opinion that Sen-

ator Tillmans trouble is due to pressureon the nerve centers of the brain Thecells are not destroyed the doctors basingtheir hopes for the recovery of his fullpower of speech on this belief

At the Homeopathic Hospital it wassaid last night that Senator Smith oMichigan who was operated on for ap-

pendicitis on Friday la doing well

AGREE ON DEFICIENCY

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friends and patrons this store will

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Christian Xanders H

OF VIRGINIA nPORTA famous American g

wine of lovelyin blood

75c full qt Only atTHE FAMILY QUALITY

909 7th St No branch bouses

Dividend Day First Monday in

Each MonthMEMBERSHIP FEE 25c

Economy CoOperative Society inc429 9th Street N W

WEATEEB CONDITIONS

U S of ARiKwlture Weather BweauMwd y Feb 21 1913 p HL

The uppar ctesmtion at Mount Mon-

day showed shore surface windmsttttr wtate and Wsfa temperature extoadfee j-

pUr to tMPQ feet At which tltittMte the tempera

tu wo a degrees This tradition tes a coa-

OMMtton of uaMtUcd weather in the Easnt StatesUuwtsb a period of fartrdght hours cr longer

UnMttted waelxs prewib owr the pmterduties the Jut twasty ir

oocuW in prwfc Hy all dwtrfrts of-

UK Mfahtaipp Ricer except tbo LOS region whereawre MOB Local MOWS are also reportedItem Middle Uteetetn VaUey UH NorthernPlates Sfeta sod tte llecky Mountain region

A tam U aortas KrtheBtnrdiy from the BockyMountain TeStes and will moss unsettled weather

of the districts eatt af the Ilcdtf Mountains

dnriw TMddar sad WcdtMtfer with snows in theUpper JUwUipfri V llf the Plates Statesand the Middle Heckjr Maintainand UK region md the Ohio Valleynight or Weteetdajr and raise ia the Eastern StatesWedjHvdar and it will be follow br fair weathermat of UiMfedppi Hirer Wednesday

The tevaveiatare will fall somewhat over the Mid-

dle Atlantic and North Atlantic States the OhioTalky sod Ihc Lower Lake region Tw4ajr lot BO-

unoRtaUjr low tcmperatores indicated for theEaatena States daring UM next

Sunmmf deyartfog Tuesday portswits haws moderate vartebte winds Uy northerlysat vnttUkd weather to the Grind Banks

Local TemperatureMidnight a m 33 4 a HL 3t 6 a rn 31

S a 10 a 36 12 noon 3 2 p a 41

4 jk 6 p a tt 8 R as 43 M p m 4L-

Maxfanua 4 wtofcww JX-

TfelaUwj bi ty3 a 08 2 p B S28pi W-

L JUtefcU B U 8 p nU OIL Mourn at-

MiMfclnn 16 Per e t of pcsaiWe swsWi-TaHajptjaUrc same date test year Maximum SS

Temperatures In Other CitiesTefstafs in Mfcr eWes tocethtr with the

i oaBt C aMisS for the twelve ended atp Tvstordar an as fattens

RainMar Mte SPW falL

Abflaae Tx M S 82-

Ariwville N a 56 36 44 B2S

Atlanta Oa 43 91 48 076Atlantic Citr X J t 48 S3 42 916-

Ithwaich N flak Kv BMBrutes Maw 16 4U r 50 40SBuffalo X 1 3 S 601-

XasMQt TWB fp rCharieatm S a 53 S TChSeaso L 1 SS 35 TCineuMti OM 43Chaenne Wjo S-SOereland Ohte 33 56 S OKDavenport Iowa 31 2 TDearer Cole M 33

Pea iloteet taro 5Q t W TMink 2t 21 T

Duluth MiaM 6 V-

BaMport Me 44 36 40 L6-GalTstOB Tw S 43 69

Hatteras X 0 M K 001H t ea M t v 12 It 16 006Huron S Dak 6 14 4 61I-ndtonapalte Ind 36 M S-OJadnocrilk Fla jS 43 7Jupiter Fla 3 K B-

Kanaas City Mo 224 22 TKey West Fta SO 70 7-4UUle Rook Ark 46 35 4J 002IXB Asgetoe Cal 56 48 W-

MarvieUe hick It S S TMeapfei 41 33 33 TX r Orleans La 73 52 TNew York X Y 45 012Norfolk Va 55 tt S 0North Pktt Xebr K 4 25

Omaha Xte IS 3 16

PatestiM Tex 56 16PhOadeJpMa Pa 6 42 014Pittabars Pa 4Q 40 002Portland Me 50 42

Portland Ore 12 36 428 at city Utah 4E 25

St Loote M 23 fg 26 001St Mian 40 3

Sea Frawsisao CU 91 4 50SpdngflaW I1L ffi M 26

Taooaw Wesh M 3 0Tawpa FIe 7S 53 6S-

TOfedo Ohio 26 4 S3-

VJdtsbws Miss 66 M 54

Title TableTodjr Hlgh tide 7iS a m and 713 p m low

113 a m 1 2 iv mTtHnor wIJis 730 a m and SS5 p m

tow tide f i a n and 210 p m

Condition of the WaterSpecial to The AYashbwtoo Herald

Harpers Ferry W Va Fob 21 Path liters areroT muddy

IT6H GONE INSTANTLY

PROOF AT 25 CENTS

What eczema sufferer would notcents to cure that terrible agonizing

ItchSince our repeated recommendationsfailed to Induce some Eczema sufferersright in this town to try D D D Pre-scription at 100 a bottle we arrangedwith the D D D Laboratories of Chicago to offer a special trial for the prosent at 25 cents for this special bot-tle This nominal is made to assurea trial by every skin sufferer

The remedy convince you Instantlyfor it taUas itch away the very mo-ment you start to wash the skin and it

we KNOWEvans 1006 F street N W

Peoples Store Seventh street andMassachusetts avenue N W

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

J WILLIAM LEE Funeral Directorand Kiabolmer Livery in connection Commodious

and Modem Crematorium Modest pricesSK Pennsylrania are nw Telephone Main 13-

SGEOEGEP ZUEHOEST-SOI East Capitol Street

FUNERAL DESIGNS

FUNERAL FLOWERSor Brery DoacripUoa Moderately Priced

GUDEFuneral Designs Funeral Designs

GEO C SHAPERBeutiful Semi designs very reasonable in priMThom 2116 Min JitU EJD ate nw

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= = == = SPECIAL NOTICESOF-

FICE COMMISSIONERS OF THE DISTUIOTof Columbia Washington Fetaary 21 1910 No-

tice is hereby given that in conformity to law thepamphlet containing a list of taxes in arrears onreal property in the District of Columbia oo1st day of July 13Q9 also all asaasedeots subjectto sale has been printed A cowr thereof will bedelivered to any taxpayer applying tkerefor at theoffice of the Collector of of the District ofColumbia If the tax or assessments togethersrtth the penalties and mats that nay hare accruedthereon ball not be prior to the day namedfor sale namely the UTTH DAY OV MAJIOH M

the property involved will be soW under mi direc-tion at pubHc auction at the office of the Collectorof Taxes of the District of Oohmbta oewuaenciBg-on tho 15th day of Mareh 1 9 between thehears of 10 oclock in the forenoon end 4 odoein the afternoon and ooatiBuing each following daySundays and lepl holiday accepted until all suchcieHuquent iireperty is soOth CUNO H RUDOLPHJOHX A JOHNSTON WILLIAM V JUDSONCommtedoMTS of the Platelet of Columbia feQftdC-

ARPBXTEItS OPT2f MEBTINGAll rariwaters ia UM District of Columbia irre-

spective of whether the eontneton or Joonwmen union or nonunion art eqpeefey torited to at-tend pen HHfutteg and sMber which will begiven at the National Rife Amory Hall G ctbetween 9th and Wta aw on WEDNESDAYNIGHT Febraarr 25 and let u busa hearttoheart talk No charge everything freeSpeaking to commence at 8 oclock fr263t

1 NEVER DISAPPOINT

My Patented Typewriter Letters are thegreatest businesspulling adrertitemeot you canemploy

BYRON S ADAMS PIUNTER-Pb ne 930 512 llth street

AUTOMOBILEINSURANCE-

Get Our Rates

Commercial Dank Building700716 14th STREET N W

Phone Main 2048

ENGRAVING FORSOCIAL FUNCTIONS-

W ROBERTS CO IncPRINTERS ENGRAVERS STiTIOVEaS

1413 New York AvenueWashington D X

Where Briefs and MotionsPrinted Best

The Big Print Shop otters printteg service thatis supreme in merit Legal printing is festered

promptly correctly

Judd Detweiler IncTHE BIG PEIXT SHOP 43 2 lira ST

DIEDAUTHOn Sunday February 20 1910 at

215 m SANTUS beloved husband-of Regina Auth aged sixtyfive years

Funeral from his late residence Bladensburg road D C on WednesdayFebruary 23 at 9 oclock a m Re-quiem mass at St Marys Church at 10

Relatives and friends InvitedInterment at St Marys Cemetery

COLLINS On Monday February 21 lilAat 115 a m beloved wifeor William P Collins aged sixtyeightyears

Funeral from late residence 630 H streetsouthwest Wednesday at S30 oclockMass at St Dominics Church at 9a m Relative and friends toattend

this life on Sunday181ft AUGUSTUS

FIELDS the beloved father of Au-gustus Fields Jr Fields MrsIda C Dorsay Beatrice Fields andMorton Fields

Funeral will take from VermontAvenue Baptist Church WednesdayFebruary 23 at 1 p m All friends in-

vitedFITZGERALD Members of Division No

2 Ancient Ordep of Hibernians arenotified of tile death of our

lamented brother JOHN FITZGERALD

Funeral will bo held Tuesday morningFebruary 22 1910 at S30 oclock fromresidence S3 M street northeast thenceto St Aloyslus Catholic Churchrequiem mass will be said at 9 oclockMembers should attend P J CONLON President CHARLES J COLUMBUS Recording Secretary

FOSTER On Saturday December IS 190

in Manila P I Maj ARTHUR BFOSTER U S A

Funeral from 2036 H street northwest at2 oclock Wednesday February 23 In-terment at Arlington

Sunday February 2 1JWANNIE E widow of James H Fowler aged sixtyeight years

Funeral from her late residence 1308Wisconsin avenue northwest onWednesday February 23 at 2 oclockp ra and friends respectfully invited to attend RockvilleMd papers please copy

GOLIBART On Sunday afternoon Feb-ruary 20 1910 at 339 oclock

daughter of Mr and Mis S R Golibart of 1933 Calvert street northwestin her fifteenth year

Funeral notice laterPAGE CATHERINE LHOMMEDIEU

daughter of William and MaryAnna Pago at Friendship HeightsMd Monday February 1WO

six years andNotice of funeral hereafter BalUmoro

and Frederick Md pleasecopy

WASHINGTONDeparted thie life onMonday morning 21 1910 at130 E WASHING

mother of M LouisWashington and Kate M Jickson and

sister of MariaFuneral Wednesday February 23 at 2

Vdaughter 1127 Twentyfirst street

Friends invitedWILLIAMS Departed this lifo on

February 191 at 1230 a m-

at his residence 1806 Vermont avenueSAMUEL WILLIAMS belovedhusband of the lato Emily Fisher

Funeral at Fifteenth StreetBaptist Church Wednesday February23 at oclock p m Relatives andfriends invited to attendBaltimore and Alexandria papers

please copyMonday February 31 1910

at 240 p m at her 1735

New Hampshire avenue MARGARETWILSON only daughter ofPetor Francis and Margaret Reed Wil-son and beloved mother of andMarie G Young

Requiem masp at St Pauls Churchand V streets Wednesday-

at 10 a m Interment

Taxesand due

paid

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