Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 17, 1914, Night Extra, Page 3, Image 3

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EVENING TTOTiaTOtt-PHID&PBPPHTA-, SATURDAY, OCTOBER If. 1D1E.
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KENSINGTON AND
RICHMOND VIE WITH
CITY'S MANY LURES
Sections Have Life and In
terests of Their Own in
Mixing "Les Miserables"
With Joy.
FRAD SCHIINNER,
NOTED SUFFRAGIST,
WILL SPEAK HERE
Hungarian Votes for Women
Champion and Labor Or
ganizer Will Address Big
Suffrage Rally.
FILBERT ST, GAM
IN BUSINESS VALUE;
, HAS BRIGHT FUTURE
(Central Proposition Worth
,. Watching Stretch of
, Property That Feels the
, Absorption of Market
Street Sites.
' filbert street widens to 51 feet begin
ning at the west elde of 8th street In the
(th Ward, find becomes a thoroughfare of
tonsldcrable Importance. East of 8th
street, It Is W feet wldo to 7th street,
. M1l tiaAfiil nllrnnKAft It illfian-
1M psars.
M The block between 9th and 10th streets
"H . l ,.., ,l,t Intn nntlm this Week
by the sale recorded yesterday of No.
KO Filbert street, being n four-story
brick building, lot 22x99. Charles TX. and
Window J. Fries conveyed to David C.
JR Humphreys for 120,000.
This property Is assessed for $22,000.
The last transfer of this piece of real es
tate was on December IS, 1891, when It
Hold for J28.O0O. However, It Is now being
improved. A new store front Is under way
and this, with general adjustments, wilt
greatly add to Its value.
The last sale In this block, but of a
smaller property, was on March 21, 1007,
No. 924 Filbert street, lot 16.6x76, which
sold for $22,000. This property Is now as-
tessed for $21,000, and has advanced In
alue over the purchase price. In 1913
Wcrshon Brothers transferred to John J.
Rogers Nos. 925-27 Filbert street, In which
purchase, howover, a country seat of 12
acres at Wyncoto figured sb a part of the
price. This Is now a part of the 8-slory
brick and concrete building, lot 00x140,
Nos. 925-7-9 Filbert street, and Is as
sessed for $260,000.
Between 10th and 11th streets Is found a
solid row of stores and about the same
condition exists on the south side, with,
however, some of the old stores unal
tered near 11th street, Soveral large prop
erties have been recently rented in this
block and tho demand Ib good.
VALUES BECOMING EVIDENT.
The value of Filbert street is becom
ing more evident as the visible supply of
property on the market Is reduced along
the larger Btrect to the south. Jfnrket
street was a very long time coming to
its own becauso owners did not believe
expenditure would be Justified In result.
Today It is a fixed fact that such' must
bo done: and when property is improved
renters and buyers are not hard to find.
Tho expense comes back, or good interest
in tho advance In rental value.
In the part of Filbert street between
Sth street and the Reading Terminal, nine
signs appear upon property Tor sale or
to rent, anil nearly all upon those which,
while in good condition and desirable,
have not been brought up to the high
pitch of newly built property.
From Juniper street, going east, on the
north side we find the Bulletin Building,
lot CO feet 114 Inches by 147 feet 4 Inches,
nsscesed at $000,000, and adjoining a lot
Nos. 1515-17 Filbert street, in the same
ownership, 42 feet by 147 feet, and as
ecsscd at $1CO,000, as a vacant lot. Then
1311-13 Filbert Btreet. 50 feet by 150 feet
belonging to H. J. Justt, also a vacant
lot, and assessed at $200,000. This prop
erty Is next to the fine Hotel Vcndlg. on
the northwest corner of 13th and Filbert
streets tnkli.R In Nos. 1301 to 1309, and
assessed for $SO0,0rO.
aILw n0trn.rd to remember tho old
dwell ngs which Blood upon the lota men-
1m K.ablive nnd the enormous advance
hlch Is shown by the assessments.
IMPORTANT BUILDINGS.
On the south side In this block the large
properties aro Nos, 1302-01 Filbert street,
Horn & Hardart Baking Company, lot
27 feet by 105 feet, and assessed at $15S,000;
Nos. 1S04-OS-10 Filbert street, seven-story
laundry of John Wannmaker, lot 62 feet
by 10(5 feet, and assessed at J3M.000, and
No, 1312 Filbert street, lot 33 feet 1 Inch
by 10(3 feet, B. W. Fleischer, assessed at
1130,000. There are, however, a number of
small properties of an older pattern which
have not yet had anything like a Jump In
value, and It will not come until the break
Is made to better conditions. It Is a fact,
however, that tl'ere Is virtually no prop
erty offered for rent between the Beading
Terminal and Juniper street.
In the 1200 block on the south side the
large property, Nos. 1230, 1332 and 1234 Fll
pert atieet. Is a two-story brick store.
Only the store fronts and some Interior
adjustments hnve been made. It is on a
lot B7 feet by 10 feet Hi Inches, and la
assessed at $159,000. At the northwest cor
ner of 12th street Is the Llpplncott Build-In?-,
lot 30 feet by 107 feet, and assessed at
$250,000; Nos. 1213-15, the Heed Building.
40 feet by 107 feet, and assessed for
$190,000; Nos. 1221.33. next to the Hotel
Windsor, lot 33 feet by 107 feet, assessed
at $130,000.
The future, and very active future, of
Filbert street Is not at all far off, and
purchases being made will be by those
who know. It Is too short a street, now
that It Is to be acited west of 15th
street, and too central a business proposi
tion to lag, with everything In sharp de
mand on Market street.
NOTES ON THE STREET.
More than $150,000 appears (his week In
the list of mortgages recorded loaned by
trust and title companies. Mortgages are
Jr.ore numerous and building societies are
as actUe as ever.
Plans have been filed for an apartmont
house at the northeast comer 22d and
Jalnut streets, to be 12 stories In height.
This was tho residence for many yeara
of the Preston family, and later wai
owned by Henry Gross. The entire va
cation of. Walnut street to commercial
need Is not very far off.
The number of permits for the erection
of dwellings of the two-story brick class
Is increasing. Among- the number are 15
Rest side of Sth street, north of Lycom
ing, seven dwellings east side Agate
ftieet, north of Ann street; 14 west slda
v-new street, beginning at Pcnn street. 13,,
os. i3i3 to nit Rlttenhouse street: 11,
-s. 73 to 95 West Shurpnack street. Thl
Is a very encouraging feature In a rather
dull market. v LESSOR.
GOLD PIECES AS PRIZES
Churchman Offers Award to Thosa
Who Memorize Psalm.
Memebra of the congregation of the
Fifth Morravlan Church are Interested
a prize offered by WlllWm JC Smith,
president of the board of trustees, who,
during the month of October, wllr" give
$.60 gold plcecs to those of the church
who meinorlie the 01st Psalm,
i A eondltioi which wlsl help the treasury
L 2? church U that each prize, winner
rXti i St lha ffiocjyr. .la IfafrS&JlKfc
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LAUGHING-,
ANTI-LIQUOR BATTLE
TO BE HELD TOMORROW
Temperance Sunday Will Be Devoted
to Local Option Cause.
Young people throughout this city nnd
Pennsylvania will tomorrow wage a
battle ngalnnt the trafllc In Intoxicating
liquors In this State. Tho regular topic
for discussion In the evening Is to bo
"A Snloonless Nation," nnd the slogan
has been announced n "A Saloonlcss
Nation In 1920." Leaders In oung
people's work have Issuod stirring cnlls
for the united support of tho endeavors
for the movement for local option.
Following closely on temperance Sun
day will come, on Octobor 25, a discus
sion of the subject, "The Christian and
tho Ballot." On that day tho young
people will everywhere advocate that
voters excrclso their right of suffrage
for the cause of good citizenship and
particularly against the "turn" curse.
CARMELITES' CELEBRATION
CLOSES AT SUNDOWN TODAY
Several Thousand Catholics Visited
Little Chapel in Last Three Days.
The novena and trlduum, In commemo
ration of the 300tli anniversary of tho
beatification of Saint Teresa, which start
ed on Thursday morning, closes with
solemn vespers In the chapel of the
Carmelite Convent, Oak Lane, at sun
down today.
The services thli morning started at 0
o'clock, with Solemn High Mass. Tho
Rev. J. B. McGinley was the celebrant.
This year's trlduum was tho largest at
tended of any In recent years. In the
three days several thousand Catholics
visited the little chapel of tho Carmelites.
At the cloie of the vesper services this
afternoon thero will be read by the Rev.
Daniel A. Morrlssey one of tho most
notable pronouncements of the late Popo
PIuh X, bearing date of March 7. 1914. to
the superior general of the Dlscalced
Carmelites, with reforenco to tho cplebni
tlon of the nnnlversnry of Saint Teresa.
PROHIBITION PARTY ASKED
TO FUSE AGAINST PENROSE
Ex-Chairman Ilockwood Says Sena
tor's Name Is Synonym for Whisky.
The Prohibition party lias been urged
to withdraw Its candidates for United
States Senator and Governor In favor of
Glfford Pmchot and Vance C. McCor
mlck to defeat Penrose.
In a letter to the Antl-Penrose Repub
lican League, Burton L. Ilockwood. for
mer state chairman o the Prohibition
party, says that his deslie Is to defeat
Penrose, whose name Is a synonymous
term for whisky. Rockwood believes that
the fusion of the Washington and Pro
hibition party candidates would greatly
Increase tho vote polled by the Prohibi
tion party and would maintain the right
of the Prohibition party to a place on
the primary ballot In the future a thing
they can not do If they run a separate
ticket from that Indorsed by practically
every church body In the State.
Madtson F. Larkin is the Prohibition
candidate for United States Senator and
Mathew K. Stevenson is the candidate
for Governor.
SOUTH AMERICA GIVES
DR. ROWE GLAD WELCOME
Representative of V. of P. Met by
Prominent Men at Reception.
Reports of a reception given to Dr.
George S. Rowe. of the University of
Pennsylvania, during his tour of South
America, have reached university offl
clals here. The most enthusiastic wel
oome occurred at the University of La
Plata, the national Institution of Argen
tine. When it was learned that Doctor
Rowe, a noted authority on International
law and well known In diplomatic cir
cles, planned to visit the Institution, a re
ception was arranged and members of the
cabinet, the diplomatic corps and the
entire university faculty entertained him.
Doctor Rowe spoke on "American Ideals"
and the part played in the progress of
civilization by the nations of the western
hemisphere.
Doctor Rowe'a South American trip was
made In the Interest of the University of I
Pennsylvania, to promote, closer reUUans
between South American, universities and
bU owa uwmuiwa.
HftPPY, SATURDAY NIGHT
A SATURDAY NIGHT SCENE IN
NEW DORMITORY BRINGS
JOY TO CO-EDS AT U. OF P.
Provost's Announcement Will Fur
ther Education of Women.
Women students nt the Unlveislty of
Pennsylvania arc Jubilant today over the
announcement by Provost Smith that co
education nt Pennsylvania will be con
ducted on n scale that will give women
educational advantages now to be had
only In tho colleges exclusively for
women.
After n lapse of 15 years tho co-eds aro
to receive tho benefits of the bequest of
the Into Colonel Joseph M. Bennett. A
new dormitory to be devoted to the ex
clusive use of women will be erected on
Walnut street In the block bounded by
33d nnd 31th streets and extending
through to Chancellor street.
Colonel Bennett willed the University
six properties at 31th nnd Walnut street?
With tho stipulation tlint the gifts were
to be utilized entirely for the furthering
of co-education. Since tecelvlng this be
quest tho University has added live other
properties In the block nnd plans aro
under consltleiatlon that will make the
now dormitory a possibility. The now
building will probably bo named for
Colonel Bennett's mother.
Between 500 and COO women students are
enrolled at tho University nt tho present
time, but moat nf them nre enrolled In
the summer school and In teachers'
courses. The co-eds Dellevc that the new
women's dormitory will open a new era
for women nt the University.
Dean McCrPa announced nt a recep
tion to tho Freshmen In the Houston
Club, Inst night, that a new building will
be completed next fall to replace Logon
Hnll, the prespnt home of the Wharton
School of Finance and Commerce.
THREE MEN SENTENCED
Disturbers on Trolley Cnr Get Five
Days.
Samuel Wark, of 122J South lSth street,
James Motitclth, 1411 South Colorado
Htreet, and Hugh Soynn, 1S31 Ritncr street,
weio sentenced to (lvo days In the county
prison for threatening a policemen and
trying to hold Sojnn In his scat In a
Woodland nvenue car nfter Soynn had
refused to pay his fare.
Soynn nnd the two men boarded a car
at 56th street and Woodland avenue early
thlH morning. They were noisy and
threatened the conductor when he de
manded Soynn's fare. Tho car traveled
seven blocks while they argued, and then
Joseph Harrison, tho motorman, stopped
and culled P.itrolmnn Kljnn, of the 65th
street and Woodlund avenue police sta
tion. $16,300 IN PRIVATE BEQUESTS
Will of Maria A. Whltmire Admitted
to Probate.
The will of Maria A. Whltmire, late of
"945 Gernuntown avenue, distributes an
(.state of $16,300 In prUate bequests.
Other wills admitted to piobate today
were: Marcus Bernath, 650 North 53d
street, ?i000: Fiank II. Comly. S038 Frank
ford avenue. Ji00; Charles 11. Green, 272S
North 12th street, $5600, Elmlra Xewhard,
24JI Noith Mainhall street. ?1500; Mary
L. Randle, 5001 Chew street, $3000.
Personal pioperty of Elmlra W, oil
man has been nppralsed at tl4.94S.62;
Elizabeth F. Gordon. $11,500; Emma J.
Cameron, $1915 55, James J. Corroll, $2S90.69.
FLAG. RAISING AT SCHOOL
Ceremony in Camden Tonight Under
Auspices of P. O. S. of A.
Flag raising exercises at the new Henry
L. Bonsull school in Camden will be held
tonight under the auspices of the camps
of the Patriotic Order Sons of America,
who presented the flag.
Reba Bonsall Bellis. granddaughter of
the man after whom the school is named,
will unfurl the flag. This is to be fol
lowed by the presentation of Bibles to
the school by the Patriotic Order of
Americans.
f Diamond
I
Engagement Rings
tine quality aiaraonm
Set In 14 kt hand-made
mountings - a great -variety.
$25.00 to $250.00
C. R. SMITH & SON
U Market Strict at JVM
i ' ti..
WUV
CROWD.
THE CITY'S GREAT NORTHEAST
PROVOST SMITH HONORED
Awarded Degree of Doctor of Laws
From Brown University.
University students and alumni are In
terested In tho announcement that nt a
celebration of the 150th anniversary of
tho founding of Brown University, Dr.
Hdgar F. Smith, provost of the Univer
sity of Pennsylvania, was honored ulth
tho dcgieo of Doctor of Laws.
Trovost Smith has been honored
similarly in recent yenrB by Tale, Har
vard and Princeton.
VICTIM OF CAVE-IN DIES
DESPITE HEROIC RESCUE
William Chapman Succumbs to In
juries Received in Accident.
Tons of rock and grnvel, which caved
in on William Chapman, formerly of
Philadelphia, caused his death today nt
Bristol after his neighbors nnd laborers
had worked IS hours to rescue him. He
was dragged from the cave-In at 5:30
this morning, but died at his home an
hour Inter.
Chapman was cleaning out a well at
his new home In Wheat Sheaf, four miles
north of Bristol. As he climbed up tho
sldo he slipped nnd tho stone wall and
gravel, loosened by the heavy rain, burled
him alive. Laborers on the Pennsylvania
Railroad and neighbors were summoned,
and they dug from 11 o'clock yesterday
afternoon until 5:30 this morning to rescue
him. Their progress was made difficult by
the continuous caving In of the soft
gravel.
Chapman cut n hole In tho bottom of
the pump nnd was in conversation with
his rescuers nil tho time.
Chapman was employed as a mechanical
cnlgncer by the Fonn Sand nnd Gravel
Company at tho sand pits In Tullytown.
Tho recent draught had made It hard
for him to get wnter. He did not work
yesterday owing to tho rain, and thought
It would be a good opportunity to repair
the well.
YORK ROAD SECTION IN NEED
OF A DRAINAGE SYSTEM
Whole 42d Ward Exposed to Epi
demic Perils, Chief Vogelson Says.
The section which Includes Oak Lane,
Olney, York road and the entire 43d
Ward Is exposed to the danger of an
epidemlo of disease If a thorough drain
age system Is not Installed, according to
Chief Vogelson, of the Bureau of Health.
A complete system, which would In
volve the expenditure of millions of dol
Ura, must be Installed, he said, if the
health of the dwellers there was to be
protected.
Residents have complained of the con
ditions In the Ellwood School, stating that
it was Insanitary and overcrowded The
Board of Education replied with the
statement that as there was no drain
age near, the school conditions wre not I
wnai iney snoum oe, dui mat the school
was kept In the btst sanitary condition
possible and was not as crowded as other
schools
Dr. Walter S. Cornell, chief of the
school medical Inspectors, will make an
examination of the conditions at the
school today and report to Chief Vo
gelson. Italian AUbaottr BowU
in Ur varitty
Igj pr. . M i , n r XLLuYJ
TOM MARTIN
KNOWN KENSItSGTOrl CHftRPCTER..
EDDIE PLANK WILL SPEAK
Veteran Pitcher Will Tell Y. M. C. A.
Boys "How to Lnst."
"How to Last" will be the subject of
an address given by Eddie Plank, pitcher
for the Athletics, before the Saturday
Night Club In the Boys' Division of the
West Branch Y. M. C. A. He will toll
how a number of well-known pitchers
have played out because of Intemperate
habits.
A "get-together" meeting will be held
tomorrow evening nfter a supper given
by the West Branch out-of-town students'
club. "Mike" Dorlzas. the University of
Pennsylvania's champion heavyweight
wrtler, and Sin Foo, sccietary to Dr.
Sun Ynt Sen. will attend.
TO REMOVE BODIES FROM
OLDEST BURIAL GROUND
Friends Will Make Eoom for De
mand of Improvements.
Considerable interest has been aroused
by arrangements madu today for the re
moval of bodies from a portion of tho
oldest burial ground In Philadelphia, at
3d nnd Arch streets, to make room for a
proposed addition to the Friends' book
store, at 301 Arch street. It Is not known
when the work will bogln. While plan3
call for the erection of an addition to the
book storo on a plot of ground In the
rear of tho store, It was said today that
It was not known when the removal
vould be made, as the contract for th.j
building had not been nwarrtod.
For the last CO years the ground In the
icai of the book store nfljointng tho
burial ground has been used as the back
jard of the store. No interments havo
been made there for 104 years. It is ques
tionable whether any traces of any of
tho few bodies that are burled beneath
the yard will be found. The bodies that
will be found will be relnterred In the
Friends' Burial Ground at Darby Town
ship, Delaware County.
The original patont for the burying
ground given by William Penn, In 1701,
Is still In the hands of the Society of
Friends. Records show that one of the
first persons to be burled there was the
wife of Governor Loyd. William Penn
spoke at her grave when she was burled.
"DOCTOR'S DILEMMA" ACTED
BY PLAYS AND PLAYERS CLUB
Shaw's Satire and a Comedy by Mrs.
Dade at Little Theatre.
The initial performance in America of
George Bernard Shaw's satire on the
medical profession, "The Doctor's Di
lemma," was given by the Plays and
Players' Club at Its annual invitation per
formance last night at the Little Theatie
A new one-act plaIet by Mrs. Frances
Pemberton Dade, of this city, was ghon
also, as a curtain raiser to the Shaw
piece. Her play Is called "In That Dark
est Hour." It was awarded the prize in
a play-writing contest held last year by
the Plays and Players. Both plays were
welt acted before a very' appreciative
audience made up largely of people promi
nent In Philadelphia society.
In the cast of "The Doctor's Dilemma"
were Sirs. W. Yorke Stevenson. Henry
Sheppard, C. Reginald Oates, Henry B.
Schaffer. Jr.. William Whitney. J. Ben
nett Colesberry, Herbert L. Wler, Mrs.
Philip Castner, Miss Ruth Verlandcn, L. J.
F. Moore and H. H. Berry Mrs. Dade
played the principal role in her own pla
let. She was assisted by Joseph A. Der
ringer. Jr.. and Henry L. Fox. The pro
gram will be repeated this evening.
As Good as
Horn & Brannen's
Is the Compliment Our Competitors
Pay Us.
That's a left-handed way of telling you
that our goods are the best obtainable.
The Horn & Brannen Mfg, Co,
Display Rooms and Workshop
427-433 N Broad St.
Short walk along Ariomobile Row
Philadelphia lins Its Chestnut street nnd
Market street, and Konslnglon nnd Rich
mond hnve their Glrartl, l-'rankford and
Kensington avenues.
The streets mentioned nro the show
streets of their localities.
Kcnslngtonlnns nnd lllchmontlltes nro
sufllclent unto themselves. They nro a
good donl llle the Gormnnlowner. who
say when they leave their neighborhood
that the are going Into Philadelphia
The people of Richmond nnd KenNlngton
have their fio nnd ten-cent stores, their
own "motion" nnd tho theatres wliti li
suit them best. Satin day night li tho
big night. It Is pay ilny In the Ken
sington nnd Itlrhmond mills, nnd tho
girls who work In the mills, drowsed in
their best and on the iimn of iurig
men most popular with them, parade the
thoroughfare.
A BOARDWALK CROWD.
It Is a Joyful, well-dressed crowd It
remind? one of the Uonrdwnlk pamde nt
the shore. Just ns the Boai-ilwnlk nnd
Chestnut street have their characters, so
has CSIrnrd, I'rnnkford mid Kensington
atonuos.
Atlantic City for years boasted of n
cd flannel nliirtf-d hcto, who wns reputed
to hnve saved many lives In the surf
In summer he paraded tho beach ns a
life saver. It Is true he did not wear
a bathing suit, for he accepted many In
vitations at the bars, nnd tho bar In
question were not the ones which wreck
ships off the Atlantic City coast.
In winter he wns always found
patrollng Chestnut street or Market
street. In hl blue flannel, life gunrd
short, and ho always was near that spot
that would be lighted up when the cafe
doors swing. Tho old "cap" took no
chances of being overlooked. For a
drink the captain would tell a tale of
his icscues. He did this for years until
he finally wns voted n nuisance.
He no longer struts, the Atlantic City
beach. Ho still haunts the cafes, where
for old times' sake, and his Munchausen
reputation an occasional nod Is given
him nnd the captain takes the look of
recognition ns an Invitation nnd loses
no time in raising his rheumatic left foot
to the brnis rail and with ills right hand
safely pilots the glass to his lips.
HKROES nicnn, TOO.
Kensington and Richmond have their
heroes. They haven't got Market Btrect
Old Captain Clark, but they have Jimmle
Dunn. Jimmle never claims to bo a hero.
Ho Is Just one of those work-a-day fel
lows who lost a hand In a hosiery mill.
He claims nothing for himself. Ho will
explain that he was a little careless in
chnnglng a gearing, or something, and
he was mighty lurky ho did not lose an
arm. He does not want iharlty or sym
pathy, but Is thankful If one makes a
purclinse of buttons whkh suve bachelors
worry by sewing themselves on to a pair
of trousers by steel teeth. For his women
patrons he carries a line of thread nnd
needles.
INTRODUCING TOM.
There Is Tom Martin. Sometimes he
sells peanuts, sometimes (lowers. Ho gen
erally can bo found near Front and York
stieets. Tom Is an affable old fellow and
likes a wee nip at times. He got a bullet
through the shoulder during the Civil
War. Surgery In those days, wns not at
Its best. In consequence, the left arm of
Tom 1 useless. livery three months Tom
gets i'J) from the Got eminent as a pen
blon The pension l a mark of apprecia
tion of the I'nlted States to the man who
wns willing to lota an arm In Its service.
What makes Tom popular Is the man
ner In which he is willing to spend his
pension. When the pension Is spent the
veteran brings forth ills peanut basket
and lives precariously, but happily, by
gorging men with peanuts they do not
want. He explains that live cents' worth
of peanuts will obliterate a breath trail
that some suspicious wives are looking
for when they throw their nrms about
their husbands' necks on a Saturday.
STREET FAKERS GALORE.
Street fakers, who ply their profession in
the streets near the markets during the
week, go to Kensington and Richmond
on Saturday nights. They glibly tell
of being a boy of the old North
east, and the holiday throng always stops
to listen and generally to buy.
Kensington and Richmond are proud of
their stores, proud of their Institutions,
of their pretty girls and boys in tho mills,
and are loyal to tho street venders who
have been crippled at their work.
JOHN LAMON 87 TODAY
John Lamon, one of the leading poli
ticians of the early Ms, and an ei-Super-Intendent
of Police under Mayor Fitler.
is celebrating his STth birthday annlxer
sary at his home, 539 Diamond stleet.
today.
HEJMMYF
MILL
c?
There is no guesswork when a musician buys
a piano. Tone values are accurately weighed.
That so many discriminating musicians have
the Henry F. Miller Piano in their homes and
studios is the surest proof of merit.
The musician rinds in the Henry F, Miller a
tone sympathetic and vibrant. A piano having
behind it half a century of experience; made
throughout for lasting worth.
The Colonial Upright gives you Henry F.
Miller excellence at a moderate price.
LX
I ' , ',."" " " " ".'."' " " ' ""'.'" ' i . i " 7 " '
MADAME ROSIKA SCHWIMMER
Prominent Austrian suffragist,
who will speak here next Saturday
evening.
Madnmo Rusltia Schwlmmcr, of Hungary,
one of the brilliant women orators of
Europe, will be the chief spenker at a blR
suffrage meeting In Scottish Rite Hall,
Broad and Raco streets, Saturday even
ing, October 21. Mndnme Schwlmmcr will
stay In Philadelphia and vicinity nbout a
week, and will make other addresses in
tho Little Theatre, Oak Lane, Dclawnra
County, and probably Now Jersey,
Mndnme Schwlnnor, or, rather, FrauS
Schwlmmcr, began life as a Journalist In
Budapest nnd Vienna, corresponding also
with teveral German papers. In Buda
pest che became prominent by demand
ing recognition of women by one of the
public organizations from which they
wero cNcIuded. From thnt time she he
came a strong chnmplon of the woman
movement In all Its branches.
A LABOR ORGANIZER, TOO.
Frau Schwlnnor has been prominent In
the labor movement by means of her
activity in helping; to organize the women
clerks of Budapest and the women agri
cultural laborers of Hungary. The last
organization Is one of the largest nnd
most Intelligent labor unions In that
country. One of Frau Schwinncr's most
deeply cherished alms Is to bring about
one standard of pay In her country.
Frnu Schwinner Is one of the secre
taries of the International Suffrage Alli
ance, nnd is working for political power
for women ns the first need In the ap
preachlng world struggle between mili
tarism and disarmament.
She came to this country primarily aa
an envoy to President Wilson from tho
women of 11 countries to ask the execu
te's help In bringing peace to tho
wot Id for all time. This message de
livered, she yielded to the request of Mrs.
Corrio Chapman Catt. president of tho
International Suffrage Ulfcmce, and went
to Ohio to help the womtii there In their
tampnisn for a suffrage amendment.
Owing to the
funeral of
Mr. J. Albert Caldwell
This store will be
closed Monday,
October igth.
J. E. CALDWELL & CO.
cjoi Chestnut Street
ES3
EST.
1863
Dr. IV. W. Gilchrist
says;
The Henry F. Miller
pianos in my studio and
home have had hard
use, and, far from de
teriorating, they have
improved.
Colonial Upright, $450
The Lyric Grand, $700
Player-Piano, $850
Modrralt trnu
Liberal dUoount for cash
Other makes from $150 up
HffF. Miller & Sons
Piano Company
1105 Chestnut St.
Factory Wakefield, 31aa.
m
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