Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 19, 1914, Image 14

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EVENTNG
LEDGER
TOL. I KO. 6
PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY", SEPTEMBER 19, 1014.
PRICE ONE CENT
DETECTIVE'S PISTOL
ENDS ROMANCE OF
BURGLAR-INVENTOR
M !
Master of the 'Jimmy,' Brace
and Bit Wooes Girl on
Earnings From His Burglaries.
ERIN'S BRAVE SONS
AT BAYONET POINT
MAKE GERMANS FLEE
i
f i
'1
-
JOHN S. EDWARDS
Burglar, inventor and pleasing gen
tleman, when not forcing safes, faces
a long term in the Eastern Peni
tentiary. , li the rough and iead language ued
by the police, police court nttomes. mis
sion workers and those who associate
with the men and women who are rather
undesirable citizens, ' .John S. Edwards,
who was held without bail bv Magistrate
Tracy at the Eleventh and Winter streets
Bollcc, station today, has had another fall.
"Tlu- underworld considers a tall as
soniethirig thot'busTness men would stle
a, failure.
Udwanls today admitted that Edwards
was only an assumed natm.-, but that he
bad used It lor the better part of his
life. ' '" '
.His rqal name, he- slated, wa J. F. V.
Eatek and he said thnt for the most of
the tithe, since hfs release from the East
ern Penitentiary he tleT .it 10(3 North
Twelfth street.
At the close of the hearing Ueutenant
Biiiiley read a letter from George D. Por
ter. Director of Public Safety. commend-In-'
Whmie and Kent, policemen, for
.-1ic the arrest of Edwards
Edna ids was caught attempting lo
"erejk into r saloon.
c, Edwards U an Inventor He ha made
,noru money with the "Jimmy" and the
"orjic and bit. hut then, although John
wjled off the earnings of his burglaries
diHd safe robbing Jobs, never boasted of
v(tjieii) but preferred to talk about his In
dentions. tr Edwards was lebMsed several months
lRgo from the Eastern Penitentiary, after
j ferung a sentence for burglary.
He was never a model prisoner, but not
t withstanding he won the friendship of
4 Jlobert J. McKenty, warden of the prison
In irS, while serving a term in the
Eastern Penl'tentlarj for robbery, Ed
wards, with Charles "Fiercer, scaled the
walls. In the jump from a M-foot gate
way. Edwards received a broken lee.
Guards who had seen the escape came
upon him while they were searching, the
flower beds outside the prison wall by
lorung the foliage back with the barrels
of shotguns.
Edwards smiled whn n euard pushed
a. sun .-.gainst his chest and said, "I'm
It. but you haven't got my pardner "
Uwgcr was captured In 'hester whn,
famished, he went to the home of a rein.
I" live to bee food.
Since his Ia3t release f-om prison Ed
wards is said to have had a love affair
and also to have cherished a hatred to
saloonkeepers
As far as the police know ho has robbed
none but saloonkeepers. He says he was
educated in saloons and he is turning
hls education to use against the keepeis
of bar rooms.
A joung woman who lived In the Sf'O
block on North Tenth street is also said
to have Interested Edwards. He confi
dentially told friends that he e.xpcted to
marry the young woman. She has left the
homo of her mother since. Kdwards' ar
rest, and the mother sajs that theie was
but little between Kdwards and her
daughter
Edwards left pribon last winter and
went to the young woman s home to
board. He sppnt nearly everv night out,
but always explained his absencu in some
plausible manner. The pollen sa.v that
every night he was awa from his room
be was using his "jimmy" and cold chisel
forcing open windows, cash drawers and
miall safes.
AH the time Edwards naa planning for
the marriage with hlj landlady s daugh
ter it Is also said.
He did not tell the girl that be was a
Mall bird " To her he was a mechanic
and a. mighty good one, for he always
had money, speni with a smile, and
knew where to get mote tnnne when a
night was expensive.
Then came tho fall The Detective Ilq
reau, when Edward was released, de
tailed a man to keep an eie on htm The
man was able to tell how mu-h Edwards'
supper hill was. whit ho spent for other
rMiic?, and all the other minor details
of life, but could not tell how Edwards
kept his pockotbook filled and that was
the main thing for "nob" Cameron. Thief
of tho Bureau.
Kdwarda shook off his detective aha do w
one night last week, drew his Jimnn and
started to work on the front door of Wil
kinson's saloon. Ninth and Filbert streets.
Edwards was peeping bis eyes open for
smooth and plausible Central station de
tectives. One, whom he called "harness
bull." swinging a club, slipped up behind
John and pl.iced agajpst his head the bar
rel of a revolver.
"Well. 1 guess ou got me," said Ed
w irds. as he handed over his Jimmx '
"Thanks for the bouquet,'' replied the
rop, v,n Is Kent, of the Eleventh and
Winter streets politv station.
Edwards while In the Eastern Peniten
tiary took an Interest In tho flower gar
dens and tho machine shop He wag busy
everv minute of his waking hours. He
invented a, doorknob which he said was
burglar proof, becaube when it was
fastened and set he could not turn it j
If Kdwards could nor work the knob the .
police are of the opinion that no one
eUe could.
Edward made u. new kind of a cne
seat for chairs and hitched up a motor
which he said hjs as near perpetual
nntion as am engine would come The
n-otor w run by spools When cnt
spool "it into water would sink, a
second spool w"-ild bob to thj surfa'e
tM sink, the first. '"
Irish Fusiliers, Furious at Or
der to Abandon Guns, Like
Beasts Drag Them to
Safety.
LONDON. Sept. IP, Describing the
four days' battles around Moils, a
wounded noncommissioned ofllccr sas t
that the wonder was that tho British '
troops came out of It as wctl as thov
did. Referring to tho retreat of the Brit
ish ntul tho loss of some hemy guns, he
said:
Halted out in the open, with weak
infantry suppotts doing their best to
stay the onward rush of the bluish
gray clouds of Germans, the artil
lerymen suffered teirlbly. cjeimnii
I mmksmen picked off the lioisos one
I b, one, nnd then when the German
cavalry swooped down the men could
1 not get tho guns awny. In one case,
where tho German t.anccrs swooped
down and killed the last man of our
battery, the situation was saved by a
ouple of companies of nn liisli Kus.
ilier battalion the Munsters, I think
who rushed at the Germans with
Hed bavonets nnd put them to flight,
while the enemy's artillery poured a
merciless Are on them. Many of tho
Germans around the battery were
killed, and, of course, the losses of
our men were not light.
The Kusltlcrs were furious when
orders came that they were to aban
don the guns, as no horses were
axallable. You could see them cast
ing loving eyes on those guns nil the
rest of the day, and at night when
the time came to fall back the poor
dells were dragging the guns with
them, having captured n. few German
horses nnd supplemented them by
men who were willing to become
beasts of burden for the time.
Glowing accounts of the heroism of the
different Irish regiments are supplied to
the newspaper correspondents at the
front, and the consensus of opinion Is
that the home rule bill Jut conceded
them has been richly deserved. In a
letter to his mother here. Private Alex
ander MncGIIIavry. attached t" a High
land regiment, writes:
"Of mv company only ten were unhlt.
I saw ajjandful of Iilshmcn throw them
selves in -front of a regiment of cavalry,
who were trying to cut off a battery of
horse artillery. It was one of the tlncst
deeds I ever saw. Not one of the poor
lads got away alive, but they made tho
German devils pay in kind, and. anyhow,
tho artlllety got awav to nccount ftir
many more Germans. Every man of us
mnde a vow to avenge the fallen Irish
men, and 1f the German cavalrymen
concerned were made the targets of every
British rifleman and gunner, they bail
themselves to thank Later they' were
finely avenged by their own comrades
who lav In wait for the Germans. The
Irish lads went at them with tho havonet;
thov least expected it, and the Germans
were a sorry sight "
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BLEASE ASSAILS
SUCCESSFUL RIVAL
AND THE PRESIDENT
oouth Carolina Governor
Says Cotton Growers Were
Deceived by Promises to
Supply Means for Market
ing Crop.
WAR OF WORDS IN ROME
BETWEEN OPPOSING ENVOYS
German and Eussian Ambassadors
Call Each Other's Policy "Squabble."
RO.MK i by way of Parisi, Sept. 13
duel of words is being carried on
between the German and Russian Am
bassadors to Italy.
Herr De Vlotow, th German Ambas
sador, in a statement issued denying the
intention of Germany to make peace, re.
ferred to the "war Ignobly Imposed upon"
tho German people. The Russian Am
bassador. A Kroupenskl, has made this I serened in ilhilv
NUW YilRK, Pept. 10 Governor Cole
I.. Blens. uf South Carolina, who re
cently was defeatd as ii ranitidine1 for
United States Senator, Is seeing New
Vcrk. Me was at the AVnldotf-Astorl.i
with Mrs. Hlease yesterday. He came i
Noith to attend the Gicnt Council of ,
fted Men In Portland. .Me.
In a conveisntlon he bitterly assailed
Senator Smith, his successful opponent; i
President Wilson and William G. McAdoo, I
Secretary of the Tieasury. Sen.itor i
Smith, he asserted, was le-elected by
false representations, and President Wil
son nnd Mr McAdoo admitted, he Kild,
that they had deceived the Southern
Ptutrs in the matter of financing the cot
ton growers.
PUN PH'TL'ltK OK Bl.KASK.
Goveinoi Blease Is slightly built, with
black hair and mustache. He was in u
gray suit, a broad-brimmed blai k soft
hat. a rd bow tie and n plnk-strlped slllt
shirt. In that shirt was u diamond.
Thero were diamond"
MIV rfP CARD - BLESS A 6 THE F1A1U Y C?A Kf OF f?OSH HJTh '7N V7
IMPRESSIVE SCENES MARK DAWNING OF THE JEWISH NEW YEAR
BRUSSELS FEAR FATE ,' PHILA. AUTOISTS HURT AS PALMER IN FIGHT AGAINST
SUFFERED BY LOUVAIN CAR DROPS THROUGH BRIDGE i PENROSE TO FINISH
In hi? cuff lluka and a ling dished mi n
finger on his left hand.
As he ch.itted In characteristic ftulilon
reply:
"This passage contains ns many lies
as words AH the Powers recognize thut
Gertnnnv la tho ntrirrftsiBnp nml tliA .. n.i I
"ignoble" is the only one applicable to I w,lh n Vsl'T hp W"H asked b Mrs.
the German procedure before and dur- Ww- to hnsten things, as she was bull
ing tiio war" giv and wanted to go to n theatre
The latest' German effort to Influence ' "There's the real Governor of South
Itnh.in nuhlln onlnlnn tin. .,!... ,u Caiolilia." said Mr. Ulcase. "She s leii
hended Yu know by that she Is Gov
ernor." Mrs. Hlnute smiled und ngaln suggested
haste tu her liutoband. lie was nsked
what he Intended doing ufter bin term
ns Goxernor expired.
"I intend to return to tho practice of
law.' answered the Governor "To the
pi in tii. of rimli'iil law. which I lm
Hut when the nest vacancy nccura In the
1'nited Stateii Senate I espect to be obi-ted
to the place."
SIIAItP TUTH'!81I
R that time Mis. Illease was the more
anxious for her dinner und the theotie
However, Governor Hh-Hto bud i hanged
ALMOST ANNIHILATED hls '",,n''' 'eeMei '" Bv ,a ;u-
and diclated one, in which be s.lid tin-
No Officers Left In First Battalion, nwn lvh" ""fated him for the Ifcnnie.
c n..i-,.. t known nn "Cotton Smith." had ' !bd
tjajr mauucia uciicia,
nORPKAI'X, Sept 1!
form of n pamphlet bearing the title
"Tho Truth About .tho War," which,
printed In Italian, 'is being distributed
wldelv throughout Italy. Those collubo
inilns In producing the pamphlet include
Count Krnest von Reventlow. a nnnl
expert- Mathlas Krzbergor, leader of the
Clerical i entre in the Reichstag, and Jo.
sepo Frledrlcb Naumnnn and Count Op
pndorf. both members of the Reichstag
Tho pamphlet contains this senten e
"Win German energy no haw de
termined to win. nnd we Invite tne
It'iinj to win with us."
PRUSSIAN GUARD REPORTED
I IT l 1)1 lni lhf
miiiii Stit
... -- . ... !. U tn.l Ul.,l,.u
'.etters round on German officers taken Ui-inniKiit under Ihe WlUon im'n'n
pnsoner. during tho retreat of the Ger- tratlon, ' b rtm- of llu- currency buy
man armies to the north nnd east Indl- would mipply them with a sulllcient
eete great distress eists among the amount of mono) to niaiket their cotton
Kaiser's forces, particularly ln tho Mth , .r0p or that tho could put it In a rot
Army Corps. Cump-intes of the Prus- ' ton wnrelumto and that thev would be
sian gurd. which originally numbered i loaned at IS'a cents a pound sufficient
Sin men. have been reduced to 70, j money to meet their running obligations.
Of several companies commanded bt since Smith's le-electnm i-oltui bu ;''ne
volunteers oiljcers are misting and no 'lower, "and now he .ind hU liimocinllo
a single ofTlrer is left in the first bat- ! colleague in the 1'nlted States Semite
talion of the guards. publii-iti pro l.iim that the ion-ill laini-
Some uf the letters show t lively fea." era n.-J ih lo.iger look t" the .latoinl
of the French artlllerr is entertained b. Admloi'-tiatlon for hrlp. but inut di-i" m!
the Germans upon their States " The statement odds
A French airman one night dropped I Mr Wilson, who clalinei on the Hit nil
four bombs Into n German bivouac, kill. t be a Southerner, with i)U soiMn-luw,
lug four and Injurlns eight. i Mr McAdoo. udnills thut thev have e-
All the onicers aro fharlng their meals ' ccived the Southern Stutcs in this mat
wlth the men. All motor cars are said ter "
tc be destrocd. I
FRENCHMAN WINS AIR BATTLE
WILSON WAY NOT PROSEQUI!;
Keported He Will Withdraw Slioot.
ing Charge Against Sghujtz.
WUITU I'l-AINH. Sept. I9.-Ther i u
il.
Revolver Duel Between Aviators
Ends in German's Death.
PARIS. Se;t 19 -Tho newspapers toda "" 'Ir.ulation that Charle
relate! the ntor of an air duel between
a French aviator and a German airman
at an unnamed place during a battle
After long rasneuvrlng the Frenchman
fcueceeded In ascending above the Ger
man Roth men used revolvers. The
German wag senoiisly wounded and his
machine turned over and fell among the
Brltih troops He was dead when picked
up.
POINCARE DECORATES GENERAL
IIMRDRAt'X. Sept 13 President
Poiticare raised General de C.isttlnau to
day to the lank of grand oflber of the
Legion of Honor The honor was be
stowed on the recoinmeiiditign of Gen
eral Joffre, comroander-m chief of the
French armies in the field.
Schoolhouscs Filled With Straw
to Await Torch. Belgians Say.
I.(INII)N, Sept. VI.
A courier who nii-Ked from Hiussels
with dlsiMtrhes sn,. the Ib-lglnus expect
to see 'HiiiEf-'lu trenteil as l,iuvalu w.is
bufoix the Get minis t vni-unte the city.
Ho says all the important public billlil-lngi-
including; tin- Pnl.iis de .lustice and
tho largest and most imposing pilvnte
residences, ulicidv have been mined by
the Gonimns ns thmisb to blow them up.
wlillo .schoolbouse.s ami many other build-
lugs arc tlllid with stiaw irnil.i.fm- the t
tmch. t
Injured In nn Accident That Oc- Will Not Retire Under Any Circum-
curcd Near Scranton. ' stances, He Dcclates With Emphnsis.
Four i'hlladclpblans wcie Inlurcd yes- CAItlfONDAUC. Pa., Sept. I'.i. Ilcpio-
teidn.v afternoon, when a touring. i.ir ' s-ntatlve . Mitchell Palmer, I'cmocr.itlc
broke through the plauks of a brldgo nnmluee for United States Smator, before
spanning n cit-ek between Glen Home and
Dalevllle, six miles east of Scranton.
They ate:
.Mis. W. Ii. Wnlls, said to live at STS
Ninth S;d atrcet, leii nrm brokon: John
A. Green, of lst and Westmoreland
stieeta, right ankle spialned and severe
lu-ulj?a and burns; Mis May Gicen, nloco
i.l Mr. Giteii, riglit wust spiainen ami
.... .,w .,. ..,., ,,, ,,. ,.,- v,.,. i,rUHc3; S. P. Mulllns. sou of n
mans lu.vo mined nil r-ads I.Mding Int.. t-hllu-Iol, l.iH. hotel pil-toi. who sus-
Uni...R "it that the iioiB., think ,'' J,,1 tneim-a of tb.e.. ribs.
they Intend to make their piimlpal stand Tho p..tv w.ih. miikliiR n tilfi from tho
on the .Vimur-l.iege line. ,, t. rltM ani1 , ,,licnn Ml)Utna to Scninton In a tour-
" ""ni me ..eing reconstiucteii (Ur sa() ln wolgh MUO pounds, which
'"ill S W0 solllEr "" "'"ht 'ln' ' '' pi oved too lieavv for tho bridge where
Tho Germans also have ,;, pr,nilng ,,r, rl,cldent oicujrcd. The plunking gnn
fir ii htroig deitnse on tho V.iei,, ii-nnea I W(1V ,,,, u,0 cur overtmib'd. all but Mul-
lln-. Ac-ordlng to the muili-i n,,. Gm
uvinn now seem to h. using I uxemburg
for their prinelpHl H10 "'.commiitiiiatlon
tor their tnnles In Fr ,ii-e
KAISER REBUKES PRINCE
Reprimands Son for Exposing Him
self to Enemy's Fire.
GB.VBVA, Sept. 10. The recklei.snesa
of Ciowtl Prinre Fiederlek Wlllhim In ex
nslng himself und his btuff in the recent
ngnting in i-Timeo t-uiteii fmth a slinrii
I llu Ik Iio: jdnntd beneath It. lie hucce-neil
In gelling the two women out and was
trying to help Green, when help tame
! with the an I-ill "f nnnther car. The In
jured wlIo taken to Scianlon on a l.ack-
' nwannii train last ni.tbt.
STATESMAN'S SON WOUNDED
leaving l,.ickuwariiia Countv Inst night,
put the final iiulctus on llie tumor that
he will withdraw from the campaign nnd
le.ive to Gilford Plnchot. the Washington
party nominee, tho en tiro light against
Peninje.
"You can sny for me, at any limn oi In
any place, fumi now on until after elec
tion duy," he said, "that I shall not with
draw from this tight. You cannot make
that declaration too stiong. do not pro
pose to withdraw In favor uf cilif iid Pln
chot, or itny other mun. If it is ueces
saiy for mo to repial thut declaration
ewrv ilnv, in order to qonvlncc the people
or thlc Htnti- of the slnieill.i with which
I have pledged myself to prosecute this
battle. I will to mi I am in tin- light to
Pie veri Inst oume of mj stivngih nml
I shall not ictlre from it "
JEWISH NEW YEAR
BEGINS TOMORROW
AT THE SET OF SUI
Day of Rejoicing as Weill
as of Fervent Prayer for;
Welfare of Family and i
Friends.
Devout Jews throughout the world !
preparing today for tho Jewish New
Year, or the Feast of Rosh Hahank '
which begins tomorrow at sundown aw! "
ends on sundown Monday.
This year, in addition to offering prar.' '
era for the safety of loved ones l,ere '.'
fervant prayer will be offered for thi
safety of thoso who aro ln war-rlddta
Europe.
There will be happiness and sorrow a
the messages borne to every Jewin
household today on the New Year carJi
and the postman, especially n ,.
Ghetto, will bo anxiously awaited -
It Is possible, too. that the c'onfllfi
act oss the sea will figure largely n th
messages. On nccount of the toll 7t
war there ate many here wnltlns with
much foreboding for greetings which
may never come.
It will not bo necessary for the letter
carrier lo ring the bell or knock at th
door of the homes In Mi r:i,.,i. ...
anxious ones there have been waitlni
too long for tho eve of the New Yar
Those loved ones abroad who do not
write at nny other time never forget to
senil greetings today.
When tho evening star makes Its ap.
pcarnncc In the heavens tomonow, thut
marking tho beginning of the worship
thoto who did not rccelvo the customary
annual greeting will lift their eyes to
ward heaven nnd invoke tho divine Prov
idence to piotect those who have sent
their last messages.
Tho Postofllce forco Is wot king over
time so that tho mall may be distributed
before tho ntlvcnt (according to the Jew
ish cntendnr) of the year C6T.",
Tomorrow night at sundown, In accord
ance with un old Jewish custom, the be
loved Jcwi'sh grandfather or the oldest
member of the family blesses the rest
of the family before leaving for the syn
agogue. T,1,!' custom Is observed In eiery
oithndox homo throughout the world. At
me synagogue an win kneel In prayer,
I giving thanks for gifts of the ln'st year
nnd asking divine blessing for the ensa-
Ing year.
i The observance of tho Jewish New Year
i ns a holy season Is commanded ln to
i passages of the Five Books of Moees. In
neither nassntre Is tbere mil unai'in,. mm.
maiiil as to how the day Is to he observed
beyond the Injunctions to blow the trum
pet, to hold a holy convocation and to
engage In no servile occupation The day
is the first of the seventh month or Pie
day or the new moon of that month.
The new moon was observed .13 holy
1 Hcasnn by the Jewg of old; the seventi
month was a particularly holy month.es
the seventh day was the hol day of the
week. The new moon of the seventh
month was therefore Invested with i
significance of far holler Import than the
other new moon days of the year. W
injunction to blow the trumpet on tHl
(lav wh'h to cnll the people to rfntfia
bronco bcfoie the I.oid. This ceiemony
of blowing the "shofai" became the cm
trnl ligure of the elaborate religious ser
vice conducted on the day.
It Is the prevailing idea that on this
dav God weighs men's actions In lie
scales of justice. New Ycnr''s Day In
the passing of the centuries has thci
come to embody the great religious lds
of divine Justice and human responsibility.
arcoiHL ocnviuco iu ivi
JEWS' NEW YEAR FESTIVAL'
Another German, Blinded, Begs
Sight to See Paris Captured.
PAItlS. Stpt. 13
'.M... i ,.., in Unbentluil Utul Ib'liren.
reprimand from his father, i:mpeuir Will- ft iimtemint in tho Ha.son cavnln of tho
iK-iuiuiuK " inimiiiiiiiuii it-ceivwi 1...,,, .ini (juaril und a ton 01 1110 i-or-
' ebsii Minister of Sa.sony. is one of tho
Genu. 111 wmiutieti ill tin- iioepiuu m nauii
In m,
tiBte today.
Several of the Prince's aides aro wild
to huvo'heen wounded.
SAVES HOUSES FHOM DEATH
Fireman Becker Then Turns in
Alarm for Fire.
Iii'iou- n tlmi b.- Harry Ib-ikn. .1 tire
II);. l of the f.Jth (tie! I'll!.' atl'titd stilt Inn,
saved threi luii.-ea fiom biirnlnv ti'i'ay In
.1 lire which ihstiiiied a pm-tlun of llu
hiiib e of Josep 1 Iiuiipill, Wood! iml uv
I. it- and 5Uth fctreet. The lots uqm iuoii
than J HA
Keeker was nn his a to the tiro liou-e
.ifler hrialifaetlng at Immt ivhn lie ban
i-ok- cumins from UontirU'tt ktHbie. .
1 I'M, Bid into the e.nolio-rtlUd bulldiuu -juU
lid th.i thmc hoirea to cufi-t. Tin 11 In
Minwi in un ulaiin
When the engine company fim 'il own
t"timi mrivi'd UecKi r imslsled lit u
tiiiiiuishlns the Idaz-.
JAPANESE SEIZE STEAMSHIP
German drnft Taken to Kobe -JJews
lepers Suppressed.
PKKIN. Hpih. 13.
A Joiiamte destioyer captured 4 (lei-
Wilson ill not ptea his cuniidaiJit in,in stiamnbip on Thursdjy and took liei
auainiit Kied Scnulw, whu flu-d live shots ! Kobi', imoidlnK to advices rm.fid
at him on Thursday. It was reported
tliat Wilon's employer. Alfred Qwynne
Vumlerbilt, and his fiiind were trtng
to prtient a scandal by u.ivlng Wilson
withdraw the charge
I'rleniU of Hibu'.lz h.i he la in a posi
tion to tell soin. tiling about the ugjjoilu
tion of WINon with Florence tscheniU. a
Southern beaut.i who re'ently dld.
here tnda .
Antl-Japaneiie (tapers pubilshed at
Vludliojitiik have been supprcded by the
Ituisiun autlioritleg.
Wilson Sues for Lecture Bill
ST I.Ot'ld. Sent !-ileni line Wil
son, ex-l'nitevi Stdtts Amljaad' 1 to
Mexico, has bjcughi suit m '1 St
I-ouls Circuit Court against tho ur-.- i-nu
Jveeum Bureau fvr JitW ail to be dao for
Ic.turing.
MRS. ANNA W. EDSALL
JiM Anna W. IMall 73 ci nbl, died
suddenly eterdy at her boino. l'ii
Notth Kdgewoid street. Mi Kdsall Iwd
liven In fefble hejUli tu. turn tunc.
Ii-atli i'jn while he was bins; fully
di-sted on a bed I'i li rnudmuii. uf
.'ii S"orth SiJkti tn btic t was mi-iish in d
a"i pro'iouri' ej her d'ad The inruiiprs
i!In.e was notified Mrs Edsall is sur
v:ed bv a son Geotee :d63ll, ef the
raiadelphlJ Press. '
Ma 11 drier. lie was taken pusoner at
I'lint-a-Muusbou.
A Germnn iinn-cmiunlsslonrd olllcer
iiamid nn PutHiamor. eon nf a German
ktatrstuun. died In the hospital at Com
t.ierfne. I'ingnients of shells had blinded
both eyes, one nrm win. unshed and he
h'ld lmonut wounds In the thighs. He
b. Kged the surgeons to mve his sight so
that he could go on to Paris with Ills
regiment.
"JOKER" SENDS FALSE ALABMS
Six Companies Summoned to Fake
Fito Early This Morning.
Practical jokeis, who have been min
ing In false alarms at ai Litis file boxes
in the Kensington t-ectlon. will reieiio
no mercy If caught by the police. The
practice bus been going on for tho last
fow weeks, nnd the police and fire com
panies of that district have be-ume des
perate, (lecturing that a falso alarm rung
in at the Hiieder Adamson Company's box
011 Allegheny n venue, east of Hlchmond
utu-et, this morning Is the last -truw.
The 1 ail was registered at 4:57 this
ruining, and si. engine comp.iuic3 ic
spui'ded two trucks, two battalion chiefs.
0110 truck and one cheiuual engine but
found that there was ncitlur trace of
tile uor of the perpetrator of the so
called Joke.
NEGRO'S INJURY FATAL
As the leuult of a fiacturcd skull, re
ceived In a light last Sunda. William II.
Joliiibon, 5JD ilanton ttnit, Zi jears old,
a Xegro, died late iust nmbt in tho Gcr
ipabtuwn Hospital. He with a number of
N'igioes got into a light Un Sunday
nigbt, Johnson bustalnirig a fiuctuted
kull.
Several of the ethers were hurt They
Wfitf diiuKd but were r.iiascd uwait
ing the result of Jo tnson's iniu Last
night thf were rearrested, and will be
Bivcii a heanns before Magistrate Ren
btw in the Central Police Station to-
day.
MOTHER VAINLY PERILS HER
LIFE tO SAVE HER CHILD
In Hospital After Attempt to Ex
tinguish Fire.
Klisabeth Wendt, SI eiii3 old. of r.112
lilchniond street, is In the llplscnpal
Hospital suffering with hums of the face
nml bauds as a lesult of her attempt
to save her child, i:ilz.iboth, I ycuis old,
who was burned to death when her
clothes caught lire while playlns with
maulics ostnday.
Tin- mother Id not In n sorlous con-
MlllUII,
COl
Tho child was also tuken lo the Kpls
ipal Hospital, whete its body now re-
. ""' "": imnovai to mo Wcudt
ome Frank Wendt. father of the fain-
ll. who s editor of n Polish news-
his 1 till, s death, only two month- ago
the famll.li lost a ti-weekh-oUl baby
DR. THOMAbSSJjJLES NAMED
Sctanton Physician Mnde Hend of
Hamburg Tuberculosis Sanitorium
II VHIHSlll'IW. Pa.. Sept it. - .state
Health Commissioner Samuel O. UImiii
H'fcterdny npiiointcd lir. Thomas H. A.
Stitcs, of scranton, to bu mciik-ui di
lector of ihu now tuhen-utosu sanitorium
at Munibuig. liiK-tor stitea ttl laKo
chnigc tlu-ro khmtl.
Since thp dlvUlun of tulu-n-ulusU dispen
saries was established, wvejal eurs ago,
Uoctor Silti-3 has bjtcn medical inspector
in obargo of tbouj. This w-orls wiij Do
ossunuHl for the present by Hr. Kari
SibalUe, JiU OMistont.
Uoctor Stltwj Is a Strnntuu uwn and I,
n Rraijuute of tho L'niversily or IW
sjylvunla.
Tiuie
11 Ui 1
LOCAL FIIli; KKUOKD
J.'Ji.
m ivi.ivv. , M t- Th
"' " ' SLh:'.tiw,:,,,. - - ,7iWta
10 30 p. m lljoii. OUb .! mil Ili ,n"ow"
Ion me 1- .
11.00 p m Durlnng. X!W S Ml, ,'"' ,Bn
J. W a. m Hear , ,r-t jg..jP, ,...
.'or of II J JUiAt., , -Vrraiog
Prnyers for Friends in War Zones
to Be Offered.
In celebration of the Jewish New TfJf.
which begins nt sunset tomoirow nisht
special services will bo held In all th'
Orthodox nnd Itefniiurd synagogues of
tho city that evening. There will also In
services on Monday morning, nnd at that
tlmo tho maturity of the clergymen will
piou'di their Now Year's sermons Th
services tnnuuiow night will lie In prepa
ration for the holldnv and will be hrS'l
devoted to prayer. Additional prajers 'HI
lm offeied tills vent- for the relatives and
friends of local Jews In Hie warrlns
nations of Km ope.
In the Oithodov sjnngoguei tb re will
be 1.01 vices nli-o in the ovenins on Mon
day, and in the homes (line w'll 6
fenstlng and holiday amusements
"The Great Dc-liflnn" Is to b- -I - se
lect of tho sermon to be delier-d MondsT
mm nini! nt b o'cloik. hi ti Kev Dr
llrurv Iteikowllz in the rjodepb Shalom
S'ii.igogiie, Ilinnd nnd Green tr-i' W"
riltlonal servlies aie to be 1 nrti' iw W
tho Junior Cungrrp.itlmi at H" "
liour in the Henlnmln 1'. 'I ell. UeniorBi
School House Hall, Ilto.id and .lefTerso'i
htrcnts. The Hev. Kll Mayer I- t" PfJ
tho sermon. These tci-viccs me epenli
intended for students and Uii"r
At the service nT the Junior i-nnsres-lion
tomorrow night, the It' pr'
nerkowltz Is to speak In tb- synaSP
tho sumo evening tlieie will be a 3rr
servle. and Rev. Mr. Msiw will PrfS"
lloth the services toinnrrmi night ,'"
at i o'clock. . .
At ICeiifsoth Israel. Pnwd .md iW
bin inenue. tho Hei Hr. J" ' !'h lvr"!,
kopf. vilni has recentl i.tuiiied rrora
Kurope, will preach a sei nwrn n "
day morning
NO-LICENSE LEAGUE PLANS
LEGISLATIVE CAMPAIGN
Will Urge Strict Enforcement d
bRws Rerrulatinpr Sale of Liquor.
in anticipation of a bi ";" "
tho interests of teinpei.in. "-".',.',,
tliltlii'.' this winter, a Phlln hia ou'
Xo-Ucense l.e.iue h.i b 'Bn"
Tho nlllccis chow 11 aie
President, the I!ei I'i
Hiow, p.iator of the Thud
Church
VifA liif-Alillitri WlllMIU -1
the Rrv. . Howaul T.ni"'
Suniuel K. McConiiell. lWr,
Secretary nml trc.isuiei. Mia" su"
land. 15aj Tioga sticet
Attorney, Jay ri. Gibr fi.
This Ictguo has the hfiii' n"
11011 01 1110 I'eiiiisjiM""-- jiiiir 1
f.nnf-110 .tint nlli.tr temnci Hlli ' M'fr ... 1
tlons ami brotherhoods I' ' ..a,)6t
urge better onforcemein " "'hl.8'n,
laws as well .is to assi-t in voi
laws, that lll ireent lb- '' j
1
i.enr-e '
Hart"
l0r,ion.
Ih. If''
toxliants
'
Government Seed for Poor jj
OTTAWA Sept l' W"V,Z r' ''"J
of seed gram Is to be t"""',ir S
Govetnmeot to farmers cf ' J
wuess crop3 were a fal""e ' ' ' ' I