',ww9'Tpimwrn wn mWkM&im T&3 Wf" .Sv EVENING LEDaER-PHItiAPELPHIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 101j ifyipiJiipiniijviii.wwiiWPAVi f n ? A. t V. Z d I OLD DEATH HOUSE RINGS WITH SHOT AS SPY IS SLAIN Carl Hans Lody Executed in London Tower as German Agent Married Ameri can Girl, Posed as,. American. LONDON, Nov. 11. tt Is olUclntly an nounced that Cntl Hans Lody. ollan Charles A. IngHs, xvho wns found Bullty by a court-martial of esplonaite on No vember 2, w(ih shot as n Bpy on Friday. Lody, when arrested. Bald he wns an Amertcnn, but later confessed that he wad a German. He had lived In New York mid Omnhn, In the latter city he ttlnrrled the daughter of Gottlieb Btorz, 6. brct .e, hut she divorced him. The statement concerning the execution merely cald: "Sentence was duly con Jl, IH-med." It Is understood that I.ody died prune, refusing to tha last to reveal the name of i, iho superior ofneer from whom he ndmlt- , ted he had received his Instructions to ispy on the Urltlsh navy. This was tho flr.it execution In the Tower of London since April !, 1717, when Lord Lovut was beheaded. Tho scene of tho execution wns the Tower Uarrackn, not far from tho spot whom Anne lloleyn and other persons famous In Klgllsh his tory were put to death. Lody was about 23 vears old. He onco wat, employed ub n. guide by n. touring agency In New York, nnd also worked for the Union Pnclflc Railroad In Omaha, lie nf.a arrested late In September In London chnrged with espionage, nnd at his trial testified that he wns an cx-Ilcu-tenant In the Gcrmnn nnvy, but th.it he hnd been transferred to the resorves. In his capacity as a reserve offlcer, Lody testified that he wns ordered to proceed to Knslnnd to keep track of the fyfr .movements of the Urltlsh fleet, but was ,fr' I limed not to do any spying. He was ij ioia 10 travel as an ,moncan cuizcn. r American passport." lie claimed embershlp In several Now York soci eties. Lost car Lody served on board Emperor William u racing yncht Meteor. j Aiiu wiiiuu iiui,v ui iiiv Auiimiii ,.n- sizes nas rciurnca a iruc out ngainsc Nlcholns Ahlers, tho German Consul In Sunderland borough, on the charge of high" treason. According to the indict ment, Mr. Ahlers was naturalized in 1D05. . After tho declaration of war ho engaged in helping German reservists leave Eng land for Germany. NEW YORKER HELD ' IN JAMAICA JAIL AS ALLEGED SPY Louis Wessels, Commission 9 Merchant, Believed Ac cused of Aiding Germans From British Possession. ..KINGSTON, Jamaica, Nov. Jl.-Louls ""Vessels, an American citizen, who, for many years has been head of the com mission Arm of Wessels. Kulenkamnff Company, of New York, with a local branch here, and Is well known both hore and In New York, was committed to the High Court today to bo tried for alleged Violation of the (otllclal) secrets act. Tho offense Is not specifically a cap ital crime, but ball was refused in this instance. NEW YOKK. Nov. ll.-Mr. Wessels has been connected with tha commission firm for a number of years and Is the head both of tho firm In New York and of the branch In Kingston, which bears the name of Weasels Uros, & von Gontnrd Company. He was widely known among the commission merchants here before he went to Jamaica 18 years ago and estab lished the company's branch at Kingston. He Is married and has three children, who '.vent to Kingston with him. The first newB of Mr. Wessels' predica ment stated that he had been requested to leave Jamaica Immediately by the British Government. The authorities gave ns tha reason the allegation that his Arm had been furnishing supplies to Ger man cruisers. Just what the ofllclal secret act is could "not be learned, but It la supposed that he Is charged broadly with espionage. Thu punishment for conviction rests with the court. Sir Courtenay Bennett, Brit ish Conul General, said last night that violations are tried by court-martial and that death Is not specified as the punish ment. It Is significant to note, however, - that a mnn was executed in England last Friday for an offense supposed to be specified under this act. WOMAN SAYS SHE SAVED PRINCE JOACHIM'S LIFE Detected Borab Throwers on Train Carrying Kaiser's Son. NEW YORK, Nov. ll.-Mrs. Leslie Ma son, of this city, who was a passenger on the Itlalan liner Stampalla, arriv ing here today, told a story how she saved the life of Prince Joachim, the youngest son of the Kaiser. Mrs. Mason was a passenger on a train bound from ' Nuremberg to Switzerland, upon which a private car bearing Prince Joachim was attached. The American woman noticed several men in her compartemnt carry ing bundles and talking among them selves, jn a language she believed to b Russian.. At p. way station Mrs. Mason Informed the military guard, and the men were arrested. Their bundles were found to contain bombs. The Prince thanked Mrs. Mason and asked her New York address, so that he could forward her an honorary decoration. SEEK TO IDENTITY, SKELETON Atlantic County Prosecutor at Work, on Woods' Mystery. ATLANTIC CITY, Nov. II. - County prosecutor Moore Is In communication tpday with the police of Baltimore in an attempt to establish the Identity of the Hft whose skeleton was found In the weda in Weymouth County. County Piiysielan K. Leonard says the body re nialned there for a year, the bones hav ifjg been bleached. The Initials F. E. M. were found in a pocket handkerehlet and on the man's coat. The name end ad drew "Araoi Walt. HIS North Tremont Uet. Baltimore." were written on a SjUp of paper which was in 4, pocket of Us Mt Cape Hay County Teachers' Institute Tt6tTOI. Kov. Ji.-The CajM Jfy Couaay Teae&eftt' iMtitnU vN be held at the Ocu CUy Hltfb Shas) BuUdteg ou TNmft 44 PWwr. M an IX & F fee ta aeiutttai UMMHEA STfcFf jSSJBPEfBSSSpW FRANK QITTELSON'S RECITAL Young Thllftdelphlnn Enthuslnstlenl ly Received at the Acedemy. After musician has appeared with two symphony orchestras and In several recitals of his own, It mny appear it rnnlt cynicism to refer to him as a vlollntst of promise. The phrase may be deadly, but In tho c.iao of Frank aitlelson, who was heard at the Academy last night, the only alternative Is to say that he Is a violinist without promise which la hap pily very for from being true. Mr. Git tloson Just at present Is what brokers call an excellent "future." When he Was first heard here, In an ungrateful Lalo concerto with tho Phila delphia Orchestra, Mr. Glttelson revealed certain technical powers quite beyond tho ordinary. Yesterday those powers wero given fuller scope and reaffirmed the earlier Impression, that Mr. Glttelson has clone wisely to prepare himself so welt. He will never have to bo back to pick tip a technique with which to express what ever he may learn to feel, Ono technical fault he has an, apparent Inability to play the G string staccato and give It a pure tone. It Is strange that his rich est tones should have come from thin string, which nt times ho abused unmerci fully. To criticize Mr. Olttclson's Interpreta tions Is to come nt once to the great question his playing brings up. The question whether an nrtlst of even tho first technical rank has the right to play In public until he Is In the fu1ne;s ol his mental and spiritual prowth. It Is not the province of the critic to Inqulro Into Mr. Glttolson's personnl affairs. Simply ns n fact. It cannot be that Mr. Glttelson has nnythlng new or vital In tho way of emotional experience to trans mit to his hearers. He Is a very young man. Of course, there nrn the terrible precedents of the great violinists. Mr. Glttelson resembles Zlmnbllst of a few years ago. He may recall that Krelsler came as a toy prodigy, that Elman was n hcart-plucklnir lad when he was first heard here. The wholo tradition Is wrong and Mr. GltteUon suffers from It. Ho Is far too good n violinist to bo spoiled by It, however. Last night's program Included tho "Chaconne," by Bach, which, It has been suggested, should bo legally reserved for tho very greatest players alone. Mr. Glt telson played It well, with slight ovcr nccenttintlon of chords nt the beginning. The three nntlonal dances were done with progressiva Improvemet. Mr. Glt telson found hlmsolf able In the Sara sato and Brnhms to fall In with the rhythm. And in the nndnnte of his flni concerto hfi achieved real emotion. Al together the occasion wns much more felicitous than outside reports of Mr. Glttelson had given reason to expect. TWO RECITALS TONTOHT. The first conflict of the musical season comes tonight, when two recitals will bo given. Mme. Alma Gluck, who sang with the Philadelphia Orchestra some weeks ago, will clve a recital of Ger man, Husslan, French nnd American songs at tho Academy of Music, and David Blspham will give a leeturo-re-cltal nt Wlthcrspoon Hall. Tho progrumn of bothrof tho artists are widely varied nnd so arranged ns to offer tho Kroutest scopd for their respective talents. Ah both are known to Phlladclphlans, tho cholco between them Is an easy matter of personal preference. DIES OF POISON OR FRIGHT Murderer Escapes Electric Chair After Swallowing Match Ecads. TRENTON. Nov. ll.-Polson or fright caused the death of Angclo Clrclcllo, a wife murder of Newark, a few hours before the time fixed for his execution at tho State prlau last night. County Physician Frank G. Scannell, who con ducted an autopsy, announced that death was duo to phosphorus poisoning, result ing from a dose of match heads soaked In water which Clrclcllo took on Mon day.' Prisoners In the death house, where he had been confined since last December, are permitted to smoke, and it Is sup posed Clrclcllo succeeded In hiding enough hends to make a formidable done. Prison authorities believe Clrclello's death was due to fright over his Impend ing fate, and pointed out that the autopsy disclosed a badly diseased heart nnd lungs affected with tuberculosis. Coupled with his enfeebled physical condition was an extremely nervous temperament, acecntu dated by two stays which prolonged his llfo when ho was almost In the shadow of the electric chair. Clrclello collapsed between 2 and 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon and died about half an hour later. His brother and sister weie paying him a last visit at the time. He was to have been ex ecuted at S:15 last night. GOVERNOR FIELDER LAUDS NATION'S PROSPEROUS PEACE Executive Issues Els Annual Thanks giving Day Proclamation. TRENTON. Nov. li.-In his annual Thanksgiving Day proclamation today, Governor Fielder calls attention to the peace and prosperity that havo prevailed in bdth nation and State. He refers to the proclamation of President Wilson, Axing November 26 for general and re ligious thanksgiving. The proclamation says In part: "The passing days carry their measure of defeats and successes, the speeding yeara bring their sorrows and their Joys, but as the world moves or. toward that Ideal State, when enmity and covetous ness In men's hearts shall be supplanted by charity and lovo for their brother, the days and years contain fresh reasons for lutpplness and rejoicing. For reasons best known to an all-wise Providence, a hor rid conflict Is raging among the warring nations of Europe, carrying death and devastation in Its train, and presenting to us by striking contrast the magnitude of those blessings which flow from In ternational peace and the contentment of prosperity, which follows fruitful fields and bounteous harvests. For our happy condition, tha thanks of a devout people should be rendered to the creator and ruler of the universe." PREACHER TO LEAVE TAIL The Rev. Bouck White, of Social Revolution Church, Finishes Term, NEW YORK, Nov. ll.-The Rev. Bouck White, who was ejected fro mthe Fifth Avenue Baptist Church lest summer be cause he persisted, in Interrupting the services by hackling its pastor, the Rev, Cornelius Woelfkln, and was sentenced to six months In the Queens County Jail, will be released tomorrow, his term being finished. A delegation from tha church of the Social Revolution, of which he Is pastor, will give him a reception. MODERN PANC1NO THE STUDIO or MODERN DANCING M. EARL DELANV MISS JNEZ. LIVINGSTON Bineom mil Seventeenth, M. W. Cornr. "Bell Phone. SpfW 8S4 1728 N.lSthSt. PHONE LUCIEN O. CARPENTER That's All SIAUOND ills D. MISS MARGUERITE a WAL2J Studio of Modern Dances 1101 WALNUT STREET Mr. BlUttb w Rttd. CiujMrea. Sprue Mat. BLANCHE WEST AU. THB MODERN DANCBfl 41o. 1MO caMTWWT BX. n be nalii e. Wjtt e(Muf 8u4, i B&rfMk THE RICH MAN'S BURDEN AND HOW IT KILLS HIM Wealth Without Health a Futile Tiling To Him Whom business Cares Have Buried From the Builnets Man's Mrnlne. There was a fool who made a fortune but he died. The world called him great but it lied, The things that go to make up ft good business man, In the popular mind, ore tho establishment of great Industries and enterprises, coupled with the accumula tion of money by the Individual. A careful rdvlow of the history of busi ness men who have made a sueceis along these lines shows that tho majority sac rificed their health nnd their lives to their business. In the last and final anal ysis, therefore, these were not good busi ness men. The best musician Is the one who can bring the most sounds Into harmony. Tho superior artist Is the one who most successfully can harmonlxo colors nnd repioduce nature. The belt business mnn likewise Is the man who can best har monize or balanco the affairs under hU control. Tho man who from a cheap tin atoro founded "The Fair" In Chicago and al lowed tho business. to dethrone his rea son and Bend him to his death before ho was 60, could hardly bo considered a good business mnn. Measured on this same scale, Marshall Field wns not a Rood business man. President Roberts, who nroso from the ranks of a car wheel moulder to the presidency of the Penn sylvania Railroad and died at the age of DO, wns not a good business man. H. A. Lozlcr, who made millions of dollars out of the Loiler blcyrle works nnd died ut middle age while eating IiIb break fast, was not n good business man. SUCCKSS F.MPTY WITHOUT HEALTH. Tho accumulation of money and the founding of great Industries Is only ono requisite and by no means the most Important ono to the good business man, for what proflUth a man to make a seven figure fortune, to put In motion a million spindles, chain continents together with cables, flash Ills silent voice over oceans and continents on currents of common air, make the ocean's billowed bosom a commercial highway, transform the ox cart Into a palace and set It on wheels and hitch It to the lightning, build sky scraping structures of stono and steel, transfix human figures and faces on sen sitized glass, dliect the methods of bur rowing Into tho earth for coat and gold until his name Is known around the world and his fortuno Is a power in tho land what boots It to know all these things and glide blindly Into the ahnmbles of Unrest nnd disease, or furnish a fashion able funeral at 45? The religious fanatic who robes him self In sack cloth and eschews tho razor, the food crank who crlea out, "back to naturo" nnd take3 to grass, the one Idea social reformer who preaches on the curb and tho business man who al lows his business to become his abso lute master nnd governor, arc In reality all In the same class. The unfortunate thing Is that the business mnn sits him down and weaves about himself the mesh of a prison. Every year puts in a now bar, every month a new bolt, nnd even day and hour a new stroke that rivets around him what he calls busi ness until he feels and really thinks he cannot escape. A GOOD BUSINESS MAN. A good business man Is the man who can direct the wheels of Industry, who can diaw a trial balance between his Income nnd his eNpenses nnd who can measure his own ability on the yard stick of endurance. He is a good business man nho gives as much study to tho laws of his own physical organization as he does to the organization of hla business and In the final wind-up I doubt If ho would not consider himself a better business man. fiat broko and In good health at 00, than sojourning In a sanatorium with a million at hla call, but out of the light at W. It Is truly unfortunate that tho gon oral laws of health and hygiene are not more universally taught and understood. We learn that best with which we are thrown In most frequent contact. The business man would absorb enough Information on theso subjects to extend his period of longevity and usefulness many years if they were taught In our METHODIST MEN MEET Three Thousand Answar Eollcall nt Convention In Boston. BOSTON, Nov. 11. A convention unique In New England religious history began here today at the Tremont Tomple when 3000 men answered present at the New England Convention for Methodist Men. This is tho first time that such a gather ing of Methodists has ever been called together In this section of the country. Today Is known as New England Day for the delegates. Tomorrow will be desig nated as American Day, and n meeting will be held on Boston Common. Friday will be called World Day. To arouse enthusiasm for this conven tion 2S dinners were held in various parts of New England. MEDICAIi MEN MAY VNITE Movement for One Society Started In Wilmington. Wilmington, Nov. ii.-Though the subject has not been publicly aired, there is a movement on foot In this State to combine the members of both schools of medicine Into one society. There was talk among members of the Delaware State Medical tioclety In this connection at Its recent meeting here, and there has been similar talk among the homeopaths. MODKltN DAWC1NO PALACE BALLROOM 3kAbtD Rtceptlens Monday, Wdneldy n4 SturJy Kvtnlnrt. rttKlnners' CUa Tuesday and Thursday Ewnlnrs. Reception follows tha Class, with orebatra music. TONIGHT MILITARY NIGHT (WEDNESDAY, NOVRMHBR 11TH) BAND AND ORCHKSTOA MUSIC Nolhlxa But Dane: Uanca All Night. GEORGE R. H. BERNARD Is rlrln private and class Iciaoas In tha latest ballroom and atas danclna; at hl Studio, 2142 N. Carlisle St. Phone, Dlanund 411V. ria bbbt ttt rown JLBSOLVTBLY VHOUALLBNaBO Gsera" 'Bernard has no connection whatso- with any other dancing-master tn Valla. The School of Real Dancing McElrpy's Tioga Academy Hit OHJUMNtOWN AVE. 25 ROUND DANCaS flUAHANTEBD, DEUON8TKATEI) AND TAUGHT SPECIAL NOVELTY LADIES' NIGHT. .OV 1BTH BcholanT Morfday and Thuraday Reception wast" TO vonli rorm own class r tali av Btrlclly prlvala Lasson Coaault r Arm-Brust. Chestnut St.. Jill. fJlKClIAIJBT la up-to-tES-mlnute dances. Li '- ' ' . I ' " '1 STANDARDIZED MODERN DANCING Jessie Willioa Slilt Stanley Baira Reed SPBCIALIa Cattle Polka Ls tlusia BUI Bwto rdB Parisian Ball jtoaei Ta fa"!1 , iLBar "Mas UTTB . PKragR 3 ITU CHSVTMUr ill Pwa- Ipruca iiiZ. public schools, or were matters of gen eral knowledge. The routine life of the average business man Is about as fol lows: He arises between 6 and 7 a. m., takes no exercise of fresh nlr, but partakes of a breakfast composed largely of cereal starch, meat and coffee, then goes nt onco to his business, sits at a desk until noon, takes luncheon nt a neighboring cafe, composed of meat, cereal or potato starch, beer or coffee, hurries back to business, sits at his desk five or six hours longer, hurries home, partakes of dinner composed of more meat, more stnrcli, moro tea or coffee no exercise, no diver sion, no nssoclntlon with the great au thors; no music, no poetry, no change. A friend may come In, or he mny go out tn lstt, then comes the soothing nnd soporlferous cigar which may have been his companion slnoo breakfast. The mar ket, the business, tho chances for making or losing dollars is the topic of discus slon. He Is In the power of his master, "business," and must do him continual obt'dlenci1. ultli t lie domain of the tyrant lie lives, moves ami has his being. NATPRE'S WARNINO t'N'MKKDHD. If he has an 111, hendache, sour stomach, Indigestion, a lingo of rheumatism, dizzi ness, or any one of the thousand symp toms or warnings that nature gives him for the violation of her laws, Instcnd of thinking a little nnd trying to nscertaln tho causo, he sends, with chesty pride, for his physician nnd his physician writes out something In a dead lnnguage tho only suitable language nnd the local druggist rends over the stuff and It li swallowed with that childish confidence that fitly becomes the modern business mnn who knows a great deal about busi ness but nothing nbnut himself. Tho das nnd months go on, the symp toms or signals become more numerous. more expressive, more lmpressl-e, moro painful: his physician Is called more often, the dead language paper goes to tho druggist oftcner than It used to; with faith he still swallows tho poison ous drugs, they relievo him for a little while, usually by paralysing the Uttlo nervo fibres that uro carrying to tho brain the messages of warning. His Physician flnntly acknowledges de' feat nnd pic?crlben a trip or n snna torlum. It Is either thlB procedure or tho fate that befel Messrs. Roberts, I.ozler, Vice President Hobart, Colonel Ingersoll nnd tho uncounted thousands who had no reputation beyond tho domain of their own locality. SUGGESTIONS 1'OR A GOOD BUSI NESS MAN. Don't allow your business to become your master. Don't discuss business at home or In social life. Tnke a cool shower bath nnd vigorous exercise before an open window the first thing upon arising. fnrtuko of a very light brcnkfnBt nn hour after arising, eliminating tea, coffee, bread, potatoes nnd meat, Walk to your business If po&slble breathe deeply. Eliminate woolen undcrwea. ; dress as lightly as possible. Tuke an hour for luncheon; omit tea, coffee, tobacco, beer and sweets. Keep your ofllce well ventilated. Secure competent help nnd trust them. Leave your olllco enrly enough to walk home, or at least part of the way. Masticate your food Infinitely fine, and by nil means do not otereat. This Is the crowning sin of the civilized table. Wo usually eat as much as we want, then call Into ncttvlty another set of taste buds by forcing on the appetite another kind of food. Take from 10 to 13 minutes' exercise be fore retiring; sleep In a cold, thoroughly ventilated room. Spend as much timo ns possible In the sunshine und open air. Play golf, Join a gymnasium, dance, sing, kick nnd play with the boya. for It Is Infinitely better to dig In the ditch for your dinner nnd to be nblo to d cest and enjoy It than to Ho invalid In your self- made prison nnd perhaps die. WOMAN AIDED CONVICT Visitor Planned Escape of Burglar From Delaware 'Workhouse. WILMINGTON. Del.. Nov. ll.-Mem-ben- of the Board of Trustees of tho New Cnstlo County Workhouse declare that tho cscapo of Cornelius Street, a burglar, waa planned by a woman who visited tho institution In an automobile. Following tho woman's visit Street cut a. hole through tho metal celling of tho workhouse and another through a slate roof. There Is talk of referring the matter to tho Grand Jury. IIU8INESS OITOUTUN1TIE8 I WANT A FINANCIAL BACKER Through withdrawal of financial support because of the policy of my paper, the Sunday Evening Journal, I need one or a group of men with a small capital to finance the paper. Success is assured by the sale of last week's issue, of which 33,000 copies were sold between the hours of 2 P. M. and top. M. The paper must appear next Sunday. Investigation in vited at once. J. LAZAR, Editor, 28 S. 7th street. Market 4289, BESOnTS Illlllllllllll v tsjtjJiCfibfijiisi The Delights of Getting Well You can combine the enjoyments of a ttvisut&cetit rftAnrt hotel wiin ALT. the TREAlMENTb pyen at Aii, Vichy, HOTEL CHAMBERUN Old Point Comfort Ineenetfof booklets, enedcseftitaseu'cid' Chios Writs MeUudi, teal es Mooter. Addicts uu. r. A.UA.MJ, nxr.. rettrtu Hearse, Ye, mFOTElL PENNHS - ATLANTIC CITT W.J. IN AUTUMN Frovlde's a, chart. o( comfort and aaia amldet onaraetsrlstia snvlwne neat that bas tttabilitsi It U u hUU srasbM borne. atitc dy S.tfe ocean front WALTBK J m'Mttf. IIIBIIIlllllIllllltSSsSS UTAH'S GOVERNOR SAYS CONSERVATION HURTS FAR WEST Eastern Slates Benefit at Ex pense of Public Land Areas, Spry Tells National Conference. MADISON, Wis., Nov. 11. Governor William Spry, of Utnh, told the member of the Nntlonal Governors' Conference here today that conservation of national resrources nn now practiced In the United States constitutes a grave Injustice of the Eastern States aRnlnHt the far West cm, or public lnml States Arizona, Call, fornln, Colorado. Idaho. Montana, Ne vada, New Mexico, Ore (ton, Utah, Wash Innton and Wyoming. He pointed out that the older States had developed their rcHourcee and pnsspn thce Into private hands without present restrictions. The natural resources of tho ttastern States, ho said, were the prop erty of the citizens of these States nnd the country as a. whole docs not prollt Store Opens 8:30 A. M. f iirnTvn'i, it I' 11 li it ii-,x-t-M . n v i stwj i n . BBS n " nintr'WF- f nnnnisri ,!, ?!5iii!iiiimiiiinn)!':!inH" E 1 S jniFniiiinmi.il ntinmnivviiniinnilHIIil I 1 MHfilH',!,l!!!'S8l The Grand reason off any other individual firm, we naturally have a greater variety to show. For the same reason we have the pick and choice of the finer decorations on the finer bodies, Unbiased price comparisons, based on quality and completeness, are mmch in our favor. To prove all these statements, we are now ready with the goods. We have Theo. Eiaviland dinner sets in twenty seven different decorations; every decoration specially chosen, every set specially priced, $20 to $65. Sets from the Limoges potteries of Vignaud Bros., M. Redon, J. Pouyat and Charles Field Haviland are shown in relatively large assortment. The most ornate china dinner sets in the world, the Royal Doulton wares from England, are here at prices ranging up to $300. Everything called a "dinner set in this china store is a real set complete for " twelve diners." There are no substitutions of smaller sized pieces to make up for a reduction in price. Every day you come in here you are sure of find ing sets that are priced below their real value. At this very moment we have a number of "one of a kind" sets, taking in a very broad variety, from American porcelain sets at $7.50 up to French china sets at $30. Originally these were priced very much higher, but there being only one of a kind we have their prices so low tfiat, with Thanksgiving Day in view, their time here will likely be short. (Fourth Floor, Central) . v JOHN WAMAMAKER fee mu m i lyuBMiWuaMaw by them; the tajr.es d&fraylnfr the ex pensea of a State Government In the Bast nre distributed over the whole State, In the far Wct, Miwever, the with drawal of lands from private ownership are serious, Impairing: the tax resources of the State and throwing a Brave bur den of taxation on privately owned lands. He said recent lams are bclnff RroRsIr misinterpreted by "bureau underlines whose rulings, If uniformly wrong:, bear the striking characteristics of bclnc uni formly ngalnst the States and In favor of the National Government." "Take, for Instance, the Stale I repre sent," sold Governor Spry. "Utah, with nn area of M.SSO.OM acres, has but from 10 to 12 millions of acres In veeted owner ship or process of transfer, and much of that consists of crazing lands that yield but ellRht Income through taxation. "If our sources for revenup for local self-government were adequate to the In creoBlnpr demands, or If our revenue were In excess of our needs and we were squandering the Income, I grant this na tional curtailment of State development through land withdrawals ould not be so serious; but It Is a fact that additional land ownership, with Improvements, moro extensive mining operations, greater power development and all those activi ties that make for a prosperous commu nity aro Imperative necessities In Utah to keep abreast the expense of maintain ing schools. State Government. State In stitutions and carrying on Internal Improvements." WANAMAKER'S Organ Plays Tomorrow at 9, Good CSuSea Sets for ThaoksfflviirM Feast importing' more French china than PHILADELPHIA HIDDEN WIRELESS FOUND aw.sfca-.,,.!. United States Officers "Uncover Sta tion on Mexican Boll. WASHINGTON, Nov. It-Secret eerV Im men and navy radio experts iteeklnr hidden wireless elation, supposed to ba violating American neutrality, hav found a hitherto unknown station at Ensonada, Lower California, not far across the United States boundary. Ofllclals believe word of the Impending Investigation, which was determined upon two days ago, must have got to the station quickly, as the radio experts re' ported It had not been talking for the lo&t 24 hours. The United State au thorities have no jurisdiction ever it wireless station on Mexican soil. KEAB.NY STATUE IN ARLINaTON" Dashing Union General Memorial Ised In Equestifm Figure. WASHINGTON. Nov. 11 -With Impos ing mlMtary ceremonies, the first equestrian statue ever raised In Arling ton Cemetery, that of Goneral Philip Kearny, formerly of New Jersey, will be unveiled this ufternoon. President Wilson, Secretory of War Gei-rlcon, Governor Fielder, of New Jer sev, nnd a delegation of New Jersey citizens will attend the unveiling. Cavalry nnd artillery from Fort Myer will also participate. Store Closc3 5:30 P. M. 11 and 5:15 P?'e iffmnmtu iiiini n -u;;ii ivaiMitr i 41 i -u our ,1 1 '4 i 1 I ;. TV .-&.ItUj-jt- w ifP-sim s-