Pc liU'i 8 t JDVEKING LEDGEE-PHILAD1SLPHIA, TUESDAY, tfUNM 1, 1P1B SCHOOL OF COOKERY OPENED TO WOMEN BY EVENING LEDGER 2 11. . Ct..2 . T 1umm .) e xiiat, uj. ounua ui u;i;iuko uuu Demonstrations by Expert, , to End June 12, Presented in Horticultural Hall This Afternoon. 'rhe Evening Lkmbr cooklnn school ,, epined at Hortlcultursl Hall at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon. Bfore an audlenc of severs! hundred irbmtn. Mrs. Anna A. Carroll, culinary expsrt. began her serlea ot 11 lectures. Armed with notebooks and pencil, many of the self-appointed pupil had enconced themselves In advanUseou settt lonsr before Mrs. Carroll came on the stage. There were stria of high-school age and older women, who, despite their Bray hatra and yeara of experience In their own kitchen,' are welcoming opportunity to learn tho beat, quickest and most economical way of preparing an ap petising meal. Mra. Carroll built her first lecture, as aha will build the other, around a plain, practical menu, and she supplement her talk with an actual demonstration, which Include mixing the Ingredient nd cook ing the meal. Sponge cako and Hamburg steak wero on tho menu today, and, while Mrs, Car roll told of the best way to beat tho eggs and the most delectable mushroom aauce to make for the steak, the women listened Interestedly and took copious note. The announcement that It would rot be necessary for them to "take down" the recipes, alnce they will be published dally In the Evenino' Lbdobr, waa re ceived with relief. The lecture course was opened with a very plain mnu, but one that gave Sirs. Carroll an excellent opportunity to display her practical Ideas on cooking and housekeeping. The lectures will all be built around the menus, but aa each Is cooked virtually every household problem will bo linked In some way with It. This la well Illustrated by the fact that the appearance of a ateak for broiling Is the opener for remarks upon marketing and upon the most desirable manner of keep ing foods In good condition while being held until meal time as well as upon tho proper preparation, and then by tho actual cooking performed on the lecture platform. Mrs. Carroll has a big; army of follow er In Philadelphia. Many of tho younger women of the city who are devoting their time to domestic science teaching have learned much from her. Nenrly every domestio science teacher and cooking ex pert In the city will make It a point to attend tho lectures at some time during the course. In order that they may be come familiar with tho lecturer's newest thoughts and experiences. If these In structors and teachers feel that they can learn something new from the lectures, certainly tho woman who conducts a home can do likewise. It Is with this idea of helping any women of the city who are interested In more practical housekeeping and better cooking that the IIvbnino I.kdoeii Is conducting the cook ing school. It Is for this reason that such a large hall has been secured and the womn of the entire city are welcomed 'to attend any one or all of the IcctureB. LECTURE FOR BUSINESS WOMEN. This tnomlng Mrs. Carroll announced that she would deliver a special lecture to business women and others who have not the advantage of largo ranges on Saturday afternoon, Juno u. This lecture will appeal to wbmen whoso time does not permit the preparation of full-course meals, those who llvo In small apartments where only a hot plate or similar small stove can bo used and those who desire to prepare light luncheons or night sup pers for Ruests with the chafing dish. Saturday afternoon has been selected as th's best time for this lecture, because business womon will be able to take ad vantage of the half holiday to hear it. This lecture probably will be tho moat colorful of the entire course. Those wno are employed or those whose home or apartments are small will learn how to prepare really delicate and toothsome meals or luncheons while the company looks on, how to add a greater touch ot leisure and nominees to their surround ings, even If they live In a single room. PRAISES EVENINO LEDGER SCHOOL The menu for this afternoon consisted of broiled steak and mushrooms, stuffed baked potatoes, fresh string beans, straw berry short cake and hot milk sponge cake with chocolate Icing. In addition to this menu, Mrs. Carroll prepared two or three special dishes. This same plan will be carried out during each lecture. The menu will Indicate but a small por tion of the Interesting details. A number of cooking experts and In structors of the city have spoken .en thusiastically of the Evenino Le do En's cooking school and contest for school girl. Miss Wilson, Instructor in domes tio science at Orexel Institute, which turn out a number of finished Instruct ors and lecturers every year, was Inter- Continued on rage Eight, Column One CLAIMS BODY OF HUSBAND "WHO BEGfiEDHER TO RETURN Man Inhaled Gas, Police Say, Because His Wife Left Him, The body of Louis Waehenspahler, who committed suicide, the police say, by inhaling Illuminating gat yesterday at his home, 2119 Bolton street, was claimed today by his wife, who left him two month ago. The body was re moved from the Morgue to his home. Mr. Waehenspahler said she will have the body cremated. According to the police, the dead man left papers indi cating hi wife's desertion caused him to kill himself. Letters which he wrote to her asking her to come back to him, the police aay, were unanswered. The woman told the Coroner Waehenspahler had been Injured while serving in the German army and a plate which he wore In his skull made him act so queerly she couldn't live with him. She had only known him an hour before she married fttsa ionr year ago. she eald. The couple owned several properties In the northeastern part of the city. Mrs. Wnohenspahler has been living in one of thea since she left her husband. WANAMAKEBS IN SUIT ' T-l r ... ... -,. ........ .Wajrt to Restrain Property Holders ron Improper Sewage Disposal, HPRBJBTOWW, Fa,. June l-JTs, pre. veat at property holder living on the Urtttfteaatara toroujtfj HHu of Jenktar ta-w-u frem attsafcirgijig sewage lata a. MfVtt mptylg late a small stream r"B nt naajr tb4r nfOftertK la Cheltenham, Sudanis Wanamaker and Mrs. Mary B. Vinmnlir bv instituted equity actions ?4afe are being heard in court. Judge Swajrti Brtstdloi.'. The suceriatMiduit tkt satate of the Wsnamakers told of sat flUby au4 unsiabUy conditions r mdttnH from the wg, sad Doctor Neli- l UA4 f Umm is tba WsoaaKr ginnwawig, . bkk 10 tut rtTTiM S8l " w a,.- -Mf .'44 WartfMkar u Mik rMiMkw w Jm tstuuf. tfcts MUST flO BACK TO PRISON 17 YEARS FOR BREAKING PAROLE Man Who Left His Nntlvo State Must Finish Term for Indiscretion. Frank Seaton was "on the level" when he was doing his bit of time In the Illinois State penitentiary at Jollet, and after he had served three years of a 20 year allotment for burglary, the Governor let him go on parole. "Don't go out of the Slate, fieaton, and you can be a ireo man the rest of your life," he was told. He lived "straight," the paroled man dwilares, but after staying In Illinois ft year th call of the open road came to htm, and telling himself he wouldn't be caught, he started east. Ho settled In Coatesvllle-lhat was hearly six yearn ( go. Saturday night Beaton got to thlnklnaj over his past and decided that for a man 5t yeara old he hadn't accomplished very much. He began to wonder If he hd done the "square" thing by the Governor who paroled him. He tried to forget his troubles by drinking too much alcohol and then, rather "tight," he becamo so noisy In talking about his history that he was Arrested. From what he said to the police and evidence In his clothes, they came to the conclusion that he was wanted for breaking parole In Illinois. SOCIAL CALL ENDS IN BRAWL Holiday Enjoyment Takes a Bad Turn Aftor Shades of Night Pall. A peaceable friendly family call on such a delightful holiday as yesterday broke up In a general fight between two families, and as n result one of tho families was held under ball today. Johh AbUrenaskft, of m North 2d street, pala a sociable call on Mn- Stanke. of M North Ifemt " stayed a little longer than his wife Mary thought, he should and she went after him. John thought It was Impolite for her to act In this manner and said so. Mike thought so, too and he an Id so, too. John decided he dldn ' PPTSJ ?iw tiS remarks about his wife and nelt her did Mary. When Mary started In to "clean up" John helped. Sophie, Mike's y,u enme to his rescue and the allied armffi locked horns. While Mary smashed wTJ ..Aatar TrtTttt AltlfiA rtff 4i Mv ""L.uir; hlrMrm.n wS on the nose, when the bluecoat Intel venea in in ...... a John and Mary were held In J500 t,,jj eacn ii" "'""" v. "--- toiij of the Front and Master streets sti tlon. ij Mini iiumis siiliiiiuijimiirjir.iiiMilJCTWvnHMllX'Mi.niTl'-'l"''J-l'L'IL1'1"l'l"''"'J''lll''l'''l,L1'u' I I " 1 B inflTOsFMWrfciiii Ci H 'ssssssssBHM' PbsssssssssbBI I fisssR' n ..-Jit, "'"EfiPSsU CPU I fmBmifW' Z, ' ,'$M&js i aMniilHffr t wfyssf 8 Mwxm ' ' 11 I mw:"H'' ' ''Mr I IS J m "" ' i rAj - -.'j u urmnr hath no man condemned na esus suiu uulu iw, tvwi-; ,, thee? tSt Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more. This text inspired the writing of David Graham Phillips' greatest novel, DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS author of "Old WioeM and New, " "The Grain of Datt, " "The Price She Paid, " Eta., Etc. v DAv jP Bsam W Her Fall and Hise" BD LLIFS Dr. CHARLES H. PARKHURST, the famous c.ergymans says: "This groat novol, having road it in manuscript, its spirit and purpose havo not passed from my momory. "Tho horolno Is doplotod as an Illegitimate child, and tho purposo of tho fiction Is to show tho blight that attachos to innocent Illegitimacy. "The treatmont accorded hor by her kindred, who by ordination of nature ought to havo protoctod and chorishod her, Illustrates In a graphic way tho vicious tendency immlnont in human nature to think tho worst of peoplo rather than tho bost. "It is one of those fictions that has a moaning, the only kind of fiction that moral and Intelli gent people have any right to spend their time over or give their thought to." To this most startling American novel ever written, David Graham Phillips devoted six years of his life. Today, four years after his death by assassination, this, his greatest work is given to the public in Hearst's Magazine. A million fathers and mothers will see this story, and read the lessons in it. Deeply they will sympathize with the child unhappily born, and rejoice that they can protect as she was not protected., those within their care. In Susan Lenox, -David Graham Phillips shows with all of his courage and power the story of life as it is. A girl beautiful, intelligent, unhappily born, cursed with the cruel stigma of illegitimacy, fights against the world. Phillips tells of her journeys down the hill, the cruel selfishness of relations, pushing their own daughter ahead of her. The marriage forced upon an inexperienced child. The horrible revelations of what false marriage really is. The curse of a union without love on the woman's part, with out refinement or kindness on the part of the husband. The flight of the girl hating immoral marriage more than any risk in life. Then the story that the public will read with breathless interest, the hard struggle, against hunger, cold, anxiety, and the last, worse dangcrjthat threatens every helpless woman. It is indeed as Dr. Parkhurst says, fiction "that has a meaning.' the ONLY KIND OF FICTION THAT MORAL INTELLI GENT PEOPLE SHOULD READ." With his extraordinary power fully developed, David Graham Phillips tells of the fall that could not be avoided, and then of the spirit conquering, of the rise of the soul, the end of a struggle. The story of Susan Lenox, is the story of cruelty inflicted by cold civilization upon helpless girls. It is a story of beauty as well as of horror. It is a lesson in powerful literary work, a lesson of true moral teaching. Many a man who reads it, many a man who feels within himself part of the guilt that pqshed Susan Lenox down the road, will feel as those men felt in the ancient days, when "Jesus 6tooped down, and with his finger wrote upon the ground, as though he heard them not." Many realizing in Phillips' powerful, vivid teaching, how de fenceless is woman cursed by man's brutality will wish that they might slink away from their own past, as "they which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one, beginning at the eldest, even unto the last," No story but this wonderful narrative of the fall and the, rise of a beautiful,, unhappy spirit, will be discussed in this country, as long as the reading of the story lasts. First, A bad start, illegitimately born. mmm Second, The relations jealous and unkind. I smmSri. .. .rfliiWlef;''Mm ?sBfc8f ' :jmmttSBxmgiiBm.. MmmimK HfeMfc&i.;.t. i .JRw.R3S8sJSbK ' . ! tssVlK, PsbPIIw'BEbP'! tA LjUk ' JHF- sfl&w WmW& '""Rr tSrProPfJ " w wmmmmmm i .11 itomim b m This is SUSAN LENOX the heroine of David Graham Phillips' great American , novel. Third, m A fall to the depths, but the power of the spirit Raised hen i,' 'Order from your depler NOWl Bp Sjjp Begin If Today! ssssfiH EHH . m . a AAMag If your deajer can't supply you 'phone United News Co. 923 Filbert St. Jm mL&3L JL JL aZ S fi, . isssssssssssssssssssssssssssHssssssisssssslBSHssss1sssssssasasHHBSSaknn r-i wlte th isklag of Usllinnai WnisTTTTOIWWrjnTTI"JWJs1 IBPEiBfrSW- ? .. .-MTV. &: IssssmifeataJastosMai M.1 , - f ... .. . : . . . . -" - nrrrnn n n in TMssssTrsMMiiii nTTTT,Mss irwrifflrTrTi - . uuu ' i3g'?gs!ls'!