Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, February 24, 1916, Night Extra, Page 3, Image 3

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EVENING IiKDaER PniLADELPniA, TnTRSDAY, FEBRFARY 24, 1016.
Iss
ir ,....
YrLA,
DEITIES
"The Utmost in Cigarettes"
Plain end or Cork tip
tcopU ofadiure, refienenb cuid
education invtu-Cailo prefer
Deities to am otiw cicarptf?
Molten orthantqhes t
7rff(f Turltith nvii
EgvpUan CWreffra in t'
81
Irs. pankhurst sees
PROBLEM IN WAR BABY )
English Suffrage Leader Taking
li' rnra nf Vnuv Little Ones
Vrl' v
in London Home
Mrs. nmmellne Pankhurst,. Kngllsh stlf-
irijt has a new role me protection or
Da war baby.
Eshe has adopted four little ones, she
u tiav. and Intends to brine up the
ffiirtn Just ns though they were her
RlVe have a problem on our hands In
'fcrUnd," she Bald, with a motherly smile.
Oriilch must be solved. It Is the problem
fjf the war baby. I have four of them,
W jl'lg 'n m? homo now In London.
liter r In charge of trained nurses, you
L." (he added, ns she took the pictures
-iiM"war babies from her pocketbook.
felfany of the women are unable to caro
(for the (Tables after they arrive." she
Lit "The Woman's Koclat and Political
, Colon has taken upon Itself the work of
arinj: for theso war babies. We women,
htho, before the war, were working for
tihi enfranchisement of women, now are
forking for tho good of the human race
jln snottier way Cnro rf tho war hnblca
feomes In under this head "
iffltrs. rankhurst is In Philadelphia In
Jtotitiectlon with the campaign which she
fijj It Cheddo Mlyntovlch, former Serbian
Minister to the Court of St. .Tnmos. arc
waging in una uuuiiiij w wuirtm iiiwiiiniii
Id for the seroians.
BO GIRL STRIKERS
ARRESTED IN CAMDEN
Cigar Factory Pickets Accused
of-'Attacking Nonunion
, Worker
.Tiro girls wore arrested, nccused ot at-
Ucklne. a workpr at tho factory of Sclden-
Itrg & Co., cigar manufacturers, Oth and
Mechanic tr"cl. Camden, today. There
lias been a strike among tho 900 girl
',nWl ttlfifn r,,, tl.f, Inel' ,(.'n ...itnTm
Beatrice Sweenev. the notice nav. tnld
Ithem.-ihe nag going Into the factory when
iMtanlo JIwacKo and Oil lo Zlcnvlvlch, 18-
jear-oiu picKcts strucK her and chased
hlr awfiv. Thev wcrn IipM im,!,, nn
pall fir court. The defendants live at 110
Ww street.
f Ttt estimates made Ijy the fnctory of-
r . ...v ' nu vr liiu (IIUJIUIIIUII
lit the 900 workers on strike varied great
Jly. Mrs. nile'n Brown, president of the
ynlon organization which was perfected
Jit a meeting last night at lotli street and
KalShn atenue. said sho had enrolled 4'JC
fiirls, so that at least that number were
Un strike, beside 17B who hnil nnr -ot
Carolled. Tho other union 'olllccrs elected
are Wllhciinina Bnul, vice president:
Sttila TiotowsKi. secretary; Josephine
nicnitowic::, correspond I nu secretary,
and Anna smith, treabui er.
B The buncluuakeis and rollers are the
enes on strike and It Is said tho strlp
peri and cutters have not none out. but
tat the norlc of the Tormer Is essential
W the making of clgais. There are In
wmai times 100.001) cigars made dally
M the factory.
tfOXGOIiEUM COMPANY WILL
ERECT FIVE .NEW MUlLDlXtiS
iWus Hook Firm Will Inr-rease
Capacity of Plant
Five n(1,HHnt fnn, i. ..tt.ii ...in
V -..., mi irtviuij iiuuuuiKn will
W ereeterl f tnH..n i,..i. i... ,...
ill'r '!'erc- Tho new buildings are to
I?i JUO.OOO, and tho sti uetures are be
If welcomed as a boon tu Marcus Hook.
'hV t, "Soleuni Company was formerly
'ftlir , . Il00fl"K and Manufacturing
The Congoleuin Company has been ope-
fer. "-u" iuu iur iiiruxniiaieiy
nt ears. The new structures will glva
Mr . or '"" " r 1-,0 aimnte
rS!1" .!? lll Increase tlie canacltv of the
L r-rnrV "5 11el " I,1,lf a d0Ze
H Duildlngs wero completed only last
tfmM n"U ,lle announcement thnt the
Ikmi..' "' larry on- sun iurtner
fflMing operations is Interacted liv tlia
inu of Marcus took as an Indication
:H mat nlann liao Y....i n.. ...i.i. u.
Un.':. ". V."" ,uu,,u '""
g-e,c,u ot ,no company
PUND PENNINGTON BUIUED
auier of Miirtlooni, n p c n
"H,UV.Vi -JO U kJIIIUli
Group at Grave
Edia
Pa,, Keb, 24. The
body of
guana S.
Pennington, one of
the two
?'r'r executed for tho killing of S.
'" Plllkerton In lliln .-minti- was
Slii 'Vi,'"1' ,roiT' tl10 luovpuo ol W. C.
ES? a ,i "'ornliifr und burled In the
S'fUiKneld Friends Bui-vine- nrnund.
MtTflt .-. .
noumiht2ly wai met at tl,e burying
Mnin i" ?BVera men. among whom was
SirTn 0na fatller' of Philadelphia. The
Uy.i , " iii.u ihw Kruve wiwiouv
ktiZ l1LTrl'cf: l V ta"e i ' !
I. -wvm hi inu viae 01 uie grave
Hence and any emotion he may have
fn3 COIlcealprl rplta oi-ntat cA.pov
lie ... --"" iiio Kreuicai secrecy
lRa,rf,,vcd in ,hB burial ot the body.
Kgr' ';(cn from the morgue at day-
febiL u e4cry effort made to keep
jjiJlie curious.
pow-jtown Club Aslis Charter
W r.:l" Philadelphia Social and Lit-
?" Illtts No. I for charter. It
rvrtn. in 11, r.i,i .,.- . ...
4le Olcaillzntlnn ate ,!,. ttt-.uiinln
U,P Ulllt Iltttl fctllnwul.lit itmniit.
jiibus and to maintain a meeting-
oil of liteiarv urul educutlonal
w lia membera " The directors
for tlm 1fa .,.... r..M,Bu nu.
B 11 Uakfo-'a street; Hugh Murphy.
(,.. Mreci: joiupn tnuKuire.
I Uerrttt street. Jamea V-arty. 2131
' let . J.;,m Donovan. 231S Wilder
'ATCH YOUR STEP"
4r . . . .. ..
mMMMM
I r- ' ". i
.
.
25
ft V
Montgomery county l
ROAD BUILDERS MEET
State Highway Oflicial Tells
Supervisors Conditions
Have Improved
NOIUHSTOWN. Pa , Feb. 24. The su
pervisors of Montgomery County weie told
by .Toseph AV. Hunter, ot .Icnklntown, a
represcntntUo ot tile State Highway De
partinent, that the dirt roads throughout
the county weie much better this year
than last. This, he learned, not from re
ports, but from riding over the roads. He
also explained tho various acts of As
sembly recently passed nltectlng the
smaller townships.
The opening address at the 10th annual
meeting of the Montgomery County As
sociation, In the courthouse today, was
made by Auron S. Swartz. Jr., a son of
Judge Swartz. He dwelt largely upon the
compensation net. While he was talking,
Thomas Evans, a supervisor of l-lnierlek
township, told him he had been Informed
that It would cost the supervisors $8 for
men employed by the township only two
hours a year. He thought rather than
pay that premium tho township should
assume tho liability, as there had been
only two persons hurt In the employ ot
the township In years. Mr Kvans was
advised lo look further Into the Insurance
rate,
George Sullivan, piesldent of the Board
of Commisioners ot Montgomery County
nnd a commissioner for years In Lower
Merlon township, declared that tho "mac
adamized roads were a thing of the past."
lie said the life ot a macadinlzed rond In
Lower Merlon was from seven to nine
' months. "We used to macadamlzo a road
I one year and remacadamize It tho next,"
, said Mr. Sullivan, "until we determined to
, tuko the bull by the horns nnd build
prepared roads."
I Mr. Sullivan told the supervisors of a
rebuke the Lower Morion township com
missioners received for not fllugup u
road In an Isolated section where a I'hlla-
dclphlnn had purchased a "flue country
place," within three-quarters ot a mile of
a good road, lip said the taxes on this
property were ?5! a year, and to do what
the owner wanted done would cost $5700.
COUNCIL.MEN AND MAYOR
DISCUSS LIGHTING CHANGES
Will Act Favorably on Germantown
Avenue Improvements
Alembors of Councils from waids in
the northeast section of tho city today
discussed with Mayor Smith nnd Chief
MoXaushlln of the Electrical Bureau a re
arrangement of the electric lights on Cler
muntown avenue.
The lights from Girard avenue ty Butler
stieet on Germantown avenue vary as to
power and mako and are located on up
right poles, a style which residents claim
does not throw the light on tho street.
Select Councllmen ISdward Buchholz, of
the 19th Waul; Hdwaid Haws, of the
37th Ward, and Geoige I). Co, of the 13d
Ward, urged tho adoption of a standard
system of lights, to include the uso of arm
pobts and dispensing with tho overhead
wires. They also ask that the lights be
placed 123 feet apait.
Chief McLaughlin told the Mayor and
Councllmen that he was at work on a
plan for the Improvements. An oidliiauco
Vlll he Introduced In Councils authorizing
tho bureau chief to make the necessary
changes.
NATIONAL GUARD NEWS
Discharge of Captain John F. Bacon
Among Governor's Announcements
IIAliniSBUrUJ. Feb. 21. Governor
Brumbaugh today announced, tlmiugh tho
Adjutant General's Department, that Cup
tain John K. Bacon, of Company C, 1st
Infantry, had been discharged. Chalney
A. Shue. second lieutenant of Company A,
Sth Infantry, had been refused commis
sion becaube ho hud failed to qualify.
Ite.slgiiatlons of the following oftlcera
were received nnd accepted: Captain C.
D. 1'herly. Company D. 1st Infantry ; First
Lieutenant II. J. Ktelnbrim, Company K
Ith luf.uitry; Second Lieutenant Kugene
I. Moench, Company !'. 2d Infantry; Ma
jor I). V. A. Wheelock, Warren, retired
with the rank of lieutenant colonel. A
commission was Issued to Second Men
tenant B. T. Brooks, Company V. IStli
Infantry.
Will Explain Highway Needs
The mistakes In laying out Pennsyl
vania's elaborate highway system mid the
methods of caring far various types of
roads will be described by William I)
Uhler, chief engineer of the State Hlgn
way Department, and former principal
assistant engineer of the cltyH liureuu of
Highways. In an Illustrated lecture nt the
Franklin Institute tonight at 8 o'clock,
Revenues sufficient to care for the roads
properly must be provided before perma
nent construction can be undertaken, It
will be pointed out lu the address, which
is entitled, "Highway Problems of the
State of Pennsylvania."
Don't tend the kiddie out
at the last minute for the
forgotten candy for the
Bridge crowd. Phono u.
Sending a kid for candy
for (ome one eUo i
Cruelty to Children 1
IAS
jm
XKCANDYSH0P
SIX FEET BELOW BROAD Sf
IN THE UM-OLNJUILDINt,
fcROAQ ABOVE CH9TIUf
QrEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT
WITMER URGES CARE
OF FEEBLE-MINDED IN
STATE INSTITUTIONS
U. of P. Expert Says Common
wealth Should Provide Nec
essary Means of Relief
and Prevention
' MANY SIGN PETITION
Today's Events at Exhibit
for the Fccblc-Mindcd
Place Widcncr Uuilillng, Chest
nut nnd Juniper streets.
Exhibit under the auspices of
the Public Charities Association.
Admission free. "
No children under 18 admitted.
t p. m. Tail: lv Dr. Alexander
Johnson, field secretary of the Na
tional Commission for the Pro
vision of the Feeble-minded.
Exhibit continues until Mnrch 8.
TOMORROW'S PROGRAM
1U m. Address, Mrs. Martha P.
Falconer, superintendent of Sleigh
ton Home for Girls.
l.to 3 p. m. Stcreopticon lec
ture's, .1:30 p. m "The Woman Un
aware," play, given by courtesy of
the Stage Society, under" the di
rection of Henry L, Fox. Play
founded on n ease in court.
1 p. m. Address by Dr. Walter
S. Cornell, Director of Medical In
spection of the Department of Pub
lic Health. Address by Dr. John
K. Mitchell.
Legislation to compel the State to care
for all children found 'to he feeble-minded,
Instead of a law to force parents to
place their children In Institutions, was
advocated today at the exhibit on feeble
mlndrdness by Dr. I.lghtncr Wltnicr. ex
pert from tho psychological clinic of tho
University of Pennsylvania. In the Wide
ner. Building, Chestnut and Juniper
streets.
"Wo find In our work," said Doctor
Wltnicr, "that there are comparatively
few patents who would light against giv
ing up their children. They nro anxious
to hnvo them as hnppy as they can pos
sibly be. Then, too, we And that often the
parents are sacrificing the normal chil
dren In their fruitless effort to care for
tho feeble-minded children.
"That Is why I do not advocate a law
compelling the parents to put the feeble
minded children In institutions. On the
contrary, I think that tho Commonwealth
ought to be compelled to provide for cases,
when tho parents ask that care be given
and doctors decla.ro that the children are
In need of Institutional care."
Doctor Wltmcr showed slides of chil
dren who have been nt the clinic at tho
University of Pennsylvania and told
briefly of their histories.
One case which especially showed the
ecpnomlc value of caring for the feeble
minded In Institutions was that of a girl
who hns been tho charge of 18 different
chailtabte organizations for years, not to
mention the care given her by numerous
private Individuals.
If that girl had been enred for la an
Institution for feeble-minded It would have
rost a maximum of $200 u year. As it
Is. she In now 17. Just the dangerous uge,
and no one knows how much has been
spent or how much will be spent on her.
Sho Is still nt large.
'Actual count of tho number attending
tho exhibit Is being kept. During two
nnd a quarter hours today 1100 people
saw tho exhibit.
The first lap ot the IJiOO.OOO signature
petition started at tho exhibit on feeble-
mlndedness has been made. It contains ,
several thousand signatures as the result
of the activities of the women nf tho I
exhibit yesterday and today. !
Women handling the petition are hav- j
Ing trouble kecidug tho crowds In line us
the men and women wait to sign the
paper, which will go throughout the State,
backed by the Public Chniltles Associa
tion. It will then be sent to the Legisla
ture with tho lpquest that money bo ap- .
proprlated so that the village for feeble-
minded women of child-bearing :ig, may
bo used. The 1913 l.eglblaturo made an
appioprintlon for tho village, which Is i
partly built. The 1015 Legislautie' did
not make nn nppiopilatlnn for the main
tenance of tile village.
Several thousand persons attended tin- ,
exhibit yesteiday. i
One ot the most potent factors for edu
cational effect In the exhibit is the play,
"The Woman I'nawaie," which Is being
presented each afternoon at ;i::tn o'clock
In the lecture room ut the rear of the ex
hibit hall.
This play deals with a feeble-minded
girl, who murdered her own baby, and '
then constructed u doll to take Ita place ,
It ceuties about a case In one of tlir
local courts, and was written In play form
by Fullertou 1.. Waldo. Mis. Clmrlej II.
Franler told Mr. Waldo nbout the case
The characters for the llrst performance
wore: Judge Johnson, of the Juvemlu
Court. Kdwaid IS. Latimer; Maiy Mur- .
dock, a feeble-minded girl, Miss Madeline
Hurlnck; Ira Simmons, a 10-year-old boy,
"Teddy" Noiton; Mrs. Simmons. Ira's
mother, Miss Florenco Bersteln ; Dr. Alice
Porter. MiV W. P. Du Uolke; Mrs. Slldell.
probation ofTU-er, Mrs. M. D. Griffith, and
Patrolman James Donaghy, Henry L. Fox
Mr. Fox directs the play, which Is
given through the courtesy of the Staue
Society.
Better Ambulances for Rlockiev
Director Kruseu. of the Department of
Health and Charities, will purchase an
automobile chassis to be used In the
ambulance service of the Philadelphia
General Hospital, which has been badly
crippled because' cars have been out of
repair and antiquated. The new chassH
will cost $1895. Duo of the ambulance
bodies will be placed on new running
gear, and will be put back Into service
Two other cars are undergoing repaliri
and when thefao are complete the ambu
lance service to Block ley will be Improved, I
kisi K t&li fS&Mm m dHI lfill ffl im. i f! (Mclirvr
lilSJKiSiSJak9J91lk S i
bbbbbbvIH miWi URvA VS kB Ha7 (Sv fSK ii'J!!'SiRK?OTS?a3l
H For those who would get as near as pos- H 1
9 sible to the highest grade in quality, but at Hi
yj a' very moderate price, we commend the IB
H Sterling, a piano constantly improving and H e
e jm aiways worm more man we asK tor it. HM I
H Pianos, $275 to $450 ; player-pianos, $450 to $800. H
irjjp B Come and hear the re-creation of music on (9 1 1
QjH the Edison Diatnond-Disc Phonograph. HaWl
' 'Will
WEDDED 50 YEARS
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hutchinson
last night celebrated their golden
wedding nt their home, 1-04
North Hancock street.
WEDDED HALF A CENTURY
Guests nt Hutchinson Celebration
"Fat nnd Prosperous"
Mr. nnd Mrs. Joseph Hutchinson. "B and
f.f. years old, respectively, are happy today
over the success of their golden wedding
anniversary celebration last night at tho
home of their sou, lllchnrd Hutchinson.
1200 N'orth Hancock street They didn't
have to go far to get there, for nil ot their
married llfo they have lived next door,
1201. They have lived longer III North
Hancock street than nny one else.
As Mrs. Hutchinson put It today, there
wero 100 guests at the celebration, all
"fat, happy and prosperous."
Tho happiest Incident of the night was
the old-fashioned waltz In which the cel
ebrating couple joined.
Mr. Hutchinson Is retired. Ho was
In the molding business for many years.
Ills son Is a hardwaro merchant. Mr.
Hutchinson, the elder, hns never been In
politics and has never been a member of
a lodge. Ho and his wife are young In
everything but years. They ascribe their
good health to having kept themselves
busily employed and to careful eating.
GERARD MAY TAKE
STUMP FOR WILSON
Ambassador Plans to Return to
U. S. Will Urge
Higher Tariff
By CARL W. ACKERMAN
nr.itLi?:. Kcb. 24.
Ambassador Guard, it was strongly
hinted today, may make n speaking tour
of America In support of President Wil
son's candidacy for re-election. If the Ite
puhllcans mako tho AVIlson submarining
policies their chief target ot attack.
Gerard plans to visit the United States
I before tho Democratic National Convon-
,, , Jlme lr ,,c ul!) tho PrcsWcllt
mi(lcl. lleavy nro by crl,lc!, ()f , ,lcailnBS
., 1,1, cvrnmnv. i, ,nV toko tho stumti
to explain a feu things about the sub
marine contioversles that the American
people know little about.
The Ambassador Is convalescing from
the injuries ho suffered eaily this week
while skiing near Munich. Persons closo
to him said today that In nddltou to con
sidering cainpalgulng for Wilson. Gerard
expects to urge tho necessity of a strong
tarilf plunk at tho Democratic convention
In St. Louis. Ambassador Gerard, It Is
It-ported, is couvhiced that I-hirope Is pre
paring lo Hood America with cheap prod
ucts at tho end of the war, to tho detri
ment of American Industries It Is mi
derstood he will urge tho Democratic
platform makers to advocate a tariff wall
at least high enough to shut out this
kind of competition. He favors, also, a
tariff commission.
5
WW never use drop In the ex
amination of the eye tor
glasses. Therefore you cannot
obtain nti) thine hut your hones
refraction. Bo limiesi with join
oyes, especially vvliun they aro In
distress, as tlioy aro priceless In
value. Tho best scrvico monev
an bnv Is obtaluablo hoio at the
most reasonable cost In the city
're$criptionM Accurately Filled
i-rd Broken Lcnaet Duplicate-!
AT HALF PRICE,
Eyes Examined Free
T.HAS. MILGROM &.RRlb.
29 S. 8th St. 32 N. 13th St.
EitablUhed 1003
3?
RESUME SOFT COAL
CONFERENCE TODAY
Operators alul Union Miners'
Will Try to Come to an
Agreement in N. Y.
, XUW YOtMC. I'cli. 21. Operators nnd
i oiganlzed mlncis ot the central competl
I live fields, compilslng tho soft coal re
Rloiis of western Pennsylvania, Ohio, In
diana nnd ' Illinois, met hero today to
make nnolher attempt to leach an agree
ment on n. new wage scale to take tho
place of the contracts that explto In those
States Mnrch 31. The miners nnd oper
nlors wero recently In session In Mobile.
Ala., lor about ten days, and did not
leach an agreement on any one of tho II
demands formulated by tho Indianapolis
convention of the miners
When the Joint confeience recessed nt
Mobile tho mine vvorkeis nnd operators
were deadlocked over the mlne.iun propo
sltlon, the most serious opposition coining
from the western Pennsylvania employers.
The Ohio miners are now working under
tbo mliie-run system with certain modi
fications In Indiana there Is a double
stnndaid. while in Illinois the men have
the mine-run basis. Western Pennsyl
vania operators me opposed to mine uiu,
they sny, because It places them nt a dis
advantage with oVnipctltors In unorgan
ized fields.
Belief was expressed that If the con
ferees could conic t an agreement on
the mine run proposition, the other dif
ferences could bo adjusted, although the
possible wage Increase might not be us
largo as that asked
irKJiontACY Tin: salvation
OF t'll ILI, SA VS PROFESSOR
Pan-American Delegate Tells of
South American Progress
"On democracy depends the true de
velopment of Chill," said Dr Jose Maria
Galvcz, piofcsson in the Unlveisitv ot
Chill and ilplegiito from that country to
the Pan-American Congress recently held
lu Washington. In a talk to the students
nf the University or Pennsylvania lu Lo
gan Hall tndny. "And the tendency Is to
Introduce democracy Into our present cen
tralized government." lie ndded.
"A strong middle class Is being devel
oped and on this Imiigs the fate of tho
democracy. We have not entirely got
away from the ollgaichy of a halt cen
tury ago when the Government wns con
trolled by a few Spanish families who
ran the country for their own Interests.
Then came tho war with Peru In '79,
bringing great wealth to the country tor
which tlioobllgarchy was not prepared. As
a consequence there has been a tendency
for tho ruling class to go to Paris anil
wasto their time on luxuries such ns tho
two-step and what you call tho 'bright
lights.'
"We are undertaking a change, quietly
and without tho civil wars that arc so
popular around iw.
"Our country was formed, you know,
when a band of tough Spaniards rode on
horseback nil tho way down from Pan
ama and married the Indians of Chill.
Hut wo arc proud of this Intermixture.
Our raco Is not distinctively Kuropeuii
or Indian, hut It has many features of
both. The trouble has always been In
our country that thero has been a large
proportion of Illiterates. It is from this
mass that we are developing our middle
class by means of our educational sys
tem. Our high schools nrc doing more
than nny other medium to for m amiddle
class. The old oligarchical tendencies
find their chief support In tho private
schools under priests and church support "
Doctor Gnlvez concluded by saying that
ho believed the twentieth century was the
beginning of n new era In tbo South
American countries Just as the nineteenth
had been In'js'orth America. ,
:
J. E. Caldwell & Co.
902 Chestnut Street
Sapphire
Signet Rings
Dining
Service
De Luxe
on a READING DINER is more
than mere dining service.
means
COMFORT
COURTESY
CONVENIENCE
' CLEANLINESS
and a time saving pleasure that
conveys an air of banqueting
while traveling on a road of
denendable service and scenic
I splendor. '
ALLENT0WN FAMILY
TRAPPED BY "FENCE"
IN THEFTS OF SILK
Detective Poses as Buyer of
Stolen Goods and Recovers
the Quakertown Mill's
Property
CONFESSION BY FATHER
ALLBNTOWN. Pa . Feb 21. Warren
lllxwin, n silk twister, his wife nnd three
children weie arrested Into last night
on n chnige of having stolen $2000 worth
of silk from the Quakertown Silk Mill
last Friday night. The silk was recovered.
Detectives Weiss and Stnnebnck, hear
ing stolen silk had been offered for snlo
hole, learned from the mlllowners that
I H'xson wns the only Allentown man who
ever worked there
Fhun a detective agency In New York,
Detec Ive Irwin M. Feurllcht came here
to Impersonate a buyer. IIIxsou confided
to him that he nnd his partner had se
creted the stolen silk, B000 yards of rib
bon cut from tho looms, on a farm four
miles from hero. The pnrttier could not
he found to accompany them to the farm,
nnd when Feurllcht nnd Hixson arrived
In n tnxl. the two local detectives, having
already dug up the silk," put handcuffs on
both visitors. He still thinks Feurllcht, "a
fence" nnd not his trapper. He confessed
the robbery, but ictuses lo dlvulgo his
partner's name, saying "there Is nliendy
trouble enough."
JJKOP FIGHT ON FLETCHEK
His Conlirmntion ns Ambassador to
Mexico Expected
WASHINGTON", Feb. 2 1. Opposition to
Henry P. Fletcher ns Ambnssador to
Mexico has dwindled to such a compara
tively few Republicans that Administra
tion lenders In tho Scnato wero confident
today of his confirmation within a" few
days.
The Democrats who threatened rovolt
because Mr. Fletcher Is a Republican have
been quieted and many Republican Sena
tors, seeing tho futility of a fight, havo
abandoned their opposition.
Want Block for Playground'
A movement to Induco Councils to pur
chase and mako Into a recreation centre
for tho 5000 children of tho neighborhood,
tho block bounded by 47th, 48th, Locust
and Spruce streets, was started last night
nt a meeting of the Henry C, Lea Homo
and School Association. The Lea School
is at the corner of 47th and Locust streets.
Although It is a now school, tho demands
upon It aro so heavy that the building of
nn addition Is Imperative, and tho school
has no playground.
DIXON
Tailoring That Ha Created
Prestige
House Established IBIS
When a man goes to the
trouble of praising Olion
Tnllorlng nnU DUon-Servlce
to bin friend. It'rj a sure
Hlgn lie's ponltlvo that our
nklll, ability to pleasa and
prices are right. Word-of-mouth
publicity has placed a
lot ot names upon our lists
that give every Indication ot
being there to stay.
1111 Walnut Street
for intaglio
crest or monogram.
vriilL, ; u ff
1 aANw -s
SUFFRAGISTS LAUNCH
NATION-WIDE FIGHT
First of Series of Meetings Is
Held to Urge Amend
ment by Congress
NEW TOniC. Feb, 24, National and
Htnto suffrage lenders packed the Harris,
Theatre here todny n the pioneer meet
ing of a national movement to compel
passage ot the national suffrage amend
ment. '
Presided over by Mrs. Carrie Chapman
Cntt, president ot tho National American
Suffrago Association, delegates from every
New York Stale congressional district
listened to the reading of their memorial
to Congress, npplauded enthusiastically
and will order It sent to Washington for
presentation to Congress. The meeting is
tho first of a national series of State con
vcnllons, each of which will reiterate the
demand made today, It wns announced
nt New Torlt suffrage headquarters.
Come and
look them
over!
Perry's
new
Spring
Overcoats
at $15
$18, $20, $25
are early on
the job !
Perry's
-STVI.ISlll.Y CONSEItVATIVlSt
Sl'ltl.Vr. OVERCOAT
Velvet collar or cloth col.
larj button-through front -ir
fly front. Sometimes full sltlc
iluedi sometimes only skele
ton lined. 3In.de n rouaer--vatlve
colors nud fancy mixtures.
i m W
HI w lh'"
1 I .-' w
J3 $
We thought of you
months and months
ago! Thought of the
waning Winter, of the
welcome warmth of
Spring days and xvlndy
evenings! You're tired
of that old heavy-weight
coat. Tomorrow you'll
tackle things fit and.
fresh and buoyant with
a new one that rests as
lightly on your con
science as it does on
your, shoulders I
perry&Cq.
"N. B. TV'
16th & Chestnut Sti
s
, 4
.' !
1
1
Philadelphia & Reading Railway
EVERY IIOUU ON THE HOUR
TO NEW YORK
m jUfc.-,lM1tiT.
J. t t Mnlcurtos. Sc
1 -