EV&NING LETOI-PHiIjAJDISLPHIA, JbltlDAY. aEFruiMJdiflit 8, 191G "DON't BE StfEEP'' PHILADELPHIA WOMAN TELLS SUFFRAGISTS tud Recommendations of Executive Council, but De mands Full Discussion by Delegates Before Approv ing Voting Machines to Be Used by Convention By a Staff CemtpoiAnt 'ATLJLNTIC CITY. Sept . A rhlladsl. . Mrs. E. T, Toosood, wMs BH Jitowtw of the forty-elehth annusl cn Tjsjjfcm ot the National .Amsrlcsn Woman Mi Association to "show th men" a. . tsassf or two alraut "expressing opinions." to atalnst "shesp" policy and "follow MW'Uader" attltudea In conventions. In a rttscuslon which arose today when the women were planning- to adopt rcconv saMtdstlons of the extcut ve council en !, without discussion, Mrs. Tooiood arose tot Irs and Midi "I object to taklnc the Xttey just as it U handed to us, without tftseueslon. I want the members of fho "Mivfit:on to discuss the questions and tMnk for themselves. I spent two days at tM National Republican Convention ond I it much Impressed with tho way the men tMtowe their leaders Just like sheep, t have no doubt that the women on our ex tlve council show splendid Judgment, but nevertheless I want this report discussed, so that we all know Just what we are' voting , tor." Partisanship does not pay In trying; to net uffrsie, according to western -women, who have repeatedly explained this from the Boor of the forty-eighth annual convention ef the National American Woman's Suffrage Association. These women who have been voting side ty side with their brothers and husbands In the western States declare that the mem bers of the organisation In session hers must keep out of politics If they want to get the vote for the rest of the women of the Nation, either by State or Federal Methods. Mrs. Walter McXab Miller, of Columbia, Mo., made a special appeal on this point before the convention, saying: "We western women' are for non partisanship. For that reason both parties ere working with us. We realize that much depends upon what the women of the West do. We know that what the women of the Weut do toward making the homes of their families the best and the happiest In the nation wlfl have Influence on whether suf frage carries In the rest of the country. The voters are watching what the women of the enfranchised States are doing and we know It" Suffragists spreading the message of votes for women bv the rialdtn piur mih. ou. in tne automobile which Is touring the nation, are suffering real privations, ac cording to the statements of Mrs. Esther O. Odgen. of New Jersey, third Vice pres Idont of the national association. Sho says the women were on the border making speeches at the tlmo of the raids and had a narrow escape, and that they had to be towed out of rivers during the recent floods In the Southwest. Dr. M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr College. Is playing an Important part In the proceedings of the convention. She has made a number of Important motions which dealt with leclslatlon of th mi.. ventlon. Her most Important role so far has been the work she Is doing In helping Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, the national president. In getting the resolution on the future policy of the association on the Fed eral amendment before tho convention. Women suffragists are going to have ex perience with voting machines real ma chines, mechanical one nnt hmn m.Ahir. for the nrst time In the history of their organization today, according to announce ment made on the floor of the convention by Miss Hannah J. Patterson, business man ager of the organisation. These voting ma chines are to be Used In tho election of the threo new officers, who will take the places or Mrs. Frank M rtoesstng. Pittsburgh, flrst vice president; Miss Hnnnah J. Patterson. Pittsburgh, corresponding secretary and business manager, and Mrs. James W. Mor rison. Chicago, recording secretary. hn go out of omce at this convention. Tho voting machines will not be used for the amendments. Voting takes placo Friday .... "'" ociock ana 4:30 C:S0 o'clock. ." MRS. DELAND WRITES LEGITIMATE SEX NOVEL and SUFFRAGISTS REJECT PARTISAN RESOLUTION Continued from Pace One. Mr, Wilson has as steadfastly held to the 8tate rights Idea. Whatever chanoe the resolution ever had to pass was due to the championing by Mrs. Robins. She almost convinced her hearers that there was no partisanship In her resolution at all, and that It was really nonnartlssn end whnllv nrn.Rnfrrnc-A Shi expressed her sincere belief that frcaU uem ivuson woum cnange nis mina on suffrage by "State right In favor of Federal grant." Just as ho had changed his Blind on many other things, onco the suf fragists exerted pressure. tfOCTOH SHAW OPPOSES Mrs". Catt presided over tho debate In a manner to excite the admiration of any expert chairman. There were attempts to amend tho resolution and they were lost; there was a trial to havo It postponed In definitely and It lost because the conven tion was determined to meet tho Issue squarely. The trend was fixed -when Dr. Anna Howard Shaw asked the floor. With her usual Inclslvenesn, sho said that no matter how you Interpreted Mrs. Itoblns' resolution It was antl-Wllnon, She predicted that to pass this resolution would defeat suffrage In several States next elec tlon, and said dryly, "Wo are a woman suf frage society, and not a Federal amend ment society." L-fc. " ----...- .Wn .... utL. WiWi SBaW -b virtually repeated her earlier speech. Thero were only a few scattering yes for the resolution. The convention had gone on record as being not partisan. The debeate that preceded the vote was notable. Not elmvt the convention began has there been su-rt Interest excited, Speeches were limited to two minutes and the discussion went on for more than two hours, at It Is easily seen how many took part. Every debater of prominence hd something to say Many announced their political affiliations, especially from the voting States In the West, and Doctor Kate W, Barrett, of Virginia, even an nounced that she was a Democrat when he didn't have a chance to be a Progres sive and vote for Theodora Roosevelt. SATI11B AND SAIICASM President Thomas, of Bryn Mawr Col lege, sided against the resolution as did another Pennsylvanlan, Miss Hannah J. ratterson. of Pittsburgh, recording secre tary. She was one of the staunchest de fenders of the present policy. Satire and sarcasm found a place In the debate. There was real need of the guiding hand of Mrs. Catt. Once In a while there came a relieving note of humor such as that from Mrs. Harriet T, Upton, of Ohio, who wanted to know why the women talked of supporting anybody when they aren't able t win anything to- support. Robinson McDowell, a male delegate from &6ulsvlll, hoped the women would continue to exercise "their. Indirect Influence" and maintain their nonpartimtnsnlj). Doctor Lovejoy, of Colorado, said that to pass such an antl-Wtlson proposition as the resolution by Mrs. Robins would rt dargerously on tho suffrage cause all oven iv niuiHIt Ther were plenty- to spring to Mrs. Xoblns's support. Mrs. Hepburn, of Con necticut. sald the crisis was at hand, and unless tho suffragists meant to use their power they might an Well disband. She considered It suicidal not to pass the resolu tion. All of Mrs. Roblns's Illinois delegation were not with her. Mrs. Bass called the resolution the most partisan ever presented In n suffrage con vention. Thus It went on from before 11 o'clock to 1, p. an. The resolution had been one of many Introduced when the hour for political policy had como up. but when It was found that It presented the Issues cleanly It virtually singled Itself out for the question. MacMillan Remains in Greenland BATTLE HARBOR, Labrador, Sept 8. Tho Qrenfell Mission schooner George B. Cluett, which went to the relief of the Donald B. MacMillan Arctic expedition In July, 191B, has returned here. Only Cap tain If. C. Pickles and the crew are aboard. MacMillan, Dr. E. O. Hovey. who led the relief expedition, and the other scientists of the party elected to remain for a time in the northern part of Greenland. "Tho Rising Tide" Rings True. Neither Morbid Nor Salacious. Other Enrly Fall Fiction Magaret Defend has written a sex novel In a proper sense of the term In 'The Rising Tide" (Harper A Bros, New York). Of course a novel of the sort commonly classi fied under tht, term sex Action could by no stretch of Imagination be associated with the creator of Helena Richie and Dr. Lavendar, Her new book is equally, of course, dsvold of the salacious and tho morbid which have been the hire and bait of the sex novels of malodorously recent mem ory. "The Rising Tide" analyses, with keen Insight Into psychological processes of the modern woman, a gin 01 toaay. "The Rising Tide" contrasts three genera tions In their Ideals and manners, the grandmother of early Victorian type and mother of later Victorian tendencies and the daughter, freed ot all the Victorian trammels. It is plain spoken but never of fenslve. It Interprets with unerring accu racy and superb powers Just how the mod ern girl looks on life's problems It reveals relentlessly the modern girl's thoughts and It exposes all the limitations of the modern girl's philosophy. "The Rising Tide" Is a careful inter pretation of femininity In flux feeling, seek ing, striving. It Is a noel of maturity, good Judgment and good taste. Good style Is to be taken for granted In any work of the distinguished author of It. "Making matches and mending hearts" Is a quotable characterization on the Jacket of "The Bird House Man" (Doubleday, Pare & Co.. Garden City. Long Island). Walter Prltchard Eaton's fall novel. That la the mission In life of the gentle and lova ble titular personage. His story Is nar rated In the leisurely, gracious stylo that no other present writer of stories seems to have In the charm and abundance of Mr. Eaton's possession of It. New England village life, of which Mr Eaton Is some thing of an observer, not to say connois seur, since he shook the dust of the New York Sun's theatrical sanctum from his feet and strode Into the pleasanter paths of the Berkshire hills, furnishes the environment, the contemporary manners and the atmos phere. Tho plot In not Involved, but It has Its moments of suspense, not of event, but of characterisation. Just what turn will a character take Is the fascination in 'Tha Bird House Man," not what exciting Inci dent will pile a thrill upon Its predecessor. The Interesting title character is a fabri cator of bird boxes, n dabster at ornitho logical writing, a lover of the little brothem of tho air and the wldlngs of the field, and nbovo all a finely natured friend of youth. There Is n full sweet llaor of sentiment and a specific romance of the bird man to crown the pervasive romance of It all. Birds of passage from Zenasvlile, Ohio, to the centres of European culture are tho trio of glrio prefigured In "Children of Hope" (the Century Company, New York), Stephen Whitman's new novel. Their father, n modified sort of Wltklns Mlcawber, like Dickens's character Is longtime a failure at various and sundry businesses, but eventually "makes his pile," and this gives his charming, educated, good-looking daugh. ters their chance In life. Above all clso they are artistically aspiring. The fine atmosphere of Old World cities Is the set ting they desire to bring to fruition the seed of their talents. Out of this material Mr. Whitman has written a good-humored, satirical story which conceals some canny 1 A . FINE NEW UPRIGHT PIANO $1.25 Wrtldr This is not m 11 h 01 an expenditure to have the reflnlmr infln. Mee of music in your soma, tho influence that MAlsM your house worthu nf 4L. -. 1 mi . " BiiMnn, inisinstru- rows s a lull-size, guar- J ""'s" piano vi. mariL Li rami new stool. Scarf ana year's tuninr free. G. W. HUyjSR CO. Me Hene cf Swrke IM1.33 CHESTNUT . - Bears AMt XXV ftARPBN HUDSON 1 ; Aaphalt $ungles Surface with f4 ,r sriea ertu4 slate, m .paint r lata neuM, ' r yeur byou vtta ptr in. t.toi.lu Ml nimna . rv imnoUHC aim no. 'ecs iasE3jtt Jwmmtfa Fall Shoes Arriving Daily. See them Here NO Wl B YM Ytl I al y i J""".llv V -,, x ,. ttgjj Noticeable is the evidence of care to observe the fitness of things in fashion this new sea son; mannish low heel oxfords or shoes with tailored suit; dainty, slender, gracefully heeled high boots with the dressier ap parel. It is a revelation to view the stock just now. r Thm Geutine Idea "Devlop tht Arch K-ZU- s L&p " The Gcutina Iitrn Develop the Arch" Brown calf with beautiful .contrasting buck top. Also duplicated In black. Rich brown or black calf. Somo patterns also in boot style. . 4230 Market Shoes and 'Stockings for the Family, 7 1. f Jlj rs- (PhONOUNCCO OWN a) Tht Stores of famous 3hoca. MM mt ' Exclusive Men's Shoe Shop. Eve.ru Vntt Prtii0ttvtn)Ui EV.-f tl--- si..... . . ..,.B.w,.u,.v a- iiiiu 1 nree UfUlinff urothcrs Supervising The House that Heppe Bnilt POVSDBD tN XtUADOPTBD ONB-PtttCB BYMTBXI IN ntt C. J. Heppe & 3pn-.m7.UIP Chestnut Str.et 6th and Thowpson Stra.u "Uied" Pianos From $50 Up We have on display now nearly 200 "used" pianos of all makes and styles. There are many that are excellent for the summer home, several are particularly adapted for practice work," some are small just right for apart ments there are both grands and uprights. Every instrument has been thoroughly overhauled and repaired and is guaranteed for 5 years and exchange able at full value any time within one year. Price range fftun $50 upj convenient terms, if desired. Call, phone orwrite for, complete detail to ttH W$KeW C, J, HMTjR A BOS wn. 111MI gsjrtsIT.NUT a. AjSj -M but not H'-natured crltletam of Americans under Its Ironic term. It It written with an Informed pen and a pan that Is not alien to distinction ef style. Fannie lteasllp Lea does not recreate the New Orleans of George W. Cable, and her new novel "Chios Malons" (Little llrown A Co.. Boston), Is not of a par with "The arandlsslmes," but It Is none the less and excellent piece of fiction ot the modern type. The heroine, for whom the book Is named, has the old-fashioned graces ot the Southern girl of ante-bellum days, but her story Is set In our time and cannot help but lack the quaint and exotlo atmosphere of the Creole romances of Cable and others of an earlier school of American novelists. The story Itself Is not lacking In Its own charm of telling, Mrs. Lea writes felici tously and fluently. There Is substance In her paragraphs. She can device and con trol situations. The big situation In "Chloe Malone" Is that of a girl of the line breed ing of the Southland, who has to choose between marrying money, which Is lacking among her assets, and a sctentlst who, as an entomologist, looks with scorn on so ciety butterflies. This Is slender plotting material, but Mrs, Lea has woven the ancient tale with new skeins ot color and fabric, and the tapestry of fiction under her loom has chirm and distinction. There are pictures of the old French aristocracy, relics and relicts of which are part of the Crescent City, and there are interesting views of the conventions and manners of New Orleans of the present piping times of push and progress. Do you bellee In ghosts? Are you fond of supernatural mystery? Are you gripped by tho fascination of detective skill? If the answer Is yes to theso queries, there's abundant opportunity for gratification of your tastes in perusal of Wodeworth Camp's "House of Fear" (Doubleday, Page & Co., New York). The way the ghost Is laid by the enterprising Mctlugh, manager of a theater supposed to be haunted by the pplrlt of Its vain, jealous and vindictive former director, dead and gone forty years, with the connivance ot a malign and fero cious cat. Is a certain delight to believer and skeptic alike In the unraveling of this yarn, which Is pervaded by a welrdness that daunts pretty nearly everybody In tho Btory except Mctlugh. And even this doughty person Is stumped nt various times In his relentless hunting of the "spook," which eventunlly Is banished from the theater and prcMimably sent to Jail. Craig Kennedy, scientific detective, whoso exploits in the solving of criminal and other problems have won him n largo fol lowing among the readers of magazine Ac tion and stirred envy in the breasts of the common, or garden, variety of real life sleuths, has blossomed forth In the pages of a book from the press of Hearst's Inter national Library Company, New York. Ar thur n. Iteeve's hero Is seen trlumphnnt In a scries of adventures under the title of "The Social Gangster." The cplsodo In which this undesirable person finds himself undone Is the flrst of a score or more de tectives stories, every one of which offers some new nngle from which the Indomitable Craig Is enabled to demonstrate his mar velous scientific knowledge and superhuman sagacity In bringing evildoers to confusion. GREAT WAR STARTS POETS A-BATTLING Gibson and Viereck Contrasted in New Volumes of War- liko Verso LARGEST OLD BOOK STORE IN'AMERICA Wars make poets, and poet" wars, said some sententious philosopher; but one does not usually associate with such a reflection a vision of the bards themselves In open combat Such, however. Is the scene pre sented to the mind by two books of recent printing Wilfrid Wilson Olbeon'a "Uattle, and Other Toems" (the Macmlllan Com pany, New York), and Oeoige Sylvester Vlereck's "Songs of Armageddon, and Other Poems" (Mitchell Kennerley. New York). Not that Messrs. Viereck and Gibson frankly oppose each other as champions of two nations. Probably they are unaware of the contrast their volumes offer, a contrast which must seise on every render. For rarely were two poets more unlike In soul- color, In style and In Integral matter. Mr. Gibson, rediscovering the method of Indi rection which describes mutely the act by tho background, paints terrible little can vases on which are shown, not tho blood spray and the tearing shell, but homely things left behind the sick cow, the family at tho peat Are. the early peas, the leaping daffodils, the whiteness of lambs' fleece. It Is a method replete with chances for n misstep; but Mr. Gibson Is so sincere and so calm an artist that when he does break through his self-placed limitation he some times Is better than his more vivid com petitors. Some hardy nnd bright sonnets. In particular those on Itupert Ilrooke, nnd two or threo lusty lyric songs aid In making his book dear to memory. It would be agreeable to praise equally the more tangible and conventional modes and attitudes of "Armageddon." Now and then there Is In It, Indeed, a. flaih ot color, n waft of perfume, worthy of tho man who -k tj. PROFIT Syr AMELIA E.BARR i. on., k.iuj nt Nna and Knight, and "a mouth more strange than Mora Lisa's Is." But. ftttsi Mr'VlmS.ViK -rtrm.n-Am.r.c.n.sm ha. robbed him or nearly an mi u. y - - --- , mouths'hymns of hate, too funny for repr -mand) he curse. Franos and lto Jrtth all the passionate aignuy 01 " .il. iV.jIb. prived of his caramels; his fingering la lp shod. Of this post must one say, Hlo Jacet"? , There Is also a good hit of the new hysteria In "A Harvest of Qernian yerss. selected ana translated Dy ?'"'"":: sterberg (Appleton, New Vork). but the volume will gain many auditors because or Its catholic selectlveness. Its scope I. from the twelfth century to the twentieth, and fairly literal : but quite tinpoello rendering of verses of those eras Is Included. Out of a New Jersey town come, not one voice, but a choir of younger tlngers, whose achievement In "A nook of Princeton erse (Princeton University Press) Is the more real because the models are those crowned by tradition. The smal,' amount of vers llbre encourages ons to read on and on, till some exquisite and finely molded pieces greet tho eye. Twenty-five men are repre sented. One of them, John Tealo Bishop, offers special comment In that he knows delicate handling, song-quallty and sug gestive power. Should he keep his head (and his heels), he may become one of whom poetry-loving America Is proud. Mitchell Buck, a riilladelphlan. offers the reader much that Is familiar, with pome new proie pastels, In "Kphemera" (Nicholas L. Brown, Philadelphia). The themes are Greek, and they are manipulate Viei lightness of touch and a cameo-like aiS that only occasionally degnrat inie IOUSIIt "" -v . -.M.,vmiiu,, m, - most daintily printed and bound, wtnJ peal to those who go In for blndlt. .2 Japanese veuum. binding, 5J "Flashlights." by Mary Aldls (duuuu ' New York), may closo this revl.Thow!: It really should be put with current noi elsewhere. Miss Aldls is An. . ! free verse authors, with ho pueriu i?,u,f '3 deceptions about stanxalo form "!!? , like. Realism for heri Is somethln 2 which one can never have too much. &-? Is a charming tale of a girl who died tiZl an overuuse ui umimv nu similar HuJ J Miss Aldls work. In the vein of fiit,7 J Evans, with one exception; he writ. 11 1 verse now nnd then. ' Movie Campaign Begins NBW YORK. Sept. . The movir,. nleture campaign ot the nenuhiio.. .' tlonal Committee will soon be In full .-.VA i.l..-l tlnM.,',11 toll! I.. I. -. ' "llr. feature of the cause at Sagamore urn )Kl morning by posing with half & doieniJ tho national committeemen In the East .5 the heads of departments at headouarffS for a movie film that will be distributed ! Slate headquarters nnd county commiit... ' hw!iirlinuf the founlrv tnr umt. ... ." ""' . can campaign meetings. PNI, Two Cents for Cleveland Dallies ' CLEVELAND, Sept. 8. Cleveland. .. . English morning dallies, the Leader ins t Plain Dealer, are now selling for two cent. ' Instead of one cent everywhere outild. ' ? "What shall It profit a man It he gain the whole world and lose Ms own soul?" A Vacationists generally re ceive many hints on "what to read" from the places they visit or the persons they have met. Among the 300,000 vol umes on our shelves you are almost sure to find exactly the books you want, and at a great saving in price. j School and College Text Books Ninth Street Below Market Opposite Postofllce ROUND this idea Mrs. Barr has writ ten a itrikine novel of the career of a young man who started life under mistaken ideals. He plays the game in a spirit of worldly ambition, steadily losing all the things that are really worth while. But ultimately, through hard luck and bitter dis appointment, he gains clearer vision and sees the things in life worth achiev ing: "Profit and Loss" is in no sense a preachment, but a strong, vital novel written by a remarkable woman. Jit dll tooUttltrt. 11.10 iMt. THIS IS AN APPUETON BOOK i, I- SBSSBBBBSSBtS. 'BBBBMU j I JialJlllssasiffBS r isaaaaaaaW'T 1 x ' ' J1sssssssssPiVT 3. aflsBBBsV " BWlKiiiKrS' . 'yTjkwySj'-'j.'j JssBssssBsstWi5.?ssW B-tSSEJSBSBBBBP 'J1 " BBBSBBBSit.&&fe !. TyC''?1 jAV3SBSBBBBBBBBBBBBEK14w'W&l4MSBBH,. .. . It"-- 'fasWyVt-- isst hisssT Bauffr--a';y''ii"Mr V? B . i;;' .MtnttVNsVfJ ajsiv voaa NIAGARA FALLS Last Daylight Tour via READING LEHIGH VALLEY THROUGH "THE SWITZERLAND OF AMERICA" SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16th $1222 .ROUND TRIP (Good 15 Days) Ask Agent or write for Niagara Falls Folder Philadelphia & Reading Railway "The only double-track Road Philadelphia to Buffalo" ! ! m D It! There's Another Broken Little Cigar! maUmHiMHfMW'iitiifl on the ADMIRAL LITTLE CIGARS k great divine sayg Hi. not profane to damn a thing inanimate. Therefore you arc excused when you vent your feeling, on a broken little cigar. But what's the use! Admiral Little 'Cigars, with the Million Dollar 3WTHEnM.LUON DOuSS'ISSBls? IS r,uu .u "av-v',"' "fciea to blend and harmonize wath the .weeleat, mildest and most satisfying to! LiST C?UarVer ? U U f Und nly n Admirl v J H za MkltfMMWIj PL ?!.? V If Mtr THE' AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY mJ, '" Wfifeh nwa H w '... ?7T Vft , 'K&J GBH