Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 06, 1916, Night Extra, Page 3, Image 3

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    EVENING LEBGEE-PHItADELPHIA", milDAY. OCTOBER 8, 1916
l?" JONES SEES
REVOLUTION IN
WAKE OF TIE STRIKE
. r.i-f Tf Rhn SRVS. A3
..m fn auub - -
Eye Twinkle Over
Thougnt ui "-"
York Riot
rATClTY NEARLY MAD
r.xrtt. D. GROAT
V V -. ...... Vnttr'l IrtO
rwf ? o w. --
Liu ir'nctlon strike Is too much
Tills ""'" ", , iir cm un
.i I'm kdiiih :'- . .. -
""-- i- do It througn ma
rw
j ..r.old Mother Jones, angel
k..aU-rer-oiu .,,... j , ,
5 '" ft. comments thus to-
i .!:. 1 h Mime time thai in
lETuM m. ". "nrworK-
"5" w done, ' ,r-
MBed on t"?'" "
l"0,TiJ,r trouble In Netf York s jusi
JS a 55c at revolution nil over
ittrt or , . . h rt ,hat
L-wttr. "" .,, ,. really' the
rM.bLl..il, in any nation. They .tart
1 .a involutions. You made tne
d "'.?. n..till In the French
I tr aon .- there's never
rtln nui"" . M then."
frfficame into her eye. and the ..t
iL1!. .re relaxed, . . ... , .
i. " j,j .Hr thinca vn '
Z Vld, reverting to the Incident.
kt! -omen are queer." .
I r" --- . - ..nc. A man ni
t .J:U' "itMher" that two
Lasher " 1",","'.i .:;.. f the
ffte woman rioier, ." v
Ysall rlghV ehe replied. "It'll
, t ".""". ,.nrl.r.
"r . J" . ivintlnued.
nWdr "' "", :jet are fa.
KSh their millions. And the mayor,
' .-i.,rtlon controlled. But
ltware us -with grand juries. You
"?." vYT in the bull nen myself."
5Ummered on the table again.
"""M' :,,.. in -tlr thin old town
Wwnencan
tf thr a
WI .1. hn mnthflril mil fit
Teh.nce at happiness. Yes, the old
a too oulet. weve goi a kci mo
Mntwtther. The city Is brutnllied;
Hen Is brutailiea an wwmw "
Use ail me muiioy, invo i...j
M Jails Instead of homes."
MWB8T EBB OF CIVILIZATION
r does New York compare with com-
vnfhur Jones was asked, recalling
rHrt la the bloody mine troubles In that
V, the police here aro Just like the
goftras oi uic iiiiiuiiK vmihh.
ji "Only there's so many of them
t tr don't have to use machine guns.
f.e clUDS insieao. aiy uou, iu iiuun
WWtn Deing ciuuoeu uy urn tfuiiw.
--llie lowest 8DD oi civiuiauon,
Ttoftef Jones will stay In town nwhlle.
u- w.. th "hnvi" nml will take
wden. but she revealad that mere is
W ihead recalling the days of the
eeal strike, when she led a frenxlea
I tt women over tho hills' and "beat
uiUallit militia."
8V she commented, smoothing ou the
k wsld on her purple Doaice inai looKeu
a tewih of grandmother's time, "there's
, times ahead. ,W won't always navo
tj No, I've lived too long to be all
lc I see good In the. future good
itnees."
r ....
WKmr mm
p MHf 1
lBilMl
COPERS BLISSFULLY
HAPPY, SAYS M1CHELL
Bcrtron Bew and Bride Expect
to Remain Some Time in
South
WALTER P. WALDEMAN
University of Pennsylvania stu-
dent, who displaced one of his
jjpinal vertebrae when tackling tt
football "dummy" last Monday.
SiTe're going to stir this old town
- en can't be deprayed and starved.
;,M are tho nation will ie criminal
.wived. We've got to have the full py
L. & N. ASKS U. S. COURT
TO GJJARD ITS SECRETS
Railroad to Appeal Against
Order to Reveal Political
Activity
WASHINGTON, Oct. . President Milton
Smith, of the Lrulsvtlle and Nashville Hall
road, and his associates will appeal to the
Supreme Court of the United States In an
effort to keep from the public the secrets
they hold regarding campaign contributions
and other political activities of the railroad,
according to unofficial Information which
reached the Interstate Commerce Commis
sion today,
A Federal court of the District of Colum
bia has ordered the railroad officers to
turn all the company skeletons out of
their closets to pass in review before the
Interstate Commerce Commission.
President Smith Is declared to be de
termined to fight this decree to the highest
court in the land, contending that tho IJouls
vllle and Nashville has ns much right to
private secrets and activities as an In
dividual. The commission says that as a railroad
Is n public utility all of Its affairs must be
-public, too. The commission Is dally ex
pecting formal notification of the railroad
company's appeal from the lower court's
decision unless somo attempt Is mado at a
compromise.
When his lft th vmtnir counle they were
enjoying themselves and had no Intention
of reluming home for several days, said
Harry V. Jllchell, Jd. who piloted llertron
Bew and Miss Jean Ilergner on the first
"lap" of their romantlo fl Rht from Avalon,
X. J . to HrlPtol. Tenn., whero they, were
married on Monday.
Mr. Michel! Was Interviewed at nidley
Park, where he and his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. P. P. Mlchell, reside. JUnco his re
turn from Bristol last Wednesday Mr.
Mlchell has tied ned to dlicuss the elop--ment
until todar. when he consented to
I break the silence.
i "I am surprised that tho newspapers ob
tained so much Information and with such
I nrrurarv In tha fAttt nf She efforts We took
' to hide our trip." sa'd Mr. Mlchell. "In
view of what has been published thero
seems little that I can ndd to describe the
arralr. From the time we set out from
Avalon on Sunday evening utdll the arrival
at Bristol nnd the marriage Itself our every
movement has been told.
"My own part In the episode was unim
portant, and I had no Idea It would bring
me Into so much notoriety.
"Bertron nnd Jean ate both old friends,
and they asked me to take them In my
car to Philadelphia. 1 did so, nnd It was
not until after I had given my consent
that I learned their plans In full. Then
when they nsked me to accompany them to
Tennessee and net ns witness to the r wed
ding I saw no reason why I should not go.
I took my car to the garage, at Twenty-
third and Market streets, and left with them
on the midnight train for the South. They
were married, ns you know, lato on Mon
day, and I left for home Immediately after
ward. "Before I hade them goodhy the young
couple declared they wero going to remain
In the South for several days, probably n
couple of weeks, before returning to their
parents. They were as happy as any young
newly wedded couple .muy be expected to
be at such n time. It was a love match, nnd
I believe It will turn out a happy one. Out
side of the undeslred publicity I have no
regret for the part I took In the matter."
A dispatch received In Philadelphia today
from Bristol announced that tho young
couple had left that place nnd wero believed
to be proceeding leisurely hom6ward. They
departed from Bristol on a local train yes
terday, and while they did not Indicate their
purpose. It Is believed they Intend to visit
Virginia towns en rqute and will not reach
Philadelphia for several days.
NEVER BELIEVE A MAN,
SAYS SCORNED WIDOW,
AFTER VERDICT FOR $1
Woman Who Failed in $65,000
Lawsuit Against Aged Bene
dict With Seven Children
Warns Sisters
DIDN'T WANT THE CASH
I mmmiitM
ENSION OF TRACTION
i STRIKE TO TUBES FEARED
RAILROAD OFFICIAL, 72, WEDS
HIS SECRETARY, WHO IS 32
Former Vice President of Union Pacific
Marrie3 in Now York
NEW YOntC. Oct. 6. William Mahl,
seventy-two years old. former vice president
of the Union f aclflo Kallroad Company, left
the Hotel Majestic late In tho afternoon with
Miss Hannah Goepel, his secretary. A
couple of hours later he came back with
his wife and there wasn't any such per
son as Miss Hannah Goepel.
Mrs. Mahl, who Is thirty-two, was mar
ried to her employer by City Cleric Scully.
She had served as Mr. Maid's secretary
for two years, It was said at the hotel,
and had been a friend of the first Mrs.
Mahl. who died three years ago.
BABB DIES OF INJURIES
Fourth Victim of "Dead Man's Curve,"
Near Allentown
AI.LBNTOWJC. Pa., Oct. . Kdward
Babb, twenty-five years old, one of four
young men from Phoenlxvllle whose auto
crashed Into n, telegraph pole near Monterey
while they wero on their wny homo from
the Allentown Fair on the night of Sep
tember 31, died thlsmornlng at tho Allen
town Hospital. Daniel Trcxlcr, another of
the party, died September 26.
The snot whero tho fatal crash occurred
Is a dangerous curve on the road to Bead
ing, and Babb,. being the fourth man to bo
killed thero In n short time, the State High
way Department Is now straightening It
to cut out tho danger. It Is known locally
as "Dead M;tn's Curve."
, By M'LISS
If you want to l absolutely safe from
a man you mustn't bllce n word he says.
You mustn't believe him when he's sober;
you mustn't believe him when he's drunk.
You mustn't belles e him when earnestness
shines In his eye; nor when tho airy per
siflage Is upon his lips.
In the light of her recent experience Mrs.
Sallle t. Hammond, nfty-four-ycar-old
widow, to whom yesterday was granted n
whole dollar In lieu of the $05,000 sho
nrked In her breach of promise suit against
soventy-thre e-year-old Qeorgo Hoffman, bus
bnml of n live wife nnd nana of seven chil
dren, says those aro true ords. Men nre
no good, Is the new phltoophy she hna
evolved since yesterday's verdict was re
turned, There was- a lachrymose air about the
parlor of the widow's home nt 1711 North
Thirteenth street this morning. The pink
wall paper looked pale and disappointed;
the chairs stood round with dejected mien.
It was ns though they had expected now
clothes or something, nnd the realisation
that they now had "to go without" was too
much for them. What can you do with n,
dollar?
Hut Mrs. Hammond hasn't even that.
"No," sho sold Jodedly. "I got my ver
dict and I didn't wait for anything else, I
don't enro who gets the dollar. I don't want
It. :I didn't go Into this thing for the
money's sake. I did It to set nn example
to men. The time has como for women
to stop believing all men tell them. We
ought to have our eyes opened. I've got
mine opened at last"
Irtve, Mrs. Hammond Is ready to testify.
Is a volatllo emotion. It's here, there and
everywhere. Two years ago, for Instance,
she thought well of Ueorgo Hoffman, she
declares; so much so that sho wanted to
marry him. Now she diagnoses him as "a
plain, old fool."
'That's all ho Is." she reiterated tear
fully, "a plain, old fool, and I'm suffering
nil this notoriety so that ho wllt.be shown
up-as prominent ns he Is, too, n church
member nnd all that.
"Men tnko women's hearts nnd play with
them, and we are simple enough to let
them do It. Then when the suffering comes
we havo to bear It. If they deny their
promises and .we have no witnesses, whnt
can we do? Nothing absolutely nothing."
The sheet music on the piano. "Where
Did Boblnson Crusoo Go With Friday On
Saturday Night'.' fluttered sympathetic
ally and Mrs. Hammond a sadder and
wiser woman wiped away a tear.
"If I had the whole thing to do over
again 1 wouldn't do tt again. It was not
worth the worry."
In the meantime there's a dollar In the
world that no one seems to want.
HEARTS GALORE FALL
AT THIS GIRL'S FEET
"Ad" to Get Homo for Her
Mother Brings Deluge o
Otters
NRW YOItlC, Oct 6. Pretty Clara
IlfhofT. the girl who advertised for a hus
band In order that she might provide a
home for her aged mother, today was fairly
deluged with offers' of marriage.
By letter and In person buslnes men,
farmers, mechanics and professional men
laid ther heart! nt the young woman's feet.
The postman had left more letters at the
lll.lo homo at 1 1 w Kent avenue, hi Oreen
point. In the lrl two days thsn he previ
ously had carried there In n year. Almost
tivery one contained an offer of marriage.
. Misn Hlshoif In (.ticking to her woiM that
rlie intended to Investigate each applicant
cimtulty. She l going over the list sli ha
with care. Sin lu.H stateu mat tne niai sni.
veil" must earn at least JSO n wn'k. Sev
eral of the applicants so far, It was learned
today, come within that class.
Mme. Mntzcnaucr to Seek Divorce
NEW YOHK, Oct 6. Beports that Mme.
Margarete Matzenauer, of the Metropolitan
Opera Company, was preparing to bring
suit for divorce against Edoardo Ferrarl
Fontana, the tenor, have been verified by
Herbert Cone, an attorney, of 61 Chambers
street
1 Wliero fasLlou displays, I
I In llio forogrouucl I
B oi ottractlvenoji
I ii:oii(,i; v. iii:iNii((i.i I
JZ0ansGom9s.
Fancy Chocolates
and Mixtures at
28c and 38c lb.
Are Wonderful Value
1232 Market St. & Branches
GALVANIZED COPPER
AND ZINC SHEETS
L. D. Bcrgcr Co., 59 N. 2d St.
iJfll, itorktt IU Krmtone, Xloin tut
y Brothcrnooa uemanas iiein-
! statement of Discharged Men
XWf'iomC Oct. 6. Danger of the
L- ti !. JIl. 11. AaaldtM-aa b
SH1 swine spreaainR iu 4110 iuuw uhuh
iHiMwn River developed toiay. i-resi-
; p. H., Sines, of the Brbthemooa ot
IhW 'Trainmen, presented a demand to
1 Hudson and Manhattan Railway Com-
'tor, the reinstatement or rorty-one uis-
rs en the tube lines who have been
tried during the past few days. It
laiwfed by the brotherhooa. mat tne men i
"tmiltl dismissed for sufficient cause. T
9mnl small outbursts of violence oc-
today In the traction strike, but
1 have been no further organised at-
1 bf- "women since last night when a
I of women encaged In rioting after
; ha run rued bv "Mother" Jones.
. xaklag a lesson from tho European war,
M of the strikers utilised a "tank'' In
stuck upon a street car lp 145th street
1 m autoivoDlie tney passeu tne car
.they did the. men threw stones
1 the car Wlnrinwa. ?n nnn war rc-
OnJured. v
'nsAeWlSliunk Hrowh. Jr.. Lawver
'eM Ittilpn of Attorney General Brown.
urancis HnunK Brown, Jr Iemuel
Mid and Paul C. Warner were ad-
U practice In the Common Pleas
1 today bv Presldlnir Judcn Anden.
! The Judge Impressed upon the young
v uie importance of their prores
tbe. affairs of tho dav and wished
ail real SUCcess. which. h nnfil. ran
T,m obtained by constant annllcatlon.
onea enaeavors solely to right
J fclZZZ - "AI.918U3U 1TANUABU 8HOK8 j !
food for Grates
J U choice dry Oak and
Ywy Ion 1 at current rates.
splendid kindling for
pwwnir nree.
imings' Coal Yards
1 Offl, 413 N. 13th Street
A Shoe That Combines
Great Value and Correct tyle
A distinctive Dalsimer model of fine calf, with a
flexible fibre sole and rubber heel. You will not
find another like it for style, for service, or for
all-round satisfaction.
Mahogany Tan Calf with
Tan or White Fibrei Sole.
Gun-metal Calf with Black
or White Fibre Sole.
$
if I 1
111 I
1
C.50 ;ciH
A dress shoe for the young man
who wants extra service added.
TIS A FKAT TO KIT FEET
rp F m Shoes and Hosiery
jLjCll&iflCfc 204-06.08 Market St.
J. E. Caldwell & Co.
V8
A -
902 Chestnut St.
Plates for Bridal Gifts'
Exclusive designs by
Mintons, Coalport,
Royal Worcos ter,
.Cauldpn, Copeland,
Roal Doulton, Wcdgwcod
and other English Potteries
i.V,
r.,
h W1''
pEMOVAL:
rv. In tho early Autumn tho
business of J. E. CaldWell &
Co. will bo located in tho Wide
ncr Building, Chestnut, Juniper
and South Pcnn Square.
Ready Money
IW States nm Society
7 North Breast.
!" MM 0rauBliB .
HADWQO
fUWM
r" DarfanM. i... .1 . .
OQD Sftors i better than
US,id:ink l0
ulUi "'mlVK
MUe hZL h'dwoHl floor, ,
I" 00 QVeni IVInaV f .I -
I " !"" V TIfWt
1NKERTON
-.
X Patty Wattr Trtatmnt
When yoa FeeljAll IrS
end Energy Gone
it's ft sign that your sys
tem needs toning up
through Nature's treat
ment the daily use of fa
mous Bedford MinorHl
Water. '
Gives relief from a run-down
ay at em, gout, constipation,
chronic indigestion afld other
disorders' of the stomach, liver
and kidneys.
BEDFORD
MINERAL WATER
Unusual Business Opening
for Man With $10,000
Nationally known manufacturer is
opening a Philadelphia branch.
The right man one qualified to take
entire charge will be given an oppor
tunity to make at least $15,000 to $25,000
net the first year, with yearly profits con
stantly increasing from then on.
The man we select must be thoroughly
responsible and have at least $10,000.
Our Field Manager will be in Phila
delphia to interview all applicants.
Address B 332, Ledger Office.
tfiHr ' .;;&
1M.U.UIOI1I fetuuir wkaf MaI.
ford Minernl fer hm 4eie
tor tfceuMiide. If in 4wU
ftboMt MftUaK yetrlf, aefc
your pbyeiclftn about He ttfe for
BWford Sprii g$ C. uouud
JJ1S WMwr' MM. Mitt.
s pa " i t rw4 ilSiWaHMnAl
mm
"We predict
a Warm Winter"
IF YOU USE fHSSKh
TKG-.
KvzmAmr
SoW by AU UUera
Taken dollar for dollar
you will find in
PERRY
Fall Suits and Overcoats
at
. $15, $18, $20", $25 .
tin
M Sk "
iy "j
full "ft
WYwL
Perry's
'JIRN'fl rAHMIOXAIU.K"
All the atria nml .marlnem
of the "youngMt" moilrU,
with comfort and ease (or
men of girth and more ma
ture development. Mlrr
ntely IiIrIi, narrow liouldrr,
drawn-ln waist lines; Eoft
rolllne lapels, various treat
ment of pochetH and sleeve
cults. Nurrow trouorr..
Perry's
notiUMcmtKASTHi)
"JUNIOIt Bri'.CIAI."
Cost, clone flttlnc 1'ortri
sUIrt snuir over hips; hleh
narrow shoulders and
sleeves; lone pckUhI lapel i
patch pockets, with buttoned
flaps; trouer extremely nar
row anil atralclit.
better wool, better weaving,
better making and
more style for the money
than in any other clothes
we know of. '
And 'one of the reasons is this.
CJ We always keep in the same drawer of our
desk a handy checkbook together with a list of
the needs and requirements of a year ahead
with this result our ready cash commandeers
the right goods whenever the price quotations
are sufficiently attractive.
fl To put it more concretely we buy our own
woolens, for cash; we make them into Suits and
Overcoats ourselves, for cash; and as, manu
facturing retailers, we save you all the in
between costs that pile up between distant
wholesaler and local seller, before the latter
puts his profits on them for you to pay.
fj And, of course, our kind of making shows Itj
influence in their individuality and style.
fl Any Perry customer will tell you! , '
.' '
Perry '.lt.-
16th Sc Chtwt
is i u i ii tiiunmfmmmm i mji ijii up
, iL.&jmu&mstdm&L"i
L. .& J-avtef
-i --j&t.iJZ
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