Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 07, 1916, Night Extra, Page 3, Image 3

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    ..
..i-j "Rndv Has Firat-
tnd Assurance First Regl-
I went v""
! Unmn Armory
L1M PIESSIVE PROGRAM
py,M Rushed for Greeting
Returning Guardsmeit
PU nOUNCILMANIC committee rush
fl G plns for homecoming rccep
II .. iirni on Monday.
or and citizens' committee
.M review troops from stand op
ke First RcBimcnt Armory,
C3 and CallqwMH streets.
ThreS thousand tickets have been
-it to families of returning : sol
5. Tickets will admit mothers,
S, sweethearts and sisters to
STsUtre ln Convention Hall.
Patriotic organizations and sailors
'.Ji marines from League Island
Jrtfl escort tho soldiers to Convcn-
flphlladelphlan dedicates song to
returning soldiers.
EVENING LEDGERPHIIADELrHIA, STTJBDAT, OCTOBER 7f 1916
Arr.m?nUSUl ba ,mpl.t.d today
Krr AftS- to' . home
Motion to the First nerhnenu
w, . ... .-". h,;; hi;
I" tne p .. ----? Se trooM
i1. . . - u...m nut ham or at Mount
c4 mm. but tho committee today announced
r'SwTflrit-hand assurances that the troops
i (? nrV' .,, t thlt1alnhla and be
tK?!!jiaA at their respective armories.
-i matiutw
r The returning troops will march Into Con
Y? .Vr. .i. ii itfo.rt atrtet and Allegheny
!TrMU. and stack their arms, blanket
Hs. canteens and clothing bag on the
Mt side of the hall. All of the chairs
111 be cleared today from the first floor of
ISi hall, so that there will be room to place
the banauet tables of the sotdler boys. The
Jail will be decorated with the city and
istlonal colors, under the direction of the
iBsrtau of City Property.
t The parade up Broad street from the
laUroad station at uroau nti " ,...-
(acton avenue win uo iimiaHmcu j .w.
Geaeral J. Lewta Good, colonel of the First
.. . . j.lnl. lh Rnanlah.Amarlcan
'War. with Lieutenant Colonel J. Campbell
gHmore, 01 me nrov ivckiihciii. ,...,....
Ceres, as chief of staff of aids.
The First Regiment, which Is expected to
rttch this city at about 10 o'clock Monday
swrninf, will De met oy aeicKauona mciuu
lac the Grand Army, Spanish War Vet
Inn, the State Fenclbles nnd other mill.
etry organizations.
I Aster a Dinner anu exercises in unvnu"
! Hen Hall, the troops will march down to the
r . 1, Ttaaaa.aaal atari! rnllAnrlllll eat e
I where they will be mustered out of the ser-
f l-.. I . TTnltaa, CtalAsi Avmnrv
'- I The vuardsmen will march to the air of
.. -a j- n - th r.i.
tWnwi me uoya Lome uacK rrom iicicu,
filnsplrlnff song1 which Is the creation of
'tro Phlladelphlans. Clarence Gasklll wrote
Itho lyric and Charles Sblaler the music.
MVy iiuiiuicu tvjJica ui iii9 ouii& ivcio
luat eX man nn Vi tntr1i lavacfll UfAAlrei
T H UIO snas w isiu wwavew vvvaa nvviw
JKtx ine panas 01 cacn regimcnr, quicKiy
fUimrf If and rv annn th rnltlrlrlnir nli
(9read from camp to camp.
, Thejr hae been slnslnff It en route since
tb day they entrained.
'.Mires from the song to the hospital at
'Wrnnefleld which is caring for Infantile
paralysis vicums. '
. ' this is tne cnorus which the boys in
fUkftVI !! all Ihn wdv fMn. Vt Tn.
sfJniBM the boy. come back from Mexico, back to
"tV .. the tood old IT. B. A.,
rrwrn ftaw a hot time In tho old borne town:
Br' , lhyre comlnr home to star.
SViVwtt 8am waa ready or tho (oo and there la
t-n - one thlna- aura I know.
f from Maxlco.
'BOYS THROW SCARE
WITH SAND BAG BOMB
Crashes Into .New York Car
With Force Enough to
Kill
NEW YORK. Oct. 7-The sandbag
jborflb, which was hurled from the twenty,
j ftlrd-story window of a skyscraper upon an
j elevated train near Hector and Church
riatneu coaay, causing a panic among scores
"jTjeIpasangers. was traced to two little boys.
i i uwt yiayxuiiv aroDDea it.
A clty.wlde search had been Instituted by
.the police, who thought this to be a new
la&a lfananna via.l.i..l .. .....t.i i . t
f ll".v. prt of "trlKing carmen or sym-i.'Hthlsers.
A cloth bag, filled with wet sand, crushed
"urt the train roof with the effective
ly a oorao ana would have instantly
..j v.io ft .irucit.
: iud
SCHOOL HEAD TO SUE
IDA PELLICCIAOTA
Eleven years old, 924 Annln street,
wno was run down by an automo
bile last Thursday and died In the
Howard Hospital. Sho was the
clghty-nlnth victim of motor ve
hicles In Philadelphia since Jan
uary 1.
CADORNA RlPREWlMA,
LAMARCIA SU TRIESTE
PRIMA DELUINTONO
ha Vittorle Italiano sul Col
Bricono o Sulla Cima di
Costabella Strategics
mente Important!
II RUMENI RIPIEGANO
9.2.000.000 HOIEL WILL
BE BUILT HERE IN 1918
Eighteen-Story Structuro on
SouthFiftecnth Street Near
Chestnut for Kuglcr's
AUTOIST, ORDERED TO HALT,
RUNS DOWN PARK GUARD
Leaves Injured Man Unconscious and
Escapes Sought by Police
A man driving a high-powered automo
bile deliberately ran down a park guard in
Falrmount Tark last night and escaped,
leaving the Injured man lying unconscious
on the .roadside.
The guard, John Maloney, of 16J Arnold
street. Falls of Schuylkill, was found later
by MacDowell, another park guard, and
taken to the West Philadelphia Ilpmeopathlc
Hospital. He was treated for general cuts
and bruises and will recover.
The police today are keeping a sharp look
out for the automobile driver, but have
little hope of Identifying the car, as Ma-
loney was knocked unconscious before he
had a chance to see Us license number.
According to Maloney, he was patrolling
a lonely section of the road near the Forty
fourth street and Parkslde avenue entrance,
when a low touring car with only one
headlight showing raced toward him. He
stood In the middle of the road and yelled
to the driver to stop and light his other
light, but the ohauffeur did not slacken
speed and deliberately ran the guard down.
The last thing I remember Is that the
driver swore at me," Maloney explained.
HIS "MARRIAGE PAPER"
LANDS HIM IN BASTILE
Once More Unhappy Husband
Jailed for Trying to Smash
Framed Certificate
LlWby Superintendent Will Ask Court
U ..uwsuuii in cuort to
Th. AMMa will W.. t.-a . .... ..
--- -.. u. nl uo auieu o aeiue ine
wool controversy at Darby, in which the
soreyaTh uinAi hn.i ..,.... .i
$ 2 Schools Wllmer A. Jtrleder
v- -- ucmiuuuo u. reason,
.w KrI?ler opposed by every member
Wumi, w . UBra ot elnl except one,
SkJiif. ifi" McConnell, a memUlr of the
r-- iii Dar, in Doard, through Wll-
Buckman. president, yesterday notl
bZunf p1ncPal t Ignore the superln-
the bo rf 'nB" lnelr reports direct
A thai! g to court,'' said Mr. Krieder.
Wtw. Ct wlth lh.9 Bch0l boar' t"1
Maki lu run- ino ooara has no
W,'." wilary as it Is attempting
I alaii . ' . " Power to remove me.
J"" not resign unlet I am told the
4ltr-UV5 nothlnf MX except that Mr,
LmJS!-Si d. "ot neaur up to. what we
-'-" viiiun," sam Mr. Jiuckman.
MAN DIES IN AUTO SMASII
Others Injured When Car Crashea
' ' Into Cliff
25a5 .' ; " C. P. Heflley,
aW.Itt'.re!1 1' man wa " and
Til,. BJure1 two possibly fatally..
mTErJL automobie swerved Into a lilt
'fi ?..0urTat auIt "1 ou tho SUte
." ad last night
Every time Charles Craig sees his mar
riage certificate It seems to put him in bad
humor
He gazed at It for a while at his home,
S242 Dickens avenue, and then, according
to the police, started to quarrel with his
wife. In the midst of their argument Craig
put his fist through the frame which held
the certificate and expressed his contempt
for wedded bliss generally.
The glass In the frame cut an artery In
his right arm and Craig fell to the floor
from loss of blood. His wife quickly 're
lented and lustily shouted for help. Craig
was taken to the University Hospital. There
his Injuries were attended to.
He went home a repentant. Everything
ran smoothly for a short time, when again
the subject of the marriage certificate was
brought up.
Neighbors heard loud words and crashes
In the Craig home and summoned a police,
man.
This time Craig was taken to theiSlxty-
fifth and Woodland avenue station. He will
have a hearing before Magistrate Harris.
MILK STRIKE END DEPENDS
ON BORDEN COMPANY'S STAND
Directors Meet Today to Consider Six
Months' Contract
NEW TOnK, Oct. 7. Upon the outcome
of a meeting of the Borden Company di
rectors today depends the settlement or con
tlnuatlon of the milk crisis. Those In close
touch with the situation expressed the be
lief that the company, which supplies one.
fifth of New York city's milk, will yield
to the farmers' demand for a six months'
contract, the only Vndltlons not yet ac
cepted. The big producers are expected to adopt
whatever action the Borden concern takes.
The twelve Independent concerns which
gave In to the farmers early today handle
sixty-three per cent of the wholesale trade
and one-tiilrd of the city's supply. They
signed six months' contracts
Woman Dies In Ninety-fifth Year
POTTSVILLE, Pa., Oct 7. Mrs.
Amanda M. Foster, wife otjthe late Thomas
Foster, died last night In her ninety-fifth
year. She was a native ot Sunbury, but
for seventy.four years was a resident of
this city. Thomas J. Foster, former presi
dent ot the International Correspondence
Schools, Is a son.
N?r
Leg . Comfort
Its
ff?iK80!l "TOCKINO
II
ll
;i
wl 'J7wftWt tSuSK
yTji!aTi'i' n it.
Ready Money
United States Loan Society
' 117 North Broad t.
41 S. Bta si. WIS Genaaatews are.
iOi'iImT, i!i'u'"''"i'i' lil'iiliW'ICTBfTIaWi
J
Dan'i dalar anJ lata enoartanlir
to rt m(r ratlnr far' 1911,
AHK Smith
rhila. Mrtar Ca
Trait Hulldlnr.
Frostproof, (luaranteetf.
t.vmbkk
it Keal Kitate
i
best short-cuts your
figure work
With only ten key. tabtou
With only, ten " w
la-hty easily Operated by the touea
irtilhod the .Dalton will moat aa.
ano swiH3iiii(Ha
H, vefaaUlUK ' ""to"
Ijfaj" "
nil atlcuUtltf.
. vfwiuu is Bt; '
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YOUR Ws" '
S.H3n:,l
JSBk. Aef afDW.
PERRY Jb COtUNS
rtvss'
nOMA. 7 Ottobre.
Come annunclava II generale Cadorna
lerl. le truppe Itallane contlnuano la loro
offenslra nelle montagne del Trentlno. no-
nostante u tatto che la staglone rredda vi
e' comtnclata e che In molte parti la neve
e' caduta abbondante. QU ultlml sue
cessl Italian! sono quelll ottenutl nelle At
pi DolomKlche, nella sona conformata dal
1'angolo della valla del Travlgnoto e dl
quella del Clsmoru Ivt essl si sono tmpa
dronltl dopo una tolta vlolentlilma delle
due fortlflcatlislme aommlta del Col Brl
con. Sull'altoplano del Carso e nella sona dt
Gorltla le batterle austrlacha mastengono
un vlolentlmlmo fuoco contra le line Ital
lane. costrlngendo cost 'le fanterle dl Ca
dorna a rlmanere nella trlncee, ma dla
paccl dalla fronts e Information! assunte
qui a,fonte degna dl fede fanno rltenere
che, II generale Cadorna rlprendera' la
marcla verso Trieste con una nuova pods
rota offenslra prima che l'lnverno cd 1'
freddo rendano Impratlcablll le strade.
Ecco II tetto del rapporto del generale
Cadorna, pubbllcato lerl iera.dal Mlnlsterr
della Querra:
Nella valte del Travlgnolo-Avlalo,
dopo le gravl sconfltte sublte nelle
glornate dl martedl' e dl mercoledl',
II nemlcb rlmase quleto. Infattl sol
tanto aslonl dl artlgllerla venlvano
segnalate In quella xona. Nol rluactm
mo a stabltlre un 'forte collegamento
tra le nottre posltloni della prima e
della second aommlta' del Monte Col
Ilrlcon. Nella sella fortnata dalla
depressions tra quests due sommlta'
nol abblamo trovato una gran numero
d cadaver! dl aoldatl austrlact.
Plu' a nord nella valle San Petlegrtno.
Avtslo, un audace e lgoroso attacco da
parte delle nostre truppe cl ha dato II
possesso dl un forte trlnceramento aus
triaco e dl alcune rtdotte nemlche sulle
falde dl Clma Ul Costabella. Ivl nol
prendemmo 102 prlgtonlerl, una mltra-
gllattice, fuclll e munlilonl.
Sul rlmanente della fronts dl batta
glla si sono avute soltanto ailonl dl
artlgllerla che sono at,plu" Intense
sul Carso, dove 11 nemfco ha mantenuto
un vlolento fuoco sulle nostre trlncee.
Alcunl nostrl repnrti In ricognlxlono lm
pegnarono combatttmentl e rl(ornarono
con Una trenttna dl prlgtonlerl.
K'i notare cne II Col Brlcon era sal
damuyjK fortlflcato dagll austrtacl 1 quail
teneH molto al suo possesso. II monta
Infattl sorgo sull'angolo formato dalle due
altl del Travlgnoto e del Clsmon, a sud
oest del Fasso dt nolle, ed era un buon
punto dl partenxa per Incurslonl sulla
strada Flera dl Primlero-Predazxo, che
ora e' quasi tutta domlnata od occupata
dagll Italian).
Notlxle da nucarest dlcono che le forze
rumene operantl In un settore della Tran
silvanla hanno dovuto rlplegare davantl a
forze auperlorl austro-tedesche. In altra
zone' della Transllvanla la battaglla con
tlnua. come contlnua pure nella Dobrugla.
Imece le truppe Inglesl hanno ottenuto
notevoll successl In Macedonia, nella valle
dello Struma, dove hanno occupato un vll
lagglo ed hanno costretto I bulgart ad
evacuare poslzlonL sulla sinistra del flume.
TODAY'S MARRIAGE LICENSES
Francla W. niehardaon. S034 Masnolla ava.. and
Mary K. Albreebt. BflS4 Maxnolla are.
lfrmin Qoldataln. nrooklm. N. Y.. and Deslis
Welner, UOO K. Moyamniln are.
Oeorso I. llendrraon, 1113 XV. Ixudn at., and
Orace K. Tralnar. 6020 Tork rd.
Edxar II. FVati 118 H. 40th St., and Anna I.
Maltor. 0027 Spring at .
Walter Markn, HIS N. Sd at., and Marr Woch-
nlak. R1S N. S1 at. .
Clinton it. KmlUi. flamerton. and Kdrtha 8.
Clayton. Southampton, Pa.
Ftorlan J. Armbruater, noxborouih ava.,
and Starr V. Wunarh. 42 Fleming at.
K.lwln J. Ola.n. 2n4t S. lth at., and Mae
Fniuy, 500 S. noblnaon at.
Millard F. War. Caps Mar. N. J and Anna
H.,Lonc, Caps May, N. J.
Frank Iowandowakl. 4C4S Melroa at., and
Rosa Klnrola, KranVford.
Martin Nalion 1726 Carusa St., and Edith
Saranaon 1220 llaixard at.
Harry a. Todd. Jr.. 0158 Hoopes it, and Mary
F. Culp. 0:8 8. BSth at.
Jarob llakeoran, 4S3 Miller St.. and Oertruda
Thompaon. 2S5T N 2Stti at,
Charlea Undaey. 27A8'Martha, St.. and Matilda
Miller. 2053 K. ilomeraet at.
Harry Ooldenbarjr. 780 a. 2d at., and Eva Ha-
blnawlts, 877 Ft. Marshall at. . .
Oaorra H. Scattersood. 240 W. Tulpehoeken at.,
and Ixula Crawford. 114 W. Phll-Ellana at.
Irvln Kramer, nohraburs. l'a., and Maud Apple.
man. Rohraburc, Pa,
William F. neck. BIO Waetmoraland ava., and
Oertruda M. llradley, ,1729 N. 11th at.
John Wllllama. 1834 Lombard at., and Eliza-
bath It. ItuiaelU 103 Wavarlr at.
Harry Johamaon. 442S Oermahtown ava., and
Maria Johanaon. Ilrooklrn, N. T.
Jamta Camcbell. rnllm. Ta., and Lillian Carl-
aon, B242 Upland at.
Arthur Warden. Atlantio City. N. J., and Sadie
Kloiterman. Atlantio City, N. J.
Michael Nemtcak. 424S llermuda at., and Wlk-
torra Knik. 2888 Duncan at.
Btanlilaw Tnoika, 4810 Stiles at, and Bronla-
lawa Bamborskl. 4B44 Stllea at.
Morris Wolder, 425 Porter at., 'and sella
Urecker. 702 X. Franklin at.
deors Thomas, 1080 Olenwoo4 ave and Ellt-
abeth Bleeth. 1080 aienwood avo.
John W. Mehrllch. I8 N. Naomi ava., and
Jennie O. Farley.- S180 X. 10th at.
1 An elghteen-atory hotel, whtch will house
the new Kugler restaurant. Is to be erect
ed at a cost ot 11,000,000 on tho land
recently acquired by the Kugler Company
at 30-16 South Fifteenth street. Just above
Chestnut street.
Work on the hotel will begin January
1, mi and It probably will be completed
by April 1, 1919, the data on which the
lease-of the property now occupied by
Kusler'a restaurant exnlrea. The hotel will
have 6t rooms, all with baths, at moderate
prices, a roof-garden, nnd dining rooms to
accommodate 2500 persons.
Plans for the hotel are being made by
Clarence B. Kugler, treasurer ot the
restaurant company. Intimates and cost
surveys have been made and Mr. Kugler
la about to report his plans to the di
rectorate of the company.
The hotel will be ot tho type of the new
IoteI Georgian In Boston. There will be
T70 rooms with baths at Jt.SO a day, Kuro-
pean plan. More than halt the rooms will
be under. J 2. B0, nnd the highest price will
be J. '
There will be no rooms below the fourth
floor. All of this space will be devoted to
a grand banquet hall, dining rooms and
restaurants. The grand banquet hall will
be on the mezzanine floor. The lobby will
be on the main floor toward Chestnut street,
with dining rooms on each side.
A gallery will run around the lobby, and
the grand dining room will have n gallery,
too. There will be a roof garden and dance
floors In several ot the dining rooms.
It Is estimated by Mr. Kugler that It wilt
be possible to feed more than 2S0O persons
at once In the various dining rooms planned
for this hotel. The grand banquet hall will
seat 100, at the least.
Tho first plan was to build a three or
four story restaurant, with banquet halls,
it was then found that with the
slxe ot the lot a hotel could be built ns
easily, and that all the equipment for the
kind of restaurant thai was planned could
be used In conducting a hotel.
AjCCUSED OF ROBBERY
TO FINANCE MARRIAGE
PLEATOHEJ,PWOMFeN
QUIT EVIL LIFE HEARD
BY SUPERIOR JUDGES
George Quintard Horwitz nnd
Jnmcs Gny Gordon Attack
Judge Davis' Ruling
for Magistrates
JURISDICTION INVOLVED
A REAL
OPPORTUNITY
FOR A
COPYWRITER
? YOU know the retail
situation In this city
and It you can quickly
write strong retail copy
with a punch, this la a
genuine opportunity for
you. For tb first rear the
salary will b moderate only,
but tbta Is unqueettonably a
Job with a fntore for the rlsht
rnan, whs has lalln In hlmaelf
and who Is loyal to his Job. If
you are a man with practical
xperlenee and are looklnc
ahead we will be slad to hear
fully frpm, you. Write. In the
flrat place, to Box O IT, Public.
Leaser.
a Br.
H CMlafteaHK I I
jSav Money
ana vyuw
TMJ-17 VlfJCl WATER
vv MET
Every bouee owner la saw (ACtaUlnaT a
tatter-meter quickly. It more tbn pays
i for Itself la a vary saort time. He pre,
oared Ir wlatr and art your Muwber
tjloetalr It NOW. Mad br Union Meter-
Comaaar
1 vu"
ir II rwrv. ar wwwi ait,r
r. If net taatalled by No raw bar
j wui aww an .'? . f,.
The Xlas, Meter tf .stawieet sad (be
awat neeelees mala. mwH sa
aTsrder. Ur to hulall. JfrUe at
.rllittilM. --4 --!- rAJ
live wW.Tutr vtv yeu tifennataaa.
m
rutcxBjOM.Ct.
1 Yi&&iBisrssz
Teamst. Hold With Assistant,
Said to Have Taken $3000
in Merchandise
Robbery that cost the Tennsyhanla Itall
road ?1000 was the stepping stone tQ.miOsj
mony used by this man, according to Je
police.
Harry Kats. a teamster. 414 Fitxgerald
street, who was held In 1S00 ball today
for a further hearing by Magistrate Har
ris, admlttednthat he robbed the freight
station at Thirty-second and Market streets
to get money tor his marriage Monday, ac
cording to the police. Ills assistant, John
Curtland, 720 McKean street, also was held
In. JJI500 ball. The police say they are re
sponsible for the disappearance ot 3000
north ot packages from the freight plat
form since September 1.
Katx and Curtland were arrested yester
day by Special Policemen Katenhelm and
Connor, ot the Pennsylvania Railroad, ac
cused ot loading four boxes of silk shirts,
valued at (400, on a wagon. Doth have
been under suspicion, acordlng to the police,
tv ho said that Katz had been arested several
times before on similar charges.
Does the word "exclusive" really mean
exclusive T
That Is the question the Superior Court
of Pennsylvania Is now deciding.
The appeal from Judge Davis's decision
that unfortunate women ot the streets when
arretted must be taken before magistrates
Instead of before the Municipal Court was
argued in the Superior Court yesterday.
The argument was based on the meaning
of the word. Kx-Judge James tiny Gordon
nnd George Quintard ltorwltx, for the Com
monwealth, asserted that the word "exclu
sive," which appears In the net of 191E,
passed to give to the Municipal Court juris
diction over these women, repealed and an
nulled n provision In the act ot 1871 which
created the House ot Correction and pro
vided thnt the women bo sent to that In
stitution by magistrates.
Thomas J, Meagher, arguing for the
magistrates, declared that there was no
conflict In the two acts, nnd thnt under tho
recent act the Judges of the Municipal Court
become ex officio magistrates or Justices of
the peace.
"If Judge Davis's decision Is not reversed
by ths higher court," said former Judge
Gordon, "tho municipality shall continue to
accept from such women the price of their
degradation In the shape ot fines, or shall
drhe them deeper Into the mire of vice by
permitting magistrates to commit them to
the House of Correction, from which they
can be rclensed through the Influence ot
potent persons.
"Wo say the act of 1915 divested the
magistrates ot Jurisdiction In such cases,
and It this were not so there could be no
exclusive Jurisdiction. It must be remem
bered the act of 1871 Is a law of the Com
monwealth, while the, Municipal Court Is an
Institution which was called Into being
by a municipal regulation. Under the
lllankenburg administration the Municipal
Court dealt with the cases In question, and
during that time legislation was enacted
providing for an Institution wherein un
fortunate women could receive treatment
according to modern and humane methods.
For four years these women obeyed the
persuasUe power of the law, not Its cold,
rigorous severity. Suddenly, about the
first of this year, the magistrates claimed
the authority they did not have while
Mayor Ulankcnburg was In ofllce. nnd they
did so under a construction which does
tolence to the English language."
Police Court Chronicle
Tou cannot always Judge a man by the
company he Is In Dave Drown rays a
Rheep Is liable to get mixed In with wolves
without knowing their Identity.
It seems that Drown, who Is rather a
voluminous negro, has an unfortunate habit
of getting mixed up with chickens which
roost nenr his home at Klfty.seven.th and
Market streets There are some persona In
that neighborhood who Insinuate there
would be more thickens In that district It
Dave didn't live there.
On the other hand, Dave contends that he
has been a "vera much mlsundahstood
man" Several times, he declares, he
chased wandering chickens off the car
tracks into the stables so they wouldn't be
killed by the trolleys.
Two promising chickens of healthy
stature were missed by Joe Rogers, another
negro who lives near Dae. Joo told a cop
and suggested thnt an eye be kept on Drown.
Tho bluecoat noticed Dave walking rather
fast .It was dark. The cop was suro Dave
looked much fatter than usual, but when
he got nearer to Drown he waa amaxed to
see thnt ho had suddenly become thin again.
And Just then he noticed two agile chick
ens Bcnmperlng up tho street.
"How about them chickens?" asked the
cop.
"I dunno," said Dave, "dere pufflct
Mrnngnhs to me. Yea kin see for youse'f
dere goln' right along."
But the bluecoat was convinced that the
aaaleW
chMsaa MM "art m (V
h 0110 Hniesa) cffies fixm dosti
Dave was nearest to them, the gtfiMru
up the obfckrjti and Dave, too, airs, took dl
three before Magistrate Ham.
"I gits, warned rec. an ar onicirrn tevawi ,1
WU.., ,. ivtiiiii k... an.v, wmm a
you know I rlo know jtUeRn 'rmt M. tt
chickens follati'me, I 'am sean X tmf
help It."
The Judge said that proximity to ohMMH
did not necessarily mean theft, and
was given another chance.
Higher tliaa usual
in commercialism
iJoals show xte-vr erajoijmetit
GEO. W. REINBOLD
ZS0, X. Bread 8L
Priest's Body Found In Pool
NORTH 1USTON, Mass.", Oct. 7. The
body ot the Rev. Stephen O. MneOlll. curate
ot the Church of the Immaculate Concep
tion, was found today In a swimming pool.
He had placed his clothing on the bank.
Father MacQIU. who apparently had been
In the best of health, was twenty-eight
) ears old and came hero from Fall Illvcr.
e
J. E. Caldwell & Co.
902 Chestnut St.
X
Silver KnrOes, Forks and Spoo
In Chests and in Dozens
0
5
REMOVAV:
In tho early Autumn tho
' business of J. E, Caldwell &
Co. will be located in the
Widcncr Building, Chestnut, Juni
per and South Pcnn Square.
Killed by P. and U. Freight
Antonlb De Rosa, forty-three years old.
of 34 1 East Price street, was struck and
killed today by a southbound freight train
at the Chelten Avenue Station of the Phil
adelphia and Reading Railway, German
town. De Rosa, who was a stone mason.
Is said to have run under the safety gates
and directly In tho path of the train. He
was taken In the patrol of tho German
town Police Station to the Uermantown
Hospital, where he died a few minutes
later.
Try. Our
Sundajr
Dollar
Dinner
The high cost ot living ana
the week-end rest are two
excellent reasons for bring
ing the entire family here to
morrow. Special Mails
, mover
Twelfth and
Arch SU.
fgslniRO e lit Bt.i
CLAUDE U. MOHH,
Usr.
Front tke frozen north
to tke blading tropics
Bakerk Cocoa
is known for its
puiribf and High
aualrfr
iwy.
Walter Baker & Co.Lti
ESTABLISHED 7&0 DORCHESTER. MASS.
1
PIIIIIIWIIIHIIIIIM!
aaff-
BaffBaaaaBBBBava
eaaa
1 Valley Forg
FOR A DAY'S OUTING
HI8TeKICAI,-HCCAT!0AI
Sjeacial ONE-DAY FARES
Saturdays tmd Sunday
tt THS MAIN UMK e TUB
lliatjelphia&lUwiiRtRy.
HUGHES & FAIRBANKS
REPUBLICAN
MASS-MEETING
at the Metropolitan Opera House
UNDER THE AUSPICES OF
THE UNION LEAGUE
OF PHILADELPHIA
Monday Evening, Oct. 9th, 1916
" At 8 O'CLOCK
ADDRESS BY
Honorable diaries E. Hughe
TtckU May Be Procured at Newspaper 0fow, RpwbMian City Commit,' 11th wd
StrM, wk. HttgU AJKmu, 1524 CkMtatJt Street
Tat