-TJ mm MILK NEAR; FARMERS DECIDE TO CHARGE MORE v producers' Association Will Take unarge 01 uiu Supply 'jtAY INCREASE BY NOV. 1 m.j. nn Milk BUI Will Be Increased About $10,000 VEAKLY Increase In city's milk V8S price November, ?1:.? nrlco for last ten years, i. 111 nrt. 18D2lYyRcqoUnnSumpUon by Philadel. WiKrimnk bill, about I1U.VUU. , Futuro y $18,250,000. l2fi?rL vrlv milk bill for city, Ml'-.ii X?nnnn tm threatened Increase. In the- winter iTofinUk. powlMy to ten cents a quart. ;. Wn,oe on rh...d..ph.a con.ume than expected by the action of ESer. In the nearby mtlk-produclnic l."t.....in In virtually controlled by aLtlons ot farmers, most of them In rer 'County, which are about to be con SBS.WI into tho .interstate Milk Pro- aoeers 'Association, unuci """ """"-: Sfcdlve bafifftlnlnB between Producer and !S!ikfr will bo Inaugurated. This will :n a pian iroducer n tt::,...-.- ..hi h inntiffurnted. This will IT, a centrallied control of at least half "" .. .. .. in Urn rltv. nnabllne tho Srmeri to Increase the wholesale price SIS three and ohe-half cents a quart to ea and one-half cents. Although no definite -announcements have Wa made by Philadelphia distributors as Is the exact amouni 01 wuiwn i" m" t retail, the consensus of opinion Indicates i!.. th. rlon of the farmers will force fiuiy dealers to charge ten cents by No- rower l. ' The Increase of two cents a quart over L present average price of eight cents will Bn an addition of 13.800.000 to the yearly cost of living in I'nuaaeipnia. inis is ram k h farmers to be simply tho amount of Ittreue they have had to face In their ' lills for feed and labor on the dairy farms, x Bjht-cenUmllk, aftor a nftcen-year con tinuous sales period In this, city, has be come an Impossibility, according to the letdlnr local dealers. In view or the steady laerease of every Item In the cost of pro duction and distribution. The added cost to the dairy concerns, tkey say, ranges from twenty o 100 per tenand Includes the raw product, freight, Muling from terminal to dairy, hapdllng tnd preparation and final distribution. Fig ure furnished to the Public LEDar.rt by officials of the local dairy companies show - teat wages have advanced, that bottles, nil, paper caps and feed have Increased la price, while horses, hundreds ot which are used for the city and suburban dis tribution, nave almost doubled In price In the last few years. The same grade of milk as Is sold here fees for some years been retailing In AVash lagton and Pittsburgh at nine and ten cents; In New York, before the recent milk controversy started, at nine cents, and In Jfew Orleans at nine and ten cents, ac- - cording to a statement prepared by counsel fer the Philadelphia Milk Exchange. Previous to 1908 comparatively little milk was brought here from any point mors than sixty miles distant from the "city. Subsequently, however, there was a treat change, and today regular milk ship ments arrive here from points more than two hundred miles away. The bulk of the .supply comes from eastern and north , eastern Pennsylvania and south Jersey, the remainder being furnished by farmers In Delaware, Maryland and a few dairy farms In the vicinity of East Aurora and El- jnlra, N. Y. , As a result of the longer hauls, the sreignt expenses Increased materially, es- "Jtelally with the higher rates granted the railroad companies by the Publlo Service Commission and the Interstate Commerce uemmisslon. The latest Increase, effective February 2S. 1915, Is still being fought by the Philadelphia Milk Exchange, the counsel for which, Roland S. Morris and Robert D. Jenks, filed a complaint against the Penn sylvania Xallroad before both of these rate renlatlng bodies. Eliminating the Inter- state, milk shipments, the freight rates have iacreased from a minimum of eight to a maximum of seventy-seven per cent during the last eight years, according to their Brief. Dairymen supplied the following fig ures to show now the cost- of production 'has Increased; f SMrtl now, 4.95 cents. . t&VUl alfalfa) Ust October. 180 perl I1W to 122R r, ou to uu cn now. K-w7jTc.nu. " '" " cn" " ,",onl at ui vSl J521 p,nt ana Quarts last year, nL9Q Bar arm... ntvmt mA An Pa;. -7L .!r" a.-v. rrr:r areas; now, 14.20. , Kr "P? last yer, 18 oents per thomandl S vVinfiT "Oi. t 'Tiu5 cans last rr. I2.SS uihi now. IS.S5. I' WniiJh.. i-,rucl,,nJt .'rom 'tatlon to dairy and Fi f. Increased 40 per cunt. I 'sCV'fi ""?. aWlM and unskilled sm- The knlllr mnnlu -.0 Al.- -it .-& .Hchd the highest- figure in Its history, WtUI a totltl nf 11B JA Aftn ,- -. JMwng to the staUstlcs prepared by Joseph JL? vS.1t.,ne' ecretary of the Milk Ex- JJf. This was 100,000,000 quarts more iZli!". 1887' when th H-rures were nr,t .aiplled. Cumberland Milk Price Rises CARLISLE, Pa., Oct. 9. Fifty Cumber- County farmers,, representing large airy interests of this section, have decided w raise the wholesale price of milk to four tT.ki TrU Th8 "" at retail will go aeout eight cents per quart, local dealers s. ftanscom's SEASONABr.R snnnnrinvi B"1 fr!Li!i ,JPI'1'J,f,',drsed PmUIs for ordVrlns, DEIJCATESRKNDKI'ARTHKNTS uHVVl.PrKii . -r??e .-7" "-r"v. Kr l. ' . , - OH9 Ma ilr Drrllrd rnk'u.l, 11. itiuii h.ir. r.r...- .---id- t;z umulli n.f."iTu;i ""Til?' IS? ajwtpack Small Ri.. v r&nissr? T0B ",l, lUI, IRMIU1 UUMU fkil-a nl A. UKOCERV DEl'ABTMKNTH UJ.I noaii Till '.r, 1" 37?m f at,,,, .....te and lDe . m irsa , --- .....oe ana lot MSTY nUTASTMKNTS Caki J. Caeosnut I-arer S-S'i::.:: IS anseomfs M -Urk.t St. Br.!, aaaaawaWlwaS',..aaaB MFyWSf' " ' Jw)1ssbbbbbbb1 4 ''WataH Bm v' rlsH aLsHLEV . . islLH bssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssBT ' 'i'sssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss! BSSP '.-V J- 1 wSSBBBBBsi LBsssssWVi.''fivV sH slV . wivtfK-JfiC. irSt.w EVENINa LBBrlilRr-PHILADELPHLfV, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1916 1 .)djJi:.itVirf.'J TlfflWES TAKEN AS THEY PASS STOLEN SEAL FURS THROUGH DRILLED WALL $15,000 In SkinB Nearly Lost in Daring Arch Street Rob- bory Ono Captlvo Escapes CUT HOLE IN BUILDING VICTIMS OP MOTORTRUCK The upper picture is that of Catharine Grubb, nine years old, who, with her brother, William, six years old, of 4521 Laird street, was killed by a motortruck today at Forty-seventh street and Wy alusing avenue. MOTORTRUCK KILLS BROTHER AND SISTER Drilling their way through a four-foot brick wall Into the establishment ot Cllttel man'a Sons, dealers In furs, at IK Arch street, thieves gathered together I1E.O00 worth of sealskins, but were apprehended before they could make off with their loot. William CJreer. a private watchman, be came suspicious after seeing a wagon In front of an empty bulldlnr at BM Arch street early this morning. With Policeman nosenbaum, of the Eleventh and Winter streets station, he Investigated and dis covered three men In the act ot hauling the furs through an opening In the wall separating the empty building from dlttel man's Sons' store. With revolvers drawn the policemen ordered the men to throw up their hands. Two of them obeyed, but the third made a dash for liberty and escaped through a rear door. Taken to the police station the men gave their names as Louis Thomas, twenty-eight years old, of HoboKen, and Jacob Winter, twenty-nine years old. of New Tork city. The police say both men have criminal records. Shortly after E o'clock CJreer saw a cov ered wagon standing In front of the vacant property at 914 Arch street, lte called to Rosenbaum. The two Investigated and found several bags ot furs In the wagon. Finding a door leading tnto the empty building open, they made their way cautiously to the rear ot the first floor. In the light of a candle the policemen saw three men working about a large hole In the wall. They were passing three bags through ths opening when the officers sprang upon them. One man managed to Jump through tbe hole In the wall. lie escaped. The other two submitted to arrest only after a struggle. After gaining entrance to the1 Gettelman building the thieves had made their way to the first floor, where they obtained the sealskins. The skins were m the raw stats and were Intended for manufacturing coats and other fur pieces. Seven bags had been filled with the loot. aBmmBMBMBIlr- - - L 1 Hw'f-iissB "sflsssHr-W ssmnrfSissssssssssHL ' - BBSSsVklttBtSBBBBBsV'''.-'V jV . bH"NPK iw H tslssss ssssssVu 4 .SBBSSSSB BBBBBEi.BBHPBBBBaBBBBBBBBBSSa Photo fcr Gutekunst, THOMAS EARLE WHITE THOMAS EARLE WHITE DIES Continued from race On doorways shouted ; the children became confused. Marie Stoll and the Duffy girl jumped. The startled Grubb children, who had al ways assumed an air of protection over each other, held hands desperately as each sought to pull tho other across the street. The wheels of the truck knocked them down and passed over them, stilling a faint cry which leaped to their lips. Several women tried as best they could to alleviate the last moments of the dying children and then summoned the priest. A crowd surrounded the motortruck when It was stopped ten feet away and a number of frenzied men and women de clared that they would lynch Walter Street, the driver. He and Derrick Fettles, another negro on the truck, tried to explain. The crowd wan closing en the men when Policemen Coleman and Haley rushed the negroes to a passing trolley car and took them to the Sixty-first and Thompson streets station. Catharine Grubb, mother of the dead children, collapsed on hearing of the trag edy. A Trtest and physician were sent to her aid. , The killing of the Grubb children is the ninety-second death due to motortrucks and autos since the first of the year. The truck Is owned by the Woolman Dairy Company, Forty-seventh and Lan caster avenue. BABY FOUND IN CITY PARK Guard Fairburn, of Washington Square, Thinks "Wee Thing Has Been Deserted" A young lady was found crying at noon today In Washington S.quare. Iter name Is unknown, her age, approxi mated by Guard Charles Fairburn, of the square, is not more than four months. "In my opinion," said he, as he adjusted the half empty bottle In a tenacious mouth, "the wee thing has been deserted. I saw the buggy standing there for more than an hour and no one by. Then I went over to take a look." An extra bottle full of milk gives ground to his suspicions, thinks the guard. Also a funnel, carefully wrapped In a clean piece ot white good, seems a bit of preparedness for the baby's new guardians. In the meantime the baby Is dosing In the guardhouse In Washington Square, awaiting a distracted parent, under the suspicious, watchful eye ot Guard Fairburn. One Negro Kills Another at Dover DOVER, Del, Oct 9. Edgar Miller, a negro of Dover, was shot and killed by Earl Iluefnngton, also a negro, In a quarrel at Little Heaven, near Dover, last night. The authorities are searching the county for the murderer. MRS. HEXRY'S ARM BROKEN Society Leader Thrown From Horse, While Hunting Taken to Hospital Mrs. Howard II. Henry, prominent among the younger matrons In Philadel phia's social circles, was brought to the Chestnut Hill Hospital today suffering from a fractured arm Mrs. Henry, who before her marriage was Miss Mae D. Fell, was thrown from a horse Saturday afternoon while hunting with her husband and a party of friends at Hawkswell, the Henry residence at Fort Washington. At first the Injury did not appear to be severe and only local treat ment waa applied, but today complications ensued which rfecessltated Mrs. Henry's removal to the hospital, where X-ray treat ment will be resorted to. Mr. Henry ac companied his wife during the trip from Fort Washington, which was made by auto, mobile. HOT SPELL NEARS AN END Forecaster Says Temperature Will Fall From 10 to 15 Degrees The present hot spell la to end before tomorrow morning. Such was the announce ment of Forecaster Bliss at the Weather Dureau today. Mr, Bliss predicted a grad ual drop In temperature of 10 to 15 degrees In the next eighteen hours. The tempera ture at noon was SO degrees. The source of discomfort has been a low pressure area In the Northeastern and North Atlantic States, which has drawn hot southern winds northward from the South Atlantic States where the pressure has been high. This low pressure' area, however. Is moving north away from this vicinity, and will be succeeded by a cool wave which Is on the way east from the Lake region. Mr, Bliss states that the hot spell should not be confounded with "Indian summer," which normally does not come until the last week ot October or the first two weeks of November. I Good Teeth Mean I fA dlnstlon. en sood dlcostlnn Is tho bails of health. Qm of the fore wars to bava good teeth Is to keep themolean and treefrom de al er by ijanr u of our Rcmi and MrrrK Tooth Wash, a tlm-ttit4 and raeaelous crodoot of our labor. torr. which la Zoo a bottle postpaid anywhere I LLEWELLYN'S rhllolphla'i Standard Pros Store 1818 Chestnut Street Dependable Toothbrua'hea. 25 c. Spanish for $n DO TOU went to lrn Bpenlshbaosuie sr PMUaaiMilss arowlnir Booth CaaMT from John Waiumakar. Uirpua-V 'William ,L. tfevln' Attorney, the Griffith Hall In Crour Bulldjnir an will almost jmtnllal.lr otart tberaln innaidnaioriBii saarursiai 01 Duaniisn inr Duminastsi man iklllU.lllIMI ASUIVJirBBI and business women, 17.60 Is entire cost of the whole course. This Class will comprise two thousand foremost rhlladelphUns. Why not loin yoursaltr Central meetlnc plaoa. Hesteourse erer written. (( projessors. Nldleiilciusly low prlco. .Class meets on Tueoder and Thursday of each week. tJame lesson, slrea at various cours ear ana ouhs to suit an. Thaaa erorolnant rhlladelphUns. wa offer as referaneesi. Rev. L. Daydt, Seotor f. saatoh Cbapeli Henry . Morris 5 ""?. Morris, ina. Bankers J inanec rrn. n , m vm 7T"""i -., st,t., wi. . Auiumowi- B. A. Club of PhllJideleblai Breast I Tuwn, lormar state oaimior aart Kaoorder or PeVds: W, W, Kepjr. Appraiser of Port of Philadelphia i Joseph 81 ufo. Manar C. Ifchraet Co.iFrederfck W. I.awrnc. geeretery Industrial Bureau, rhlladel poUChainber of Cemmerosi William C. Benkert. Heal Batata. Far further Information phone Justice Detwller, class director. Spruce 970T1, or mall feJlowms coupon properly filled out. Gordoa-Detwller leetltele, tea Croser Building, rhlladelfthlal 0eatlfK Please send further information regarding gfunlah Course advertised In Ledger, Name ,WUh what firm. Euslnsss address. V W S W gOjesejsBSPv en a W$f&Jggto H- ., Prominent Attomoy Drops Dead at Son's Dinner Tablo Thomas Garle White, a prominent mem ber of the Philadelphia bar, of 2036 Spruce street, dropped dead yesterday evening as he was about to alt down to dinner at the home of his son. Erroll White, J0S4 Chest nut street. He was fifty-nine years old Mr. White wss associated with Assistant District Attorney Joseph It. Taulane, with omces In the Stephen Qtrnrd Building. He was a member of the Art Club, the Phila delphia Country Club and the Huntingdon Valley Country Club. He married Harriet Brown, of Brookllne. Mass., who survives him, with two sons, Thomas E. White, Jr., and Erroll White. PARALYSIS KILLS TWO Four New Cases of Baby Plnguo Re ported Sunday Two deaths and four new cases marked the history of the Infantile paralysis In Philadelphia Sunday. So quickly did the disease act In the cases of the two children that It was not possible to removo them from their homes to the Philadelphia Hos pital for Contagious Diseases before they died. The day's death toll wns as follows: OnOttOK IrKMAN. flv manlha old. 483 rot- terton Itethta, T-entr-eecond Ward: reported alek Saturday afternoon! died at 3 o'clock yeatarday mornlnjt. WAt.TKIt SCOTT, two and one-halt yearo old. 2S2 (lerrttt atrwt. Thlrtyalith Ward: re- ported sick ysterday mornlns: died yesterday afternoon. The new cases reported, all of which have been removed to the hospital, are: ISAnEI, MonaAM, sixteen months old. 61S2 Master atrt. Thirty-fourth Ward. ELHII5 DAKKn, aavan years old. S30S West Saltsar atreat. Thlrty-elthth Ward. UAROAnET D6TI.AND. three years old. 8Jt4 Malon atreat. Twenty-fourth Ward. MART FOR.IHK. twenty-two months old. S1S8 North Ilodtna street. Twenty-eighth Ward. CARRANZA DOOMED, U. S. EXPERTS BELIEVE Military Men at Fort Sam Houston Say Opposition Will Overthrow First Chief SAN ANTONIO. Tex., Oct. . The regime of Venustlano Carransa In Mexico In doomed, according to military experts at Fort Sam Houston, headquarters ot the southern department of the United States army With Jose Tsabel nobles heading all the opposition. Including Vllllstaa, Zapatis tas, Lrgnllstns and Dlntlstns, and General Alvaro Obregon turning against the First Chief because) of his decree of September 39, ordering tho election ot a President by Congress Instead Of by popular vote, and a four-year term, Carransa apparently has not a leg to stand on. Instead of Carransa having united all factions against the United States, reports Indicate all the fac tions are united against Carranxn. Carrnnxa's military election decree waa unpopular. Villa, Zapata, Hobles, Dlax, Trevlno and nil the other brands of revolu tionaries nre said to fear he may be trying to assume a dictatorship. Mexico's fate rests on Obregon or nobles, the experts say. Sataxar Is working with Ilobles, only sixty miles south ot Juarex. Milk Goes Up in CollinRswood COLLINOSWOOD, X J Oct. . Milk went to ten cents a quart here todny throughout this section of New Jersey, al though a few dealers will adhere for a time, at least, to the old ftrlce. Feed and other necessities, many of which have come Into use In late years through the demand for sanitary handling of dairy products, have made the old prices far from profitable. Milk 10 Cent at Iiaddonflcld HADDONFIELD. N. J Oct. 0. Milk goes to ten cents a quart beginning to day, and Proseoutor Kraft will be asked to Institute an Inquiry as to whether an un lawful conspiracy exists to raise tho price In this town. Milk from the Bame dairies Is sold for eight cents a quart In Carrden. HOTEL OWJfER ON STEMIANO Dr. R. B. Ludy, of Atlantic City, Re ported on Ship ATLANTIC CITY, N. X, Oct , R. B. Ludy, reported to have been a passenger on the torpedoed steamship Stephano, may be Doctor Ludy, owner ot the Hotel Elberon at Paclflo and Tennessee avenues. Doctor Ludy, who Is a Pennsylvarxn by birth, had traveled alt over the world, having visited Australia and New Zealand a year ago. Definite confirmation that he waa on the Stephano has not been received here. cripps33ooth goes Ly lot uo dog Lark I GEO. W. REINBOLD 2S0G N. Broad St- Ready Money United States Loan Society 117 North Broad St 411 S. 6th st. ZSIS Oermanlowa btc. DIXON Dhtinctlv Tailoring House Established 1800 We've Increased Our Efficiency by adding to our staff a master cutter, whose skill Is the last word In Dixon Tailoring and Dixon SerTlre. , He's ready at your com mand to give your Fall suit or overcoat the lines and curves, the smart style and perfect fit your preferences demand. plus the finish and work manship that's Included In the purchase prlco of every bit of master-tailoring which leaves our hands. $35 to $55 1111 Walnut Street Wood for Grates Wo soil choico dry Oak and Hickory lojrs at current rates. Also splendid kindling for starting fires. Cummings' Coal Yards Main Ofllce, 413 N. 13th Street -LADDERS Alflllft. 1A. tt.t Rifn..lAfi. 91. 4 L. D. BERGER CO., 59 IV. 2d SJ. aaaaaaaasUala 4000a-xMarkel S3a. J. E. Calcktell & Co. 902 Chestnut St Wedding ' Silverware Of Substantial Weight REMOVAL: In tho early Autumn tho business of J. E. Cnldwcll & Co. will bo located in tho Wide ncr Building, Chostnut, Juniper and South Tenn Square Open Saturdays Until Five Lighting f roubles are easy for us to solve and ad just that's our specialty and our 30 years' experience guaran tees you satisfactory results. An Exclusive Variety of Table and Floor Lamps Retail Display Rooms 427-433 North Broad St. The Horn & Brannen Mfg. Co. AUTOCARS HAVE STANDARDIZED DELIVERY SERVICE CHASSIS. $1650 eleeleiVVQielelela'bailalielelelelelelelelelE HalliHeH IisssBsssBiHBsI r i ff sfSsR , '.,, jaV !& , hi v -3f ftr ; 'C;i. Tiii lPHaHF I iffi jgfyffir ytfrffi "B HiliiniaBjln. kHBUr mhRB lsslsHriHMHMMslssHHflH kB4Lrjtr,73 ) fHii kSB9HI Jhk2515 rti9sBsflifsss9BsHsBHK MJBssWh,' i'rS riCTirssWlrM MHSWHHHf JHI ImH8ssVsssk P5av JHEPNSBQMiAw HPVBsVt)i VbTV jEk'14 EQaiBvrf' " JQlilR !SkI l&.i.i..i.i.iKiw ,. v-.1111Hll(ilHD.iHbv ilBvll 1H I mLpik 2mB PTi " HUk; 1iiiiiHIHKHRai..iH ' -M7' - sH WisssssBssssssU 'ssLssBaMF.ef'WnH aMP 'H,'- k JX - . ,..,. f i ; " , iPirsaa mam !BKf$9iw&&' . &v ' tJjiwcCi '- ..; V" lai '!, & .';. -'&& . V .'"' v $S&3;Jfe ' ,T - i?-;ci,i T Froelich Bros., Inc., Plumbers' Supplies, 142 N. 7th St., Philadelphia, say: "We knew we were making a good investment in buying an Autocar, from the satisfaction it is giving so many other concerns but the results have gone away beyond our expectations. We got the car last March and it hasn't lost a minute any working day since. Enlarged our territory far out into the suburbs, where we never delivered before with teams, and save us money every d,ay. When you consider it does the work of three doubl teams and you figure up the costs of those teams, drivers' wages, etc., -you can see where the Autocar wins out as an all around delivery proposition." More than 4000. other concerns in all lines of business use the Autocar. Write for catalog o:r dill on the Autocar Sajes & Service Co., 28d wad Market stmets, Philadelphia, factory branch of the Autocar jompuyt Aramore, ra. ! iPrice is not the Touchstone f i of Economy by a long shot! I - w I t N s Perry's "TOLL BAOK" ' FALL OVERCOAT 1 Hlclt shoulders, shapely sleeves comfortably set Into body; graceful drapery o( back, moderately full skirt; eomo silk-lined In shoulders and sleeves only. Button through front: variety of cuff treatments. T We advertise Perry's $15 $18, $20, $2(5 Fall Suits and Overcoats for the values in them at their prices Q Price, after all, is just the index of the best a store can do" for the, money. A store can accept Suits of some- . body else's making as, pretty good value, add a reasonable profit,, and let it go at that. J At Perry's, no such procedure would ever satisfy us. First-of all, we cut out the middle man's profit. Then; we're never content; with our former beat -we've got to beat it and do have done so even in this season of soaring costs 1 CJAnd especially tbe little personalities' of Perry tailoring have -toy stick out all over every sur.cn in our store, ar-.-i c we'd have the niftafe mare! J You'll know wha&iM, men, if you compart A the clothes! PERRY & (J W. B. T." iiiW(lfflB