,- iSYKES DENIES BREAK WIWIFRIGAR; AFFIRMS HER LOVE twn't Visited Him in Prison Be cause He Asjcea nor 10 Stay Away, Girl Says JHO OF PARK SHOOTING uim Amanda Syke. the pretty student MOT """'. ..., villa n Wla"ir u .hni l-Mwartl Ilblan,! In t'alrmount L August it, today positively nnirmed j lOVS fOr Ine priPUUCI" nm. Pi-l ni icni 1 that me couple imu muncu uii, mcir ment iTirii letters every day on from the '"". a X.l. t1t ! In riiM Home, sii 4vii .t ........-, iu L-m.nslnc nrlson, where Krlirar nwalts lTJ7i ,nd the other from Moyamonslnit to IStil North Park avenue wero ndvanccd k . . .. !. KnMtl KaltvAAfi lhi nnraa jv... lnrer tiad not been severed by the. EiZotlnc and the publicity that followed &4r' surrender to the, pollen. Her falK It""' .... ...i . In hi. nail u-aa mnlnlnail ) 10 Vlitl ' ' " ' ............ , r aKea ner 10 limy una) imm iiib , but not to rorirei 10 wrne. HKIt MOTHKtl PRAISK8 1UM iimlratlon and respect for th younir l.lll.J ttnlan.t atai tit.. ! . ." " . -u. .... nlnm ntillwianliArf ltwnii MM Several tifiii't""" i...i.i i ikim 2iZ Mlu SyUea In an automobile were eX- saVlln U Sykes, whose husband la a en manuraciurer. one spoko ior ner ir. who ran from tho room with her .specked apron over her face when a tr callea ni ineir nomt. The ttory of my daughter' engage fcLj httnr broken oft Is positively untrue." EdTvrs. Svkea. "It la alas unfair to Mr. 6Mr. for whom we have tho highest ad a1"?:' ..i ... t .i.i.,ii ... .i..-i. Oration, iiiw - " ucicimiun wi uiukii i. wis honorable and noblr. -will we welcome him aa a son-in-law? r. Indeed, we will. If our daughter loves i and cnooses mm an ner nusunna ne h welcomed. He has shown himself l be n fan with red blood In his veins." HASN'T LOST FAITH Mrs. Sykcs cave out this statement from itr daughter "I have not lost my faith In Mr. Fr'gar. lie fact that I don't visit him at the prison Pasould not bo misconstrued Into n be'llef !hat our engagement has been broken on. El.tteTen't visited him because he sent me ivord that he doesn't want me to call on rsi wiiiie ne is m prison. The couple plan to be married Immedi ately after tho trial, which la to be held fa the spring. They and their friends are Reafdent of Krlgar'a acquittal. FIANCKB WILL BR WITNESS Miss Sykes will appear na a witness In gFrlfar'i behalf, he mother aald. not at the truest of her parents but of her own ac- - "If a young woman la willing to do that. to accept further unpleasant publicity, i It appear that she does not care f)5r the an for whom she testifies?" asked Mra. . "ne was disappointed when the er refused to allow her to testify at i Inquest. f(To tell the truth. I have never directly ssra my oaugmer u ano cares for Frlgar. (, concerns her "and Mr. Krlgar and no one be. But I know that she does. She writes I aim every day and receives a letter from In every day." PTae picture of health which Miss Sykea enia is ampio proor mat she has re- rea from the nervous shock that fol- i tne snooting. She returned home her mother quietly the end of last et from Chelsea, X, J., where she was i to recuperate. since her return she i received an extended leave of absence n the Jefferson Hospital, where she was Mraln ng. Whllo awaiting the ordeal of trial she Is spending her time unob- Nvely, taking 'short walks, helping her er and renewing acquaintances with young people ut the Cookman Meth it Church, Twelfth street and Lehigh oue, where she taught Sunday school. CONVICTS RETAKEN AFTER SING SING ESCAPE i - A Mi-Night Search on Rockefeller P Estate Ends in Captures. Rode Out on Truck jpOBSININCJ, N, Y.. Oct. 20. After on all- -h Ecurcn inrougn tne wooqs or tne es. j v aunn u, itocKeioiier, during wnicn aK Al tha alv nnniilntii mtin inal Ta-m B!n yesterday was shot and wounded, tt . U --i i- . v wo inicuucra wero rounueu up ana Mured tnrlnv Th plx convicts escaped from tho prison RBal tnOtf)rtritrlr VbbUHak nmwnn Tke" Curtis, who led the'escapa by tin- T"""" guara aDoara me trucic, was K through the abdomen, perhaps fatally, 'captured. freely had Hockefeller given hla per- -" ur mo prison guards' hunt over Htatej when the posse saw a man run- , "" "o rauroaa trncK near me wefeller hnmn n..AAHi.i. ki EL. i ' y cal to him to halt. In rrv oui ma gun Curtis caught It In iw ' a " ne "trurgled to release It , shot through the abdomen. He was t to Shi Bin4 Ilnanltal. Tfwse who escaped were Thomas Hyland, " .""" lammany, serving ntteen ".for robbeh-: Frank Lut. Ilfe-term -- uicu oieinauer, serving twenty ljrm for carrying burglars' tools, and WIN """i p ior carrying concealed tons. i Employe Avert Train WrV JM. OIEQO. Cal.. Oct 70. What the -.. . r l0 nav t)en deliberate Opt to wrarV lh a.H,- T. I. a j - - -- w.w ua,iicb..a tram tarry- Litia """ "m Ban Diego to Los SSMSS ! tir.il . t..... I .. uki' t'fvery by a track walker of loose r- oPIkea from m ran U .. a... Inu?'V'r b';,", ha1 ben removed, and , trZ., u " ma ran wun the rail '. "ont had teen drawn. "aPaBTammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmml sBk'v bsbbbbbbI HBStKQBswvv'Iv Sf ' laHV ss.SflFss!it"'fi3iT 1tA EVENING LBt)OER-rHlLAI)ELl?HLV. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1916 GENERAL VON FALKENHAYN Commnndcr of tho Teutonic army Invndtnjr Rumania, who is reported voundcd. GENERAL FALRENHAYN REPORTED WOUNDED German Commander in Transyl vania Quits Command, Dispatch Says nOME. Oct. 20. Field Marshal Falken hayn. former Chief of General Staff 'of the German army, has been wounded In the leg nnd compelled to relinquish command of the Austro-German armies n Transyl vrnla, said a "Zurich dispatch to tho Cor rlero d'ltalla today. General Krlch von Falkenhayn was for merly military Instructor to the Chinese Government, then Governor of Klao-Chau nnd tho military tutor of the German Crown Prince before tho outbreak of the wai. On October 17, 19f4. he was named chief of the General Staff, succeeding von Moltke. On August 29, 1916, he was dis placed by Illndenburg as Chief of Staff, and three days later took command of the Transylvanlan operations against the Ru manians. He Is flfty-three years old. Unconfirmed reports that he has been wtunded follow but a few hours tho an nouncement nt Berlin of the retirement of General von Kluck, famous In tho early days of the war, because of shrapnel wounds he suffered more than a year ago. BIG ELECTRICAL PROJECT Great Northern Flans S00 Miles of Electrification ST. TAUL. Minn., Oct. 20. Plans are being wflrked out by the Great Northern ltallroad Company for the electrification of more than 300 miles of main line between Spokane and. Seattle, Wash., and other mountain divisions In the West, It became known today. The project aa tentatively outlined Is one of the biggest of Ita kind ever undertaken. The Great Northern, through a subsidiary company, controls water rights on the Chelan River, In Washington, nnd the present plans. It Is said. Include the rais ing of the level of Lake Chelan, near which the main power plant would be established.. It Is understood that actual preliminary work on the project wjll be started by next summer. HOTEL ADELPHIA This Week'. Entertainment Laditt' Lunch on Balcony f ,Gntltmn'i Lunch ) OC English Room V A la carte service all day, Charges are moderate. Uaniant Knsitali Ream, 4 1 SO to 6 1. M. An Kxeeptlonal Dance Orchestra French Trio and the Popular Hawaiian Orchestra Trousers ASpcciaJty JONES in6WalnufSfreet Ready Money United States Loan Society 117 North Bread St ilt S. BUi st. . tSIS Oeraualowa are. mi mi im-iiw iiii mi mi in SSitlil '" " "" Uil "" "" '" " JflUlOJLil Dine This Evening at the Arcadia-r-Table d'Hote Menu $1.25 Like ev.rythlnj? cls at the Amd!, -thtv table tl'Nbte dinner distinct ive in fs4, gervlee and urnHiiHliMff. JVVe invite your eemiwHeon. Music and dancing, 4 t Arcadia Cafe Wkdener Building iflenu Friday, Qct. ?0, IptS After Six P. M, BluepeinU or Little W CoHMNtme Caieur or Crtftm Bruuelloi ' Filet of Flmder Meunlere CoquMe of Letter ar Until Ribt el Betf dm, jmi, MakH Petmkti, 3tlath Cafe Hmu ,ajrry fort Frenik PtV " let Cftm Dmi Te FOOD EXPORT EMBARGO URGED AS SOLUTION OF HIGH COST PROBLEMS Federal Bureaus Will Co-operato to Learn Remedy After Election May Enact Legislation COULD KEEP WHEAT HE R E By JOHN EDWIN NEV1N WASHINGTON. Oct. 20 A serious ef- fort to reduca the high cosi of living will be made after election. It wilt Invehv. It was learned tonay. th Pepartmenta bf Jus tice, Utbor. Commerce- and the Federal Trade Commission. All of the fncts dealing with the alleged manipulation tf prices by speculators will le prepared for congressional nctlon. Should this prove necessary. The big question of an embargo m the export ot foodstuff will for the drat time come In for serious con sideration. Some leaders of the master bakers' or ganisation of the country nnd wholesale grocers have argued for months that Presi dent Wilson hail the power to prohibit ship ments of wheat. Sources cIo to tho Ad ministration strenuously drr.led this. But, with election out of the way, the question will be seriously considered anil If It Is determlnedVthet some such plan Hs neces sary to prevent flour and other necessaries or life going to panic prices It Is likely that Congress. (Is rcsponslvo to the will of the people, will t urged to take action when It meets In December. omctals for the first time now ndmlt that the European war will last all through next yeir at least. With reports that crop dam ygti are Increasing. It Is certain that the I nlted States will he denuded of nil Its food, ftuffi unless something Is dono to prevent It. The frank statement by Chancellor of tha Kxchequer lleglnald McKenna tn the llrlt ith Parliament that ,hl Government Is rpending on every working day 110,000.000 In thi I'nlted States simply cmphaslxrs what alrtaoy has been ascertained by the De partment of Commerce, the enormous ex tent tf this export trnde. Hut the fnct that more than one million dollars a day of this amount goes for food and clothing and other articles badly need ed by tho people as a whole, whose price already Is nearly prohibitive. Is Just being realixed In official quarters. While It Is true that the coming session ot Congress will be short nnd must be de voted to appropriate legislation, officials here believe that It will be possible to get any needed legislation affecting the cost of living through, providing the Government departments can agree on tho scope ot such laws. Home From Ambulance Work WILMINGTON. Del.. Oct 20. Mrs. Wil liam C Speakman. who has been with the American ambulance service at the French front, arrived home late last night. Her husband. Dr. William C. Speakman, will re main In France until a man can be obtained to relieve him. Doctor Speakman Is now on his second tour of duty In France. I v if i WeitMlTw k WMM 5-SRNNft HIRT5 HftEiJftlK OHLYfC S U. S. Army Drab Gray, Brown, BJue, Etc. Ppeelsl lot of Mantra.' Samples pur ens"""! for spot rash permit thla low prlM f ?..'.s. .JJuaranteert all-wool flannel, cut full, all alita. Collar attached. E.IACKiNAWSNN:;g: All Slilti & Colon Sent anywhere parcel poat on receipt of price. Open Hvenlnta. ABE L. GREENBERG niiyiJCLJ- NAME AND NUMnER 804 Vine Street Headquarters for Union-made Overall! and Clorea, k Jfanscom's DELICIOUS PURE CANDIES are making new friends every day. Our own make Fancy Chocolates and Mixtures 28c and 38c P0l-hd TIIKV'IIK I1IIIMTI 1232 Market St. & Branches BIBLELADENTREACHER, SCARES GIRL; ARRESTED Crowd Menaces Man Who Threatens lG-Year-Old De tective Rescues Him A man, believed by the police to be a nllglous fanatic, was arraigned on n charge of disorderly conduct today, after he had been chased $y an angry crowd of sevefal hundred, pulled knife and threat ened to "smack" the faces of two young girls, who Ignored and tpade fun of him, he said. He Is Thomas Marine. 31? Itast Wlldey street, nnd said he was a local preacher. Magistrate Price held him In 1100 bad for a further hearing. An examination will b mads as to his sanity. Marino was saved from the crowd by Detective Charles Itrendley. who placed h'm under arrest. Accord ng to the testl ntiny. Murine told the police, ho was a pi lest, n minister nnd n preacher. Ho carried several Tllhles. He got off a street car nt Twenty-second and Somerset streets last night, nnd, after swear ng at tha conductor and motorman, threatened lo "smack" sixteen-year-old Annie Iloyd nnd her sister, who were standing on the corner. William ISoss, 1918 North Twenty-third street, took the girls' part. A crowd gnth ttdi trouble brewed, nnd Marino ran to tho porch of Mrs. Frank Mark. 2019 West Si-merset street, where he pulled n putty kidfe. The crowd had followed. The pilsoner said he drew the knife In self dttenso nnd thnt tho girls had Ignored him nnd laughed nt him. They couldn't very well do both," Mag istrate Price said. "Well, they made fun of me, anyhow,' Marine answered. The prisoner carried n dog basket filled with clothes. Mercury 32 In St. Louis ST. LOUIS. Oct. 10. St Louis and east ern Missouri got Ita Mrst touch of winter weather today. The mercury dropped nine degrees tn 32. A light snow began falling nt 6 o'clock this morning and the weather forecaster announced It would continue through the day. lMl'ORTING CANADA "WHEAT Farmers Concerned Over Large Ship ments From Southern Alberta MONTRKAU Oct. 20.--The wheat crop of Southern Alberta, which thla year con sisted largely of number one. Is being drawn on for seed purosrs so extensively by farmers of the United States that there Is some alarm among Canadian agriculturists who fear depletion of the quantity avail able for use In Canada. Considerable quantities of last year's Canadian crop were Imported Into the United States for seed purposes, the more northern climate having a particularly In vlgoratlng effect on all varletlet ot grain. You take tho Best with, you when jou travel In a ScrippsSBootfi GEO. W. KEIXDOLD 2506 X. Broad St. mJ GALVANIZED COPPER AND ZINC SHEETS L. D. Bcrger Co., 59 N. 2d St. ilell. Korku lit JCe.afo, lfols ! J. E. Calcktell & Co. 902 Chestnut St- Pearls Pearls for Necklaces '-j-x r Pearl Necklaces ,T -REMOVAL: , In tho near future tha business of J. E. Caldwell & Co. will be located in tho WIdcner Building, Chestnut, Juni per and South Pcnn Square. ALL COkDOVAN All - over - shell Cor dovan, the last word in fashionable leather, color and workman ship. One of our latest designed models and patterns, made for service as well as looks. Greatest variety of other exclusive models In various leathers, (4.(0 to 110. V 1EDERMAN 930 Chestnut 39 s. 8th 203 N. 8th m "Dal8imer Standard Shoes' Tha New Boot Patttrn In Black or Dark Tan t WM .-... . ",i ' .5t"l mmmmmmmmmmtmi il.il HMfi rj mrj m :.?rsmm&l ', r f. ' a-J ft, ' m """ '" imiwv.iBa.. yip : aB c , T-' How's This for $5? There are many well-dressed men who believe, that Five Dollars is the right price to pay for shoesthey're discriminative and far above' the average in determining values. We have a bigFive Dollar trade one of the largest in the city and they tell us our Five Dollar models look Jike Six and, even even elsewhere, Vou will find many exceptionally clever Five Dollar models here. 'Tis m Feat ro Fit Feet ,1204-06-08 Market St, LEMl Last Two Days of this One Week of INTENSIFIED VALUE in PERRY SUITS at $15 worth $25, $22.50 and $2,0, and difficult to duplicate at even those prices in most stores! 1 That's the whole story, so far as you are concerned, and all the strength of the Perry name stands back of it! It meant foresight and courage back of a desire to give a big treat in Intensified Suit Values to thousands of our friends who had a taste of our quality on similar lines last year! I And it was last year we began our prepara tions to put this October week across this year!' You know how things have gone up. Well, we got the woolens and worsteds for these Suits at big concessions on the Prices of One Year Ago because of the offers we made the makers of them! Then we tailored them, ourselves in our quiet spells another saving; so that today their likes at $25, $22.50 and $20 are about as plentiful as white blackbirds! S Fine plain and mixed worsteds, fine cassi mcres in dandy patterns, blue serges, flannels, cheviots cut on the latest models and tailored by Perry to stand up and to fit with grace and easer all at the One. Uniform Price y . $15 ..';-: ,.v Until 6 P. M. Saturday! . ',1 !;-r 1 i '; ','Jfl 1 ; 'V vIvyW,&w'if $Cr' ' "'' i.lw: ii-v . " vr-"1 7? VtfR 3fpm?h .'? - ?-ssarff..H, "1j 4- PERRY 4 ..CO w 16th & Chottnut Sfc. . 5flar.Ji'J - V " I'ili tfflth