r VjgiJfZ m WCWBS m iiPP i-Hl i?JsK. -A- -ir waMBuwtiw to ItsV SP - "fax j-f , flftl. m UP WORLD OVER, . ? a't-s pEtcment by City Bank of Now tAYork Shows Even Haitians Chargo More for Logs :,- amco tno war .USE OF 50 TO 900 PER CENT ii BVBNINQ LEDGEfl-PBHADBLPHIA", fRilKV.Y, JTOVEMBEB ' 17, IfllC PROTECTION, SHORT HOURS, COURTESY LURE GIRLS PROM DOMESTIC TO PUBLIC JOBS Prices In foreign countries continue to r HUVHncD JUDl IID OUII1Q no 111 ,W UIUW f BtAte. nnd for the same reason A com- t is pllatlon by the foreign trade department ifct1 the National City Bank or New York, XJjf-Jwu'fc recently, showed that prices abroad sfK" vWro fcerccntsire of the articles lm tYlW Into the United States had advanced X v Xreatiy t.lnce the outbreak of the Duropean war The compilation, which covered a con siderable variety of articles. Including food Btufr manufacturing; materials and manu factures, showed that the most striking nil- i -vbcs had occurred In fbodstuffs and man- jtifacturlng materials. v "You would scarcely expect," said the '' bank's statement, "that the natives of Haiti and Jamaica, which famish most of 5" our loewood, could bo so fully 'on to the . nltuatlnn as to demand, and Ret. three times lhi nrlea ner ton for their loBWood as they did before the war, but they aro demanding , -J &.,. I. ffA (Mi1lin vrnllfHPa Htlll f lb UllU ftUillUB It Alio IHWIBW ,,... ... merchants of India. Java and San Sal vador are demanding and getting ten times as much per pound for Indigo as they did before the war. Chinese and Japanese silk KTowera are getting double tho prices pre- vadlng prior to the war, and 'fresh' eggs erasi Into tho United States at double tho price of two years ago. A recent Htnte went by the American Consul General at 1'flrls Indicates that tho Imports of Franco 111 1916 enter that country at prices about ninety por cent higher than In 1814, and the exnorts leavo that country nt prices Sbrtit forty per cent above, thoso of 1914. '"The prices shown aro thoso of the ar ticles ln tho wholesale markets of the countries from which tho merchandise Is Imported Into tho United States, or tho Actual selling price In tho country from which the exportation occurs. Tho advance In the Import price, therefore, docs not In clude tho advance cost added through tho unusually high ocean frolght rates. This general advance Is tho moro atrlklng when It ta remembered that a largo proportion of tho merchandise imported Into tho United States Is drawn from several different coun tries, and tho Increase In tho average Im port prtco therefore represents tho average ' , price Increase tho world over." Among tho advances taking place the - last two years, as enumerated by the ' talk, woro India rubber, fifty per cent; jtoat sklno, slightly moro than fifty per cent; copper, from fourteen to thirty-two cents p6r pound; plglron, from $34. E0 to ' -JIM. 32 per ton; tlnplnlc, from .12 cents to 11.2 contn per pound; raw Bilk, which h year ngo was exported to this country at J4.73, Is now $4.07 per pound; chemical '"wood pulp, unbleached, from $3G.D5 to 43,78 per ton, and bleached wood pulp, from $49,20 to $SS.13 per ton. Combing , wool, which was exported to Amorlca at i an average of 34.4 cents n pounu in mo month before the war, was 37.0 cents In July last, while carpet wool Jumped from 16.7 cents per pound to 23.4 cents In Au gust, 1916, Among tho food supplies named as com ing In for stilt advances wero macaroni, coopa, currants, sugar, macltercl. cheese and eggs. Tho dependence of (his country on China for eggs was shown by statistics pre pared by the bank. The Importation of eggs alono from China in the llscal year 1915 was 2,030,802 dozen, and In 1914, 1,875, 365 dozen. This did not include, the yolks ,of eggs and frozen eggs, of which the Im portations from China In 1915 wero 7,067, ; 085 pounds, tho total value of eggs Imported J.Stovo- China and Hongkong In 1915 being v nearly $1,000,000. f ft t l(k L jl MISS BROWN,- S3 Wfe2fe&L NICE. HORNlM J III JI U-J sQCOS - Pll (BESSIE., OH I Jf$iIt$$ltet UmtK$m$lk Vi hSr come hereC ca" feir m i ovji yy I Jv"M '" I v ' J ft . THfe.Ae.BAie. DOMESTIC WE.,A UOT OP MONCY OHE. 13 ENVIOUS OF HeR SMALLER SALARIED SUTTER THE COMMERCIAL WORLD 'DtS31EtT3 7 A WEEK AMD board ."mi33 drown" gets s per. but ohe is independent" Laws Guard Safety and Comfort of Industrial Workers, "Bosses" Call Her "Miss" and Hours Are Easy Hence, the Serious Servant Problem TM Is tho flth of a series of arti cles upon the problem of the ilomesllo worker, n which the acta of tho situ ation, toycthcr with its causes, aro lfi ousted, SPEAKERS' IDIOSYNCRASIES C S3 Eoch Public Speaker Has Peculiarities All His Own Shorthand reporters soon discover the idiosyncrasies of various speakers and wrlt- "ieis. They become familiar with tho pet words and phrases of publlo men, and can follow a debate almost from memory. Every writer and speaker has favorlto phrases and wards that are repeated over and over again like an endless refrain. The vernacular of the average person Is singularly proscribed. A man who uses unfamiliar words Is looked upon as pedantic and a close student of the dictionary. In the Senate the Hon. J, Hamilton Lewis, Of Illinois, Is dimcult to follow, because ho ,. i ha a way of saying things entirely different from any one else, and makes use of words usually omitted from modern dictionaries. His, classical allusions nnd quotations aro likely to be confusing In these prosato days. i J3enator Marline, of New Jersey, has a pen- chant .for the old-faahloned "Fourth of July" oratorical style. A stenographer would easily forecast the words and phrases he would be likely to use "Affairs at Washington." Joe Mitchell Chappie, in Na tional Magazine. ' , Dointr a Big Business , 1 t. The Clay County Jail Is doing a capacity jfcuslness, the sheriff having been compelled , to release somo of the prisoners In order " v to make room for newcomers. There la no ' l ' l jllmlt to tho possibilities of a popular Jail. ' 5-Kansas City Times. !' THE WEATHER Official Forecast WASHINGTON, NoY. IT. For Eastern Pennsylvania: Overcast In Hsauth and probably snow flurries In north "portion tonight: Saturday fair; not much I dft-ehmsa in temperature; fresh south to P jgLjUjrtst winds. ,85mt' Light snow fell over scattered areas In "Fj-VBw Lake region and the BL Lawrence val- Jay during the last twenty-four hours, iprhlle fair weather has continued through out the remainder of the country. The temperatures, are rising In the eastern half t the country, except New England, and have begun to rise tn the cotton belt, The greatest changes are resorted from the Ohio and Tennessee valleys, where the rise iws averaged about fifteen degrees. There -, fs Etill a deficiency everywhere from the , AtJantta coast westward to the Itocky -Mountains, although It Is slight In the cn f tral volleys. IT, 8. Weather Bureau Bulletin -,. Cljrvtlon Ukon at 8 , m. ultra time. S UitlUlo- Vtleo. SSattao. .m. n't. fait. Wind. lly.V..th.r t nt. Os Bd 4 ,, w ., CUar itUntlo CUT..., 8S KiUlmor. Ma... 81 SlsBsrtk. N P, 11 'Bostuu. !.,. 80 Snffilo. N X . , SO Chkatu. .111.. . . SO CtBClnnstl, O . SI Cbelna7 O ... ill '- ivr, rol,. .. 88 - $ &ittoit. Mich. . , S3 . ami Pso. Tx .. 5 - t Plvetton. T. . H f - L- IIrrtptnurr J. SO -. fesaf-iT ?:! - Mures, a D... , 40 lad&jupoUs, InJ SO JiikmnifilU. i'U. 40 &? II i ieidii CJ.L til pnlatUU. Kr M (WPBia, Tina 43 iKlCil, Cu IS M uui, as FlsASX . 44 Tarn . 24 wtalk. V . si tmUiwm. Okk. 4 n.. . - i HBUSSP. , . n b ai .WW M S3 SO 20 2a 38 n SO S8 S3 28 48 SO 34 10 SO II 34 Si) s5 38 43 IS 30 il it M w a T KW aw aw gnv w NW 8 NW a NW 10 w .03 W NB BW NCI tw w 8B NW nr Cl.ar Cleir Cloudy Snow cioudy Snow Clur Clr !r CUar Cloudy Clear X, CM CUar PCMy Clear Cloudy Claar Cltar Cloudy Clear flnovr Cloudr Cla Cloudy S CUar Clear iaa-ar Claudv Clear TIinCI3 cardinal rcnsonH aro responsible for tho fact that tho domestic nervant. now worth her weight In gold becauso of tho end of Immigration, has been wooed Into tho huslnoss nnd Industrial world from tho prlvnte homo. They have the protection afforded by tho law to fomnlo workers In business nnd Industrial establishments, tho limitation of working hours and that deference, lacking In homes, that tho woman omploo llnds In factory, Bhop nnd atore. Thrso thrco reasons oerbalanco tho economic attraction of domestic work. In splto of tho greater opportunity for saving money afforded tho worker In tho home, tho nverngo girl prefers what Is known as "public" work. There Is common sense In It nnd there Is psychology In t Tho law provides cer tain regulations to which tho employer In tho establishment must adhere, Including regular hours. And tho wnrkor's pride Is gratified by treatment which is unicnown to the servant. The Pennsylvania woman'B labor act of ID 13, In its very first section, spcclllcally excludes domestic and agricultural workers from Its provisions, ThOiPUbllo health nnd welfare of nil other female workers It pro tects by "regulating their employment In certain establishments with respect to their hours of labor nnd tho conditions of their employment." PROTECTION FOIl WORKERS The cook, maid, nurse nnd other house workers were not Included In tho legal supervision by tho Stato because of tho difficulties that would bo Involved, It was said at the ofUceB of tho State Department ot Labor and Industry. Inspection, such ns Is carried on In establishments by State officials, la vtrtunlly Impossible In the home ; PIONEER, 85, REGAINS SIGHT AFTER 20 YEARS Aged Californian Undergoes Successful Operation in San Francisco Hospital For twenty years George Van Busklrk, elghty-flve-year-old Yuba County (Cal ) pioneer, lived In the darkness that cataract of the eyes brought on, only to see tho light once more, following an operation performed by Oreen brothers at the St. Francis Hos pital In San Francisco, Van Busklrli's resolve to undergo the operation was formed after ho had read or the restoration of sight to sixty-three- year-old Mary J, O'Farrell and to olghty-year-old Samuel Phillips by the same surgeons. FOOD SUPERVISION URGED BY PERKINS Continued from l'aso One. months' period ot 1014, just preceding the outbreak of the war, these exports totaled but 180,000,000. Even with a season of unusually poor crops In virtually every grain, tho United States has contributed a greater sharo this year, proportionately?, than at any time during the period ot the war and probably than ever before In its history.. Expor tation of the six major grains wheat, corn, barley, rye, oats and buckwheat thus far this year has approximately doubled since 1314. Shipments of vegetables abroad also have jumped by leaps and bounds. During the eight-month period of this year U,?6S,i87 worth of vegetables has left American ports, against 17,791,316 lasf year and 15,413,271 In 19H a rise of more than 100 per cent during the war. The American hen also has been called upon to "do her bit." Against an exporta tion of 13,117,000 In the first eight months of 1914. the United States has shipped 11,410,000 worth of eggs during the like period this year. A special probe into the entire food sltua- tion is to be discussed today by the Federal Trade Commission. and without such supervision nn net regu lating the employment of domestics would bo without forco Tho department contents ItHelf with overseeing tho work of tho em ployment agencies where domestics nro engaged to determine whither or not the positions offered tho applicants nro bona lido positions. Further than that It has no legal power. Tho net states that females In estab lishments may not bo employed moro than ten hours In any ono day or moro thnn Jlfty-four hours In any mio week; or moro than nix d.iys consecutively except those working In fruit nnd vegetable canneries nnd nurses In hospitals Overtime Is al lowed on three dnys In tho samo week pro vided It docs not oxceid two hours any ono day or Ilfty-four hours for tho week, In case ot n legal holiday or tho loss of moro than thirty minutes duo to altera tions or damago to machinery. Thoso under twenty-ono yearii, except telephono operators moro thnn eighteen years old or nurses In hospitals must not bo employed between 9pm nnd 0 n m , and no worker may bo employed between 10 p m and Cam except ns manager superintendent, clerk or stenographer At least forty-IHo minutes is set asldo for tho midday meal; but this may bo reduced to thirty minutes where the working day Is loss than eight hours No cmployo may bo required to work moro thnn bIx hours continuously, without tho stated intervnls of forty-IHo or thirty minutes, nnd Bhall not bo required to remain In tho workroom during meal nnd rest periods. The law further Imposes health provisions and the posting of schedules, so that the cmployo may readily understand when her rights aro Infringed upon. AT TO HOTEL RULE. Upon tho enactment of the law a dispute aroBO as to tho whether or not It npplled to domestlo employes In hotels. The In dustrial board of tho department there upon mndo a ruling which threw tho pro tection of tho law over fcmnlo hotel em ployes as well. v Modillcd regulations for Bhort-term sum mer hotels wero permitted to subdivide tho one required day of rest Into two half days each week. Hotels and Institutions employing not moro than ten women wero permitted to give tho day of rost a ono complete day of twenty-four hours each week, ono complete Sunday or.o week nnd a complete week dny tho next week, alternate Sunday with one-half week day, totaling two full days each fortnight or two half holidays each week, defining halt day as flvo hours' consecutive service. Ho tels and Institutions employing more than ten women wero required to adhere strictly to the act. In addition, the workmen's compensa tion net excluded domestics, together with agricultural workers, from tho benefits of Its provisions. No law fixes their hours True, there Is a custom adhered to by good housekeepers of setting certain hours for work and cer taH days "off" for recreation. But even In the best-regulated households emergen cies arise, such as late dinners or recep tions where the servant Is called upon for extra time. Thcra Is no law to prevent a domestlo working after 10 p m or before Q a. m or surrendering her day "off" More lmpresslvo than complaints Is the fact that coincident with the rapid falling off In tho supply of domestics compared with the demand Is the Increase of female workcrH In establishments In n bulletin of tho State Department of Labor and In dustry Issued this year tho number of fcmnlo workors reported In 20,571 establish ments for 1914 was 210,299. This number has been Increased to 250,000, It Is esti mated From an economic standpoint the domes tic Hcrvnnt has nn advantage over tho girl of the atoro or factory Out of her weekly earnings sho Is In a position to save moro thnn her moto Independent sister. Tho wages of domeHtlcs, ns given by tho flics of O. II Hopklnson, nctlng superintendent of tho State's I'ubllo Employment Bureau, average from 15 to 112 a week. This does not Includo menls, lodging laundry nnd tho very Important Item of gifts from members of tho household, such ns nrtlclcs of cloth ing On tho other hand tha femnlo Indus trial workers' Incomes averaged as follows Operators In clothing manufacture, from 1G for beginners up to 116; paper and paper products workers, 15 and 10; salesgirls, 15 to 17; textllo weavers, 110 to 120, and packers, 16 to 17 50. Out of these Incomes tho glrlB pay for their own board and lodg ing. From these figures It will bo seen that ttie domestic has tho bettor of It economically. NEWSPAPER PRIMED ON STOCK MADE OVER FROM USED PAPER Dr. Jasperson, of Neenah, Wla., Invents Process fof Bleaching Used Material and Mak ing It "New" TESTS MADE IN MICHIGAN Dr. Thomas Jasperson, physician of Neenah, Wis, has Invented a process for converting old ncwepnpcrB Into pure white stock that can bo used ngaln for news paper printing. Doctor Jaspcrson'a dis covery hns been tcBtctl successfully. It Is said, nnd a mill Is bolng constructed In Chicago whom old newspapers will bo con verted Into- new stock Tho test was made In n mill at Kalamazoo, Mich., and tho finished product was used for several Issues of a Neenah newspaper The otqok that results from the process I. n,.n whiter 'than tho original paper, It Is said. Doctor Jasperson, who, has been a prac tlclng physician and chomlst here luiAniv voars. has been working on process for four years, ho completed his for his Six months ago tabors nnd offered his Neenah paper mill Idea to some of tho owners. Having faith In his Invention, Doctor Jnspcrson nppenled to a local newspaper publisher, with tho rosult that a contract was signed "with a Kalamaioo mill. Through Doctor JnKperson's chemical process and Inter through tho pnpor-maklng machines, sevoral rolls of paper wero made from old nowspapers nnd sent to Neenah, whoro they wero used Doctor Jasperson, Blnco the test, hns been flooded with Inquiries from all parts of tho country Ho has obtained a patent on his procoNH, nnd there are some Neenah paper men who nro regretting turning down the physician's offer In tho process old nowspapers are put Into n beater or mixing machine and the chemical Is ndded By this tho Ink Is ex tracted and tho paper pulp Is bleached a puro white Tho mass Is washed several times beforo It Is run through tho rolls or cylinders, from which It comes, dried by heat, In a fine white sheet nnd Is rolled on n spool for use No changes In plant equipment nre neces sary, tho regular machinery being used. Making Citizens of Emigrants Tho groat floodtldo of emigration that will follow this war, ns It has followed nil other conflicts In Europo, will present to us, ns Americans, tho prrra:em of hnrmon lzlng tho rnclnl Ingrcdlcms for tho great nfultlng pot of democracy which Is Amorlca Perhaps It Is because It Is all so free to us that wo fall to appreciate fully what Constitutional Amorlcainsm means With out lifting a finger or making n sign, simply by signing his natno and taking nn onth, a human being Is transformed Into tho glories of citizenship. Ills llfp, his liberty, his property, are guninntced'by tho law of tho land. Is It not for us to dovoto somo time In the servlco of this lnnd? If only to mnke more hnrmonlous tho cltlzonshlp around you This seems to call for moro than a mcro expression on days llko this at Bemus Point. "Tho Harmony of Life," The Editor, In National Mngazino FTADING t Heafwifhthe Least Wasie fit t- FINGER RINGS PHILADELPHIA Old English Signet Rkgs -twentHwo Irarat hard dd.6 Sqpplitesjcwrradlinesjcpazes AlmaudiiieGanielsBlooaslcaiGs Kepiodticed klheBafliacteH7 Crests and CbcfroftArms eridrciVBdJEarfiealitg 3K1ton SMI It t J? I "THE" daPS- S If 19 "W is ISt JMW4, Ore . SS 33 .. HB . mm. wfiSEZKU '- IL r sF m- -ss-v2.(iig .&jrjGLP -4V& ?BJGft 1 JPKL rjmWgXg&, g- u feaTKSsNAsaaliiHsJttl- irgefc ,Jte "fe.jfe 4 I m- . JliyiEliiii 3SL-rr -miiiiniwil immWm : A floor must withstand more wear and I tear than any other part of your home. jogicany, niruwooo noors wnicn are more durable than, the ordinary kind are the best investment; also they are more artistic and more easily kept clean. Obvious reasons for consulting TON $NTt&&J e ffyW n H I i JUL ' &m vjt Ulif l ill i ft"Bij WW Ash your Dialer tor It THE BEST PREPARED COAL ON THE MARKET SIINKD BY The Philadelphia 8c Reading' l! & !re Lo. Pigskin has proven the moat remarkable leather for Men's Shoes. It has no equal in beauty of grain, ventilation or service. Largest variety of other exclusive styles, all leathers, $4.50 to $10. GENUINE PIGSKIN Rich Dark Shade NlEDERMAN 930 Chestnut 39 S. 8th 203 JV, 8th Hawaiian Week Nov, 20th to 25th All the lateet Hawaiian Victqr liccorde faithfully reproduce the quaint, liaantlnr, amorous melodies o the Ilenailao Islands in all of their kd, slid tunefulness. Hear them. Hawaiian Victor Records IB Sa.SMT'iWIeW 1 m. &aBSplt A eBew jef m - M48 IKuu Home JeUve I'UuUltoa Beat ,, Hawaiian Walt JJedlejr 11701 tmiinu, Wiju .., IIUo JUwaliaa llareb fn IWaUaua Wait iiiiB jijenoimo uarcu T- It 1( chain Uarth IV1 j Hr Hciil9ta.HeI0W lflmmTmgaim.rva Walts Sam 1U iu. ISo. to lu. 7Se. 10 la. 105&. IS. 10 la. 18o. 10 la, 18S. 1W South mnihSL loo is ryuiny tamolb ii i ' San Francisco Woman Blnmea Ahlmal for Unhappy Marital Mlxup When Charles C. 8lm, b. San Francisco contractor, went to Stockton five years, npo to bore an 'oil well and forgot to return home, It worried hla wife, Mrs. Bnrah Sims, so little that she tore up tho marriage cer tificate, but when ono Saturday night, Mrs. Sims saw the husband weighing another woman on n publlo scalps and tha other woman declared In answer to a question that sho also was Sim's wife Well, Mrs Sarah Sims Was Just angry enough, according to her own story, to swear out n warrant accusing Sims of hav ing one wife too many. A little fluffy while tlog belonging to Sinn, which had a penchant for Mtlng Mrs Blms's children, started the trouble that has re nulled In the matr'monlal mix-up, said Mrs. Sims, In relating the highly Involved series nf events that led to the filing of the bigamy charge. About thlrty-flvo years ago Mrs Sims wns married to Henry Kahllcr. also a con tractor, In the cast She had throe children by Kahler, but In 1901. after they had moved to Oakland, they separated and were divorced. Kahler, according to Mrs Sims, still lives In Oakland, Is married again and has five more children. In 1910, In San Francisco, Mrs. Sims, then Mrs. Kahler, met and was married to Wil liam Erben, now said to bo a deputy sheriff. Two weeks sufficed to separate tho two nnd a divorce followed. Less than a year later sho met Sims nnd thoy were married In Martinez, April 1, 1911. Tho date, said Mrs. Sims, w'aa not significant. It wns Slms's second matrimonial ven ture, said Mrs. Sims, He had one child, a eon, now grown. rive weeks after the marriage came tho troublo with tho dog After It had bitten her son and daughter, said Mrs Sims, bIio announced that Bho would kill tho animal Her husband objected, physically, she said and a week later went to Stockton on the well boring expedition As far ns Sirs. Sims knows, sho says, tho well job Is stilt detain ing him. Sims, according to tho records obtained a license August 10, 191G, In San Francisco, to marry Bertha May Scars, who also had ono previous matrimonial experience which ended In divorce. Sims gavo his ago as fifty-three, his brlde-tobo ns forty-four Mrs. Sarah Sims admits to fifty six nnd Bays Sims Is now flfty-clght. Mrs Sims read tho wedding llcensa notice In tho newspnpers, and soon nftorward filed a bigamy charge Nothing cvor-camo of It, sho said, and she did nothing moro until spurred on by tho occurrcnco of last Satur day night. ThlB was a near scene, nlilch followod tho claim of both Mrs. Sarah Sims and tho woman alio says Is Mrs. Ilcrtha Slmn, that Sims Is their husband. Now, because bIio tore up tho marrlngo certificate, Mrs Sims Is salng up her money to obtain a dupllcato from Martinez, In order to proceed with tho prosecution when Sims, whoso address Bho does not know, 1h found. WOUNDED SOLDIERS BECOME TOYMAKatl Maimed Frenchmen Aro BP TVnll-lArl l - XT "Sr ..Employment Mme. nemardlnl-SJoestedt san I. 'fl loon-j Magazine! " ta It was in the Pavllllon de Marsan ti 3 wlsa devoted to tho dceoratlWTrt. 1 the exhibition for toys was held. earVL?'! ly the toys made by mutilated solduJTi great rear salon which onntaini .!": 7i was n veritable fairyland cl,.73 Here In ralnbow-hucd batiaiu. ' rtor- rayed nil tho familiar creatures of uf. " and barnyards, together with the i.f" '? of the plains and jungles. A!ofir' shelves swam argosies of swans. b7an t swans, black nnd white, with goldenl L Here, also, were ducks and ehlckn. j" nnd cats, wonderfully and Botnium.e fearfully made. "meuraei not An army of miniature elephants aell.w the eyes of tho children. elephwK j ...., UUi.,iu ,uiu une NlKhta." !,!!$ elephant caparisoned in red nj .."' whlto ones draped In emerala ni J phtre: purplo, green and polkaVIft giraffes of the Jungles, all ranS lj 12 for tho coronation of an emperor ot InVV Some of the most famous ot our eXi Le Ilurgeols, the sculptor, and the pahVuS Jaulmo and IUpln. have worked wliiTw!? and mind to create models and ta ,.. -1 skillful artisans of tho wounded soS'll iuuiiiutimiou ior ineir ordinary tradei. French Ordered to Use Less Lleht PARIS Nor. ITj-The Minister of tt, Interior, Louis Malvy, has instructed SI prefects of every department in France ti uvi'i-ui, in co-operauon with the MaroriSel pf tho communes, to the people lo rJo2 an far na nosslblo the lii,n., ,.".V.?iB homes and business establishments. "- Il g 1 " MEN'S TAILORS V& Cor. 13lh and Sansora Builders of Clothes to Dressy IVJcn Suitings, Overcoat- $OC ITn ings to your order "" " CA5H PRICES I fOK OLD GO&.D.I uiamonaa.raaris. SODESH I IS7 S. HtH Streat 4KS!rr riioneit Walnut CC30 Mula S09 KBh, A flakj' KMSO ?lATINUM.SILVFo KUbleUsnohinecJ. E2EFINIMS ro ic re R0ANN & DlLKS 1102 CHESTNUT STREET Tyrol. Wool (In a Knitted Fabric) A rich, substantial looking material that is damp proof and needs no pressing. Yields long service. Men's &? Women's J Sport & Outing Clotking'5 Overcoats, Golf Suits. Top Coats, Motor Coats, m Jackets, vests. Sweaters, etc., etc. HANN & DlLKS IIQ2 CHESTNUT STREET Manufacturers and Imvortcr II A. Colli Water Treatment When Voa FeerAll In arid Energy Gone it's a sign that your sys tem needs toning up through Nature's treat ment the daily-use of fa mous Bedford Mineral Water. Gives relief from a run-down ay a torn, gout, constipation, chronic indigostion and other disorders of the stomach, liver and kidneys. m I BEDFORD MINERAL W&TER Handles ty drvoQiif ant all d . UaiUa vnwirj, Vrilm is il uou havt anu difficulty In btlna luipllfd Physicians know what Bed ford Mineral Water has done for thousands. If in doubt about treating yourself, ask your physician about its use for you. Bedford Springs Co. u" 1325 Widener Bid?., Plilla. iiiiiiitiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiinii"' frrnrvffim BticJiwl!.eai The real old-fashioned kind. 75c for a 12-lb. bag. Agents for Deerfoot Farm Sausage Maple Syrup, Gojden Syrup, Honey. JB. Bradford Clarke Co. RACB SarSf 'Jf,3J;ut streei. wse'? - iiil,lii,ii.-?i1hliinW1ilHWil Wirr i tiBSmT? jt,:--r, :: k j t'-ivfe. ,.iii; 1 -v mMmmMmfflmwmwmmm Unl I -Ml Ihc.':! IImHLHHBBLILBHHBH ''-'V