iwiismBji'i'iMSre ' "f" "'JSp 'dWJ-s ''l-9-KS!H a EVENING LEDGER-PHIItADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, 'NOVEMBER 22, 1916 3 MRS. MILLER QUITS AS SUFFRAGE HEAD Rnrnrispa Convention hv IE Quitting State Chairman ship of "Party SUCCESSOR NOT NAMED hn i I Question Arises "Who Is Big I mi unougn woman 10 xbko ino $ Perplexing Position?" By M'LISS WIIiTJAJISPOnT. Pa., Nor. M. A jjyrottehnlcitl opening to what promised to it a placid first dny of tha forty-olghth nnnl convention of the Pennsylvania TVonuin RufTrnRO Association In session hers was Riven this morning, when Mrs. John O. Miller dropped a bomb In the. shops o( her resignation from tha Stata chairman ship of the Woman Suffrage party. Instantly, tha suffragists realized that tha feeling of rivalry botween the Hast and tha West, Philadelphia nnd Pittsburgh, had not abated. It irlll be remembered that nt the con ventton held at the Adelphla Hotel In Philadelphia last year after the defeat of Iho euffrago amendment, a spilt In the suf frage ranks was threatened and a walkout on the part of the Philadelphia contingent narrowly averted because the suffragists of the eastern part of tho State resented the triumphant attitude of tho Allegheny county delegates who carried their part of the State. Mm. Miller is the leader of Allegheny county. She Is credited with being tho best money getter In the State and one of the most astute politicians. She has been dubbed the "Penrose of the or sanitation." Mcr resignation came as a complete sur prise In a spirited speech which followed shortly after tho annual report of the presi dent, Mrs. Qeorga B. Orlady, which was read by the fourth vice president, Mrs. E. J Klcrnan, Mrs. Orlady being unable to ttend tho convention on account of Illness. CHALLENGE TO CIUTICS Mrs. Miller gave press of business and home duties as tho reason for her stepping down. Her friends declare that her action Is Instead a direct challenge to the criti cism of Philadelphia and other suffragists throughout tho State that bIio "wants to own the wholo show." it has been bruited nbout, they say, that she holds too many oHIccs: that being first vlco president. State chairman of the Woman Suffrngo party nnd chairman of Allegheny County cuts too much power Into tho hands of ono woman. But now that she has given them what it is thought they wanted, the cry Is, "Who is a big enough woman to be tho State chairman of the Woman Suffrago party?" The reply on all sides, like that In the morality play. Is "nobody." It Is a known fact that In the council of lenders In which tho resignation of Mrs. Miller wns discussed before tho opening of the convention tho ofllco of Stato chairman ship was offered to every member of the Stato Hxccutivo Board and promptly re fused by them. H'n a big Job and wants a big woman. Because of the attempt which will bo made on Thursday to revise a by-law which. If the revision is passed and It Is predicted that It will be, will weak en the power of tho leagues and clubs and centralize- tho full strength In the Woman's Suffrago party the Job looms even bigger. MALE ANTIS ASSAILED. Wanted: A Stato chairman. As yet no one has been found to be willing, or perhaps able, to tako It. In her report of tho work of the county conferences Mrs. Miller, pre ceding the announcement of her resigna tion, took a swat at tho malo antl who has made the fcmala antl do hla dirty work. She did not say that tho male antl was synonymous with tho liquor Interests, but tho feeling yns that she meant It. The day of tho woman antl Is past, she said, and In the next campaign she will tako even less part In the antl work than she did. and the man antl, who Is really be hlnd the whole opposition, will hae to come down from behind tho skirts of the women. Two types of suffragists exist today, Mrs. Miller points out They are the lifters and the leaners. The lifters, she explained, are the women who do a great deal of per sonal work on finance, and they are the women who know how to get along with other women. They are not overcrltlcal and they always work at least three times as hard as any other suffragist In the county. I "If wo had sixty-seven lifters In our sixty-seven counties, tve could push the mass of leaners on to victory, because votes for women will be given because of the work- of a comparatively small group and the rest will get It without any effort or work on their part," she said. To facilitate the passage of thesuffrage bill through tha 1917 Legislature, Mrs. Miller declared that the Legislators were being reminded of suffrage by numerous Utters and Interviews, "We will go to the 117 Legislature with the most thorough W P9SQ19i l "Si 5?t JittmF mt Jt nml Vn Chicken! That humblo barnyard fowl has now degenerated into si term which glorifies tho fine feathers and legs, WVro rather proud of tha chicken barnyard va rioty that has been dressed by our chef. Walnut at 13th Street Ditronfa m ran ay ay ma &ftBU $ CORRECT m 1 & MEN'S TAILORS Cor. 13 th and Santom We Appeal to Smart Dressers CSBSKSiBStolSO s HIGHESTpPAIO KR OLD GOI13tPlATINUH,SIEIB Diamond. Pturo. RubiasJspjihWs etc UMODEHN DEFINING CO.K 13? 3, Hih Street .& rhol Walnut 8(59 ' 121 Mi APPLIANCES ssxp eos oj.TAi.aQva L R, iERtJEl Ci.. 5 N. U Street STATE SUFFRAGE HEAD RESIGNS OFFICE Mrs. John 0. Miller, of Pittsburgh, surprised tho delegates nt tho con vention of tho Woman Suffrago Association, nt Willlamsport, by resign ing as Stato chairman of tho Woman SufTrago party. Mrs. Miller, who is known as "the Pcnroso of thp organization," is seen with her two children. Tho resignation is expected to reopen tho breach that is sn'ul to exist between tho eastern and western parts of tho State. poll that we havo ever had In Pennsylvania and our mombers will go to Congress more thoroughly lined up Uian they have ever been before," she ndded. Tho suffragists wero welcomed by Mayor Jonas Pl.iher and Miss Henrietta Baldy Lyon, of Lycoming County; Miss M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr, respond ed. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw arrUed last night SUFFRAOE CAUSE BRAVELY AWAITS HOUR OF VICTORY; MRS. ORLADY'S ADDRESS READ WILLTAMSPOriT. Pa., Nov. 22. The salvation of the cause of woman's suffrage lies In a man, according to the predictions made today In tho address written by Mrs flcorge B. Orlady. president of tho Penn sylvania Woman Suffrage Association, and read at the opening session by Mrs. E K Klcrman, fourth lco president of tho or ganlzallon Mrs Orlady was dctalnod on account of Illness nnd could not be present at the convention which opened this morn Ing In tho Y M C. A. Auditorium. Mrs. Orlntly In her messago to the dele gates said that a great American who Is to be will arlso nnd espouse tho cause of womankind, making It tho fundamental principle of Americanism. "I then give ou this thought nnd belief, Mrs. Klcrman rend from Mrs Orlady's paper, "because that thing which we so much desire for our completion enfran chisement can only ho given us by man, r" I. E. Cald-Well & Co. Chestnut Juniper South Penn Square r Wrist WatcKes Of Jewels-and Platinum Victrolas $15 to $400 Easiest Terms Three Stores Open Until 10:30 Tonight ma so that all who cannot arrange to do their hopping during the day may dojt in the evening. This opportunity of evening Victor Shopping will remove two problems What to give and when and where to elect it Talking MachineCo. Central Broad Above Walnut Wjflnut 1150 Tht Three Open Evenings Uptown Broad & Columbia Wamond isoi W. PhOa, 52d & Chestnut Belmont 6109 w. phua. 4124 Lancaster Ave. Baring im and because we have demonstrated tho merits of women, the time will IrevltAbly come when man will be no longer content for his leader and hla parly merely to Indorse or havo tho opportunity himself to vote fa vorably upon the question of woman suf frago: the time will come. And tmrsl come, when a great man, a Lincoln, a Washington or a Jefferson, will rise rrom tno ranks of men nnd not only express his belief In th fundamental principle of Americanism for which wo have striven, but will lead the way so forcibly that men at large will rise, combine and overthrow the leaser but pow erfully organised part of ouf cltlsenry, which strives by derlotn and sometime by despicable nnd debased methods to keep from us our rightful heritage of privilege and responsibility," ULTIMATE TIUUMPK FOnHSttEN' The address continued: "Inevitably, the time will come when great men, joining force or Inspiring nnd dominating a great number of our best men, will force men to endow us with nit that which will contribute toward making us the dim valuable cltliens possible. "Already It Is undoubtedly probable that a largo majority of th best men In our country bclleto In the Justice of our de mands, but until there springs the great Inspired leader to unify tho thought of the Individuals In the mass of men, that other always well-orgnnlted forco, which Is op posed to nil legitimate progress nnd uplift, wilt hae Us way, "It U truly remarkable, all things con sidered, If you think of It, that without ever having had a largo force of men In the field openly fighting for this fundamental Amorl canlsm, t hat a secured ns much as we hae. It Is truly remarkable, In view of the unquestioned Justice of our demands, that thero has not already sprung from men a man to innko men see nnd reallzo what they should do to add to this activity. Ile member always that those forces which pro fess to, nnd largely do, mirror nnd retted sentiment In their various communities tho newspapors for years In dominant num bers have espoused our cause, "Is It not strange then, that In view of the fact that the best men for years havo announced their conviction nnd belief that ours Is a righteous effort, organized oppo sition does not realize that It cannot much longer oppose this basically righteous move mentT And is It not p d commentary Uon the whole situation that our cause, be ing so righteous, long ago has not oxer thrown tho unrighteous? "Undoubtedly, tho great pirty of the fu ture, tho great political party, will bo that pnrty wlilcL., rcelng fav. and clear through tho ejes of Us leaders, will reallzo that there Is no ono causo In which so many Individuals Individual Americans re so strongly Interested as In the enfranchise ment of women. "Stop for a moment nnd consider the progress of the woman suffrage cause, and what do you glean from the fact that the wentern man almost na n unit has now come to the point where he has enfranchised the women of his western section of the coun try? "Did he do It because he did not be lieve In their equal Intelligence, because he did not have faith In their Integrity, be tauso he did not desire them to be laboring at his side at the polls for a better west r for a west kept clean? Bather did he not endow Ihe women of his land with the franchise because he believed In them And remember also that having granted this boon to women, he never hss believed It Just or necessary to take It away from her Then consider the position, by com parison. In which tho men of the east are placed I" Mrs. Orlady then quoted the constitution of the United Stales from the section which soya, "To promote n mora perfect Unlonj to establish Justice; to Insure do mesllo tranquillity to promote tho general wolfaro and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity," nnd then compared the actions of Canada to those granting suffrage to the women of the United States. She oen predicted that as a result of the wbrk wowen of Europe have done during the world wnr, It Is likely that women across the Atlantlo will be en franchised before women In some parts of tho United States aro granted suffrage. Better flavor and mora economical became Clawsons 25c Vanilla tquah 40c worth of any other y Ready Money g J United States Loan Society J I 117 North Broad St. I I 414 8. Sth nt. 23IS flerranntown are. I Maueh Chunk Itotelman Dead MAtJCIt CHUNK, Fa., Nov. 81. Harvey It Albright, forty-nine, proprietor of the Pennsylvania Hotel here for ft number of year, died of heart disease, after several months' Illness, He Is survived by his widow and two daughters and on son. No. 1 Maine BALDWIN APPLES $3.50 a Bbl. Get prices elsewhere and see tf these are reasonable. You can reduce your living ex penses by trading at Janscom's Wholesale & Uclnil Grocers 1232 Market St. & nrandies ABE MACKINAWS Combine fflmfort wsrmlh nrvlrt. ntilHtysmt mnrturs Illr-h rnlnrlhta In all sties una 1 sm miu money itQ CC Hejrulnr PO.OO price SS fcQ 9Q Ho)"' Sizes PO447 HcRiilnr $5 EN VINE5T.U?usv! . Reliable Western Representative with offices in ChlcnRo is in posi tion to lake nn one or two addi tional lines that sell to Jobbers. Address Representative, 1 G 0 1 risbrr llulldlntr, Chicago Men's Hats rf modlil Into . , Uttt .11. ! cieanta. mocnta, rd snd rtlrlramta f tausl to nw. ( Jefferson Hnt Co., 125 S. 10th St. US Mn Announcement And an Invitation THE Rosenbach Company announce the Opening to day of the following additions to their already spacious Galleries: . THE MEDICI ROOM devoted to things of Italian origin: lamps, mirrors; old chests; mediaeval carvjngs; sculpture; bronzes. Among the interesting things is the gold embroidered Sevens tcenth Century Mitre, worn by Pope Benedict XIII. J THE GEORGIAN ROOM designed in the style of the Adams period contains English furniture; old silver; rare mezzotints after Sir Joshua Reynolds and George Morland; English porcelain from celebrated collections. THE OLD PRINT CABINET finished in the manner of the Tudors in Old English Oak. Here are shown original engravings and etchings of the great masters: Durer, Rembrandt, Meryon, Haden, Whistler and Cameron. THE NEW PRINT GALLERY contains the best examples of Ancient and Modern Art in all its varied forms: mezzotints, etchings, engravings, sporting prints, water-colors and paintings. THE BOOK COLLECTOR'S ROOM is devoted to rare and choice Manuscripts, Autograph Letters and Books, and contains the finest collection in America. Ask to see the desk upon which Charles Dickens wrote the immortal "Pickwick" in 1836. A Special Announcement We are exhibiting for the first time in this city, the birth place of Liberty, an ORIGINAL CERTIFIED copy of the being the identical one sent by order of Congress in 1776 to Frederick the Great, It is one of the most important American documents in existence. The, copy in the Department of State at Washington is faded and is never shown to visitors. NOTE: Owing to its great value, and being under guard, the Declaration will be on free exhibition between the hours of ten and five o'clock only. .( YCost LsOrdiq.L tJnuitatLon is extended to YOU to visit our galleries and to enjoy and in spect at your leisure the many beautiful things marked at, rnodr crate prices, This invitation is just as warm and cordials if made by a member of the firm to you in person, ' ' The Rosenbach Galleries 1320 Walnut Street & MP ti.i.i.oiiv.,1 w.ifr imaa.. . I MMW II Mill hi I III! llli nlJMKliW Perry's have anything a man may want for outer wear, be it fAn Ulster, a Great Coat, a Chauffeur's Coat, a fur-lined Coat, a fur-collar Coat, or just an Overcoat only that being a PERRY Overcoat m a k e s ,it JUST as different from the rank and file as shoulderstraps distinguish the officer. Or, if it's a Suit $ Perry's have so vast an assortment of fab rics, patterns and colors that they will make you forget the war and the war's very real alarums, as you examine and ad mire lot after lot and finally take a bird's-eye view of these thousands of Suits at Perry's, just as in ordinary times 'singl e-breasted and double-breasted, belted and p 1 e a t e d" backs; loose or snug-fitting, and many of the coats skeleton-lined with sympathetic silk. Maybe it's a Dress Suit or a Tuxedo f And here again you will find Perry's to the fore ! If we were to tell you the names of some of the men who secure their glad rags at Perry's, ydiS) would recognize a good many . prominent citizens. And what is more they have expressed their unqualified con viction " that Perry Evening Clothes give them better fit and more character than those they used to wear rat twice Perry prices! $25 up. Add to which S Our Frock coats and vests; cutaway coats and vests; separate trousers; dress vestal fancy vests; corduroy vests; golf and auto coats, and you have a range of outer gar-, ments for men which makes Perry's the Clothing Store Complete. PERRY&Ca "N, B, TV 10th awl CNstrmt St s ss fflipiM to jjUMnjmm