) 4 JBVEMNG MBaJilRr-PHILADELPHiA, TOJife'DAY, KUVMIBEK 28, 1010 JL '-' H - $.-'TP"m M.J I,. .' , - '... , , 1 t ,V Vf ? ft RV J v.' V "si 1 K. '! iSJ t 5, '&i h . - 'W3, .v-fjjf' shs-w--' &??! - ' - imMBh" " ; " . : mn t Thomas A. Edison and Nikola Tesla both believe that electricity's possibilities in the service of man have barely begun to be realized, and each gives his forecast oi what is coming in. the two timely ar ticles in this week's c THE NATIONAL WEIKLT STOUGH UPHOLDS HIS ATTACKS IN HAZLETON Evangelist Tells Slander Suit Jury of Eaps on Politicians in Sermon GOT TIPS FROM" MAYOR WILKES-BAIUIB, Nov. 28. Dr. Henry W. Stough, tho evangelist, of Wheaton, lit., who hag conducted rovlvnls In several cities of the East, faced court and Jury hero yes terday as a defendant In ono of tlio four Blander suits brought by prominent men of Hazloton, each of whom sues for 19,000 damages. , The- casa called wns that In which "VI1 ' Ham J. Cutlen, Councilman, Is tho plain tiff. The accusation liecnuso of which he seeks to recover la that mado by Mr. Stouzh In June, 1914, when. In nddrosnlng an audi ence of 6000 In tho Hazleton tabernacle, ho said that William J. Cullen, John I-'lerro. nldermen; Harry Jacobs, browor, and Max Frledlander, county nsseBsor. wcro .the foui men wholly rcsponslblo for tho existence of vice conditions In tho mountain city. Tim ult has long passed tho Btag of ordinary interest and by .Stimuli and his friends Is looked upon an a light of tho saloon against tho church. Stough admitted on 'tha stand having made, ns the plaintiff charges, tho following statements In a sermon: "Harry Jacobs Is tho man who runs your city. Do you know htm? Ho runs the Arnold and Pllscn Tclm breweries. Ho Is general manager and ho Is one of the bosses that runs Jim Harvey, tho Mayor and things -' down at tho City Hall. Ho runs tho wholo bunch down there "Big Dill Cullen Is nnothor boas. Ho Is called tho Commissioner of Public Safety, whatever that means. He tolls saloon men when It Is safo to run "I will tell you another, one mora of tha bosses who runs this city. I.lttlo John Florro, fcar-o, fcar-o, they fear him; no, they don't. Flerro, that'B It.. He's the Twelfth Ward boss, tho man who runs two saloons and who brings things through for license through booza and beer, though, and not through water llko tho other 'fcar-o'. Tho fourth Is Max Frledlander. tho wholesale liquor dealer. I want to lay It down that If It were not for Flerro, Cul len, Jacobs and Frlcdlander thero would not bo a disorderly houso open In this city tonight. If It wcro not for them there would not bo a saloon open after midnight. If It were not for them not n saloon would daro to open oh Sunday. There would not bo a slot machine or gambling den or a poker game In Hazleton tomorrow night If It wero not for theso four. "I lay the moral condition of Hazleton and tho vicious things hero at tha feet of these four. Let them take up tho gauntlot. I have thrown it down. I charge them with being responsible for the conditions here, and I say they are tho real mayor and chlof and council and all othor issues Insofar as politics, are concerned In Hazle ton." U. S. Envoy Dines Kaiser's Nephew CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 28. Tho new American Ambassador, Abram I. IClkus. save a reception Thursday for all tho Turk ish ofllclals; Among tho guests was Prince Waldemar of Prussia, oldor son of thn Kaiser's brother, who Is here on an official mission, to present to tho Sultan an Inlaid sword. The Prince has paid his respects iu uie American Amoassauor. Pardons for Canadian Deserters OTTAWA, Nov, 38. Pardons are to be given to all Canadians who deserted from the army after enlisting for overseas serv ice, pruviucu iney report lor amy ny oe cember IB, It is announced here. This Is Intended as an act of grace to mark the arrival of the Duke of Devonshire, the new Governor General of Canada. Pardons also will be accorded to all deserters now serv ing prison sentences or awaiting trial. run e-is-ia Th Oitcr; H Blxe Look for UlueTas "Waitera ' Dozeri!"""" Then say "Seatag Oysters" and he will bring you the first oysters you. eyer ate tha,tyouc were sure of. Succulent and just a; bit " M salty they will conw tpyotjt with our original Blue faff on every shell. . ,.-.-..- Seatag Oysters Grown under ideal natural conditions miles off Cape Charles, Va. Served at the better hotels and restaurants with all their original deep Sfa purity and flavor. Is W t..,yAMAS - -jfateMlnr . .'....- . - . . g- miBHre:f?a JiiMmjmmmai..'.:'' - - . 'jjjM(s?wwifBjBjtYii 'Street wiM VKSSU&dSiiSKKKKSKSSSK' "FS-iJijTfiBffxSnSWIBE? ' JMW&iBMsjMEBHEiSnSiWnSl UulE j I II llll lillilillilIIIJIIfH ,..i I ii. I I 1 i i-JPWi....Hy i jjj WiiiiiiiMJBIigMMWWMWsaMffipiM i't.4. 4 11-' ll" UNION CASUALTY REPLY TOMORROW Wood, "Insurance .Wizard," Prepares Answer to 6'Neil Attack TO EXAMINE WITNESSES Tho answer of the Onion Casually In surance Company, Third nnd Walnut streets, ono of tho Insurance companies ,taken over by the Consolidated Investment company, whose Assets, according to Stato Jnsurnnco Commissioner J. Denny O'Noll. consists of blood-colored mahogany furni ture and piles of handsomely engraved green certificates, may bo (lied In tho Dauphin County Court at Hnrrlsburg tomorrow. Hearing on tho application for receiver In tho Union Casualty Insuranco case has been set for December 19. Attorneys for Lyndon 1). Wood, "InsUranca wizard," aro at work today on the answer. Tho hearing In tho Pension Mutual Llfo Insuranco case will be held December 18. State Insurance Commissioner O'N'cll In conferring with tho otllco of tho Attorney Oencral In Ilarrlsburg, going over tho re ports of examine relating to tho affairs of tho two companies. It Is probable that several witnesses wilt bo subpenaed by Commissioner o'Nell for the hearing when tho nffalrs of tho Pension Mutual will bo threshed out. Under the laws of the Comrs-mwoalth, Commissioner O'Nell has the power to call any person who, he thinks, can throw light In any Insurance scandal. Much speculation exists as to the Identity of tho wltncsscH who may bo called. Wood, who yestorday announced that his guns wore ready for action, arrived In town today -from Harrlsburg. Ho said that ho was satisfied with yesterday's outcome, "I am llko n fighting king who fights his enemies when they are trying to do throno him," was all that AVood would say. An Interesting plcco of literature on file In tho offices of Commissioner O'Nell came to light today In the shapo of a pamphlet, entitled "To tho men nnd women of America." This piece of lltcraturo was found among a lot of dust-covered papers dealing with Wood's operations. Undor dato of October 13, 10H, Wood wrote to former Insuranco Commissioner Charles Johnson that ho was sending the pamphlet to Insurance "prospects." Ho speaks of tho Pension Mutual as being tho only Instrument through which tho poor n.u .po,.' avol(1 "Pending tho remainder of their lives In tho poorhouse. The pamphlet reads a follows: "To tho Men and Womc-n of America: "How? Uy an old ago pension. ,. "It,.is ns certnln ai a Government bond. It will protect your ago In tho only sure way. It will give you an Income from the day when your earning power falls to the day when your eyes closo for tho last time. It will rcmovo nil doubt ns to tho manner In which tho latter days of your ...u ..m, .,u npum, ior ii mnKcs certain that you can spend them to suit yourself It makes you as Independent ut eighty as you aro now nt forty. Is not that worth something? .No one wants to bo dependent upon others, however dear they may bo ; however willing they may bo; however able they may be. Thero Is only ono suro way to prevent It and that Is by nn old ago pen slon. "No ono wants to go to tho poorhouse. There Is only ono suro way to prevent It, and that Is by nn old age pension. "No ono wants to worry In his old days. There is only one sure way to prevent It and that Is by nn old nco nenslon. - ' "Kvery one wants to be suro of a happy caro-freo old age. Thero Is only ono wny to be suro of It. nnd that Is by providing against everything which will prevent It by taking out now sufllclent protection ngulmtt thoso things In tho form of an old age pension. "Your llrat duty la to your family. Pro. tect them as well as you can. "Your second duty Is to yourself. It Is Just as the first, nnd should bo performed Immediately after tho first. ."Don't delay It any moro than you woula delay providing for them. "There Is only one company In America from which an old ago pension can be purchased." pfryifl SJk "V 'JS! jl i I, 'i A Daily Water Treatment, 1 t IlandUd by "11 leading druff gista and grocera. Write .i you have any diffioulty in being supplied. ,, tyf I aVLif " . .' H 53 . .',. lISHUSDk. , . .. . w. 'JU. '....: v ' : BMBlMMfto " SpiSiiiifr ,Jf?Ki-yrirf - , WrpfffT W TilfinllTlilitfttfM iiilil'irpiiiiiti'i it ii rnr iiiiin - - - - nrrmi" "it iffr OFFICES OF ACCUSED INSURANCE CO. w,myn.,(f, - -'f-t - rr ' "I II ' y , J ' -. . . . . j ,ri w w -. -, . , , ,, klMAwU.MAJMWUlM--MV,Mvmk. s. ,A.: These nro the hendqunrt' rs of the Pension Mutual Life Insuranco Com pany on Fiftli nvcnuo, Pittsburgh, on the second floor nbovc a pool parlor nnd a colTco store. The president of tho Pension Mutual Life is Lyndon D. Wood, who is nlso the power hnck of tho Consolidated Invcntmcnt Compnny, nn organization which was to bo the nucleus in his merger scheme of seventy-eight insurance companits. Insurance compnny presi dents in nnd outside of Pennsylvania complain that this company is being used in u scheme by Mr. Wood to ruin their companies if ho could not get hold of them. LEISURE CALLED CURSE OF HOUSEWIVES' LIVES Professor Says Mnrricd Women's Ensy Existcnco Loads to Divorce in Modern Day CLKVI3LAND. Nov. 28. "Tho belief that love Is tho slnglo nnd only basis of a per fect marrlago union Is Amerlca'a greatest fallacy. This American Idea goes u long way toward explaining our very high di vorce rate." With that statement Prof. .Imr.cn K. Cut ler, dean of tho School (if Applied Social Science of Western ltcservo t'lilverslty. to day elaborated on his address to tiio men's Class of tho East Knd Uuptist Chinch, In which ho said, "Lovo alone as a basis for marrlago Is vulgor and low." The professor skotched the changes that have taken placo In tho American family llfo changes, ho declared, that aro ecldoin faced by people who nro worried by the great number of dlvorceH, ruco sulcldo and other evils. "Tho traditional typo of home In which the father was a patr.arch, a mnstcr of tho family, Is gone," ho said. "Work formerly Private Lives of Kaiser William II and His Consort Secret History of the Court of Merlin by Fischer 3 Volumes, $10.00 Campion & Company 1316 WALNUT ST. Trousers A Specialty fflGWalmif Street IOUNEa) Natare Will Remedy Chronic .Indigestion The surest, easiest way is to let Nature treat daily with famous Bedford Mineral Water prescribed by physi cians everywhere as effective for relief from Chronic Indi gestion, Constipation and similar disorders of the stomach, liver and kidneys. A pleasant water treatment. BEDFORD MINERAL WATER It has relipvetJ thousands in the last hundred years, Even abroad, physicians recommend Bedford Mineral Water as the beat treatment for rheumatism, gout and other ajlments. Carlsbad has been its only jrivai and now Cirlsbad is inaccessible! i- Bedford Springs Co,, Lhn"ed 132S Widener Bldg., Phila, - W; w. 4. . ' . - ,i.t&i:Ii d&, dono by women of tho homo Is now done by factories. "When a girl used to working gives up her Job to get married, she finds too much leisure In the homo. Of courso, she Is dis satisfied and discontented. Many men aro afraid to have their wives cam money ; they think It is n reflection on thonmclven. lint women must havo Interests that will occupy their time. There aro not many di vorces when this Is tho case." She Would Appreciate An EngagementRingLikeThis AS A XMAS GIFT $600 Tha lrt that will lv rrrntrat clfamir. Aflashtnr diamond of axtra ordinary brilliancy. Itand-plercrd plat inum ettlnit and band. We bought ft before tha blc advance In prlca. Can't ba duplicated later for tha aama fla-ura. Onitr our rettrve plant, a amall depotff Kill ton thla rtitj, or ant; oMfr artlelt for mu until Xma: Kverv Ultcktll diamond guarantert at reprttmttd, Wrlln for Diamond Ilooklet. MITCHELL'S-. Established 107D DIAMOND STORES 37 S. 8th St. 56 N. 8th St. Ready Money United States Loan Society 117 North Broad St. 414 S. Slu nt. S318 Germantonn are. lTX43ffjL dTOlTVQ" DVKtl$TiK Is m HI CONGRESS FACED BY BIG LEGISLATIVE PROGRAM Vill Have to Sit nt Night to Complete Schedule df final Session WASHINGTON, Nov. 28. Congress must burn tho midnight oil prodigally If It would finish Its labors on schedule at noon March t, In the opinion of many early congres sional arrivals today. The mere routlno will consume a long while, leavliic; but lltllo tlmo for the rail road labor legislation, food embargo ques tion and other major legislation destined to make the closing days of the sixty-fourth session notable. Republicans frankly say they do not believe everything can be squeezed Into the nllAtted sp.ico, and they .nro willing that much shAll hang fire, since, they argue, they will have moro power in the Congress that begins December. 1817. Leaders estimated that virtually thirteen weeks will bo consumed In army, navy and other regular yearly and "regular special appropriation bills. This will leave a scant month for other measures of wldo Impor tance. If the Supremo Court erases tho Adamson bill from tho statute books, Congress ex pects presentation of another eight-hour law There nro additions to It contem plated, nt any rato, and the compulsory In vestigation before striking bill will bo a storm center. Tho big sensational scrap of tho whole session, however, will come from tho food embargo measures If theso aro pressed as now planned. A row, equaling or surpass ing that over tho McLcmoro armed ship bill, Is anticipated. Tho conservation group plans to stir up things when tho Shields, Myers and other similar bills appear. , Measures designed to permit formation of exporters' trusts, as a post-war protective step, will feature tho session If thero Is tlmo for everything. Then thero are a hun dred nnd one other bills df varying degrees of Importance all of which means midnight oil or a lot of unfinished business March 4. an unusual selection Unusual in the richness and the exclusiveness of the patterns unusual in the perfect fit, in the quality of the fabrics and unusual in the in built R. & F. roomy comfort. Made to our own specifications. Colors guaranteed fast. R. & F. Special, $1.50 Imported Madras, $2 and $2.50 Art Silk, $3 and $3.50 Pure Silk, $3.50 to $7.50 1114 Chestnut St. 11 S. 15th St 1119-21 Market St. mmuiL 'iHMfUkKSk R5ME5 Tonel Now for ten years and longer the Packard lias had the unstinted npproval of a discriminating patronage. And today it is.a more lux urious, comfortable and serv iceable car than ever before. All that America and Eu rope have learned about car riage elegance is embodied in the new Twin-six. Its dignity of design, the lasting richness of its finish, A s k t he Packard Motor ih CORNELL'S ALUMNI MEET Former Ambassador White Absent From Celebration In His Honor NEW YOnK, Nov, 28 Dr, Andrew D. White, former Ambas.ndir to Oermany and president emeritus of Cornell University, was to have been the guest of Cornclllans In New York nt a dinner at the Waldorf Astoria last night. Owing to the state of his health, Doctor White was compelled at the last moment to forgo a pleasure which, In a letter he wrote, "nothing but nbsolute necessity" could have compelled him to de cline. Doctor White was eighty-four years old on November 7 last, and the dinner not to have been n. celebration of his birthday nd his long years of service to Cornell. The dinner was a Joint tribute to Cor nell's famous old president nnd a plea to tho alumni to rally to the support of the University to further the Cornell mob. Illa tion movement which seeks to raise among alumni a continuing fund of $100,000 an nually for the support of tho University, Miner Killed by Kunawny Car HAKUrrON, Pa.. Nov. 28. Joseph Sir annl, a miner, wan killed, nnd his laborer, Joseph Mlrando, ierlou3iy hurt, when the car In which they were being hoisted from tho slopo to tho surface at the Dodson Heaver Urook colliery dashed back down tho plane after tho chain snapped. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin BEAUTIFUL FABRICS REASONABLY PRICED Marvelous colorings in all well known and highly prized weaves in room sizes and smaller pieces, including new importations of the popular Chinese and Scrape rugs. Purchased before the war, they rep resent values it may be difficult to duplicate for years to come. QtMm FROM Olil? OWN Newest patterns and colorings in America's leading Wilton Floor Fabrics The Bundhar and French Wilton ags. The time used in a visit of inspection will be well invested. Splendid Suggestions for Xmas arA ARDWlCft tl I 1220-1222 Market Street llllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllll lT7MitiE fflL'ffim; Inuuwiwvrr" iszrz ill -4 mm 111 nl ilRR i5rSV 11 S3? ' "ii L'i M mil! 8101 m U!UH mm 111 Hiiiailiiiiiii VAiil rf'n: rMM! I Jl! HI ii fMUif l jlffll! i m Quality folk quickly discriminate between true elegance and its imitation that's the reason they are quality folk the sumptuous ease of its up holstery and the quiet beauty of its furnishings, are all ouster evidences of a deeper genuine ness which makes it and keeps it the standard equi page of refinement. The powerful new motor has freed enclosed Packard's for country touring for all roads., at all times of the yeaiv Approved I, True ele gance is not to "be imitated. man who owns Car Co., of Philadelphia atu wrcn uroaa street, Philadelphiaalso Bethlehem, Harrisburg, Lancaster, Reading, Trenton, Willlamsport and Wilmington .gg Send a Fiowergratn ZJKsMm press ypur sentiment I Of loVe. rotrrnvt "At"1;! tion, as only ' sweet I fresh, fratrrnht iC!S:! p.nn. Roni- rft ta thfl t nlf?S?5ffi n n. "vu until i.uuuu(n; 1'iupaia. $5 We ' of fa fy,9 221 South Broad Street In thm mlJJU of th. blotk 5 tt LOOMS' IAGeeCa. I inmuimrai I I " 1 yam4 :!i!n:r:::r.:!vlir ii ffiiihlHS! nruit:;:::::::; ii; SI Hi! mm IV'"" Milk HUt Bm 'Hi'! one TWIN'-'O e'-:.- PBBTB.HEIlBilHiiMWLIffPBBHfWliHfB