Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 30, 1916, Night Extra, Page 3, Image 3

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    m
CITY GRATEFUL
FOR BLESSINGS
Spirit of Thanksgiving Ex
pressed in Church Serv
ices and Charities
TURKEY DINNER FOR POOR
THANKSOIV1NO
loril. for .Id rnlnt lhantht
Net. Into tll wroniihtt
Lorn, for IIiij wlfkfi wilt
iitirnira.Hna rmliua i:iii
For '
int nnr irom men
kepi.
Oar thnnkiclrlnr nrrfnl.
tlTlnr b
Mil II.
nam vtttn nawtlli.
Th thanks of Fhttndelptilft nrlss heaven
ward today from ths thnnVful.
Ths gratitude of the city on this Thanka.
(trine Day takei many forms Thankvglv
Inr services were held In many churchea. In
hospital", In city Institutions, In homea; the
lamo, the halt, tho blind, the poor and the
Insane Rave thanks.
The rich Rave thanks to the Creator and
charty to tho poor, who otter their humble
thanks. Chnrllablo organisations dlstrlb.
uted food to thousands and In turn have set
astdo today as donation day, opening their
doora for contributions of money nnd mer
chandise for thn continuation of their work.
Tho day will closo with dances, dinners
and entertainments, social nnd charltnbto
In nature, chief among which will he the
annual charity ball ot tho Federation of
Italian Societies, which will be attended by
Mayor Smith nnd othor prominent officials.
Thanksgiving services were held thrnunh
out the city. Amonjr them were a union
service at tho Central Congregational
Church, tho participating churches belnc tho
First Moravian, tno Finn ll.ipllst, tho Cen
tral ConBrcgntlonal, SLMatthcw's Lutheran,
Central North Broad Presbyterian, Spring
Garden Methodist, "West Green Presbyter
Ian. Olivet Covenant Presbyterian, Trinity
Methodist and Ctirlut Itefonned.
Othor union services were thoso of tho
Bethlehem Presbyterian and Oxford Pres
byterian Churches, In the Park Avenue
Church: tho Tabernacle Methodist. In tho
draco Mothodlst Church; tho First He
formed, In tho First Church of the Brethren,
and tho Fourth Street Presbyterian, In the
i Episcopal Church of tho Atonement.
Illshop IJcrry conducted tho services In
tho Arch Street Methodist Church.
At tho Philadelphia General Hospital
ThanksRlvlnfr was obsorved this mornlnn
with services In tho Cathollo, Episcopal nnd
Methodist chapels and In tho women's out
wards. Through tho generosity of the Mary
BhleldB legacy fund, programs were pro
vided for the Philadelphia Hospital for the
Insano and tho Insane department nt By
berry. Itcllglous services, muslo nnd other
entertainments were provided at the Home
for the Indigent. Holmeslinrg.
The Inmates of thesa Institutions and of
the Germnntown Almshouse will bo nerved
with Thanksgiving dinners, chicken being
substituted for turkey In nil except the
Hospital for tho Insane. Iloast beef nnd
trimmings will be served In the prisons.
SALVATION AltMY DINNER
Tho largest Thanksgiving dinner to he
spread for tho poor (s thnt of tho Sal
vation Army, which has provided a
Thanksgiving meal for 1200 children in tho
First neglmont Armory. Tho Pennsylvania
branch of tho Shut-in Society distributed
baskets of food for cripples and Invalids
Unable, to Icavo their homes.
About COO poor children nnd mothers will
be the guests of the Helping Hnnd Rescue
Mission, 721 North Second street, nt Its
seventeenth nnnual free dinner tonight. A
commltteo of minlstern nnd church workers
aided Charles II. Toner, superintendent. In
providing the food. Tho 200 Inmates of
tho Whosoever Mission, Germantown, will
be guests at a Thanksgiving dinner tonight,
to bo followed by a musical entertainment
In Chelton Hull.
Today has boon set aside ns annual donn
tlon day by tho board of trustees ot Jeffer
son Hospital, which during tho last year
treated 8308 patients, eighty per cent of
them free, at a cost of J181.282.25. Money,
food nnd hospital supplies are needed.
This la also donation day for tho Uvnn
tellcal Homo for the Aged. Old York road
and Hunting Park avenue., nnd the Ger
man, Episcopal, Presbyterian, Frankford
and St. Agnes's Hospitals, where contribu
tions were received.
A hockey game between two teams of
girls opened a. long Thanksgiving progrnm
for the Germnntown Hoys' Club, 25 West
Penn street, this morning. Tho teams were
captained by Miss Florence A Pfyffer nnd
Miss Grnco K. Thackrnh.
New Englandcra found a pleasant sur
prise at tho Hotel Adelphla, where a real
New England Thanksgiving dinner was
served, with roast Vermont turkey nnd
cranberry sauce ns tho piece da resistance,
and distinctive pumpkin and mince pies n
la New England. Othor "high spots" In
the menu, which will be served until 9:30
p. m., are grapefruit, soup, fish, sirloin of
beef, creamed green peas a la Franealse, po
tatoes duchesse, salade loretto and English
plum pudding, with "trimmings" like cel
ery, salted nuts, raisins, olives, sorbet creme
de mentho, Ice cream, cako and demltasso.
Tha Hawaiian orchestra was an attraction
' that helped crowd tho hotel with guests
from tho city, New England and New York.
' ITALIAN SOCIETIES
Among those who have accepted Invita
tions to the annual dance, concert and lunch
ot the Federazlone dello Soclets.' Italians
(Federation of Italian Societies), at Lyric
Hall, 928 South Sixth street, are Mayor
Smith, Justice von Moschslsker, of tho 8u.
preme Court; Judges Patterson, Barratt.
McMlchael, Flnletter. Monaghan and Mac
Nellie, Senator Edwin H, Vara, Congress
man William S. Vara, Major General J.
Lewis Good, Recorder of Deeds James M.
Hailett, Chevalier Oaetano Foccardl, the
Italian Consul; I. Gordon Foster, John P.
Coughlln, Michael C. cogiia, ueorgo yum
tard HorwltsA Harry C. Mackey, H. C.
Itohlflng, John L, Hums and Magistrate'
Coward.
j The first Thanksgiving dance of the Ger
mantown Cricket Club will be held tonight
,n t Manhelm, preceded by a dinner. More
man zoo persons are expeciea io uuoim.
HOLIDAY JOYS FOR JACKIES
Turkey Dinners and Dances nt League
Island
Thanksgiving brought Joy to the sailors
t the Philadelphia Navy Yard today,
am , , ..,, ..ft ...Ml, atMltl.
luraoy uinucro, vu.j.icu w " ,....
Ing hot mince pie, wero served on tho
battleships South Carolina anu juicniguu,
which put Into port for the holiday, and the
vmsaIs nf ihA rMprvft fleet stationed at
League iBland. After the repast, which
was eaten at noon, tho sailors of the
South Carolina and other ships gave, dances
aboard, with flags flying from every mast
The guests were their sweethearts, una
friends. Music was furnished by the ship
bands.
AUTO KILLS AGED MAN;
112TII VICTIM OF YEAR
Eamuel Fowden, 79 Years Old, Struck
nt Broad and Tioga
' Streets
. . .. ...... -m
i Bamuel Fowden, seveniy-mno ,.
or lt North Nineteenth street, aio ...
L. r. .. , l.. I -nnv Vrtm In-
, Juries received when run down by an auto-
moDiia at Broad ana Tioga wwi ,
xius Brings tna iisi 01 -Utes
In this city up to US slnca January .
t Tha aged man was trying to avoid the
Buddies of water while, crossing tha street,
Ust night, and dtd not ae the approaching
machine driven by LouU Bremer. Jr.oi
,Kuu WeiMel, of the Fartt and Leblgn
Javiu4 wutloo. d fWH
alkenhayn's Troops
Capture Campulung
Contlnoed from Ire One
repeatedly attacking our positions on
the summit of rtuln Mountain, near
Orunlshte, have been driven from tho
western slope.
LONDON, Not. JO.
Tho Allies are pinning their faith on the
Russians to extricate Rumania from the
German war pincers.
Dispatches today Indicated that the
Ciar's forces were pounding vigorously at
German positions In the southern Carpa
thians, Inaugurating an offenslvo which, ex
perts here were confident, would force Field
Marshal von Mnckensen to cense some of
his pressure on tho Rumanian forces flow
approaching the line from which they will
defend tho capital.
The Russian thrust nt Klrllbaba was re
garded here as the best possible stralegla
move slnco. If successfully maintained. It
would forco a straightening out of the Ger
man lines, permitting the Rumanians tognln
back a goodly part of Transylvania, If the
German lino was not straightened out under
these conditions. It would be In danger of a
strong flanking movement.
ALLIES ADVANCE AGAIN
ON MACEDONIAN FRONT
PARIS, Nov. JO.
Troops of four nations nro surging
against the mountain positions of the Bul
garians nnd Germans northwest nnd north
cast of Monantlr, In Macedonia.
This cosmopolitan army, under General
Harrall, Is mado tip of French, Russian,
Italian and Serbian soldiers.
Tho fighting Is particularly severe around
Hill No. 1248, where tho French aro deliv
ering n scries of storming attacks.
Further progress for tho Allied forces Is
reported In dlsritches from the Macedonian
iront today.
Ilnmbnrdment of Trllep by Allied aero
planes was nnnounced In today's official
statement.
Tho thunder of nrtlllery In the Mognlci
Mountains nlong the Orneco-Sorblnn fron
tier Is never still. For weeks, by day nnd
by night, this great duel with big guns has
gono on nmld tho blenk nnd barren crags
It has tnken n long while to array the
Allied forces ngnlnRt tho positions of tho
Bulgarians nnd Germans, for heavy artil
lery nnd ammunition supplies had to be
hauled up steep nnd mud-nilcd mountain
roads. Storms have been frequent on this
front, nnd thcro have been heavy falls ot
snow In tho mountain.'
Tho present soldiers of Serbia and Bul
garia aro better able to Bland the rigors of
n Balkan campaign than nro the soldiers nf
France, Russia, Italy and Germany. They
nro hardier from farm toll nnd outdoor llfo
nnd wero seasoned by two warn before tho
present world conflict hroko out.
Ono of tho most commanding figures on
tho Serbian front Is Field Marshal Mlshltch,
who Is In command of tho main army. It
was ho who drove tho Austro-Hungnrlans
out of Serbia nt the tlmo of tho second In
vasion. The commander-ln-chlcf of the
Serbs Is Crown Frlhco George. Attached to
Serbian headquarters Is Admiral Trou
bridge, who was sent to Belgrade last year
with British forces and nrtlllery to help
protect tho city from the Austro-Gcrmans.
DU FOURNET THREATENS
TO OCCUPY ATHENS
LONDON, Nov. 30. Dispatches from
Athens descrlbo tho situation thcro ns
ominous. A Router dispatch says tho Greek
Crown Council has voted to support tho
Government In refusing the Allies' demand
for tho surrender of tho nrm's nrtlllery nnd
munitions, nnd other dispatches say that
adherents and sympathliors with ex-Pre-mler
Vcnlzelos, In much alarm, have ap
pealed to Admiral du Fournct for protec
tion. Venlzellst partisans In nnd about Athens,
tho dispatches say, nro very strong nu
merically, but nrc absolutely unarmed,
while many loyalists nro believed to havo
received rliles and ammunition secretly,
some. It Is Bald, from the Government
arsenals.
Admiral du Fournot on Monday morning
mado n tour of Inspection about tho city,
and It was pointed out to him loyalist par
tisans during tho night had marked the
houses nnd shops ot persons whom they
regard as Vcnlzclos sympathizers with glar
ing circles of red paint.
A clrclo nf red paint waa on tho house
CRAZED BY HIS CONSCIENCE
Man Who Killed Stepfather Five Years
Aro Becomes Insnne
The 'weight on his conscience duo to hav
InR killed a man. carried for flvo yenrs, has
overthrown tho mind of Elton Pnrncll,
twenty-nine yenrs old, n negro, of 921
Mount Vernon street, Cnmdcn. His mother,
Mrs. Mary Price, whose first husband. Alex
ander Bantom, waa shot and killed by
Pnrncll, February 24, 1906, asked Recorder
Stackhouse this morning to glvo her author
ity over her son She Bald his mind had
not been right since he was arrested De
cember IS, 1910, tried tor the crime, and
acquitted by a Jury In tha Criminal Court
Parnell killed his stepfather, who was
then living at 847 Joint alley, while Bantom
waa beating his mother. He esoaped from
the police by Jumping out a second-story
window and was gone five years, while the
detectives searched for him. His mother
believes that his conscience during that time
made him Insane. She said that now he
spends his time preaching Incoherently on
street comers. Recorder St&ckhous gavo
her tho custody of her son.
"BLACKnANDER" DIDNT APPEAR
Reading Cops Hunt Sender of Letter
to Business Stan
READINO, Pa., Nor SO. The city
police nnd United States postal Inspectors
spent the entire, night In a fruitless effort
to capture the sender of a "black-hand" let
ter to Alexander Miller, a leading business
man of Reading, commanding him to place
12000 under a bucket beneath one ot the
arches of the Penn street bridge, under
penalty of meeting with a "serious acci
dent" Upon receiving the letter several days
ago. Miller notified the police and they were
on hand at the appointed hour when Miller
was supposed to tjirn over the money, No
"blackmailers" appeared and efforts are
being made to trace tha threatening letter
by means of the handwriting.
U
Bracelet
Watclaes
Of several depend
able makes. Those
VA
made by Gruen and warranted
by us are particularly attract
ive and offer a wide price range
C. R. Smith & Son
fl
18th and Marktt Strttlt M
1
Home-Made Bread
5c loaf
J232 Market SU .
929 Market b, mm
Fa
X
W
EVENTING LEDGrER-PHnJADEEPHIA; THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30,
of the Mayor of Athens, and the Admiral
Jlslted him to discuss protective measures.
It was reported that tho Admiral announced
ho would occupy Athena If any outbreak
occurred, but that the Venltellsts fear such
action would come too late to save them.
ONLY ARTILLERY BUSY
ON WESTERN FRONT
TARtS, Nov, 10.
Artillery fighting In the Ablalncourt and
Pressolre sectors waa the only activity along
thn western front reported In today's of
ficial statement
LONDON, Nov.10.
Machine-run and rifle fire from the Ger
man trenches was active In the Guedecourt
sector, Generat Sir Douglas Halg reported
today.
GERMANS CRUSH FOE'S
ATTACK NEAR YPRES
BERLIN, Nov. JO.
Fighting, In some ptaces hand-to-hand,
German troops repulsed an enemy attack
In the Ypres bend, the German official state
ment announced today. The assault was
made after strong artillery preparation and
nlong a front ot about three kilometers.
Foggy weather continued along most of
ths western front, tho statement said. Ar
tillery duels Increased not only between tho
fierro and the Ancre, but on both sides of
fit Plerro Vnast Wood.
News at a Glance
CltlCAdO, Not. 30. llrim fredrrlcki
nnd Miles Brown, policemen, are In hos
pitals, seriously wounded, today ns a re
sult of being shot by gangsters whom they
had arrested In pursuance ot tho clean-up
order Issued In an effort to stop a wae of
murder In Chicago.
CHIC.WIO, Not. SO. r.leht hundred pen
niless, hungry persons feasted nt the Cath
edral Mission hero today on a turkey din
ner given by "Lucky" Baldwin, cvntiRollst,
who spent his Thnnksglvlng day hero with
out a cent eight years go.
LONDON, Not. SO. Nine resolutions
dealing with penco "111 be Introduced nt the
annual conference of the labor party, which
will opon In Manchester on Jnnuary 2.1. The
relationship of labor and capital nnd tho
problems which will faco tho working poo
plo after tho war will ho discussed at length.
Radicals among the labor leadors aro pre
paring to attack the Government on account
of tftn Increasing cost of living and tho food
shortage.
SritANTON, r.. Not. 30. The ReT. J.
V. Stephens, p.iBtor of tho Welsh Congre
gational Church nt Plttston, was stricken
whllo prcnchlng from the pulpit In the
Nebo Church nt Old Forge. Ho fell to the
floor unconscious nnd Is now In n serious
condition.
C1IICAOO, Not SO. The International
Hnr ester Company tomorrow will put Into
effect nn Increase of ten per cent for com
mon labor and clerical employes. Twenty
eight thousand employes In plants nnd offices
In Illinois, Ohio, Minnesota, Now York and
Wisconsin will bo affected
REAMING, Nor. 30. Notice was tosted
at tho blast furnaces of tho II & G.
Urooko Iron Company, Blrdsboro, below
Rending, today of an Increase of twenty
flvo cents a day ot wages of all employes
to bo effective as of November 27.
I.ANSnAIn, !., Not. SO. There was
a 15,000 lira nt G o'clock this morning nt
tho farm of Allan Swartlcy, on tho Allen
town road two miles from Lnnsdnlo. Tho
big bam. outbuildings, farm machinery
nnd tlio, season's crops wero dostroyed. This
had been n bumpor crop year nt the
Swartloy farm nnd tho crops wero all
stored In tho barn,
CLEVELAND, O., Not. 80. Three dis
tinct earthqunko shocks about 3000 miles
distant from Cleveland wero registered last
night by Instruments at St. lgnatlus's Col
lego here. They camo at 10:25, 10:27 and
11:05 p. m
3IOHNTON, lj.. Not. 30. Willi morn
than BOO entries, Including birds from nil
over Berks, Ijincnster and adjoining coun
ties, tho nnnunl exhibition of the Mohnton
Poultry nnd Pigeon Association opened hero
today, to continue Friday nnd Saturday. It
Is gcnernlly conceded to bo the best show In
tho history of the organization, this being
specially true of the pigeons.
READING, r., Nov. 30. At a meeting
of City Council today one bid. tho only ono
lecelved for the collection and disposal of
tho city's garbage, was opened. It was
that of tho Pennsylvania Sewerage and
Garbago Company, of Philadelphia, which
offered to erect a modern plant nt a cost
of $300,000, the city to have tha option of
buying It after five years, tho company to
dlsposo of tho garbago for the first flvo
years on n scale of prices ranging from
$53,100. tho first year, to $86,872 the fifth
year.
PHILADELPHIA MARKETS
Thanksgiving Day being a legal holiday,
the banks nnd trade exchanges aro closed
and wholesale trading In all lines Is sus
pended. In the absence of fresh In
formation on which to base reliable quota
tions, our usual report of tho markets Is
necessarily omitted.
Denounces Sensational Revivals
READING, Pa., Nov. 80. Several hun
dred Methodist Church workers, at a rally
In the Memorial Methodist Church of the
Holy Cross, here last night, heard Bishop
Josoph F. Berry, of Philadelphia, denounce
excitable revivals, tabernaclo campaigns
and other "wholesale soul-Bavlng methods
of trying to take people to God." Ho
expressed disbelief In the success of any
of these sensational means. Tho Rev. Dr.
John O, Wilson, of Philadelphia, district
superintendent: M. F. Landes, secretary ot
the State Sunday School Association, also
made addresses.
"We're Distinctive"
DIXON
Dependablo Tailor Service)
sinca Eighteen-Sixty-SIx
As w were about to ajr
Dlxon-Tsllorlng means that the
workmanship and the mate
rials are both excellent
Dlxon-Servlee means that you
will be pleased and satisfied
with the result.
83S $88
1111 Walnut Street
"We're Reasonable"
rOBIOJNAI, IDEAS IN
ELECTRICAL WORK
i
217 Walnut Street
TKt Flrtt Cott it tin Onus Coil.
Ready Money
United States Loan Society
117 North Broad St
sit S. 841 st, MM .WHanUM are.
I
W&M3&Z&g&
fl Alfred M. BloominciiaJo
fjgm
KATIIAUINA SCIIRAAT
INTIMATE OF EMPEROR
BARRED FROM HIS BIER
Frnu Kntrinrinn Schrntt, Com-
pnnion of Francis Joseph,
Gets $250,000 Legacy
LONDON. Nov. 30 How Krau Katha
rlna Schrnat. Kmperor Krans Josef's Inti
mate for nearly two-scoro years, and the
woman to whom ho wns credited with pour
InR out his sorrows, wns refused a Inst vlow
of tho man sho loved wns told In wireless
dlsp.itches received from Zurich today.
AccordlnK to tho report. Krau Schrnnt
drovo to Kchocnbrunn Pnlaco on tho morn
Ins; after the atted Kmperor died. Sho de
manded admittance to tho palace, nt which
during; the life of the ruler Bho wns an nl
most dally lsltor. nnd permission to tako
a last farewell of his body.
Court attendants admitted her to nn ante
room, whllo servants sotiRht to obtain the
now ruler's wishes ns to whether sho should
be admitted. Word finally camo back to
Krau Schraat that sho could not Bee tho
Kmperor's body, and she was urged to leave
at onco.
According; to dispatches today, the Km
poror's will leaves his companion and Inti
mate $250,000 tho samo amount loft ono
of his grandnleces.
$350,000 TO BE SOUGHT
FOR MT. SINAI HOSPITAL
Friends of Institution at Dinner Learn
of Cnnvns3 to Mnko Build
ing Improvements
A rmnpnlRn to rnlse jnr.0.000 for hulld
i.... n-i-.vrpii'iitM t" th" Mt Hlnnl IIor
pltal will bo Inaugurated In tho near futuro.
., n Linn m " h nmdi' lust ulKht nt
tho sixth annual dinner of tho Krlcnds of
.Mt. Sliml. an auxiliary of tho Institution,
by Joseph 'Weinman, a director ot tho hos
pital. Tho dinner, nttended by forty-six mom
bers. wns held In tho Hotel Adelphla nnd
wns presided over by J. J. Wolport, head
of tho society.
Mr Weinman nnnounced thnt Mr. Wol
pert had been chosen n member of tho
bonrd of directors. Joseph Oeffen. super
intendent of tho Mt. Slnal Hospital, nnd his
wlfo were nmnng tho guests of honor.
Thoso In chnrgo of tho dinner wero thn
Misses Mlncrvn Ilosenthal, chairman: T.n.
Slngerhutt, Cecelia Ilosenthal. Ilesslo
Wiener. Itose Debater, Stella Kaplin, Kll.
nbeth Lnrscman, Anna LtpHhutz. Nora
Nelnstln. Irene Llpshutz. Fanny Oxnian and
Cecilia Friend.
UNION SERVICES IN CAMDEN
Evangelist Lyon Preaches Collections
for City Charity
Camden's Thanksgiving began today
under n dripping gray sky.
Union Thanksgiving services of nil tho
evnngellatlo churches were held In the Lyon
Tabernacle, at Ninth street and Wright
avenue, at 10:80 o'clock. Instead of the
customary two union meetings In North
nnd South Camden. Tha Itev. Dr. Mllford
II. Lyon, the evangelist, preached on "Abil
ity and ItesponBlblllty."
At tho evening services, which will be
preceded by a Baored choral concert of 1200
voices, ho will preach on "Oratltude to
Ood." Collections at the two services will
be applied to the city charities, which In
oluds the Camden Home for Friendless
Children, tho West Jersey Orphanage and
the Mary J. Ball Home.
ijf
Retailers
Jottpb
Button
Educator
for Mittet
(Hl Shoes fl Z&Py
S mJf
FRANCIS JOSEPH
BORNE TO TOMB
Medieval Ceremonial of
Endless Formality Marks
Last; Funeral Procession
HIS TOMB IS THE 133D
Emperor Rests in Dingy Little
Church of Cnpuchin FnJLhcrs
Among His Ancestors
LONDON, Nov. 80. Crypt No. 188 In
the vault of the ago-darkened chapel of
the Capuchin fathers In Vienna holds the
mortal remains of tho latn Kmperor of
Austria-Hungary.
Dispatches from Vienna said reparations
for tho funeral of tho late monaroh were
completed with all tho regal show and
pomp of medieval custom that tho rigid
etiquette of the most formal court In the
world Rllpulntes
Tho funeral procession which bore the
body to tho grave, where ho Joins his an
cestors, started nt :30 from tho Hofburg
l'alaeo The Kmperor's last resting plnco
Is a short three blocks distant from tne
nnclent Hoflmrg Stnto l'alaeo, through
crooked, narrow streets. In some places
less than sixteen feet In width.
AN HNDLKSS Cnnr.MONIAL
nurlnl of a ruler In Vienna Is a cere
monial of almost endless formality and
pomp, riven the most mlnuto details ot
tho procession, of thn transfer tho body, ot
tho words spoken by every functionary.
Is part of a ritual perhaps centuries old.
Custom decreed that tho late Emperor
should lay In stnto In tho coldly formal
Hofburg palare, which abodo Frans Josef
In llfo detested, nnd that after a certain
number of hours tho body should be trans
ported. In specified fashion, to tho dingy
Utile church of tho Cnpuchin fathers, the
monks who for centuries havo been keepers
of tho Ilnpsburg ileait.
At 1 .10 tml.iy precisely tho deep-throated
tonrs of tho giant bell In the sT0-fnot
stooplo of .stoplmn'H Church, mingling with
scores of others, nnnounced termination of
formal ceremonial In tho Hofburg Angus
finer Church of "blessing tho Imperial
dead" nnd beginning ot tho march to tho
grave.
ICAIHnU COMI'nLLF.D TO LHAVD
In that procession wero representatives
of nil of Austria-Hungary's allies and ono
ot tho grcntcst gatherings ot royalty slnco
tho death of Queen Victoria, of Hnglnnd.
Ono notablo absentee was Kaiser William,
ot Germany, who left Vlonpa yesterday on
strict ordors from his physician. Tho Oor
inan Kmperor had a bad cold, but notwith
standing thnt, ho had como to tho Austrian
capital for tho funeral. Ills physicians,
however, nrdorcd that ho lcavo tho damp
clliunto nt onco.
Thcro wero half n dozen othor members
nf German royalty In Vlonna, however, and
Ciar Ferdinand of llulgnrln, tho Crown
I'rlnco Ilorla nnd I'rlnco Cyril, of that same
country; tho Turkish Crown 1'rinco, Wahid
lCdilln ; I'rlnco Alfonso do Uourboii of Aus
tria, Infnnta Dona Mnrla do los Nlcvca
nnd tho Crown 1'rlnco Oustav Adolf of
Sweden. These Joined In tho funeral pro
cession, with a resplendent guard of honor.
Custom decrees that tho most respondent
of nil ceremonies of tho burial of an Km
peror tako placo nt tho 100-year-old chapel
of tho Capuchins. Tho wnlls of this llttlo
church and the nltar were draped In solid
black In this ICgyptlnn gloom scorc.i ot
wax candles threw a dim, ghostly light
oor tho gloomy Interior. All tho rough
benches hiul been tnken out nnd nil the
notables wero required to stand. Accord
ing to tho Hapsburg custom, tho master of
ceremonies, resplendent In black, red nnd
gold, camo from tho sacrlstry as soon ns
tho procession moved anil acted as usner
to thoso seeking mlmlttnuco to tho tiny
chnpel. nrrnnglng them In nccordanco to
birth, rank nnd Mntlon In life. All theso
wero gnrhed In full court ceremonial dress,
with nil orderH and decorations worn.
As tho cortego ot tho dend Kmperor np
proached, drawn by eight black horses
(Franz Josef wns tho fourth dead cm
poror to bo carried In this anciont equipage),
detachments from ull tho Clunril regiments
formally gavo the last salute to their dead
Kmperor and drooped tho colors to his re
mains.
Insldo the church the ritual provided for
an entrance, nt tho moment the cortege
nrrlved at tho door, of cardlnnls, bishops
and other prelates. Archbishop Nngcl In tho
center nnd the Tnpal Nuncio nearby, all
garbed In white, gold, violet, nnd carmlno
yif the ceremonial church rohes.
V MEN'S TAILORS V
Cor. 13th and Sansora
Tailoring That's Distinctive
Suitings, Overcoat- tfor Cr-
in, to your order vsJ-fOU
Not tvtry broad-toed th4
it an Educator, Look
or thit mark on 10U,
If Your Feet Gould Talk
HPHEY would say "Those pointed, bone-bend-ingfashionable'
shoes you buy, give us corns,
bunions, fallen arches, callouses, ingrown nails.
Give us a thane. Put us into roomy, com
fortable, good-looking Educators that 'Let the
feet grow as they should!"'
Msde lor MErJ, WOMEN, CHILDREN
Start Iht whole fimily wearing Educators today. Let
Nature relieve you of your foot-ill. Let your children
grow up withtut auj foot-ill.
Uade by Rice & HutcMns, I no., 13 Men Street, Bottoa.
RICE & HUTCHINS
U Jb I J$ f
HOE
ELtt.V,. ru.ua.
can be supplied t wboleiat from
atock pa our floor.
L Moy Jo., lac. l'hUadlfi 1,
1910
City News in Brief
DlrLOStAS WRItr. AWAIUIBI) to thirty
flva nurses of the Hospital of the Univer
sity of Pennsylvania In Houston Hall last
night Tho Jlev. Craig T. .Tardumlan led
In prayer, and nn address waa given by
Dr. R. Tnlt McKonxle.
TWO flUKHTS AT thexweddln In ls0
of Mr. nnd Mrs. Henry Ilroomnll, 4815
Cedar avenue, will bo pnfsent nt their
golden wedding anniversary tonight Mr.
nnd Mra, Henry llroomall expect about 128
relatives and friends to be present.
Bin rtAnixnrtANATii TAoonn, nen-
gnll poot nnd winner of the Nobel prlte for
literature In 1911, denounced nationalism
In a lecture last night at tho Academy of
Muslo.
Titn rnif.Anni.PiUA niiArxr.R of the
Knights of Columbus observed Its twentieth
anniversary at a banquet In the 'Adelphla
Hotel last night. Supremo Grand Knight
Flaherty was toaMmnstcr.
A MAIL TOUCH WAfl RTOI.HN from
tho platform of tho Tarony station, nnd
taken to a field, where It was rifled. Pos
tal Inspectors are working on the case.
T1II3 roLICr ore aearrhlnr for the
driver of an automobile who knocked down
Samuel F. Sowden, llilrty-four yenrs old,
of 8415 North Nineteenth street, nt Oer-
manlown nnd Kris avenues. Sowden la In
the Samaritan Hospital suffering from n
fractured left leg and other Injuries
THTJ coitNm.I. and Wnlrerslty of Penn
sylvania musical clubs gave their annual
pre-Thanksglvlng concert last night In the
bnltroom of the rieltovue-Stratford. About
1200 persons wero present.
nATTKlir.n IIV A HAtT.OH and n elTll
tnn In n Chinese restnurant at 917 Itaco
street early today, Policeman Koegan, of
thn Kleventh and Winter streets mntlon.
required severnl stitches nt the Jefferson
Hospltnl Policemen Tyron nnd Ilellerhy
came to his assistance Tho men. Ivnn
Harris, ot the South Carolina, and Wnlter
lllhlebrnnd, ot New York, wero hctd undo
J 1 COO bnll each for court.
JANF! IlONNP.n, the elsteen-jrenr-old
victim of n Halloween stnbblng nflalr. dis
played n truo Thanksgiving spirit today
when she forgavo llfteen-year-old John
Murtlia, of 204R Klmlmll street, who
wounded her, and gavo thnnks that slio wns
nblo to spond tho day nt her homo, 204C
Carpontcr street, with her parents, nllvo
nnd rapidly recovering from her Injuries,
Jano Is tho daughtor of Nell Bonner, presi
dent of tho Nntlonnl llctnll Liquor Dealers' i
Association.
AllSTKO-HUNOAniANS In Philadelphia
attended solemn requiem masses today In
severnl churches In obsorvnnco ot tho
funeral of tho late Kmperor Francis Joseph.
The Austro-Hungnrlnn nnd German consuls
nnd tholr respectlvo stnffa nttended tho
services In tho Iluthcnlan-Grcolc Cathedral
of St. Mary of the Immnculnto Conception,
Franklin street above Ilrown. Father
Klnlsh. rector of tho chinch, celebrant ot
tho mass, was assisted by Fathers Ooryn
slty and Orun. Mass wns nlno eclobrnted In
St. Ann's Cathollo Church, Lnhlgh nvcnua
nnd Memphis street, nnd In other churches
whero tho congregations nre composed of
people from tho Austro-Hungnrlnn empire.
MORE PRIZES FOR MUMMERS
Councils' Commltteo Considers Greater
Awards for Marchers
Councils' Now Tear Commltteo la consid
ering n plan to spend tho better part of tho
J7000 approprlateii ror celebrating tho dawn
of tho New Year for prizes to bo awarded
tho mummers. No New Yenr's Kvo recep
tion will bo held In Mayor Smith's rccoptlon
room, nnd It Is plnmied to tako n part of
tho money usually spent on decorations to
Increase tho prlro money for mnrchlng
clubs.
I
r IS no longer necessary to pay $8 to $10 for shoes of
the highest type. Our Royal "Master Made" Shoes
arc a proof to the contrary.
Made on exclusive lasts, of the finest materials, by
America's best shoemakers, they are sold at our economy price
of $6. They're worth looking at, because no other shoe shop
lias ever been able to give such tremendously superior values
under $8 to $10. Every new style is here this week.
TOE ETOILi BT
UK jtIUf """JLfiA
IfPbli
SHOP;'- MEW
in. rn:n niiuks at iiasemkmt i'uioes
N. W. Cor. Market and 13th Streets
En franco on ltlh Nt.
' -
New York Now the
World's Art Center
An Interesting Article by Harvey Watts
on the Way America Is Capturing
Europe's Famous Works of Art
THE glory that was once Rome, then came
to Paris, then was n.( peculiar attribute to
London, has now parsed to New York.
The great Doctor Bode, of the Kaiser Fried
rich Museum of Berlin, says "the art education
of the European expert is now incomplete with
out a knowledge of the great American collec
tions. In Sunday's Public Ledger Harvey Watts
shows how the age of Lorenzo the Magnificent
is once more revived with an extravagance of
artistic possessions and a luxurious magnifi
cence of art life that Florence of the fifteenth
century never even dreamed of,
SUNDAY'S
PUBELCteAa. LEDGER
'
rtTiT nTrf1i"1r"
GERMAN PAPERS filTTB
AGAINST UNITED STATIW
Accuse. WHsdn of AUemptlnp; to Mak
U-Bont Wnrfftr
Impossible-
AMSTBnDAW, Nor. lOvAecusInS 3Pr
Ident Wilson of "nttemptins to mak sub
marine warfare Imposslbl" German news
papers rerelved here today eontilrt bitter
comment against America's "unnentrsJlty.'
They declare Germany intends following her
own chosen cours In submarine matters
despite cajolery nnoT'threata,
"Tha German people.4 saya the Cologris
Volkszeltung, "will decline to accept Wll
son as a mediator If he reopens the sub
marine question, Ho Is attempting to
make submarine warfare impossible. If ths
suhmarlne Issuo comes to focus again It
will not bo Germany which ha broken
pledges, hut America, for Ambassador
Gerard promised that America would keep
quiet It Germany fulfilled her promises.
This she haa done,"
."Germany will win tha -war desplts
America's tinnoutratlty," said ths Cologne:
Gar.otte. "Wo Intend to consult only our
own Interest respecting submarine warfare
and will not allow American threat or
flattery to Influence us."
Pollution Caso Trial Continued
wnLLSiiono, Pa., Nov. SO. Th cas
ngalnst tho I'roctor, Ellison A Co. officials)
for maintaining a nuisance by polluting
tho Cownncsque river with add and rot
use turned Into the stream from the plant
at nikland, hns been continued over ths
term by consent of counsel.
By the Author of
t
"The Blindness
of Virtue"
i
In his incidents our author
goes sometimes daringly far,
yet his frankness is ever hound
about with delicacy. Ho is us
ing the truth, not for exploita
tion, but in line with his pur
pose to make out his case by
something better than preach
ing and precept. His realism
is justified by his sincerity.
New York World.
THE SINS
OF THE
CHILDREN
BY
COSMO HAMILTON
AT ALL BOOKSELLERS
S52 pages $140 net
LITTLE, BROWN & CO., Bostoa
APPLIANCES
For Mechanical Pnrposts
L. D. BERGER GO., 59 N. 2d Street
UeUilarktt III. KtvitantUaln tll.
cfnnouncing tho
jfflMyL, Master Made
at
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