T i ' I ' ' JiiiyBapBwfy-wn'jtWiri't ".''T""jgTgj.? JL EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPniA, MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1917 w MISS ALEXANDER DEAD; AUTHOR AND ARTIST American Woman Eminent in Italian Literature and Friend , of Ruskin News of the death of Miss Kranccsca Qrny AlPTnmler, nn eminent American Itntlnn nilthor, of Florence, Italy, was re ceived today by her cousin, William Gray ilroolci, 2B7 Sotith Twcnty-llrst street. She died January 22, nt tho nco ot more than eighty yearn. Mlsa Alexander, whoso literary nnd arlh tic production) won nrnlso from the Brent rrltli' John IlusUIn, was horn In Hoaton, tho dnttBhter of Frnnrls Aloxander, tho famoui palnjcr. Her Brent-grandfather was Wil liam dray, of lloston, an American mer chant prince of his tlmo. Her mother was Lucia Uruy Suott Alexander, who from her lnrgo estate established a fund for tho support of forty reduced noblo families of Italy After upending pnrt of her childhood In lloston nnd Philadelphia, Mis1) Alexander pwent to Itnly, whero she lived slxty-Ilve years until her death. Sho was tho author of "SVajsldo Hongs ot Tuscany," "II I,lliro d'Oio," "Tho Story ot Santa Zlta" nnd tho pathetic story "Ida " Sho translated sev eral volumes of Italian folk-songs, Illus trating them with her own pen-and-ink sketches llusMn wroto Introductions to her works. Miss Alexander left nn estato valued at 8ocral million dollars. Her salon nt Flor ence; wna a plnco of assembly fort prom inent literary men nnd women nnd Italian nobility. GIRL ENDS HER LIFE AFTER LOVE QUARREL 17-Year-Old Cashier Shoots Her self Following Meeting With Youth WOMEN'S HAT VALUES -TO BE STATED IN EGGS Visca, From Which Brni(l,Is Made, to Do Traded for Hon Fruit CHICAGO, Jan. 2D How many eggs will milady's new spring hat cost? AJ though eggs aro not legal tender, millinery prlros actually will bo bated on wir-tlmo egg value?, nccordlng to W. C. Schmlogol, who has just returned fiom a trip nbroad. "Vlsia braid will bo used for expensive huts as well ns thoso of medium price," ho fatd today. "VIsc.i Is mado successfully only In Geimany. Tho raw material la be ing sent to Switzerland In echango for ggs and butter ho thn prlco of millinery may bo computed In eggs." PIANO MAKATHON PLANNED Baltimoro Man Challenges Champion to Long-Distance Contest Arrangements aro being mado for a long dlstnnco piano-playing contest for tho championship of tho United Slates between "Larry" Huntington, of Philadelphia, pres ent holder ot tho title, nnd Catnlllo Baucla, of Baltimore. It Is planned tn s,tngo tho marathon cither nt tho Academy of Musla In this city or In JIndlson Square Garden. New York. SldO bets probably will bo mado for either $500 or $1000 a hide. Baucla, tho challenger, Is expected In this city lato this nfternoon to discuss details of tho inntch. Ho has n record of fifty-ono hours. Huntington's lecord Is sixty-flvo hours fourteen minutes of continuous playing- Baltimore Man's Son Killed at Front BALTIMOlti:. Jnn. 20. H. C Wingnto, a member of ho police force hero, has been notified (by tho British Embassy that his son, Frederick II. Wlngate, bervlng with tho Twelfth Canadian Mounted nines in Franco, has been reported killed. Police Court Chronicle Friendship Is nil right if it ibn't mled with too much liquid. Thomas Gallagher, of Bristol, can attest to this. Tom formerly lled in Itlclunond. Ho ictiiriicd there to greet his old friends and tell them about his prosperity ns a farmer. Gallagher had no sooner struck tho neighborhood of Front and Clearfield streets than ho was surrounded by many of hispid clonics. Somehow or other Tom couldn't explain It ho found himself leaning frequently against mahogany bars nnd staring at what ho thought was himsolf in a big mir ror. This period ot happiness lasted for several hours. Then Gallagher realized that ho was Blttlnii In tho middle of a car track; also that his friends and his money wcro gone. A policeman piloted him to tho Bclgrado and Clearfield streets station. Thero Gallagher enmo faco to faco with Wnglstrato Doltz. "It's too bad," tho Judso declared, "that you cannot return and meet your frlend3 without getting diunk and spending all your money. You can seo that it doesn't pay. Your friends and your money havo gone." "Yes, I guess there's nothing to it," said Tom "Whero will you go If I dlscharga you?" asked tho Judga. ' "Straight to Bristol," replied the prls. onor, with an air of determination. "Go!" said tho Judge. Half an hour nftor seventeen-year-old Lenora Miller bid seventeen-year-old Miller Nccger good night sho shot herself In tho left breast w'th her brother's revolver nt her homo, GS10 lilngsesslng avenue, dying early today at tho University Hospital with out regaining consciousness. It was a lov ers' quarrel. Tho girl nttended a Christian Endeavor Society meeting at tho Woodland Avenue United Presbyterian Church last night with young Is'ctger, who lives nt 0G0G Woodland nvenue On tho way homo, nccordlng to N'ceger's story, they quarreled, and at her door tho girl returned a ring which ho had given her to wear. Half an hour mter tho Milter family was startled by tho report of a revolver. Tho police of tho Sixty-fifth street and Wood land avenuo station wcro summoned nnd tho girl wns hurried to tho hospital. Sho died without mnklng n statement to De tectives Prlnz .nnd Qulglcy, who were put on tho case. Miss Miller was a depart ment storo cashier. Imaginary parties nnd Imaginary admir ers, which tho girl Invented to arouse Neeger's Jealousy and retain his affections, aro believed to have been responslbto for tho quarrel that ended In tho shooting "I cannot believe that my daughter shot herself Intentionally, said Mrs. Margaret Miller, tho girl's mother. "Sho always was full of life. Sho must hao picked up tho revolver Impulsively without a real Inten tion to kill herself. They had quarreled before, nnd I bco no rcnBou why this dis agreement should havo been more serious than the others." N'eeger, who Is a Pennsylvania Railroad clork, wns questioned by City Hall do tcctUcs today. SHOOTS FOR REFLECTION UPON WIFE'S LOYALTY MEN SUFFRAGE WORKERS WON'T DO PICKET DUTY Sextet Offered by Ryerson W. Jen nings Reply "Nothing Doing" to Proposition If Ityorion W. Jennings desires to hit the dit3ty uffrago trail for tho White House and picket duty, he'll go It nlono without tho sextet of suffragists ho expected In a letter to tho Congressional Union, tho organization conducting tho task of fencing President Wilson In tho White Houso with a thatch of feminine pickets, tho noted restaurateur said that not only would ho himself stand Bentlnet with a banner on Pennsylvania avenuo. but he could vouch for s'x colleagues In tho Penn sylvania Men's I.cngtlo for Woman Suf frage who would do likewise. Tho unanimous nnd chorused reply from Avenges Sicilian Insult by Riddling Slanderer With Bullets P1TTSTON-. Ta., Jan. 20. When Augus tlno Schandro, nged thlrty-threo, of Hughostown, raised two fingers ot his right hand to express tho Sicilian symbol of tho Insult. "Your wifo is unfaithful," Angolo Corfeno hastened to nvengo tho Insult by shooting Schandro through tho heart. Tho shooting occurred Inst night on Pnrsonngs street, Hughestown Dozoii3 witnessed tho tragedy. Chief of Pollco .Too Tavlgllono was standing 150 foot awny and saw tho first shot fired. By tho tlmo ho had reached tho sceno. pounced upon tho slayer nnd snatched away tho re oler, throo other shots had been fired, polnthlank, Into tho victim's body, killing him Instantly. Corfeno offored no resistance. Ho has a wife and flvo children. , You can get butter insurance just as well as health in surance, and many times they both mean tho samo thing. Tho few extra pen nies you pay for MERIDALE BUTTER are really paid for butter insurance. You nrc guaran teed a full pound of pure, fresh but ter, mado from pasteurized cream atourownsanitary creamery. No hand touches this "uncommonly good but ter" cither in tho mak ing or in its quick trip to your table. AYER & McKINNEY raSic? ri.lladelpl.ia Dell Phone, Market 3741 Keystone Phone, Main 1783 look for tlie"Mcrlfotl" Krappcralr-ttcht, dust-and odor-proof at your croccrs. KS tho sextet, reduced to plain language, wns "nothing- doing," Herbert Mllllken, one of tho sextet, went further than his col leagues, Herbert Welsh, Wllmer Atkinson, Uenry Justice, Frank Stephens nnd Carl H. Grammer. nnd denounced Ityerson W. for saying that President Wilson had treated suffrage In "weasel words" "Colonel rtooso elt Is a master of the word 'but' and Mr. Jennings Is nn admirer of tho Colonel I do not think President Wilson could bo compared with the Colonel In tho Use of such weasel weirds as 'hut.' " "aid Mr. Mllllken. So It Is that Ityerson W. Jennings would have a bodyguard of six men to aid him In picketing tho Whlto House, whenco come tlm "weasel words," but WHISKY NEARLY KILLS BABY Two-Year-Old Girl Finds Bottle in Gup board A two-year-old girl Is recovering In St. Agnes Hospital nfter swallowing n. quantity of whisky. She Is Winifred Conley, of 1829 Slgel street. The llltto girl wns taken to tho hospital In nn unconscious condition and for a time tho physicians feared she would die Mrs, Annie Conley, thirty-seven years old, tho mother, was nrrested, but was relensed after she had testified that Winifred, nftor n birthday party, had been found uncon scious on the floor. It Is believed the little girl obtained tho whisky from a cupboard. fiwf 4-(PR0N0UNCED GYTINO) 1 The Stores of Famous Shoes. a ANNOUNCE theIr Semi-Annual Shoe Clearance Beginning Today, Jan. 29 Featuring very xcoptional I bargains in shoes for men, I women and children. In view of the ever-advancing I leather market, tho salo' this season is particularly I important. ' 1230 MARKET STREET (Shoca&Stockinra for the Family) 19 SOUTH 11TH STREET (A Quick Service Men's Shop) irym way is easy loci . lIu "lu ( L ' 'J.J..,.1., I u m.. llW - w ear your s tkinwitK .Resinol Soap Bathe your face for several min utes with Rcsinol Soap and warm water, working tho creamy 'lather into tho skin gently with tho finger tips. Then wash off with moro Rcsinol Soap and warm water, fin ishing with a dash of clear coid water to close tho potcs. Do this once or twice a day, and you will bo astonished how quickly the healing, antiseptic Rcsinol medi cation soothes and cleanses the pores, lessens tho tendency, to pimples, and leaves tho complexion clear, fresh nnd velvety. If tho skin is in bad condition through neglect or im proper treatment, apply a littlo Rcsinol Ointment nnd let it remain on ten minutes before tho final wash ing with Rcsinol Soap. Keslnol Sosp contains no harsh. In jurious alkali, and Is not artificially col ored. Its rich brown being entirely duo to the Itpslnot balsams In It Sold by nil diugglsts nnd dealers In toilet goods. Phyiicians have prescribed Rcsinol Ointment for over twenty years in the treatmentof skin and scalf affections PMLADEtPHIA, Special Sale' The disposal of odd pieces at ex lieme)y kwprices The Inise flat Heooe built FOUNDED IN 1S65 ADOPTED ONE-PRICE SYSTEM IN 1S81 C. J. Heppe & Son 1 117-1119 Chestnut Street 6th and Thompson Streets SPECIAL Unusual Values in Used Pianos Largest Assortment in years We have over 100 used pianos now on sale. Every one of these instruments has been thoroughly over hauled and put in first class condition. These pianos are guaranteed' and exchangeable at full value any time within one year for a Heppe three t sounding-board piano or one of the genuine Pianolas. Prices on use d pianos range from 50 up. Terms cash or charge account, or rental-payment plan. New Pianos No tone like the Heppe tone Heppe pianos every day prove their supe riority over other up right pianos. The three-sounding -board patent gives to Heppe pianos that tone which m a k e s the grand piano the in strument most prefer red for concerts. In sounding-board con struction the Heppe stands alone. - HEPPE PIANOS Heppe $365 up Marcellus ,,. 325 Edouard Jules 315 Francesca . . . 275 up The erenuine will teach your children good music The Pianola actually teaches. Its teaching is simple; so simple that children can easily understand it. The Mctroslyle device actually gives you the composer's expression. His melody and accents arc played by the Themodist. Every interpretation of the composer is possible on the Pianola, Many world-prominent music teachers are using the Pianola in the education of their pupils, and even their own children. Hundreds of schools, uni versities and conservatories are using these Aeolian made instruments in connection with their instruc tion. To hear the Pianola is to know why these great authorities choose it above all others. The Pianola may be secured in Philadelphia at a price no greater than that asked for "imitations." The Aeolian Family of the player-piano world is on sale at Heppe's and includes Steinway Pianola $1250 Weber Pianola $1000 Wheelock Pianola , $750 Stroud Pianola., $600 Francesca-JIeppe Player Pianos $450 Aeolian Player-Pianos.., $395 Write for catalogues Bronzes Leather Lamps Porcelains Furniture Novelties Objects ofArt Three Monday January twenty-ninth j-v Tticsdaj: January thirtieth - y WedrLesdatfJamiatMrtjrst THEBADPtBANIiS SBIDDLE Philadelphia SJ:SROBINSON Cc CRAWFORD5 NX B '. V' ' .f a "''-. t-J "- . -lTP .. v . v , -..jks-" -.. n&v& vswiR isinirmmrare3!ia vj tj- rwr wimiw . -."j"-"" "w s ymi OUR 36th ANNIVERSAR TEA and COFFEE SALE Today, tomorrow and Wednesday we will continue Our Great Anni versary Tea and Coffee Sale. Pleasant memories will remain with those who have taken advantage of it. Yes, this event will be remembered by thousands of thrifty housekeepers, who appreciate the exceptional values of our Teas and Coffees and have learned that it pays to buy Tea & Coffee "WHERE QUALITY COUNTS" c lb. 45c GOLD SEAL TEA It 39 23c Vz lb. Pkg., 20c 12c 4 lb. Pkg., 10c Every lover of good Tea should buy "Gold Seal" at Our Stores, and now. It is carefully selected from the finest Teas grown, has the quality and flavor of Tea usually sold in many stores at 80c to $1 the pound. You should buy "Gold Seal" Tea now, because at our Anniversary Sale Price it is out-of-the-ordinary value. We have your favorite kind Black, Mixed 'or Assam. 29c KAMELIATEA25clb. 15c V2 lb. Pkg., 13c 8c V4 lb. Pk-., 7c Our Kamelia is a Tea of remarkably good flavor and quality at a very low price. If you have not already tried Kamelia Tea, we advise you to do so while this special price lasts. You can have your choice of Black, Mixed or a very fragrant Old Country Assam. 30 C K. Sc U. tSEJl BLEND COFFEE S.27 .lb. If your Coffee taste is critical, try our E. & C. Best Blend. It com prises the highest grade Coffees grown, and pleases the most particular people whose taste is most exacting. It is exceptional value at its regular price, 30c, and a big bargain at this special anniversary price, 27c the pound. 20cKSD COFFEE It lb. Robford Blend is a Coffee of excellent quality and flavor. It is the most popular 20c Coffee sold in this city, and has won its reputation strictly on its merits. If you have not already tried it, now is your oppor tunity at this special price. Whether it is Tea, Coffee, Butter, Eggs, Canned Goods, Dried Fruits. Cereals or anything in the grocery line, it will pay you to come to any of jur oiurcs iuc cvciymifig jruu i&jui.v. Robinson & Crawford The Stores Where Quality Counts Throughout the City and Suburbs t i.fcfii ! 4WtiiTnrf The Evening Ledger will pay $100 in gold for the best criti cisms of its women's pages. There will be three prizes: $ 2edPrlze9 $30 3rd Prlzef $20 In addition to the prize-winning criticisms, the Evening Ledger will publish such letters as display merit and pay for the same at regular space rates. The decision of the editors of the Evening Ledger will be final. The awards and publication of the criticisms will be determined solely on the value of the ideas submitted. Literary merit and fine writing will have no weight in determining the winning letters. The ideas may be constructive, or in the form of criticism of the features of the Evening Ledger's present Women's pages. The purpose of the competition is to learn the views of Evening Ledger women readers. Do you like the Women's Exchange? Do you think the Evening Ledger should conduct a Pure Food Depart ment? Do the Women's pages give enough attention to education? Ought there to be more frequent articles on health? Tell us. Speak right out in meeting, and let us know what you think. The Evening Ledger invites your criticisms, because it knows their value. Evening Ledger readers have from the very first issue of the paper offered many valuable suggestions. That is one reason why the Evening Ledger has made and continues to make rapid progress. Address letters to "Women's Editor," Evening Ledger, 606 Chestnut Street. No answer mailed after midnight of Saturday, February 17, will be consid ered. Announcement of the awards will be made Saturday, February 24. I Hj Etitting iHBdger NOTE Commencing today the Evening Ledger," together with all Philadelphia newspaper, will be 2c per copy, """ ,-' v ;'ssgiKy-, r r I i. I Mill J, III i J! fTl''TliiTBfnMi1f111TViiiiiiliTlfTitriTITlYVifhif J'fltHiilE'M ) m