wr ' rH y XT IT, ?'' Hv; A W H ;' N - IV fe ATMS WOMEN W KU5H IU SERVICE f(Va fr Air! in Milif uiur iI I TiiiciJ-ii'ni ir;iir. : War Comes GIRL CATCHES RECRUITS NI2W YOniC March 29. Natlon-wldo reports today show the , women of the country oiTorltiR to sonc ns Blgn painters, factory Inspectors, ianl ttenogrnphcrs,, nurses, driiB clerks, cooKs, laundresses nml npythltiK elso they're heeded for. Hundred of patriotic women Imvo answered tho navy s call to tho colors, and thcr hundreds have answered In other branchf without belnjj called. Under sanction of Secretary Daniels, Mrs. Margaret M. CrumpacUor, widow of Federal Judge Crunipacker, of Indiana, and Mis. Charles Francis Hedell made nn nutp mobile speaking tour along Broadway tell ing crowds of men their duty, Mrs. Crum packer. Just back from tho French front, told what Frenchwomen have dono for their fighting men. Dozens of women have offered all or part of their tlmo as stenog raphers. Plans for a woman's big prcparodncis camp, on tho Chevy Chat-e Idea, were rapid ly being completed b.V Miss Alice Carpenter, who Js hacked by Mayor Mltchcl and will go to Washington today to discuss New Torlc women's preparedness plans with tho Government. , In Milwaukee forty-threo women hao applied for enlistment In the navy. .Mllwaukeo women havo organized a base hospital with fifty nurses and twenty-fho ftldn, large enough to caro for COO patients. The local Ked Cross has 172 now women students enrolled for service. San Francisco naval recruiting olllces re port 150 women applicants for enlistment. Several hundred women havo taken up couises In Hcd Cross nursing. Girl book keepers, accountants, nurses and stenog raphers by tho dozens havo offered their services. Hcd Cross training classes have been or ganized by tho St. Paul Y. W. C. A Among tho women applicants for navy Ber vlco was Miss Jean Bishop, who has two uncles In tho British army. University of Minnesota co-eds havo organized a Red Cross .class. Minneapolis women hao or ganized Red Cross classes and many women xhac npplled for naval service at the local rcciuiting office. A corps cf honor guaids has been or ganized by the women of Portland, Ore., s for homo defense. Twcnty-flvo women and girls havo offered their services to tho navy. A corps of women pledged to aid local enlistments of men has been put to work. Although no women have offered to en list in tho navy at Cleveland, they hao organized a complete Red Cross unit ready to inovo tho moment war Is declared. A call has been Issued for 10,000 moro Red j Cross lecruits In Ohio. V Tho National League for Women's Serv- . Ice, oigaulzcd In Columbus, O., a few days ago, has 150 members and Is growing. The local Red Cross has COO members now, and Is out after 20,000 more. Ono -woman has enlisted In the navy at Kansas, and four other applications are being considered. CIRLCALLED PLOTTER IN RIDER MURDER CASE Defendant Testifies in Mt. Holly Trial Implicates Millie Demanco MOUNT HOLLY, Mturcli 20. If tho defense being offered 7k the Rider murder caso today Is to bo believed, Giov anni Iraca. the accused man, had no con- nection with tho plans for tho crime and his being in tho vicinity of tho hold-up and murder was duo to a deep laid plot of Mlllio Demanco, the girl in Jail, Tony Rltzo, her uncle, employed on tho Rider bogs and LulggI Pinto, a friend, who had gone to tho bogs two days before the crime. On tho stand today Iraca said he boarded i with Mlllio and her mother In Philadelphia v at 1125 South Twelfth street. Ho had a brother, Tony, In Trenton. On October 3 ho and StlWo went to see tho brother to talk about buying a farm. At that time, ho said, Millie went along as a friend. Tho brother returned to Phila delphia with them and then tho Iracas went to Newfield, N. J, to see a faim that Tony Trocone had talked about to tho de fendant. When they returned Mlllio said she wanted to go to Atslon to seo her uncle, who had telephoned to her on October 3 at which tlmo Pinto was at Millie's house. Tho defendant said that both Mlllio nnd Pinto talked over tho phone. They arranged to go to Atslon, and Millie said If they got an early start sho might bo nblo to find a farm they wanted. She said she wanted to be thero by 6:30 In tho morning, and they left at 6 o'clock. In the car wero Millie, Frank Vassclla, Frank Ledonne, Joo Camara and the two Iracas. Camara had a bundle and It ap peared to contain clothes, but the 'defendant did not know what was In It. Millie gave the directions for tho entire trip, he said, When Atslon wan l cached she told Vassella and Ledonne, tho chauffeurs, whore to stop tho car. Camara and the Iracas left the car together, walked about a mllo until they camo to a road and sho toid the Iracas to wait thero until sho and Camara returned, which they did. Camara and Millie took that bundlo when they left him and his brother to await their . leturn. This statement gao tho lmpres elon that Camara and Mlllio were deliver ing the masks that tho bandlt3 doing tho hooting wore. Irnca declared his brother knew nothing about tho shooting. While they wero wait ing for Mlllio nr"I Camara to return they heard some shots fired, but could not tell the direction fiom which the sound had come. When Millie nnd Camara got back nnd wero nsked If they knew an j thing about the shooting, they said It was just dono to f lighten her uncle when tlipy had a llttlo trouble with him. Ho declared that ho knew nothing about tho Rider bogs, tho payday thero or anything else connected with the qrlme until Pinto, who returned to Philadelphia with them, said on tho night of October 5 that ho heard a man named IUder was killed near the place where their car had stopped during the day. . BRITISH PAPERS SEE NEW "PROVOCATION" OF U. S. German Holdings of Belgian Aid Workers for Four Weeks So y, Interpreted CONDON, March 29. British news papers commenting today upon tho report that Germany -Would aijk American relief workers In Belgium to postpone their de parture for four weekB for "military reasons" called this "another act of provo cation." The report Indicated that Ger many was prepared to use coercion If the Americans attempted to leave, beforo .the nd of tho' four weeks. v- .Thla move, It wan said, wan to, prevent PtlUUb'worWfrafiatkBOwtoKVot 0r- CITY WOMEN PLAN M0T0RB0AT KITS Philadelphia Preparedness Workers Organized as Red Cross Auxiliaries TO FURNISH FIRST VAID I'lilladelphla women, through the South eastern Chnj.tcr of the Red Cross, will co operate with the Government In supplying irst aid boxes and medicine chests for p-. "al 200 motorboati. nccoidlng to an nounecMic.it made today by Dr. Rlchaid II 'laitc, director of the chapter. v?.0it,,or.nnl,c Wls '" communication with nshinBtoii todn concerning the exact umber f chests and boxes which will be ,, , : ",ml W ,1,nt ho Pl 'ross ox- cots to hac 200 boats assigned to this i n.ipier. The first aid cases will contain bandages aim dressings. The medical cases will con. mm medicines for slight Illnesses, sore eves pnV.n ; f, '" nny ""tPtinal troubles, nc- --v.if, iv i-zuciur nunc. 1.-?' !lil,'e'Plla may bo made Into n urancu of tho Red Cross Instead of an aux lllry,Jf the request of the chairman, Mis t. L Jones of tho Satterleo apartments, Is laorably acted on at Washington head quarters. When tho Pennsylvania Women's Division Tor National Pieparedncrs became a p.ut of the American Red Cross and tho ten chapters automatically became auxiliaries of the Red Cioss, It was pointed out that' Vest I'lilladelphla has a population of per haps n half million, and that It would hardly bo practical to have It an auxiliary, but much better to hae It as a branch with other auxiliaries wciklng under It. ThO announcement nr fhn rlmncftm nf the preparedness chanters in !!ml r.rnt. auxiliaries made public today Is ns follows Philadelphia General Chanter. Mis. II. n. Coxe, chairman, becomes Auxiliary No. 1 i-cnnsyivanla Railroad Chapter, Mrs. George D. Dixon, chairman, becomes Aux lllary No. 2. Urquhart Chapter, Mrs. G. W. Urquhart, chairman, becomes Auxiliary No. 3. West Philadelphia Chanter. Mrs. C. H. Jones, chairman, becomes Auxiliary No. 4. Collego Women's Chapter, Mrs. George D. Feldt, chairman, becomes Auxiliary No. 5. Mrs. n. H. Leaf's Chapter of Colored Women becomes Auxiliary No. fi. Army and Navy Chapter of Germantown. with Mrs. V. II. Williams, chairman, be comes Auxiliary No. "i Mount Airy Chapter. Mrs. II H. Durrcll, chairman, becomes Auxiliary No. 8. , Drexel Riddle Chapter, Mrs C. P. Wynne, chairman, becomes Auxiliary No. 0. Chestnut Hill Chapter, Mrs. F. A. Pack ard, chairman, becomes Auxiliary No. 10. Kmphasls Is put on tho factothat there Is no charge for olunteer workers to aid with the Red Cross work. When a preparedness chapter becomes a part of the Red Cross It sends a dollar for each member and tho name of tho member and then tho women automatically become members of tho Amci lean Red Cross. All other money In tho treasury of the old chapter belongs to the respectlvo auxll- laiy to which It has been changed. This sounds ns though the money changes hands, but It does not. for tho chapter sim ply becomes an auxiliary, with the samo otllccrs and workers and holds Us own money, which does not go out of the treas ury at all. Elkton Marriage Licenses EMvTON, Mil., March 29. The following couples wero granted marriage licenses In Klkton today: Albert Hafer and Mamie Gibbons, 1 2d ward Thornton and lsabcllo Got man, James M. Wolff and Dorothy 13. Walker, all of Philadelphia ; lMward T. Miller and Mao Furcron, Butler, Pa. : Wil liam Corcoran and Sarah Scott, Wilming ton; CUudo Knglo' and Ruth Lachman, Reading: Reggie T. Ryder nnd Rose llar klns, Ardmore; Charles W. Keith, Newark, Do!., and Myrtlo P. Eklund, Prlnclplo Fur nace, Mil. ; Charles W. Molfett, liellwood, and Helen M. Kyer, Tyrone, Pa,; AIin lie. Gonlgal and Frances Connors, Wilming ton; Leon Relss nnd Adelaide Wllsey. Haz leton, and Ramond J. Basso and Miriam Feglcy, Reading. TODAY'S MARRIAGE LICENSES Albert Dlauort, 1232 Butler St.. nnd Mathilda Uelffen. 4024 Dexter st. John .Martin. New York city, nnd Mary Gormlcy, 2111 llrldee t. VashlnBton llrooks. 1157 Beach at , nnd Mamie HobertKon. 2111 TiUn M. Hnrdle K. (llrhi, Jr.. Qunrrvllp, Pa,, nnd Jlesile V Hammond, Lincoln UnUeraltv, r.i Nathan Ooodmaii. 1.141 N Franklin nt nnd Itoso rtoldhere. .1730 Catharln t Prank Klein, 10J" N (Ith t . nnd Jennie Schwartz. 240!) N. nth st. John V. O'Pnnnell, 3718 llaverfnrd ae nnd i;telln 13. Wertz. 37)3 Haverford ap Jnnien H. Core. 'W'ashlnKton, D. C" , nnd Pearl 11. Douay. Vv'nBhlnKton, D. C Aiel E. Johnson. 14'J2 Wds avenue, and Knth- erino Allmaras. 73 N. 13th st Jacob Walton, 1B21 John St., and Ida M, Hap- wood, 4821 James st. Frank I,eerlnB, 20JS N. 15th St., nnd Adelo F. Edmunds, 401.1 Baltimore ave. Samuel Cale. 3038 Wharton st,. and Elizabeth Black. 1C07 Tulip st Richard Blank. 123 S. 32d St., and Hilda Wolf. 3043 Tulip at. '.,.. . Claude K. Aborn. Cedar rtaplds, In., and Eliza beth M Mellrlde, 715 XV. ClearlleUI st Domenlto Harblefl, 7C Kater St.. and Carolina I.ucln, 703 Kuter st, Alsldney Gunn. 2031 Ton St., and Bessie I,n,non. 2411' Srruco st. William Bolardt, Jlryn Mawr. Pa., and Anna Hchoz. 1311 W Dauphin st. Maxwell Pollock, 434 Mooro St., nnd Jennlo Un p'Tweewy. Vwishart st and Dorothy II Askln 30BT N. Water st. Nathanlol Watklns. 1743 Cambrldgo St.. -and I'arrle Wells, 1S03 Toplar St. , Wliflam H Harrison. 1521 Christian at., and ItoseE Chapman. 010 H, 16th st. Rev l" Clark. 2425 N. 4th St.. and. Mario E. f'harles K Bupp. Oettjsburc. l C j" Kltzmlller. 1751)?. 16th st. John aLi. bS.V.fKS.V ' HinerK, -- '" ,,:,,,,,,,. t. nfl Mnhpl ""y-""'"' ' - and Margaret Vim enzorED'Ambrosoril4-. Wilder st, GlSse'ppIna Baetolo. 1145 Wilder st. and j Ready Money i United States Loan Society I I 117 North Broad St.' I 1 4H S. 6th gt. 2548 Ctrmantown Te. that protect ou full amaja. o"cry way. -Made In our own loft. .mutest canvas, at modest prices. F. VANDERHERCHEN'S SONS 7 North Water St., Phila. "At tho Sliit o the Hall" For 208 years we have milled Buhrstone Water-ground Whole Wheat Flour A s-lb tiackace delivered to you by ilili JnSr 25c. We also have Buckwheat Flour, Natural llron Rice. Breakfast and nfant Foods, containing every element tha Nature put Into 11? ;?: A.. bim n-hUk &i ir ,;; .V-wKr S i "NVpJ- IV vll I t&- R EVENING LEDGER-PHiLADfeLPHIA, 'MuESDa; iSiArgH 29,917 M NOW AN AMERICAN Otto II. Kahn, member of the bank ing firm of Kuhn, Locb & Co., has become u naturalized American citizen. Born in 'Germany, he cumc to this country in 1893, having pre viously become n naturalized British subject. NEW PHONE EXCHANGE BUILDING IN SHERWOOD Three-Story Structure, Costing $400,000, Will Be Ready Next Autumn A now cxclinngo bulldltiR for the Bell Telephone Company, to bo lnon as "Sher wood," will bo built on tho southeast cor ner of Klft y-se ptith nnd Chestnut streets. Construction, which will cost $l00,00n. In cluding nil equipment, has been started. U will bo ready for us next autumn. It win & I.clshton are the contractors. Handling of tho telephone traffic of West Philadelphia will be greatly facilitated by this new equipment Tho growth of the scrico In that section has been tremendous In recent years. The new building will bo "I" shaped, with a frontage of sixty feet on Chestnut street nnd 170 feet on Flfty seenth street. It will bo threo storlci, with basement, with provisions for an additional story and sldo and rear extensions. " In tho basement will bo tho battery, en glno and boiler rooms nnd cablo vault Terminal rooms, operatois' rest and lunch rooms and the operating room will occupy the reftt of the building. Want Better Street PaviiiR Huslness men's associations and lmpiove incut organizations In West Philadelphia nro preparing to press their demands upon Councils for better street paving In several localities. The Fifty-second and Market Streets Iiuslncss Men's Association will take mi tho matter of icpavlng Market street on tho south sldo from Forty-ninth to Fifty- third street. Tho reviving of Forty-eighth street below Chestnut and Fifty-ninth street above Cedar avenue also will be urged. Loses Both Legs; Dies at Hospital XOHIUSTOWX, Pa., March 29. Thomas J. Green, 1207 Mnikley street, Norrlstown, a Heading Hallway fireman, was struck by a train this morning in front of tho Main street station whllo he was hurry ing across the tracks to reach tho pay car t) get bis month's money. Hoth his legs weie cut off Cieen died tljls afternoon at tho Charity Hospital. piiiiiiiiiiiiii2iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii:iiiiiiiimntiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiui' IskYour Physician orDrup-ist About I Mountain 6 Valley Water For lirioht's Dliense. Ithcumos B llsm, Gout. Diabetes, etc. H I Sample it Free at A i I 718 CHESTNUT ST. HF Caff, ttrttr. phone. Head what it IQF a has done or VhUadetiihians. p rlioncH Walnut 34071 Main 451 g iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitJiiiiiiiiiifitiiiiiiiiiiiiitim,-, EVERY JOB on time every time that's how we deliver our GOOD PRINTING. Our spec ialty is commercial worji, in "arge or small lots, for .arge or small firms. No catalog jobs to delay others GET ACQUAIHTED.-aondfor prlco-llot, samples or estimates, by mail or repre sentative. Parcel post shipments to out-of-town customers. LOUIS FINK & SONS PRINTERS and STATIONERS 56 N. 7th St. (1st floor) Our HEWproceen gives emboseed or engrave! effect without platee or dies. Suitable for announcements, vnvltations, eto,--tuslneaa or social. Entire Company Will Participate AN OCCASION v . FRBKCH BOOK if You're Invited to Attend II T1IE II II HaveaHeart JJ WP art y at the Ij liotel Adelphia s. Thursday Nighty . After the yy; '? i. "aSSus: , i MRS. YARNALL BELIEVES SUSPECT IS MURDERER Negro in Custody "Looks Very Much Like Slayer," Says Widow A negio captured today In Ills homo at 1807 Ilnluhridge street Is believed by Mrs, Harold li Ynrnall to bo tho maiuwho shot nnd killed her husband In their homo, 8JU Pine (street, early Sunday evening. Tho man was taken beforo Mrs. Ynrnall, who Is confined to her bed by shock. "Ho looks very much Ukc tho muidcrcr," was all she would say. As soon ns she recovers from her pros tration she will go to City Unit nnd en deavor to make u inoto positive Identifica tion of the man. Funoinl services for Mr Ynrnall will be held this afternoon In the Chinch of tho Redeemer. In llrjn Mawr The services will bo conducted by the Ilev. Geoige Calveit Cf.irter, rector of the church, and the Hev. (leorgo Pomeroy Allen rector of St. Mary's Church, Ardmoici Mrs Ynrnall will tn deavor to attend tho services Clicumstnntlal evidence, the police say, points Btiongly to the latest cuspid in Imo case Knrly today Captain of Detective Tate received vvoid by telephono that u iii.m answering the description of the murderer was concealed In the Itatubrldgc street house Captain Tato sent Detectives Mc Dermott and Fischer out. nnd, posing ns health Inspectors, they gained entianco Into tho house. They found tho innu In bed. The detectives questioned the negro, who said he was suffering from grip nnd named a phvsleinti who was treating ilm "That man Isn't suffering fiom grip,' said tho physician upon being questioned. "He's suffering from some internal Injury which must have been caused by a fall or jump fiom n high place " The detectives aro Inclined to believe that the Ynrnall murderer Jumped from sonic high place or, even If he did vun out of tho door, was kicked violently by the man ho had shot, who was unusually powerful. Tho negro denied nny knowledgo of the crime and said ho had but recently como to this country from Jamaica and was em plnyed as a stevedore Hubert (illpln llrvln, son of Mrs. Ynr nall, was commissioned a second lieutenant In the army yesterday. Hrvln was a prl ?ate In tho First City Troop whllo It was on tho border with tho First Pennsylvania Cavalry. Ho took an examination for his commission nt (Jovernors Island early In tho month and passed. IIo will be sent to Fort Leavenworth. Heart Disease Kills Arsenal Employe Heait dlseaso Is believed to havo been the cause of the death this morning of John Martin, seventy vcars old, and for many ears a telepbono operator at the Schuyl kill Arsenal. Martin, who lived at 40.19 Chester avenue, fell to the street on his way to work this morning nnd was taken to the I'olycllnlc Hospital To Recover Coal From Culm Banks TAMAQUA, Pa., March 20 Tho Heading Company has started electing a wrtshery at Ncwklrk, a mllo west of town, whero It will In four weeks be ready to wash some of tb'e richest culm banks In tho anthracite field and which have been un disturbed for nearly forty years J. E. Caldwell & Co, Chestnut Juniper South Penn Scmar : SILVER itk ckina wi For Sherbet Brandj) Cordin Is Ramekins Excl xciusive ramps AT Greatly Reduced Prices A clearing of all lamps at almost The Horn 427-433 Oven Saturday Until rtie AUTOCAR "We operate eight motor trucks and the Autocar is the handiest , truck we have," says the Shanahan & Elliot Ice Cream Co., of Philadelphia. "It averages 50 to 60 miles a day and its remarkably short wheel base, for two tons nanacitv enables it to cet in and around the narrowest streets to make deliveries. We more this spring." ; '-' .i- iT WOMEN SEE SUFFRAGE BOOM IN BRITISH SHIFT Will U. S. Need War to Show Justice of Ballot QlaimsV Is Question By M'LISS Will tho Ameilcan man have to bo "shown"? Or will ho pioflt by tho situa tion In Hngland? Will tho American vvomun havo to wait for war to demonstrnto her capabilities of nillng the requirements of citizenship, nko her Hngllslt sisters? Or will the American man net now? Thcso questions and a few others, equally pertinent, aro bclng'nsked In 1'hlladclphla suffrage headquaiters today ns the result of the suffrage situation developed In tho Drlllsh House of Commons yestculay. In that debate all the old reactionaries, CN-l'icmler Asqulth, Honnr haw, Chancellor of tho Hxehcquer; Premier l.loyd Ceorge, Walter Hume Long, the Secretary for the Colonies, nnd the erstwhile greatest enemy of tho "Cause," all reversed their attltudo In regard to the enfranchisement of women, Mrs. ,T. 12 Owen Philips, nn Itngllsh vvoinnn In I'lilladelphla actively engaged ns an organizer In tho Pcniisvlvnnla Men's League, who did suffrago work In Hngl.md when Long and Asqulth weio the chief op ponents, was paitlcularly gratified at the developments. "It Is but tho logical outcome of evolu tion," she said, 'hut, of coutse, tho war helped the evolution along. It gave the militants a chance to do constiurtlve. In stead of destructive work They estab lished honieH for war babies Instead of smashing windows nnd throwing bombs. They took men's places In every lino of work. Xow, It Is to bo hoped from tho etpressloii of sentiment In the llouso of Commons jestcrdny they are to bo re warded "American women Miould have the vote now. They Miould not have to wait for a war to piovo themselves." In changing his position on the question of buffrage, Mr. Asqulth, who. In the old militant davs, .i tho prime taiget at which suffragettes threw their missiles, iorb.il and otherwise, taid: Tho fact that for thieo cnrs thero has been no recurrenco of the detest able campaign which had disfigured our public life, would m.iko It Imposlblo for any ono to say that In changing his position In reg.nd to stiff! ago ho and his assistants hail yielded to force what they had refused to yield to argument. With tho exception of the actual bear ing of atms In tho field, thero was hardly a i-civleo which had contributed to maintenance of tho cause of the Al llei In which women bad not been as active nnd efficient as men Wherever ono turned might be seen women who, without detriment to the prerogatives of their sex, wero per foimlng work which three years ago would havo been icgarded us falling exclusively within the province of men. After the war questions would arise with regard to women's labor func tions nnd nctlvltles In which tho women must have a voice. On Monday Mrs. J. o. Miller, as Penn or crystal Cockt a ils B o ui 1 1 o n Cafe Noir Finger Bowls en cost. & Brannen Mfg. Co. North Broad Street i od IKI rlmim Utitrilijaif'fiaiUW.irTaw-fpl)-? A Short Walk Along Automobile How. HANDIEST TRUCK THEY HAVE haye just bought a second Autocar and expeqtget t V) , - U'iiiri' " M - 'iiiiiFiiiilirvfilTiri 'nii I'll Hi sylvania's representative, will Join th uf fraglsts of the National Association In Washington, who are to be on hand at tho opening of tho special session of Congress to remind tho lawmakers of their bill, It Is cxpectod that Miss Jeunnetto Hankln, Montana's Congressvvomnn, will Introduce tho bill. Tho Intention of the suffragists Is merely to get tho bill reported out of com mittee nt this crucial time, It was said. WAN COMMITS SUICIDE AFTER SHOOTING WIFE Quarrels End When He Fires on Woman in Bed With Children After firing a fusillade of phots and wounding his wife, probably fatally, as Bho was lying In bed with threo children, Frank Schlfnnl, thirty-five years old, of 1120 South Thirteenth street, committed suicide shoitly before 6 o'clock this morning by shooting himself In the head Tho wife, Mrs. Lula Schlfnnl, was shot In the nbdomou, Sho rushed to tho street In her nightdress and collapsed nlmoft nt tho feet of Policemen Lawless and Oulda, of the Seventh nnd Carpenter streets sta tion. They sent her to tho Howard Hos pital. Physicians will opcrato today. According to tho police, Schlfnnl nnd his vvlfo have had several quarrels recently. Ho returned this morning nfter visiting his brother In York, Pa. Ho walked Into tho bedroom where his vvlfo was in brl with her threo small children. Another son, twelve jcars old, was asleep on a nearby couch. Scmfutil drew an automatic pistol and started filing. Only one shot took effect. Tho shooting threw tho neighborhood Into nn uproar. Schifanl's body was taken t6 the Morgue. Girl, Hurt in Auto Crash, Near Death IjANCASTKIt, Pa , March 29. Miss Kmnio. l.andis, the seventeen-) ear-old daughter of Jacob I.andls, Is blng nt the point of death from Injuries leccived by being thrown fiom an auto on the Hllzn bcthtown turnpike. The car wus driven by her brother, Warren I.andls, who lost control of It Boy Ihk Week Save $2.50to.$G.50 6oo people have already taken advan tage of our special March sale of4"Thor" Electric Clean ersprice with out attach ments, $22.50; price with at tachments, $26.50.. Special terms $2:50 atvtime:of pur chase balance . in monthly in stalments. On and. after April 1st, this "Thor" Cleaner, will sell for $25 with: attachments, $33. And, only during this- week wilt the easy payment terms u outlined y above apply. Be lure to plat t iour order this week if you want to take advan tage of I educed price ant tptc ialetiv payment tirme. Clean' er te on demonstration at the Electric Shot arut District) Office. , ZK? Philadelphia JT 7" Mi , , Vis ' AT -N ' .. ' Attentive ii Small thingi dtfntiAro itvi & Larg e! f. 'A . . 'M ts ine man wno Keepiu his desk clear, hisl ter file up to date, ti engagement pad Jlv'4 working order, is sur. ly going to get tn very best, when ifjS comes to picking tht' new Suit, the newfi Overcoat he will wear?.? in the "Easter Prom!1 enaae: M CI Haup linif cent- rminilw .w u &w . to thinking of wha you're going to wearj next Sunday or next'3 Sunday week? fJ We have everything; at Perry s ! Singlt breasted Suits witH1 vertical pockets, cres cent pockets, slanted outside patch pockets with .flaps, regular pockets; oeitea ana. pleated backs; belts all? the way round and bu&:;i toning in front dotti ble-breasters belted aU round, half belts oft tucked and pleajra, backs, plain backs, ana all the varieties of; iA' pockets. att ii ! 4 f rS "1 j aimuariy or opring1 Overcoats the n e'W Perry Trenchers in dif ferent models in bltlt trrnv. nlive tnn and nnv city mixtures, wltk. iridescence in t hit ,...., J-1 is.i snouiaer ana sieeve iwv ings- close- httingj . , . -....? uoats, loose-nmn Coats, conservatii " - J r Coats. 'Au 'i & rfAJVi ' f$ CI A nd thp. Perm F, . ii-W: Men wno were toia an believed they couldn' be fitted in ready-t wear clothes find out it's not so at Perry's Sizes cut oh stylUm lines for short, stewbyj iinncn all v nrnnnrJi ---.., rrn tioned, ana Dig men,io any length or girth. $ I And as for Value 1 the prices we c use superlatives, we'd rather you'aB to. match ours where, and do yp own deciding! J! m $15, $18, $2Q,.2M forSpnnjrSi spruiuvej 5 ,J ' ?'-s,-v VAUXI M .-! k ..-.st ZEm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers