i.t i, ill' RED CROSS BALL PLANNED AT ATLANTIC gcashbre Fashionables Hope to Raise $3000 at Affair on Garden Pier ' V ATLANTIC CITT, Jun 21. V...hore fashionables nre planning to I f3000 for the American ned Cross as " ' ,it of one of the most unique balls W .. . ,kl. Mtv It Is in Via plvn rir held in v" -- ! , J on the Garden Tier. A leading " hire "111 be a series of folk dances of ' tiopg allied with tha United States In the the tit r' aiuiij w - ' - dances and rnkewnlk. which W?,?a with the Seminole Indians of EH ii. will be Interpreted by girls from L.-JJ. will D" UHCil'tcu wj bi" ..,. -lilsea and Ventnor cottage colony, IM VV, h eneh nth or In neefeet. IM ..I vying with each other In perfect M T,.:..!vm In the art of dancing M '"IT"1 i onesses for the dance will be announced rZ'. Atlantic City Country Club In also T.nmr to do Its bit for tho Her Cross !fftMln(t a tournament on the Fourth of ', under the auspices of the United ' . . r.nlf Association The last tournn Bt? netted the club J250 for the Red Cross '! , the club at Northfleld. Including a Sh championship, and later across-coun- The links are being newly mled and several extra bunkers are be. at In The latest alterations are mak- f holes 'more dinicult and many pitfalls .H made for tho unwary. Scores of 76 ft! ow considered good cards The Atlantic City Yacht Club and the r rtilsea Yacht Club are nlso arranging to 4M i the B"1 Cross by navlnB a serles of itirtalnments. Including yachting parties, i which the women will pass their time vnlttlng for the soldiers. As soon as hot Either arrives bridge parties aboard ship t .in he a salient feature of life at tho shore, i umtier of owners having pledged tho use i J .heir craft for raising war funds In this i -he first big race of the season will be i h,1(i 0n July 7. when tho two shore yacht L' tlubs wl" entertain together at tho Atlantic ' City Yacht Club In honor of visiting yachts- hen from the South Jersey seaside resorts. o?0 elaborate affairs are scheduled for July jv'owlng to the fact that tho city Is going ' to have a spectacular patriotic rally on that ccculon, a feature of which will be a stride of all youths of conscription age ' in th city Eery organization In the re- ' Sort will be represented In this patriotic ' demonstration to show that the nation's rlmround Is united in upholding the boys who may be called to tho colors. Bathing rtrU, representing the thirteen original Stain, are to have a part In the celebra- .' Hon. ijohn McOlynn and family have leased the cottage at 105 South Oakland avenue for he summer and will arrhe In a few days. Mr and Mrs J. D. Henderson entertained 1 supper party at the Shelburne, wheio Judge John H rattcrson and Mrs, Patter ion were also hosts. George Broadhurst Is here for a month, working on a new play. Some of his most notod successes. Including "Paid In Full," were written here George Arlls also finds the sea air conducive to literary work. He ,ind Mrs Arlisa hao taken an apartment tt Delaware and Pacific uvenues. i Mr and Mrs George W. Shlsler have opened their cottage, 38 South Plaza place, Chelsea Mr. and Mrs John Laughran, Jr., are oc cupying their summer home on North Carolina avenue, i "' Senator Clarence Wolf, of North Broad n street,' Philadelphia, has opened his cottage, , 112 Kingston avenue. Mr and Mrs. Leslie Walker have as their ' guests Mr and Mrs. Charles C. Alen, of " 4912 locust street, Philadelphia, nt their Chelsea home Commodore and Mrs. William F. Metzger will give their annual dance at the Chelsea lacht Club, Saturday evening, which Will mark the opening of the Saturday dances at the club. A large charity danee will be given at tho Hotel Ostend Saturday evening, Juno 30. for the benefit of the Seaside Home for In valid Children. The patronesses are Mrs. Harry Bacharach, Mrs. Silas Shoemaker, Mrs. George A. Bourgeois, Mrs. Leo S. Conway, Mrs Charles Y. Goodfellow and Mrs. Jacob Welkel, assisted by Miss Ber tha Goodfellow. Miss Katherlne Moore, Mlts Mabel Klrkpatrlck, Miss Blanche lates and Miss Evelyn Brown. Henry C Schmidt and family are occupy ing their cottage at Chelsea and Pacific avenues. , Members of the Lafayette Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will tew for the Bed Cross every Wednesday throughout the summer. MAN KILLS WIFE, TWO ' CHILDREN AND HIMSELF Quarrel Over Money Matters Be tween Husband and Wife Results in Tragedy NEW YORK. June 21. Richard Barrett, forty-one years old, a tatlonary engineer and well known as an amateur boxer, shot and killed his wife, Mary Barrett, thirty-nine years olJ; his on Kilton, four, and his baby, flonald, eighteen months old, today, and then 'com mitted suicide by slashing his throat with a rator He had quarreled with hla wife Over money matters. The crime was committed at the Barrett tome, 450 Grant avenue, Brooklyn. Bar rett had been on strike for several weeks M his wife had complained that she lacked S?Se5r.J feed the fan'"- Helen, Bar rett s thirteen-year-old daughter, and John, ,r,ton' n,ne 'ears oId- who slept In n adjoining room, were not molested. AMERICAN BATTLES FIVE GERMANS IN AIR, ESCAPES Corporal Bigelow, .Attacked While Photographing Enemy Positions, Gets Back Safely tJRIS' June 21 -Advices from the front m.vv ?etalls ' thrilling air battle In ar ?'e?,Crp6raI Stephen Blgelow, of Boston, part tha Lafayette'Escadrllle, took MeSL'-i" w" Photographing German post "tori J&1. attacked by five German avl en. I', .Vth01" hesitation Blgelow engaged CW.i he.machlnes while the-jhrapnel from BbTVL igh anRle 8Uns rattled around IlnT. A," A1mlcan Bt back t the French ! thouKh his machine was badly dam- MASSEUR REPORTED MISSING pk C. Holton, Patronized by Promi nent Men, Vanishes', leelHli,appearanC8 of Park C- IJolton, an wa. VlJ ' lmaseur. well known about town, Hedi t0 tha Detectv Bureau today. i ti.ir... ' ."u "ii"eni among nis patients fcn. I r Weaver a"l other prominent per- llrS"01 Been seen y hU family Hub , ' "'sni, wnen ne leu his home. dbVrrUh twt. to answer a- call. Ills atfi$aranca can be attributed to rb cause. atrWf 1 D- s- Clements. 723 Chestnut t !i.hl hrotber-ln-law. Mrs. Hoton ar i,,' 0lay' rrom their summer Ipme at Wabani Md, to help ,n the :h (pr her ITaI. ' .... j ,V , ? lett home about 7;30 o'cIocHTues- tere. if -ana telPhoned his son Lapnard joiii "t'a iaior mai ne wouia spera tne Kgt with a Mr Brown at St DavldsV who irejiiniani n im wniinn tMu- 'veld. S fn JO Inches Ull,l(h PASSION FOR HELPING UNDER DOG BROUGHT FAME TO MRS. HUMISTON ? s iff r sf 3 k"?! H I Woman Lawyer Who Solved Ruth Cruger Mys tery Determined to Find More Missing Young Women By NEW YOBK. June 81. Once more a woman has turned the trick. The Police Department of New York city fnllcd to solve the mystery of the missing sevcnten-year-old Ruth Cruger, who dlsap pcared last February. Mrs. Grace Humiston. "attorney-at-law," to quote the modest lettering on her office door at 50 East Forty-second street, after months of quiet, persistent work of a sort that women are not credited with doing, unearthed the mutilated body of the girl In tho cellar of Alfredo Cocchl's bicycle shop, the proprietor having skipped to Italy. With nil tho avenues of Information at Its command, with its hundreds of stool pigeons and Its resources of untold power, the Police Department "fell down on tho Job" and faces an Investigation for negli gence. With only one hired detective nnd with severely limited funds, a mero woman "pro duced The" name of this woman lawyer Is on every lip, where nowspapers are read. Rat tnllons of photographers, reporters, tvndl cat men and motion-picture people haunt her ofllco and surround her home, which Is down In Washington square. White-faced clients by the dozens, having read of her skill and pluck, hang around tho corridors of her oflir In the hope of getting in a word about .lielr cases. Success and fame are hers, a glittering personal success and fame that Is given to few to achieve. And yet all that Mrs. Humiston asks Is the time and opportunity and quiet necessary for the Investigation of cases of missing girls similar to that of Ruth Cruger. As I sat opposite this plucky woman lawyer at a table In an Inconspicuous little eating placo around the corner from her otllce, It didn't seem possible that one of such reserved, dignified "lady-like" de meanor could be the same who, surmount ing th hundred and one obstacles placed In her way by a prejudiced or merely stupid which It Is, remains yet to be estab lished police force, went, unarmed and un afraid, into dens and dives that would give pause to the hardiest criminal detective. "Everybody says the crooks will 'get" me." Her generous mouth widened Into a smile and her nervous brown eyes played here there and everywhere. "Well, 1'vo thought of that. I know enough about this city and the life that is lived In the underworld to know that It Is quite possible. But what of It? I'd just as lief be 'got that way as die some other way. At any rate I'd be doing what I thought I ought to be doing and thero'd be soma satisfaction In being 'got' like that." Talking to Mrs. Humiston, you understand why she succeeded where others failed. Suc cess In a case like this was an Ideal, a zealous passion, with her. Helping tho under dog is her hobby. If money and fame are Incidental to tho pursuance of It, well and good, but they will never bo anything but Incidental. Were It not for the odium that has attached to the word "upllfter." due to the vague efforts of certain Ineffectual creatures to do good In the world, I should call Mrs, Humiston an "upllfter," because In so far as the dominant motive of her work is a desire to make the world a better place to live in, she is that. But her methods ara the common-sense, practical ones that few professional upltfters over employ. "I don't care anything for money," Mrs. Humiston told me, "except that It will help me with the work that I am planning, which is to set In motion Investigations that will bring to light the fearful white slave condl tlons In big cities like New York, Philadel phia and Chicago. That's all that I want money for. "In the beginning of my legal career my work lay chiefly among people who could afford to pay me nothing. In fact, that's the reason why I'm a lawyer today, because after years of Investigation yes, I've been an Investigator and was employed by the Department of Justice fof a number of vears I decided that for a woman who couldn't cure her desire to help the down trodden ft course In law was absolutely es- ""But I want to tell you tnat when I take a fee at all It Is a man's sized one. I don't believe that there Is such a thing as wom en's work. Work Is work. I am a woman and I never forget It and I never want the men with whom I work to forgeMtjpit I expect to be paid according to rrjeyps and not according to my sex." Mrs. Humiston Is not a suffragist, that Is to say. not an active one, because she believes the question of woman's enfran chisement to be a minor one considered In the light of such larger Issues as feminism j but prior to the death of Mrs. Ine Mil holland Bolssevaln the two women lawyers were planning to go into partnership. "Inei liked the court work and she Was rood at It. but It has always embarrassed me to go Into codrt where there are so many man," Mr. Humiston smiled In de precation at her falling. "I prefer to alt back ahd'jo tha dlggtnr. 'I lnOUBv w W"ai awas we iswsi EVENING LEDGER-PHlLADteLPHIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1917 M'LISS but" this sorrow fully "it was not to be. "Yes, my husband Is n lawyer," she laughed, "and, of course, you nre wonder ing why we nro not In partnership to gether. That's what eety ono wants to know. Well, because wo like to llvo In peaco and amity nftcr ofllco hours. Hl'SHAND Ri:AI. MAN "My husband Is a IiIb lawyer nnd a real MAN," she continued proudly. "Wc seldom talk about our business affairs. Sometimes ho tells mo about Ills cases nnd I consult him about mine" thcro was nomethlng de llclously fcmlnlno in the cholco of the verbs "hut wo do not often Inject business into our home life." Tho story of Mrs. Ilumlston's career reads like n thriller. Tho Crucer case Is but one of several spectacular ones In which she has figured prominently. Horn of nn old New York family, she was graduated from Hunter CoIIego in 1888, and, sidestepping the hO?lal opportunities that were hers by rlcht of birth nnd posi tion, sho studied law at night school in the New York fnlveisity. I'ean Ashley. Impressed with her grasp of law, Induced her to take the clay course. After taking her degree she founded tho People's Law Firm, designed, as she phrased It, to give "Waldorf-AitorK advice to thoso persons who could afford only to pay lodging-house prices" It was In these early days that her Intuitive sympathy and ability to keep her clients' secrets won her many friends In the lower walks of life, the friendship of women whom she hntl helped and whose aid In cases like the Cruger girl's is now proving of Incalculable value. "Then H. S. McClure sent mo South to Investigate the peonage conditions in tho turpentine camps." She was gulping her coffee hastily so as to be on time for an ap pointment "I didn't do anything very spectacular, like disguising myself. I don't bellove In all that, although I did go Into ono of the camps ns the companion of a woman peddler nnd the train that we were leaving on was shot at. I've been shot at soeral times" this negligently "but I've nover been hit." Under the Roosevelt administration Mrs. Humiston, In recognition of tho cloer In vestigation work that sin had done, was appointed an assistant to Attorney General Bonaparte and "sleuthed" for the Depart ment of Justice. "I used to hear Government people talk about the easy hours Irom 9 until 4 of a Federal Job," she commented crisply on this episode in her career. "It was never ensy for me. I worked then ns I do now all tho time, becauro onco you get thinking about the fato of the many young girls who are trapped or missing you don't take your mind off them until they aro found and redeemed." After peonage was abolished In largo measure, due 'o her efforts, Mrs. Humis ton went abroad, renlly to rest, she said, but her passion for Investigation led her astray again, and before she knew what she was doing she was Involved In a study of Immi grant conditions and how the peasant girls of foreign countries were recruited and trained for the white slave traffic of Amer ica. As a result of her discoveries Rhe wrote a series for Pearson's Magazine, safe guarded under the nom do plume of Mary Quackenbos. Later her Investigations led her to Cuba and South America. In Lima. Peru, she met Howard Humiston. She married him there. This was In mil. From Lima her honeymoon took her to Buenos Aires and then to England on a slow boat. It was on this voyage that smallpox broke out and Mrs, Humiston, In the absence of a physician on board, took medical charge of tho boat. Due to the rigid quarantine precaution she Instituted and her unceasing care an epidemic was avoided. When the ship arrived in port it received a clean bill of health. Back In New York she established a home, and decided that her public work was over. "But I had no children," she told me, "and there was the opportunity to help other women, and so somehow or other, de spite all my resolutions to be Just a wife and homekeeper, I found myself setting up a law otnee again." Then came the case of Mrs. Antoinette Tola. It Is a great thing to have saved an Innocent person from the death sen tence, but Mrs. Humiston with characteristic mo,desty dismissed this with a few words, "Somebody came and told me about this poor Italian woman. It wsb really a pathetic case. It was true the woman had killed her husband there was no denying that but things were going so against her and there was no one to help." this great woman lawyer spoke with Infinite tender ness, "and so I Just took the matter up." As a result of taking the matter up Mrs. Humiston obtained evidence to show that the poor Italian woman had been driven on to the streets by her fiend of a husband and that, goaded by the outrages he was commit- jng upon ner, an Kiuea mm. jpe woman had be-en cvmdetd. Mrs. Humiston Urtt obtained a reprieve and later the woman was pardoned altogether. FEW WOMEN BAD "Few women are Innately bad, I have found." Tho woman lawyer, weary from her grueling work on tho Cruger case and the excitement and publicity Incidental to It. leaned back In her chair and fingered her watch so as to keeep "tabs" on her ap pointments. "Many of them are led astray. Those who seem out anrt oMt bad are usually degenerate and cannot help themselves. "But what I would like to see written Into tho statuto books in an net making criminal persuasion punishable. I don't know how It could bo done Just now. but perhaps It could. At any rate, n girl who leads a drab life, who makes scarcely enough to live on. who exists In surround ings that would be Intolerable to us. Is not wholly responsible when a fine-looking man, to her way of thinking, comes nlong nnd ofTcrs her a little pleasure I don't think any womnn. except the degenerate ones, is really n degraded one from choice. And when I used to read about poisoned needles and knock-out drops nnd the various wiles of human (lends who entice unsuspect. Ing or weak girls I too used to smile cyn ically; but I don't any more. More wicked things than It is given most of us to reallie or imagine happen every day. Tho Cruger case has proved that." Mrs Humlston'n fame as a lawyer spread, mm ns a result or me Tola pardon the Itnl .... ... Wl ulr i um (ill 1 111)11 ni" ll fl l" 1 lawyer" nuifo",! '"""V UPn hwom"n lawjer ns upon a creature ready for can- onizatlon. That's why, when Gennnro Mnzzella was the death house at Sing j Hng on a charge of murder, they came to i her. And when she brought evidence to prove that the man wns Innocent: when I sno was responsible for a new trial and the man's nltimatp nintiittal. she cot a renuta lion for Infallibility thnt will be hard to shake in some quarters Later Thomas Mott Osborne selected Mrs. Humiston nnd Mrs Bolssevaln to work on the case of Charles Rtielow, and It was the former who obtained the confession from n man named King which commuted Stlclow's death sentence to on of life imprisonment. Ask her how sho does it nnd Mrs. Ilumls ton's eves burn with the fire of n zealot. "When n life Is In question, when n man or woman's Innocence Is at stake, I don't admit fnlltire I had to find Ruth Cruger I slmplv couldn't stop until I did And I've got to find nbout twenty moro missing girls whose cases I am Interested In nnd who may surfer a similar fate to Buth Crugcr's. I wish the public would gather a Cruger me. mnrlnl fund to bo used for tho purpose of tracing down these girls who disappear. God knows how ninny ale on tho police record ; 1 don't " Since the Police Department has "eaten humble pip," nnd after a four-hour confer ence with Commissioner Wood, during which that gentleman nsked her help nnd promised her tho support of the depnrt mcul In the work tho is planning, Mrs. Humiston Is reluctant to critlclzo the New York force for tho manner in which It handled the Cruger case. "But I will say." she commented bitterly, "that they did hamper my work, nnd even on the last day before the body was dis covered placed Innumerable obstacles In my way. 1 do not think it will happen Hgaln." The womnn who turned the trick Is of mlddlo nge nnd commanding, though wo manly presence. She has a splendid full figure that misses being stout by a wide margin. Her fnce Is tho face of a woman who has looked often on the sorrowful side of life, but her attitude Is not of one who lias been embittered by what she has seen. Her voice Is soft nnd low, and ccn In mo ments of tho greatest stress and excite ment her presence of mind never leaves her. Her dark hair was caught with plain but becoming seerlty under a tiny toque of black feathers, which harmonized with tho plum-colored silk suit that jhe wore. She looks like a prosperous wife and mother who Is pel haps the leader in her civic com munity. Passing her on the street, you would never know thnt the quiet, unobtrusive woman had gained tho title of one of the gieat criminal lawyers In the UnitedStates, a woman who had earned a high place for her sex among the seats of the mighty In the legal world LONDON STOCK MARKET Favorable War News Offsets Effect of U-Boats Henvy Toll LONDON. June 21 t Favorable war news offset the effect of the large losses to Brit ish shipping by submarines during the last week on securities on the Stock Exchango today While trading remained quiet, tho markpts generally were steady and the undertone was healthy Led by the 4 M per cent war loan, the gilt-edge section was firmer. There was f.ilr demand for Investment, owing to ex pectations of a reduction In rates for de posits by the banks. Americans were weaker nnd Canndlans were dull. Homo lines were slow. Altera tions in Argentina rails were nnrrow, but the shares were weaker. The feeling In Allied bonds wns cheerful, especially as to Russians. They were helped bv tho maintenance of the Improve ment ln tho position of exchange. Rubbers lacked steadiness. In sympathy with the itnplo. Mines were listless. LOCAL MINING STOCKS TONOPAH STOCKS nid Asked MacNamara. 20 .22 Midway J2 .14 Xllzpah r:t in .11 Hescuo Kula 23 .24 ooi.nriELD stocks Atlanta 1J -12 Illue Bull nt .02 nonth "j ;; Dlamf n n "2 -n Daisy 02 .nt Oro "2 .03 Sand Ken J2 .01 Silver Tick 10 .11 MISCELLANEOUS Ariz United 2 .30 Nevada Hill 2 -3" Nevada Wonder l.M 175 Tecopa Mln 25 .30 Leather Compnnles to Merge CHICAGO, June !1. Negotiations virtu ally havo been concluded for a merger of Important tanning Interests in the Chicago district thiough the purchase of control of the Wilder Tanning Company, which has one of the most modern tanning plants in the country at Waukegan, with the Grelss Pfleger Tanning Company, at Goose Island The Wilder plant will come under the con trol of tho Central Leather Company, but will be operated by the Orelss-Pfleger Tanning Company, which, It Is understood, will conduct the business of the combined companies. The Wilder Tanning Company was organized some two years ago with a capital of J2.000.000 and constructed the plant at Waukegan REDUCED TO $3&$5 I S7.50 & ztfxMiL I 510.00 sgSm TLRSDisv 1 UAIO SXXS JI d 3 Removal Sale Mr 131 Our r.ntlre Stock Hold at VQl E 50 Off I E OT"-5 Orltlnal To rrlcea 01 iC rFJuk Sulta, Coats, after- fjl lr9W"cvs noon, aummer and e) ll Us I evening Dresses and Ml tan J mouses. Eery gar- flf R WiviA ment plainly ticketed flJKOtA with orltlnal regular Jkll rtf'IVXtV Take advantage of IsJI yrYYVr " unu"ual oppor- JQj F 123 S. 13th Iff H&. Sfn4. Doe a 2i'w jJlrO Below jKj Shop LI ll x2SSn"oni j&Gy I0 PHILADELPHIA MARKETS GRAIN AND FLOUR , WIirJAT ttrcrlpu. S0T.333 bush. The mar ket w nominal una quotations nre nmlltfd. I'OII.V H'celpti, ln.MO hunh. Trade w quiet, liul the tnnrket ruled firm under light ofTerlnER. Quotations. Car lota for local trafts a to location Wratern No. 3 llow. 11.7PW l.-0, do. No 4 sMlow. I1.77W1.78. do. No. B, jellow. tt.7A4M.7n. OATS ltccelpta. nn.MS (man. Trade was qulft. but values were well sustained at thj lat decline. Isolations. No, s while 7.1 W 7HM-C. standard while. 73lt7:!'ic. No. 8 white, 71f7t4r. No. I white. 7uS70Hc. KI,orit llecelDts. IMS bills and 1 tiS4.103 lbs In sacks Trade was slow and tn market was unsettled Quotations Winter, straight. ll.Mlrj. Kansas, cl-ar. tliail.'.n ,dn. straight, 1 12 r 12 Ml do. pnt.nt, Jli 2:W 1S.7H. spring, flrat clear, II Iff 11.5(1, do. patent. I1212.S0: do favorite brands. I1.1H 18 r.D, city mills, choice nnd fancy patent I1HV13 .".( UYi: FLOl'll was steadlh held but quiet We quote tllffll 7,i per bbl . aa to qudllt. PROVISIONS The market ruled steady with n fair demand. Quotation!. City twt In eet. smoked and nlr drled ;i,"c , urawrn be f, in stts smokfd arte, city beef, knuckles and tenders, smoked and Mr-dried, .10c. western bef. knuckles and tenders, smoked, arte, beef hims. Ssn'fr'SJ. pork, family. 114 M1M4S hams. t ciired, loose, Sfl2Si4t, do. skinned, loose Wi 2"c, do do, smoked 27' (f 2H, other linint smoked, city cured, as to br.ind nnd nxerage srtSL'O'tc. hams smoked, western cured HOfiTS'l's r. do, uoueu. uoneless 4IK . pl.'llli sliouldi rs 8. I' ,., '- iiu riinirvru . IFI-Ill" n M,,'!JSf.r',,n. , V,7T anT.'X rjred arte breakfast baenn. wtstern curd 31c. f.Ta western renned. tcs. '.'4c. do do u. tubs r,jc. do 'do do'Vlubs V" "" ln tc ' urmvpr." o.t . ric KlirliNLLl aUuAKSs The market was quiet but steady on a baala eureq loose, mc rto smoked I2r belli "' ,,ouc Ior ",rn nn Rranuiatea DAIRY PRODUCTS TttTTKR The market ruled firm with demand absorbing the limited offerings Tha quotations were. Western fresh solid uw ked crenmerv, fancy specials. 41c etra. 3iiifc4nr, estrn firsts .1c firsts. 37'ic secunda. 3H'ie nearby prints Mnov. 42c, average extra 40W41c. firsts. 3Slr 3n seconds am ti ae, special brand" of prints JnhhlngT at 4r,ffMxo KCIC1S ranr stock ruled firm with detnind falrl actUe and offerings only moderate Quo tations were ns follows Nearby firsts, tin 20 per case. nearb current receipts. 111 no per .ase western extrn firsts IO 20 per case, do firsts JR'in per case fnni v seliTtfd i.mdled eggs wen- Jobbing at 401? lie per dozen. rltHEsn The market was quiet nt recentlv relsed prices Quotations New York fu'l rcom fancy, new 2IPi 'ft 2.'mo do. do fair to sood, new 22 23c. do p.irt skims, lllhc. POULTRY I.IVI3 Was In fair request and ste.idv tinder moderate nrferlntrs. Quotations: l'owls. as to quality. 24W2."ic. roosters 178 1ac, sprlnu hlcuens not LeRhorns plump, jellow-sklnned. wclhlnB miff2 lbs apiece. 3Sf3lle. sprlnu ebb kens not LeRborns smnlier sizes 2ilwt ll.'c. white I.eKhnrns 225l2tlc. ducks, I'eliln inS?20, do Indian Itunner. 17riKc. pigeons, old per nstr. 2ri'?T2Np. do oun. per pair. ( 20 W 22c Ulll.miu r me siock wns in nnnn rnj.irni and Arm, with supplies well cleaned up. I ne quotations were l-'ow Is, 12 to box milk ted. dr-plcked fancy selected 2C'4c. welching 4 lbs. and oer apiece. 2ftc : weluhlntf 3H lbs. nplece. 24o, welghlm: 3 lbs apiece. 2JU-.ii. fowls, Iced. In bids, fancy. dr-pliked. welch ing 4 lbs. and oer apiece 2:mc. smaller stzei. 210'...., u roosters dry-pbked lbSjc. broilers. Jersey, fancj. 40s4S.'. broilers othor nearby, welkhlnft llt2 lbs apiece. 3.B40c; smaller sizes 300 .inc. turkejs. fresh killed. Iced, per lb. Western, beet here. S.102ne. common, 20 322o. duiks. sprlnu. 2223c. squabs per dozen While, welahlnc II to 12 lbs. Per dozen. I4M4 "ft. white, welithlnB 0 to in lbs per dozen. S8.4O0.inn, white per dozen, $2.7.ri'ic2.no. while, weighing 8 lb. weiKning '" per riozen, 12 2.itf2.Mi. VAnue. wemnins ikumi-? lbs, per dozen. SI 7.11f2. dark. SI 0O5J2, small and No. SOoOSl FRESH FRUITS The market ruled steady with demand fair. Quotations Apples per bid llt-n Davis 54 vP 4 Ml, Ilaldwln. S4WS, do. Northw 1 stem, per box. SI ".11W2..V1 lemons per box. S.1"i I firatmes Florida, per 0r.1t. Ilrlirht fann, :tff ,".r.0. russet, fancv. S2?a Ml. poor. 7"cWSl"0 (Irapefrult, l'lorlda. per crate. S2 M)W! I'lne iipples 1'orto lllco. per crate Sate 4 Straw berries, per quart Jersey. 4frN2o. uelawarn and Maryland. 4fSc Ulackberrles. North faro Una. per quart 7W10c Huckleberries. North 'nrollna. pep quart, 14lilc. Cherries per 8 Ib, basket Sour, IllfftlOc. sweet iloJ7."c Can taloupes, Georgia, per crate. S2u3. do. Califor nia, per crate. 14 00. Peaches, (leornla. per carrier. S2 riOGf3 Iiu. Watermelons. Klorlda, ocx car, S250W 100. VEGETABLES Pslrabi ntnrk Bold fairly nnl values ppnprnUy wro well nuBtatnfsl under moderate ofTorlnKff Quotations. While potato, North Carolina. Imt bbl No 1. $Sfcl. No 2. ?:7, rutin, .. (If I; whlt notation Norfolk, per bbl Nfi 1. I8.A0Cr0.no, No il, $4 fiO flU .'.n. onions Tpxan per oral No. 1. $1 lir.fct I.fi." . No 2. itu W SI 10, cabbage. ITantrrn Shore. pr bhl-crat f'2 'JA91' r0, do Norfolk per bhl-cratr. $'jttr 2 .".ll, Lettuce North Carolina and South Caro lina, per banket fiOr!P$l. relerv, riorlda. per Ki-tnrh crate, $lfT2. ban. North Carolina nnd South Carolina, green per bicket, IKfl 23. do. do do. wax. per banket. Siir(f$l: do. Norfolk trnen, per banket, $2 2.2.1, no. do. wax. per !2i?2.Vi. peppern, $1 .V1i 2 HO, nquanh l'lorlda, per box, jlfffl M. ruiumbern North Carolina Pr banket, 12ifr2J.n, do, Norfolk, per banket, S3 (if 3, 2.1. beets Norfolk, per 100 bunrhen $25M tomatoes. 1'lorld.i. p r crate Pimj, $.Vrf 3 f.n choice $2.23 ffi 2.71 tomatoen, Mlinlnnlppt, per flat crate, $1.23 If 1 3.1, mushroomn, per 4-lb banket. $101 30. LIVE STOCK QUOTATIONS CIUCAOO, June SI. HOC1S Hecelpts 24 000 head. Market slow MMI'e lower. Mixed and hutihers. m lSWlfl n.-i (rood he.nj. Jl.-i 10(ir 10 10: rouitli liea f tn.iofy I n.3.'.. Ilrht 14 no snnv pi", iiieum: hulk strM.imn I'ATTI.U Receipts 4nno head. Markets steady. Ileees $N TMfM.I so. tows nnd heifers fl 7fli911 70. sto, kers nnd feeders. S7 1010 XT Jahes 11 (fl.-i 7.-. SIIi:i:l' Hecelpts SOCIO head Markets stendv Ntlc nnd Western. IIMO'STI 1.00. lambs, tin 7.1fr Ifl r,0 Reserve Bank Increases One-Day Rate NHW Yor.K, Juno 21. The New York Federal Ilcserve Dank has Increased the working rate nn one-day discounts from 2 to S per cent, the latter being the regular fifteen-day rate on promissory notes. When the one-day ndvnnces were established In connection with the present Government Ilnancing the accommodation was fixed at not less than 2 per cent or more than I per cent, at the discretion of tho officers of the bank. Such advances are secured by eligible paper or United States Government obligations. (A It is better for the baby you. Your own health will you ars allowed to miss a and go out into the fresh When you wean your Xffliiiik A 1 M m !ac e? , 4 SA M mum l rwisfca IAS you know he is safe, because Nestle s is al ways the same, always free from germs, al ways contains the same things that your baby body needs. needs. Don t wean him You can never be sure of U you Know u comes irom a cican uairy, even today, if you know it is free from sickness. It has sendihecou- a tough curd the baby can't digest, and home ponforaFRSB modifying Is uncertain. You cannot modify Trial Paekage it with such scientific care and uniformity as of W feeding Nestle's does it for you. jJouf fc, In Nestles milk from healthy cows, purl- by bcsis. Tomorrow's War Menu BREAKFAST Stewed lAprlcots Bice With Cream Codffsh Cakes With Tomato Ketchup Hot Bolls Coffee I.t'NCHnON" Welsh Rarebit Iettuce and Tomato Salad Tcanut Butter Cookies Tea DINN13U Cream of Potato Soup Baked Trout Sliced Lemon Stewed Kale Macaroni Au Gratln Chocolate Lonf Cake Cortes HART AND SENNETT DESERT TRIANGLE Chnplin May Join. Also Doro, Sam Bernard and Hackett. Legal Battle Soon Hy the Photoplay Editor As forecast ny thin newspaper weeks aso, William S Hart the beloved "Ulll" of thousands of kids nnd nldsters. In out of Triangle A battle ln film hictory equaled only by the recent attempt of Douglas Fair banks to froo himself of the now dead Fine Arts is cnMinR Its .shadow on tho horizon. At the same time, It Is reported definitely thnt Mack Sennett, originator of the Key stone Comedy brand, and one of the biggest figures In the corporation, has signed papers giving him his release The Key stono name and trademark themselves con. slderable assets, remain with Triangle To complicate matters, the rumor that Charles Chaplin, now with Mutual, will Join the corporation will not down Sam Bernard who proved a good bet In two or three Kevstones; Marie Poro. who was an ar tlftlc success with Lasky and Fine Arts, and James K Hackett nro mentioned n' probable signers with Triangle also. It is Interesting to recall that Hackett made the first American Famous Players release. ' The Prisoner of Zcnda," years ago. That was the Inception of Paramount and pointed tho way to Its great power that was to be. Hart will cast his lot with Thomas H. Ince. who lately milt the Sign of The Three. Triangle in almost sure to fight Hart's with drawal bitterly It's likely the stnr will counter with some such proposition as that Fairbanks mado when ho withdrew. Doug las alleged the secession of D W Orllllth ns supervising" director as excuse for his own action. Hart now will name Incc, nnd claim rlie same exemption. Sennett may produce for himself, though It seems more likely thnt his slgnaturo will be nftixed to a contract with ft very impor tant corporation soon. Tho same may hold true of Incc nnd Hnrt. Should nil these plums fall luto the Artcraft or Ooldwyn baskets. It will be a rare haul. Indeed. And something of the sort Isn't at all Improb able. ni'nT "The Marcelllnl Millions," Morosro Pnramouni. with Oeorse Ueban nnd Helen Jerome nddy. Story hy I,s.wrente MeCIoskey. Directed hy Donald Crisp Photoplay critics ought to bo provided with rubber stomps reading: "Story poor; direction fine " Then tho countless repeti tion of similar phrases could bo avoided weekly. "The Marcelllnl Millions" Is no ex ception to this ever-growing rule. Its nar ratlvo rests on thnt oh-so-famlllar formula. In which poor folk Inherit wealth, only to find they were happier among the string beans nnd squalldlty than tho caviare and costly furniture Donald Crisp (by the way, won't some one pleaso bring his "Ra- r Preserve ll W Your Furs Ijv AW w''hut delay; protect them from moths, fire n ipLlI and theft. Place them in our cold-storage eA Iffil vaults, where they are safe and come out S 1 I Oj cleaner and healthier. jg I IrM Write us now, while you are thinking about fyl vw ' or phne Walnut 1 308, tomorrow. I bIhI vm TT r YV7 Mm m, riouse of WengerjF k 1229 Walnut St.r You Can Nurse Your Baby Longer extra looa growing ing time Nesile'sFooH complete milk food not a milk modifier V ' and is better tor tied, tree irom germs the call 9B are lc better because modified, the baby needs are added. Retraced nursing or two . to a powder it comes to you in an air-tight air, can. No germs baby on Nestld's plete food, so you add only water and boil one minute and you know that you are giving your baby the food that his little on raw cows milk. For your own raw cows' milk even tnjs coupon .-. f'r' M mona" to Philadelphia?) ha work wonder of humanizing this tenuous Not only hare the characters the belteraMfr, Inflection of humor end wlatfulness, fcs the expert direction has made the lltt, nleeej n. rfellcrht In (h. vm Th. .MSU ta the rich man's home are so realletlewMf , beautiful that they couldn't have be,'.'. faked. Lamplight and other effect! agt splendidly handled, Also note the meft charmlntr baby s.nce Mae Marsh's In "!,? tolerance. jtir. ueoan acts lempesiuo' land naturally and pleasantly. OnOaitAPHICAI ITEM. "Tottay onlv: imoua Jfeus Orleans Ji Band to accompany 'A Doll't House,' ' i 7enrtfc Ibsen, Norway's favorite ton." rf fifffrt oHmtued by Douglas Fairbanks, ohs ? comes to the Stanley all next week in "WU4 ond Woolly." Two of the most vital announcements te puNe from the press agents' typewriters ar to the effect that Warren Kerrigan and Bes- ' sle Ilarrlscale will not co-star In raralt - plays, and thnt Eddie Polo, of Universal, in studying JIu-Jltsu. A Leslie Hlton, a Phlladelphlan, who ha', been making animated cartoons for Bray-iT Paramount, has called It all off with those' i studios, nnd will devote himself to exploit ing his own characters. Many of tha "Colo- t nel Heer.a l.lar" series have been written, nnlmated and photographed by him. Uni- ' versal Mill release his "Hilly nnd Squint at Palm llcach" soon. FIASH-BACKS OernWIne Farrar, fit California to work i on new feature, III with tonHUtts. I Mary rickford's next to be "The Little Prtncrss," by Frances Hodgson Burnett, famlllarlted on the stage by Millie James, Tyrone Power signs with Marine Com pany, to do a sea-storv ' TWO KILLED IN BLAST riTTSDUnoiI, June 21. Two men xrtr killed nnd a third fatally Injured when th boiler of a freight locomotive exploded near here early today. Warren Cnrlyle, engineer, and Brakemaa Walker P Allen Worth, both of this placs, were killed. Their bodies were hurled lev eral hundred feet J. G Buffington, fireman, of Guthrie, Ky was seriously scalded. He d(ed at a hos pital later. White Buck for the Board Walk $ 4 Slim and raer de Islsntd for only the J dlserlmlnatlns, and the added note of style to any nmmir costame. Now that warm weothsr Is here yen know how much you need these pumps o come In nowtodny. Easily $6 value. You would pay that for it elsewhere. IfflMLlPOTrSif - 1 FO. WOMEN o ins Floor Saves 6 1208 fflO Chesfnut St, m Instead of weaning him at five or six months, you can nurse him the full nine months that you should if, when he is little, you substitute one feeding a day of Nestld's. It is so like mother's milk that the baby will feel nodifference. Nestles gives him just that little he needs to help along his little body. And when wear comes, he will change to tfc bottle gradually and easily on It&ji'' l&SsmSmmh. y can reach it. It is a com sake and your baby.a 8cnd NESTtfi'S FOOD COMPANY Shi uulwortli llolldln. New Tork Please send m FREE your bok and trial packai . Ham Addfsa MiJMii Ji VflL m:i i i "jm- a as? i , Mi ' I fr.J J fr? , . ' -: ' j- cU Hi rr kkS tUHHbMH 9VHHtPK f Qkaf A. ' " " A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers