f AND, EXEMPTED, QUITS. FORGIVING WIFE prafted Following Fake Recon ciliation, Deserted Spouse Is Given Port of His Pay NOnniSTOWX. I'a., Nov. 9. T.,t.d of ordering the arrest of Blaine tt nonrs. of Itoyersford, who la charged " W? i Morton Hotrer. with non- mJart. Maglatrato Clark, of Norrlstown. npport .' , chairman Heebner S. ferred the coso to Chairman Heebner J!k. Wourth District Drnft Uoard nt Iar.s- .ith the result that tho husbanu, iha had beeVi exempted on the grounds of iSrlnr dependents, will now bo ordered MDOrt for duty In the National Army. MrsHoEers told the magistrate a. story they had been married for several rt but that ho had not lived with her 1a had dono little for her support until f!.r? she says that about, the time he iired the notlco ho returned to her nnd I!td a reconciliation; In fact, sho said. acted just like a real husband," Ilogers found It convenient to shower her with In.nv gifts, she says, nnd she felt that Sice he was willing to do what was right nd rroper she should do her bit, nnd when k. sawested that they go to housekeeping ha readily consented. Just as things were .hlnlnf themselves nicely tho Government Jailed Mm to become a soldier. They ttlked matters over, she says, nnd finally rreed that he should file a claim for ex mDtlon on tho ground of dependents. The Unsdale board honored his claim and he s exempted. "Almost Immediately after he had received notice," says Mrs. Rogers, Blaine's attltudo cfianged. He was no lower tho loving husband. Ho deserted me and left me to look out for myself as but I could." Tho wife says- that Rogers raoed back to his home In Iloyersford nnd refuted to take her along. Sho now occu Blei three rooms In Fottstown and Is trying her best to earn a living, although she Is i m health. The warrant for Rogers was never served. Marlstrate Clark communicated with the tansdalo draft board nnd received a reply that Rogers would cither be sent to Camp Meade to fill out tho present quota or be held awaiting tho entralnmcnt of tho next Increment for that camp ; also thnt arrange ments would be made whereby the wife would receive a part of her husband's pay wMIe In tho service. CREDITORS OF BREWING CONCERN FILE PETITION Begin Proceedings to Have Company Declared Insolvent by United States Court A petition to have tho Froto Brewing Company, of 1230 Fronkford avenue, ad Judged a bankrupt was (lied In the United States District Court today by three credit ors, ho alleged that the company Is In aohent A further object In the filing of the bankruptcy proceedings Is to proent a sheriff's sale of the company's asbets, fixed for next Tuesday nt 9:30 a. in., upon an execution obtained In Common Pleas Court No, by the Baltimore Pearl Hominy Com pany for $559 40 Judgment for this amount was obtained by tho Baltimore concern on October 12 last, and In iho failure of tho Eroto Brewing Company to tatlfy tho Judg ment within five days thereafter consti tuted giving a preference through legal pro ceedings to the Hominy Company. If the snlo were nllowed to take place the Hominy Company would obtain a pref erence over other credeltors of the brewing company by having Its claim paid In full, and It Is for the purpose of having nil creditors derive an equally proportionate ahare of their claims that the court Is atked to restrain tho sale. No action has as yet been taken upon tho request for a restraining order The threo creditors and their claims arc: Carl-Ullman & Co., $1985.07 for goods sold and delivered, Hevcrle & Hay, $195 for lervlces as expert accountants, nnd William 8. Severn, $78 50 for merchandise. ' - 1 EVENING LBDGER-FH1LADELPHU, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 0, 1M EDWARD SNYDER With his seven-year-old sister Inolma, this live year-old young ster accomplished the railway journey from his home near St. Paul, Minn., to tho residence of nis. grandmother, 426 West Olney avenue. BOY OF 5 AND SISTER ALONE FROM ST. PAUL PRESIDENT ASKED TO AID U. S. SUFFRAGE CAMPAIGN Women Leaders Call at White House With Request for Assistance in National Fight WASHINGTON; Nov. 9 With New York State won to their cause, leading sultr.i glets called on Fiesldent Wilson today with request that he throw thn ma 'Motor. mining aid" to their national campaign as he did to the State effort. Those who presented their caso wero lira. Carrie Chapman Catt, Dr. Anna How ard Shaw and representathes of the women oi omo nnd Indiana. They declared a sit uation which "permits women In New York to vote, but denies It to those of Indiana u uiuo unjust anu unequal, ana asked President Wilson If he could not now aban don his stand that suffrage must bo won Btate by state, : PRINCESS VISITS BALTIMORE Native Pennsylvanian Takes Son to Johns Hopkins for Operation BALTIMORE. Nov. 9. The Princess or Thurn ind Taxis, who was formerly Llda Eleanor Nlccoll. of Unlontown, Pa., nnd hoe matrimonial difficulties wero at times the topic of the day In Kuropo and this country, today accompanied her son the Hon. John FltaOerald. to Johns Hopkins optal here, where ho will bo a patient f local specialists. The Princess would not discuss her visit w Ualtlmoie or tho illness of her son. Cyclist Killed by Jitney Run down by a heavy jitney on Chester n.i " EJdystono, this morning. P. H. ...y iy' .ot Lansdowne, thlrty-ftvo years old, SJMt.S.?tl5r Wlled- who riding a motor SLm ., drlyer of the truck, William "ML of Lansdowne, was captured by State Ponce and taken to Chester and committed. "This Is the Life," Says Master Edward Snyder, Who En joyed Trip After traveling alone all the wny from a small town near St. Paul, Minn , Kdwaril Snyder, five years old, and his sister Thelma, seven, nrrlved in this city today on a visit to their grandmother, Mrs. Mary Uurkhart, 426 West Olney nvenue. Tassago had been purchased rtralght through to Philadelphia by the parents, and the conductor on tho train from St. Paul received instructions to put the children err nt Chicago nnd sco that they made the proper change of cars. Edward, however, was boss of the trip Inasmuch ns all tho money had been In trusted to him This flurty-halrcd, smiling youngster acquitted himself with 8uch hon ors that the betting was even among the other travelers that he was cither a little prlnco traveling Incognito or else he nnd his sister were Juvenllo members of the stage. He bought tho meals, tipped the waiters nnfi porters like a veteran nnd saw that his sister had everything that she wanted. In ract, he becamo a ginnd faor Ito with every cue nnd he was beginning J?, fccIJIs ,f ho lin "ve(1 on a tln nil his life. Thelma. who is a little more than two years older than her brother nnd there fore treats him In a more or less mothcitfy manner, wai continually on thi watchout thnt L.dward did not do anything rash In answer to one of her rebukes he nald "Oh don't be fo fussy. This Is the life." The telegram which announced tho kid dles' coming to relatives In tho city was delayed for some reason, nnd so there was no one to meet them nt Broad Street Sta tion when they came in. Such n littlo thing as that meant nothing to Edward, who took In the situation immediately. Accordingly he bought his sister a magazine and some candy and after getting a shoe-shine fixed himself to nwalt comfortably the arrival or somebody who could prove that thev were related to him. y When Mrs. Uurkhart got to the station one of tho first questions she asked the children was how they had enjoyed their trip and what they had seen. Edward thought for n few minutes and then tersely answered, "Trees cows and houses." Tho Snyder children will remnln with ,,,v,. hi.tMuinuuirr ior a lew weeks then roturn to St. Paul. and William J. Dasher, Merchant, Dies iy!aJ7' Jt, Das.ne. a retired merchant died Wednesday n ght at the Masonic Home Ji.W .I".! ,ntarl streets, on his eighty third birthday annlerrary. Mr. Dasher was born In this cltv and for fifty ye re was In business He was a member of Washington Lodge, Xo 5,.F ami A M Services will bo at the home1 tomorrow "aft- "emete'ry mCnt Wl" be ,n 0edar "'" DR. WILLIAMS, SUNDAY SCHOOL -WRITER, DIES Aged Minister Succumbs to In firmities of Age Editor of Church Paper , The llev Dr Moscley It Williams, for thlrty-eldht years associate editor of the American Sunday School Union nnd one of tho best-known Congregational mlnlsterr In- tho United States, died today nt tho Oermantown Hospital from causes nttrlbu tablo to old age. He was seventy-eight years old. Doctor Williams was stricken suddenly In his home. 29 West Walnut lane, German town, on October 4. A complication of diseases followed and caused his removnl to the hospital, where he died at 2 30 o'clock this morning. Especially Interested In Sunday school work, Doctor Williams early wrote for the Sunday School Times, and from 1878 be came a constant contributor to the publica tion of the American Kundaj Kifhuol I'nlon On May 1, 1S7D, he was appointed nsslstnnt editor for that society, a position which ho litis tilled for more than thirty-eight jears. Although ivllevcd from nctlc responsibility In 1916, whcii ho was made honorar as sistant editor, he continued nctUely at work until the ycry day he was stricken by. his last illness During this long period his work on the Union Qunrtcrly, the Young People's Paper and the Sunday School World carried his Influence Into every part of the rural dls trlcts of America, wherever union Sunday schools arc planted and conducted through the work of the American Sunday School Union. He wns born In Knrmliigton. Conn, De cember 3. 1830 He reeeUed tho degiee of bachelor of arts at Yale In 1864 and innstec of arts ten jears later. He attended Union Theological Seminary between 1864 and 1866 nnd was graduated from Andover Theological Seminary a year later. The honorary degree of doctor ot philosophy was conferred upon him by Temple College In 1899. Doctor Williams was ordained to tho Congregation il ministry In 1868 nnd was pastor of tho Second Church In this city un til 1869 He nlso waM pastor of the Grand Avenue Chape), Brooklyn, and the Plymouth Chapel, Portland, Me. Doctor Williams was secretary of the Phllo Alpha Club, of this city, and a mem ber of the Congregational Ministers' Union He assisted In tho compilation of Doctor Schaff's Dictionary of tho Pible In 1880 nnd wrote tho Introduction to the History of the Revised New Testament In 1881. Doctor Williams Is surWved by his widow, a son, the Itev. Dr Clarence It. Williams, nnd threo daughters, Mrs. Thomas K P Haines, of Swampscott, Mass, and Misses Margaret D and Ethel I, Williams, of this city. The funcrnl will be held at 3 o'clock Monday afternoon from his residence In terment will be the following day In tho family plot at Terry. Ille, Conn. PRINT-PAPER PRICE MAY BE FIXED BY U. S. Indicted Makers Reported to Have Pro posed Maximum Rate of ?3 a Ton WASHINGTON. Nov 9. There was strong Indication today that the print paper situation wll soon bo nettled and a rea sonable price fixed under Government con trol. The print paper makers Indicted In the so-called paper trust case In tho Federal District Court of New York are understood fto hae proposed that a maximum price of $3 a ton be fixed, pending announcement .f the final price by the Pedernl Trade Com mission. It Is said tho paper men have offeied to plead nolle conterdere and accept fines In the trust case. The Department of Justice ndmltted thnt 'Important confer ences" had been held with counsel for the Indicted men. The Federal Trade Commls slpn ndmltted It wan taking preliminary steps toward print paper price-fixing. TIHEfHCHENS CASE NOT DECIDED After the final argument between United States District Attorney Kane nnd William A Gray, counsel for tho defense, heard to day before Judge Thompson, In the Fed eral Dulldlng, decision In the Thlerlchens casa vas reserved for ten dan. The de fense bases Its argument for a new trial on discrepancies in the original testimony of Marie Funk, nnd on the two conflicting affidavits sworn out by the girl. From her original damaging testimony against Thlerlchein, ob glen at the trial, the g'rl later lecanted, on the belief that that captain was unmarried; to recant later, it Is stated, on learning tho contrary. mi 'Wm Hi inPffi "DAMN AUSTRIANS!" CRIES "SISTER CHICK" Woman Who Stole German Am bulance Here to Get 18 More of Them A LADY AND A LIEUTENANT REV. MOSELEY H. WILLIAMS Fnmillarly known as the "Bishop" of Congregationalism, for thirty eight years editor of the American Sunday School Union, died today in the Germantown Hospital. SEASON FOR QUINCES IS NEARING ITS END Cauliflower, However, Is on Market in Considerable Quantities From Long Island Quinces are .Irtually nt tho end ot their season, according to tho dnlly report of T. Itussell Smith, chairman ot the Home De fense Food Commission. Lettuce Is still plentiful nnd comparatUc ly cheap, although a trifle higher than prevlouslj. Grapes aie Just about normal, from 13 to 16 a cents for a three-quart pony basket of the Concord arlety. Celery sells at in to C5 cents for a bunch of one dozen stalks. Apples continue compara tively high in price. Cauliflower s on the market In cnnsldeiablo quantities, coming from Long island. It l a very fine quality selling from 82 to $2.2." for a crate of 12 to IT, heads. Pumpkins are a little cheaper, running from 0 to 10 cents apiece. Cab bage nnd potatoes are quite plentiful, being about normal In price. Potatoes Fell from $1.40 to Jl.CT, for a bushel, and cabbage Is selling from $23 to $30 n ton, which Is about 1 '4 cents a pound. These are wholesale prices. Tho supply of fish ,-emalns r" ; equal to the demand, but ,-ome arc a little lower In price today. Thrtonly ones on the mar ket In any large quantities are whiting and ling. Small nnd lnrgo whiting are whole saling at 3 4 to 4 cents a pound and ling at 3 to 4 cents. AIU'NHANT CuMMHte. potatnx, rallhf. lettuce, romnlne, sweet potatoes, carrots, beets Iiumrkt1" nrsnires nnd lemons NOIIM l Onions cauliflower, spinach, eel en . turnips, pears anil prnpes HrAIICK Pineapples, crantwrrles apples, ba nanas and tomatoes. By M'LISS "Sister Chick" Is In town. The thousands of wounded whom she ha.i nursed on the French and Italian front lines do not know her as anything else but "Sister Chick." Say to them "Slgnora Chi qulta Mnxzucht" and you leave them cold. Tell them hat a noble Ijdy, the wife of the ltnltrtn Cnnsiil nt Ithelmn. Nfatillahi-d the 'twenty-seven war hospltr..s on the Italian frontier, and they will vehemently protest that It wan "Sister Chick" In her nurst's uniform who did It. And they and you are loth right. "Sister Chick" Is Slgnora Chlqulta Ma zuchl Also xho Is Lieutenant MnzzucM. of the Third Italian army, commissioned for her almost unbelievably .alorom work In the Latlsina district, where she has es tablished more thn two doien hospitals by tho sheer force of her personality In con Junction with American generosity. She has a German bullet In her thigh, received nt the battle of tho Marne before Italy had entered the war. She has an ugly revolting scar on the bar., it her neck receKed In a Teuton gas gangrene nttack when she was gathering up thi wounded nt Gorilla. She has an Imperfect fourth rib broken when Fhe fU Into a ditch from an emergency b'cycle she was riding back to the base hospital for succor The Germans had shelled the ambulance Allied with wounded which sho was driving After rescuing eentecn of the men from the debris of the wreck she "hopped the bike." to use her own phrase, and "beat It back to get help." Do you wonder thnt rne was the first woman to be given the Legion of Honor from France In this war7 She got It In November. 19H, three months nftcr the war broke out. anil that she all deorated with Italian service r bbons which mean nil sorts of honorable things that sho doesn't like to talk about' "Sister Chick" Is a beauty of the clenr, hluc-eyed. brllllant-complexloned type, and despite her various "casualties" looked en tirely normnl and wholly Irresistible ns she talked to me In the Gcrrnnntow n home of 'Mrs nenjamln Miller, whose guest sh Is Her history Is romantic Horn In China of a Spanish father nnd Ilrltlsn mother, she wns married to Lord Seymour when sho was a child and wldpwed nt seenteen, when her husband, the nephew of Admiral Seymour, now commanding the British fleet In tho North Sea. died In the South African war She is also the niece, of Cardinal Vaughn. Later as Lady Seymour she married her present husband, who Is "somewhere In France," and from whom she has not heard In three months Slgnor Mazzuchl was J tall in Consul at Hhelms when the Germans KKOWIfflM I Georgette Crepes ALL SHADES IN nomore3noless w "Copyright Fendlnc ALL STYLES and FABRICS black Waists a specialty 1120 Chestnut Street Next Door to Keith's SECOND FLOOR TAKE ELEVATOR ilitamiiMa I Oiders Filled. Send .or Cj!j:ojjj mJk b Aeafs ,' f SX,L burns I &pff?25 I s rJ Iftcafs cuts n SK heats bruises esmo u RwtAidfor nouehold Accidents JSle "me ?ntle, healing medication fn, 'S,mafce Heinol a standard remedy W f klntroublei malcea it a moit rella- Sls-ll'"1"1! ,or bums, scalds, , ., ani similar emergencies. ih " Uia-W. XwikriskHi. BONW1T TELLER. 6XO. ififie (ecicrShrpOrhmatlortt CHESTNUT AT 13 STREET FOR (TOMORROW) SATURDAY Specially Arranged Sale Misses' Suits, Coats and Dresses One Hundred and Seventy-five Misses' Suits Velour, Burella, Silvertone and Broadcloth. 25.00 and 35.00 Values to 59.50 One Hundred and Sixty-three Misses' Dresses Taffeta, Charmeuse, Satin and Serge; one or two of a kind in all misses' sizes 14 to 20. 10.00, 20.00 and 25.00 Values to 39.50 "f. ( Misses' Daytime Coats ' SPECIALLY PRICED FOR SATURDAY Velour, Zibeline, Frieze and Burella. A 5 i ' 22.50' 25.00 35.00 ' 1 : - SW?J!Sr"rr"" . ..re jt r . .. mmj. . . jr -1 , tn rr itim h S, ? W AzftiJtfikd.jixn. ' .. C u . .jj'B.m .jjiL .i.iC i!i.i '..,.. jl . itdJiiii . , i. .. .'ju uuo me your ambulance and tret ! Is here to collect She already has five ciime. and "Sliter dhtckV description oil " cwnin or th nun la p cturesqua as Pollu s might b, . , ',l ,w the very flevl' rettlnit out of that P'ace. si,, M)(1 wltn 8 vivacity that matched her sparkllnfr eyes and KlowlnR chfreka. "Thank and, I had the nerve to wr IS 0e-"Tinn ambulanca and haul soma or the wounded nwav That was when I sot mt fouith.rib accident ...!Int (''rmans had Wn ordered to re i.f.i: .. 'i1 French had Intercepltd the tVrl ,imC ,he sKn"- said quickly. -There-v..- .'? French came on them very quickly ;;"r ,lie Ijo-'pltnl In the street was it Ger man ambulance. 1 had a pistol taken from nii.T i,lJi?nic'r wh0 wa" 'V'nf In the hos ?""' ,Ldlln know what I was doing no body did nn i . .... ... .1 ..r.. .Ii 1 J?"1, ,,uUlnff ho Pistol at his heart. Hnld rll,.A h.. . . . . .. Slgnora Maxsuchl elshtcen ambulant.. ot them, and If personality, nnd Initiative, 11 "'""". nni charm count for nny Jlilnir. the rest of them nro as Rood as on their way to Italy -',?i,0C l;os ovpr there." she said earnestly 'nerd comforts nnd they are f-olnir to h.ue them Thev must hn.e them now My God how the Italians can flKht. !uiL,,ry M,v,e f0ll't without ammunition, lm .tiU"lcl',nt "'I-" ' Kr hours some m ..J.",01"""''1 hn" hunf on rocks In m, nn Ei1." ,,n'u,e8- M" nr-onlcs and no one able to go up and help them nit... 1 .on!no u"r" to "' tl,n,u tor an- .1" nt th fr0n' "' 00rl1'-' I Was nnrilt ir 'l:"?,0 ,acU w!,cn ' founl "" l.,n "f,,,1"1,,''" Tne Italians hmo been killed like fieas Jn my hospitals i hne seen from 00 to S0O wounded broucht In eery forty-eluht hours for weeks. v,,u do lint know what sutTerlnfi Is here Hut f.".,?1?T XVhnt 1!ln'1"","( nnd Keneroslty Is, and If It had not been for you Americans I could not have kept theso hospital Kolnc Uut. my God. It is wot It " sister Chick 1 f 1 1 , , -.v. - jH klckrti'ofl: her WtiW imi aat wuV ilftl irefture sr'Mr1i"r)Ki atocklnsa, "Look at those feet1 she said 4mfca rally 'Thafn whal liaprxrts tp ft wsM you stand on them for 1ften hnuj-a etsaw diy In all sorts of weather and all , .: of places." ' "Why dont t have :t taken t)utr ti fffe. '. peated. "gome limn I will hut nw haven't time It will take two or imm, wteks I cannot spare that time, and Wr' v I st'ck to my German bullet as f stVtf Hi -my Italian boys, until this war la pver ml, they no longer need me, 44 "My God, thoe Germans, they art iW rlhle." she continued with her fnsclnatlsaj bluntness of expression "I have just heard thnt eighteen of my relatives hav been killed. There ura thirty-two In the ttu And also 1 have Just heard that thnsa damn Austrlans In this latest drive against Italy' have shot all my wounded men In their hospitals." "Sister Chick" wears the flnlform of tlw llrttlsh lied Cross. She will speak nt (ha ' ltltz-Carlton tonight mmmmm lATilji I KHV Ml III I II Wf 1 aVCjj r liBMBf m ia.'t;jiiT,,tfiii is j.siI '..;";' Safe Milk 'or IoiaBto & IoTaiisW r; ":: r &aasjat lrlalA A Nutritious Diet for All Ages, ilecp Horllck'a Alway3 on Hand n'cU Lurch: Home or OfRce- Lf 7 a M v Here's a Fhenomenal Value $8 Park Mahogany Hit ary Soots $ with Military Heels, 5 .50 "iirli n boot as "Tn rapltnlne" lis" never been known in ll fof leas limn , ren lirfore lentber prices went up. Now In l'hllad.t plilii etruni;iiiit hliiii we ilnillengr jou to And It at that prlc. It's dniililnc, hIIiii nt line, will welted acle m eonqncrlnr gtv Tal In uny Ktylf Entlici lnif with all th. quality and character nittt nuie inutle Koyni Hoots rnmouN. A Boot Never Before Offered at This Wholesale Price of $5.50 A i-nhir thnt utanili tilnnr n I'hllaileluhld at a vtuo of 11.10 at least, l'ou'll Anil too. In flue black ratf Ttikr your thotce tlul where the utiilulr economu hon out. dors itself tn mahinn iuch a piiiiumcital offer, Philadelphia tcomen act. Thev will (a line in hwuliel.i thin trrea ij you arc nor aiiionn iiem uou-ii tnisa wour cna a capitame" Door, come n thlt loeec. it t'npltnlne villain this smart "L QYA1 BOOT vou The earlier HO our chance (a tht tetter. :F O It WOME N dBs 1208-10 Chestnut St. 2nd floor saves $2 'BtJtt.l'MJUiilJl.lliiJIXIlJ'lJJ'JmViailllMlJJUUftiBBgUl 111 m m m uiBLMiiDBiHnaiina mm mm m m m mm m m m w mm ills isra sis m sm His m The House that Heppe built FOUNDED IN lSns ADOPTED ONE-PRICE SYSTEM IN tXM C J. Heppo & Son 1117-1110 Chestnut St. 6th and Thompfon Sta. ( THE AEOLIAN PLAYER-PIANO Here is a player-piano which, for a very moderate outlay, will give you complete interpretation, marvelous tone power, guaranteed durability and a name that you may be proud to have in your home. This player-piano is made throughout by the great Aeolian Company, makers of the world-famous Steinway, WeberyiSteck, Wheelock and Stroud Pianolas. It is patented: It is made in figured mahogany, with a quick, perfect action and beautiful tone. Its value is unsurpassed. Guaranteed equal to any $600 player-piano sold elsewhere If you can find a better value for $600 we will give your money back. The Heppe warranty of value goes with this player-piano. We have sold thousands of this style. We know its quality. We guarantee it with our name and reputation. only $10 monthly If you do not care to pay the full amount at the time of purchase, you may take advantage of our rental payment plan, applying all rent to purchase. Customers are not required to pay a war tax. Call, phone or write for full particulars. C.J. HFPPE.&'SON Downtown, 1117-19 Chestnut St. Uptown, 6th & Thompson Sts. m m im EU U3IEU U3?y 113115! iSBTlis pjl TfDllEii iraJlETi rraiEil ifalEil 1?5 H H II Pt Is ma M II m ' H m r ??4 A i.-. - ; - V s" :'! L-V