CHESSES (Bf!2H T.w' -Ayifw?. II t JBmm M m I .. t EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1919 LY. BOATMEN TIE UP HARBOR & Strike o 15,000 Marine .nH w. r." TVS: Workers Halts All-Man- -Her of Transportation BIG SHIPS ARE HELPLESS Teas' Ocean - Going Craft Cannot Sail Shortage of Food and Fuel Mennces City By the Associated Press New York, Jan. 9. Except for a fcmall fleet of f err j boats, tugs nnd likhters engaged In debarkation of homecoming troops and loading of per ishable surjilles for the American ex peditionary forces, harbor shipping was nt a standstill today as the result of the strlko of 15,000 marine workers In ah attempt to force arbitration of their demand for higher wages and an eight hour day. Not only privately owned craft, but the boats of the railroad administra tion, 1200 In number, were tied up and the sailing or berthing of ocean steam ships, an well as the ferrying of pass engers between Mruhattnn nnd Its neighboring boroughs nnd suburbs, whs Impossible. Terry fieri Ire Virtually Stop Suspension of ferry service left Staten Island, New York city's great mldhar bor borough, completely isolated ex cept for two small boats operating to and from Terth Amboy, on the New Jersey shore, nnd launches able to carry only small groups of passengers. Krom New Jersey and Long Island the only access to New York was by way of the East IUer bridges and the subwavs and tunnels under the Kast and North Rivers, In which trains were crowded and entrances choked with dclajcd trav elers throughout the. war. The railroad administration rerouted New Jersey commuting trains In an if fort to relieve the eonitestlon after the closing of the ferrlts. West Shore pas 'etngers were tent to tho Krle terminal at Jersey City, affording connection with the Hudson tubes, and travelers on tho Central Itallroad of New Jersey from -points bcond Elizabeth were trans ferred there to I'eunsylvarla trains, run. 'nlng direct to the tunnels. However, nearby Jcrseymen using the Central were detrained nt the feiry terminal and were forced to Journey more- than a mile afoot or In ciouded trolley cars to the under-rlvtr railroad. I'oodktiifrs Hutted ;At nil the Nw Jersey ard Uing Isl.ind ferry barns long llnus of trucks, many of them laden with perishable foodstuffs for New York markets, awaited a change lu the situation which might land them In the streets of the metropolis. The tie up left New York with a limited stock of fresh foods and the milk suppl), .ilriudy seriously curtailed by, the e'.rlke of the New York Dairymen's League, was fur ther threatened when lupmcnls from New Jersey halted Mmrment f cn.il, essential lu' ma'ntinatico of the limited supply which tn. i Ity'n storage facili ties can accommodate, also was sus pended. , At noon the Lackawanna ltailro.nl. Whose ferry crew hae a union nf their own, had iltcllnod to Join I hi- strike e.f tjio marine workers' alllllltloti. and tho company's boats were earning pasen trers bctwtcn Hobokcn and tho New York side. rector of railroads, and W. n. Tollock. superintendent of the railroad admlnls tratlon's mnrlne department, after tele phone conferences with headquarters at Washington, announced that they hoped the strike might bo settled during the dny as tho result of action begun by the railroad. War nnd Navy departments. Meantime, Mr. I'ollock said, "we nro tied up tight," He added that the harbor men whose nrlcvance Is based on tho refusal nf the boat owners to arbitrate their demands, ns advised by tho national war labor board, had agreed to furnish crews for vessels In emer gency Government service. This, ho said, tvouM Include tug Service for liners carrying troops and freighters with perishable supplies for the Ameri can forces abroad, and ferryboats to land troops from transports. Cuyler Submits Railroads Plan Continued from Tate One that rates bo not only what has been called reasonable, but adequate and suf flclent to enable tlr carriers to provide safe, ndequato and sudlclent srlce, to protect existing Investment and to nt tract the new cnpltal necessary In tho public Interest," It was declared further that "the stntuto rhould provide that existing rates, put Into effect by tho director general of railroads, should bo continued In effect until changed by tho Interstate Commerce Commission as provided by law," or through Initiation of new tates by roads. Kxprrss rates should be dealt with In tho same manner ns freight rates. Regional ltnte Tribunal tlegtonal federal rate tribunals, said Mr. Cuyler, might be created In this manner: "The Interstate Cunmcrcc Commission should divide tho United States Into a number of regions for each of which the President should appoint a regional commission, which should be a board of primary jurisdiction, consisting of one member for each State In tho region. Tho regional commissions should have i authority to determine all conylalnts , and to report to the Interstate Com merce Commission. If no objection Is tonlay urging that Congress nnd not the l'resldent should determlno when rail roads are to bo returned tq private con trol, ho had not meant to crltlcUe Con gress for giving the President originally authority to relinquish tho roads nt his will. WARFIELD URGES SANE RETURN OF RAILROADS Chicago, Jan. 9. H. Davles tVarfleld. of Ilaltlmore, president of the National Association .of Owners of Itallroad Se curities nnd of the Continental Trust Company, of that city, has been In Chi cago nlnce Monday In consultation with the executive committee of the National Industrial Traffic League, In connection with Plans for the return of tho rail roads to prlvato operation. Half of the People Interested Tho National Industrial Traffic League represents 160,000 shippers of the country. Uefore leaving for tho east, Mr. Warflctd said: "The National Association of Owners of Itallroad Se curities represents In membership over $5,000,000,000 of tho $17,000,000,000 In rnllroad securities In the hands of tho public. When you consider that one fourth of the total Investments of the great life Insurance companies are com posed of railroad securities, that over .10.000.000 undupllcatcd life Insurance SUGGEST KNOX AS G.0. P. CANDIDATE Pennsylvania Senator Cen tral Figure in Parleys in Capital TRAINED BY ROOSEVELT GERMANS SEEK PACT WITH POLES Progressive and Conservative Elements Would Rack Him, Is Assertion Washington, Jan. fl Senator Phil ander C. Knox, of I'ennsjlvnnla, his emerged ni tho central figure In tho din eurslon of republican presidential booms for 1920 It wris the Progressive Senators from tho West who led htm paBt tho dozen or more of booms for "favorite sons." and Into tho front line of presidential possibilities. With most nf thn memhers. of the policies are outstanding, that every life Senate absent from Washington attend. Insured has therefore one-fourth of tho ,n llo Itooscvelt funeral, those who re- provision made after death invested In ""neu in tne capital passed tne aay Berlin Government Opens Negotiations With In vaders of Posen CONFLICT WOULD END Ilindcnhurg Receiving Troops at Cassel and Sending Them to Disturbed Country MINISTER RESIGNS PULPIT AS WORK OVERSEAS GROWS Lieutenant Colonel Charles C. Pierce Gives Up Rectorship Hero to Devote Energies to Registration of American ' Heroes' Graves in Franca railroad securities, that 50,000.000 peo pie. nearly one-half tho country's popu latlon, have a financial Interest In the railroads, you can form an Idea of how Important become the methods tinder whl'h these properties are to be re turned to their owners. Mr. Wnrfleld said that the plain of the association now rearing completion III shortly be presented to the Renato commltteo know holding Hearings at Washington. Mr. O. M. Freer, of Cincinnati, and president of the Traffic League, said last night. "The cxccutlv e committee of the leagun Is appreciative of tho co-operatlM spirit shown hy Mr. Warlleld In the several days' conferences with our corn- made to the Interstate Commerce Com- mlttee and our members and good re talking polities, arm esneclnllv tho nresl dential campaign, which will open next winter. The claims for support of every man who has been mention d as a possibility since the death of Colonel lloosevelt completely changed the political outlook, were carefully reviewed, and after a full day of discussion Progressive Senators declared that they faoied Senator Knox a.H the next standard-bearer of the Re publican party. It was pointed out hy the Progressives that Senator Knox received much of hi training for public llfo under Theodore Roosevelt. havlner liee.ii Attorney Oeneral under president Roosevelt nnd having Council to always been n, close personal menu or the late ex-President. Such Progressive Senators ns Ken- yon, of Iowa: flionnn, of North Da lly the Associated Press I'nrls. Jan. D Thn Herman Onvcrn ment has opened negotiations with tho Poles, who have Invaded the province of Posen, according to the Frankfort yazello, which savs that nn understand lug that will end tho fighting will bo reached, irirtlest to Evening Public Ledger Courleht, toil, bv 1'iibUo I.nlorr Co. and .Veto Vorfc Timet Co. The Hague, Jan. 9. Illndenburg Is very nctlvo nt hlH headquarters at Cas sel, although little Is heard of him. Illn denburg Is receiving the returning troops, sorting out tho good and bad elements and sending them to Poland. Tho Ger man press speaks of tho large numbers of troops being tent to Poland. Tho Socialist organ i'rolhelt has pub lished a private telegram of Hlnden burg's to the eastern general staff In which he stated he did not recognize the decision of the Soldiers and Workmen s reform the army, especially mission within a limited time nnd the18"1'" mu,,t necessarily come of It. This hot.i: Cummins, of Iowa, and Polndexttr, commission does not ocrru!c the lower tribunal tho orders and findings of the reglanol commlrs'ons should automat ically go Into ffect. Uroul supervisory powers should hi granted the sceretnty nf transporta tion, said Mr. uler; these would In clude authority to require: rerouting of traffic to preent or illmtnntc con gestion, to require common use of ter minals, to compel complete unification In war tlms or other periods of nn tlnal emergency, to require roads to Is tho first tlmo the owners of the of Washington, declared that Sen- railroad properties have extended hnndH j ntor Knox was their choice ns standurd- to tho shippers nnd It cannot fall to fearer for a united Republican party, produce good results. I think It can ( Ills ilo.se association with Rooscelt he said that the shippers of the country would enable him to reoelvo the sup realize, and the war has emphasized port of tho Progressive element In the ns regards officers and noncommissioned officers. Hlndenburg points out that ucli a far-reaching decision cannot ho taken by representatives of one class, but by the whole people. A nrmnn mnlor. hist nrHved at the Itaguo from Uerlln, Mates that the sit-' that our closer relations may .soon be uatlon still Is pissimlstlc, tnat tnero is i resumea. great depression among the upper clan.ses. "nut I cannot Indulge In unrealizable anil that no stable government win ne j expectations, ine nomewarn journey is established unless the Ilntento makes a opt to be long-delaed. Tho service of Because, as ho says, hlfl work as a lieutenant colonel In charge of registra tion of graves of America's hero dead In Franco will tako tho best of his energy, tho Rev. I)r. Charles Campbell Plcrco has resigned as rector of SL Mnt- thew's Protestant Episcopal Churcn, Eighteenth street and Olrard nvonue. When I shall liavo finished thero will bo little of mo left," he said in his letter of resignation. i Although tho signing of tho armistice has hrought tho end of hostilities, Col nel Plercc'a work will go on for some time. His field of operations has ex tended, rather than diminished, nnd It how covers not only Franco nnd Del glum, but RUssIa, Italy and Great Brit ain. Edward It. Bonsai!, rector's warden of tho church, today made public Col onel Tierce's letter of resignation. It follows: "My Dear Friends: "Tho armistice between opposing na tions nccersltatcs an earlier considera tion than had been contemplated of the great problems which war suggests, but docs not solve. My own connection with a certain phase of those problems Is so close, and my Involvement therein la likely to bo so absorbing and long-con-tinned, that my obligations to the mili tary service seem plainly to conflict with what I should owe to you and tho par ish whoso temporal nffalr3 you admlnls. ter. In case I should contlnuo to hold my place as rector. There Is no proper pnraso in which to put my appreciation of all that you han done and have Been, tnroughout nearly eleven years of our comradeship nnd service, and particularly of the whole-hearted sympathy and co-operation which so many of you have given me since tho President called me back to military duty and I camo overseas "to do my bit." After more than a year of absence, It Is also very comforting to havo so many letters Indicating hope sponslblllty of great magnitude, which cannot well bo brought even to the be ginning of Its lengthy final stage of operation until the living soldiers, whose transportation to these shores consumed so long a time, have been carried home In triumph to their waiting friends. "Meanwhile and afterward I must remain here at my place of somber duty until my mission Is finished or I shall have rendered the last full moasure of devotion to my trust. My field of oper ations, now nnd afterward, covers France, Belgium, Russia, Italy and Great Britain, and possibly Germany Is to be ndded to tho list, and when I shall havo finished there will be llttlo of me left. "This nil means that I owe to you and to my own peaco of mind to take nn action that I had hoped might be long delayed, an action that will leave you absolutely free to call a rector who may glvo needed personal ministration to the parish which I hnve so long tferved and loved, nnd to which I cannot return. For this reason, I am asking you to ac cept my resignation as rector of St, Matthew's, to dato from December 31, 1018." Colonel Pierce was a retired nrmy chaplain with the rank of major when the war began. Because ho originated Z,,y, BERGER GUILTY; SEEKS NEW TRIAL Milwaukee Editor and Four, Codefcndants Violated Espionage Law FACE LONG JAIL TERMS By the Associated Press Chicago, Jan. 9. Attorneys for the five Socialists convicted In Federal court of conspiracy to violate tho espionage law began today tho preparation of arguments In support of their motion for a new trial, which will be heard two weeks from today before Judge I.andls. Should tho motion for a new trial bo denied, the flvo men, who are now out under bonds of Jl'0,000 each, will nt onco bo sentenced. Tho law provides) penalties of from one to twenty year' Imprisonment or from J1000 to J 10,000' fine, or both. The verdict of guilty was returned by t'-- lury lato yesterday nfter five hours' deliberation. Tho verdict wa3 a sur prise to tho accused Socialist leaders, particularly to Victor L. Berger, Con gressman-elect nnu editor of tha Mll- tho Armv Graves Registration s-rvi i 1'""" '.""'' " na" expressca ik. emr.k i...i.. w.. V srenrer commence in a verdict of ac- thc Spanlsh-AinerIcan War. he was' ,UM ,hnn nn - , ,. ' ?. ". called hack Into tho service, and placed In charge of nil American military ceme teries, overseas. Although no longer young, he responded nt once. Ho bocamo rector of St, Matthew's March !2, 1908, when he retired from tho army after serving In various posts In the West, Cuba, tho Philippines, China and other foreign and domestic points. It, thit unless tho railroads are given i party, thev pointed out, whllo the con. j rtf ,.n(e stn.tinrnt to the. German pen-1 which I am chief Is charged with a re distribute cars among natrons fairly, considering the whole subject. The pur- and to provide for proper move- Mioses of Mr. Wnrfleld and those of our ment of traffic. Mergers or ronsollda- j committee are not far apart. The league tlons, Intercompany agreements on , will send lepiefentutlves to Waah lates or practices pooling of facllt. : Ington to present Its views to tho Sen ties, and pooling of earnings In con- uto committee, nectlou with elimination of unneccs- ( sary train service, sho'ild be subject ..., .,-. -n. ..,., .. to ,,, approval, a.eo.dln . the i-.ll- ' READING NOT COMING BACK road plan. The Interst.itu Conmierej . Commission would receive npinnls In n. . u C.:i Will C 1 .. case ..f dlr.ngreen.eut bctvv.en .i road Mans Upitrs t.P.'ll Will Succeed at and the secretary of transportation, ) Washington Crged MrAdoo to Hold On I Paris, Jan. 9.- (H A. P.) - -Tho Karl Rallro.id executives piei-ged Director leasonable return on the Investment In ervative Republican leaders favor him them and on the money required to give t nueh nn extent that he came within the shippers additional fa Mies nnd a narrow nrirgln of being .the Repub servlce In proportion to the Incn ase in I Mean candidate In 1D10 Instead of their business w.- suffer as much nn Charles KvnnB Hughes ihu im nun ilio mllrn.ids. Wo nro I Senators representing both elements In tne iccpunllrnn party further poimeaoui that Senntor Knox occupies the peculiar position of being the only leading Repub. Ilcan whose training has equipped him to handle the grave international prob lems that will confront the United States during the n"t few years. In addition t.i serving as United States Senator and ,.s Attorney General under Presidents McKinley and Roo-uvelt, Senator Knox was Secretary of Slate throughout the term of President 'J'aft, , All of tho Progressive members of I the Stmt In nro not united behind Sen ator Knox, however. Senator Borah, or 40,000 I'rrxons Mrsl.ded Tho harbor men curr 'd out their threat to tic up not only thn tailroad and privately on in (1 hnatc but also those In the munhlp.il service As a in sult Staten Ihland had its last passenger ferry and alo Its last bati 1. of mall early this morning. Foity thousand persons: who labor In Manhattan were left stranded on the Island, a few of whom, after hours of delay, reached tho city on launches or by way of w Jerccj or Brooklyn. In thn Isolated Imrougli also Hvn sev eral hundred urmv nnd navy others who were brought to their offices In Man hattan on invy tugs and l.iut.che.. They wilt bn housed here, II was stated, until normal transportation is resumed. Hundreds nf highti'CcIng ratt, which had been taking lntsengers nround the. warship Meet ntiflmr'd In .he Hudson, turned t ferrvlng between thn Man hat tit; -nd New Jersey f-nnres, p.ittlc. ularlj' In the uptown dlstilcts, and reap ed a re.ulv harvest of fares Among the flrht passengers were mldlers from Camp Mcrritt, N .1 . on leave In the city, r.nd who were detainee! minv Injurs pas.t tho termination of their liberty .Shipbuilders bound for Ihe emergency fleet plants on Muten Island, we're un able to rciwrt for work. Mor,. than 10,000 of thehe men were forced to turn back homo from Ilattery Park when tl.n Gov ernment-charte reel stunners which ply te and from the) ship) arils were de serted by their cre.is. , The union leaders declared the y w ,ind tin up thn city tiro ami pe.Itm boats, but municipal offli lals profebsed to feel no imenslneM In this rfgard Thn crews, thoy wild, were uniformed men, umb r ilty pay and icgulallons. and not sub ject to union orders. Paul Ron' nge, attorney for the New York Iloat Owners' Assoi latlon, admit ted tho harbor strike w is trv con,. rlete. "When tho authorities In Washington aro ready to send nn emissary who will talk straightforward nnd tell us to our faces what ho thinks, then the heutt owners stand ready to meet him m con ference," he said "t'nder no conditions I -will wo have any further dealings with .Detail " .., ij, .iiniiuiau u. me war i labor board, Wo aro through with him." A. II. Smith, eastern regional dl r , .eiuToi .-UC.VUOO tneir co-ojierjttoii nnu (o1 11B BrU,h high commissioner and have urged him not to relinquish Ceeleral I j., llmbass.idor to tho United ontrol until ongress has lim oppnr- stn, ftcCordlng to a Loudon dispatch tunity to Itglslatc, Mr. Cuyler declared. ,,. ,h,. l'hi. de Paris. I Ho read a message hp stilt Walter T. R la n-uil that Lord Robert Cecil, i Hlnes, asFlstant director BCnci.it, on i former Assistant Sei rctarv of Slate for Deceinbtr 21, saying 'Foreign Affairs, will succeed him. 'Tho cvcutlvc.s, of coiir.se desire to """" " ' art in entire harmony with the illrtt- tor general and to air him, as they have In tho Mst, In rvtiy wa. In cauju.g forward the work of the railroads, under b'cileral administration. "We would urge upon the director general tho Importance in conformity with the President's statement (In his nddrcth to Congress), of time to consider plans for the future, at.d that any re turn nf the roads may bo Ucterreel until at least this opportunity has been af fmiled " "Vn e-ann"t help but urge uiwn the tllrertor (.tnera! Ihn grtai dNaater that lu our judgment vwiuld cnMie l,ulh tie tho owners eif tho ro ids, the nturilv holders and til" public at land, if the mails shuuld bo returnttt until tlnm had been I given to fully mnslde'r these prt'hUnis" I Mr Culir eil. Incd that the s ih .lion nf Railway llxtciittvm repre sented !i '. per cent of the rmlwav mile ago of ihe country mid Included mi itiiall) all blK lues et'tpt ih hoiuhcrn Railwav ! Interstate' on mtrce ''nnum(,.sionr lalgar i: Clarli cilniueil P. tin tom liillten today that In his state mciii jes of Heading will not ruurn to Washing- Idaho, one of the Progressive leaders, pin that no food will bo sent until thero ' is a stanic government uuohci. u. u ikv tlonal assembly with whom tho Kntente can negotiate. This major affirms that the returning; troops arc In good splilts (meaning the j bupporters of tho old legime), hut that tho Soldiers' Councils In the larger towns ' endeavor to Influence the troops by de-' mobilizing thon who are willing to work I for tho Spartacua party Immediately. often paying soldiers twenty marks dally for this work. Tour correspondent learns that Jho Ger mans nro exporting n large number of neutrnl shares to Holland nnd other neutral countries with a double advan tage to gain on the c.snhange. Accord ing to :i Dutch banker, huwevcr, these shaies are sealed and cannot be negoti ated until pence Is signed. To Hcatl Army Hospital Here f'nrllnle, Tn., Jan. 9 Major Arthur C. t Iiachmeyer, just relieved as head of Car- ! lisle Army fjcneral Hospital by Colonel Frank It. Keofcr, Is appointed com- i mantling officer of Philadelphia recon struction hospital. Major Bachmevcr I with causing Insubordination, dlslovaltv has exceptional talent for organization ' and refusal of duty In tho military and land a fine personality. nnvnl forces. qultnl than nny of tho others. Ills as sociates In the caso nro Adolph Germer, nntlonnl secretary of tho Socialist party; William R Kruse, national secretary of tho Young People's Socialist party; J. Louis Kngdahl, editor of the American Socialist, nnd Irwin St. John Tucker, social propagandist. The defendants wero Indicted In February, 1918, following raids on So cialist headquarters and a denial of second-class mailing privileges to Rergcr's paper, as well as the American Socialist, the national party organ. They were accused of willfully obstructing tho recruiting and enlistment service of tho nation while It was nt war, through speeches, articles, pnmphlets, cartoons and other means of propaganda, and .WITH THE ORIGINAL ORCHARD FLAVOR FIRE WRECKS CHURCH Baptist Edifice in Haltiniore I'rry of FlumcM llnltlmnrp, Jan. 9. (I)) A. i) The Seventh Uaptlst Church, ut St. Paul street nnd North avenue, tho lending Raptlst chtirih In this cliv, was wrecked bv lite todav. enly the outer wallet of the riiico beautiful giamte cdlllco re maining sunillnc An overheated f urn ice is saltl lo have cati'ed tho fire, which entailed an esti mated loss of UOO.ono. WILL TO BE FILED FRIDAY Proiiotis of Colonel's LnM Tes tament Kept Secret Oyslrr llaj. Jan s w Kn.lin Roose velt. ooiiIii of Thiodoio Roosevelt, tnld list night tha In nil probability the Colonel's will vv uld be filed In Mintola on Frldav .Mr Roosevelt said the will had been I irned over to him, but ho iicfus-ed to ,n:ii(e known Its contents. has declared In favor of Senator Warren C. Hnrdlni?. of Ohio, who has been l equally prominent with tho Junior Sen 'utur fiom IVntis.v Ivanl.i tn the discus sion of piesldcntlal possibilities, nnd Senator lllr.im Johnson, of California, who is now regarded as tho spokesman foi th' Progressive. s since tho ele-ath eif , colonel RooscmU, ban a pre'sldentinl iK.om all his own. BEAT BOLSHEVIK ARMY Loyal Htissiun Capture 31,000, Much War Material Mnnlilnetlion, Jan. (Hy A. P ) -Loyal Russian troops, operating under the authortiv of Hie Omsk fiovcrnment, havo eleftati'd u large llolshevlk army, lapturlug .". 1 out) prisoners nnd latgo quint. ties of wa'i material, aicoiding to a telegram from the Omsk authorities to the RuFslau minister at Stockholm. n As.". i lated Press dispatch from W isl'lngt'in last Frldiit. quoting Mved.sh ailviies, caul el. 000 prisoners had been taken hy the forces of the iiinpU i internment in the victory at Pom Ah the telegram above gives the H'tme total of prlsonets, It mav refer tn the en sie lighting The I'.trller tils- ' patch put tnc total Rolshevlk loss In the tichiing at Perm from December to De.eiuber -3 at 00,000 men. ifrtr?' '&fV V? v It Couldn't Have ff V Happened With ff p Atter bury jfe- j I r m-mra it rrnmnii iiihiHihhbiiiiii ihuhmM i " I . 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Delaware Ave. S, jniVYX fi , , "g k I inv sitj ci IU ' ftl W Ul . eft i ff Piiiil) X"'"' MfXk S'VJ 1 a i Wfc niiiiiiiiin n nn 1 1 mini ui r l . s x m 1 cai? I .BWLMIIIIirK I HlWl V ' " -" J Trsr I tKA Jtr Iw4jmiA H vIbbVmbVmbVmbVmbIbVmbBIIIIiC at ll KM 11 111 ilii am VnnL w ,r H ii.w MAivft. bwb. &rf.-Bsbes.asu bh Kmuumuur m II Hill fill ll IW bWIIIIbK. , r MANN'S I Jr i5 ImB , m ft jh m a s "',"i't'& xUlllCwMilililflr Loose Leaf Forms f I b.f'clr' f . partial list of our legu- 1 iT" M 1. U ll! flM m''Jm ftKl iHllll II Ullll luF b lar stock Formst J A fit J if . V K'Vllfl W '" K llllll III I llll Ill UT U Arrnunts I'nyuble Record I H I vBBBiltaVliltlllll BT &r. Illlllllllllllllllll A Ilitlanre Rlifpts 0 v II rvJlTlinilll T v lllllllllllllllllIU' 1 1 fj HUN rsyahlc nnd lteceliablt 0 I . N A lrvwfff I lllllll I ' HUlllllllllllllllr 1 n Combined rush und Journal j k .N. jtwl I lOTHI llillllllll slllMUUIr ' a Columnar Sheets H Ix. . 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' "M H i:mp..,e' ltecord tl!lllll(lTTTr l!Hllllll E5$25l7 T jfHWk M g Ilxnense Hepnrt Sj-tem mtlillllllUI iIMB& UtrnuIs r 2T M B FIcurhiK (sheets iniyUlHllllllPl 1uKMM SL iML I inientor.T fnrm. fllkr UIIIIIIIIILL KSlUlin WflllUiil vJmnT b. i iflWrv cj tvu can hitpi.t .M.r, I Nrrw?UilUii2B wvvrall I UlllllllllllliyflHfes sf'jJrlaS I WILLIAM MANN COMPANY Jm WMlilm 21511135 7 N I Stationer Printlni: W n Zr A wT Jk Ts5M,,mmmm'w aU LmW li 529 Market St. I g9ngMK naKaacBiiiiyaiiaaBfeRiiiiBBHBiaaiiiiBSBizasiB.iKiiBBBiaiiiiiiiHiBBiHa ab"-""""'"suMsssiuuiiiaiigiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii E! ss s SB sS PROMPTLY-GENEROUSLY Si TO THE 100 Federation , Will prove a revelation to those 'who use it for the first time be cause of its absolute purity, delicate medication, refreshing fragrance and super - creamy emollient properties for pre serving, purifyinc and beauti fying tho skin and complexion, wo soaps in one at one price. Un rUlns and rttlrlnc mtar.tbe face nits, Intleura. Ointment, waali off In liva mln,, 'with. Cutleura Homa nd hot inter. ulnr od. btl sppllexl with the hansi. w wsnscrlatlr, and .eMitlniie wbih. ar trea . OF 5 ll JEWISH CHARITIES OF PHILADELPHIA $750,000 to be raised will support every worthy Jewish Charity. Team Captains and Lieutenants report at luncheon at Ad'elphia Hotel everv day at noon. CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE-HEADQUARTERS 1312 Walnut St.-COL. SAMUEL D. LIT ChkirW ''' "" ' . - "5S BMa"lllaaHHMBiNMB BBaMBBBBBBBSflttBBBBllBBflBBBBBBlBBBlBSlAlaaVaaaeaU'' r..7 J' '- - -Ir n. $ el'-f f. ..Al BBMBBBBBBBMBBBBaaa avHHaHBBBrpBaBBaBaaHMiHH .'1-thS .; rt-iri-,, ,tA ", i. t.j V..-nt AYiLvir J..- W. ...aTaa E ' l . I . v, , f irlaWi aTll 1 'i . .. Ill I I llll I ' I -JTV . T -Ssl I 1 wea -yttA