sJ'l '"Vi'Vi Y . I, r. V ';- """ "-, " T---. --,..- '." ," "lV 'I rsw',u; wxrimsiT-vm tottW.t. T:wrtiTr'.T? tjixtt . a Tvnvr irnrr a AirvNmAV. AYAV K 1ft1Q ' i' . t ' r w4i ...M 0 XJ I AJJ.14.ilU J, VJJUJUJLV- JJJJUVJJUil X LJLXXJXJUJUiJLii JUIJLJ7X AIJLVJLIJIA- u..a.. ... , i .v j. 'J&. ' WOVE NI0NUK1EMT llMffttlM Wreckers Today Begin Demol ishing Last Mill Property on Right of Way GENERAL MUIR HAS NO HOME, LEGALLY, AND NEVER VOTED Iron Division Commander Divulges Secret in Declining to Discuss Military Presidential Possibilities LEGION NONPDL ITICM WILL SPEED COMPLETION l Arrangement for the erection of the Art Gallery on the Parkwajr nt Twenty fifth Ktreet. under the plans of .Tncqurs Greber, will necessitate the removal to 8 new position yet to be selected of the George Washington Monument nt the entrance to Fairmount Tark. erected by the Society of the Cincinnati, and dedi cated by President McKinley, it was announced today. The city on Saturday acquired the last mill property on the right of way .iramOthe' Parkway, that the Flelsber Com pany V iwenty-nun street.- mrector Da team .Ti has ordered that wreckers be gin demolishing the building today to 'prepare the site for the Art Gallery. This spot in the future will bo the start ing point for the work on the Schujlklll embankment. "The presence of the Kleishcr Timid ing up to this time has held up construc tion on what is to be the terminus of ' the Parkwny," said Director Datrsman. "The delay which has taken place In connection with the demolition of this building was due primarily to the war and later to the removal or the ma chinery and certain material from the building. Tn compliance with the wishes of the federal government, Major Smith made no effort to have the occupants 'vacate the building during the wnr for the reason that the building nnd its equipment were necessary to the manu facture of many articles essential in the conduct of the war. "Preparations to complete the Park way over the site of the Fleisher Build ing have already begun nnd plans for the work are being drawn by Chief Dunlap, of the Burcnii of Ilighwa.is, and Percy Proctor, engineer in charge of boulevards and parkways. Provision is made in the pending loan for $350,000 necessary to carrj on the construction. "Aside from the construction of the center and side drivewnjs nnd footways of the Parkway, the plans for the devel opment of the improvement at this point provide for rather elaborate treatment. The design for the development here is to be elliptical in form and exceptionally attractive. It w ill immedlntelj fnc c the proposed $400,000 Art Museum, and in the center of the design will be the Washington Monument which now stands at the entrance to Fairmount Park at Green street, which is to be re moved to .its new position ns soon as the work at the terminus of the Parkway is sufficiently developed." Major General Charles II. Mulr has yet to cast his first vote. Mlo made this admission today lu declining to discuss possibilities for a military can didate for the presidency in 10"0. It isn't that "Uncle Charier' Mulr doesn't believe In voting. He sajs It Is the fact that he has never been nble to estnblish n voting tcsidencc since he became of age. "The only place that I might claim a home," he said, '"is the illage in Michigan where I was born, but 1 sup pose some state regulation would re quire more residence there than I could establish. I hae never been nble to establish n voting residence since I hae been in the scniee." Much of General Mulr's sen ice has been out of the country. He served with the Second Infantry in the war with Spain and came from his duties' on the Pnnamn cnnal to take command of the Twcntj -eighth Division. He wns nsked whether he thought the boom of Major General Leonard Wood for the Republican candidacy in 10-0 would win fnor with soldiers, "1 hnve no opinion on a political mntter." he snld. "and wouldn't ex press them if I had ahy. I know Gen eral Wood. Met him first on mv way to Cubn in 180S when we were on the same boat. I hnc seen him since, but do not know him intimntelj But 1 don't know nnj thing about politics." Deaths of a Day H Pltilnilelphin bar, in l.ogan Square, near the 'nrchiepiscopal lesidence. She was Interested In the nrchconfrnternlty of the Christian Mothers nt the Comcnt of the Sisters of Xotre Dame, West Itlttenhoiise squnre. Mrs. Bow en had a large circle of friends here. William C. Kuemmerle 'William C. Kuemmerle. fift -right j eats old, died after a brief illness yes terday nt his home, IW'JI C'omly street. For a number of scars he was fi eight agent for the Pennsjlinnln Railroad nt the Gray's Ferry Stntion. He wns a Mason, n member of the Traffic Club nnd picsident of the Provident Building Iioan Association. A widow and thiee daughters survive him. The funeinl will be held fiom' his home Wedncsdaj nfternoon. man. survives him. Mr. Goodman lins been cngnged In the clothing manufac turing business for thirty-five jrars, nnd wns treasurer of the Montgomery Cloth ing Company of ( ontesville. Pa. Miss Georganna McCullen Miss Georganna McCullen died at the Presbjteriun Home for Widows nud Single Women, Fifty-eighth street and Giecnwny avenue, jesterdny after n brief Illness. She was sewutj -two years old. Funeral services will be held at the home Wednesday morning nt 1 1 o'clock, nnd the interment will be in Mount Moriab Cemetery. Delegates to St. Louis Conven tion Deny Plan to Boom Candidates PATTERNED AFTER G. A. R. Denial that the American l.rglon, the new veterans' association. Is to be used for political purposes, was made here today by two of the delegates to the first convention of the legion In St. Louis. Major Charles ,T. Riddle, the Amer ican ace, who hends the delegation, mnde an emphntic declaration that the American Legion is not a political or-gazlnatinn. lie was nsked whether the American Legion would support the boom of Major General Leonard Wood for the presi dency. "The American Legion i not n po litical niganimtlon." he said. "We nre going to St Louis with no plans except to oignnize the association nnd form a program of activitv. But we have no polltiral purposes." Similnr views were expressed bj Col onel Millard D. Brown, former com mando of the lOOth Infantrj, nnotber of the delegates from this city. Colonel Brown said : 'I he soldier organization is designed sun Ivors of the Civil War have pacd on. "It Is not our purpose to create a political machine or to build up a league for the purpose of supporting a soldier candidate for the presidency. "At the close of the Civil Wnr the G. A. 11. was formed for the purpose of protecting the interests of the vet erans and to perpetuate the memories of those who bad made the s'npremc sacrifice for the country. Similar rea sons actuate the men who are organ izing the league of world war veterans." The thirteen delegates to the conven tion In St. Louis will leae the city tomorrow night nt 7:nn. The conten tion Is scheduled,' for May 0 nnd 10. Lieutenant Colonel Theodore Roosevelt. Jr., son of the late Colonel Roosevelt, Is temporary chairman of the legion. Mrs. Caroline Lafayette Mrs. Caroline Lnfnjette. widow of Thomas Kennedy, died Saturday nt her : home, 1334 Spring Gaiden sheet. On ' IT" September 1!(J Mrs. Kennedy celebrated her ninety-fourth birthday. She was nnmed after General Lafayette's daugh ter. Her grandfather. Nathan Jones, was n personal friend of Lnfnjette. Sol W. Goodman Sol W. Goodman, a clothing manufac turer of this eit), died ycsteiclay nt the Breakers Hotel, Atlantic City, of heart disease. Mr. Goodman was born in this city in IS01 and nttended the old New Market street school. Iu 1880 he mar ried Miss Hannah Rrafman, of this citj, who, with her son, Benjamin B. Good- Morris Rufe Moiris Rufe, owner of extcnne onl raids in Gcimnntown nud prominent in chlo nffnits ill that section, died jcstei - da at ills home, 'JUS 1'nvt WKtor sticet. j on the lines of the G. A. R. and will cicrmnnioun, lonowing a snort illness, .succeed milt orgnniznuon wocn me insi wtrnrntnen 's Restaurants Our Springtime Decorating In now eomplttfrf and w Intlte yo l'hlladelphla. to come nnd enjoy the atmootthcre nf the handiometi dlnlnr tmloni In BREAKFAST Wilh Us Tomorrow nnd we'll acquaint jno with the taotlettt morning repast you've ever enjojfil. SUGGESTIONS Ccrrnl nnd Cream Dolled K Rolls and DatUr Coffee Cerenl nnd C'rram Coffee Hot Cake and Ryrup Rolls nnd llutler Quite Inexpensive, Too, 50c 1520-1522 Market St Oppoftlte llrond street Mutton j matmKaiimimiMi?muunMaaaemmm maw ii u MRS. MARGARET R. BOWEN Sitter of the Late Archbishop Ryan Die Mrs. Margaret Rjan Bowen. eighty t years old, a sister of the late Arch bishop, , Ryan, died Sattnday at the home of her son. Major J. Rjan Dev ereux, in Wnsbingtou. She was the widow of Edmund S. Bowen, foimerly of Bellefonte, I'a., who was an officer of the Erie Railroad. Her first husband was Judge Devereux, of St. Louis. Shortly after her brother, the nrch blshop came herefrom St. Louis in 1884, Mr. and Mrs. Bowen moved to this city. Mr. Bowen died a few jears later and Mrs. Bowen lived with her son, Ashton Dcvcjreux, n member of the i SM.ERAS HMMADdoaVTC icwMuiiarci pHS3S32ET nwawiwiM m box camiras at roua? AND ENLARGEMENTS J "THE BETTUtCIND' Oil I J LEATHER COODS-fRAMED PICTURES 8l2c1l&Ru?sT.8lZ 4p Either a Help Or a Dead Drag "X, OUR stationery can pull Y new business and retain old customers or fail to. It rests wholly with you whether jour letterhead, invoice, check, etc., represents you and your business, what you stand for and what your ideals are. ade quately and in the best possible taste. It ! partly a matter of paying enough but more n a matter of flndlnar the rUht concern tn produce euch stationery. Our work won a medal at the t.on don Exhlhltlnn or 1014. May we gene jou? The Edwards Company I-iltho'-rraphers, Printers Steel and Copper riate niigiaeis Youngstown, Ohio Y, BONWIT TELLER GXO CHESTNUT AT 13 STREET lonftll Mi 181885 SPORTS fliOTHES These Sports Suits and Wraps are not able not only for their fine tailoring but also for the excellence of their fabric. "Bon tell" Jersey may be had in heavy, iftedium or light weight; and in plain colors or heather mixtures. SUITSr 29.50 to 45.00 Cuts, Gapes and Jackets 1$.50 to 37.50- Ji k J 1' BONWIT TELLER 6XO. &he cSpedc($hopOMnatiofi6 CHESTNUT AT 13 STREET Announce for Tomorrow, Tuesday DECISIVE PRICE REDUCTIONS An Opportunity Seldom Offered so Early in the Season Women's Tailormade Suits 25.00 35. 35 Gabardine and Serge OJ 00 Suits 18 Braid-trimmed serge and OR OO checked suits 19 Serge and grey mixture OJ OO suits 22 Navy and tan Poiret twill OC f)f 50.00 36 Velour and Shepherd 5 .00 checked suits 12 Tailleur and box suits in gQ QQ tricotine 18 Serge blouse suits; fancy QtQQ vests 10 Semi-sports tweed and gQ QQ check velour suits A Group of Model Suits This assemblage of suits, reduced because of broken sire range, in cludes some exquisitely tailored box, blouse, tailleur and elaborate models in tricotine, serge, and Poiret twill. Featuring Paulette and tinsel-embroidered vestees. Extraordinary 65.00 Women's Wraps At Very Special Prices 50 capes, coats and dolmans, developed in serge, tricotine, velour, 1 Op Cfb silvertone and tweeds ) ji .JJ 30 tricotine capes of exceptionally graceful lines and excellent yt n ?! quality fabric' In navy, tan and black , i -T jJ 40 tricotine capes, featuring long and short jacket effects and blouse Z O E? fronts. In navy and black only f & .DlS 35 Bolivia and tricotine capes, full length. Models by Cheruit. I i? O Sf) Also Paulette models with vari-colored linings ) U i JJ 37 Evora cloth wrap-coats with draped collars and tie-belts. Inl On Cf all fashionable shades fO.DU Women's Frocks and Gowns Special types of frocks and gowns, especially designed for summer occasions, are em phasized in this assemblage of originations in net, organdie, voile, handkerchief linen and printed tub fabrics. Many hand-made frocks are included. 18.50 to 125.00 Afternoon Gowns of heavily-embroidered or beaded satin, crepe de Chine, beaded or embroidered Georgettes, foulards combined with Gorgette, printed chiffons and satin and Georgette combinations. Also distinguished models in tricolettc. REDUCED TO 55.00 Tailleur Frocks of tricotine, sergd embroidered wool Jersey, foulard, Georgette, and satin in a variety of smart and exclusive designs. i s 1 if REDUCED TO 39.50 29.50 WANAMAKER'S WANAMAKER'S WANAMAKER'S DOWN STAIRS STORE Huiinidreds of Summer Frocks Answer the Call of May Light cotton things are re placing some of the silk and heavier frocks and there is one section devoted entirely to pretty, light frocks. At $5.75 They aio of voile in coin or pin dots, striped, flowered and fig ured designs, all prettily trim med with white organdie collars and cuffs. Some of the new touches are the broad belts (many are sashes that tie in the back) and pointed overskirts. At $6 and $7.50 Plaid and check gingham frocks have white collars and cuffs and button trimming. Serges, $7.50 are the most practical of street or business frocks. Some are braid trimmed models, some have broad belts, are now $7.50. Crepe de Chine, $12 is light and cool and can be worn all Summer. A group of thes, frocks in navy or Copenhagen blue, gray and tan are braided or combined with Georgette crepe. Lustrous Taffeta is in many styles. The frock sketched is collarless and em broidered with braid. $16.50. A quaint ruffled taffeta IrocV, the bodice embroidered in pretty designs, is $19.50. This style ii sketched on the left. Fresh Lookang Foulards are made in various models, som combined with Georgette crepe. $13.50 and $18. (Market) Lowered Prices on Women's Swits Serge suits are now $11.75, $15, $16.50 and $19.50, Wool jersey sports suits are $22.50 and $25. Tweed suits are $20 and $22.50. A group of fine novelty suits is reduced to $25. (Market) Double- Texture Raincoats for Boys of 6 to 16 , $2.85 Of course, girls can wear them, too, and small womerf can be fitted in the larger sizes. These are splendid, durable coats, with taped cemented seams, roomy pockets and a collar that can be buttoned close under the chin. They are in khaki color and are the best water-proof coats that we have ever had for even twice the price. (Cliffy, Market) More Eiraterestflinig Coats amid Wraps Are Reduced There are many, many styles to choose from in exceedingly attractive and becoming models in rapes, dolmans or coats. There is particularly good choosing among wraps of serge, suede velour or poplin between $9.75 and $18.75. Styles that will appeal to women's varied tastes in quiet navy blue or in the brighter Spring colors. Many are lined throughout with fancy silk. The dolman which is sketched is of serge in navy or black, full length, lined throughout with striped silk and fastened at the waist with a silk cord. There is a deep hood collar of cloth and silk. Price is now $19.50. At $22.50 a sport cape of suede velour in a shoit length has a jacket front and is lined throughout with fancy silk. It comes in Pekin, tan and taupe. The same cape of silvertone is $25. From $29.50 to $45 there are bolivias,Saigr tones, duvet de laines, crystal cords. There are not many of a kind, but there are a number of styles well cut, beautifully trimmed and much reduced in price (Mttrkfll Heavy BSeachedl Muslim 21c a A good quality snowy muhn, 3fi inches wide. vlusHin 1 9c a Yard This is of a good sturdy qual ity, 36 inches wide. (Central) Special Cheesecloth Double-Fold, at 6c a Yard It is full bleached and of good quality; 36 inches wide. (Chealnut) Women's Black Calfskin Ties Oood-looking, graceful Oxfords are made on a blender last with imitation straight tips, welted soles and high curved heels. $5.90. Children's Anklestraic of Several Kinds They are all made with comfortable, wide toes and welted soles and are 'to be had in various leathers: black patent leather in size 8Vj to girls' sue C. black calfskin in sizes 8M; to 2. white leather with buckskin finish, sizes 8V4 to 2. white canvas in size 8i to girls' size 6. Prices range from $2.50 to $4.90, according to size and leather. (flieatnut) Women ys Boudoir Slippers Special at 75c Gay, pretty slippers in lavender, pink, cham pagne, red, black and gray. They are of leather with a soft, suede-like finish and have fluffy silk pompoms on the toes. 'S Handkerchiefs Plain white, sturdy quality linen handkerchiefs with hemstitched hems are 35c each. (Central) Lovely New The material is a beautiful soft crepe de chine, and it comes in delightful shades of orchid, rose. light blue, pink, Copenhagen and taupe, une is a slip-over style shirred at the waist and with fine tucking in the front. Price $12.50. Another style opens in front nd is bound round the sleeves, neck and down the front has a lovely soft satin ribbon in self-shades. The price of this is $15. Feminine Fancy delights in such bits of daintiness as boudoir caps and mules. Brides-to-be show an unusual in terest in these lovely things. On a counter there is a heap of de lightfully dainty boudoir caps that she can choose from. And there are others in the cases. They are of soft satin, crepe de chine, net and Georgette crepe, and the wee rosebuds and bows and bits of lace and flying ribbons are put together very cleverly. Prices are 75c to $3.85, Mules are in many styles of satin, sometimes trimmed with lace, at $3 to $5. (Central) In the Sale of White for Tuesday The stocks are full of good values in pietty undermuslins. Nightgowns At $1.25 white nainsook slip over nightgowns are embroidered and stitched in blue. At $1.50 pink batiste slip-over nightgowns are trimmed with lace, hemstitching and shirring. Bloomers 50c pink and white crepe ba tiste bloomers have elastic at the waist and knees. 75c pink sateen bloomers with ruffles at the knees are stitched in blue. (Central) tf In the Down Stairs Rang Sale Savings of 20. Per Cent and More Just at the time when people are find ing their need and looking about for new floor coverings, we are glad to have been able to assemble these splendid rugs, all in perfect con. dition to sell at substantial savings: Asminster Rugs in mottled designs measure 27x54 inches and are $2.50 each, which is $1.25 less than Usual. ' WooJ-and-FJber Rugs of durable quality in good pat terns and colorings. Rugs like these were marked a third higher in our own stock. 9x12 feet, $11.50; 8.3x10.6 feet, $16.60; 6x9 feet, $7.60. Japanese Matting Rugs in brown, green, red and blue woven patterns, 9x11 feet, are $4.50. Chtna) Seamless Asminster 7.6x9 feet, $25. Tuese are just a shade above present wholesale prices. t Willow Grass Rugs J at substantial savings. 18x35. inches, plain center, 7&c; figured ' center, 80c, up to 9x15 feet figured, $19.60, with 7 sizes Ini Detween. fel l-tf" 4 VI -I m t y- m i i'.i ''I m -.-i rJ 2 r fX J C f,l Mldi.. i -. '-a J iA r, -. .dt. H. Sjvj Yj. 2!iOB&KJK.. .NKAa,.?r.JIWfT.Eftiai , .,