MP ' V ; , w. rm J" w Vtfv - V . v s , J m I. v& vi Bi- Sfr it? IVv f-T ry - f'l R ft IV" IV y. WW,' bag- "' s i$. e-k'-' i.81?.- ar.' . it &.-. ? h i,ss rf "v. 1 - M m i r .-v. m RYENJa. PUBLIC rLEDaip-T-PHIL4ELlHIA, , FRIDAY; MAY 23, , 1D19 i5HURT,21YDIE' r w. ... N bAU UAUUULN S kaf persons KnocKea uown wnon Motor Runs on Pavement at Thirteenth and Chestnut DOG CAUSES JERSEY MISHAP Fifteen persons uore iuJnrcJ, two perhaps fatally, in lire automobile ac cidents. The injured arc: Godfrey Malm, hurt when automo bile smashed store window at Thir teenth and Chestnut streets. Charles Dal, twenty-five years old, Ultz-Carllou Hotel, was cut and bruised when the automobile ran on the imminent. by an'nutomoblle yesterday whllo riding on a small "klddlo-kur" near his home. In an effort to avoid running down an elderly vomau who was crossing Chestnut street at Thirteenth, last even ing, Joseph 'Krledrlch, of Thirty-third street uboic Huntingdon street, turned Ills tar sharply 1o the left and ran up on the paemcnt in front of the cigar store of Godfrey S. Malm, at the north east corner of Thirteenth and Chest nut streets, Knocking cloun eight per sons before the machine halted. Four of tliein were taken to the Jefferson lloipital while th slight bruises and for treatment. According to the police the young . , f ,,.. t sCE(.,t that vou ask man driving the uutomobile miido au tucm. If vou mean the species with eitort to turn on jus power ami slop imr !.,-, t mnv Im able to tell you some- BAR FLIES GOING TO BERLIN WHENSALOONS CLOSE HERE Not the Red-Nosed Kind, but Those With Wings Will Seek Original Habitat When Lager Beer Ceases Floiving . Where will the bar flies go when the saloons close V It all depends on whicu species you bar uiev, snm cutoniologlst. ambiguity. If sou mean the arlrty with the red noso and en to the Jefferson "" " UCDCUUS "' lie others sustained mcau b.yZ,lM wenj to their homes.-JCtt!:!;:, car, but in ins nasio toucueu some part of the mechanism and caused the car to leap onto the pavement and into the cigar store window, smashing a large bulk window. Williams was crossing thf- street at (.hard arcuuc and hhacknmaxon to the thing. They 11 probably stables. "Flies don't dunk stale beer to get drunk, t don't belierc they can get drunk. Th drink stale beer because it's a food tliey like. And when ou ..t tl.n wtiilr, hppr iiunv from tlum. streets, when an automobile ilrhcn bylfiip..ii i,,.,,!, i,,oo to where they can Oeoric H. Mrohlein, of 444.i llich- M fl.,i iHt n cod to the btubles 1 moud street, struck him Strohleiu gme pri,ns. nr to the eurbuuc nails. Tin- I himself til) to the police. )iP ,jy , j I10 ,ly diiToreut in form coherent statements could be, obtained from them. However, the bar flics of the common house arlcty wcro glad to talk. "We'll go back to Gcruiauj that's where -wc came from. You people (nought us over with jour first barrel of lager beer. And jou'e neglected us etcr since. You fed us at the bar. Hut jou'o never educated us. Wc hao uccr been taught to have sense enough to clcatc our station and inoe to better neighborhoods. No, sir! Wc'c had to stay hero in the saloons and pick up what education we could in a hit-or-miss fashion. "It's only the few progressive ones nho'tc had the good fortune to bo near enough to jump into a rich mau's coat pocket as his foot rested on the rail bettered themselves and reared families of hcnlth'y and Intelligent children who do them proud. "But, sir, the, crying shaino is this: That uftcr having brought us over here, and after hnvlng fed us up and neglect ed our education, the United States Is going to tear away even these meager means of livelihood- -and that amounts to nothing less than deporting us like common Bolshcvlkl. "Perhaps it's for the, best we cor tninly couldn't live on sody water or In stables not with our peculiarly trained tastes!" TIlO W ebb boy Was 1MJHUC With Other ... .liwn.witjnn from (lip l-ninlnnll lintIM' .....1 I.. ..l,,... .m-nr (l.i.rn fill lin trnt linmn Mis. Charles Daly, twenty-one years I jmmgv,crs al Second lint Cumberland i tVi UDa h,.'! go whcrpcr there's fwid." L11( then to set up light housekeeping nl.l. lUlz-Carlton Hotel, cuts nuU v.u, bruises received when automobile lan on the pavement. Charles Daly, Jr.. two years old, streets, when au uutomobile dricu b Abraham Tabas, twenty-three years old, J.'!00 North Second street, struck him, ( ki.ocking him to the ground. The wheels of the ehiel( passed over him and be When the red nosed bur Hies were in his kitchen umoug respectable folk approached with the questlou they wept I It's only those few thut amount to so much just to think of it that no :in thing now. Only those few bac llitz-Carlton Hotel, was slightly bruised Lustained a fracture of the skull. I'hj when auto ran on uic jaeuipm. Miss Clara Stahl, 1328 Hollywood street, who was stightlv injuied iu the same accident ns the Dulv family. Miss Katherine Merger, S-S June street, bruised iu the ncrideut at Ihh tcenth and Chestnut strei ts Miss Jessie Sjhcs, 100 Brinshuist street, slightly injured iu the actidvut at Thirteenth and Chestnut stieets. Miss Mary Carson, tnenty-ihe years old, 1S30 North Crokey street, suf fered cuts and bruises inthc accident Andrew Williams, forty-one venrs old, of 233 East Allen street, in St Marj's Hospital, suffering from cuts nnd bruises after being struck bv au automobile ycsteidav at fiirard aenue and Shackamaxon street Itoy Webb, ton years old. of "(((l North Second street, who was knocked down by an automobile at Sfioud ami Cumberland streets Walter Djer, four years old. of 3-M!l Ormes street, stiuck by an automobile yesterday at Rosehill and Tioga streets. Mildred Stiles, nineteen cars old, Paulsboro. N J , who suffered a frac tured skull when a jitney upset. Emmanuel Miles, nineteen enrs rtld, a sailor, also a passenger in the jitnpv. J Call in Aatson, twenty jears old. driver of the jitney, bruised on head and back. Albert E. Kay, five years old, 311 North Twenty-eighth streft, run down sicians ut the Episcopal Hospital enter tain small hopes for his recoery. Tabas was ancstul bj the police of the Fourth aud York, stieets station . llilld's nklo Broken ' Walter Pj er was struck by an auto I mobile driteu In William iMudmait, twentj speu rars old, li'J." AVcst In ' diaua avenue, at Roseliill and Tioga streets. The child sustained a brokeu ' '...Aln ml tnc remnvpil in flip Ktii. I copal Hospital, while Lindman was I placjd under arrest by the police of the Front and Westmoreland street sta , ticu ATLANTIC 9 "FRANKLIN HOUSE" URGED American Philosophical Society Sup- i ports Permanent Memorial A permanent memorial of Benjamin Franklin in the form of a beautiful building ubsolutelj fireproof, to be ore ted in the I'urkwu at Sixteenth aud Chern streets, wlncli is to bf the home of the American Philosophical Soeictj aud known as "FrauMm House," was discussed last night ut the Congress of Presidents which nut in the Hotel Adelphi Former At toruej (ieueral Hampton L. Caison spoke in favor of bill 517 which is now n the state I.raisluturc and which an piopriates ifoOO.000 to the American Philosophical Society to be applied to the -rectiou and equipment of the building. POH,ARXJE YOU wouldn't give the most important job in your business to an unknown man. You'd select one that has made good. Then why experiment with unknown motor oils in the most important job in your car lubrication ? Atlantic Polarine, Atlantic Light, Medium and Heavy have made good. It pays to use the one that fits, your car. Ask your garageman which. ATLANTIC OTOR OILS Keep Upkeep Down. Held In Stabbing Case Tbomus Lynch, eighteen years old, of 3093 Calumet street, was held in $300 bail for u further hearing Juno 1 when arraigned before Magistrate Price to day accused of stabbing Leo Cavnnaugh, eighteen years old, 3430 Queen lane, with a penknifet BUILDING D E IN FOURTH BLAZE Showers of Flamo'From Explo sives Deluge Fighters of Spectacular Fire ESTIMATE LOSS AT $3000 Firo destroyed the two,-story frame lulldlng in the rear of the cleaning and dyeing establishment of Fred J. Malt, at 3722 Markct street, early this morning. The fire, according to the police, Is the fourth firo in the plant within Uie last six months. The damage is esti mated, nt, about $3000. The fire was discovered by George Bamberger, of 3728 Market street. Ho as walking near tho Mattcstftbllsh mcn,t when ho heard the crackling of flames and saw tho reflection of the blaze. Stopping only long cuougb to deter mine tho extent of tho flrc; bo ran to a nearby engine bouse and. told the firemen. The cngincs'rcspondcd and au alarm was turned in summoning addi tional apparatus. The burning building was in such a position that the firemen were hampered in this work. In addition, periodical explosions in a store of chemicals kept in the structure made their work more hazardous and they were forced to re treat several times when such supplies Ignited aud exploded. Several times tho. firemen were dcl- ,f,1 -nrlMi hnirrrii nf flnmos -thrown up by tho explosions nnd Bevcrai of tho '4 firefighters received minor uurns irony such flames. ' ,Tho structure of tho baUding'tuld tho supplies stored in it wcro such that it wns'more'thnii an hour before; tno fire men began to subdue tho flames. Mr. JJatt, owner of the place, ttd vanccd tho theory that tbo firo was started, by crossed electric wircs. This, . he' said, was the only reason bo could . possibly glvo for tho blaze. Strlke'Poster Distributor Held For putting up-dodgcrs calling nttcn Hon to the claims of the striking bakers, Decoz Kcrohis, twenty-nhic, of Twenty fourth street' 'near Jefferson, was held in $600 'bail 'for n further hearing next Friday by Magistrate Coward. The technical charge lodged against Kerohls was violation of tho city ordinance against distributing circulars wltlfqut a license. v . " President s FULL-PAGE COLORED MAP OF NEW FRANCE, BELGIUM, LUXEMBURG gjgj by the Peace Treaty Alsace-Lorraine, Rhenish-Prussia, the Sarre Basin, etc. Does the Treaty Violate Fourteen Points? The latest and bitterest blow to German hopes, successively disappointed in the Zeppc--hns, the submarines, and the Kaiser, is the discovery that President Wilson and the American people have not secured for Germany a "soft peace." German leaders and German papeis angrily protest that America has "betrayed" the German people. President Ebert declares that in the Peace Treaty President Wilson "has deserted his fourteen points," while Ludendorff declares after reading the terms that "if this is peace, America can go to hell I" In the leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, May 24th, German and American public opinion, as represented by the statements in the leading journals of both countries, is presented. Each of the fourteen points is carefully analyzed in its relation-to the terms of the Peace Treaty so that the reader may readily understand just how much justification there is in Germany's protestatipns. Other very interesting articles this week arc: With What the Regulars Did in the War a Comparative Chart Record of Every Regular, National Guard and National Army Division Engaged the Major Casualties, Artillery Captured, Prisoners Taken, Kilometers Advanced Germany's Economic Shackles The End- of Price-fixing Japan's Press Barrage on America Turkish Women's Cry for Mercy A River of Electric Power Why Aviators Fall D'Annunzio at His "Worst and Best' Ninety-five Per Cent Efficiency in the Y. M. C. A. News of Finance and Commerce Finns in the U. S. Labor's Bill of Rights Hopeful Signs in the Business Sky Germany Starts a Commercial Offensive British "Failure" in Egypt For Better Control of Explosives Flesh-eating and Ferocity Shall Literature Go Dry Too? Dropping the Old and New Testaments The Best of the Current Poetry Numerous Interesting Illustrations, Including Humorous Cartoons The Literary Digest an Ideal Mental'Bracer Even the wisest of us are m'ore or less prone to get into Broove3 as regards our thinking on the great questions of the day. We tend to read the same papers, to listen to the , views of the tame people, to cling to the same ideas. A novel thought or a fresh conception on any subject of teal importance to us finds many barriers of habit and personal bias, to break down ere it can find lodgment in our minds. AU this makes for stagnation and shuts out progress. What we need is a mental fillip, the stimulus of a quicken ing tonic that shall remake our conceptions of things, re adjust our conclusions, put sanity and vigor into our whole outlook upon life. Such a stimulus is waiting for you at every corner news-stand in the shape of THE LITERARY DIGEST, America's foremost news-magazine. Every week it offers you the .world's comments on the world's affairs and the world's thought, freshly culled from the periodicals of every land'iand language, without any admixture of personal editorial preferences or interested interpretations. Read THE DiqEST today and week by week and keen yourself informed, up-to-date, mentally in touch with the live currents of universal progress. ' ! May 24th Number on Sale Today All News-dealers 10 Cents i The 'Tis a Mark of hlstlnctlon to e a Reader of iterdflrDtest i His dignity is ruffled he gives the Sign of the-Bulging Pocket in Answer to a new and enthusiastic member who signalled this good old scout to join the Order of Orlando. "Join?" he says, "Why, Son, I'm a full-fledged Patriarch of the Golden Band there isn't a secret of the Order that 7 don't know. But I can't blame you for being enthusiastic." WE NvX S?"? IhAi Vaam clKe Sign of a Good Cigar The Sign of the Bulging Pocket is fast becoming the most widely used high sign. When you've learned the pleasant secrets of Orlando, you'll-understand why. Be on thy way, Friend!- (Go to the- Crystal Altars where the brethren hold their rites the counters of United Cigar Stores every where. Become an Exalted Exhaler of the Mystic Mist Learn today the satisfaction of Orlando the cigar whose fragrance charms whose mildness wins whose econ omy pleases. Little Orlando, 6c Box of 25, ,$1.5050," $3.00 Orlando, comes in ten sizes lpc to 15c. Little Orlando 6ov Ten sizes enable us ttf use a fine grade bf tobacco without waste the secret of high quality at low prices. Orlando is sold only in United Cigar Stores "Thanltyoul )99 w H si .1 i 1 i if The Literary Digest V J L-liv 2SP'f?umxmss! NEW r).fKWTOiaL t --J mi 'Wx. . m. ' . . L')"' iik'thvtA:f I-.TNT I H &4S.LJL vJL" ? Ji
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers