! "J M V i ' far . t JATOLEIIE tf 1J 1 4,iV I MNttsmut I? " L. 'S SfeS President Tolls Hosiery Men &.. ru....j r,. - J-J - ! ci " J onuuiu ds opseueu xu &','$ Check Bolshevism wis, . , ! ii"ri. 'APPEALS FOR NO. 12 SOCKS jliie league of nations Is the only pos- gUBrnntro of world peace, former H&tnt William Howard Tnft told the Users at the annual banquet of tbc pjAatlonal Association of Hosiery and tf(.unucrwcar Manufacturers anu ninu- Itf AUJ AnnLitUn 1.a1,1 1af Yitpllfr nf P ...the Bellcvuc-Stratford. The early completion of tho work of tbc Peace Conference was also urRed as KV V m-eat necessity by the former I'resi- jjsWtlvnt. It the spread of radicalism in some Rj$'offthe allied countries is to be pre- Tented. ft? tii. iirii.ti topsn with Interest in ft? ' Hio front fnV nnw before the FcBCC i'i Conference, Mr. Taft switched liii line - 1 1. ...! nnV tlmm nnHrplv 1)V f Fiimrlse by seriously requesting the (IF hcsiery manufacturers "to make more No 12 size socks." because, he said, big men like himself have an everlast ing competition to beat the other bis njen to the few pairs of that size the .ordinary store keeps in stock. English and French Favor It Mr. Taft then returned to the sub- i.." I.a Iflamm nml Rlltll thflt both fejk the French and English people expect their representatives, t. icmenecnu uim IMS Word Georec, respectively, to auopc ine league idea, and that most Americans arc in favor of that measure. Strong IMea for League Hia speech was a powerful plea for the lciteue, with an adroit ue of persua Ira. Anticipating objections from time Id time, Mr. Taft dismissed each one with some serious or humorous thrust. In general, his address was the same as the one earlier in the day at the Bryn Mawr commencement. Tho former President was- in good spirits' and he joked over hN defeat in 1012. P- C. 'Withers, former president of the association, in the speech of in troduction, referred to himself as one who had supported Mr. Taft in 1912, and .who hoped to support him again in 1020. "I thank Mr. Withers for his gen erosity, but I must say thnt I look back upon 1012 with less affection than I do upon any other year," Mr. Taft de clared with that famous chuckle of his? "And the other suggebtion that he made does not disturb my slumbers in the slightest. For I know that it is the custom to place in nomination for that high office every guest of honor, no mat-tcr-who he is no matter whether born in this country or not, and no matter whether the peculiarities of the situa tion make his election impossible or not." More seriously, Mr. Taft said : "If I know the temper of the Ameri can, people, they are not quitters, and .thv nnirup will he when they are called ! uon to take their place in tho affairs if.jl.lt .l..i !! thorn In Tho United W'SUtea is the most powerful nation on fiirtV and tiotcntiallv the most powerful yin-a military way. Ave cannot live a Jlle or. national isolation unu we uuuuui. :s escape ine simre ui "" ' " y.- damns tnis worm us uuuu u n. nu (" be made, according as God has showered ttis Diessings upon us. When Mr. Taft spoke of peace and i, ine neeu oi an eariy signing mere cic many nods of assent from nis ncarcrs. ,.' "We must have a normal peace ana L It is the waiting tor u mac is numus J huslnesa now. 'mere is a nan anu mere Ma a waiting of capital until we know what the terms of peaco are to be and iionr tumM tho rcnrlrl iq to be made t aeainst further wars." ,MV Then quietly and evenly, disarming q prejudice as ne went aiong, wuu jue avop thnso wlin HPpmpd to haVO the iM vUinn n th npt. nml that he honed K?3 4a 1.. nno.T no .no nf ttinlP clin if have the vision, Ir. Taft described the ,purpose of the league of nations and what it Is believed it will do. s Mr. Taft lightened an extromeiy teen ' ulcal discussion with many shafts of : - wit. At one time he was speaking ot lyhia efforts to negotiate two treaties with t'ipreign countries, treaties wnicn woum K 'pave the way for a discussion of jus if ticiable matters. 3fStruncated and crippled those treaties Kj$ikave the heart to propose these treaties p-cSTswJ wq'iwo countries, i pui invm away VnFZA t tlto l.ono tKnt ttio Sanntft trnilli? Kfts. change its mind or that the people would 'change the senators. But instead they V? 'changed me. ? "Vim know, it's Kiimpthlnp i-nod tn ff&'be defeated." he added, with another ;$' those delightful chuckles. "In vie- &iury, you Know, you are so iiaoie to uc curried away in a maze of winning that .you uon't Know wnere you are. uut tit, when yo wnen you are ueieatcu you Know ex- i0kctly where you are." K&t' In general Mr; Taft maintained that r Ihe league of nations would not impair fV s-the sovereignty of any of the nations agreement and thnt the council and the 'assembly could simply recommend and W. ' : propose plans. Ij5 - , "I leave it to the ladies whether the fJW'WQra proposal carries witn it any con Etsotation ot acceptance," and the women u ipuuiea. M' r IKimt thn end nf his address Mr. Tnlt &3- gpoke of bolshevism. R. iJYf iDO WUUU Milt icaiu i,uai. iiiuciii.il p'- ' will take care of bolshevism as it takes rt Tfc ' firm.- .-1rl tll I...... 4l.at A .!.. hX care' of any bad smell let it cvapo- KAjWte- . .. . jr .Mrs. Katherine Ulemmons uould, ot Jft a JHew lorn, was introauceu us iuc nrnt mfi .nreiident of the first Woman's Chain- ., r.-MNr, QT IMJUIUCILC JUOL IKlUlll -1&4, XHil ,r Itfifltt. The Philadelphia Commercial Museum w& .lAonrlhfd nn one nf the most valu- ,We sources of credit and export in ''Jfeiwation to manufacturers in the ". fhtifx! States bv Charles Lyon Chand- JwV "foreign trade manager of the Corn ' Eratonge National Bank, in an ad- ywjieruay at me closing .btsciuu Ritwuvvuwuu i fnllnwinir officers were elected at, XV xi. jonnston, ivhoitihc Mills, xvnoxviue, xenn.; vice rt, D. L. Galbralth, American f, 4Ja,r uii Jiiwi, i "wi'w '- t. S. D. Bausher. Glorie Un- irltfills. Beading, Pa. ; treasurer, O. Blood, Jonn xjioou a lo hin- secretary, u. x. carter, utnut treet. Philadelphia: at directors. Joseph Felden. Box KsltUug Company, Philadelphia; i nml, west uromer, o.vrni.-unc, :.t K. .A. Bcott, x-eeness iyuuuuk ffempany, Boston; J. J. I'noenix, Jky ' xMitfinjr Company,- Uelavau, KdWHftl isioon, joun iiioou a Philadelphia ; G. Oberlander, Kntttinr luu. ueauinir. ra. : man, (.ivhh-. jvbuhug M;.,Jep4 xi. zens, UMM?ai auiwau t Taft Admits He's Dead; Ho Laughs and Laughs "Senator Borah is right," said former President Tnft today when told of the references the Idaho league, ot nations opponent mado to him yesterday in tho Senate. "Senator Borah," and the full Taft chuckle enmo out, "says that tho Democrats treat rae kindly." Then ho laughed. "He says they treat me in the same way that people move' aside in a respectful attitude to let tho dead pass. "I agree wIWi Senator Dorah In that characterization of the attitude of the Democrats toward me. "One of my chief interests in the prcscut situation, one that moves me even in my grave, is to prevent other funerals." And then he laughed the hearty Taft laugh that began with a chuckle and ended with head thrown back and full-faced smile. YOUTH DROWNS WHEN CANOE IN SCHUYLKILL UPSETS; FRIEND SAVED Neither Trained in Navigation of Light Craft Boys See Accident in Fairmount William Ilauman, twenty years old, 234 Girard avenue, was drowned last night in the Schuylkill river opposite Sweet Tlrinr Hill, Fairmount Park, when his canoe upset. A companion, Stewart Uenson, 55 12(5 North Front street, was rescued by boys on the bank. Pauman owned the canoe and asked Benson, a stranger, to take a ride with him. Both were new at canoeing. When the canoe capsized, three youths on the west bank saw the acident. They plunged in and swam to the struggling boys. Bauniau had gone down before they could reach him. They pulled Benson out as he was sinking for the i last time. They swam ashore with him. ' Tho rescuers were George Heavy, nineteen, of 154G North Forty-fifth street, Nathan Yusen, seventeen, 3S.77 Cambridge street, and Nathan Knplin, seventeen, 3038 Poplar street. Dnu Furman, a park guard, recovered the body of Bauman. It was taken to the Lankenau Hospital, where an effort to rescucitato him was in vain. BLOODED BULL IS SOLD FOR $11,000 Pedigreed Animal Brings High Price at Auction Twin Cows Sell at $3050 Each A sleek, blooded bull with a regular grand ducal pedigree sold today for 11,000 at the bazaar sale at Thirty seventh and Market streets held in con junction with the meeting here of the Holstcin-Friesian Association. The lordly animal is known as Sir Aaggie Meade the Kol, His joint pur chasers were C. Xi. Amos, Syracuse, N. Y.. and A. A. Hortmann, Hamilton, N. Y. The bull was sent here from Woodland, Calif., by A. W. Morris & Sons. Two other notable sales were of twin cows born April, 1018 and said to have a great milk and butter producing fu ture ahead of them. They were Echo Sylvia Hartog and Echo Segis Sylvia sad commanded $3050 each. They were bought by the Tranquility and Alla muchy Farms, Allamuchy, N. J. About eighty pedigreed cows and bulls were sold today at the auction. The sales averaged about $2200. Among the big amounts secured were : Fanchcr Farm's Dutchland Princess, a yearling cow, $1325, buyer J. J. Bonner, Marcy, N. Y. ; Allamuchy Ormsby Mechtilde, $2200, buyer Italph King, Mentor, O.; K. A. S. 7.. Jessie Duchess, $1275, buyer C. C. Holl, North Canton, Ohio, and Liberty Pon- tiac Lady, $1550, buyer II. F. Metcalf, Holyokc, Mass. Yesterday's sales totaled $57,0S0. The auction will continue until 10 o'clock tonight and will be rcsBmed to morrow. GIRL SCOUTS DRILL TONIGHT Seventh Ward Organization to Give Concert and Dance An exhibition drill, concert nnd dance will be given tonight in Mu.lc.1 Fund TTnll' Locust Street above Eighth, by - " - Girl Scouts' Troop Do. Ill of the Seventh Ward. Drills by the slrls, singing by the Peerless quartet and Marian E. Ander son, contralto, with Mary A. Mtapney at the piano and n reading byIrs. Norma Woodson will be on thepro- gram. The entertainment will be under the direction of Mrs. George F, Chand ler. The troop was organized fourteen months ago by the Seventh Ward Charity Organization and has a mem bership of twenty-six. The' headquar ters are at 715 South Sixteenth street. Miss Ethel Bascom is the captain and Mrs. V. Burton and Miss Sarah John son are lieutenants. The troop will have a camp at Newtown Square during the summer. CAPTAIN ANTRIM RETURNS Medical Corps Officer Home After Seven Months In France Captain Harold T. Antrim, medfcal corps, son of Clarence D. Antrim, for mer select councilman from the Thirty second Ward, and graduate of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, has returned after seventeen months' service with the American expeditionary forces in France, Captain Antrim landed at New York op the Chicago, and wan1 immediately granted, u short leave to visit his home Fn this city. He probably will be dis charged today, end later will practice medicine in Philadelphia. Nearly iH of the captain' service was with Forestry Engineers in the zone o( advance. At times be worked under "hell fire when the engineers were filling emergency orders for tim ber. In Octoberf while on temporary duty at Avecourt, be was slightly "enssed," but at present he suffer no EVENING PUBLIC lEDGER-PHILABELPHlAr !B0l)A'MajJ2Sf 6-W: E U. S. JOB DIRECTOR Candidato for Federal Assistant Post Is Here Pleads for Continuance of Service BILL NOW IN CONGRESS If Congress passes a bill which was introduced this week, a bill officially listed as II. II. 4305, a woman will be assistant director general of tho United States employment scrvlccj of the De partment of Labor. The woman director will be Mrs. Margnrctta Ncalc. She came to Phila delphia for a few liours yesterday from her busy office at Washington to at tend one of the sessions of the National Women's Trade Union League, in ses sion here. The league is interested in the passage of the bill. Unless Congress speedily provides money for the maintenance of this serv ice it must be curtailed In size or bo discontinued. Mrs. Xealc would not talk about the bill. But she did tell of some of the work that the service rendered during the war. and since the feigning of the armistice. Mrs. Ncalc was in charge of the feminine employment work. Throughout the country offices for wom en as well as for men are maintained in principal cities, in charge of cm ploment experts. The service is free. It has found jobs for thousands ot men and women. The task of the employment service has changed in character since the sign ing of the armistice, Mrs. Nealc said. During the war the job was to find workers. Since the nrmistice it is to find work. The employment service has been fighting for its life for several months. Congress adjourned without making a new appropriation for its maintenance. A deficiency bill introduced to meet its most urgent needs was thrown out on a point of order Since the first of the, year the service has been maintained at'ferred with investigators who came to its original size, principally because labor organizations nnd civic societies j in which the terrorists committed out gave financial aid. Unless Congress . rages. supplies needed funds by July 1, the working force will have to be cut to skeleton proportions. The bervice is maintaining 500 offices. "Bebides," said Mrs. Neale, "the employment service is co-operating with every agency which is nt work getting job for soldiers. All the welfare or ganizations interested in this great un dertaking arc operating their employ ment bureaus under the name of the United States employment service. "Since the. signing of the armistice the United States employment service men's nnd women's divisions to gether have placed 2,130,717 work ers in positions' throughout the coun try. The average number for whom jobs were obtained every week was G0.00O. "The federal service has filled n very distinct need in the United States. Less than one-third of the states have their own employment agencies "The cost saved to the workers of the country through the medium of the federal agency is about $22,000 a day. "An interesting feature of the work for soldiers and sailors is that agents arc constantly active In France and the occupied territory of Germany, listing the needs of service men soon to re turn home. We get busy then and try to have jobs ready for them, in their own cities, by the time they return "Enemies of the federal employment service have made the charge that it is maintained in the interest of union labor. This is not true. The union man does not usually need the aid of the service. It is a boon to the un organized workers of the country who otherwise would resort to tho private employment agencies. Union labor fa vors the maintenance of the fcdernl service because it is to labor's best in terest to keep nil the workers, organized or unorganized, in steady and well-paying employment." BACH FESTIVAL OPENS 250 Singers and Philadelphia Or chestra Take Part at Bethlehem Bethlehem, t-a., June -0. The four teenth Bach festivnl at Lehigh Univer sity will be presented today and Satur day. A final rehearsal of the 250 sing ers of the Bach Choir was given last evening in the Packer Memorial Church, where the four sessions of the festival will be presented. Dr. J. Fred Wolle, conductor, has arranged for a rehearsal of the six soloists and the members of the Philadelphia Orcbestsa, who will furnish the accompaniment, in the church this morning. All the regular scats for Saturday's ; sessions have been taken, and very few "The F'lda y program includes eight l.nn(ntni , flret nf tvlilnl, Tl.T..l ......., ...... ... .....u.., 11V 4.UIII Is My Shepherd," never has been sung in Bethlehem. Saturday will be de voted to Bach's greatest work, the "Mass in D Minor." The opening of earh session will be announced by the trombone choir of thcMoravian Church. TO PLAY "BROADWAY JONES" Cohan Comedy to Be Offered by Phllopatrlan Players June 9 The Phllopatrlan Players, under the direction of James Skclly, will glve'a production of the well-known Cohan comedy, "Broadway Jones," as their nimuul benefit for the House of the Good Shepherd, St. Magdalen Asylum, Germautown. As in former years, the benefit will be given at the Broad Street Theatre and will have a week's run beginning June 1). The House of the Good Shepherd is twenty-seven years old. Financial ob ligations induced by war conditions have placed It in the most straitened con dition of itB career. The organization has at the present time the care of two hundred young girls. Maccabees Plan Clubhouses The Maccabees are to have a system of community clubhouses throughout the country. Plans for their establishment were made public yesterday at the state convention of the Women's Benefit As sociation of the Maccabees'at tho Hotel Walton. Probably the first one will be erected in Philadelphia, according to the an nouncement made by Miss Blna M, West, supreme commander and founder of the order. Entertainments, and dances will be" held in the clubhouses several HERE TO HUNT The former chief of (ho United States Secret Service, who lias been given the task of directing the fed oral detective forces In runnlrig down the bomb conspirators, is In . Philadelphia today Investigating tho bomb explosions Xavrf kmmmmmmmujemmmmmmwmmzi&jfr,Tie&ivx',', ':-.,,:.. ..Kmmetmxi &t&&. 4JMtol4v&wMw2 WIIXIAJI JAMES FLYNN Fly nn Arrives Here to Hunt for Bombmen Continued rrom I'aee One ment of Justice, was cloictcd behind closed doors for more than two hours with other covernment officials. At City Hall. Captain of Detectives Souder con- Philadelphia from the other six cities rVdditional evidence, garnered in Washington, has given nn international tinge to the investigation. This develop ment indicates the foreign anarchists were imported into this country to take part in the outrages on Monday. An interesting feature of this phase of the probe is contained in a dispatch received here from Zurich, Switzerland, where pro-German agents nnd an archists, are on trial. One of the nc cused Italian anarchists yesterday re marked to the examining judge : "Our comrades arc already at work in America, as the newspaper dispatches show." In this city the investigations centered today on the work of identifying the terrorist who was killed In Washington and of determining why nn nttempt was made here on the life of Louis Jajiecky, a jeweler, of 244 South Fifty-seventh street. The jeweler's home was bombed as was the rectory of the Catholic Church of Our Lady of Victory, at Fifty-fourth and Vino streets. ' The international tinge developed when the French authorities in New York nnd Washington were called upon yesterday to make investigations as the result of the discovery of a wallet on the lawn of Mr. Palmer's home on the day following the explosion. This wallet is dupposed to be the property of the dead man. nnd in it scraps of paper that lead the authori ties to believe the man had lately ar rived in this country from France, and that he is one of the memhotH ot nn anarchist group in Europe opening op erations in this country. An investigation of the contents re vealed a note written in French, sup posedly bv the dead man, saying "I am ." (Here the name which the authorities refused to divulge was filled in.) "I arrived here on the ." (Here the name of a French vessel plying be tween New York and France was in serted.) In the wallet wero n number of French, Itnlian and American postage stamps. The exact nationality of the (ipnil man has not vet been determined. but the authorities are almost positive from the discovery ot the wallet mat the man came to this country only a short time ago. The wallet, when taken to leather experts, was declared to have been made in France, although the name of the manufacturer is not stamped upon It. A picture of a boy about nine years old also was found in the wallet, and is supposed to be the son of the dead anarchist. HAMM0NT0N BOY DROWNS Orphan Takes Fatal Swim In Clay Pits at Wlnslow Junction Sixteen-year-old Frank Hess, of Hammonton, N. .T., was drowned in the clay pits at inslow Junction last night. Hess and a number of companions, in stead of going home for supper, went to the pits for a swim. Hess disap peared after they had been swimming for some time, and the boys made a search for him. His body was found in the pit six liours later. The Hammonton municipal lung mo tor was rushed to Winslow Junction, but was of no avail. Hess haa no parents living. He has been staying at the home of his grandfather, Mar tin Barton. rKlSSEL An unusually distinctive fea ture ot the Kissel design Is the radiator eemi-spherlcal In de Hlgn. big,' noble and Imposing looking. Low-set, bullet-shaped headlights add to the front-view appearance, See rhotooraph in Sunday's Ltdaer Pictorial Beetle. W. CLARKK GBIED. SOS N. BKOAD Reliable Paiiits and Varnishes "Superior" R. SI. Faint St. 30 Gal. "C. A. O," K. M.. Taint t3.0 ALL SHAUK8 AND SIZE CANS ROCK tUSTRB VARNISH For Inside $3.80 tlal.i Outside 1S.SO Oil. "O, A, O." OPAL1TK WIIITK KNAMKL 15.00 Gallon-Can. I1.J3 Quart-Can S Special Shades ot Pure Linseed OU House unci rorcn x-aini fs.oo (lal.t 750 Quart. MARINE BPAH VARNISH SJ.00 per Gallon i worth 16,00, PAINTH MIXED TO ORDF.R ANY SHADE DESIRED C. A. GILLINGHAM llth nd Morris Zlst and Wliartoa s TERRORISTS FLYING TO FEATURE NAVY YARD CARNIVAL Home of Sailors Will Be Opened to Public June 28 for First Time .Since 1918 For the first time since lfl tho Phil adelphia Xavy Yard will bo thrown open to the public on June S, when Nav' Belief Day will be celebrated at the j-ard with an array of interesting activities. Thcro will bo a carnival, athletic events, airplane stunts, submarine div ings nnd many other features for the entertainment of the viritors. The pub lic will be permitted to go aboard the battleships nt the yard. There will be a large number of booths where varN ous attractiveHhings may be purchased, including refreshments and army and navy bouvenirs. There will also be a rummage sale. An admission will be charged, as the entertainment is to be for the benefit of the Navy Belief Society, which helps In alleviating the sufferings or needs of tho dependents of the navy personnel. Mrs. C. A. Carr, wife of Captain Carr, ,of the navy yard, is chairman of the Pennsylvania auxiliary of t)ic so ciety. The following'.are the. various committee chairmen and officers: Navy women's committee, Mrs. L, W. T. Waller; navy yard employes' commit tee, Mrs. John S. Lynch; clvilinn wom en's committee, Mm. E. T. Stotesbury; civilian men's committee, Hon. Thomas B. Smith ; executive committee, Rear Admiral C. F. Hughes; treasurer, Cap tain J. II. Martin; carnival manager, Lieutenant Commander F. It. Payne, and athletic committee, Major A. ' J. Drcxel Piddle, U. S. M. C. TRUCK DRIVES OVER BOY" Wheels Crush Lad's Chest -Was Stealing' Ride, It Is Said , Thomas Darrow, ten years old, 3002 Mount Vernon street, was seriously in-1 jured early today, when the rear wheel of a truck passed over his chest. Thomas, it was said, was stealing a ride nnd fell off as the truck approached Thirty-ninth street nnd Lnncastcr ave nue. He is in the Presbyterian Hos pital. William Bray, 318 Poplar street, driver of the truck, was held under ?G0O bail by Magistrate Harris, to await the outcome of the boy's Injuries. nKATIIS WALKEH. June 6, THOMAS P. WALK. Ell, at Cornerstones, near PhnenlxUIlp, P.. Aced 83. Relatives and friends- Invited to funeral services from hla late residence Cornerstones, Mon., June 0, 3 p. m. Int Morris Cem, PhoentxMllo. Conveyance ni meet 1'hlla. and Heading railroad train ar riving at Phoenlxvllle, 2:11 p. m. MOIIRIH. Suddenly. June f.. WII.T.TAM 8.. of 1131 Green St.. husband of the late I jiainaa Moms. iieiamea ana mends in vited to ifuneral services. Tups., 2 p. m.. at the Oliver It. Hair nidi.'.. 1820 Chestnut st. Int. Northwood Cem. Itemalns may lie lewert Mon. evejunsr. SMITH. June's. MAHY 8., eldest dauffh ter of the late Jacob H. and Mariraretta H. Rmlth. Relatives and friends Invited to funeral services. Mon., If p. m.. at the Oliver H. Hair litdi.-.. 1820 Chestnut st. Int. private. HOMjOWAY. June (1. at N. K. -cor. Penn and Knox sts., Oermantown, AMI13RT KAHNKSTOCK. son of Harry D. and Nellie D. Holloway. ased 15. Kuifrnl services on Mon., 10 a. m.'. at the OIlvS H. Uair Dldc.. 182ft Chestnut st. Int. private. WILSON. June 3, JAMES, son of William and Klliabelh Fleming, aited 27. Relatives and friends Invited to funeral services Mat.. I P. m., at TCBlucm:? ui imrcmn. i.iu F-. 23d st. Auto funerul. Int. Mt. Marian Cem. Remains may be viewed FT!.. 8 to 10 p. m. T.BnAT, ADVKimSr.MKST8 IN T1IK ORPHANS' COURT FOR TUB .COUNTY OF rillLADF.LriUA. April jerni. iviir. .iu. a Estate of J?rederlet W. Evans, Jr., drrenaed. Notice Is hereby given that Annie Stetiart Krana. the widow of the decedent, has filed In said Court her 'petition claiming her ex emption of 1800. under Section 12 of the Fiduciaries Act of 1017. out'pf the real es tate of the decedent, known as Nos, 2132 and 218 North Kalrhlll street. Philadelphia, and that the appraisers' appointed hy the Court have appraised, Wessld premises at the sum of 700. over ind above the mort eaue of tlSOO. to which same are subject, and rraylns that said appraisement be con--..., .rha afllil netltlnn mav he allAweH hv the Court on Friday, June 27. 1019. unless exception. : jroWAIID R. WILSON, THOMAS F, OAIN. Attorneys for Petitioner, THVORWB NOTICIW 33 KLHAII'WIUJAMS, late of south ilJ2? weet corner Third and Central ave- ""wheresa. Ellia 'Williams, your wife, has filed a libel m ine iourt oi wommnn 1'jeas. No. 4. of Philadelphia county, of September against you. Now you are hereby notified and reoulred to ?PPJr In said .court on or before Monday, the & day of July neit. to answer the complaint jf lb; said Ellia Wil liams and .In default ot such appearance iou will be liable to have a divorce Kranted In. your absence. y KANaMS-, Hherlff of Philadelphia, "HELP WANTK1 vkmai.k HOSIERY Exp. kdiii ana loopera on Ithltt. A,t if "Williams full automatla machines, steady worjt, good pay. Hxtenlo Fleeced i ffjj.anisin -. ;4in xv. S415 N, Howard it. Unuri wtwi "-. HELP WANTED MA t.K COOK Wanted. Filipino or ., Japanese as DEFENSE OPE HS IN FORD'S LIBEL CASE Presentation of Chicago Tri bune's Evidendo Is Expected to Continue a Month d. LAWYERS READ IN RELAYS By the Associated Press Mount Clemens, Mich., June 0. Di rect cvidenco for tho plaintiffs in Henry Ford's $1,000,000 libel suit against the Chicago Tribune was completed today and prpscntntlon of tho defense, ex pected to last n month, was begun. Couns61 for the plaintiff yesterday in troduced depositions, editorials and even cartoons for the purpose of showing that specific malice lay behind the. Trib une editorial of June 23, 1010, in which tho Detroit manufacturer was called on anarchist. Couniel for the Tribune objected to all of the evidence introduced yesterday most of it on the grounds of remotcnens to the lssuo on trial. Desks were piled high with ponderous bound volumes of the Tribune, nnd lawyers, to savo their throats, relieved each other in rending. As the volumes were opened the big banner headline's of 1010. announcing one German victory after another, were visible to the spectators. The front pages were' devoted almost entirely to news of the great war, but from time to time on the editorial page the law yers found wiltlngs devoted to the Mex ican situation, but generally In its re lation to the holocaust in Europe. Tho editorials read bore the headings "Submarlno Controversy," "President Wilson Moves for Peace," "Mexico nnd Belgium Entering the European War" and "Our National Danger." The cartoons were pertinent to the editorials. They were Introduced by the plaintiff to support his charge that tho Tribune urged war against Mexico to divert supplies from the enemies of Germany, and that specific malice arose in the. breasts of the publishers against Mr. Ford because he opposed the use of force in the country south of the Rio Grande. A PIPE, A FIRE EXIT HOBO Johnny of the Road Should Be More Careful When He, Retires Johnny Hobo forgot to douse the glim of his corncob ,plpe before he retired Inst night on a bale of white rags in a freight car on the siding nt Levcrington avenue and High street, Roxborough. And every splinter of the freight car, excepting the Iron truck of the car, and every one of tho ten bails of rags in it, wore consumed by the subsequent flames. The transient lodger escaped, and the wagon and crew from the Maine 'arid Dupont streets fire station put out the fire. ARREST FRUIT DEALERS Five Fined $10 Each for Falling to Cover Their Stands In pursuance to the recent ordinance making it unlawful to keep fruit un covered ou sidewalk stands, Special Agents Buckley and Smith, of the Board of Health, today arrested -five more of fenders. Magistrate Harris in his office' at Thirty-seventh and Market streets, fined them each $10 and costs, and declared that he would cover up out-of-door fruit stands for the good of the health of the public, if he had to arrest every fruit dealer in the city. Reverend Dr. Russell H. Con well will address tho New Era. Bible Union at Bethany next Sunday afternoon at 3.30. The Male Octette sings twice. The - service begins at 3 and ends in fifty minutes. This is to extend a cordial 'in vitation to the reader to attend. Tl-olley carsjto the door. JOHN' WAJJAMAKER ' Presiding. "Says the Heayy weight Champion: ' I take the broad' stand, that a fellow who does not know enough to train himself for a fight does not know .enough "to win a championship. The man who must be told everything around the training camp 'is, the sort of fellow who keeps peeking anxiously into his corner to see what his manager is wig-wagging during the ht, and getting his block knocked sideways while he is doing it.". It is admitted that the' result of the fight depends most ly on Jess WiUard's condition on July 4th. This one way to get the right dope on his progress is to read his "Own Story" that he wires to 4- v " THE DAILY PRESS Place your order at once with your Carrier or Dealer or Phono Market or Main 5100. JI ?' ': V N. J. PEACE LEAGUE MEETS TO INDORSE WORLD COVENANT Taft Principal Speaker at Ses- "sions at .State House' at . " v. Trenton Today' , Trenton, N. J., Juno 6. For the purpose of expressing popular ratifica tion of the league of nations covenant, the New Jersey branch o tko League to Enforce Pcaco opened a .stato con vention at the state house-here today, with former Pr.csldcnU'Willlam II. Ta,ft scheduled as the' prlnclpalspeakor. Oilier speakers on ho program for the afternoon and evening sessions ot the convention nrc former TJnt'ed States Attorney General George W3Vlcker sham, llabbl Stephen S."Wlse, of 'New; York,' and Helen Varick Boswell, who is to take the place of Dr. Anna How ard Shaw, prevented from attending by Illness. ,. Sessions of the convention arc being presided over by 'Dr. Henry van Dyke of Princeton, chairman ot tho Ncw.Ier sey branch of tho League to Enforce Peace. AT LAST, A HORNLESS BULL Not a Nature Fake, but Real Live Animal Minus Usual Headgear "I have heard of hamless sandwiches and stlnglcss bees and beerless schoon ers, but I'll bo gum swlzzlcd if (that ain't the first hornlcs3 bull I've ever scenl" And the stranger who is taking in the Holstein sales at the Bull's Head Bazaar, Th'Irty-seventh and Market streets, scratched his head. "Now, there's a bull I wouldn't bo skecrcd of meeting In tho meadow with even a Bolshevik flag in my hnnd. He's an awful ugly-looking animal, nnd he looks ns if lie hadn't had a shave for the last month, and I dare say that his uncomellncss is what takes the place of horns for his own protection. Now that wc got hornless bulls, who knows what wc are due to get next. Who wants to live in a world with swordless fish, or humplcss camels? It ain't natural. "And it has its pathetic side, too. How the deuce do they expect the poor gentle cow to call for help when it needs help without having one horn, let alone two?" JEWELERS t ' CHESTNUT AND JEWELED Finger Rings Bar Pins Brooches Pendants Sautoirs . Bracelets Quality -tIndividu ality- 4i JESSWILLARD Wires Every Day From Toledo to "n, I . .His'QwnStoryVofHis New Method oFTraining. .' ' HELI !' Man Charged With Qriving Mur der Car and Killing Compan ion Identified by Women CORONER DETAINS HIM Albert "Bed" Murphy, twentytnino years old, who said he lived at Nine teenth street and Columbia avenue, was held without bail by Coioner Knight to day to await tho action of tho grand jury. Whild detectives nnd witnesses wero testifying that he shot and killed one of his companions in a holdup at Fifty first and Arch streets on Slay 22 tho accused man sneered continually. Ho is charged with having caused the death of Wilfred E. Carpcntier, of Now Bedford, Mass., a Belgian. Carpentler was fatally wounded by a' shot said to havd been fired by Murphy nt Harry W. Pctcrman, C33 North Allison street, n collector for tho American Stores Company. Miss Lillian Moore, E021 Ludlow Terrace, who witnessed tho hold-up and shooting,-swore to the most damaging testimony given 'against Murphy. She was one of several women t who wit? nested the shooting, nnd positively iden- iiucu i.uurpuy ns ine man wno drove toe murder car used in the hold-up, nnd the one who fired the fatal shot. Maxwell 'Webster, owner of the ma chine used by the bandits, who said it was stolen "from in front of his home on Spruce street near .Sixtieth, was subjected to a severe examination by the detectives. Ho admitted at the in quest that he had been arrested oa several occasions for suspicion of pick ing pockets, but denied nil intimations that he was implicated in the hold-up in West Philadelphia, He was not ar rested in connection with the case. MAKE PLEA FOR ARMENIA Recognition of De Facto Government Asked of Wilson by Forty Governors New York, Juno 0. James W. Gerard, chairmen of the American com mittee for the independence, of Arme nia, announced last night that gov ernors of forty states, headed by Governor-Smith, of New York, had cabled a rcnucst to President AVilson that he exert liis great influence to bring about I tlin rppncrnltlnn hv the nnwprn nf thft delegation of integral Armenia as the j0 facto government of the country. SILVERSMITHS JUNIPER STREETS DFQRGRMIDJURY Iffl! SNEERS PRESS v, i . f m iizm $e? 'UlrtwlUr. ., d .fights a wee . ' Afte June Uth,' No. ISO 8, OOtli f z? n MO SFv 7""f- "Vf i. is 1 .,.... i ,o .." -se. '.Mmsmm','' ,:i.;r. It S' .'I..!