Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, June 16, 1919, Sports Extra, Page 4, Image 4

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHIKADEtPHlX kOtfD'AY, , TONE 16,tl919 ;f.-,f, . ' ' ,. ; i
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STATE EMPLOYMENT
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BUR
W.
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Declares Stevens
-LEWIS'S ATTACK DEPLORED
f-CX.
.
8$
RATS' LONGEVITY LAID
TO BATHS AND WISE DIET
Methuselah Among White Rodents, JSevcn Years Old, Amazes
r Scientists at Wistar Institute
(
rm. .t. .mniofmrat bureau is being
e-nv aiic nunc w..,..v, -,-
handled largely through ngcucleA tliat
arc used to cmpioymcm i'"""i
rather than through some abstract and
theoretical scheme that may have de
veloped since the emergency has arisen.
This, in brief, is the reply 'of the
service, and particularly of former Lieu -
ltt, tennnt Governor FranK i. ."cv m.u, i
criticism voiced by Calvin i.evris, 01 ..
war enmp community service, at the
City Club Saturday.
F. It. Steven", assistant executive
3i '...' f ,i,n i-nmlovnient sen ice,
with hcadcunrtcrs in the Vlnance
Uuilding, let it be known todaj that t e
work of getting jobs for soldiers seemed
to be satisfactory to everbod,.v con
cerned, IncludiuR the fcoldiors, and hat
it was just possible that personal pique
over something remote irom uru ...
dexes nnd effic.icnc.v had played a pan
In the present criticism.
"I have just had a telephone ronver- j
eation with Governor McClain." nid i
Mr. Stevens. "My attention lias ucen
called to this criticism. I had not
jioticed it jesterdny. I may say thnt
our figures for May speak for them
selves. Two thousand three hundred
and thirty-three applied for positions.
Two thousand eight hundred nnd forty
nine men were asked for. We sent 2077
-to places and of these 107(1 proved ac
ceptable.
Co-operation Given
"Army officers from Colonel Wood's
office have offered no criticism. We
J Jcnow that with them Pennsylvania
stands ace-high in the efficiency, with
which it has handled the returning
soldier movement. In this connection
It has hnd excellent co-operation from
the old government bureau at Third nnd
Walnut streets.
' "We hnve tried to unite the work of
the allied fraternal organizations by ap
pointing a man selected by them to
work with us. He is Mr. Samuel
Matthews, and he is working in the
pny of the state In co-operation with
them. They have brought no complaints
to him and none have been brought
by him to us. Then, in addition to the
booths of the Y. M. C. A., Y. M. II.
A., K. of C. and other employment
services represented in the City Hnll
.Building, we have at various times
had representatives of the Employment
Malingers' Association, who have
picked and hired men on the Bpot.
"Also, through the Philadelphia
Chamber of Commerce, we have been
able, with the help of Colonel Hicks, to
send out appeals for jobs and sugges
tions as to how to employ men. It
p seems that we havo co-ordinated these
various agencies in a fairly effective
manner.
Among other things, Mr. Lewis's
-' criticism was that "at present the state
employment bureau is not oven an ade
quate bureau of reference, much less n
modern employment bureau using a
scientific system of placements."
The Wistar Institute, Thirty-sixth
street and Woodland avenue, swapped
Caspar for Mike the Immortal, and
then cut up Mike to sec why he was
living so long, ,
They discovered that his longevity was
due to a wise diet Mike was no scav
enger and to frequent baths.
MiUc.wns a performing white rat, nnd
he belonged to George K. Nitzsche, recorder-
of the University of Pennsyl
vania. And Mike's trouble that was
perplexing zoologists amounted to this:
he wns for some strnngc reason living
long bejond the allotted span of life for
n white rat. He wns seven jears old,
and should have cashed In his check
when he was three.
The learned doctors over at the in
stitute heard about Mike's age, nnd
their scientific curiosity wns aroused.
They persuaded Mr. Nitzschc to barter erudition.
this Methuselah among rats for the
youthful Caspar.
And now, Caspar is lortt of all he sur
vejs in Mr. Nitzschc's office. He ekes
out a living on tho rolltop desk in the
office on the third floor of the Houston
Club, Thirty-flMi nnd Spruce streets.
His bed is a pigeonhole.
Caspar may be viewed nny morning
devouring copies of college catalogues.
He has a wide range of tnste nnd his
diet doesn't end with college catalogues.
Miss Jessie Cliftqn, the recorder's
stenographer, never neglects to bring
Cnspar every day a slice of bread and
a cold potato.
Caspar, in spite of the fact that he is
hardly two years old, is growing near
sighted. However, mi-opia seems to be
the lot of every one vho must live too
much in the atmosphero of mellow
E
PRAISES SPROU
FORCHARTERCHANG
L
E
Amendments Written in Wood
ward Bill Noaring Final Pas
sago Please Senator
OPPOSITION IS DENIED
HOMEOPATHS MEET
ATASBURYPARK
75th Annual Convention Holds
Memorial Service War
Featuring Program
-
Deaths of a Day
MRS. ANNE STARR GRISCOM
Emergency
Cross
Asliury Park, N". J., June 10. As
sembled for the seventy-fifth annual
convention of the American Institute of
Homeopathy, several hundred of the
best known practitioner disciples of
Hahnemann last night paid tribute to
the memory of their brotners who died
within the Inst twelve months.
The memorial service was an impres
sive one. Sixty-nine homeopathic phy
sicians died during the year. The
neoiolocist. Dr. C. Forrest Mnitin, of
Lowell, Mass., read the list. Dr. Jo
seph II. Bryan, of Asbury Park, pre
sided. The memorial address was
made by Charles F. Adams, of Hacken-
sack. N. .T.
Dietetics will be largely considered
at the convention. It Is the belief that
war foods will be continued and will
hnve n growing usefulness. Sanitary
science, which did so much to keep the
soldiers of the nation in health in
crowded vamps, is to have its rlace in
everyday life if the physicians can have
their way, and a series of papers on
this subject nre to be read.
HOLD 17 AS PICKPOCKETS
Representative Dalshelmer Testified
Against Five of the Accused
Seventeen men were arrested yesterday
on the different trolley lines of the city,
in an effort to round up some of the
thieves who have been robbing pas
sengers. The arrests were made by De
teeth e McCarthy, Clark, Malouex and
Hyun.
At a hearing this morning before
Mncistratc Mecleary, Herman Dnlsh-
THREE YALE SOLDIERS
FROM HERE KILLED
Commemorative Hymn for Men
Who Died in War Sung at
Commencement
The following Philadelphia men nre
on Ynle's roll of honor:
Julian Cornell Middle, '12, second
lieutenant, Lafayette Escadrillc; killed
in nction, August 20, 1017, in the North
sen.
Henry Howard Houston Woodward,
'10, corporal, Squad 91, French avia
tion service; killed in action April 1.
1018, near Montdidier, France.
Mortimer Park Crane, '17, first lieu
tenant, royal corps, killed in nirptanc
accident, May 15, 1018, in Kngland.
A solemn note wns sounded at the
Yale commencement exercises yesterday
afternoon whqn a commemorative hymn
wns sung in public for the first time
as n tribute to the 20(1 men of Yale
who made the supreme sacrifice during
the war. The composers were Professor
Horatio W. Parker, dean of the Yale
School of Music, and Brian Hooker,
'U This was the first time that the
hjmn has been sung in public.
3 LOCKED IN CAR FOR DAY
Boys Arraigned After Beating Way
on Train to Baltimore
"Hiding the brake beams would have
been better. We might have seen some
scenery nnywny," said three young men
who rode from this city to Baltimore in
a sealed freight car.
Saturday evening, Fay May, seven
teen jears old, Salt Lake City; Jack
Williams, nineteen years old, Millston,
and George Mediums, eighteen years
old, from Massachusetts," climbed
into a Baltimore and Ohio Bailroad
freight car.
A railroad man scaled the car just
before the train started. Nearly tweu-
: - ..nHUBnlntlvAO fpnm tlwt rPi'flftll . . . .' . .f
riiut-i, iciui. T ,,, . , i 1 1 ty-iour nours later taint calls were
waru, anu me omy i-m uuriimiuu . niw,rl from the car as it stood on n
ote against the charter bill last week,
testified against five of the men who had
been arrested.
"I have been robbed twice very re
cently," he said. "I am positive that
these men are the ones who jostled me
the last time that my wnllot was
stolen."',
These men were: J. Stern, 1242 South
Seventh street: Julius Dais, 1CS0
South Seventh street; L. Goldstein. 212
Nine street; M. Goodwin, II4G Cnllow
1,111 street, and A. Ashoff, 501 South
Ihird street. They were each held
under $1000 bail for a further hearing.
The other men were held under $000
Aid and Red
Worker Dies
Mrs. Anne Starr Griscom, wife of
Rodman Ellison Griscom, died late Sat
urday night at her home on thelDoIo-
bran estate, Haverford, after ten days' I hail each
illness. Funeral services will be held at i "7-7 "V . . n c . n
noon tomorrow in the Episcopal Church I RAN TRAIN, THEN rtLL UbAU
of the Redeemer, Bryn Mawr. I : r"
Mrs. Griscom, who was promuient Engineer on Shore Line Dies After
socially, was active in the work of the ' Completing Journey
Emergency Aid. Bed Cross nnd various ' shenerd Lang, engineer on the Ponn
other war relief organizations. She and B,unnia Railroad, was taken seriously
her husband had been hoxholders nt the m wujjc runniug his trniu from Camden
opera for many seasons and she was a t tl. 8Uor( yesterday, but grimly re
member of the Acorn Club. imaiued at his post. His faithfulness
Mr Grisconi, a son of the late Clem- J death ns lts toll,
ent Acton Griscom, who was president j an stUyed in the cab until he had
of the International Ivnvigation Com-I tnp OCOmotWe into the rouud
jpnny, is a member of the firm of Bertron , ,,. ttn(, tts hu stepped to the ground
fell unconscious. A physicinn nrrived
within a few minutes, but Lang was
dead.
The fireman said that Lang hnd not
Griscom & Co.. bankers, with nffippn
Jn the Land Title Building. Their chil
dren are Clement Acton Griscom, 3d,
who is a member of the firm of Ilertron
rXnZ' q.' , -m7 arr' complained duiiug the trip, and that he
fnSrV r, "rvived,byltIier-did not know that he was ill until they
":SL,Sn,.!,.B.7' reached the roundhouse. Lang lived
Isaac Tatnall Starr, of Laverock,
Chestnut Hill, nnd Charles S. Starr, of
Haverford.
at 421 South Seventh street, Camden,
and was one of the veterans of the
service. The diagnosis showed that he
was a victim of heart disease.
H
Miss Ann Bacon Smith
Miss Ann Bacon Smith, aged eighty
three years, died yesterday at her home,
337 South Eighteenth street. Miss
Smith was one of the oldest members
of St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Locust
street above Sixteenth, and always took
u deep interest in the affairs of the par
ish, Slie was a grandniece of Chnrles
lacAlestcr, who was a prominent Phil
adclphian. Her nearest relative is Mrs.
Alonzo Wood, n niece, who was Miss
Fannie Brown. Mrs. Wood, who is the
widow of an Episcopal ministef, will
arrive atihcr aunt's home today from
Catskills, where she has been spending
the -fate spring.
suiing in Baltimore, xne trio were
hungry and thoroughly disgruntled.
They were arraigned this morning in a
Baltimore police court.
PROBES SOLDIER'S DEATH
Fix
Harrisburg Coroner Alms to
Blame In Trolley Crash
Ilnrrlsburg, June 10. Coroner Eck
enger will institute an official inquiry
into the trolley car accident which cost
Bay Leach, a Winchester, O., soldier,
his life at the hospital yesterday morning
The authorities aim to learn who was
at fault when the motortruck, in whieh
twenty-eight soldiers were riding, was
strucK oy a iroucy car on Saturday.
lracn was twenty-Jive years old. The
injured soiuiers were taken to the
Carlisle Government Hospital last
night.
Plan Branch Mall-Order House Here
Sears, Roebuck & Co., of Chicago,
are planning the erection of a branch
mail-order house in this city. No site
hns jet heen selected. Tne company
is credited with having done $S,000,000
worth of business in this state last
year.
DO YOU WISH TO VISIT thft nTTIE
FIELDS of FRANCE or the GRAVE of a
RELATIVE or FRIEND? Two Ilrltlub
olnrrrs arrange touri bj- car, arm nee for
culdrn If required),' hotel accommodation, find
where rrmeA are nltaated, and pliotorranh
the name If reaulred. Apply at once br
letter and let priority In choice of date for
when vtaltd are allowed br the nuthnrltle
Meri. Areett ft Co., 60, Avcnoo Mctor.
Huxo. rarin. (XIV) France. "or-
.Governor Sproul is praised by Sen
alor Varc for amendments written into
the Woodward charter bill, new Hear
ing final passage in the Legislature.
In a statement mado public today
Senator Vnre thus explains his position
on the bill :
"There wns no foundation In fact for
the printed statemenfs in the newspapers
thnt cither hiy friends or I held up the
charter bill in the Senate last week. It
wns held up there by W. narry Baker,
the chief clerk of1 tho Senate, when he
found that there were certain necessary
corrections to be made before It could be
finally passed and sent to the Governor.
"Our position Elncc last January has
bcc.n that wo would help pass a bill that
met with the approval of the Governor;
having full confidence in his business ex
perience to sec that the bill would be fair
to our taxpajcrs. With his splendid
tiaining in this respect he was able to
dctcctithe factional, expensive nnd ab
solutely useless provisions In the orig
inal bill as prepared by the revisionists.
For these services on the part of the
Governor the tnxpnycrs of this city are
under lasting obligation. The Governor
with his keen sense of propriety separ
ated the control of the recreation cen
ters and playgrounds from that depart
ment that controls the paupers nnd the
insane as originally provided in the bill.
Ho preserved for the people the right to
choose their own receiver of taxes in
stead of this officer being appointed by
the city treasurer, as originally provided
in the bill. He at once saw that the re
visionists had increased their original
number of roiincilmen from twenty-one
to twenty-seven for purely factional ad;
vantage, notwithstanding the fact that
this increase would cost the city 30,000
each year for many years to come. He
reduced the number to twenty-on,
"The revisionists' bill as originally
presented placed the city treasury at the
mercy of the mandamus evil on n gi
gantic scale, for the Commission qn City
Planning was gien power to employ
engineers and other employes- without
limitation ns to number, councils had no
control to protect the taxpayers and the
city treasury would have been compelled
to honor mandamuses issued by this
commission in an unlimited amount.
The same was true of the provisions in
tne original bill as to the art jury and
the Civil Service Commission. The
original bill provided for one Civil
Service Commissioner with a nower to
appoint a thousand or more employes
under him if he so desired. This con
stituted in him a power that never had
existed in any city in this country.- lie
wns also given the power to appoint
boards, commissions nnd attorneys for
nny purpose whatsoever; nil nt the ex
pense of the taxpayer.
"The uovernor corrected all these
evils by eliminating these powers and
making nil such appointments subject
to the control of Councils nnd of appro
priations made by it."
LAFAYETTE OPENS
COMMENCEMENT WEEK
Rev. Harold Robinson Proa'chos
Baccalaureate Sermon4-Class
Day on Thursday
Easton, Pn June 10. Lafayette-
College is celebrating its clglity-fourtb
commencement this week. Bnccalaurc-
ate Sunday was celebrated yesterday
at the beginning of the week, instead
of at the end of it, as has been the cus
tom. The Rev. Harold M. Boblnson
preached the baccalaureate sermon, and
the annual sermon before the Brnlncrd
Society was delivered last night by the
Bcv. Itemsen Dubois Bird, of San
Francisco, an alumnus of the college.
Intcrclass day will be celebrated
Tuesday, when the under classes will
assume'the Status to which their success
in examinations entitles them, and this
will be celebrated in n parade. Wed
nesday will be undergraduate day,
which will be featured by n play by the
interfratcrnity on the open green, dnsa
day exercises will be Thursday, which
Is designated ns senior class day, and on
thnt afternoon President MacCrackcn
will give n reception to the graduating
class and lt,s friends.
, '
FRpSH AIR CAMP TO OPEN
July 7 Selected as Date at Zleber's
Park by Volunteers
vukn'a Pnrlr. nt West Point. Pa..
is not conspicuous on the map, but' In
the rtrenms of tho children of the Blums
it is paradise itself. It is here thnt
the Volunteers ot Amcricn nre piunums
to send poor boys and girls for outings.
Colonel Christopher u. licrron, com
.. on nf tlm Vnluntpftrs. hiiR nnnouncod
that the fifth annual fresh air camp at
the nark would be formally opened on
July 7.
Colonel Hcrron appealed for aid id
carrying on the work. "Whnt will you
give," he nsks, "to let these little ones
hnve the time of their lives nmld sun
shine, flowers and bird song, lots of
sparkling water, swings, merry-go-
round, moving pictures nnu, dcsi oi an,
mnj nta n nlf-ntv?" Last veor. said
rinnnl TTnrrnn . mm rneffed hit of child
hood nftcr a day in camp, joyfully ex
claimed: 1 never Knew mere was
such a cool place in the world."
The headquarters of tho fund arc at
1213 Filbert street.
3
DEVELOPING
PRINTING
AND ENtARSEMeNTS
i".TH E B ITTtR Ml H D
CAMERAS S'u.
MAIL ORDERS, PROMPT SERVICE
- END rOft. PRICE IST.
812.CHEMUTSI.81Z
nlf
'4?
IK. . ,
-.mjL
ha ?'-
James Magulre
James Maguire, a tipstaff of Common
Pleas Court No. 5, who lived at C10
North Kijhteenth street, died yesterday '
after a year's illness. Sir. Magulre
Shcppurd
WAISTS
All To Be Sold Out
Before Inventory at About
Vfc Their Value
ijr whb uuuufc BiAij-uvu care oiu. tie nan
.. . huen a member of the Fifteenth WnM
Sh tlenubllcan Executive Committee tnnro i
;7- t than o third of a century. Before his .
K. v 'Appointment as a court officer" he had i
!tz AAwwA.? a vinrlr atlarrl fln.l nil n mn.n '
3.H VM '" . MV IMCIU"
,0, er Ql lue uru uriiuriuirm. lie De-
Z.J . -1 A A, T.I, 41. 1 .
j'i,' jongcu iu me I'jiireuiu nru union
I Republican Club. J
Geqrgette
Values $5.50 to $22.00
Marked $3.50 to $12.00
JcOOr ANI LIMK
TUOLJ1I.E.S
UBjtaiitlr relltvl
vr our pirriai nrvu
kuppcirti, fitted and
ilufUd br rt.
f lur H ft M m I m
jsiaiuc Hmierr, in
H m 1
1 Hnalerr. tb
, meat comfoi-tabla
auDDort fnr varl-
ii coae velna. awollan
' UtnlM, vak lent
m .--. .. ,.
al
'tfc,
Crepe de Chine'
Values $6.00 to $9.50
Marked $2.85 to $5.60
Silk
Values $4.50 to $12.00
Marked $2.85 to $8.00
Cotton
Values $4.00 to $12.00 i
Marked $1.75 to $7.75
Hoatf:
DARLINGTON'S
1 . 26-28 Chestnut Street
Special Values in Cool
Summer Dress Materials
CREPE DE CHINE; heavy,
crepy weave in black, white,
pink; 40 inches wide; fljl OC
$2.50 quality for, yd. J1.0tJ
GEORGETTE CREPE of the
regular $2.50 grade, black
and white only; fljl QC
40-inch pl.Ot)
JAPANESE PONGEE; close
weave natural shade; 33 inches
wide; $1.25 quality tPI Aft
for, yard Pl.UU
TAFFETA SILK in black
only; good weight and quality
for summer dresses; , 35-inch:
?2.00 grade for, 1 CC
yard P1.UJ
WHITE SILK BROADCLOTH
for waists, dresses, Buits, skirts,
men's shirts; washable; 32
inch; $2.50 quality tPI, QC
TAFFETA SILK, 3G inches
wide, black and navy,, regu
larly $2.25 yard; flj 1 n
tomorrow Jl.0
WHITE COTTON VOILE, 38
inches wide; fine for cool sum
mer garments'; 40c value OQ
for, yard OC
FANCY WHITE COTTON
VOILES in various stripe and
plaid effects; 36 inches wide;
50c, 65c and 75c values An
for, yard fiv&C
WHITE SKIRTINGS, gabar
dine and whipcord; correct
weight for summer skirts; 36
inch; $1.00 value for, nt?
yard .'. OC
PRINTED ORGANDIES,. at
tractive floral patterns on white
grounds; J8 inches .wide; 7f
$1.25 value for, yard. ,
FIRST FLOOn
Plenty of Pretty Waists Here
From Which to Choose
M&
The three illustrated are good examples of the
variety. At $5.75, of white voile with embroidered front,
while tucked, yoile collar.
The $8.90 model a also of cool white y6ile embroidered with
rose, Copen or black polka dots; white organdie collar.
At $7.00, White Batistei .Waist 'tatamed with, pinch tucks
, wi Wi"?' c4Mrpa ww twpw ,'.sBM;wit Jnwid-
"I have Determined That $6,
000,000 Is Irreducible Mini
mum," Declares Governor -
CHARITY ASKED REDUCTION
Rv a Staff Correisondcnt
Harrlsburjr, June 10. Governor
Sproul emphatically opposes any fur
ther attempt to pare down Hie proposed
salary increase for school teachers.
"It will be useless, for nny one to
urge mo to cut down 'the proposed in
creases," the Governor declared. Ef
forts have been made during the last
week, the dovernor says, to have htm
favor a reduction in the proposed 20
per cent 'increase in teachers' salaries,
which is ,to bo cqualy proportioned be
tween the state and the. local school
districts.
The Governor declined to dlvulgp who
had urged him to favor a reduction be
yond saying "persons connected with
prominent charities,"
."They liavc-asketV me to sacrifice tho
teachers," he continued) "so they might
gel bigger appropriations' for their fa
vorite institutions." ThotGovcriior an
nounced that ho had been compelled to
"take a positive stand," nhel would not
discuss the matter any further.
"I have determined that $0,000,000
Is tho irreducible minimum," lie said.
"And it may br inoro if n way can
bo found." f. t
French Naval Mutiny 'Ends
Paris. June -10. Admiral Konnrch
yesterday reported to the minister ot
marine tnax tne aiscoru among the sail
ors brought to Toulon from the Black
sea, where they participated in n "red"
demonstration, had entirely disappeared.
Copperhead BltesYlttii y, , ,
Dnncnanon. Vw.i June 10. BH MB
ler. seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mil, ,
Theodore Miller, of Allen's uoe, vmm-
township, was bitten on tne root TJMI
copperhead snaicc. 111s irg murai
swollen and spotted. The boy's tMr
sent him to a physician and then killed,
me repine. j 3 ,
'
vB
rrTttiiiiurn
i
i
"92
For Summer Comfort
A ood aponga we hava Ihem to
fit' your pocket aa well aa 'your
hand. Our Pure Oath Soap, 12o
rake, 62c a box or B cakea. ne
fraahlnr Tonic Dath Bait. ISO a
bottle. All conducive to health and
all conforinlnK to aur atandard of
eervice.
LLEWELLYN'S
rhlladelphla'a Standard Drnc Star 1
1518 Chestnut Street T
lootnoruBoen 7ou ran arpena in.ki
l
.aMaaBaaalaaaaaMl aalaa aa r
BaaaHkaiBi'HlilfS
aHKSa&lvVHnVflilSV
VaaaHaaaHP fl llailBHml!i!iM)ilW
aHA J jfHjfljllj HHbIbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbP
V
CONFIDENCE
The Tag is your guarantee
WE could go into the fine points of construction and describe
the economical operation of our engines, pumps and special
power outfits.
But our Bulletins and Engineers tell about these things ever so
much' better.
Briefly, we would, rather tell you about the guarantee that goes
with every engine, pump, concrete mixer, hoist, ait compressor
and sawing outfit we sell. ' Vv
This guarantee is "The Fairbanks Company O.K." It assures
quality, fair price and long, reliable service.
Then there are Mill, Mine and Railway Supplies, 'Scales, Valves.
Power Transmission; Trucks and Wheelbarrows, Machine Tools,'
Automobile and Service Station Equipment all gathered under,
one roof all sold under "The Fairbanks Company O.K."
- We are proud of our service. And justly so, because we aim to
keep at all times stocks of various sizes and types of mechanical
'equipment and supplies, and make quick deliveries.
i
I
SCALES
Of coune you know Fairbanka
Scales. They are uied in every
industry. The nime itself is a
aynonym for reliability and trust
worthiness. Fairbanks Scales
bear "The Fairbanks Company
O.K."
VALVES'
Get the benefit of "The Fairbanks
Company O.X." on all valves angle,
globe, rate, blow-off, swing check, re
grinding, vulcanized asbestos stop cocks,
big and little iron, bronze end nickel
bronze mounted. A valve U more than
jastaralve when it is backed up by this guarantee.
. TRUCK and WHEELBARROWS
. Trucks and wheelbarrows must
be right in quality, right in type for
the service. Otherwise they make
work hard for the men. In the full
variety of the Fairbanks line you will
find exactly what you need trucks
nd wheelbarrows that are easy-running right in
balance. The quality if backed by 'The Fairbanks
Company O.K.,;
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MILL; MIKE & RAILWAY SUPPLIES
There it something more to
twist drill or a shovel when it
I carries "The Fairbanks Company
O.K." The reputation of Th
Fairbanks Company is back of
acomniete atock of mill, mine and
railway supplies. And that is why every article is
good enough- to bear "The Fairbanks Company O.K."
POWER TRANSMISSION
Rivet your attention to th
ceiling of your shop or to tha '
drive on your machine some day.
Think how much dependa on
this power transmission. If it
isn't right, production hi held up.
It pays to replace old transmit
aion or to equip that new addition with pransmitsioB
thatbearathemark "The Fairbanks CompanyO.K."
AUTOMOBILE and SERVICE STATION
EQUIPMENT
Labor saving machines and
tools for' repairing Ford Cars
and Tractors. Manufactured
by the Service Station Equip
'ment Company of Chicago.
Sold under "The Fairbanks
Company O.K."
MACHINE TOOLS
ITT
Turret and engine lathes, screw machines, drill pressei.'railltrt, planers, shapera,
grinders, hack saws and many other kinds of tools. They are all leaders in their
line and sold under "The Fairbanks Company O.K."
Telephone .
to i
THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY
Arch and Seventh Streets
, Philadelphia, Pa".
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Bell Market 2210
VILMINaTON. DEL.
Ford' Bulldlni-
"TRENTON, N. J.
American Mechanics IJulldlnr
DISTRICT OFFICES
v
Keystone Main 1715
BETHLEHEM. PA.
Bethleham. Trust Co. nulldlni
HAnniBBURO, PA,
27 South Third Street
Branches in 22 Principal Eastern Cities
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