t- .-c,,--.- .w-,, vUypiwfiP u A W V EVENING' PUBLIC LEDGBRr-rfflLAJLPH, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1919 a m&fif.iw'w "$$ i r r. I,J,I I ! r l . i 6H i L IX If ! J M ' U 5 ? tl l i 15 ,?- 1 Ifctl IV- R-ri t SPRINKLERS THE AUTOMATIC .FIREMEN Personal liability Yen are legtllr end morally responsible for the lives of your employee!. There has never been a Ion of Ufa from fir or panic In anjr property protected by QLODE Automatic Sprinkler. Safeguard your employees andyour bus Iness. Arrange for QLODE protection. CLOSE AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER CO. 2031 Washington Ave. Dickinson Ml GLOBE Sprinklers protect inu urge, modern bulldl.g ewnca oy H, PHILA. MAN RESCUED IN SEA; TWO, MOURNED AS DROWNED, RETURN Camden Youths, Their Clothes Found Near Water, Go Home, Saying They Hunted Jobs The exciting rescue of a Philadel phlan at Atlantic City, false alarm of a doable drowning, and the finding of the. bodies of two men drowned In the Delaware fiver some time ago marked Incidents of the water yesterday. E. A. Poole, of Philadelphia, and his eon, Edison Poole, seventeen years old, were rescued from the ocean at At lantic City yesterday by guards. The undertow was very strong nnd many persons had narrow escapes from drown In?. Mr. Poole and his son were In waist deep wntcr jfjhen they were flung from their feet, Jftlrled over and over and carried IntdSdeop water. McCullough ''and Schott.fof the guard force, drove their boat through the sea to -where father and son had disappeared and pulled them aboard. For bix hours yesterday Camden po lice dragged Line ditch, near Jaekson street, to recover the bodies of fifteen -year-old Raymond Pedrick, 025 St. John street, nnd seventeen-year-old Kenneth De Vcrbois, 020 Division street, nnd for bix hours sympathetic neighbors comforted the sorrowing par ents. The boys' clothing was found near the water. "We merely went to Atlantic City to look for jobs," they explained, "and when we couldn't find any we came borne." The body of a man was found in the Delaware. A registration card in one of his pockets gives the name of Albert Hanson,, 2300 Washington avenue Newport News, Va. The decomposed body of a Japanese, believed that of a steward from one of the steamers in this port, was found in the Delaware River at Torrcsdale yes terday. He wore a blue serge suit and high leather boots. BURY HADD0NFIELD WOMAN Mist Kay, 87, Lived In New Jersey Town for Sixty-five Years The funeral of Miss Deborah Kay, daughter of the late Joseph Kay, took place this morning, at 11 o'clock, from 34 King's Highway, East Haddonfield, N. J., where she lived for sitty-fivc years and where she died Thursday. She was eighty-seven yenrs old. Miss Kay had been an invalid for two years. The services were conducted by the Rer. William S. Terrell, paBtor of the First Baptist Church, and the Rev. Frank A. Smith, of Elizabeth, a former pastor. The interment was in the Bap tist cemetery. Miss Kar was the last of the, gen eration of we Kay family which had Us origin In England, and which was one of the pioneer , families to settle In the Haddonfield section. Two nephews and three nieces survive her. Philadelphia 8o!dler Dies The death at sea of Private Joseph Foyer, of Philadelphia, whose street address was not given, was reported when' the troopship Henderson arrived at New York from St. Nazalre, France. He died from an abscess caused by n mule kick received while he was In serv ice on the Mexican border eighteen months ago. Everything for Jaunts and junkets For urban and Suburban wear, For motor or Manor, for sports Of all sorts The underwear, Hosiery, shirts, ties, Pajamas, Handkerchiefs, Straw hats, Caps, collars, suits, Flannel trousers, Bathing suits, Scarf pins, cuff Links, belts, Garters, umbrellas, Canes. Yours for Service &&&!& Wi& "wivr c 8TOMD imMCXtnut ,1. mmmmmmmmmmmmmm j SV1 l nmsz zt7nsw .1 I Thousands Enjoy Sport and Defend It, but Mr. Wana maker Voices Objection t While thousands of persons partiii pated in Sunday sports in Fnlrmount Park yesterday, either as players or spectators, there was n notable absence of so-called "disorder" throughout the day. Captain Hnyes Duncan, of the Park Guards, reported "nil orderly to Thomas S. Martin, secretary of the Park Commission. Mr. Martin had nNo made a personal inspection to nsmro himself that there was no disturbance. "Of course, there was cheering when some one made a hit." said Mr. Mar tin. "Well, what would you expect? There wouldn't be much to n ball game if you had to muzzle the spectators." No signs were posted in the Park warning baseball players they must pre serve order if tin. wished to retain the privilege of playing on Sundays in the Park. "Signs! Nonsense'' aid Mr. Mar tin, "we had no intention of posting such notices. The games hnvc always been orderly. No signs hnvc ever been necessary. The park guards usually Varn captains of teams that the cheer ling should not be too loud. For that matter, no one is very likely to be nn- Jioyed by a little cheering, for there lsn t a house or a church within miles of the two mnin playing fields." Declaiing that forbidding amusement fan Sunday to children in the parks was like "putting small bojs into strait jackets," the Rev. James T. Higgins. in a sermon at the. Catholic Church of the Most Blessed Sacrament, at Fifty -sixth street and Chester avenue, of which he is rector, espoused Sunday sports, "Recreation, properly regulated and mornlly safeguarded, is necessary to the health and happiness of the people," he said. "The man who would deprive children of a blameless pleasure which they can get out of n game in 1 air mount Park on Sunday is, to say the least, mistaken in his interpretation of the Divine injunction." That an open Sunday loners the prin ciples of Christianity and alsoervcs as a stepping stone to Bolshevism, was the declaration made by John Wanamakcr, speaking Sunday afternoon before the New Era Bible Union in Bethany Pres byterian Church, at Twenty-second and Bainbrldge streets, "We are trusting too much to a men tal airplane with no guiding wheel," he declared. "The church is the guiding wheel and the further we draw away from it the nearer we draw to destruc tion." KILLED UNDER OWN WAGON Driver, Jolted From Seat on Glrard Avenue, Crushed to Death Joseph A. Deeny, thirty-two years old. 240 Wharton street, n driver of n milk wagon, fell beneath the wheels of his vehicle and was so badly injured that MTuicd in the Presbyterian Hos pital. Mr. Deeny was jolted from his seat at Belmont and Girard avenues. He was taken to the hospital in a patrol wagon. YOUNG MOTHER IS HELD Cruelty Society Agent Charges Mrs. Rlchtor Deserted Child Mrs. Eflie Richtor, twenty years old, was held for n further hearing tomor row on a charge of child lesertion by Magistrate Dietz yesterday, in the Trenton avenue and Dauphin street po lice station. Mrs. Richtor was ai rested on n warrant sworn out May 0 by Sarah A. McConnell, an agent of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, Miss McConnell alleged that Mrs. Richtor left her two-year-old son in n room in the 1000 block of Shack amaxon street, where he was found iu a famished condition. The boy was taken to the Philadelphia General Hospital, where he is yet a patient. 20,000,000 People live in New York City and vicinity. It is the one great market that all manufacturers seek. Many concerns have their own New York organ izations thousands of others do not tand cannot. Bush Terminal Distributing Service solveB the problem far those who do not maintain an Eastern factory, stock, room or distributing organization. We provide unequalled distribut ing facilities for hundreds of manufacturers and sell these facilities to the individual at lowest co operative costs. 123 storage warehouses and million dollar automatic sprinkler equipment Loioest insurance rates. Tell us your needs and let us offer a solution. BUSH TERMINAL COMPANY Executive Offices : 1 00 Broad St., New York "The Heart of Hotel Reading THE nftTEIi OF CHARACTER. REFINEMENT AN1J SONSniNE Formerly "The Bryaon" 12th & Market Su. No elaborate Hoof Garden. Restaurant or Cabaret performances, but no elaborate charges for rooms. We sell real hotel service without frills. THE ONLV HOTEL in Philadelphia with the following features, which are an innovation of my own and free to my guests: Morning paper (Publlo Ledger). Circulating Library of all the prominent authors; copies of the Saturday Evening Post to female trussta. I havo also Installed a Hoptess and Chaperon for the benefit of our unasconea iemue ffuesiB, wjio are ..KCBiurv. unnvr ma a.uioruirct-uon vi pur - apFV TW. "W ! .VWUDII I ' "I'll .. li' .... j Wmmtmmmmm rifl fesv-a irBBBaliBHK 1. llLtSSfl1 ! f HBH BBBBBBBBB&&fJ' V N"-jWWWt jJBs' SBBHBm' JbbbbH ' LEWIS GLASEK Missing from Ills home, ."" North Fifth street, for several weeks LOUIS GLASER! GO HOME ,...-ri,i. i ttns n)I PXCtC(i likei Parents Offer Reward for lnforma-1, r "1,m' ''"V," nlcc llttle Taea ., r, j, ... I n ' ' " "Pens,' I says to mvself. tlon Regarding Missing Boy j ..Hut , y In an effort to locate his fourtcTn ' Mjr first blownR t , year-old son. who has been missing Slfttion, Recklessly I ,o,s'd three bils for more thnn six weeks, N. Glnser. of over the counter 'Return to Arlnn C30 North riftl, street, has o.Tered a tie' I snv, omr V". the reward to nny one who will bring in- ticket man. and before he got throuch formation concerning the boj with mo ho had sot me back $3.(54. Louis Glnser, the boy, went witli the , Thinking that this tiip would cost me family to watch the Jewish panidc .1 tine ""thing outside of my train fnre, I 2, nnd hns not been seen by his rein- ."'ought 1 would got a parlor-car seat, tives since. He wore a blue sorgo suit, ' nl"' "'"' ,vls thhty-scven cents moie. black shoos and hose, nnd glnsso, with Chocolates at St. 25 Per celluloid rims. Ills father claims thoio was no reason for liim to ruu nwny1 '. 'eachod the shore O. K and the from home and believes something hn -,'a h10'" made me feel sn optimistic happened to the child. A. A. WALLGREN IS CITED Philadelphia Cartoonist One of Hon ored "Stars and Stripes" Men A. A. Wnllgrcn. whoso cartoons nro remembered b Philadelphia renders through his connections with news pnpois hcio. hns been cited by General Pershing for his sort ices in connection with the Stais nntf Stripes, the official newspaper published in Paris for the benefit of the American cxpeditionnr) force. "Wall)" shares honors with Private Harold Ross, nian.iging editor, nnd Pn vatc Hudson Haw let, a writer. Those three men woie leliotod of thoir duties si weeks ago "The signal honor paid to the. rrt ices of "Wall)" and his two nssoilntcs nt tests the npprecintion of General Pershing. Other members of the Stnrs and Stripes' staff received personal letters from the American commander, but the citations wore loscrved for the three men named. TRAFFIC CRASH AT SKIPST0P Loaded Truck Collides Broadside With Touring Car Another traffic accident has been re ported at a skip-stop crossing in West I, . T - V '-.. .-ausc,., l)j n number of automobiles nnd trucks trying to got across the intersection of I lltitn.1n1nl.tn F- 41.- ...!.... .l I avenues morning, Henry Rexider. ,"i(i25 Mnster street, drove n truck loaded with prod uce into a touring enr piloted by Etl vvnrtl McEwen, fiO.IO Osnge avenue MoEwen is finnncial secretary of the Printing Pressmen's Relief Society. The impact spun the lighter car half way around, stove it in on one side nnd hurled it fifteen feet. Quick applica tion of the brakes on the truck saved both drivers. Residents in the vicinity claim that because of the skip-stop on the Lancas ter avenue car lino tlieie tinffic is con stantly in confusion, and during the rush bonis a mad scramble is always on among motor nnd other vehicles to get noross the car tracks in front of np proaching trollo.vs. Hot Bearings Cause Auto Fire Overheated bearings arc believed to have set a motorcar of Frisco Brothers, 3134 Market street, afire early today at Tulip and Ann streets. Firemen ex tinguished the blaze. Philadelphia" T.iinenster nn.l TVmclrnn nrenniw i,w,than tne evening, i tun not enre now ire available at any hour of the day. This i of outvTUlsa Murphy and Mrs. Khlers, will t sr at tneStt? of flilladelfitila a real pleasure. wm0Bmmmmmiimmwsmammmswmm avaiigDie at any pour or tne day. This A VOID GLADYS AT SHORE," j nnn OfDlipr nnrii URGES WEEK-END JOHNNY" ll" ZlLn r Is Wiser Man After Accepting Invitation Over Sunday; Aho Tighter With His Cash Inexpensive Little Vacation as Guest of Fair Maiden Fig ured Up Just $43.20 "T'M X0T one of those guys," said t,t 'rk'.rmi Johnny, as he returned from the shore today, "who lets a sigh every time he recklessly spends a nickel, bllt tlll nnrl tlmn o -l-t l vites mo down to the shore, for a couple "f days I'll think numerous and sun dry times before I accept it. "When I was at the office Saturday and I got a phone call from Gladys invitiug me to Atlantic City for the omotning that I thoueht T must take Gladys's mother some candv. On entering tho onlv con fectionery shop nearby I was in foimctl that they had some fine choco Intes at SI. 2.1 a pound. As n pound box resembled In size nbout tho pie war ton cents worth, I decided that two pounds would be necessary, like wise deciding to part with two nnd n half of the well-known "kopecks. "I hail dinner soon after reaching OlflfllC! lirtitin nnil tli.n .. A .1. 1.. ;.. would be nice to tnko a little spin ,n their car. 'Fine,' I thought, 'hoie's n little more pleasure snns expense.' "But I hud another think coming ' Wo had not gone fnr before it was dis covered thnt the gasoline supply nlmost wasn't, so of touisc I recommended a purchase. The fuel wns $.27 a gallon nnd 1 recklessly said ten gallons, please. The garage ninn insisted thnt we needed some oil nnd I ordered four tpiartB nt .10 cents per. ".More gloom we had not gone far before I thought I wns bnek in tho trenches ns there wns a report from tho roar the. Investigation revealed that the inner tube was entirely out of I commission. I, chivalrous like, offered t0 Purchase a new tube but Gladjs n.o- , tested. 'I should say not,' she insisted. "Investigation revouled,, however, that Gladjs did not have her purse with I her and I was Sfl more out S7.H0 for the tube and $1.."0 for the work iu get ting the car into shape again. Light Lunch SI 2.80 "Knowing thnt I was spending more far we rode, but at about this time Glnd.vs started to got hungry and wo motored up to a fashionable grill. ltl Silversmiths VrfJ. j f Stationers Pc arls Whin selecting imparl ani Jewels & incgniyomf experience ht Jeweler should be considered SOME recent arrivals in ac- , t1) cordion and crochet silk HI scarves merit attention. lluin "W 1 2.. -t .. . l ArtaiaVal It4ll II ill i m piain colors very ueuumui nj I I Dill shades, too in English hand-frame 1 III crochets. They have the "feel" that M 1 II denotes quality, $3.00 and $3.50. hi I III I J Accordion fashioned scarfs, stripes m IrUIII mmA n vravAtv rf rgtA Pfln.u rlAcfrvna loll Hi $3.50 and $4.00. 1 i Hi . J J I 111 Accordions with silk-embroidered fig- H i j- ljjll ures especially attractive, $4.00. In mil 3 0 j crochet with Jacquard figures, $4.50. m mWp Founded 1824 Ik I Mg 1121-1426 Chestnut Stet Igl I WHWWflWUHfT iiTi'ii i i'n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 10 ffPn lklTf "nv'''"'''""'''"HTO!nwTPffffri , ? That "Free" Week-End Trip Cost Johnny a Mere $43.20 Train fare Tips to maids Ten gallons of gasoline... Oil for motor Inner tube, garage service. Supper Supper Candy for hostess . 4.00 2.0(1 2.70 1.20 0.00 12.S0 0.00 2i"0 Total $13.20 "I guess the prohibition law hns stirred a lot of hotel men to boost thoir food rates anywav the damage there was S12.80 and the funny part of it all is but at that I do not think it is funny that we did not have any thing to eat worth speaking of. That fifty-cent cover charge was certainly a knockout but thoy seem to got nwaj with it. "We went bathing Sunday and that was 51 more. "When Gladjs and I came homo we found that there was to bo no Sunday supper so we went to n hotel. Whigs for nine more of my dollars. "On leaving for Philadelphia Into Inst night T left SI tip for ench of the woman nt the Dauphin street nittnnee maids, which I understand is the cus- .Two pnrk gunrds who placed the corn torn, nnd believe me I was glad when I jbntants under nrrost wore sot upon by got to Philly. more than 200 snilors nnd bntll beaten. "Got me right I did not mint! ,, . , , spending the money, but the next time Morn Sf"lro M A"" some bird says to me that I have it Sergeant Harry Long, of the guards. .,. . ff !,'..;.,,. o t..Vnrl nt Hio ulinro lie.inl of the riot, musteretl a ilnpii 1 am'liable to wallop him or something, "The next time I go to Atlantic I nm going to n first-class hotel and sate money and steer clear of Gladys. "At that Gladys is a nice girl " BLIND ARE ENTERTAINED More Than 400 Have Outing at Wil- low Grove Park the seventh annual reunion outing of pniticMpauts in the Blind Relief run. of Philadelphia is being hold totlnv nl Willow Grove Park under the lii Hon , of Mrs. Isabel W. Kennedy, oxeuitivi secretary. More thfln 400 are being entoitameil Pinner will be served tho guests niul i tickets provided for the Crentore band imicert OPPORTUNITY - is knocking at every door in America. Today is beginning another epoch in American indus try," says the U. S. Dept. of Labor. We might add, also an era of better advertising. HERBERT M. MORRIS Advertising Agency Every Phase of Sales Promotion I 'lOO Chestnut Street Philadelphia Diamonds o I AH I PAill Guards Ride Down Mob to Res cue Comrades Who Arrested Sailors POLICE TURN BATTLE TIDE Mnilnes sailors and soldlors en gaged in nnother riot at the Strnw borrv Mansion entrance to Kairmount Pnrk Inst night Like the sot oral others which oc curred previously tho disturbance last night had its origin in an argument over a woman, the police sny. Tho fighting lasted for more thnn an hour, during tho course of which the service men led assaults upon the Woodford guard house, in rnirmoimt Park, and the Twenty-shth unci York streets police station. Patrolmen used their clubs fiooh nnd the soldiers, sailors nnd maiiiies u-od whatever weapons the toulil find, quite n few securing dishes from nn iio crenm parlor nenr tho entrant o nnd hurling thorn. The fighting followed tho arrest of tiiree sai ois who nnn lone it inor n i mounted gunrds quickl) and rode to the1 1!Kht iThe number of sei iee men hail been augmented h) new nrrivnls, nil seemingly tiled with the nnihition to t.ike n crntk nt the guardians of the liw. both of whom wore wielding their I t lulls with good' effect nnd bnttllug tien el) I The mounted guards rode thioiigh the ijflHjaRSr s9BH NUHHb1bW H j FW 17 fT r f .at y' n ineocissors lesi J Take sample piece of tube 1j in. Wt by 3 in. Stretch to 9 in. or three H times its original length. Cut on jH the edge with scissors. The cut jtjjflU should not be more than 18 uH in. across the sample. IF the I H strip tears apart the rubber is itjjjjn I Norwalk Tubes I do not rip Neither blow-out nor puncture can de stroy Norwalk Tubes. The unavoidable cut remains a cut it does not rip and destroy the tube. The scissors test proves this be fore you buy. Norwalk Tubes are floating 6tock. Norwalk rubber floats. Compound rub ber sinks. Your pencil eraser is com pounded. Test its weakness. Norwalk Tubes, red and gray, set a new standard the standard of absolute quality. File away a dated sample of Norwalk Tube and others and compare them at the end of a year. Norwalk Casings are as good as Norwalk Tubes. If your local dealer cannot supply you write to Standard Rubber Tire Co., 826 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa. Harritburg Harne. & Supply Co., 32 N. 2d St., Harrisb'g, Pa. The Tire Shop, 401 Delaware Avenue, Wilmington, Del. (Distributors) NORWALK TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY lakers of Casings, Cord and Fabric; and of Tubes, Red and Gray Norwalk, Connecticut 'Floating stock means rubber so pure that it floats. Snip a little piece of Nortvallc sample and see. Floating stock means to the rub ber industry vhat24K gold means to the jeweler. To you it means mileage, You are going to learn a lot more about Norwalk quality. But don't wait, Start sating your mileage-money now. Get the stuff that's in the tube. Ask for a sample Of Norwalk rubber. NORWALK TUBES and CASINGS -pp , v , d r p , -fi ijip-7 -s-J I struggling crowd and guided the two beleaguered patrolmen and three pris oners to the Woodford (liiard House. The men gave their names as R. M. Hill and Peter Hlckey, of the battleship Kansas, and Frank Salverson, of the Santa Leonora. A great crowd of service men gathered around tho guard house and threatened to rush It and rescue the three snilors. Additional guards wore cnlletl from other sections of the pnrk and the fight to clear tho ieiulty of Strawberry Man sion was begun Police Strategy Best The battle waged more fiercely than ever, the co-operative methods of the guards and pntrolmen from the Twenty sixth nnd York streets station final!) outgeneraling the sheer weight of num bers of the service men and attaining their object. Then the snilors heard that several of their number were under arrest at tne station nouse ana mot eel toward it. The police wore again successful n clearing the street" after a determined fight. Five men were arrested after this fight nnd held in $000 bail for court by Magistrate Pennoek, at City Hall, today. They nro George Arbaugh, eighteen )cnrs; Sliolliy ('nine, nineteen tears; James P Hriltle, fifteen )cnrs; A. P Armstrong, eighteen yeais, and John Dnltiui. twentj three yenrs, all of tho nn AMBLER AFTER HOSPITAL Colony Club Plans Further Means to Rase $50,000 Fund Menibeis of the ineinorinl hospital committee of the .Vmliler Colony Club will moot (his evening in the Town Hull of Ambler to discuss further way and menns of raising funds for the hos- pital. The hospital is to lie established as soon ns the S.'O.OOO gonl hns been ronchetl in the campaign for money. Mrs. Godfrey S. Xlnhn is chnirmnn of the hospitnl t ommitteo. Mrs. Robert Ralston is president of the Colony Club, whose 1.10 inembeis me backing the movement The slightest cut in sn inferior tune Rip! and the tube is ruined. Make your dealer prove that the tube he sells will starld the Norwalk teat. All the Way From Far-off Guatemala Comes Praise of Our Clothes I I The other day it was a soldier from the Panama Canal; today it's a man from a little farther south. Cf He comes to the States once a year on many business missions and personal errands, among which is the purchase of a whole year's supply of our clothes. J He visits several other cities, but he tells our salesman, whom he has called upon for a good many years, that nowhere else has he ever procured the same all-around satisfaction that he finds inside the "N.B.T." So, there must be something more to it than just our claim. There must be some thing back of that claim. Have you ever investigated it? CJ There's no time like the present! 1 And you can try us out either in worsted, or in flannel, or in cassi mere, or in serge, or in a Palm Beach Suit a Suit of Mohair or a Breezwcve at $13.50, $15, $18, $20 And we'll make good! Closed at 5 P. M. Perry & Co? "N.B.T." 16th and Chestnut Sts, .i .a ,1;; Q. ! !.. ' tl r v.V. ' " ' . W3K.t jT :-3KflA UM. a. ; J A&mtmmimB&TfLi .. ui rr -' p-' CJiJ-ttJ
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers