n'""--,vvfii'V;(vjfr-f-' "NTM K?jr" ?s .1" JV'-J'k -$ i. V v , EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, JULY 28, 1919 lu-A ! "S Aiit. "i. . 1 WREMEN EVEBY TEN FEET,. Lower production cost The tremondou8 lite waste In America is an overhead charge on production. It ia an unfair burden on our manufacturers who are now competing for the world trude. OLOBB Sprinklers eliminate the tire menece. Let them protect your buildings. GLOBE AUTOMATIC SFRINrOER CO. 2035 Waihfpiton Ave. DlcklrUon Sit Tb Unlrcnlty of Minnesota bulldlogfl ban GLOBE protection. Ill TMSiPS Six Women Included Among Vic tims of Weelj-End Accidents in and Near City A WINNER AT SAMARITAN FETE AUTO DRIVERS ARRESTED FORMER ARMY PRIEST NOW MISSIONARY HERE Rev. Eugene Kennedy Will Also Be Assistant at Historic St. Joseph's Church The Ilcv Trigone T. Kennedy, ohrtp Jaln of the 8lxty-uintii Infantry, of NrV York, has been transferred to tills city, where he will serve as one of twelve members of the Mission Hand and as a priest at the historic St. Joseph's Church, on Willing's alley. Announcement to that effect was made last night at the churcli, where he will be associated with Fathers Albert Brown, William Qulgley, John CoiiRliIln and James Mulrj. Father Kennedy is expected to assume his new duties this week and will officiate as priest bctw ecu missions. His transfer here is a part of the j early changes made in the Jesuit order. , The Itev. Kdward P. Cplllane, of the Church of the fiosn, Kighteenth nnd Thompson streets, will resume parish work, having been assigned to the Church of St. Ignatius I.oola. New York. These changes are included in a large number of transfers nnd appoint ments authority at New York by the Very Itev. Joseph II. Uockwell, S. J., of this Jesuit province. Father Kennech is a giadtiate of the College of St. Francis Xavier, New uork and Georgetown Universities and has been a member of the faculty of both Institutions. MAY GET THIRD DECORATION Brave "Jimmy" O'Neill, of Aldan.l Recommended for Congress Medal Private "Jimmy" O'Xeill, of Aldan. Pa., has been recommended for another decoration for bravery. This time it is the Congressional Medal of Honor. O'Neill already possesses the Dis tinguished Service Croqs and the Bel giau Croix de Guerre. He was given the D. S. C. at the review of the Twenty-eighth Division at Colombej -les-Belles on March 10 by General Per shing, and was the only private deco (rated on that daj . He received the Belgian Cross at St. Nnzaire on April 25 from Lieutenant Colonel Kellar, by order of General Charles H. Mulr, commander of the Twenty-eighth Division. One man was killed and twelve per sons injured In a series of week-end traffic necidents in and around Phila delphia. . The dead man was: Tnlin Klirlnppr. nlxtr rears nltl. 5040 Noith Lawrence street, struck by an1 automobile. The injured persons arc: Mrs. Mary II. Davidson, fifty years old, 171 West Dauphin street, fractured skull; thrown from nn automobile. Elmer D. Dell, Lnnsdowne, lacera tions and contusions; automobile ac cident. Nathan Jv Leger, twenty-one years old, (Ki.'l Havcrford avenue, lacerations of head and body; thrown from auto mobile. Carl Mays, United States Marine I Corps, lacerations and contusions ; caught under upturned nutomoiiile. C. F. Hutter, United States Marine Corps, lacerations and contusions; caught under upturned automobile. Wolcion tVrmstrong, Wjncotc, cuts about bead and face; struck by auto mobile. Mrs. Nathan Itothschllds, 1700 South Broad street, general contusions and lacerations; nutomobile accident. .Mrs. Annie Etelsteln, 017 Jackson street, ecnernl contusions nnd lneern- tions; automobile accident." Mrs. Mary Henton, seventy-six years old, -.vj Jlcrgeu street, Gloucester, frac tured left leg and internal injuries: struck by bicycle. Mrs. Theresa Kosch, forty-six years old, 27.18 South Marvine street, injuries to back ; trolley car accident. Miss Fannie Betts, injuries to hand and arm; tiolley car accident. Leonard Sell w Inn, .'!(!27 North Sixth street, broken leg; automobile accident. IJliringer was struck as ho crossed Slarket street at Fifth last. Wil liam Sehummv, of Pennsgrove, driver of the automobile, said he did not see Khrinccr because of on intervening trol lej cur Khringer was pronounced dead at the Petinsjlvaula Hospital. Schummy was anested and will be held to await the action of the coroner. Mis. DavidsoAwas injured when the automobile in wli"h she was riding with her husband collided with a machine tliiven b Kliucr D. Dell, erf Lans downe, at' Diamond and Hambrej streets. Phjsicians at the Woman's Homeo pathic Hospital saj her condition is serious. Dell escaped with minor in jinies. Both he nnd Davidson will be gien a hearing today. Leger was found unconscious nt Foity-sixth and Market streets. He was in au automobile that struck the stone wall surrounding Kirkbrido's. The accident occurred at Forty-ninth nnd Arch streets. Leger could not ex plain how he leached the place whcie he was found. The two marines were injured when '- W me' d & t w 1111111 WBmm- h -y cjk wH i HF ' f $k 111 ' wm s mM. m i I lB wyP' mm i iMH $asm t WOOL THEFTS HERE Men Caught Robbing Baltimore Warehouse Believed to Be Philadelphia Gang CONFESSION IS CLAIMED Activities of wool thlees, who haw stolen more thnii $211(1,0011 wortli of woolen doth in this dt this enr, are cpcotcd to be broken up h the arrest of four Philadelphlnns in Baltimore. The men were placed under arrest while removing $10,000 worth of wool ens from a warehouse in that city to a U nick for transportation here. A confession obtained fioni one of the men is cprted to lead to the re coei of iiini li of the cloth stolen heie nnd the nnet of some of the men who took part in the robberies. The bands hne made a special of high class tailoring establishments nnd woolen mills. In almost cerj case the cloth was can led awn in automobiles The men under arrest gac theli i names as ltubin I.a.noff, Max Levin, William C. Messier and Abe Millei. Another man, Joseph Cohen, who said his home was in Newark, N. J., also was anested. Laz.uolt Is said to have made a confession to the llaltlmoie police. He was anested while tliiectiiig the loud -ing of slO.000 worth of i loth from the w alehouse of the Itothholz Compiuij into a niotoitniik Snturilny night. He and the other men put up a light before submitting to nrrest. Miller is a teamster, with offices in North Lawrence street, Mecisler, the chauffeur, is believed to be nn employe of Miller, who snys lie nnd his truck were hired by La7nro(T to haul some cloth from Baltimore to Philadelphia, La7iirofT having told him lie was moving Ids tailoring shop from that city to this The Philadelphia Detective Bureau lins been apprised of the nrrests In Bal timore, and detectives are InvestigtUng the stories told by the Phlladelphians under arrest. Mrs. Miller had received no word of the arrest of her husband until this morning. When nsked where he was, she said lie had gone to Baltimore ou a business trip with his truck She did not know just when he would return, she snid. I OUT AM) I.IMI1 Tltllt lll.l.S Ilulnntlv rdlevfil b our uptclMl arch nunnrt mini wnil nIJutrtl b experts Our Sen in less F.lnMIr llnsler, the most tiunforlable support for vnrl roee Vrlns swollen limbs, mnk knees and ankles Trusses, iiliilomln.il anil athletic sup purlers of all kinds Piififfl i iSHf m ltATKf"i wirier u u Rif . '- mf nf (ffforml RWllHiKtK In thwond riiilmlrlpliU Ortlioprillr Co.. 10 . 13 It t. ' m out uni keep for reft r nt 1 r ET 1 LI us make our "present prosperity permanent by advertis ing," says the U. S. Dept. of Labor. We second the motion. HERBERT M. MORRIS Advertising Agency Every Phaie of Sales Promotion 400 Cheitnut Street Philadelphia H I.filuer rhoto .s r!i Ileda Mary Cojle, eleven months, winner of first prize for the fattest baby at the Samaritan Hospital fete, Broad and Ontailo streets something went wrong with the steer ing gear of the automobile they were driving and the machine turned over on the Iloosevelt Boulevard. They were treated at St. Luke's Hospital. Armstrong wns struck at Old York road and Kdge Hill road. He was treated at the Abington Memorial Hos pital. Harry Freeman, of Oermau town, driver of the automobile, was ar rested and held in $500 ball for a fur ther hearing. Mrs.. Itothschllds and Sirs. Htelsteiu were hurt when the automobile in which they were riding was struck by another as it was leaving a gaiage at Broad nnd Bnstol streets. r Mrs. Hiaton was stiuck by a bicycle on which Marion Mjers, fourteen jenis old, of Gloucester, was riding. The woman was taken to Cooper Hospital, Camden. Mrs. Koseh was injured when two tiolley cars collided at Thirteenth and Ontario streets. (Miss Betts was hint when a car going in the opposite direc tion to the one on which she was riding struck her hand as she was waving to a friend. Schwinn was hurt when the motor cjcle on which he was riding was struck by an automobile nt Rising Sun ave nue and the Roosevelt Boulevard. SAYS CHRIST IS NEGLECTED Minister Sees Big Buildings as Tern pies Reared for Mammon Standing on the site of the pioposed Protestant Ihiiscnpnl Cathedial, at Twentv -third street and the P.irkwa.v I jesteiday, the Rev. Samuel Booth., curafv of the Diocesan Church of St Man, waved his hand toward the group. of skv scrapers around Q'ltv Hall anil told a large congiention nt an open-air seivue that, judging from its buildings, Philadelphia honors Mammon rather than Jesus Christ. "What are the monuments that stand out over tlioi o?" asked the clcrgvnrin "Thev are monuments to the ingenuitv of man in commercial enterprises. Thev are tributes to man's ability in business anil the professions. But what ot Christ?" IMMKDIATK DKI.IVKriT Host mcillum-prlecd car on the market Elgin Six KIVE-PASSKNUBR TOl'IUNd J Authorized Apencv KiT Ar.ril I.Alt.UiK lli17 Arch Street 4S5 I H Silvorsmitlu vfif I !' Stationer 3 tJ Diamond Engfafment Rins Solitaire. " Jeweled For brilliancy iho Polished Girdle Diamond ha 3 no rival. Exclusive w'lk ''House MARINE FIREMEN RETURN Strikers Have Decided to Accept Shipping Board's Concessions j Marine firemen who have been on' strike here have decided to accept the I concessions of the United States ship ping board and return to the ships to-i day or tomorrow. Representatives of the different ma- I rinc unions, which met in New York,' officially called off the strike which has tied up American shipping all over the country. About 40,000 mariners were on strike. Galvanized Boat Pumps I.. I. Denrer Co..8B N. 2d St, iff U How's your old Straw Hat After the rain? There's a nice, new Balch-Price ' 5 th Avenue Straw Hat waiting For you here. $3.00 to $12.00 LINDE SQUARE DEAL Au gust of Furniture Yours for Service && .r UT7JL. tiQKZZzi irfV Uth and Chestnut "NI.Y BTOBB . rm YOUR Summer Underwear have you been able to find satisfactory garments? Our assortments are exceptionally full and varied, probably just what you want is here. Nainsook Shirts and Knee Drawers, 85c, $1.00, $1.25 each. Gauze Shirts 75c each. Finer Grades Gauze Shirts and Drawers $1.00 each. English Gauze Shirts $1.50. Lisle Thread Gauze weights, American made $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, and Imported $3.00. Union Suits, Nainsook $1.00, $1.75. Madras or Mercerized Fabrics $2J50, $3.00, $5.00. Summer Business Flours, 8:30 to 5 Saturdays, 8:30 to 12 Noon 0 n"A rOUNDKD 1824 11V JACOII IlKKI) 1424-1428 Chestnut Street The four corners of this business are built squarely upon Highest Quality, Lowest Prices, Location Saving and Volume. From all of these angles the customers' interest stands out first and foremost. The Square Deal Store must put patrons before profits. . This is a time when the Square Deal looms big for the homemaker. The profiteer is abroad in the land. Unfortunately for all of us, he lurks behind the mask of patriotism and stalks in the shadow of good citizenship. While within the law, perhaps, he smiles and smirks and sends his prices up and up until the burden is almost .too much for us to bear. Beware of Profiteers in August Sales The Linde Store makes its prices upon the cost of goods at the time they were bought by us, not the present market value. We have been buying for six months ahead, knowing full well that the furniture trade would this summer face a serious shortage of materials tand labor. And our prices to you are based upon what we paid, although there have been three to five advances since then. Stire enough, the crisis is here. The factories are all sold out and will be running on present orders into next spring. Some of the stores were caught short of stocks and didn t know until a few days ago whether they cbidd have an August Furniture Sale this year. Imagine what kind of values they will give their customers, in spite of all the high-minded talk indulged in! x The Linde Store's price is always based upon the first price, and is never boosted up because gen eral prices are rising. Linde Store quality is always the pinnacle of dependability and appearance. Linde assortments surpass anything in Philadelphia for variety and extent. Linde Savings exceed those of any other store in the country selling furniture. You can readily prove this by comparison. Don t, under any circumstances, buy until you compare the Linde stocks with those of the leading stores. Vft'i This Store Will Be Ooen Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings until 10 o'clock for the convenience of those who cannot possibly come during the day; but PLEASE NOTE that we are so crowded with customers in the evening that ujiless you come early, we shall be unable to show you as prompt attention as we should like. HENRY LINDE 23d Street, Columbia and Ridge Avenue Starting This Morning in spite of the Continued Tightness of the Woolen Market Our Semi-Annual REDUCTION SALE of Spring & Summer Suits Not one of which we can replace to day with equal quality merchandise to sell at their ,low Original Prices! i Here are the facts in a nutshell J Prices are advancing instead of falling! J These Suits were already big values at their original prices! Cfl There are no finer clothes made anywhere regardless of what they sell for ! In spite of these established facts $65 Suits are Reduced! $60 Suits are Reduced! $55 Suits $50 Suits $45 Suito $40 Suits $35 Suits $30 Suits $25 Suits are Reduced! are Reduced! are Reduced! are Reduced! are Reduced! are Reduced! are Reduced! fl Everybody was sure six months ago that all prices were going to toboggan. But the expected didn't happen. Instead of going down, prices are going up; in stead of costing us less, every Suit that comes into our store is costing us more. And that is true of everything else from houses to hoe handles with no relief in sight! Yet, in spite of that prevailing condi tion, we have gone through our Spring and Summer Stocks with the pruning knife of general reductions applied to merchandise that will cost us more to replace than these clothes cost us. The reason is that no matter what happens, our cycle of business must go on just the same. flfl And so, not to disappoint the thou sands of men who look for Perry Reduc tions about this time of year, we give them an opportunity to get the finest clothes made at less than the low, regular prices they sold for all season long. It is another chance to take time by the fore lock and safeguard yourself now against the advances which are as sure as sunrise on the Suits of next season. Sale starts this morning at 9 o'clock! Closed at 5 P. M. PERRY & CO., "N. B. T." 16th & Chestnut Streets a m Ji. . t . it 'i $ 3l 71 31 'J Wl I 4 si "i f i. a v.- I 5tf l : a ?. t i) Jte&asjri2rei' fT .tW?:?? It! 1 ,. . , 'is :if-i -.. ... ti l . ij 4"C f rS . 1 l" . .- i try it-A? !&:''' "r . A . "( ., "VK "" -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers