M'tVWWy! ISjP mm ammMvm e-K JSOV (WVrtlrp(fl'W' '- 'f'twrWfr K EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1019 4. u- iAHY NATIONALITIES WAR'S MAIMED STUDY OCCUPATIONS AT NEWARK COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY! :Late of 1115 Chestnut Street- LA Mavfeon & DeMar$ 1215 Cltestnut St. III SOLDIER SCHOOL LVocational Training Given to Organization That Aids Needy Aged Celobrates Fiftieth Annivor3ary August 29 GREAT FETE WILL BE HELD' Wounded Vetorans at Collingswood Sa-rs, PSOME TAKE 4-YEAR COURSE Tomorrow '-!rW,' if xi J-tegycj,Vgt7gt A -i rvxXTwvj -" - v M f. Coming from tha war tliiAblrl and unfitted for their pre-wnr occupation. J.', men of the nrmy nnd nnvy who have 4 been discharged nre flnflinu the gov eminent ns willing to go to extremes .ffor their rebuilding as the service men 'jwrr to offer their Ikes for the gov "ternment. W& 'An a result the men who came out tef the war 10 per rent or more disabled r'nrc being rchnbllltnted without expene to themselves, to which i added bv the government $"!" n month for single men and 5100 for each married man to keep them and their families in n com fnrrnrile stnte durinc the period of being It restored. . Dr. Daniel It. Hodgdon, formerly i Jirofej?or of the science department of !-the State Summer School of Colllngs- wood, rs. .1 . is now director oi me K'ewark Tollece of Technology, which school has been selected by the govern ment ns a unit for the vocational edu cation of the disabled nrmy and nnvy men. Neatly 100 men have already been admitted to take up different courses. Among these courses are mechanical drawing sign painting nnd lettering, electrical engineering, machinery, auto mobile engine building, architectural drawing nnd designing nnd numerous other trades. Lower courses in English and mathematics for tnose wlin utile i t II .t .. fAntnM !nnlf I 'U may be had. There nre many different nationali ties in the school, and they have become Americanized. Have losl IJmln X Many Some of the students have lost one or , both legs, others lost an nrm, many of f them have been wounded with Bhrapnel ,'or bullets nnd still others have been ' gassed, shell shocked nnd otherwise dis ' abled. Every one of them come directly under the eyes of Doctor Hodgdon and his faculty of instructors. Here nre sketches of n few of the bors at the institution : Vladimir Georgevitrh. Serbia, enme here in 101(1, enlisted in 1017. in Scv ' nth Division, mnchlne gun battalion, fought at St. Mihiel. now a nervous . breakdown, preparing to be a mechan ical engineer. Milik Calak. Austria, enmc here in 1011. enlisted in 1017, Seventy-ninth l; ... -, i ivision infantry, fouglit at eruun' 1 St, Mihiel, gunshot wojind, learn- .machinlst trade. n Zett. Itussian, came here In, 1013 A enlisted 1017, Third Division. infantry, shrapnel wound at Chateau i Thierry, shrapnel still in body, ma chinist. Joseph Rudiinski, Toland. came here in 1007. enlisted in 1017, Third Divis ion, infantry, bullet in left leg at Ver dun, fought at Chateau Thierry, auto L-r-roechwilc. l-iirey Sctiro, uuuan. iweniy-mnin Division, infantry, received six shrapnel wound. , Bronsilaw Staszkeruex, Lithuania, .wounded in right leg, taking a prepara tory course for higher educntlon. Theodore Bell, American Mission Fii i . jSSSSSJPiwBlSBSBjPjBflBssSA i SSsSSjHSHBSHsSk SBSjf ' iaIBBISsbjBSSSBSjI MfcfciBMMGr.' '. .x w jmwa. r wvSH rv i i.piscopni i nnrrn, i nyne. lie was a 1KhM ; $' & t gifyZgpV'BKNB MBBBflHMHflBftl Deaths of a Day V member of the Sons of the Involution WMwmlm& ., X& Jffl&W'vMm KHHsMhHH mmmmkuk V - :aaiaateIli HraiH i fHH&rfTv! v pPJalBBBSSBSaSKSKSiiflsssBssBSBSsl mH; af I r-BsBiV fe-i LOW "P1GHT LEG fcBCM KRlE rawR' Jf3m LEARNING to be an ELECTRICAL jjr -wmgw JRBI ENGINEER Deaths of a Day LIEUT. NELSON D. WARWICK Son of Former Mayor Dies Mawr Hospital Lleutcnmt Nelson Dudley Warwick, son of the late former Mayor Charles r. Warwick, died Sniurdnv evnlng following an operation for appendicitis in the Hrvn Manr Ilnspilnl. Mr. Warwick, n lawyer. with offices the Franklin lluilding. where he had been associated with Judge Oeorgo Henderson before the judge was elevated to the henrh of the Orphans' Court, returned on July 10 from rrnuce, where he had spent eighteen months in the motortruck re construction corps of the Tinted States army. He had enlisted ns a private nnd was promoted through the different grades to first lieutenant. Less than n week after his return to his home, 200 Olenn road, Ardmorc, he wns stricken with appendicitis nnd was operated upon Inly Mr. Warwick, who wns thirty-one years old. i- survived by n widow, who wus Miss l.auretfn Hancock; two small children ; his mother. Mrs. Ella K. Warwick, who lives on Chestnut street above Thirty -eighth ; a sister, Mrs. William Oglcsby. and these broth ers: Charles V. Warwick, Jr., Edward Warwick and Paul It. Warwick. His father died four years ago after a long illness. Rear Admiral Buehler Rear Admiral William George Nueh- ler, P. S. N., letircd. died last night I at his summer home in ilaverford. He i wns born in this city March 25, 1837, and had lived here since he retired, larch 'Jo, 1809. His home as at 124 I South Seventeenth btreet. I When a boy of seven Admiral Bitch - I ler moved with his parents to Harris - ! burg, where ho was educated In private schools. In JM7 he entered the Tinted Stntes unvy as third assistant eugineer. He wns promoted chief engineer in lSIKi, captain June 4, 1804, and retired with the rank of admiral March IKS, 1S09. He was nn officer of the United States frigate Niagara when it assisted in lny- Alfred M. Berg Alfred Moses Herg, of 327 Heneon street, Camden, died suddenly on Sat urday on Teak's Island, Me., where he nnd Mrs, Itorg were spending the summer. Mr. Herg. who wns seventy-four years old, was h son of Moses Herg, a Mar ket street clothing merchant, who sup plied uniforms for many soldiers in the Civil war. When a young man. Alfred M. 1'erg conducted n sheep ranch In the West. John F. Harder John Frank Harder, chief clerk in the Philadelphia offices of the Cnrncgir Steel Company, died in the Abingtou Hospital. Snturdny night, following nn nttack of pneumonia. He was thirty nine years old and for seventeen years had been employed by the Carnegie Steel Company. He is survived by a widow, one daughter, eight months old. and one brother living in Camden. Funernl services will be held nt. his late residence. 10.'! Noble road. Noble, nt 2 o'clock on Wednesday afternoon. Interment will he made in Laurel Hill Cemetery. Mary White Janney The death is announced of Miss Mary White Janney, daughter by n former marriage of Mrs Marie Montu, wife Dt: PANIEL R. HOPGPON, pir?ct-ot- of Major Montu. of Turin. Italy. Miss Janney, who was in her nineteenth year, died yesterday. Her mother wns Miss Marie Carstairs, daughters of the late James Cnrstnirs, of this city. John Goldlng Xmv York. Auc. ll.--(Kv A. I'.l - John Noble Holding, real estate broker I who handled the sale of many I'ltin avenue lots along "millionaires' row," died nt his home here yesterday of pneumonia in his sixtieth year. Mr. Goldlng was broker in the purchase of the proper! v for the Grnnd Central Ter minal, a transaction involving inoro than $,1,000,000. Other clicnls included the Standard Oil Company, the Equit able Life Assurance Society, August ISclmont, William Waldorf Astor, the Astor estnte, the lute Frank W. Wool worth nnd many other notable persons nnd lurge corporations A half century of service to the aged and destitute of this city will be cele brated by the Little Sisters of the Poor August 20, The work was founded In 18G0. The celebration has been planned as nn expression of appreciation to the many benefactors who have made the work of the Little Sisters possible, and who have by their generosity given aid and established the work permanently. Twenty Little Sisters are nt work at nrrnngements for the jubilee, nnd there will probably be delightful surprises not only for the guests, but also for the. more than two hundred and fifty elderly men nnd women who make their home at Eighteenth and Jefferson. At 10 o'clock on the morning of August 28 there will be a solemn high mass, nt which Archbishop Dougherty will preside. The sermon will be prenched by the Ilev. Albert . llrown. A reception will follow the mnss and then will come a special jubilee dinner. There are also rumors of boxes of candy to be distributed from large, festively decorated baskets. The institution is maintained by the voluntary contributions of the public. During the last fifty years .1000 elderly men nnd women have made their home there. They have contributed their use fulness to the institution nnd received in return the attention thnt has made them comfortable and contented. One thing that the Little Sisters nre very nnxious to make clear is thnt the 20th of August is not nn occasion for soliciting donations, but Is a jubilee of thankfulness for past benefactions. V Mid-August Hat Clearance AToi less than 140 Hats in this 1 v R priced as high as 7-50 and some even higher. You will see all the fabric hats that have been so favored this season, especially those in the nifty sports styles. Many are trimmed in refreshing effects that are exceed ingly catchy and bright in mode. 2 O' .vcr ov Jtiats ot the wonder fully fine types that have been selling up to last week in our salons up to 12.50. Georgettes and taffetas arc well represented and, indeed, some of the finer straws have been included. All the summer colors are shown in the lot, and you'll be wise to be early tomorrow. '.Purchasing Agents' Orders Accepted ousa VsL WJ Special Reductions wen 500 dozen Union Suits for quick clearance, in cluding B. V. D.'s, Rock inchair, Roxfqrd and the latest improved drop seat. $2 and $2.50 values. ,, t -a e? .UJ Now $ co.w-puncher in imnan, corn in nan rrancisco m ., i nr .. firsf .... teleirranh. For1 UI1S BCrvn c m" irunnu i"m lumoi , from the New York Chamber of Com-, merce. In the Civil War Admiral Buehler served as chief engineer on the Aris took and (inlenn, nnd participated in the nttneks on James Itiver nnd Fort Arizona, hunter Alaska, enlisted In 1017, Ninety-first Division, Fifth Army Corps, shot in abdomen and leg, electrical engineer. Julius Treadwell, negro, entered service 101S, Ninety-third Division, hbfnfaotry, a foot wns shot off at Ar- .KA. l.... l. lr,;.l ... .ln.e nn hnttla- Mr. V. ' . . .... , it Tlnrliny nnd nt tinssnee of forts at en Beta, raarnea, win ne a mecnanicai ---, .,, --- - ' tinnn n( Inli n linii iinilni l.niennii i IIUIJUU wi .uuuur uuj uuu' i & uiiiteui, I lie is survived by a widow, who wns IMU Caroline Hoecm-. Up wns a racm- 926 Chestnut Street 1338-40 S. Penn Square Widener Bldg. Arcade So Connection With Any Other Store i if engineer. James Tansey, Ireland, came here 1010 Dnt.,d,l ,A.i.;n. imfi Vfnnfv. i".L ri:in if..t ,, ,!,! ,,t st 'her of the Uittcnhouse t lub, .Military Older of the Loyal Legion, Society of Colonial Wars, Military Order of For- i eign Wars, Sons of the Revolution nnd other organizations. i Wlllet L. Boyd Willet Livingston Boyd, who was I widely known in Philadelphia business circles, died yesterday at the rectory of i Calvary Episcopal Church, Consho- ' hncken. of which his son-in-law, the Ilev. J. K. Moorhouse, I? rector. For four jears Mr. and Mr liojd had made I Thev sing the 'heir liome wttli their son-in-law nnu nnd "Amer- daughter nt the ( onshohoeken rectory. and after those' -'Ir- "oyn wns norn in ttns city six- get down to the t -three tears ngo. ii son of George! L Stihiel, sniper's bullet in left arm which i tvs amputated. U Shell Shock ctims Worst Dv. ' Hodgdon says thnt the shell -? shocked victims give the greatest "trouble in getting their normal mental condition returned. To get them in jterested in their studies nnd to keep their attention requires skillful man agement, Dr. Hodgdon said. Ilemsrk flblc progress has been made with such Students, it is claimed. The wnrrior students like to gather in the, chapel ami sing. ''Star Snancled Itunuer IV lea" with a vim. : natrintic sones thev 1 ar songs, love lyrics and home tunes, i '"." '"' """,,,l "'" iuju. r 4 It has been found thnt seventeen .many jears he was associated with his X different nationalities arc represented ' father in the firm of George Tioyd & f . ... . . . ... c ...i.i... i.. t u. :. y n Una scnool. a numuer are not anie c""', ii"m-ui- tim .ti mc mur yet to speak English well, so they are of Ins ueuth n- wn vice presiuent anu learning this lauguage in lonnectiou treasurer of the Twentieth Century with their vocational work. They be-, Storage Warehouse Company, Market j lieve that they will finish the ttork set street. West I'lilladelphla. 7 before; them, which, in mnny cases, lie Is biirvived by a widow, who was Will take four years. , Miss opina Allen, daughter ot J. c. r Several of the men are high school i Allen ; a daughter, Mrs. Moorhouse j graduates and are tailing four years in'tlnee brothers. Dr. C.corge M. Boyd, j! ejectneal engineering and meclianicnl , iiohert l-. isoytj and .1. ai. noyti, nnd drawing. lliej nre higli spirited and two sinicrs, .tirs. ttiiuam ij. Many, jull of enthusiasm nnd know thnt they of Ardmore. nnd Mrs. J. W. Claghorn, must learn to be expert in something "f Ucrmnntown. ,or become a burden on someone else For twenty years Mr. Boyd was a during, 'the rest of their lives. member of the vestry of St. Mary's v KTYjarJt3'J ' if MROCKWAV ffi ilffmnn.TVE RIOHT WAY" BUSINESS f t PROPOSITION TRUCKS J Every cent you invest in these trucks will prove a paying invest ment. You'll get more work at less cost and less trouble. Let us prove it. J Call, write or phone. 68 YEARS 1 - , OF 'JjBUCCESSFUL nil BUILDING .iBrockway Motor Truck Co. of Philadelphia Tf fL 232-?6-28 MARKET STREET rflLAG AND COMPLETE SERVICE STATION .lTliyMSM)4Mdl Peirce Graduates More Than "Get By" "Getting by" is the achievement of the untrained young man or young woman; "getting on" is the achievement of Peirce School graduates. The difference lies in the preparation. The "get by's" enter business un trained in its essentials, and spend their time in an effort to learn what they should have known when they took the position. But the "get on's," already trained in business methods, have time to devote to developing their oppoi'tunities and consequently forge ahead. Wouldn't the thrill of it get you ? Wouldn't you drop whatever you were doing to listen to the greatest band in all the world? The chances are you will seldom see Sousa's Band, but you can hear it every day, if you wish to! Sousa on the Victrola is the same as Sousa marching by all the fire and dash and peculiar rhythm which have crowned him the world's March King. The Victrola brings you Sousa and the leaders in every branch of music and enter tainment. They make Victor Records exclusively! Victors and Victrolas 12 to 950. Victor dealers everywhere. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. Don't be contented with merely ting by" determine to "get on." Day and Evening Sessions Send for 55th Year Book 'get- Important 'Notice. ' Victor Kecerda ud Victor Machines ro ftdcntlficaliy coordlosted and BjrnchronUed Id the processes of manu facture, and should be used toe ether to secure a perfect reproduction. Ntw Victor Records demonstrated at L' d !( en the 1st ef ch month v Stl s? - ;i "VictroU" Ii th. SUsiitered Tr.derattk of th Victor Talking Machln. Company detlf B.tlaf th. product, of thii Company only. Peirce School Business Administration t m Pine Street West of Broad Philadelphia America's Foremost Business School sHjp kV 11, 7iWtomcSS 'W!sSt!ha -'wr nine .50 0-75 B stfr -ttJ &&$& vz 7 n j O- .$ -o a'ivj- J &f m "ay 'Mbit 'Br'Jl'. ,? Jft,.. HsIKI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers