Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 15, 1919, Sports Extra, Page 3, Image 3

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V rmSMBN EVERT TEN FEET
Forgct-proof protection
Yeur QLOBE- Automatic Sprinkler Sy
trm Is alwajri ready for action at tha
ciltical moment, even If your nlnetr
notild fofset to Impact It for our own
Iniptctor will eiamlne It at regular Inter
val and report lie condition to you.
Write for details of this new service.
GLOBE AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER CO.
SOU Wathtncton Ave. Dickinson HI
Th. wmr.-Ore.Uad build.., .1 S.W5. N. v.. lu.
h' DETECTIVE'S BIG CATCH
"Bill" Greeji Hauls In Slippery Cus
tomer Eel Measured 36 Jnches
District Detrctlvc "Billy" Green,
of the Munnyunk station, lias caught
so many slippery" characters In his day
that eels just naturally flock to hlru.
Billy caught an eel last night In the
Manayunk canal that measured by the
yardstick thirty-six Inches long and two
inches thick.
He does night duty 'and lie sets his
lines about 0 o'clock every night. In
the morning before Minup lie gathers in
his catch. Within the last two weeks
he has hooked seven eels mensurlng
more than thirty Inches.
MacLAUGHLIN TO RUN
Director Says He'll Be In Field at
General Election
No matter who wins the llcpublicau
mayoralty nomination Joseph S. Mac
Laughlln, director of supplies, says he
"will head an independent ticket for the
general election.
Asked today if he still contemplated
making the run independently follow
ing the primary the director replied:
"Positively. Immediately after the
primary I will announce the commit
tee which will direct my campaign.
"This is a right between the boscs;
Penrose on one side, and Varc on the
other. I say it Ih time to let the peo
ple rule and will make my campaign
with that as my slogan."
2 WOMEN IN AUTO CRASH
Machine
Is Smashed and
Hubby-
Chauffeur Held
K. W. Wills, 5835 Thompson street,
has a .badly wrecked automobile rmtl
$400 bail hovering over him today as
the result of reckless driving, the police
say. His wife is in the Presbyterian
Hospital with a lacerated face and his
other passenger, Mrs. J. U. Stewart,
(5120. Media street, has a broken nose
and a face badly lacerated from flying
glass. She is in the same hospital.
-Wills was driving his car on City
Mne late last night. At the Bala
bridge, a "blind crossing. " he crashed
into, the open car of Roland Hill. -0
. South Forty-eighth street, in which
were five passengers.
Magistrate Harris heard the evidence
and held Wills for a further hearing
next Sunday.
HOLD-UP SUSPECT CAUGHT
Policemen Outrun South Broad
Street Man's Alleged Assailant
Samuel Copper, of 2214 South llroad
"trect, was held up by six men early
rsterday morning. They beat him with
their fists and a blackjack but failed
to obtain his money or jewelry.
j The hold -un occurred on Jackson
street below Seventeenth. One of the
Wen accused ct complicity in thp rob
bery was captured after five shots had
been '
nrcd
at him during a chase
jjiver fences and tlirnugn dark alleys.
The' men were beating' Copper when
Sergeant Fuhs, of the Fifteenth street
nsid Snyder avenue station, appeared.
When the assailants snw Fuhs, five of
them ran.,
Two policemen chased Frank Jones,
one of the alleged highwaymen, for four
squares, succeeding filially in capturing
him at1 Sixteenth and Bitner streets.
Jones was held in ?100() bail by
Magistrate Baker.
NEW PLAN TO REOPEN BANK
Stockholders Will Consider Operat
ing North Penn Institution
Coincident with the announcement
that several, lurgc financial institutions
in Philadelphia have offered to take
over the defunct North Penn Bank
comes, word that stockholders of the
bank are also considering such action. '
One hundred thousand dollars has
already been pledged with this idea i
view, Ut is said, and the plan will be
discussed nt n meeting tomorrow after
noon at Grand Fraternity Hall, 1020
Arch street.
Invitations for the meeting have, been
sent to stockholders of the wrecked, in
stitution by .milium Morris, 3124 Ridge
avenue, secretary of the special commit
tee of stockholders, which is headed by
former State Senator John J. Coyle.
Ranaley Sees Victory '
ly Sheriff 'Harry C. Rausley, chairman
or rnn turetconirnucu-ciiy committee,
"dopes i out" that Judge Patterson
will havci a majority at the primaries
of exactly 58,450 votes.
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2 KILLED, 3 HURT
N GANG FEUD HERE
Froe-for-AII Fight Ensues Whan
Shot Is Fired at Restau
rant Proprietor y
VICTIM UNDER INDICTMENT
Two men were shot and' killed early
this morning and three scrionsly wound
ed ns the result of old feuds.
The Bhootlngs. according to the po
lice, are the latest In n list of murders
and assaults nmdng a lawless element
in the southern section of the city that
has kept the pofice busy for the last
two jears.
The dead are:
i Giovanni Cancello, fifty-eight years
' l, . inn null ..J n.l T7.1
OKI, oi o.u v nnsiian Hir, mm ju
waruo xersnni, iweniy-pix ycunt uiu,
League street nbove seventh.
The wounded are:
Frank Costalione, thirty-one ye&.rs
old, of 1203 Peter street, now in V.
Agnes's Hospital with n bullet in llio.
left side of the back; flaetano Bruno, )
thirty-eight years old, of Oil Washing
ton avenue', In the Pennsylvania Hos
pital with a broken left leg, nnd Michael
Marbanl, thirty years old, of 741 South
Eleventh street, shot .through the right
thigh. Ho Is In the Howard Hospital.
Cnnecllii and Bruno met each other in
a restaurant run by Cancello at 820
Christian street. Botli men were sit
ting at a table drinking coffee when
Bruno, without warning, raiXed his cof
fee cup and said "Here's luck," open
ing fire at Cancello ns he .did so, with
a revolver held In the other hnnd.
Cancello drew his own pistol nnd re
turned the fire, while the thirty or
more patrons in the place made a inad
scramble for doors, windows and shel
tering counters.
Bruno and Cancello rushed to the
street, where, according to the police,
others drew guns nnd the shooting be
came general, Cnncello, having been
hit by a shot fired by boiup one in the
crowd, staggered back to the kitchen
of the restaurant, where he collapsed.
Costnlione managed to reach Klcvcnth
and Ellsworth streets before he fell.
The others were picked up in the street
outside the restaurant.
Tersani was not identified until this
afternoon, ten hours nfter his death,
when some of his friends saw his body
in the Morgue. j
Patrol loads of policemen and plain
clothes men from the Second and Chris
tian nnd Seventh nnd Carpenter streets
stations soon arrived nnd six men
and one woman, Mrs. Marie Cancello,
were arrested and taken to the Sev
enth nnd Carpenter streets station.
Little light was thrown upon the af
fray at the hearing before Magistrate
Coward. Seven witnesses? were held for
a further hearing September 2.". Men,
held without ball as suspicious chnrac
ters were Joseph Cimmiuo, of Scventht
street below Christian ; Cesarc t Ma
znrola, of 820 Chrestiau street; Bendol
Monteccllo, of Wilder street above
Eighth, and Gnetano Squambatti, of
820 Christian street.
Those held under $400 bail as mate
rial witnesses .were Joseph di Cesaro,
of South Franklin street near Ells
worth : Farelll Fcronte. same address,
jinil Mrs. Marie Cnncello.
Uctccuves lieeneKC, Jiaruunon, wen
notti nnd Hago, with police detolls un-
der Lieutenant Kerns, are investigating.
Cancello, according to the police, was
under indictment for the shooting of
Vincent Petruzzclli, forty-three jears
oftl, of Eleventh street nenr Fitzwnter,
who was shot October 11, 1018.
Marbani was shot at 745 South
Eleventh street, a garage, by Frank
Fischelli, twenty-nine years old, of
750 South Eleventh street. Fischelli
is now awaiting a hearing at the Sec
ond and Christian streets station.
Depths of a Day
Mrs. Charles S. Bradford
Mrs. Emily Bradford, wife of Charles
Sydney Bradford, of 245 South Forty
fifth street, who was related to several
old and prominent Philadelphia families,
died yesterday in" Atlantic City, where
she had been spending the summer
Mrs. Bradford was n daughter of the
late General George Archibald McCall
nnd Mrs. Elizabeth McNurtue .McCall.
Major James Sydney Bradford,
dford, who
J." with' th'e
.. is a son
In Franc,
served in the engineer corps
American expeditionary forces,
of Mrs. Bradford, and Mi
M. Bradford is a daughter.
Mrs. J. .Bradford . Ramsey
Catharine G. Ramsey, wife of J.
Bradford Ramsey, Jr., 'manager of the
Ramsey Paper Company, i of .this -city,
.lfn.l KAut.Rilni. n hnr Imma f)OQ dt.tli
Forty-second street. Iter funeral wlllj
be neld Thursday ntternoon.. ,y
Mrs. Thomas Mulgrew
Rebecca J. Mulgrew, wffe of Thomas
f ,tl(yntt Htn.l -?uflrTfl V nt her 1inm
.-.,, ,.., ... ,..... -""Y -- --- ,
0020 Old York rond. Funeral services
will be held at the home Wechiesdrty'i
afternoon at 3 o'clock, and burial made
in Northwood Cemetery.
John 8. Thompson
Reading, Pa., Sept. 15. John S
Thomnson. sixty -two years old. for
merly treasurer of the1 Colonial Trust
Company, city councilman and school
controller, died here Saturday nlght'of
nervous ailments. He was postmaster
under President Cleveland.
FOR JUDGE OF THE
ORPHANS' COURT.
Place your X after first' name on
the ballot (Patrick P. onway)
for Orphans' Court Judpe. En
dorsed by the Central Labor
Union of Philadelphia and by
Hon. Samuel Gompers, Presi
dent of the American Federation
of Labor. For 25 years a-mrm-ber
of the Hattero' Local Union,
No, 18.
Remember Conway on. the 16th
- ,-r
EVENING PUBLIC "LEDGER-P(HnJADETiHlA MONDAY,
.,
"MISSING" HEIREISS AND HUi3BAtfi)
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lllBHMSf 5j life g$P?9
The sltecn-car-old daughter1 of w Yonkers family niu married In this
city Saturday to Joseph La GVossa a real tstjf te man. Mrs. Ij
Grossa, who was Miss Constance .Bnlch, ronsef nte to pose for n
photograph yltli her husband, who is twenty-flv years old. She was
forced to sell her hair for $5 In order" to get sort ethlng to eat. accord
ing to nttectlvo iHrowri
RED vCROSS ROOM REOPENl'vl
Independence Square Auxiliary Re
suvnes Work for Winter
IndcpeiKhtjiec Square Auxiliary No.
270, of vrhlrlt Mrs. George Horace Lori
mer is chnirman, nnd whose work rooms
are nt 1508 Chfstnut street, opened to
day. Home .relief nnd home service
work will be .carried on by its mem
bers, who wilf also tnke an active part
in the Red Crofs drive for membership,
which starts oni November 2.
The board of directors of the Inde
pendence KqiKire Auxiliary Includes
Mrs. George Ffciles Baker, Mrs. Robert
E. Hare. Mrs. E. Burd (Jrubb, Mrs.
Frederick English, Mrs. Otis Skinner,
Mrs. Theron I. Crane, Mrs. Francis X.
Dcrcum, Sirs, Charles V. McLean, Mrs.
Hnmpton L. Carson. Mrs. I. II.
O'Harra, Mrs, William Sheppard. Mrs.
Rodman Griscom, Mrs. J. Bertram Lip
plncott, Mrs. Joseph Leidy, Sirs. Reed
Morgan, Mrs. .1. Wellington Shannon,
Mrs. S. P. Snowden Mitchell, Miss E.
P. Dickey, Mrs. Charles Borhman nnd
Mrs. Walter Waring Hopkrnson.
IRISH START TREATY FIGHT
Mass-Meeting Begins Nation-Wide
Campaign Against Pact .
The Friends of Irish Freedom, made
up of Irish society representatives in
nil parts of the country, plan a nation
wide campaign against the league of
nations.
The campaign is booknl to start in
this city at a meeting to be held
shortly, at which Eamonn de Valern,
president of the pro-visional' Irish Re-
Ipubllc, will preside.
r -it-l--i! t- 11.- I..HII. nt iintlnna
WUJCCUUI1 HI Utr liurt" " ...........
is based on its failurewto recognize
the -Irish republic.
Delecates ot the Friends of Irish
Firoedom in this city met" last night,
mud. formally urged ngainsti ratification
by the United States Senate of the
league of nation. They denounced
nlsc Enland s ram on oiuu rein
headquarters.
HVidnv teleernms were sent to Presi
dent Wilson nnd Senators Knox and
Penftose, telling of the action.
'AU'iREVOIR, STRAW KATY
WlltedRemnants of a, Happy Sum
mer "Go West"lToday
Good-y !
Farewell thatched chnpeau !
Au revoir agricultural headgear!
In other words straw' hat get out !
This Is Sentember 15.
Mtfnv lingering strnws are taking
l,oir Inst ffasn today ; and they look It
Some should have Yctfrcd many weeks
ago. Although their complexions have
been changed with all sorts otconcoc
inns, the snurt of youth was only tern
poray and it left them sad and strained
looKing.
Wills Probated Today
' Amon
l,ll0se t.
;,.
mong the wills probated today were
n probaten touay were
. Trotman, of Cam -
f Mary l
mO00: Ventura Blanco. 1211
North Frnnklin street, $10,000; Mary
L. Fallon, JflU.uuw; -uarma auyer,
"508 North Nineteenth street. i0000,
and David J. Simpson, $5300. All
plicants.
Tries to End Life After Quarrel
William Grecnwald, ot 1727 North
Tnrlt nvenue. nttempted to cbmmit sui
cide by swallowing poison, according 'to'
the police, tonowing n quurrci mw
friends over politics. He is in a seriousl
Icondition ut'the Wonian's Homeopathicl
fjjospitol.
H
If SilWramiths
Stationers
ffancsoinQjp J)ecoraied
Service Plates
of .
English Bone Cfyina
t
Lenox China
is noil for sale, elsewhere
in Philadelphia
SHOTS.? IRED IN THIEF CHASE
L
'run
e Man
Caught by Police Loot Is
Recovered
Afters' robbing the home of lsnac
RodsiiJ .'1227 Oxford street, early this
i tiarniijs. three men slipped out the al
1 y lefuling into Thirty-second street,
n d Uito the arms of two passing pa
ti totiDJ?!!.
Will' men dropped n bag and rau.
Pn tmltnen Faul and Kling gave chase.
Th ir yells to 'the men to s'top being
unh Wded, the policemen opened fire
with Hhfir revolvers, with the result the
men u-nn faster than ever. The chase
contl tilled into ".the section known
as
Snydi ir's wo
ood-. nt Thirty-third and
Oxfor tl streets, Here two men mad
their lescane. Jnml mip vn
their
nnd one was captured,
who t Jic
li.
poo cc say woh one of the
gang. I
The man tf aid he was Jnk M. Lus
kin, t lenty -one years old, ntyf n
veteran ,ofthe Canadian army. Both
policemi In ,-erc ex-service men. They
returned I a nd found the bag dropped
by the fu itlves contained about ,100
worth of, jewelry, clothing nnd 'other
nrticles. f
Luskin will have n hearing nt Central
Police Cd urt today.
Two "Hurt In Auto Accidents
StrucB by an nutomobile while play
ing nea; her home. Henrietta Stranb,
eight yd ars old, 1187 Whitman 'avenue,
Cnmden , suffered lacerations of the
scalp a jd body. She was taken to the
Cooper llospital. "Edward Waters,
nlnetrsj n years ojd. of Pitman. New
Jcrse , isin the. West Jersey Homco
puthic Hospital suffering with a frac
ture f the left leg. He was hit by an
anion! lobilci
O ounty to Address Rotarlans
U. J. County, vice president of the
Pei rnsylrania Railroad Company, will
be J he principal tjpenker nt the Rotary
Ch li dinner next Thursday night. He
wi- I take as his topic "A Successful
Re tonstrurtlon Co-opera.tion Must Be
Sul stitutdl M- Discontent." Another
spc aker rtll be Robert E. Lee, who rep
res 'nted the government during the r,e
cen waif In mobilizing industrial nc
tivi lies niiungnoj-e than 50,000 workers
in (nrioiri fields
(Carrier Held for Mail Theft '
Areihrd of robbing the malls while
net! btf as n letter carrier at Wildwood,
Hartj Doughty, twenty-two years old,
was loc'ted up in the Cnmden county
jail jV Deputy Marshal Voll. The ac
cus M man is said to hnve admitted
spt tiding considerable money in excess
ot his salary w!hle entertaining at I the
see Ude nssort.
1 Che complaint wns made bv Albert
I Ft h-nise, ,ti postal inspector of this city.
,i , i, .
1 lb MolvJlCTS Having
F laughters Considering
V,heir First Employment
(rn ou hntewBted In elnz your daughter I
hiplo edj I
itie mtixfm
in wnoirsomp envirnnment as
i a vlna: an opportunity to tarn to ,
mum of her ability?
Tf fo, We are always Rjftd to talk oer thrae
cpporiiy nuea, eapsrciuuy uuw wntn Mmi ex
cellent rlerleal ponltlon are open. ThM I
ttariicruar posuionn require no previous .
pexlerice for a 2earh hlsh school arlrl.
HAViS TOUIl DAUGHTER CAIaT. AND SHE
US NP WB WOULD LIKE YOU TO COME
WITH HER.
Cjrtis Publishbg Company
7th and Snsom Streets
Q)
!M M it
if
H
(At ,-
AT . lit
fltv." i .X
' W.
I
HEIRESS SOLD HI
TO PURCHASE FOOD
Constance Minnick, Missing
Girl, Sacrificed Locks to
Cot Money
WEDS A PHILADELPHIA?.
Constance Crowell Mlnich. sixteen-year-old
daughter of a wealthy New
York man. whose disappearance
caused a nation-wide search, was forced
to sell her chestnut hair for $." in At
lantic City that she might have food,
nccording to Detective Brown, of this
city.
1 The girl is the bride of a l'hilndel
Iphian. She was married on Saturday
to Joseph Ia Grossa, twenty-fiw. nf
007 Christian street, a member of the
real estnte firm of Langsner & La
Grossa, 501 Liberty Building
and Chestnut streets.
B. E Mlnich. vice president of the
Vu I r ,mr,r J , I
T 7- ,. 7 r i .1 i , ,
of ?.,00 in lis efforts to find the girl.
....in ri iirxuu'iiuuiuuiiir, iiiiu- mese are vexatious prolileins. nut
lug to Detective (Brown, she was re- ti1Py'ie nothing nt nil compared to the
duced to straits in Atlantic City. housing problem uhidi confronts the
Following her disappearance from her 'college bojs.
home in Westchester county. New York. The University 's matriculation this
according to Brown, the girl ndmittcd JPar js nnuMinllj heavy, while houses
to him that she had made her way to fnr the undergraduates' are unusually
Atlantic City nnd there had run out of 'Hcnree. And nt that some of the fresh
funds. "Ln Grossa also told me," sniil .men are fnr once in urenter luck Minn
Brown, "that he found her wandering
ine iioaruwniK, hungry nnu penniless,
lie sum ne iounu n room lor ner ui a ( uipii- exdusnn use.
hotel nnd left her there. Later he met William O. Miller, college bursnr,
her in Philndclphin and married her. Sn.s that every dormitory room was
"The girl confessed to me that she engaged ns long ago as last June, with
had been farced to have her hair bobbed, a loug waiting list of disappointed up
She sold her beautiful chej-tnut locks to.cnnts.
n hnirdrc.Kncr for .." witV which to buy A students' residence committee has
food. Slfe told me she had left home been formed with headquarters nt the
because her parents had beeu tool Houston Club, and every effort will he
strict." made to lodge the students nenr the
The marriage license was obtained University, o as to stimulate college
Saturday, rfter the Marriage License i spirit.
Bureau iiu'Citv Hnll hnd closed, from
the derk nf the bureau, at his home Divorces Granted Today
The marriage ceremony was performed (,,, t 0f Common Pleas No. I to-
n me iwv. Alvin L. I ooncr. l!i.ij,in. ,.r,min,i ,ir,.,.. f ,ii,-r,. ,,. m,
North Sixth street, nt the house 114
South Twaoty-second street, where the
bride has, "lived since she motored to
this city with La Grossa from Atlantic
City.
lthnugh hut sixteen years old, the
irl gave the date of her birth ns
March 5, 1K0S. nt the time she and
her intended husband applied for the
marriage license.
Father Here Saturday
Mt and Mrs. La Grossa now live jp,lnPirt treet. .1. E. Kenyon, sixty
at the house where the ceremony took j flvp Jpnri( olil. is in the West Philadel
place. Today the youthful bride, wear- ,,,),;., Homeopathic Hospital lu a serious
ing a vivid green tarn o shnnter and a condition,
gown of dark blue serge covered with i '
n dark blue cape lined witli n figured '.
gray silk, accompanied her husband to'
his real estate office. There they were
found by newspaper reporters nnd pho
tographers nnd willingly consented to
pose for their protogrnphs.
"Papa was over here Saturday
night," said the bride, "and I am going
home for n visit Wednesday. Joe." she
added, looking nt her husband, and
blushing with pride, "will come over
for the week-end.
"Papa came over on the 8 o'clock
train and left on the 10., "58 Saturdav
nlght."
"Yes," broke in Mr. La Grossa.
"nnd my wife talked with her mother
ovr the telephone from Broad street
station."
"Oh Joe, there's no use telling that," i
pouted the bride. ,
"We are very happy and wish the
newspapers would let us nlone now,"'
the bride continued, in answer to qucs-
tions.
Acquainted Three Years
"Joe came to Atlantic City for me
and we motored up to Philadelphia. I
"How long hnve I known JoeV
"Oh, I don't know. How long have i
I known you, Joe?
"Three years? Oil ; it's been louger
than that."
Over the telephone today the ad
mission was made by the secretary of
the girl's stepfather that Mr. Minich
had vUited Philadelphia last Saturday '
night and teen his newly married daugh
ter. All other information was refused. '
l1
Hats that are definitely appro
priate to your individual type
and taste.
m
1
.'J o
SEPTEMBER 15, 1919
Mr. Mlnich having been declared to
be much depressed by his daughter's
marriage nnd her mysterious; dlsappcnr
nnee from home He requested, his
representative snld, that nothing more
be published concerning l(Js stepdaughter
or his family affairs,
"What age did I give When we ap
plied for our marriage llccnseV" asked
the bride todny. "Oh, what difference
does that make. You know what the j
laws ot rcnnsyivania are ami you ougui
not to ask that question," countered the
groom.
"Yes, t was going to Wellesley Col
lege," said Mrs. Ln Grossa, "but no
more school for me now. I've attended
several Schools nnd I've traveled quite
n lot. I expect to remain in Philadel-1
phio some time. Joe nnd 1 hnve a lot I
of shopping to do today,
"Why did I leave home without tell- !
Ing my parents t was leaving?
"Why. I came away to get married.
.ihi.'i 1 rv i. .i,...i ......I..- .
14 1 tin a. (ft- nu i tpniiii tii in M ii
her husband, and he smiled "yes."
STUDENTS SEEK HOMES
Housing Problem Confronts
Penn
Men for Ensuing Term
Not the Intricacies of the binomial
theorem, nor Act the vncrnrlcs nf the
Broad ( temperamental Greek enclitic: not Cne
Isar's fondness for "indirect discourse."
i nor the sleep-inducing propensities ot
r ,1,(r,,r,n,lnl l"ilus are troubling
, vpr,mnl Drnins ol "l0 "-csnmen nt
I ,..nn tM, TMr.
i the upper clnssmen. for n lnrge pnrt of I
the dormitories has been reserved for .
I. Russell from William J. Russell;
Edith Washbnurn Schliff from William
M. Schliff; Hannah Mary Strouse from
David Strouse; Marion Hewlett Bap
tiste from John Bnptiste: Dagmnr Han
sen from Frederick Charles Hansen.
Fractures Skull In Fall
Suffering a fracture of the skull when
he fell down n long flight of stairs in
frnnt nf Ills nnnrtments fit 1K Stmitlt
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AjuctfttA, 5 dmjf vdowr
M.
OAJtraae
We show a broad & lec
tion here nothinfcf less
than the most diverffied
variety would be adequate
to the requirements of our
great following.
Full consideration is given
to differences in tastes, ten
dencies and types of men
and our responsibility to
provide a becoming effect
for each.
Soft' Felt Hots, Ameriam-madc,
$4 to $10.
Soft Felts from Borsalino of Italy,
Mossant,.J'allon and Argod of
France, $10.
Velours, $10 and $12.
Cats, $2.50, $3, $3.50 and $4.
JACOB REEDS SQM
1424-1426 Clestoraft Sihredb
FWi-w
HOT AND
NIGHTIES
FIGURE IN BLAZE
Occupants of House, Who Flee
to Hot Roof in Bare Feot,
Rescued
DAMAGE IS ONLY $800
.
,, , , . ... ..
KevoUer shots, nightgown esc es
1m"" fni window, to sheds In the
)' T" "K '7, ,,r?Pu. ,1
?'" h" " rrp "'1 of " firC t0'la, Ut
lint i.liswonu siren.
Damage to the store and dwelling.
property of .loe Treliro. ,wns estimated
at SS00.
A revolver shot attracted attention of
n poli emun to the blaze.
Trefiro. his tcn-nar-old, daughter
Maiy in his arms; his nightgown-clad
wife. Angelinn. shivering nt his side,
was dancing up nnd down on th" reli
shed, sputtering in the smoke nnd tr) -ing
to get down. Neighbors effected the
rescue nmid-t a snlvo of cheers.
Hie fire had gained considerable
ncn(hwlv i front. ,U,en Mrs. Joseph
Vonutti. occupant of the third floor.
of (, (.!a(, bnnt
through a front window to the tin awn
ing over the sidewalk with her niece.
Josephine Pnresn. the jears, in her
nrms.
The i oof was hot. Her husband ap
peared. In their bare feet, they were
obliged to dame on the roof At this
point the firemen appeared, n Indder
rescued.
wus Iinstily hoisted nnd nil hands were
-piln (.n,1N(1 of th(1 f,rp
is not known.
Rivet front tires caused heavy dam
age to property nnd cuucd the Injury
nf one mnn on Sunday.
The plant of the Atlantic Refining
Company. .'5144 Pussyunk nvenue, was
menaced by fire, which destroyed a por
tion of n pier nenr n lnrge tank in
which 120,000 gallons of oil were
stored.
Three bolice boats, two tugs of tie
refining company, six engines nnd thirty
hand trucks of the corporation were
called nut by two alarms, a quarter of
an hour apart. Patrick I-'lynn, thirty
two. Magazine lane and Thirty-second
street, nn overseer at the refining com
pany, was burned.
Another fire almost destroyed tiie
Weymouth, a newly commissioned boat
of the Bowers Southern Dredging Com
pany. The craft was moored off Pier 0,
Greenwich Point. Five hours' hard
work by two police crews nnd the men
of four engine companies were needed
to snve the boat.
Fire late yesterday damaged the
waste mill of Charles Devlin & Co.,
at Kensington avenue nni! Hilton street,
nnd destroyed more than 100 tons nnd
other wnste in bales. The total loss is
placed nt S10.000.
&& -
ero.
V 31
onui
nwtmijXM 10 fo S
v-lvr
;VM,
fc'
SJOTi
Here's the
Round -Up
Clearance
Sale of '
$30, $35, $38
and $40
Overcoats
and Suits A
at One j
Uniform jj
X X JLV.- - JPBV
i I
' 1
J t
$25 if
1 You can't makelahy
mistake in buyintg one
or two of these Sraits.
You couldn't make lany
mistake in themiat their
original prices of $30 to
$40. They weret good
values at those prices. 1
They would be good V
values at $3U, ftddH,
$40 today! t
$ We are cm:ng tiidm
r,i,4- he!iiick VU- tr ri-ziirj
just one, two, three, '
four of a lot. We don t
want broken stocks.
But all you are inter
ested in is just oneiiSuit.
If you get your sitee in
this Sale, you'll Jhave
some suit ! ,
And Overcoats!
Cfl Medium weights and
heavy weights. Con
servative styles and
snappy styles.
f And all for the mod
est sum of $25 each!
Fall Styles
are Here !
1 Hundreds are buying
them. If you want to
know what's what,
come in and look them
over.
Perry &Co.
"N. B.T."
16th & Chestnut gts.
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