' f"' Vn Br- .11 1 Ms V.1 rtM-' , ' fc V Alfr, ' B Fi.--"' ' H' EVENING- PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1919 ri? fcr r lb Ij-V u K i F BOY DEAD, 10 HURT IN STREET CRASHES Youngster Loses His Life Under Trolley Collision In- jures Five jRUTO HITS CHILD OF EIGHT h , One boy Is dead nnd two others nrc Sadly Injured in Iioipltal todnr as the result of street accidents. T'iRht other persons were hurt in trolley car or automobile pmaMiups. The dead child uas .Toeph Jackson, twelve years old, 410 Dtirfor street. lie was knocked down by n trolley car nt Fifth nnd Durfor streets. Patrick Rush, of 2407 Nicholas street. ins the wotormau. Hl- -vx ill be nrrnisned be fore Magistrate l'ennock today. Tony Lukens, eight years, of 710 Kater street, was hit by an automobile and scriouslv injured lnt nlejit while playing on South tuet. between Sixth nnd Seventh street. David Perloff, 600 North Tncnt -thiid street, owner nnd the drhcr nt the automobile, will have n hearing toclaj. Doctors at tie rennsUanm Hospital found thnt the boy was buffcrinK from n fractured skull and internal injuries. Edward 'Whickwar, n fUo-ycar-old boy, residins nt 1709 Lombard street, was struck by a trolley at Columbia avenue nnd Nineteenth Micct last night, nnd suffered a fractured skull. The boy was removed to the Woman s Homeopathic Hospital, where his con dition was pronounced serious. A trolley struck the tonrinp car of I,ouis Schuchniau, of l&'.O Marvine street, as he was crossing the track at Sixteenth nud Marvine streets. Schucli inau's two car-old daughter, Sarah, was thrown from the i cuter of the street to the sidewalk, just escaping another car The child was treated at the Children s Homeopathic Hospital for shock nud tontutious. Four women and a man were hurt when two trolley cars collided last night nt Eighteenth street nnd Ridge avenue. The injured nrc : Mrs. Helen Steele, 6207 Chew street ; Miss Matilda Englehart, !M10 North Garnet street; Mis Hobcrt 'Wilson, 1024 West Toronto avenue: Miss Flor ence O'Connor, .'KilO North Sixteenth street, and Robert Maddo-c, 2202 North Sharswood street. All were treated at St. Joseph's Hospital. HOG ISLAND CARS BLOCKED Trolley Trailer Jumps Track Holds Up All Traffic Many Hog Island workers had to use automobiles and motortrucks to reach their work today because a trolley car jumped the track at Island road and "Woodland avenue. Trolley traffic was hampered for nearly three hours by the occurrence. The trolley car a trailer that jumped the track swung over on the eastbound "Woodland avenue track so that traffic in both directions was blocked. Transit officials later sent Chester cars .down Forty-ninth street and out Elmwoocl avenue, iseiorc me swiirinnu arrangement was ordered about twentj cars passed Torty-ninth street nnd had to back to that point to continue their trip. Hibernians Deplore Legion Stand A resolution "deploring" the nction of, the American Legion nt Harrisburg on Saturday in calling De Vnlcra a traitor was adopted nt the last session of the biennial county convention of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, at 1600 North Broad street, last night. BOMB MAILED TO MRS. RODMAN WANAMAKER Ir' ii ti ii ' rrd i i'i !; t j , fir BARRAGE OF BRICKS MARS JOY OF 8 BARBER PATRONS Customers and "Artists" Dash for Protecting Cover of Furni ture When Strikers Attach Market Street Shop ViAffSlStiS!iltiAiS!iStSSiiStXlXSlSSjS!SSCCSSStlXiiSS (r) IrUcrnnlionnl lilm The illustration shows tho bomb container and the infernal machine recehed and opened by Mis. Itodtnan Wnn.i maker at licr suiiiiiicr home at Tuvedo 1'arU, N. Y. A discharged butler's desiio to get cen with u maid he blamed for Ills dismissal caused him to mail a bomb addressed to Mrs. Wan.uiuher in tile cpectntion that the maid umhl open the parlmge MRS. RODMAN WANAMAKER ESCAPES BOMB BY CAUTION GLOUCESTER HOMES "A closo shave." "With lilac, sir?" "Yes, nnd si " Whang! Dang! Also Xing! Eight expert barbers nnd eight equally expert patrons exercised all their ex pertness in the race for shelter as an expertly timed barrage of rocks came hurtling through the expensive, plate glass window of tho shop nt Eleventh and Market streets last night. The man with but one side of his face shaved fought for the privilege of hiding behind n couch with the man wyo had ordered n haircut and remain ed in tho thair just long enough to have the clippers trace a neat furrow through his crop. And the barber who had been "sir ring" n patron a few second beforo kicked thnt same patron in the face during the courte of nn argument for the protecting influence of a chair. Hut the minature Maruc within, the shop was nothing in comparison with the fight between the barber strikers nud protecting detectives nnd police going on in the street by that time. As the fighting, grew more furious in the street, tho strikers withdrew their attention from the shop to devote nil their efforts to keeping the police quiet. And the eight expert strike-breakers nnd eight expert patrons cautiously peered from their respective hiding places, watching the tide of battle." After the strikers had been dispersed, tho tonsorlal processes were concluded, but none of the patrons hod the nerve to order n "close shave." Equally stormy scenes were enacted about n barber shop nt Ninth nnd Chestnut streets n hort time later. Six barbers on strike were arrested during the night. They gave their names as John Cutengo, Darien street near Christian ; Ilcnjamin l'uggone, Seventh street near Catharine; Frank Rizzoli, Ninth street near Reed j Frank Scv crino, North Avondnle street; An tonio Cajgrio, Juniper street near Dickinson, and Pnsquale lioccalo, Six-tv-third street near Arch. GIRL ATTEMPTS SUICIDE Young Woman Takes Poison After Trip to Seaohoro After nn attempt to end her Hfo by taking poison tablets -while in her room nt tho Majestic Hotel lost Saturday, Miss Anna F. Sclinffcr. seventeen Years old, of Enston, l'o,, is in ti hcrious con- union in St. Joseph's Hospital. Her parents were notified nnd visited her. Tho mothe could uot bo ascertained. The girl is supposed to have come from Atlantic City, checking in nt tho hotel last Thursday. On Saturday, after re peated knocking nt her door had failed tb bring any response, the room was entered forcibly nnd she was found unconscious. DEATH PROBE HALTS BURIAL? i State Police Investigate Case of Child, Supposed Victim of Fall Investigation of the death of five' year-old Mary Gorber, of Sprlngtown, has caused Coroner White, Bucks county, to postpone tTIo funeral. The investigation is being conducted b state police. Dr. F. J. Diebert, of Hcllcrtown, has issued a certificate of accidental death, however. v The child's death is thought to have been due to n fall. Her body was bruised from head to foot nnd thcro was a deep cut on her forehead. ALLEGE RENT GOUGING IN NEARLY 500 CASES Tenants' Associations Will Pre sent Complaints to Former Lieutenant Governor Today Nearlj the hundred specific cases of nlleged rent profiteering will be sub- CMTCDIin DV TUinCQ'inlttod to former Lieutenant Governor Avoids Opening Box and Tears Off Corner, Discovering Gun powder Butler Confesses Plot as Aimed at Maid New Yoili. Oct 7. A German butler's desire to get even with nn Irish maid he blamed for his discharge from the employ of Itndmnn Wnnamaker caused the butler to make a bomb and mail it on September -."' to the Wnnamaker summer home at Tux edo Park lie addressed it to .Mis. , Kmt, ue Nnnnmnkcr. The explanation gnen lor Wnnainakers this is thnt he thought the maid variablj opened all packages intended for her mi-tres. The package, however, went dirertl to Mrs. WnnamnUer, arrhing on Sep tember 27. Perhaps because the wrap per was n kind nf paper used onh by the AVannmaker store, but did not bear the store label, n it ought to hue done, coming from that sourer, she looked upon it with suspuiou. Cautiously she removed the wrapper Inside it was a handsome paper bn, laender in color, oval in shape, with embossed let tering on the rover indicating the con tents were bottles of perfumery. Mrs. YVanaiiukcr. Cautions Had Mrs. Wnnamaker lifted the coer from the box and the contrap tion within woiked as intended, she rould hardly have escaped disfigurement and po-sibl would lia'.e been badly in jured, for there wns in the box a crude detonator, a pound of gunpowder, spriukkd with cajenne pepper, and scraps of brass tubing Hut Mr-,. Wnnamaker did not lift the lid. Instead she turned the box upside down and i emoted a bit of the paper at a coiner. (Stains of black powder trickled out. Mrs. Wauamaker then handed the box, wrapper and all, to George Lllis, her husband's valet, who took it to police headqsiters. whero Mr. Wnnamaker is a special deputy commissiouer. Detectives Edward Cooper and Charles Newman, of the bomb squad went to work under the direction of Detective Sergeant James Gegan. The investigation ended with the arrest of the butler, nnd, according to tho police, his complete confession, nnd is de scribed bj Alfred J. T.illej , nssislnnt district nttorne, "as neat u bit of police woik ns I ever heard of." Koimer Itutlcr Confesses The butler now a prisoner in liolle- Mie Hospital is Lrnest Allien liustnt wns cniplojcil hy the two jeais, b the lntn Finding of Strand of Hair Leads Police to Believe That Woman Figured in Robbery James Hill ten jcars, during which period his wife was Mr. Hill's house keeper, and b John Sloane twenty I cais. When the distiiet uttornej pre- ' sents the cildcuce to the giand jurj to-, small intrinsic il.i .Mrs wnnamaker anil ;he maul, Man O'lliieti, will be asked to testif The detectives found in the box four matches, the business ends of whiih were piessed against sandpaper. The other ends of the matches were fastened to Hie lid. If the lid hud been lifted friction with the sandpaper would have caused ignition. Near too heads of the matches was a piece of loose cotton resting on the compound of guujowcler, red pepper nnd fragments of brs. The box wns nbout lite inches long nnd four wide The label on the wrap per was a regulation American Express Compnti) label bearing the canceled two-cent stamps and addressed in handwriting to "Mis Itadmnn Wnna maker, Tuxedo I'atk, N. Y." The package hnd been mailed nt Ili'J Fourth avenue, the postnflire substation near est the Wnnamaker store. Even thing possible had been done to make it ap pear that this was nn innocent parcel sent by the New Yoik store. Twelve homes in the residential sec tion of Gloucester were entered and a number lobbed enrl.v todnj b two thieves whom the police believe nie a man nnd woman. With the exception of two pearl rings which were taken fiom the home of William lirodwny, '.yj'2 Monmouth street, only articles of worth are missing. In one case a child's bank nnd pocket book were rifled. At every house which was robbed entrance was gained by forcing open one of the side windows. The thieves made no attempt to leave the first floor in nny instance. Finger piints and n strand of hair lead the police to believe that one of the two was a woman. It is thought thnt they nre the same pair who operated in South Camden last xvcek. Those whose homes wcre robbed be sides Mr. Ilrodwnj nie: Nelson l'owcll, SUO North Brown street; Leo Scrcncflf 'IJ10 Monmouth street; Wil liam Fljnn, 021 Monmouth street; Joseph Van I lest, 034 Monmouth street, nnd II. It. Lawrence, 021 Gaunt street. Police are investigating. Fiank li. McCluin today for action when he meets olfieials of xarious ten nuts' associations and members of the Heal Estute Itoaid The probe into rent profiteering in this city is being conducted by Mr. McClnin, who is chairman of the Pub lic Welfaie Commission, at the insti gation of Governor Sproul, who ordered a thorough investigation. Harrj Coryell, vice president of the Tenants' Piotective Association of l'eonsjlvnnin, declared that a street list, with the numbers of nearly 2000 vacant houses held for sale which cannot be rented, has also been piepared for pres entation nt today's conference. .This list, it is alleged, will show a conspiracy exists on the pait of certain landlords in this, pit to withhold properties from the renting market. In one Wfst Phila delphia street there are said to be bolid blocks of old houses which their owners are holding for sale nt high prices. At one time, according to Mr. Cor ell, all of these houses were occupied, but it is said that within a enr the teunuts have been driven out nnd the houses, now acated, are available onl to pur chasers. The lists to be submitted to the head of the rent piotiteeriug probe todny were compiled by the police at the re quest of Sheriff's Counsel Itusscll. He turned the lists over to the Tenants' Associatiou as of value in the investi gation into the methods of some city landlords. jSTjjWv, aggrcsgn ftSM Kg Tomorrow, Wednesday S$ III Extraordinary Sale j I 360 Smart Hats M ! 1 For Fall ! J 9.75 nt Every hat created in our millinery workrooms in our usual high class manner. Large, small and medium effects in Lyons and Panne Velifet; trimmed with silver, wings, jet ribbons, fancies, glycerine ostrich flowers and feathers. Mawsoh &DehA 1215 Chestnut Street Purchasing Agents' Orders Accepted - ill I 1 I 1 . NLA He JtoQ M Speeding forward on the straight road to efficiency- airy The automobile industry is breaking all records. De mand exceeds supply. Production is double that of a year ago. Everywhere tremendous speeding-up. Such expansion such extraordinary growth is a sure test of any filing system. Library Bureau methods have stood that test. Today, practically every leading automobile manufacturer is a large user of L. B. filing systems. The automobile industry has no monopoly on activity or efficiency ! What L. B. methods have accomplished for others they will accomplish for you. They are founded on correct principles and are therefore adaptable to every business under the sun. The very bigness of Library Bureau is your protection. It saves you from experimenting. It offers you card record and filing systems that have made good in every kind of busi ness and under all conditions. It offers you experience f You will be interested in reading about the L. B. central ized filing system used by one of the largest automobile manufacturers. Write for folder 738 WO Library Bureau TAXI PASSENGER ROBS DRIVER AT GUN'S POINT Thinks Ho Won't Pay for Ride, He Tells Chauffeur Then Takes Roll A "fare" picked up at Hioad Street Station, robbed n tnxicab chauffeur ut the point of a 'revolver early today nt Fifteenth nud Wavcrl streets. Tho clmuffeur, .lames Morris, 2224 Catharine street, told the police that a negro entered his cab at the station and Baid he wanted to go to AVnverly street, which is near South street. When the machine reached there the negro, Morris said, stepped out and said he didn't think he would pay for the ride. Then he nimed a levoher nt the driver ''and demanded his money. Morris gave him his watch nud S15 in cash. The negro menaced the chauffeur with his weapon as he backed away and then disappeared in a side street. Morris related his experience to the police of the Twelfth and l'ine streets station, who have n description of the hold-up rV-jJ) pie Here's a Good One; , the Bestpu Never Heard: You do not sacrifice anything when you buy the Noiseless Typewriter. You gain! The Noiseless brings you all the speed and efficiency of the noisy typewriter without its click, click, bang and clatter. Fact is most stenographers will tell you that they can do more work and better work on the Noiseless than on any other machine they have ever used. NOISELESS TYPEWRITER The Noiseless Typewriter Company, 835 Chestnut St., Philadelphia 'Phone Walnut 3691 Ask for Vooilet and Impresiivt List of Useri 2Ite I P 1 MaOson Filing cabinets wood and steel uard and tiling Founded 1876 systems M. W. MONTGOMERY, Manager 910 Chestnut st., Philadelphia Salesrooms In 49 leading cities of the United States, Great Britain and France Mail Orders Filled & DeManV 1215 CKesfnut Street . Liberty Bonds and Purchasing Agents' Orders Accepted Great Fur Clearance! "Small" and "Individual" Lots Only, but Each Item an Extraordinary Bargain on Sale, Tomorrow! It is only natural that such "fast and furious" selling, the selling that characterized every hour of the Annual Fur Sale, should 'prove rcsultful in the variety and number of "odd" and "broken" line"!. This is what happened! Furthermore, many lines can only be replaced at prices that are 1 severely raised in the wholesale market above the prices we originally paid for our skins. We haye thus decided to "close out" these lines at prices even less than those that prevailed during the Sale. Detailed in formation is given below in list form. Quantifies Only as Specified Against Each Item To Avoid Disappointment, Shop in the Morning! A Small Deposit Will Reserve Your purchase mm iff Fur Coats (2) Marmot Sports lenpth; shawl collar nnd cuffs of marmot. (1) Australian Seal Three-quarter length; shawl collar and cuffs of seal or contrasting fur. (2) Natural Muskrat Smart Sport Model; laro rolling, shawl collar and cuffs. (2) Natural Raccoon Flared Sports design; shawl colalr and cuffs of natural raccoon. (7) Hudson Seal Smart Sorts model with shawl collar and cuffs of seal. (4) Natural Nutria Smart Sports Flared models; large rolling shawl collar and cuffs of nutria. Regulaily 125.00, Now ff 5.00 . . . (3) Hudson Seal 36 inch. Smart model; large rolling shawl collar and cuffs. Fur Scarf 8 Itegu.. larly Xow (6) Taupe Wolf ...'.... 25 00 14.50 (5) Brown woir sg.oo h.so (6) Brown lox 25 00 17.30' (5) Taupe Fox 26,00 17.BO (4) Blacic j-ynx 35,00 si.oo (3) Black Fox t 45.00 Si.SD (3) Natural Mink 45.00 ss.sq 47) Hudson oeai ...... 10.00 34.50 (2) Stone Marten GO 00 44.56 (7) Jap cross trax.,,, 87 BO 44.5a (2) Hudson JJy oauia , 10, vu 49.50 Regularly 285.00, Now 225-00 (4) Hudson Seal 36-inch model; shawl collar and cuffs of seal, beaver, squirrel or skunk. Regularly 425.00, Now 325-00 Fur Stoles IURU- larly (3) Australian Seal .. 67.50 (3) Hudson Seal 106.00 (2) Natural Squirrel . 125.00 (1) Skunk ,.... 145.00 Now 44.50 00,50 80.50 08.50 Fur Coqtees IteBU. larly Now1 Nutria .., 160,00 110.00 Australian Heal ,,, 165,00 115.00 Scotch Moleskin ,. 215,00 103.00 Natural Saulrrel .. 265.00 1D5.00 Hudson Seal ,,,., 206,00 225.00 Fur Sets Now H 20.60 1 42.50 I 44.50 I 40.50 I 40.50 I 04,50 1 64.60 I Blacic Fox ..,,.., 100,00 74.50 I Taupe Lynx 110,00 70,60 I Mink .,..,....,, 126.00 84.50 I U lack Lynx , 196.00 88,00 I Regu larly (3) NaturalIlaccoon . 45,00 (4) Gray Wolf 62,50 1(2) Nutria 60.00 (3) Hudson Seal ..... 72,50 (4) Black W'olf ,.K... 75 00 (4) Taupe Fox ..,,,,, 98 00 (4) Brown Fox ..,,.. 98.00 1KU AV t V,'W ' ' -''V - - Ffy($ty9&!M '?'- '? tv u, ft h' ' J&ff .. ' ffw "f" !' yi WEVj ' V3JBUXfcjLTSlg.5glV ' 2zsl mtuSSSsBKK&samm ?fWi "T'T """" x''' v; , l '" , , I