Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 17, 1919, Night Extra Financial, Page 3, Image 3

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EYEXIXG ' prBLIC EEDQETrfflLA)ELPIILV, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1919
-.' J
I
Why Aren't
You Taking
Nyjol
JFbr Constipation
Nujol mil
teach you
habit in
the world.
Cet a bottle from your drug-
citt today nnd write for free
I booklet "Thirty Foot of
Dnnger" to Nujol Laborato
ries, Standard Oil Co. (New
Jersey), 50 Broadway, New
York.
Sickness Prevention
PARTY GOES TO GREET
ENGLAND'S REFORMER
Philadelphians Will Receive Dr.
Herbert Stead and Bring
Him Here
p,iin.n( in. iin .i.ini.i. ... ........ v......
Piomine.it Philadelphia is. nieii.bers
of a committee of the National Tteform
Association, will go to New Yoik to-
day to welcome Dr. Jlerbort Stead, of
London. British authority on labor
problems.
Doctor Stead will be the guest of the .
association while in Philadelphia, and
will be entertained at the City Club.
He will speak at the world's Christian
citizenship confcienee nt Pittsburgh
during "Armistice 'Week," November !)
to 30.
Heading n ' Philadelphia committee
which will foinmlly welcome Doctop
Stead to this country U John Walton.
The other member ot the committee
are S. F. Jlouston. H. Davis Page. Ali
Ian Sutherland, .losvph M. Steele
Henry H. Bnnsull, W. Alexander
Brown. Dr. Finley M. Wilson, the Bov.
John Grant Newman, Dr. George M.
uicKmnn nnd tJr. Julward b. I.ittell. . .
1.. ,M.i - , x , .
than thirty years ton study of economic.
-L.ui.-iui' oicauwiio iias uevoieii moro
conditions and esneeinllv tlie relntinn nf
-. l
the church to labor, will speak in three
Philadelphia churches on Sunday next.
He will speak in St. Matthew's Luth
eran Church at 11 a. m. ; in Temple
liiithernn Church at 4 p.m., nnd nt
Trinitv Lutheran Church at 8 p. m.
On Tuesday evening he will speak nt
Tioga Presbyterian Church, Wednes
day at Frnnkford Avenue Methodist
Episcopal Church ; Thursday evening
at Ilridesburg public school hall, nnd
on Friday evening nt Aich Street Pres
byterian Chursoh.
Doctor Stead was the associaate edi
tor of the Enelish Review of Reviews
for twentv years, and is a biother ofl'hv manv
mc mic ,, uiiuiu oitwu, nmcti journal-
1st, who lost his life in the sinking of
the Titanic.
Deaths of a Day
i Dudley T. Llmmerlck
Dudley T. Llmmcrick, sixty-two
years old, well knoxvn in musical cir
cles in this city for many )cnrs, died
yesterday afternoon at his home, U007
Chestnut street. The cause of death
was heart disease.
Jtr. Limmerick was active in tho Ma
sonic order and served on a number of
committees during the recent conclave
of the Knights Templar, here. He is
survived by a sister, Miss Marguret
'Limmerick.
Mrs. Martha B. Price
The funeral of Mis. Martha Blanch
ard Price, who died Wednesday night
In her home, 404 West School House
lane, Germnntown, will take place to
morrow from her home. Services xvill be
conducted by the Rev. Willianr P. Lee,
pastor of the Second PresDyterian
Church of Germantoxvu. Interment
will be made in tho West Laurel Hill
Cemetery. Mrs. Price, who was a
member of an old Quaker family, wa
the .widow of Jacob S. Price, well
known in building circles here. She
is survived by txvo daughters and three
ons.
Mrs. C. H'. Mockrldge
Mrs. C. H. Mockridge, mother of the
Rev. Dr. John Mockridge, rector of St.
James' Protestant Episcopal Church,
Twenty-second and Walnut streets,
died Wednesday at her home in To
lonto, Can. At the time ot hot death
Doctor Mockridge was en route to Can
ada in response to word advising of his
mother's illness. Mrs. Mockridge's hus
band and all her sons were Episcopal
ministers. - '
Mrs. Harry B. Clark
Mr. Lillian M. Abbott Clark, wife
of Harry B. Clark, a lecturer, of 88G0
Glrard avenue, died yesterday at her
home. ,Her funeral xvill be held tomor
row in an undertaker's chapel at
Eighteenth and Chestnut streets.
Enrique C. Zegarra
IJma, Oct. 17. Senor Enrique
Cornel Zegarra, for more than twenty
years prominently connected with the
project for building the Paita-Maranon
Railroad, to connect the Amazon river
and the Pacific, with American capital,
is dead here.
President Leguia, ot Peru, declared
in his inaugural nddress October 12
that the negotiations for the construc
tion of the railxvay were well advanced
and that it would open up a region
capable of supporting a population of
25,000,000. Senor Zegarra was edu
cated in this country and was formerly
a member of the Peruvian cabinet.
Mall Airplane Wrecked In Fog
Alientoxvn' Oct. 17. A mall plane
In charge of Lieutenant S. A. Robin
son, on tho way from Belmont Park to
lieliefonto, became lost in a fog near
Macungie early yesterday, crashed into
a tree nnd, in a fall of twenty feet,
was wrecked. Lieutenant Roblnfion
suffered minor bruises.
Aro Sola
Agents for
f RONTON
STANDARDIZED
GEARS
10,000 standard Bins tn atook,
to slct from
at .tli
SEARCH STREET STORE
'
71 WtoffM taHonHa.
AJ&- comwwy
DIG DEEP FOR BODY
OFVANSHEDCHILD
Searchers Continue Excava
tions at Hammonton, Think
ing Kidnappers Buried Boy
EXPERTS EXAMINE LETTER
Digging in the lelnil.r of tlie do
sorted liouc nenr Ilnmmontnn, X. .1 .
where it is thought kidnapper nm j
have buried the body of Billy Dudley,
two nnd n Imlf years old, who liai
been milling nine days, was resumed '
today by searching parties.
The digging started yesterday when
I searchers noticed that the ground hnd
been disturbed in several places close
to the abandoned building, In which
It Is believed the Dancy child was held ,
captive on me nucrnoon ana nignt alter
ho was stolen,
Whiio the digging is going on today
Walter Venicr, head of the Hammonton
volunteer (ire department, will try tn
mimn water fiom the boes close to the i
Damey home, so that the ground mn ,
of Ilnmmontnn liclicxc the rhild mnv
liave fallen into n pool of water
Expel ts Kamlne letter
Experts in handwriting in Atlnnli
' examined the letter received h
Ml.- 1Icl.(.llles Dansc,t ,,..,. of llIU,
i Dmisey. nnd declaied thut the hand
writing was that of n woman x ho had
I evidently attempted to make It appear
! & ft&S Zlti i!!
'Xexxark. N. .T.. stnted that the child
was safe and rfould be "west of1 the
Hockles" in rive days, where he would
be given an education and a "more
biilliant future" than the child's own I
parents could give him.
The mother of little "Ilunnv" White,
grandson of Councilman Kdward II.
White, of Hammonton, is fat i 11 infcar
thnt there, mav be some nttemnr. in
fsteal her little boy. In the letter to
Mrs. Dansey tile writer declared the
Dansey bov had been tal,en in mi(ale
for the "White brat."
0,ll(1' CMM Ounrtled
Because of these stiiti-menlx Ihe phi
ents nf tlie White child are tnking cwr
precaution to guard the boy against
liaiiu. The White child bears an un
xlsma resemblance to the Dnnvej bov.
11UU BUI11C puisuus sn. liii-j t,a milt
.nnpv t,lnvin in frnnl of the White
l ...... 1.... ...... 1IM1.
-:' " ... ..
home on thn dnv nf his disaiinearauce.
file authorities in Ilniiiniontnn attach
Importance to the letter writer s state
ment that the missing child was stolen
by mistake.
Tr.1... IV Wilsnn eliiuf nf Ihp At
Iantlc county detectives, ipiestioned feience with legitimate imestmeuts to
White in nu effort to learn the, names i icquiie tlie maintenance of sauitur)
of peisous who might have, had enough i ,nditions, to compel thu icpnir of
K'lTKpingld " - "" '"''if ' '
is chairman ofjhe law and order com- ' flooded ceilais, '1 hy fear the mm
mitteo of Ilainmontun and his recent I pnign, if its gets its mone), will foice
activities in p oseciuing o ranr.y
ntiitt;i b auu uuum s-io hm- h i iuuh i
a possible ratou ior int ;
leal liis ohlld.
utlemp'
Trj- o Trace I'npeis
Detectives lire making an effoit to
tiace the origin of tho paper on vhich
the letter to Mrs. Dansey was writ
ten, ns the paper is of a peculiar
texture.
Folloxvlng a telephone call said to
hnxe been leceiyed from the Philadel
phia police department, Hercules Dan
sey, the father of the boy, hurried to
Palermo, o small village on the load
to Cape May, to inxesligate a report
that a boy ansxvertug tho dcsciiption
of his child had been abandoned by
autoists in that toxvn on Sunday.
The autoists who left the child, the
report said, ansxvered the description
of four foreigners seen in Hammonton
by Miss Ruth Gnrdiner with a child
answering the description of the Dan-
sey child in that toxvn on the day the
boy disappeared.
WOMAN AND SON ON HIKE
Girl Scout Leader and Young Boy
Scout Crossing Nation
Mrs. Bertha L. Tames, Girl Scout
captain of Carney's Point, X. J , and
her fiftecn-year-bld Boy Scout son,
William, sturted on a transcontinental
"hike" from Nexv York today, each
carrying twenty-pound pack contain
ing camp equipment and a change of
doming and snoes
Thev untd ihn ai.,i nmio
our expenses as xve go," and obstacles!
in the path of their trip must bulk very I
large to stop them. They propose to
camp our. every night.
"My husband tried to dissuade us,
but we are determined on our ad
venture," Mrs. James announced before
starting.
Mrs. James and her son made nn
initial tramp of 125 miles from Carney's
Point to their starting point at Girl
Scout headquarters In New York.
MAYOR EXPECTS ALBERT
Smith Awaits Word as to Visit tof
Belgian Rulers
King Albert and Queen Elizabeth ot
Belgium are expected to come to Phila-
dolphin the latter part of this month,
but the date of their arrival and tlie
duration of their stay lias not been
decided on by the State Department.
Mayor Smith communicated xvith the
State Department moro than a month
ago and extended an invitation to the
rOVfll Viqftnra tn llMlnnm il.n nnnal. it
the city. The invitation xvas accepted.
It is expected, lioxvex-er, the Mavor
Kflwl. Hint tllPV will vmiftll Tlliflfwlnlntilii
about October 27.
Freight Claims-
Be Bervei
and aarves
and serves
' FIVE GENERATIONS OF THE BOWEN FAMILY
LnaHKw'aaaaaaaV 9'JCSKiaakaakaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaHHkaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaV I Jl
wbBmSm'MmdBBih,.J1' Aiirir TmffmigaKmmr,
Tmmmwmmm Iti 'iBm' 'Ir-JK -m
raaaaaaaaaCBHBa iMhiili in n i i II i laaaaaaaaaavsD) jjmwx., i .zfmdMK z-8i
i lmm-mMmmm iWlMimmYTmkft
!laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaUBBS&Mf rVaHarWWsHBBIiHBOiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWLiaB lilaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVfM. t (WSSmsWTV . ilaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWfeciSL laaaaaaaat ffW .. H
$ .pHWBSBSSrhHu y i itvPmlWWIH HBHLiHBWwaWi? JSShKHKKjH
iilaaaaaaaaafllaaaalsiaStxl-FmlaraHLaaWMH - gHaXsyBWBaaaaaaarft A MBW8fc ' $ ? t V. 9
' Mill jWai J:ffliliW I W IiilS
'iaaVaSBWM$ilMjSSiHaaBBaL-... alSfe3llS?:2lffiM! 9 1HKN? .wmWi:J
I'rom left to ilclit are Mis .Inlin l Itowen. iiliiety-le cars, or lr, Snulli l'ift setoiid stuet, t.ioige .
Itiiwen, slt.v-ihe jears; Mrs. .loslali M. Shannon, forty-heen eiiis. Mis. Unwcn's graiidd.uigliler, Mis. 1,
M. Ferris, lier great giandiliiUKhtei', and .Miss .Mai Ion Ferris, a gie.it gieat-gmiidilaughter
CIVIC FUND" WORKER FIVE GENERATIONS ATTEND '
SAYS FOES BALK DRIVE BOWEN FAMILY REUNION
Publicity Chairman lAys Blame Ohlo.si Member Is 95 and Deeply Interested in Current llvents;
on Slum Landlords as Con
tributions for Reform Lag
Chaiges that enemies of tlie move
ment sue -combating the attempt ol
the Cnited Civic Campaign workci"
to raise S2C5.000 to carry un Its work
uie made by .Inliu Lrnsuy urown.
(hiiirman of the publicity committee.
"These interests." said Mr. liioun.
"have taken up tlio cause of the 'slum
lamlloid' nn'd argue that it is inter
, h i111I)U1vPln,.nts
'lotal .ontributions of $18,..0, w.wo
nnnouiiied up to Wednesdn) night. 'I'hc
four organiyiitions xxhosc campaign
goal is if2u.",(KM) are the Philadelphia
, Housing Association, JLhe Public Edu
ution and l hlld I.ani
or Association,
the Cixil Seivice Reform .Association
and the Bureau of Municipal Research
Samuel S. Fcls, ot tlie Bureau of
Municipal Research, strongly depre
cated the lepnrt that the cn-operatiug
organizations xxcie out tn dig up
stories of ginft.
"Nothing is fuitlier from tho tiuth,"
Mr. Fels said. "They look to the fu
ture nnd aim to co-operate ill evety
way xvitli the next city administin-
i tion." .
"Tlie campaign is indorsed by some
of the most pioininent men in the
country," said George O. Tniiiblyn,
campaign director. "William Howard
Taft thought it so important that he
left all his other xvork and came to
this city to launch the drive."
FIND BOARDER A SUICIDE
Shot- Throu9h Heart, Ends Life of
Despondent Man
Sound of n shot coming fiom the loom
of Andrexx" Hirscli, fifty-two i u old
attracted other boardcis nt lV-'.'i 'l.dcn'
street today. When they mend tin
room, Hlrsch was lying dead mi Hum
floor, lie had shot nlmsell tliiougu
the heart.
Hirscli. It was said, had woiked for
years in shipyards, but for some time
had been unable to tind employment.
He kad been downhearted for several
days.
-
GALVANIZED, COPPER
AND ZINC SHEETS
L. D. Berger Co., 59 N. 2d St.
Bin. Uarhtt B54. Xvi1mt, VatH 404.
iimmmiiimiimmiimimiiiiiiiiimj:
I
jjCHARLIE P0MERANT2 f
E
E
E
I
-
E
-
Wants you to E
take Lunch at
h i s Restaurant
today. . . . ! 1
11)24 CHESTNUT ST.
lVe,H VnMIHUI Ol.
ZZ
flUHIIl H 11 1 1 1 1 1 II t 111 IIHIl 1 1 III 1 1 1 1 II Hill H?
Check up on yours"
if they're ".hanging fire" consult
the I. T. A.: We know how to gel
quick action we're doing it every
day and our ten years is a record
of satisfactory results.
Write or phone our service man ivill call
Industrial Traffic Association
Perry Building, Philadelphia
Spruce 15 I'lionet Hare 88S
Helps With the Dsr.s and Goes Shopping
iniVi; generations of tlie Itnwen fain
-- ilv Hie celebinting loda in theluime
nt the oldest member. Mis. .Inlin li
Hnveii. 121." South 1'lft) -sicond
-street
Thcic is reallv no spei IhI cause foe
lelelunting. further thiin the fact lluir
one of the three out -of-tcmn members
of the f ii tn i 1 v is on a visit here. Me i
(Jeorge W. I'owen, sixty-live )enrs old
I nf Well-boto, Pu. And he is the nnh
I mule member of the family lelibriitiiig
I Mrs Joliu ISoweii is niiiet) fix.
, .xenis old Her granddaughter. Mis
losiiih I Shannon, is foit) sexen
)eais old and lixes xxitli her tin
gieal-ginnddaughter, Mrs. I,. M i'er
lis, is '2i xears old, and lives at lillti
Kemrsi ssini? axeniie. And Ihen then, is
-----r. r -..-.. ...... ...... .
Miss Marion Feins,, her gieat-gieat
ginmidaughlcr, whose ieal age is fmu
jears but who said she xas txxo.
and ., dM.ply inU,r(lsri,
.lis. IJowen retains all her faculties
in cut rem
exents. She is very agtiic and e
plains that she "helps with the dishes
and go.s in tuxxn alone to do her
shopping'
There is no dnubKthat her heating
is perfect. While she was explaining
lioxv young she xxns an airplane passed
liigli in tlie air oxer licr home. She
heard it and ran to the. fiont door to
see its flight.
"I uin gi rally inteteled in airplanes
but only as n spectator," she aid.
She was asked if site would not en
joy a trip in tlie nil'.
"No," she answered, "nij ambitions
are not so high as that "
Mrs, Itowen wan born in Sheffield.
Mass . in a log cabin on a farm. She
and her husband mox-eil to Wcllsboio
Reputation counts either for
or against you depends on
the re put at ian.
JACOB REEtfS SONS
1424-1426 (Oiesttmnit Sfareefc
sm , . m
iiiPMimi
English Brogue
Shtll Cordovan
1
There Is a decided touch of smartness In this
up-to-the-minute shoe that the well dressed
man will appreciate.
Its distinction is not confined to style alone,
but quality, fitting, workmanship and wear.
Our Shoes, 9.00 Upwards
IEDERMAN
in 1V;1. xxhele lie npimil ,i fieil ;ilvl
giain stoic. When the ('ml Wm
st irti il, Mr, Itiixxen whs tun nhl for
aelne seivice, anil both nf their sons
too xoung.
"We will nlxxaxs haxe xxuis." she'
said, "despite the league of nations m '
an) thing else. I am in faxnr nf the)
league, hoxxcxer, if it will lnlp in inn
vmix tn keep peace " . i
Mrs. itnxxen bellexes the ilNcoxer.x
nf the use of eleitricit) the gmitest of,
all ,
Theie "aie three menders of Oie
I'oxven faniil) who aie noxv xisiting
Mrs. Huwen. They Hie J nines M
lioxxen. her other son, sil) -sexen
i-iiii old. nf Wcllslinrn Dr. Louise
hi iiius, foil) -two .xeuts J, nil
ii...i. ,rr... . .1.1... ,.!, (,. ..' ..,,.,:., ..r i s"i i '
...,. , .. . , V . . I ., I I f , . , , 1 1, III IILt-L. ''1 ,,.,,
Wallace stteel, and John It, liowen.
fort) )ears old. a standstill, who is in
the mitoinidiile business m Washing
ton. I). (
fwsj Tjr rjl '1 111" C
f rlL rnllaCielpnia U
I l l
'" h pc iva Qlvovrici
U II C S I I d dUVClllSt
vertises
Philadelphia but every
business must blow its
OWN horn.
HERBERT M. MORRIS
Advertising Agency
Every Phase of Sales Promotion
400 Chestnut Street Philadelphia
y Out business Is glOVVlllg ttc
liiendously not only in dol
lars, but in Miltinic of Rai
ments sold.
(J When prices are high, think
ing people spend their monej
with houses whose reputation
assures a dollar's worth of
alue for excrv dollar spent.
i
J Join the xxic people -
jour nioncj s xxotth.
Fall and IVinUr Suits
art priced $30 to ?80
Fall-weight Overcoats,
t.W to $60
H'iitfei' Overcoats, 30 to $S0
In
930 Chestnut St.
39 So. Eighth
203 No.JSighth
DEMAND CONGRESS
INE
Thousands of Postcards and
Letters Sent to Washington
by Citizens Here
SHORTAGE LAID TO WEST
Philadelphia I'ongressnien todav ie
iciveil through the infills thousands of
postcards and letteis urging nction b
CnneTss to pievent the threatened
sugar famine
One type nf postal issued in printed
form, informs the congressmen that
they can regulate sugar prices as easllj
as postage costs. The posteaid leads'
"I protest against the liiientened
sugar famine
"An unwarranted sugar famine stares
the people of the I nitcd States in the i
face. v
"Congress knows this, and knows
that its Immediate action can avert ,
(Ins famine. Such is the plain ilutj
of Congress; for sugar is not a luvurv j
hut an essential to the life of the na
'.on Next to air and watei. sugar is
I he most needed element of nnuiish
iiK'iil : evciy bab) and eer) child needs
i,, its HcnrciM and exorbitant pi Ice
s a hardship till their Unlit s
Congress gaw us iea(iiiahle postage
and should give us leasonnble siigm
Sugar enn be legulnteil as pnlh us tin
nn-'totrlce.
'The pi ice of sugar is mine Inipcii
t tint than the price of postage 1 put
Ihe question ot sugar ann us piuc
dearly up to you. mv representalhe in
Congress."
V btnnk space is left fur the name
nnd address of the petitioner Such
cards have been provided for listrihu
tion in all sections of the cit In
each section the cauls hear on the face
the name and Washington address o
The High Cost of Books
Can Be Avoided
by renting nrw popular
fiction from
WomrauYs Circulating Library
15 South 13th St., Phila.
Clean eopie supplied promptly.
END SUGAR FAM
vsSlalioncr.
SlcrlincS Silver
o
lea -"Dinnci; -Sci "vices
Knives - Forks """'Spoons
'loilei Articles -Novelties
Worthj' of hchijS placed
Willi Ihz faituj' sihsi'.
n
Glace
2Ja i
.--.
r.T ii .
I zijamimmwQtimmkm
I, xit2.to4
1 '1
Sra a; i
I a'. I
a: I
ii l 4
1 1 91
I v
1 ?
' I(
1 1 PsgPvC-v
the reason.
See
g $
l r
tiie congressman from that particular
district.
Western sugar hoarders arc blamed
for the shortage by local refiners. The
Western refiners, the local men say,
are unaffected by the wartime law
against cane sugar hoarding.
The Western refiners work almost
entirely in beet sugar, they said, and
are holding otrt vnst quantities of their
,.rrli.nf It. l...m tt IHIlLtni. n 1llllnr.
......list ... ..ui'.i us ..un., .. n.iiiu,, l
when (he pmmllzntinn bnnrd poes nut i
of business. i
Philadelphia!! Hurt at Wedding ,
Mount Holly, X. .1., Oct. 17. Catch- i
lug on the sharp point of nn lion fentei
Hint he nttempted to jump while par
tiripating in a frolic nt the marriage of '
lienjaniln 13. Colkitt and Miss Isabel
Deacon, nt the home of Mrs Itnchel A
Deacon, on Broad street, Clarenie
Jones, of Philadelphia, a cousin nf
the bride, hnd the entile front of his
light leg lipped open, necessitating hm
leinovol to the hospltnl
Nature never punished
iiny one for getting his
muscles tired, but she pun
ished many for getting their
nerve exhausted.
Let us give you a personal
demonstration.
COLLINS INSTITUTE '
OF PHYSICAL CULTURE
W nltNRIl -OK 15TH ! W M.NM T
Quality
Originality
in
Luncheon Candies
Afternoon Tea
Open In thr ' tiling till rlrven-
thitty fur soda rinrf for
i omtf i
I?16 Chestnul Si,
i'
r
f8
ylIhos
Are a Saving to
the Smart Dresser
ignited
Shop around then see
this Queen Ann"
Boot $
Black
Kid
JL'ST an example xaluc, to acquaint
the woman who wants the newest
and fashionable in footwear that it
costs less at the "DelMar Shop."
Our upstairs location and out- policy
of maximum sales at a smaller profit is
t nousanus ol w o
rtjfai" 1
already knox' "DelMai
Values and they also
know that every new style
is shown here first and
Ki'catly beloxv the price
asked by other high-grade
boot shops.
Our $1.15 Silk Hosiery
j
Upstair Store for Women-
y$&il&dr&Compfiy
1 jusJLxvnvAfnur orreet
Downstairs Store for fylcn
-m
'"
Leather Coats
lined with cloth
Cloth Coats
lined with leather
and
Reversible
Coats
of Cloth and
Leather that can
be worn inside out
or outside in!
Our numerous as
sortments and wide va
riety of these very pop
ular Coats are another
instance of how we
foresee the vogue and
forestall the demand
for the newest thing
wanted by men and
young fellows.
fl The coats are double
breasters and single
breasters, have belts,
and are in all lengths
from 30 inches to 46
inches.
$ Double- breasted
leather coats lined with
Corduroy.
I Double- breasted
Cloth coats lined with
leather.
If Double- hreastert.,
that can be worn leath
er side out or cloth side
out.
I Double- breasted
leather coats lined with
covert cloth.
I Double- breasted
Reversible Overcoats,
Tweed on one side,
leather on the other
handsome coats which
ever way you wear
them!
Leather and Mole
skin Coats.
I Short Coats, sheep
skin lined, with fleece
collar or with fur col
lar. I Fur-collar Coats.
I Fur-lined Coats.
J Fur-outside Coats.
I Aviator's Union Suit
of leather interlined
with softest, warmest
fleece fabric.
I Worth your while
to see them!
Perry & Co.
"N. B. T."
16th & Chestnut Sts,
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