wT-,r" It fl. n ' t? ft s . a Ics I5 II",', ly ft 4 fe IC-" I J I' L o t! ? f i rt b- ' - " ?' 1 IIGE OF OLD-LINE G. 0. P. Jt, - Regulars Plan to Retain Party Control Through Ohio 1 Senator ANXIOUS TO DEFEAT WOOD By CLINTON AV. OILHKUT Staff Correspondent rf lliv rite-nine rulillc Iitiltrr Conrtaht, lilt), bv rublio I.etlotr Co. Washington, Dec (I. Sender Hnnl 'iiBi o Ohio, In t)u real cliolco of the old'llno Itopiibllcau lenders, the men who prevented the nomination of Uoom elt in ini(J and ranted instead the nomination of Hughes. They will not eoucentrata their efforts upon him ai they did upon Hughes until after the national convention meet. All their efforts until the nt semblins of the convention -will bo di rected to preventing the unmUmtlon of General Wood on one of the earlier ballots. General Wood Is recognized the leading candidate, lie will enter the contention with distinctly more del egates than any other candidate. Senator Harding will possibly have HARDING IS CH( the support only of his own state nndlment In their territories for or against perhaps of the neighboring state of I the league of nations covenant. Kentucky on the first ballot. In the , Selection of the place nnd the date early bal.otlng an attempt 1,1 be made ' " cX" cU'" i to concentrate the scattered nntI-ood at ,vhleh ninny prominent women Itc j vote upon Senator Harding and make him tho nominee Thenlsn to nrmw nn.l' nnminn- iJ... -.l.... -l..n.. I...1.1...- .1.. i.i .u "'-i' i-mvii. m i"mrut nn- oih states against him. It is a fteht be- tweeu the men who hne usually con trolled the Ucpiihlicnn nationnl con rentions and the Itoosevelt Itenubllcna leaders, many of whom broko from tho party In 11112 and vent over with Itoosevelt to the Progressive party. The personality of General Wood Is not m much nn issue nor l.s his availability art a candidate. The real thing that interests the politicians is whojs going to control the Itepubllcnn party. Is it going to be the men who have con trolled It in the past, who nominated Taft In 101H nnd Hughes in 11)10. or the prodigal sons who left home in 1012 and went over to Hie Progressives? Great Wealth Behind Wood Theso prodigals are General Wood's greatest source of strength and also nlsf greatest weakness. Thev have at their disposal great wealth. They lave tremendous energy Tliej have the one vital organization there is to day. They have more money than Col onel Itoosevelt ever had beliipJ him. for when the supports of tr.e more conservative candidates go to some of the sources of money which were avail able to Mr. Hughe aud Mr. Taft they nnrt tliem invoranle to ueneral Wood, Hut nevertheless th prodigals are not liked. The old line Republicans do not wish to see George W. Perkins be come the nower in the Itepubllcnn party that he was in the Progressive party. In certain sections they love not Dan Hannn, of Ohio, any more than they do George W. Perkins. Frank H. Hitchcock, who is busv in the South In behalf of General Wood, although a regular Republican with no stain tmon his record, is not loved by many of the regulars any more than is Mr. Ierkins or Mr. Hanna. These arc the most conspicuous examples, but nil along tho line the same Issue exists. Everywhere the Wood movement is the old Itoosevelt movement rlus something more, plus the support of some of the regulars here and there, plus the per sonal strength of the general in New England nnd ia the Knnsas-Nebroskn-Missouri section where the general trained his divisions for service in France. Everywhere there is a Wood movement. There is the same ques tion. Who is going to control the Re publican party, the old local leaders, or the men who supported Roosevelt In 1012? A Politicians' Convention The politicians think that this is go ing to be n politicians' convention : thnt General Wood, in spite of his being the political heir of Itoosevelt, will not develop enough popular strength to weep away obstacles and capture the convention. They regard the Wood movement as primarily a politicians movement, the movement of men like Perkins, Hanna, Hitchcock and King. of Connecticut, most of whom were active in behalf of Colonel 'toosevelt. and who are now making what they .can of such popular strength as Gen eral Wood possesses to master the con vention. They think it will spend its force before he balloting goes far in the convention and that then they, the old regular 'politicians, can take command, bring forth their candidate, and name him. Their candidate, if Their present calculations avail, will be Senator Hardlnc. The politicians, all except the re turned prodigalsjirefer Senator Hard ing to General Wood, not merely bo cause the general will owe too much to politicians who are not in favor with the orthodox, but because Senator Harding is the ideal politicians' can didate. Senator Harding is himself a politician. Ho. is a regular. He belongs to the organization, believes Jn the organization, and would work with it. General Wood is less cer tain. Even in the army where disci pline is more a religion than it is in Jiolitics, General Wood has been hard o control. By temperament he is in surgent. Politicians Sure of Harding The politicians feel sure of Senator i nardlng: they do not feel sure of Gen eral .Wood. They do not want his type of President if they can revert to nn ' earlier type belonging to times that were kindlier to the politicians than I the present. Last winter there showed i itself among tho Republicans a great I i.nrntni for what was culled u "Me- i Klnley type of President." McKinlcy being the last of the Presidents to get AS happily with Congress nnd with the politicians. It was felt this year the . anihllonn chances were so good that a non-sensational sort of candidate could tu nnmeil and elected. Senator Harding is the ideal "Mc Kinlcy type" candfdate. He comes from MeKinley'B state. He even looks like McKinlcy. With him in tho White House something like the old relations k.i,rn Poneress and the executive would be resumed. And as many of th Influential Republican party leuders i .. momhers of the Senate, the desire for a candidate who would not, if elected, trv to run Congress from the ffhlte House is strong. The plans of the Harding supporters contemplate holding the big states and tus controlling a majority of the con vention. Dislike of George AV. Per VkBS among the Republican party ktders In Nw York is counted upon . t Prevent New York from giving many 'legates to General Wood, ' Pearose (o Hold Pennslvan!a Senator Penrose Is not supposed to 4a definitely committed against Gen rl Wood, but he is expectel to hold pVnssylvanla for Governor tfproul and IfrtM ant! Wpod movement proves airoBg enough, to throw bis strength for nrdlDg at the right moment. Illinois will he for JiOwden. who is now nothing ' iL... d fnrM,f(j UAH 1 f A WHIZ AI1M w" . vr'i '"..:.ii.;.. ;c: jm iis.j vmu" u- .h but an no tailed to alar strMfffli they have pa nr4tntr. thcr original centorjw JiWr ejontly to tho McKinlcy ideal, l.owdc.n may hold Iown, unlens It goes to Senator Ken yon. And Jxtwden will divide tho South with Wood. Ohio and Ken tucky will bo Harding's from the out let! MnftsnclmHcU will go to Coolidga. With thin group of states and with the other statcH which have, fruorltc sons, tho regulars count upon checking the Wood movement. The question seems to resolve Itself into how much popular ntrength General Wood will develop between now and the convention. There nre two groups of politicians. The "ins" and the "outs," both bent upon controlling the party. The "Ins" have the advantage of possession. The stake is big. if they can nominate and elect a "McKinlcy type" of President. The "nuts" have greater energy. The "Ins" have greater skill. If the people want Oenernl Wood bndlv enough the organization will have to bow. for It has no one lo oppose him uith wlm hn nomilar strencth If they nre comparatively indifferent the j orguiiratlon will ikwudijt nnme iinru iiiK and the prodigals will not have fatted calf, but husks to cat on the! return. SPROUL WILL SOUND KEYNOTE FOR G. 0. P. New Yorli, Dec. 0. (By A. P) Two governors. William C. Hprnttl. of Pcntmlvnnln, and Samuel It. McKelvle. f.f VMirnakn. nlll make "kevnote speeches nt the meeting of the Uepub linnn imtlnml committee In Washing ton next Wednesday, Will II. Hny. chairman, announced here. Mr. Hays also will make an address. All committeemen have been asked to be prepared to report on the senti , publicans will lie present, nt. i.ouk, I an Francisco nnd Anbury Park are actively seeking the convention, it was I . ln,1 !!,! it. ,Ltt ml In tin held ."'"'"' .""" '. '." -l"-": " nbout the middle of June, I THIRD AX VICTIM DIES Son of Man Who Slew Wife and Daughter Succumbs Passaic. N. J., Deo. (!. (Ily A. P.) Nathaniel Strong, twelve jenrs old, died tnda) from injuries received Tues day night when his father. Ma.on It. Strong, attacked the family with nn nx, killing Mrs. Strong and the eldest daughter and then committing suicide. Deaths of a Day John H. Shelmlre 1'uneral services will be held Tues day at 2:30 p. m. in the Moorestown Presbjterinn Churen for John H. Shel mlre, who died Thursday morning, from pneumonia, nt his home, 135 Uu&t Central ucnuc, Moorestown. Mr. Shelmlre was for twenty jears associated with Shelbly, Tjler & Co., of Camden, as biuer nnd mnnaecr. He was a member of the Trimble Lodge, F. and A. M. He is survived bv his wife, and two sons, George Shelmlre, I of Moorestown, and John II. Shelmlre, i Jr., of Los Angeles, Calif. Services . will be conducted by the Itev. Marcus A. Urownsou, of the Tenth Presbyterian Church, of Philndelnhia. assisted by the Itev. Dr. Hemingway, of the First Presbvterian Church, Cnmdeu, and the Itev. Dnuerty, of the MoorcEtown Prcs bjterlau Church. Interment will be in Colcstown, N. J. Ezbon C. Lambert Dead nridgeton, N. J., Dec. 0. Ezbon C. Lambert died yesterday of paraljsis at the age of seventy-six. He had an un usual Civil War lecord, having served In both the army and navy. He wns first a member of the bnnd of the Third Regi ment New Jersey Volunteers until bands were done away with, and then enlisted in the navy and served until the close of the war. He was an officer on the gunboat Itascu of the West Gulf squadron and was in the great battle of Mobile bay under Admiral Farragut. He was for many years a merchant here and served twenty-five years on Bridge ton's board of education. Mary A. Hamilton Mary A. Hamilton, widow of Frank Hamilton and mother of the Rev. Francis J. Hamilton and Dr. William A. Hamilton, died yesterday nt her home, 001 Glrard avenue. Frederick W. Storch Frederick W. Storch. who died on Thursday at his home, 1712 Wolf street, will be buried on Stindny afternoon fol lowing services at the Trinitv Lutheran Church, Seventeenth and Wolf streets. Mr. Storch was a prominent member of the Masonic order and a real estate dealer. Mrs. Mary Cauaten Kunkel Mrs. Mary Carvallo Causten Kunkel, I grnudmece of Sirs. James Mndison, wife of James Madison, fourth President of the United Stntcs, died Thuisday at her home, 0120 Pine street. Mrs. Kunkel's mother wns Mrs. Anna Pnvno Cnusten, a niece and adopted daughter of Mrs. Mndison. Her fnther, Dr. James II. Causten, was well known socially in Washington hnlf a century ago. Mrs. Kunkel lived in this city for many years, nnd was the widow of John Kunkel. of Cntnctln Furnace. Md. lit was president of the Catoctin Jfoun; tain Iron Co. Mrs. Kunkel is survived by a son, John linker Kunkel, of Detroit. Sho will be buried next Monday iu 5Iount Olivet Cemetery, Frederick. Md.. iu the family plot ad joining the burial place ot Frnncis Scott Kev, author of the "Star Spangled Banner Mrs. R. Mrs. It. E E. Phillips Dead Phillips, mother of S. W. Phillips. Blackwood. N. J., will be buried tomorrow from her homo in Salisbury, Md., where she died Thurs day night after a long illness. She is survived by two daughters. Helen and II. Virginia Phillips, and two sons, L. M. Phillips. Delmnr. Del., and C. E. Phillips, Salisbury, .Md. Mrs. Phillips Wus the widow of William V runups. Immediate Delivery of the Popular Model 11 VICTROLA $130 CHAS. E. ROBERTSON Opn Kvtnlnin. 3851 I.ncatfr Ave. YX7annl .liffl A Duyer 01 uovvns and Dresses by an exclusive shop in Phlla. Good Opportunity All answers strictly confidential C 314, Ledger Office '!-' EVEKJNG' PUBLIC BENEDICT CROWELL AND WIFE rewigaBfCUIW.J'MiJUJUiw,aw H1 1 bBBVBr WE& 'Jfei Wnimrhiii r Wmm. . Mr .dHHB IfensSatBBH iEEmt w W HHiilB jriv Jes, HbHmHhbbhiTkSMkIbbbbH i JR .dK IHHH MJsSPWHfflHBiftwSSSBiSSiOT J n WImi llfff7rinf il ' HHnHHH il3yipiis The assistant secretary of war was n guest today at the launching of the Cambral nt Hog Island. Mrs. Crowell was sponsor for the ship named ia honor of tho American soldiers who died in the battle of Cambral In the war NEW PLAN TO END STRIKE Chicago Business Men Go to Wash-' Ington With Coal Proposal Chicago, Dec. fl. (By A P.I A, d legation of business men left Chicngu f.ir Washington today with a plan which they hope offers n solution of the strike prrblenis. Their plan provides thnt ui.lon leaders shall' order the miners to return to work, as n "atriotic duty, on the hais of the fourteen per cent in cense. A national arbitration committee would then he appointed to mnke nn investigation of till nhnses of the situa tion nnd render n decision which would bo binding ou both sides of the contro versy. Church 77 Years Old The congregation of the Wharton Me morinl Methodist Church tomorrow will observe the church's seventy-seventh anniversary. Ilishop Theodore H. Hen derson will preach nt tho morning services. Are The amazing statement of ex-Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo that the profits of bitu- , minous coal operators ran- as high as 2000 per cent in 1917, and hisimplied charge that they still are .profiteering at the expense of both the public and the miners, has started a pretty rumpus in the editorial columns of the nation's press. The United Mine Workers,' Journal thinks that Mr. McAdoo's statement is vindication for the miners in their claim that the operators "could grant a substantial wage increase out of their profits without increasing the-price of the coal to the consumer." Mr. McAdoo's implications are false, reply the operators, and his "misleading statements and insinuations are the kind of stuff which Bolshevism breeds upon," while the Philadelphia Public Ledger, recalling a clause of the Revenue Act which makes it unlawful for a Treasury official or agent to divulge confidential information which comes to him in his official capacity, asks significantly, "Will William Gibbs McAdoo be able o run for the Presi dency if he is in jail?" The leading article in THE 'LITERARY DIGEST for December 6th discusses the question as to whether the coal operators have been taking undue profits from the public, and presents opinions from all quarters bearing upon the subject. Other news features in this week's number which are of keen interest to the public in clude: , '.i How to Save the Treaty A Summary of the Suggestions That Are Being Advanced by Friends and ' Foes of the Original Document Silver Passes "16 to 1" Mark Europe's Money in a Sinking Spell The Farmer is Against Organized Labor America's Abandonment of Europe Bonus Denied Canada's Fighters America's Military Menace Why Japan is Distrusted Germany's Big Bertha an Accident Where Alcohol Still is King A Dead Sea Power Plant Is Snow Fall Decreasing? N- Nutless Bolts in Shipbuilding Pussy-cats' Bit in the War Higginson's Service to American Music Chesterton on Scots Humor American Boys Go to Shakespeare's School Tlaa ,FUNK & WACNALLS COMPANY (Publishers tl die - - .. l i -". - - LEDGERPHILAIJELPHIA, SATURDAY, REDS FIGHT FOR RELEASE Birkman and Emma Goldman Plan Appeal to U. S. Supreme Court New York, Dec. 0. (By A. P.) Efforts lo free Emmn Goldman and Alexander Iicrktnnn from Ellis Island on bail will be made Monday, if their writs of liabeas-corpus arc dismissed by Federal Judge Mayer, their counsel, Harry Weinberger, announced today. While both his clients arc ready to go to soviet Russia, if permitted to pay their own expenses nnd select their own method of going, Weinberger said they have authorized him to carry to the United States Supreme Court, if neces sary, his efforts to prove thot their deportation would be Illegal. "They do not want to be kicked out of the country in steerage," he said. Weinberger was hopeful thnt Federal Judge Hand's release in S1000 bail of Hymun Lachowsky, who had been or dered deported, would be n precedent in the Hcrkmnn-Goldmnn cases. the Coal Operators Profiteering? Many Interesting Illustrations Including Humorous Cartoons December 6th Number on Sale Today All Newsdealers 10 Cents The Pi POOR SENATE! WILSON ALWA YS SURPRISES IT In Addition to Refusing Wreck, He Signs Documents With Indelible Pencil What Next? y CLINTON W. GILIIEHT SUIT Correspondent of tho Kvenlnc Public Washington, Dec. 0. As "Cervantes laughed Spain's chivnlry avvny," Pres ident Wilson laughed away the Senate and its pretensions to being the only thing that s,tood between the nation and ruin. Tho President cleared the nlr with his llttlo joke by certain senators being "renssured even though somewhat dis appointed." The Senate Is reassured, even if somewhat staggered, to find there was nothing in Its theory that Private Secretary Tumulty was 'tho real President of the United States. And it certainly is staggering to go to the bedside of n nervous wreck nnd find him the only cnlm man In the place. , Here was Wilson broken down, per haps crazy, something more, pcrhnps paralyzed, clearly incompetent and at tho very lenst nervously nil unstrung, while the nation stood on the very brink of war. Who would conduct this war, when the head of the nation upon his bed, his hand withered and his brain clouded, merely signing with his left hand papers pushed at him by con spirators, who were keeping the country in the dark about the real heedlessness of its government? Who indeed but the Senate? What Do You Know About That? Why, Secretary Lansing had not seen the President in fourteen weeks? What do you know nbout that? Aud with war only a few days away. Hut was war only n few days nwny? Well, bring it n bit nearer or make the dull public perceive its nearness by n resolution breaking off relations. Let the country understand to what n pass it had come with Its chief executive ly ing incompetent, not even writing his own messages, and only the vigilant Sennto guarding the nation's Interests, All the. watchers of our liberties worked themselves up into a fine frenzy. The constitution was searched. Surely the wise fathers of that document had never contemplated n President who could not nothing more thnn sigd with an Indelible pencil documents stuck in front of him by heaven knows who. An indelible pencil, indeed! Almost an in sult in itself to a self-governing peo ple. Mr. Lansing had not peered behind the veil in fouiteen loi.R weeks! Four teen weeks. "It's enough to drive sane people mad the way that number four teen recurs." Mr. Lansing had not seen. Well, somo one would. Tho Senate, the all-seeing eye of the re public, would sec. It would lift the veil. It would regard the withered Ed. Howe's Rieligious Confessions Protestant Belgians Hollanders in America Where They are Located Their Character, etc. New York's Building-Trades Wages Our "Pussyfoot," England's Hero and Pest Books as First Aid to Morale Leitch's Formula for Industrial Harmony That Phantom Yankee Army on the Verdun Front Senator Poindexter Who Wonts to be President "Close-up" Glimpses of the Far East The Spice of Life Best of the Current Poetry Social Work by Block Units ( Famous NEW StancW Dictionary), NEW YOWC x . . - , . ..'y.i ..- . t lx t jriSt - - "WiP " DECEMBER G, 1910 to Be Physical 'and Mental hand. It would (ell the whole truth, to the deluded nation. Excitement I There has not been such excitement since the Senate discovered the failure of Mr. Wilson's ndmlnlstrn tion of the war nnd proposed n war cabinet appointed by itself with the President made responsible to tho war caninet. Those were crent days, though few Thee were great days, tho Senate ever watchful bad discovered something. Smiles and Jakes Stern Senators It Is a topsy-turvy world. The Sen ate, all excitement, walks into the sick room and finds the only man In Wnsh lugton who Isn't suffering with nerves, A smiling gcntlemnn greets the Inquisi tors with funny stories from Mr. Doo ley nnd u happy shot nt feeling reas sured. If somewhat dlsnnDoiutcd. ar? What do you mean? And the conspirators who surround Wilson caused Mexico to release Jenkins nt the very moment when the Senate was crlt- Innllr nrnmlnitip tltn PrAulilonf n ... whether or not he could conduct a war in liehalt ot that worthy person. The treaty? Who is in n hurry nbout the tienty? Certainly" not the President Its cure the rest cure. Many people ought to take it. Imagine the Senate as calm, ns free from nerves, as he, cracking Jokes like the President. This' morning there was only one comment. It came from n friend of Mr. llson, a rather sentimental friend of his. It was, "Fall was very de cent about it. wasn't he?" Ho was. II acted like n man who was renssured nnd not disappointed. And. would you believe it? This very day, following the inquisitorial visit of the worried senators, tho cheer ful invalid keeps up his smashing of precedents by using thnt same indeli ble pencil in transacting routine official business, signing nnrdon wnrrnnts with it and using it on n bill to increase the pay of tho police in the District of Columbia. True enough, according to those near the President, he refrains from the his toric nrnctice of signing official parch ments in ink becnuse of the difficulty of guiding a pen while in a reclining posi Hon. And the wonder-stricken sena tors can only shake their astonished heads nnd murmur under their breaths. "Who'd have thought it?" Germans Aak Aid for Soldiers Herlln, Dec. 0. (Ry A. P.) An appeal is published by tho Pnn-Gcrman newspapers for funds, clothes and posi tions for returning Baltic troons. who they say "sacrificed everything for the high ideals ot me laincrianu nni wno now stand without positions and with out brend." COURT CRITIC'S IDEA WRONG, SAYS JUDGE Brown Assorts Ledorlo's VieWs of Juvenile Tribunal Based on Misconception VISITOR STANDS BY GUNS CiltlcNm of tli? Juvenile Court of tills pity by Arthur Iderle war banod on a misconception, ncrordlng to a intemcnt given from Judge Brown's chambers today. '" ' Sir. LcdcrJ, who l counsel for thu Detroit Hchool attendance department, Jh attending the convention of the I.en.iue of Compulsory KdUcatton Offi cials, paid a flying visit to he Juvenile Court jesterday. He was vehement In his criticism of the speed with which oasei were handled, the apparent lack of testimony, nnd the Met that there wns no X rial by jury permitted nor public attendance. -Mr. .I.ederle held to his original crit icism today and said thnt he admitted he wns in a hurry, but that Judge ljrowu seemed to bi in more of a hurry. "I think that every child has n soul like anybody elsp," said Sir. Ijederle, "and when I sec them handled iu such a manner as I saw yesterday it hurts me." He snid that If Judge lirown were regarded ns u l'hllndclphla Ben Lindsay, the latter had better look to his reputation. Judge Brown's reply was issued through a representative. "An abstract of every case is read as the case is brought up, and furthermore, n com plete record Is in the bauds of the judge for consultation. The .court records would show that testimony was given Iu every case," Judge Brown asserts, A representative of tie Philadelphia oomt said public hearings were con demned as disapproved by all juvenile courts In the country, and that it was the policy of this court to exclude all except those interested in the cats. The local court, he explained, follcwed the practice of juvenile courts in Chi cago, New York, W.ishington'and Den ver. ,f w y ujjs.'gvq fj II THE Restaurants IW4 II1VIA UMUItft DClT.bC, OUJCtU WVUniilJi, UUU their cental atmosphere. A elance throueh these, announcements will assist you and your Jiursc. Cabaret and TONIGHT 9 to 12.30 Special Supper Menu Cover Charge 50c souvenirs For Ladies T T SmSSSSISMS!S:SMS!mJSMSm!SMSSSISSMSI ViA""UC "iJLi"' "' fl.-.....u liri. ., n Tte mmm American fir iff RESTAURANT 114 South 15th St. (Flfterntli and Chestnut) Oven from fl A. M. to 1 A. It. Business Men's Lunch , ha. jr. to s v. M. Cliolcs of Roast Meats, two Veta bl. Ilrfad and Butter, Tea Kfn or Corfu, Dessert . . SPECIAL SUPPER (Except Saturdar and Sunday) fi to 8 P. M. 8Sc, 75c, 60c and 50c Dunrlnr 10:30 r. M. to 12:30 A. II. SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER 12 Noon to 4 P. M $1.25 No Cover Charge Orchestra x e: niAZ CAFF - 122 South 13th St. J-4 "Not the only but the bete' ' AMERICAN AND ITALIAN CUISINE Appetltlnilr rrepared Special Sunday Dinner. $1.25 Special Daily Luncheon, 50c For ladles and Gentlemen Open 11 A. M. to 10 P. M. MUSIC MOTOR TO Bide-a-Wee Tea Room Old York Road, Opposite I'. 0. Telephone Jenklntown. Pa. Open from 7:30 A. M. to 1:00 V. M. Daltj, Except Sunday Luncheons and Dinners a Specialty ALCOTT LUNCH ROOM 4th Floor. Sheridan ntdc. Dtb and Sanson TABLE d'HOTE LUNCHEON A Reitaurant for Buitnet Women Hot or Salad Lunches, O C Including Soup and Dessert - V BEaUL.ii; SBRV1CK OR CAFETERIA SPECIAL DINNER 40c Boop Meat S Vegetables ICoffee Ilread and Hotter SOUTHERN RESTAURANT 721 W.lnutSt.1J.ti;-.?a ...& m- KELLY'S 2N-9thi Open Day & Night Oyjiter in, Every Styje f- --. 2049 AUTOS STOLEN (N 19JS state Records. Show Only Z7Z- of Them Were Recovered Harrlsburg, Ded. d. -lllgliw'ay De partment reports show thnt 20W htiM' mobiles were stolen durlug into, of, which only 272 were recovered. The nutomoblle code of 1010 provides for reports to the state authorities of nit cars stolen. It is estimated here that the value of stolen cars was npproxli matcly !j;:2,0)0,000. Of the cars reported stolen 13.12 were taken nftcr the approval of the new law which established a fine of $5000 hnd ten years iu jail as tho maximum penalty M automobile theft. MISS CATHERINE MILLER It civJt nn n1kcmr (n rnmnitment ment Ul Iphla, v,lul 'bo at tlll U earnings , Catherine Miller, of South Philadelphia, entered utrayer n Husineis college years oi ape ana wno now at & i 11200 a year nn a. tin nkkr tier. What better present could parents or ofn$ rlrVi mint nr iinHn rrtv n trlrl thnn A. raurftft In business rollejre that would flt her to fill sucn a position as iuina aiuift nasi Slrrmr'n It nn In rim Onttc B07 Chrstnut M. l'honei. Walnut 884 WATCI1KS AND JFAVEMIY A Kuarnntenl amine of in per nt. Chna. ir. Denn, HO 8. Elchtli, listed below are famous in choosing according to your desires 3jrBrgrfggrargjgrjBjgjBjgjgjBfgJajajg "Al mw Lsfifetf OVER Twelfth and Arch Sts. CLAUDE M. HOUR, Mgr. (inirance on jzii at.) yU.....:.::..,. and Chinese 3 i-Xiu 'I "EAT HERE" L . . i r 1 w "x. Littleton's Restaurant wm at. and Lancaster Ave. , 4U n. aroad St. Ttlir.ili.Alt nivvT-n II A. M In 8 r M. 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