Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, February 13, 1920, Night Extra, Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    V
-
UTr
, n -i
ID G.O.P.DELEGATES
ARE AGED UPON
Penrose, Knox, Sproul and
Moore Among Those Who
Will Attend Convention
GEN. PRICE IS MENTIONED
Dillon ins ft conference between Sena
tor Penrose and W. Unrry linker, hoc
rclar.v of the Uepublicnn fctntc commlt
toe, It M1" lenrncrt today Hint the fol
v lowing liavo been tentatively ngreed
upon to bo supported for delegatea-at-large
to the nationnl Uepublicnn con
vention :
Senator Tenrose, Senator Knox. Gov
ernor Sproul, Stnto Clitilrmnn William
H. Crow, Mayor 11. V. Unbcock, of
piftvbuigh: Mayor Moore, of I'blladel
phia; .!. Leonard Ucploglc, of .Tolin
tlcmn; Colonel .TamcH Klvcrwn, Jr., of
Philadelphia; Perry M. Chandler, of
Delaware county, nud A. W. Mellon, of
ritttburgb.
There nre twelve delegates- nt-lurgo
to he elected, and for tile other pines
nmoug others being discussed are for
mer Judge ISIce. of Warren county :
Major General William C. Price, of
Delaware county; Major Council, of
ffcrnnton, and General IT. C. Trexler,
ot Allentonn.
ti t.. ..tktikln tlmt- in' tif-rnmnnnK llnnn
n complete ticket will not be reached
for u week, or more.
The question of the candidates to be
supported for congresmen-nt-large ou
the Uepublicnn ticket is sst ill under
liceu'lon. The four incumbents,
Mcth. Galium! and Uurke, of Alle
dienv count ; Ctago, of Grecue county,
and 'Walters, of Cambria county, ate
all apirmits for leuominatloii.
There has been talk of the Penrose
contingent dropping liurko. who bus
l(led with the Vuro combination. With
in the last week, however, MicrV have
heen MiKftiou-, of a probable bariuon
program under which nil of the present
conEre"incu-ut-largo would be sup
ported for lenomiiiiiticm.
Tlieie i alto a nitno to hac Gar
land run as a district candidate to de
feat CnngrC'Smnn M. Cldc Kellj. in
Mleglicnv couutv.lmtGurlaud'!. inclina
tion if to slay in the field as a candi
date foi cousrej.smun-nt-large.
i'oiincr Congressman Joseph Mc
laughliir; of tlii-. city, former Senator
Funk I'. Croft, of Montgomer conn
t, and Major General Churlcs M.
Clement, of Northumberland, are among
others proposed for congrcssman-ut-large.
WILL GIVE MUSICALE
Pelrce School Alumni Association
Plans Concert Tonight
The Alumni Association of the Pcirca
School wil give u. inusicnle this eveniug
nt8:30 o'clock in the nuditorium of the
Central Branch o the Young Men's
Christian Association, Arch street above
Ilroiil.
The muic will bo rendeied by the
Philadelphia Ladies'' Stringed. Quartet,
Thicb iccentlv won the prize offered by u
member of the Philadelphia Orchestra,
nnd which has been jueAiously held by
men's oigani.atious.
The members of the quartet are Flor
ence Haenle, first violin fllclen Uowley,
second -iidin; MHric Brchu, cello, and
Ella ltowjcy. viola. They will be as
sisted by Miss Grace Wade, soprano
soloist, and Miss Blanche Lester 'IV on,
a reader.
TO HOLD VALENTINE BAZAAR
Fete Tonight Will Be In Aid of Smith
College Endowment Fund
aentine bazaar and supper at the
Bis lirother Building, Twent -first and
Chestnut stiects. will be held tonight
an a means of raising monej in the S-l.-000.000
dme for the Smith College
fund
In addition to valentines all sorts of
odds and ends useful and ornamental
will be ou sale.
Smith students, attired iu novel cos
tomes, will serve supper from 0 :P,0 to 7
o'clock this ccning. Miss Knuna L.
Miller is chairman of the bazaar and
Miss I'dltb Sheldon is treasurer.
DOCTOR FURBUSH HAS GRIP
Director of Health In Bed Follow
ing Strenuous Ordeal
Or. C. Lincoln Furbush, director of
nealth . was said to bo resting comfort
"bly this morning at his home, 4300
I.oeust street, lie has been in bed since
Wednesday afternoon with a mild at
tack of giip.
Dor tor I'm bush bad been working all
w in his City Hull offices nnd then
visiting; hospitals at night. His exer
tions, it is believed, weakened his re
sistance to the disease.
Penitentiary Worker Falls Dead
Robert Osbom. an'nttcndnnt at the
J.ateru I'enitentlnr, dropped dead at
Uenty second and Brand) wine streets,
Inst night, while on bis way to his home
'3.(i:i Hamilton street. He was twen-''-tm.
yours old, i0 WIW pronounced
wad at the Garrettsou Hospital, where
J".e wus tnkeu in the patrol of the Twen
tieth and Iluttonwood streets station.
Fire In Pile of Rubbish
fire in a pile of rubbish was discov
jM pn the first floor of 523 South
Jourth stieet last night, where llosen
um ,S. .lafTj, contrnclois, are build
os a four-story factory. The Humes
jwe put out before the engines arrived.
'The damage is slight.
'"THE Wardman Park
x Hotel is a country home
and a city home in one. Golf,
tennis, and horseback riding
n the wooded bridle-paths
of Rock Creek Park, with
the luxurious comfort of a
nietropolitan center, await
the visitor to Washington.
harry wardman elmer dyer
mntnt Mtnaitr
FRANK F. HivIGHTLY
Deaths of a Day
FRANK F. BRIGHTLY
Noted Lawyer, Author of Severa
Books, Was Nearly Seventy-five
Frnuk V. Brightly, lawyer nnd -author
of several bonks on legal subjects,
died last night at the Gladstone Apart
ments, nicictith and Pine streets. Mr.
Brightly was nearly sccnty-llvc years
old.
lie is survived by bis widow, Mrs.
Male Brightly. He was born February
110, 1845. His father, Frederick C.
Brightl- was also a lawyer and au
thor of law books. He practiced hero
for fifty cars.
Mr. rBrightly was admitted to prac
tice iu February, 1S0o. He was not
jet twenty eurs old, and bis admission
was allowed ou u special rule by couit.
He had studied law in the office of his
fntber, which be entered iu 1801, on
ronipletiug bis preliminary education iu
the public schools. The car following
bis ndujisMon to the bur be received the
degree of LL. 15. from the University of
Ponnsjlvania.
In bis profession Mr. Brightly de
voted himself chiefly to practice per
taining to divorce aud marriage. He
wuV iccoguied widcl as an authority
on the law of martial relations.
Amoug the legal works of his author
ship arc "Brightlv's Digest of the Laws
of Pennsylvania," "Jtrightly's Digest of
the Decisions ofthe Courts of Pcn'nsyl
ania" nnd a digest of the decisions of
the courts of New York. He published
"Brightly's Monthly Digest of the De
cisions of the Courts of Pennsylvania."
He was the author also of n collection
of reminiscences published periodically
several years ago entitled "The Old
Bar."
FUNERAL OF FLORIST
Edward W. Habermehl Will Be Bur-
led Tomorrow ,
Edward W. Habermehl, of the firm
of J. J. Tlaborniehl'H Sons, florists, who
died last Wednesdn . will be buried to
morrow morning. The funeral service
will be held ut his home. 2105 Diamond
btrcct. Mr. Habermehl was fifty-two
yeais old. Licatli was caused by pneu
monia. He is Mirviwd j a widow. Mrs.
Mary Worrall Habermehl. and- tour
daughters, Mrs. Clifford Shipley, Mrs.
J. W. Dennis and the Misses Mar and
Klennor Habermehl. He is also sur
vned b two brothers, John P. Haber
mehl and Joseph Habermehl, and two
sisters, Mrs. Charles .1. Clarke and Mrs.
John 12. Mursdcn.
Mr. Ilnbermehl was a member of the
Knights of Columbus, the Florists'
Club, the Philopntrinn Club nnd Other
organisations.
Dr. William John Martin
Dr. William John Martin, sixty-one
Spars atl, a well-known dentist of this
city, died at his home yesterday after
noon us n result of a complication of
diseases from which he had been suf
fering for u number of weeks, lie had
been actively uigagcd in business un
til a short time before his death. Doc
tor .Martin was born in Hamburg, Pa.,
November 1,", 1858, the son of Henry
V. Martin, then head of the engineering
department of the Pennsylvania Ilail
toad. Miss Carrie V. Riordan
Miss Carrie V. Itiordan, widely
known in advertising circles and asso
ciated with the advertising depaitmcnt
of Gimbel Bros., died yesterday at tho
home of her brother, Torrcst II. Itior
dan, 5015 Webster avenue. Miss Itior
flan was a member of the Business
Women's League and the Women's Ad
vertising Club. Her funeral will be
conducted tomorrow morning, with
service's in the Bair Mortuary Parlor,
1820 Chestnut street. Interment will be
in Washington, on Monday.
oonn i. urooKS nl
John T. Brooks, a retired market
gardener, who died last Sunday, was
buiied this afternoon. Funeral services
were held nt the Brooks home, 2025
South Broad street.
Mr. Brooks was sixty-eight cnrs
old. His is survived by a widow, Mrs.
Extra Reductions
on
Shoes
Evcry'Pair Reduced 3.00 to 6.00
in This Final Revision of Prices
These Shoes are exclusively Niederman
Shoes none have been specially bought
for a sale. We have made the reductions
in bona fide accordance with our policy of
not carrying over shoes from one season to
another.
Men's Shoes 7.90 to 9.90
Were 10.00 to 13.50
Women's Shoes 8.90 to 10.90'
Were 11.00 to 18.00
Women's Short and Discontinued Q Q(
Lines, Were 9.00 to 12.00 t UU
jlEJ
:dermAn
39 S. Eighth 930 Chestnut 203 N. Eighth
EVENING PUBLIC
MAYOR APPROVES RAISING
FUND FOR "WHISTLING COP
Will Call Meeting Next Week to Arouse Interest in Permanent
' Plan to Care for Patrolmen! 's Kin
"Mathcw Kernan was n faithful. nnd
good servant of the public, and I am
glad to find so many Phlladelphlans
interested in the welfare of, his widow
nnd children. Ho leaves n deserving
family, nnd I heartily approve of tho
lnlsing oa fund to aid tbem." ,
Mayor Mooro thus expressed his
opinion concerning suggestions that a
fund be stnrtcVfor the family of the
"Whistling Cop," who died Monday of
pneumonia, contracted while he was in
public Rcrvicc. His widow and four
small children live nt 2005 Harold
street.
"A m,mhir nt lotters containing sug
gestions, as well as contributions, have
come to me." continued me jinyor.
"Public feeling Bcems to be roused in
this case, and I hope it will serve ns
nu Illustration of the many similar
cases. It is deplorable that the families
of men who have given years of faith
ful service to the public should be for
gotten and neglected after the father's
denth.
"There should be some way of sig
nalizing special' acts of bravery nnd
courage done in service, and tjberc
should be n system whereby those de
pendent upon the patrolman could be
more substantially provided for upon
his death. It isytcrrible to lcac n
widow and children to the charity of
Jennettc Iloffncr Brooks, and eleven
children eight dnnghtcrs and three
sons.
The daughters are Mrs. John W.
Shisler. Mrs. Charles A. Shettsline,
Mrs. Henry Bnstiau, Mrs. J. ,T. God
frey and the Misses Phoebe, Jennettc,
Alma and Blanche Brooks.
The sons arc John J. .Brooks, Jr.,
Wnltcr Brooks and James Brooks.
Mr. Brooks was a member of the
Masonic order and n trustee of Trinity
Lutheran Church, Eighteenth nnd 'Wolf
streets. s
Bury Mrs. Francis Wood Tomorrow
Mrs. Frnncis Gummui Stout Wood,
who died of heart dUeuse in a telephone
booth iu the William Pcnn Inn, at
Gwvnedd, Pa.. Wednesdn night, will
be interred nt the Ivy Hill Ccmcterj in
this city tomorrow morning.
Tho funeral sen iocs will be held at
the home of her brother. Morris A.
Stout. I!" Clow en avenue, Germantown.
'he Itev. Jacob Lcroy, formerly pastor
of St. Mnrtin's-in-the-rield, will con
duct the services. .
5Iis. Wood is survived by her hus
band, Oscar W. Wood, who is con
nected with the Germantown Spinning
Co.; two brothers and a sister. Mrs.
Kstelle Griffith, of Glenrock, N. J.
Mrs. Wood bad been active in Bed
Cross work unci had, gouc to Gwynedd
while her husband was recovering from
o slight illnebs.
Patrick J. Ryan
Patrick J. Ityan, sixty-two jcarb old.
formerly a patrolman and dctct'tve of
the Second nnd Christian streets police
station, who died of heart disease AJ ecl
no'da night, will be buried at the Holy
Cross" Cemetery Monday afternoon.
PUSEY&IONES HALTS WORK
Construction of Tankers Delayed.
Follows Report of Sale
Following the report cstcrday that
the Gloucester City, N. J., sh pyards of
the Pusey & Jones -fco. had been sold,
work on three oil tankers to have been
built for the Anglo-Saxon Co., of Lon
don, was halted.
Keels of two of the tankers had been
iaid. and the keel of the .third would
have been laid today. The fnct that
work has been halted on the only pri
vate contract of the company is taken
as corroborative of the report that the
ship arc! has been bought by the Balti
more Hrvdock and Shipbuilding Co., of
Baltimore. 1
A M. Cobb, assistunt general man-1
ager of the Pusey & Jonw concern, sa c
todav he had heard nothing officially,
of the reported sale. Officials lit the
offices of the Baltimore concern sub
stantiated tho report and unuouueed
that the company would take oier the
Gloucester shipyard as soon as Chris
toffer Hannevig, president of the IScw
Jcrsev concern, makes final adjustment,
with "the United States shipping board.
This will require a month, officials of
the purchasing company believe.
You really feci as fine asj
you look after a Collins,
Treatment.
No charge for a demon
stration treatment.
COLLINS INSTITUTE I
OF PHYSICAL CULTURE
COIXIN3 I1LDQ., WALNUT 8T. AT 13THj
LEDGEK - PHlLADELPHrA, FRIDAY-,
ft
relatives or friends, who may already
be overburdened. v
"The pollco would glvo us better
service if we showed them they were not
mere political puppets, to be kicked
from plllcr to post at the whim of a
'boss.' Wo should recognize them ns
human beings nnd men with some
pride."
Mayor Moore expects to call a meet
ing of prominent citizens in his office
the latter part of next week to arouse
public Interest in the helping of widows
nnd orphans of patrolmen. Ills hope
Ih to develop some independent organiza
tion or fund to. care for such depend
ents, nnd to provide for the education
of the children. In the meantime, he
uelleves Immediate financial aid would
be welcome to Mrs. Kernan.
Superintendent of Police Iloblnson
ulso expressed his approval of a fund
for the Kernan family, as well ns n
permanent system whereby other such
cases might bo cared for.
"Two other policemen died the same
dny Kernan died." he said.
"That makes four deaths this month
from natural causes. In such cases tho
families recmre nlinut. S2000 Insurance
from tkc Policeman's Insurnnce Asso
ciation. There is no pension except in
cases where the patrolman wus killed or
disabled iu service, and even then the
amount is not enough to provide main
tenance for an entire fntnily."
WE HAVE HIM ON THE LIST
Latest Pest, the Auto Splasher, li
His Glory These Days
There is one man just as bad as
the masher and'slnshcr and he is the
auto splasher.
Ho is out today in all bis glory.
If he fails to ride through a puddle of
mud close to rcdestrians on the side
walk, it is because he fails to sec it.
Hundreds of men and women have
had their clothes deluged with mud
during the Inst few days on account of
the determined destrocr.
Augend by the fact that ho must
now ghc ordinary humans ample time
to oross the streets in tin, pntir of
the cit. the splash demon looks eagerly J
iui muu piics auu, men rides turougli
them viciously.
All of which goes to show there is
a cry practical renson for keeping
the streets clean.
$127,530 IN- LEWIS ESTATE
Inventories Show $93,264 Owned by
Bettle Bellak Wills Filed
Wills probated todav were those of
Bernard Wood. $10,000; George D.
Sidman, who died nt Lakeland. Kin.,
S4000; Umma P. Kahlcr, 2021 Ogdcn
street, 0300; Charles W. Kiue. r7.'!!
Chester avenue, $0000, and Kichard
Kav, ."100 West Tabor road, $ll),l."0.
Inventories of personal propertv were
filed in the estotes of Clifford Lewis.
.?12r...nO.:;o : Bettie Bellak. .$0:!.204.li5
and Katharine Cassclton, $.1f),428..'i0.
Lctteis of administration we're
granted in the estates of Mary J. Perry
222 South Porty -fourth street. ?10.
.S8.",; Abraham X. Chabrow. 372S North
Thirty-third street, moro than 10,000,
and Hyman Axelrod. 020 North Forty
third street, .$11,".00.
$13,000 for Boy Scouts
The Ilotnrj Club drive in lielmlf nf
Camden county Boy Scouts has thus
fnr resulted iu the raising of 13,000.
This was reported at the tenth annual
dinner ot me scouib last night by Wil
liam Strundwitss, president of the Cam
den county council of the Scouts. At
the Imiiciuet. assurance was giien the
hcouts that by nest summer they will
have four acres ot pin ground along a
stream, with a log cabin to bouse them.
r - stationers J
Oriental Pearls
jExperis have pronounced
Jus coJecion of Pearls superb
for orient and perfect. graduation
Necldac&s
SirySle Pearls J&r
aaatiim to Necklaces.
Foreign
Remittances
BROWN BROTHERS & CO.
Fourth and Chestnut Streets
New York PHILADELPHIA Iloston
IN
I ARRESTED
IN DEATHOF WIFE
Police Probe Domestic Affairs
of Daniel C. Giles Will
Have Hearing Today
FOUND BY SON, GUN IN HAND
Investigation is being made today by
the police of Camden into the domestic
affairs of Daniel C. Giles, who was
arrested late yesterday in connection
with the denth of his wife, Mrs. Louisa
Giles.
The woman wns found dead in the
bathroom of the home of her son. uan
iel O. Giles. Jr.. 138 Laurel street
Woodlynnc, N. J., with two bullet
wounds in her neck. Danie' C. Giles,
her husband, nccordlnc to the police.
was sitting on the edge of the bathtub
with a smoking revolver in bis hand.
TITorts of the police to obtain a defi
nite cplanation of the affair front Giles
so far have been unsuccessful. He will
have a hearing today before Recorder
Slackhouse, of Camden.
Tho body or Mrs. iilcs was lounci ny
her ton, Layton, nineteen onrs old.
He told the police that his father re
sisted when he nttcmnted to take the
'revolver from him. The police believe
that Giles intended to kill himself, iwr.
and Mrs. Giles, with Layton. who live
at Pitman. N. J., were visiting Daniel
C. Giles, Jr., nnd had been at the let
ter's homo several cs.
Many conflicting statements hae
been made by the elder Giles, according
to the police. During the night be was
moody. He first showed defiance of the
police, later he talked to himself nnd at
times refused to answer nucstions.
Lnvton Giles told the police his
father was evidently suffering from a
severe mental strain and bad been act
ing strangely of late.
BACHMANN'S BODY HERE
Lieutenant Died In Antwerp Will
Be Burled From Home
Tho body of Lieutenant Lrnest Glenn
Bachmaun, T. S. X.. son of Mr. nnd
Mrs. Krnest C. Baehmann, of 2220
North Uher street, who died iu Ant
werp, Belgium, on November 7. 101!),
arrived in Philadelphia today. The fu
ncrul services will be held tomorrow af
ternoon at 2 o'clock, in the chapel ot
an undertaking establishment 2127
North Broad street.
Lieutenant Buchmann was taken ill
with typhoid fcer just as he was start
ing for home, nnd died in un Antwerp
hospital. He was a graduate of the
Centrnl High School and Drcxel Insti
tute. He entered the navy in 101.
Although only twcuty-iHe years olcJ,
he was n thirty-second degree Mason
unci will be. given 11 Masonic burial.
Before cutcring the navy he wus un
engineer for the Standard Oil Co. His
fattier is superintendent of engine in
stallation nt the New York shipyard.
Suspicious Character Held
A man giiug the name of Bernard
Benton, thirty-four jenrs old. of 2031
Arch street, was held under S2000 bail
for a further hearing by Magistrate
Ilnrris this morning charged with
"entrv to commit felony." He was ar
rested last night while running from the
Clalrmont apartments, forty -fourth
nnd Walnut streets. Several women
iiing in the apartments called for the
police.
Subway Car Derailed at 15th Street
A Itoute 11 car jumped the track iu
ii.n .nhiuiv :it the rifteeuth street plat
form this morning, delaing traffic for!
more than twenty minutes on an suu
wa -surface lines. The derailment oc
curred nt !) o'clock.
T
We sell drafts on the
principal cities in all
foreign countries.
We make cable
transfers to all parts
ofthe world.
FEBRUARY 13, 192Q
MOTHER WILL SCI
ADA HUFF
SUffORS
Daughter, in Prison, Has Al
ready Received Two Offers
of Marriage
GLAD TO HAVE FOUND HER
"Ada will make no hasty marriage.
e will know all nbout the man first.
I'm her mother and she is going to
profit by my experience."
Mrs. Helen Kcll, who yesterday found
her long-lost daughter under intensely
dramatic circumstances in Moyamcnsing
Prison, where she Is held ns "Ada Huff"
on tho charge of having carried off ten-
months-old Genevieve Leonard, made it
plain this morning that the two pro
posals of marriage the young woman
has received will be refused.
Ada IIiilT, nineteen ears old. has ic
ceived two proposals of marriage. One
was sent direct to her at the prison,
the other to her in care ot Detective
Franlo Hodge, who nrrestcd her at
Stroudsburg, Pa., and brought her to
Philadelphia.
"My own unlinppv experience," said
the girl's mother today, "will be 11 pro
tcction for Ada. I have struggjed along
these do.cn eais not knowing where
my husband was. I nm going to look
after Ada's welfare."
The mother talked while she worked
in her temporary home at 100S Dieision
street, Camden, where she is emp!ocd
ns housekeeper for Walter S. Layton.
a Pennsylvania Itailroad engineer, and
his two children. Mrs. Kcll has her
other child, Krnest, thirteen enrs old.
witli her. She is u small, iniddleagecl
womiui. eneriretic nnd hardworking. She
I busied herself dusting while she talkecf.
1 am not conic 10 desert Ada now.
I nm going to do ever thing I can for
her. I nm a poor woman, but I have
mother love enough to make mo willing
to sacrifice nu tiling for my child.
fhnt T hSvo & n,v child J 1 hV.l l ee,
lnr.l ,m Tl,eJe irs nlt bt
hard all these cars, knowing that I
,.t , - '.: ,
L. :" " ... J?... r m V ' P "! ,V"8
could not gio her the love nnd advice
that n daughter needs. 1'or twelve
ears I hae tried to find her. It was
nlwas hopeless.
"And now that I have found her ou
mil be sure that no muu is going to
come along and mnrrj her unless I
know ever thing about him. You ma
be sure of that."
EXPLOSION IN MANHOLE
Covers Blown Off on Chestnut Street
Between Third and Fourth
All the manhole coers on Chestnut
street between Third and Fourth streets
were lifted off this morning by the
force of an evplosion in a gas pocket in
the conduits nt Third and Chestnut
streets.
A fire resulted. The firemen were
unable to extinguish the blaze until the
gas burned away. The damage to the
wires was repaired then.
HPHE Army and Navy
JL are both using the,
"big gun" of modern ad-i
vcrtising to obtain recruits.' ' '
HERBERT M. MORRIS
Advertising Agency
Every Phase of Sales Promotion
400 Chestnut Street Philadelohin
1 30 Years of
((
Here Is a Bond Patent Univer
sal Drop Hanger, with Rlns
Oiling Ball nnd Socket Bearing
l.asy to erect, ea.sy to align and
best of all, easy to ItUAUGN
Details on Request
PA Special
a
rfcViAy VOW DA1SIKEB STANDARD 7"""rr7-rmVK rnrm t fT
r That Affords For Men
rA Most Substantial Saving
Full Line of Dalsimer Standard
Ten Dollar Shoes Repriced at
Dark Tan Calf
Black Calf
J mm
v
Black Kid
Patent Colt M
A VALUE so exceptional that we refrain
entirely from superlatives and say, simply,
SEE them.
SPECIAL
$15.00 Genuine
In the exclusive
mediun) toe shapes
:
-:
In the exclusive brown bhade, English or fl-fl -f Or
T1S A FEAT
3) a (dime i
1204-06-08 Market St.
m
Personnel
Henry G. BitEQLB
, rretident I
FRANK M. IlAItDT
T. EuAvoop Frame
Vice-President)
Nelson C. Dennet
Truit Officer
Henry L. McCloy
Seer clary ,
.TohnC. Wallace
Tfcaturer
Thomas B. Prossek
Heal Estate Officer
A. Raymond Bishop
A ssiilant Treasurer
Vincent R. Tilden
Assistant Secretary
IlARnY Stewart
Assistant Ileal Uslate Officer
Lonis Bosche
f Assistant Trust Office
John B. Townsend
Assistant to Vice-President
Philadelphia
Trust Company
iW Chestnut Street
and
Broad and Chestnut Streets
Northeast Corner
11
SERGEANT YORK TO LECTURE
Will Describe His War Experiences
In Talk Here
Unusual interest is being evinced by
Philndelphians concerning the speech to
bo made here on Thursday evening, Feb
ruaiy 20, by Sergeant Alvin C. York,
foimcrly of the Lighty-second Division
and one of the greatest heroes produced
by the war.
Sergeant York will tell of his expc
" ricnoes in his speech at the Metropolitan
uncrn House. 11c is uivmc un luu wiu-
-N of his lecture tour toward helping
" tllp backwoods people from his
J PO,lntrv ; ,,e mountains of Ten-
ncssec, ns well as the mountaineers of
the Appalachian range in Kentucky,
Virginia and North Carolina. An agri
cultural and industrial wbool will be
founded for the benefit of these people
under the direction of the Alvin C. York
Foundation, a nonprofit educational or
ganization founded by business men of
the btnte of Tennessee.
WHITMAN'S Luncheon serv
ice is fast becoming as
well-established an institution
in Philadelphia as Whitman's
Candies.
Afternoon Tea
Optn in th trorning till eleven
thirty or toda and tor
candies, .
016 e&eetnm st
Bond" Service j
1
than a quarter of a century
I
has given a feeling of last
ing satisfaction to hundreds
of manufacturers who have
installed "Bond" Power
Transmitting Specialties.
For 30 years the name
"Bond" has stood for
Double Sure Quality and
Performance.
Write for Information and
Catalogue
1
Shoe Value0
ty All Toe Shapes
"
All Sizes
And All
Solid Leather
Cordovan Shoes
PX.AD
TO FIT FEET
L
RUBBERIZED
RAINCOATS
$7.50 $9, $12
Closing outv
our Best
and Finest
Quality Suits
and Overcoats
in the One
and Only
Special Sale
this season
for these
Finest Grades!
I That means a saving
of $10 to $20 on these
Highest and Finest j
Grade Overcoats and
Suits and
Ifs the only sale
these top notchers will
be' featured in!
1$ It's buy now, or bye
bye to the chance to
have a $100 Overcoat
for $80, or a $75 Suit
for $60!
I The original prices
were marked close as
a matter of fact, we i
can't replace them to
sell at those prices!
OVERCOATS
$95 & $100 Overcoats, $80
$85 & $90 Overcoats, $75
$80 & $85 Overcoats, $70 "
$70 & $75 Overcoats; $60 ;
$65 & $70 Overcoats, $55 ;
$50 to $65 Overcoats
NOW $40, $48, $50
SUITS
$70 & $75 Suits, $60 & $65
$65 Suits, $55 J
$60 Suits, $50 ;
$50 & $55 Suits,
NOW $40 to $45
Trousers Reduced!
$6.50 Trousers, $4.50 '
$4 to $7 Trousers, $3 to $5
$8 & $9 Trousers
Now $6.50 & $7.50
Perry & Co.
"N. B. T."
16th & Chestnut Sts.
J
t
flMtfl
M
Ri
SCI
iWl
m
"M
.4
J
n
m
;4
mi
IjgiffiBSgSgg
ac
I"
Itke wo sxoa axo&s
C ' r, "Si.,
V
o
. Jl 4FWiiWrPWfcB
n