lll. , .' S- " w I. A ,V I M A t HCEISSUES SUNGK IM 1 ' T ESS 'SLAP: Gomnor Uproul, Attorney General Schaffcr, Major Biddlr, Itobert J. Mc Ornlh and General Attcrbury, A feature of the lirimarv election In I Philadelphia will be the contest for the largest popular oic netueen .Major oore aim iteceiver ot Tnxei uenuricic. 1- i- i i , lxj , ul- a .'., t v, .t , r uv 'j:s-,,, ' ;,, y . il I WU KUBBLK POSE t i ii.i i it . f uii mckauzniin aiso oacKoa dv w V Mhnrft ArlmimetrnImi i .,.--.-.....,. ,... ....... -t f'jr PLAN NtW IUN UHUHUH i"UrKe, Garland, Walters and urouP HU"t"ng to aurrouna lower 1 V..1 'J. . . . at Broad St. and Wvomlna Ave. The YAox) Protectant Episcopal Church, it at hunoiinced yesterday. ill hare one of the handsomest croups of bulldingH on North Uroad street. The Iter. C. It. Lone W the rector. NOT SUPPORTED The Pl" rail for an imposing church ' group, dominated by a tower, at Hroad street and WoinlnK monue. The tower will oerupt a position npprosi mntely In the middle of the i?loiip. The church will bo on the south fide of the lot, with entranced on Itroml ftreel The present edifice will remniu until the new church Is completed. The parish houe will have entrance on AS GAME IN WHERE IS MICHAEL BASS? ENDRICK X&J wtatrullon Camden Mayor la Requested to Locate a Mlsalno Son Mavor Charles Ellis of Camden, has received n letter pleading for assistance in locating a lost don, Tho writer, U, Haw, of 172 Sherman i street, Now lorlc, asks that an effort tr.. n...-ii!.. rr n . i bo made to find Michael, who dlnap- tutor Dwelling From Roar, butltH,nrc,i from Chicago in mm. vbero the Hasu family was then living. The falhcr bclicTCS Michael H now in Camden. The letter contains a pathetic appeal for the fron to "come home befolre It is too late." Mayor Ellis is making every effort to find Michael, who Ih twenty six years old, as his father is believed to be dying. SLAIN MISSIONARY' IRK IS PRAISED Aro Frightened Away Without Loot FhMILY WAS NEXT 000R ran Allinncc and Jloore art- (etrution leaders nre putting out balloti toda Minnlnc their ,. A'lto" for Concrrs-nt-lnrce. The ' V"lteM. contains the mines of Aril ' V! Iil ji; rmiiii h lUni'tf, Burke and M M Garland, of ' York road, and the rectory will adjoin .fniUbtughj Anderson 1! Wrtlters, of ( the parish hme on Iht- " 1" m V,fci,. ,T i t lii "no idde. The buildings will form : .Tehnktown, nml Joepli McLaughlin. throc M(s of a quadrangle ot tnis city. Colonel Thomas f Crago, (iermantown of. Greene countv. csndidnto for re- i trimmings, will itone, with limestone be used in tne con v ' ..-I-... ...'. , ..., ... stniction. Woik upon the structure . ....., .,... .,,. ,.,. "J'h MnM the alliance. The alliance and tidmiultrptiou "plat-" la marked nlso for Judge fad-, ler.'of Cumberland eountj. for the Su premo Court, and .Tudgo Linn of this eUy.for the Superior Court Of the fifteen candidates for delegates. nt-larpe. the. alliance nnd administration will toot sunport Itecciver of Taxes Ken dtlck, Charles .1. lllddle and Itobert .1 i Aictirath will start nt an earl date. GOING BACK TO BELGIUM War Orphan Failed to Appreciate Home Here. It Is Said Marcel llarratt. the ecuteen- car old Belgian bo who lost both of his parrots during the wnr nnd was brought to Philadelnhia with Kmll Taul Gerard. The alliance therefore Is Minnnrtme , a Fiench bo. Itt Juuo. by returning .. .. H .. . r. 7. . ' . .IJI .. Ill .. K..1 4 !.".. AT O? inn .mil so caned i'enroe "lnte for omi:r, 'uuru m w iiju j -i. delegates-at-largr, and is not paying ay attention to Governor Sprout's ex pressions on behalf of Hcceivcr of Taxes Ktndrick. the Vhtc leader. i.ne iaro 6iatc tor ueicgatcs-at large His nasssec is to be paid by n member of the Bclginn Society, who furnished the bond for his rrlense lnt ear. The bo. is st.ilcd us incorrigible and did not appreciate a good home with a tvlll, not contain the name of Minor Philadelphia fnmlly. according to off! Moore. This is in retaliation for thelcialH of the llureau of Immigration, rejection of the Kendrirk nudulcv b Gloucester. the Penrose leaders The Varc slate nt He Is now nt the Gloucester deten thla time bears the names of Kendrick. tion house. Two robbers. poMng as garbage col lectors, entered the home of Charles Fnreckson. n 0127 Carpenter street, nt 8 :H0 o'clock last night while Mr. and Mrs. Tareckson were seated on the in closed porch of their neighbors' home next door. The robbers were scared nwar before they had time to collect any loot. The Fareckons were rented in a glass-inclosed porch nt the home of M. Rudy Heller, who lives next to I'areek sons nt 0120 Carpenter street. Mr. Heller went to the kitchen of his house (o obtain some ice water. He switched on the electric lights, which Illuminated the rear of the Tareckson home. .Mr. Heller thought he heard a noise, but returned to the porch later with the ice water. A short time later two men came out of the nlle7 separating the two homes. and dumping some garbage on their wagon, drove nwnv When Mr. and Mrs. Tareckson te tiirned to their home they discovered that a kitchen window had been forced and that two men. who left footprints on the carpet, had commenced to ran sack the china closet and drawers ron talnlng the silverware, when thc apparently frightened away. Y. W. C. A. DRIVE GOES ON Continuation Committee Will Bring $425,000 Up to Million The Young Women's Christian As oeiatlon will contihue Its drive until the total of $1,000,000 it seeks ban been obtained. Although 'the drive was scheduled to close lapt night reports nt a closing dinner of worVcera and directors showed that the totnl so far contributed was .$423,000. Of this amount $77,833 was subscribed by the many who attended the dinner. It was docided to form a continuation commjttce to carry the drive until the financial goal was reached. Mrs. George McFadden, a member of the executive committee, declared "we will never sar die and we will continue the committee until wc get the money." Scientist Say3 ,tho Rov. A. R. Hoaro Was Pionoer Among Nativos in Alaska WAS KILLED BY INDIANS Dr. Harlev Stamp, traveler and scientist, of nt)18 Chestnut street, todav told of the work accomplished in the 1 4lb Mission Warehouse Burns A blase which started in a bund1 of waste and Paper last night svept through the warehouse of the Tlrotber hood Mission, .100 Belgrade street. It is belle ed to bn,e been started bv a discarded match or cigarette butt thrown In n basement window. Vir- wiiteitually everything stored In the building was damaged. wviws SALE-DRESS GOODS tqaNvMoruN vvnviMM SKCONP tt nnrgrwitijQ wtvtwj; 9 are colnc out o businqja and will iacrltlce our entire stock of woolens, iillts and (.otton goods I'URKy Willow TnfTeU; 10- HO tc In. nlilti blue and blink: JJ i We ' Crp l Chine! 10-ln. f-t eC wins; nil colon,, S3. so tuI. S3. 10 Milue Trlrotln; nil wool) 80-ln. SO QQ wlilei SI mine ,VO french Scrxei SO to 34 In. SO QQ ulilei Talne Si . . iUtsJO All-iionl fierce (sponsril) ; SO Q f.O.ln. wide; Millie 3.50. . . iT7 Clilffnn Itronilnlolbi 54 -In SO QQ wlilvi hII rotor: vallle SO. 0I70 rrult of t.onni: 8Ee IQ ft aorette Crepe: hII rol- 1 eyr- 'J'Jie .. :"'i,c TilLr. or.t 40-ln. lde; S3 10 i.l. 1 . O Molmw U Sl.eetlnr: S'4 QOC 3 . " .Mr ... -. ' vli. win .. .... JJ -. rirnrn iiiu i.uiinr i m.i k rnrn v ... . - - m t s- T- "Jll. Ita.l Nnmailaf i K y.y.ry '" -,.. ..-..- - - ,- CLOTHING ON CREDIT f 36-ln. wide; S3 50 JO yQ 40. In. wide; SO QQ Hatln; value . . ChrmetiM?j SI value . Ponce: nsturnl t1u sa.no Chiffon Tarr.lit; 1)1 ue nnd blark; ft value 20 af m .. O tot tne enure lamny off on all Clotlting olor; '1.39 '2.49 t rata '2.98 Crane Ho Thine .StrlptiJ SO IQil.nit Cloth; 11 ? d. In A f( Blilrtlnr: M value Wi.'I7 , nerei T-ln wide: 0 val. T.VU Blankets, qullu ginshimo aoIIcs, percales sreatlv reduced AMERICAN JOBBING HOUSE HY-GRADE CLOTHING CO. 827 Chestnut St. 5iVM.W OPHN K KltV HVKNING MttMHtUWMMtuj r3Jori:N EVEMKCt 616-18 S. 4th St. Ou.r.nteed bona tide sale. No strings to this offer. I"rrj gartn.nt guaranteed material, style, make nm lit. YOUR MONEY REFUNDED IF NOT AS REPRESENTED What more can wo nugxest? The original prices and tax. ore on eiery garment. These icood were made to aril tor what theV nre marked. Hear In mind, we back up cterj word of tlila adverllsemenl. 10 OFF ON ALL CHARGE ACCOUNTS 20 OFF ON ALL CASH SALES Coma and comiiirc yourself and ante money. This in a lanllimatc offer. Butter Pith if FhitH. QwU tuple FUlttr Piatt, St Oem plftf, T5 00.. jiv-ilf URN you s..k a gift 1II1PM paiaeitlnr the charm rK of new-nut, dlitlne llreo and el.ganoe tor TT.drilor or Dy other oec ac tion, yon Trill nnd It quickly at t. rre A Ren at a, vrr .abntantlal taring. Our llnai of Jewelry, ill rer wart. te. offer the rrldeit ponlble -l.etlen, I. PRESS & SONS lllamond Importtri Who'utltJtii'ttri BihtrimUht Cor. '8th & CKtstnul Streili 1017 Markit St. 909 MirV't St. X u -jK.aiiifr Il n.1 blcftk, iflolatcd village of Totnt ll6pe, in northwestern Alaska, by the Ilev.tA. n. IJoarc, killed a few dnyB agoby Indiana. Doctor Stamp, vho Ipitcd the Itcv. Hoare In May. 1017, said that the missionary of the Kplscopal iChurru liad gone to I'olnt Hope from Phila delphia in 1010. . , , When he nrr!cd iu the frozen v I age, the llcv. Hoare found only Ksklmos Tor a time, the Philadelphia!! -ns fWert to carry hn his Vork in a il- s!6n constructed ot Vihfclobonc nnd . . . QrAdually ho gathered enough lumber from shlpi from the stntes to erect a permanent mission, largo enough to ac commodate seventy persons. The fiOO Ksklino of Point Hope were devoted to the Rev. Hoare, but n tdic white men enmo In contact with the7Iinllnti living further Inlnnd, the latter formed nn intense hatred for the whites. I A . iL.,, uursziij ."wj... n u h.duii( uitic ri:c uuuicroa. x c6uutcra between the Indians and vvhtt iricn. It oa on Indian ho tlttWj ' killed the missionary. ' The ItcV. Hoaro' returned to Willi dclpbia for n short tlmo (n 1017,' whtn he wna rcllovcd by, tho Itcv. Dr. n, Itlchard Thoman, of Princeton, JC. j) After a short visit here, the Iter. Hoare returned to the frozen North. lie had A no family and It IH believed died alone. - I Wifc The Store of Personal Service 1310 Chestnut Street Most Exceptional Opportunity ! Tomorrow 125 Silk Frocks $19 Values 30.00 to 40.00 While there are only 125 Frocks in this One-Day Sale, tho assortment is won derfully varictl and all sizes for Women and Misses are included. Fine Taffetas, Satins, Ciorgette, . Foulard, Flowered Georgette com bined with Taffetas and a number in Crepe de Chine and Tricolette. Colors are navy, black, taupe-grey, Copenhagen blue, and a few- light tones, including white. Two are pictured. All Seles Final No C.O.D.'s No Alterations irt? y&A ft SECOND 1'LOOB1 V Will Wilson Run Again? Thai "there will be 'hell-a-popping' at San Francisco" is the warmish cQmmeiit of the chief Democratic paper in Nebraska on Mr. Bryan's victory in the State primaries, for he will now go to the Convention as a delegate "with full opportunity to devote his power and talents to either guerrilla or open warfare upon the leadership of President Wilson and the policies for which he stands." The President has indicated very plainly, in his letter to Delegate Jouett Shouse, read to the Kansas Democratic State convention, that he will insist that the party support his League program. The New York World believes it would be a fatal policy for the party to repudiate the President, for "it is only under his leadership that the party can be held together," and the Brooklyn Eagle say's that if the party is to make the campaign on the League issue, "the only logical candidate is Woodrow Wilson." The Republican press naturally have a few remarks to make about all this. Thus the Milwaukee Sentinel: "Run for a third term nomination? Of course he'll run health permitting. And, as a prominent Democrat remarks, such is Mr. Wilson's sublime self-confidence that when it comes to that question he will regard himself as the best judge of the permissive state of his health." One of the most interesting articles in this week's LITERARY DIGEST May loth deals with the possibility of Mr. Wilson again being a candidate for the Presidency, and presents the editorial view-point on this contingency from many angles. Other important articles in this number are: I Candidates' Strength Revealed in "Digest" Poll of 11.000.000 Voters More Than 1,100,000 Votes Are Summarized This Week, and the Votes From Southern States Are Beginning to Be Heard From Greatest Non-Official National Poll Ever Undertaken in This Country fc V w Has California Eliminated Hoover? Morality of Trading With Lenine Is Poland "Freeing" the "Ukraine"? The Sky-Rocketing of Sugar Painless Extraction of Bonus Taxes The Irish Muddle Soviet Grip on Russian Cooperatives Italy's War-Disillusion Storage to Avert a Coal Crisis Why Gasoline Is and Will Be High The Undesirability of Oil Gushers The Passing of Tragedy Queens Berlin Acclaiming the French Tricolor The Motion-Picture as a "Handmaid of Religion" ROT" Catholic Union Against the "Reds" "Hand-me-Down" Sermons The Veto Power of the President Character of the Veto Power Exercising It Presidential Procedure Origin of the Veto Comparative Prices of Foodstuffs Governor Edwards, Champion of the "Wets" Seven Candidates Tell Why They Would Be President Beneficent Influence of the Work man's Silk Shirt Secretary Meredith, Another Successful Man Who Was "Once a Poor Boy" "Sun-Traps" to Catch Nature's Free Heat Best of the Current Poetry f r lash and r ire tests do not prove motor oil quality The Burning Test Sticky tar from ordi nary old type paraffin base motor oil Pluc6 some ordinary motor oil (the old-typo paraffin base) in a cup. Burn oil about thrcc-quartcis. The residue h sticky tar. This is exactly what happens in an engine. This gummy tar sticks to cylinder walls, piston heads, valves, etc., collects dust and dirt and forms carbon deposit, tho grpatcst obstacle to efficient lubrication. , Many motorists believe that an oil to be efficient must have "Flash" and "Fire" tests high enough to withstand the terrific heat in the cylinders. "Flash" means the temperature at which vapor fron il will burst into' flame. "Fire" means the temperatur an oil at which the oil itself will burn. rom Le Burning down SUNOCO does not change its lubricating qualities Place an cnual quantity of SUNOCO, the ncw-typc mo tor oil, in h cup. Burn off about three-quarters. Tho oil that rcmuins has the tame lubricating qualities as the oil you started with. Engine heat doesn't affect SUNOCO, as it is not a compounded oil. When consumed in the engine it lcae3 no bticky residue to form hard, flinty carbon deposits. The fallacy in these tests is apparent. "Flash" and "Fire" temperatures of 450 and 500 degrees, respectively, are high, but the temperature in a cylinder is approxi mately 2700 degrees at the time of explosion. No oil made can wholly withstand such a heat. The all-important consideration is what is the lubri cating value of the oil remaining after part has been burned away? The "Burning Test" alone is proof The old type, paraffin base, compounded oils, when partly burned, leave a residue that not only fails to lubri cate but causes carbon deposit. SUNOCO the new kind of motor oil being a non compounded, 100 per cent distilled oil, burns doivn evenly. The part not burned is as pure and as high in lubricating qualities as before. Read "The Burning Test." SUNOCO is made in six types to insure the right oil for every car made. The "Sunoco Lubrication Guide" will ' tell you the right type for your car. Ask your dealer for a copy or write us. SUN COMPANY PHILADELPHIA OFFICE-FIHANCE BUILDING '. -.w : Many Fine Illustrations, Including the Most Interesting Cartoons "" May 15th Number on Sale To-day News-dealers 10 Cents $4.00 a Year The How Presidents Are Made By ARTHUR WALLACE DUNN Thl nw book rei ttvs raion why our rrmMenU, (rom Washington to WtUon. werx chon 12n,75c.nct;ljr mill, 80c At All Ilooliitore JttarijDst FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK I j r v. MOTOR OIL More than a million gallons of lubricating oils per week mmwmummBA & t .; J' i , w to :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers