Li, fl i- NJ. " -'1k :U J' tfmTHFRSj money teacherstoter ; SPEW BOARD 'MEANJOCUINJ' 5240,000 RocoiVod From State Is Diverted Tor " i rurpua 'CITIZENS' PLAN MAY- FAIL ... .l..i nlicrfl will not re- ;S .n Immc, late increase of 5200, L&rf? Governor Sproul pWWind V ;;! $210,000 to tlie uoaru oi,.uu- "fettoW&n.h'asuse.Hl, fflf?2! Ar UlCta tl, last .?BB.1.nrj!iilon for tenchern sal- !SS wm Included by the citizens' cm.. ffi aVono of the Items siiRgestcd to '"'it .. t. 400.000 for the nurposo of Jijrlnit "in Immediate Increase of $200 to VThe finance committee of the board '111 meet this nftcrnoon.S and, It is pre dicted, will reject the increase pian oi Atfordlni to William Dick, necrctary LittoBoarTl of Kdncatlon, the $210,000. thouib not then In hand, was "btul fetfd sway for tho general purpooes of the board" In tho beginning of tho year. llrry T. Stoddart, n member of the finance commiure, msu kuiu wiu ?;, mn 'tncq not exist." And it is under- tood that Simon Orat!!, president of the board, expressed nniscu in a aimi jjr fjuhiou yesterday in a conversation mth (ieorgc wnnrion i-cnpcr, a mom for of the citizens coramlttei!. Comniilicc Submits Plan A plan to pay the teachers nn Inline- iW inrrcaso 'and make tho Flnegan iitllzntloti schedule effective on Jan- 'nr; 1 wsi submitted by tho citl- nV committee to Mr. Grata and In John Wnnamaker, chairman of tho ioancc committee, in a letter sent them a Monday. Itefcrcncc to tho $240,000 Item was made In the first of a series 'tl four suggestions, pointing the way t,n.r,1 (liidlnjr tho necpsaurv 51.400.. 'MO. Ihe paragraph in question read ' is follqws : '"First. The payment made to your ijltaola on .tinc 2 last, which was marked for use in increased salaries anil no publicly announced, amounting .tj $240,000.' ,t the maps-meeting in the interest ' Inrrensud enehers' salaries, held 'trader (he auspice of tho citizens' com- piltec in tlio Apademy ot Music on Ihy'JX, Goveni'T Sproul told nn uudl nieof li,000 "hlladelphlaus nsHembled in ml outsider the building, that he had a erea surprise. lie said tho stato' ai prepared to pay the Hoard of Edu tatlon nt once the $210,000 balnnpe of tie salary appropriation. The fioveruor's announcement was trirted with outbursts of cheers' from tbf throngs of tedchcrs and' interested litliens. That mccting'waa attended by 3lr. Oralz, Mr. Dick and other mem ber of tlit' Hoard ot Education. Hut they did not sneak that night. The pa; merit was duly made five days after ward, on June -'. $210,000 "Spent Lon- Ago" l.at night, on the eve of the meet Ing tliat is to consider the salary In row plan, Mr. Dick came forward with the statement that the? $240,000 ''in been spent long ngo." "It is true that wo recplv' the money onWat .Tune." said Mr. Dick, "but vtknew It was coming to us, and go it lid been ineluded in tho 1020 budget jjide up In January." "in other words," Mr. Dick was ailed.' "'that sum has been spent?" "Long ago," he replied. "It was ipent for the general purposes of the ward, l cannot understand wuy tnut question should come up now, for It tias been made clear time and again. We have great difficulty in collecting our taxes afM, as a result, we have to plan eur aels in the first half of the year to male them stretch over tho second half." Mr, Gratz. discussing tho plan of tho fiiuens committee ip an interview yes terday afternoon, mndc no reference tu the $240,000 item, but intimated that the entire Boheme was impracticable be cause of lack of funds. "I wlch it were possible," he said." ''Hut there arc certain things that an Impossible. If you have ouly $1 and you want something that costs $2 you cannot get it, no matter how badly you want it." Sajs Committee Started Wrong Mr. Stoddart asserted tho citizens' committee, "started out on the wrong i)pothe-U In assuming that the b3arl Mi S24O.0O0 left over from the Inst Hate appropriation, da it does not have -ueli a sum." "I will, however, have more to say on this questlpn tomorrow aftcrnobu,' ho added. Franklin Smedley, another member w the liniincc committee, said he doubted whether the board had suffl wnt money to carry out the scheme. lMwanl link, dinirman of the clti wns committee, bald he had no further tniemeiit to make regarding the plan. Uur suggestions are now in the hands na ."nuancc ,c,Vmmltt,(" said Mr. Ith r,hey w,n bo '"mussed at tho ZthtZ-"- x have "0ll,iDS South Z? Wijijon, principal of the .TM. 1!lfa(,e,l,'lIl "lU'h School for ' vlr'! nnd nresident nt V, rr..i,..j .Cvfii.lnt MW AltlUHi3 ;;,","" Pronounce,, the plan TJtUUll "It ftnlrftd tlm ..,.,.... m Z ii i'.'"'!-emergency prou mX nS.hc said-- l. llocs not Pide us tanh V'U8$'V?n tte tcachers of 1'ltts ottfp'JJf. V,r h De,,roit- Nwark nnd lelmnr1 buI,? tnow that would "or tanks" fnctIl"l strife within Miss Margaret Magulrc. wnicrvlsinr' Set1,.0' .'h0 'Call ' sXoT1 and Counr n dJve,ctor ,f U,e AI1C(1 Teachers' Mhrv.fF'? a slmllar "Pinion. Tea h,V.nBnlro ntta,cl5(,d tho Women's taKiiVSii!ian,iM.t,07 for Its "attempt w inject politics into the fight for higher The Engagement Ring Gihvmelr beautiful when aet ' WA PoIMecf Gtxtto Diamond Legislator Hopes Women's Or ganization Merely 'Signed "Through Ignorance' HOLD MEETING TOMORROW A IftMnH MH.lt- 1... ftl.A 11Tkm. ITaa.l.oJ Ofgnnlzntion.to cantltdateg for the state Legislature asking them to state thcic position ,on tlio'.Finegan'Bnlnry bill for rchool teachers to ertmo hefnro thn T.nrr. Ulaturc nt the' onenlnv nf their ert session in Jnnunry hns nrotfsed ituRgno-1 tlon" among mnny of the trnchers of tins I city and Unfavorable comment from' members of the Legislature. I Tames Franklin, n member of tlm1 Legislature, characterized the letter ni tho work of ovcrzoalous and badly ad vised leaders. "I have been a member of the Legis lature since 1830 and never in all that time have I seen such a misleading and mean document from educational peopl? as tho letter sent under the letterhead f the Women Teachers' Organization to each of our members. "They say that Doctor Finegan will present, a salary bill. He cannot present one ; he can merely prepare It. There Is n threat In- the lctor that might be re garded more seriously if I did not bo Hcvo thut the Benders were sinning through ignorance. "They want the members of the Leg islature to commit thcmselvea to some thllll that, to us. In not fix v-t In nvUe. rnqc. ,Such an notion on our part would ' Ikfl nrrn(1Clf nlll ?nMlnln(l.... ..,!. ..1.1.1.1 leauircs that wo shall take office with-' out uaving promised anything. 1 nm very much surprised to have received such a letter nnd hope that the senders will bo better advised next time." Miss Jane Allen, president of thor Women Teachers' sOrganliatlon, said that, there was no intention nf InWHntr politics into' tho, salary campaign, hut that on honest effort was simply being mauo to ascertain mo Kind ot men that wouldbe sent ot the next Legislature. "I nm sorry that such a matter should have come up at this time, when the teachers ore ulout to be united on the salary question. AVe shall have a meet ing tonight, when I believe nil tho dif ferences that now exist among the teachers, on the salary question will be patched up. . "The plan submitted by the citizens' committee, I believe, will give us nil what wo want. If the board teen its way clour to adopt this plan I don't be lieve they will have any trouble with tho teachers." RIVER GANG NABBED Police Believe Prisoners ,Are Re sponsible for Many Robberies Through the alertness of Captain K. C. Mctcalf, of the steamship tanker Annette, the police believe a gang of river pirntcs" that have infested the river front and stolen good valued ut nearly $20,000 from steamships and piers on the Delaware river In the last few months has been rounded un. Four suHpccts captured by Captain Mctcalf were arraigned yesterday beforo Magistrate liaker, and the supposed lead er of the gang. Tun no Lucia, also known as "Cuba," Tenth and Carpenter strccfc, was held without ball. Three others in-rested at the same time with Lucia were held in $1000 ball. -They were Panto Mcmcslo, Louis Moscon and Itamon uVrmantandia, Thirteenth nnd l'ino streets. . The capture of 'the men as they were attempting to rob the Lake Annette lefl' to a report, that they were members of the ship's crew, but this wns proven false at the hearing. FIREMEN AT REUNION Volunteers Go to Allentown for An nual Meeting Fifteen members of the William renn Volunteer Hoar Compnny, No. 18, Oiranl nvcnuoTind Dunton street, men who served this "city without pay for .ah..!. !... Aha.mc.1 .,ntA fnpnnil tn mill JVU1D, IVilCU IlllillCU WVH. AW...VU l I'M. the trucks to fires themselves, left Ilroad Street Station this morning for Allentown to attend the annual con vention of tho Pennsylvania State Fire men's Association. r The party, which included the sons of manv of tlie old veterans, left the fire quarters in six automobiles nt 7 o'clock for the railroad station. They will mako a stop ip Harrisburg, where they will bo met by n band of twenty eight women, who will accompany them to Allentown, after a short stop-off in Harrisburg. Penn Man for Cox M. J. Pickering, of this city, gradu ate manager of athletics at I'vun aim now on leave of absence, has arrived in New York to take churge of the Cox-ltooRCvclt National College Men's Club, recently organized hero as part of the Democratic national headquar ters. TODAY'S MARRIAGE LICENSES Jamea 1. Dwyer. JTryn Mawr, nnd Anna M, McOroay, 442 Old I.itclli-n rnud. Udwnrd I. Henley. 018 W. Tloca at., nnd JoDhlne J. Pnimarn, 1813 Tins nt. John Hobs, BIB W. Hedmvlck nve.. and Lil lian 12. McCaushey. 1:0.13 Kris nve, Vlnei-nt nacchutl. 4T10 Marlon ave., and Vllomena, lUnalll 4710 Wavren t. Harry rav, BID W. York (it., and Mary Mnyuor, iuk ,. rairuill (. Frank Flood, 4234 Lancaster ave Jeanetts Ilellly. 712 N. 46ih at ralrlrk Qulnn, 2327 K, Indiana ave, Dorothy latency. 27BT Croaky at. Ennannn. O. I'urlnonl, 02 HI Uunaom at, Irene K, Kolarl. 8210 Sanaom at. Qua Festlnntcln. 222H 13. Cambria at Ida Aruff. 3043 Tontalne at, J, Milton Allen. liar Harbor, Me Mury necket, 4414 Waln.it at. ChurlfH II. Doeniter, Ilaltlmoru, lid,, and and and and and and Mary Halnea. r2!0 Florence ave Oeorno Veaeau. New York city and Mary Dornea, 207 N. Juniper at, William I'enmmer, 174S N. 2iat at. and Martha Scott, 2037 Dlcklnaon at. Leo V. Confay. nB21 Upland at., and Mary A. nucktey, 41B N. 00th at. Walter J, b'ltock. 103,1 N. Marahall at., and Marie I. Ilraun. .413 W. Dauphin at. Irwin Dromler, 3822 Wyalualng avo,, and Jeano Lanraman. 2213 N. 20th at, joufph C, Drawn, Mlllvllle. N. J., and Irene Walker. 330 N. Camao at. piissasiiiQ, MI ! ..J YOU' CAN STRIKE ibiM H''JaBaaH9.i;, "Jtrf.-'rW'hii. '&& mW$ aaaMBP5iaiP'klk WAn'3 tWS'y: aaaaaB mlSHY-i''tM I'X'Jff aaaaaaaB msJV'-- ;-4 &p(m aaaH Kmm;V'M III wim ' tM!M IBaaaaBiBft'r4J Lcdirer Photo Strtlcc If tho exhibition at tho Chamber of Commerce meets with public approval, this may be nn everyday sights Paper suits and overcoats, which nro quite tho fashion In Vienna and Berlin, can be bought from twenty-nlno cents up. They nro now being shown as a novelty by the chamber CAMDEN LIQUOR MEN LUCKY Saloon Owners J.lkely to Escapo Prdsecutlon by U. S. The 124 Camden saloonkeepers, who on Monday paid fines approximating $50,000 on charges of liquor law vio lations, probably will escape federnl prosecution, according to John Crolly, assistant prohibition enforcement officer. "So far," said Mr. Crolly, "Camden Cotiuty Prosecutor Wolvcrton has not submitted the evidence the Camden po lice collected ngulnst the men. It would be folly to bring them into tlie federal courfwlthout this evidence. The sa loonkeepers arc lucky to get off so lightly." Crolly would not comment on the re port that there has been a row between him and Prosecutor Wolverton. HOTEL BILLS UNPAID Young Cuban Says Cable for Funds Stllllc Unanswered Miguel Grandolis wns held in $500 ball by Magistrate Meclcary, in Centrnl Station this morning, charged with de frauding two hotels. (Sraiidolls is said to be of a wealthy Cuban family. Testimony at tlie hearing showed that Grandolis. who snys he comes from Havana, lived at one centrnl hotel for f,..,i,inii iinvu rimntni- un a board bill of $-15, which lie failed to pay. Ho then moved to another hotel, where he owed $30 when arrested Inst night. The Cuban nt the hearing said he ran out of money here nnd hail cabled to ins home for a remittance. He hns not re ceived an answer yet, he said. ; Gov. Sproul to Visit Penn 8tate ainf rniiepn. Ia Oct. 0, Gover nor Sproul will muke his first visit to the Pennsylvania State College Sat urday, when ho will be the guest of Penn State graduates assembled nt their first annual "Alumni Home-Coming Day" celebrntion. Tho Governor will attend the football game between Dartmouth nnd Penn State, nnd will spenk ot a smoker in the evening to the largest assemblage of State College graduates ever held. Sailor Is Slashed In Flaht on Ship r,llowine n nuurrel on board the I . H H. Gntllrle. a revenue cutter, anchored off Chestnut street wharf, last nii,t -wniter iimviiind. nineteen vcurs old. a snilor, wus painfully cut on the right arm bv a mess attcnuunt. now- laud wns taken to tho Pennsylvania I Hospital, where doctors worked 'for more tnun nn nour to stop me now ui blood and put twenty stitches in the arm. ii..,i..,H. 'Mi limit or llracrful Llnea and Blender Silhouette, rrenth Heal j J0 2;.:::::.::.:.o SiiTrr.,2r:: ::.::-:.joosi! ftaBBBBBBBBall M IB 'llanilnome Coat Hriiii of HI FURS 1 "Distinctively Different" 1227 Walnut Street H EiUMIabed Years . . 'EM ON PAER J. W. BEST WINS DIVORCE Philadelphia Man Is Granted Decree From Wife at Shore Resort .Tohn W. Eest, an attorney with offices in the PenTicld Building, has been granted n decree of divorce from Mary Pauline Rest, nt Atlantic City. Cus tody of their two children, a girl and a boy, was given tft tlie husband, wlth the wife retaining tlie right to visit them. Mrs. Best wns Mary Pauline Olmstead, of Washington, before hec marriage in mil. Mrs. Host stated in her defense that she had "owned up" to certain indiscre tions upon her husband's assurances thut "If I told the, truth he would bury the past." Hest is sixty-two years old nnd his wife is twenty-eight. Mrs. Hest had her husband arrested at tho shoro last summer on charges of assautt and battery nnd intent to kill. She staggered into the police sta tion one morning and swooned while telling n tale of brutal attack on her by her husband with a hammer. She was in u critical condition at the Atlantic City Hospital for weeks. Hest was tried at a criminal court in Mays Land ing and fould guilty. His attorneys listed, for clemency on account of his advanced age. .Tudgo Robert II, Inger soll fined him $1000. CLEVER THIEVES GET$1O,O0o One Hides In Store Till Closing. Roll Safe to Rear Chester. Oct. 0. Placinsr a 2000- pound safe on a truck in the wholesale xrm.rry ntuiv in. vntui vruiiu, uurginr.S rolled It to the rear of the building, burled it in flour bags, chiseled off the combination and took $10,000 in cur rency and some silver. A diamond lavalliere belonging to Miss Anna Fein ntcln, the bookkeeper, also was stolen. It appears that one of the robbers hid in the store until after it had been closed, and then admitted others who aided him in the job. Collections had been made by tho firm, which insured burglars a good haul. There was no evidence of the store having been broken into. The robbery was not discovered until tho nlaco was opened in the moralncr. "Where's the safe?" exclaimed Miss Kcinsteln. "I left it in tho corner last niirtit." 'J. no dookh ana mmem of the firm, with tho exception of checks, wero unuisturoeu , 1'crsonai unarges u l&tnsctis f 925-27 MARKET STREET Personal I Automatic START TO-DAY - To Introduce Our New Automatic Reduction Bargain Basement 2 I I I Every Day There Will Be Advance 20 REDUCTIONS On Certain Lines of New Merchandise Until Our Automatic Reductions Adjust Themselves. All Garments Must Sell Within 36 Selling Days After .12 selling days 20 will be reduced t After 18 selling days 40 will be reduced After 24 selling days 60 will be reduced After 30 selling days 80 will be reduced I Aftef 36 selling days garments will be given away. 3. . . . .. PAPER CLOTHING HI made whisky, it was testified at a hear- . ,, . , , Jlnjf before .Maglstrato l'rlce, In tho Suits on Exhibit at Chamber Of Twenty-second street und Hunting Park Commerce Cost 29 Cents and Up " ' testified thut Kasschra ran from the nVFRP.n&T ARF P.HEAP T0O.u",',0 nnd tl,rcw tlie (-,('11 f '" "till uvtnuuttja hhl oncar, iuu . to tlie trnf,1(H of the 1i,.nilHlvnnlu Philadelphia clothing nnd textile manufacturers arc looking over' the possibilities of, introducing paper cloth ing to the well-dressed populace of this city. They claim that while a snappy paper .suit may not be beat in the- long run, i certainly 'look o. k. for the first 100 yards. If paper sulti go on the local mar ket, you con get one nt twenty-nine cents mid up. Representatives of leading cloth and suit manufacturing concerns have been catling' at the Chamber of Commerce 1 today to inspect the sample collections ot paper clothing wlilcn iinve Just been imported by the government to show what the well-dressed Austrian and German are wearing or tearing thltf season. , The exhibit includes ,uItK. overcoats. (collars, suspender mid motor dusterH for men, nnd skirts, aprons, etc., for women. The clothing looks like it coarse grado of cloth and feels much the. same but for the fact that It is stlflvr tu the touch, The men's suits range in price from twenty-nine cents to S'J.-fO. Overcouts I set the Austrian back from $1 to $2 in real money, wnicli is tlie Kuropcan. way of saying American cash. One of the most serviceable suits for men nbout Vienna is a neat dark gray tweedy looking paper affair thnt Is mauo on the following bchedule 10 per cent papefj 40 per cent cotton with 20 per cent .unannounced. It is said that the Germans regard thcMS suits as mere scraps of paper, to ba torn up nnd thrown nwny at tho sllcrhtest occasion. Thi. milt are verv successful in suits are very successiui in ssss SKn,ss'srS' ... , ,, r. -i,- ...i SSSHSSl night extra clothes. The most daring pieces of the exhibi tion are the paper suspenders, which arc said sometimes to go bad in tho pinches. The suits arc mnue uy a speciut chemical process which makes them fairly practical except in the rain, r subway crushes. Little incidents like that have been known to turn a well dressed European into a tramp in sev eral minutes. HELD AS SALOON BANDIT Paroled Convict Accused of Taking $140 From Till Barney Fraln, twenty-eight jears old, no home, was nrrested this inorn- lnr ftinrmxl with belnc the bOlldit wllO held up nnd robbed the saloon of Stanley, Wnsakomis, nt aeconu auu iiuriou utrcptH. Inst Monday nicht. Fraln had a -hearing this morning ' before Magistrate Cownrd. in the Sev ' cnth and fnrpenter streew po ice sin - , tinn. nml was held wlthou r. duh lor court. We has been identified, accord ing to the police, ns tlto liold-up mnn. He was released from the Eastern Peni tentiary October 8, on parole. . On the night of the hold-up nn armed man entered tho saloon, backed the proprietor and four customers into a corner and took ,1-10 from the cash druwer. Young Republicans to eMet'Tonlght i .1m f !. v n,.MiMa' of Philadelphia will be held, ut the headquarters of the association, 217 South Brood street, this evening. The speakers will be Miss Lillian Howurd, of the Republican women's committee of Pennsylvanlo. Trevor T. Mnthcws, Esq. will speak on the League of Na tions and Judge John W. Jones, of In dinnn, will address the meeting on "Labor nnd Economic Issues of tho Campaign." " ',""'"""' "-...-"."", -.i-" "i THIS OFFICE EXECUTIVE DESIRES A HIGH-CALIBER CONNECTION A managing executive nc?ftuntjir ,n,i auditor who thoroughly understands e(nelnt bmlneas procedure, one quallrwd for comp trollarahlp an executive of a hlnhor order, doslrea.. position whero maximum capacity Iinyajcaiiy ana mentally and an ability to net thlna-a done In a big way will open up a greater opportunity. Hay I have an lit tea .vjvv t ' A 911. LEDOFJt, OFI1CK Charges Reductions ( I . r I STILL FOUND IN HOME i Man's Quarrel With Wife Results In Dlsqovery .Max MrtColloni, who cuiyluctD n boarding house nn Fulrhlll ntreet, uonr I Ontario, drove his wife inul two chil- dren from the home every time ho , iivcnue Hiutlou today, Mwollom bud Alko ICassebra were nrrvstcd at 1 :,'I0 o'clock this morning ' In the kitchi'u of tho' bonrdlng house by i'ntrolincn.Oella antl llureert. who ltaiiroad, wuero it was later recovered. They ulso testified they found three barrels ot mash and n cjunntlty of whisky at the house. Magistrate l'rlce held the men In JGOO ball tucli for n further hearing tomorrow. CASH REGISTER MEN HERE Twenty-slx Heads of Departments Visit City's Industrial Plants A delegation of twenty-six employes of the National Cniih Itrclntnr i'n. nt -Dayton, O.. today visited Philadelphia .ueuiuurB oi mo party called early tills morning at the Chamber of Commerce, where arrangements were made to visit several large industrial establishments, Tho pirty wns made up of heads nf departments who ore on n tour to a number of lnrge eastern plants for the purpose of studying labor and welfare conditions in thlH section. Thev were in New York yesterday, Phllad-lphla toduy nnd will bo in Washington' to morrow, returning the next day to Drfy ton. These men ar gathering data in ull parts of tho country, having re cently made a trip to Buffalo, Cleveland and Detroit;. GIRL FOUGHT IN STORE t, Woman Detective Has Bandaged Face, but 8ees Prisoner Held Olive Miller, of 241 .South N'lnth street, wns held in $1000 ball for further neurinp in a vcek by Magistrate Me clrnry this mornimr on n rhiiriw nf ulmn- llftlng in n Market street department store yesterday. Miss MeGovcrn. the lltnri-t rlntnttftl- M'liA nliitunHAjt n .!...- ",", "","' , "'''"'":" uk""- cii ami n uiiniiaceii nice nn n result, or ':1..Jii"j5i " -sstes srfe-a which Miss Miller threw uwav when the wns arrested. Neighbors Save Machines ' A fire on tln ronf nf n xtnhlf, lin- longing to M. ( Campbell, 2051-53 Almond street, caused damage- amount ing to SHOO this morning. The cause of the fire Is unknown. An iiiltomo I bile and a heurse belonging to Camp bell, who Is an undertaker, were in the building nt tho time. Neighbors sent in the alarm, drove the automobile ami pushed tho hearse into tho strdct. Deaths of a' Day CHARLES N. WILLIAMSON Popular Writer of Automobile Stories Dies at Bath, England Bath, England, Oct. 0. The death is nnnounced of C. N. Williamson, the n,,...!!;. Charles Xorris Williamson, journal ist and author, gained wide popularity as a writer of stories in which tho nntn. , hnobilo played a prominent part. Con jointly with his wire, Alice Murlul Willarason. ho wrote, among other tales: "The Lightning Conductor." "The Princess Passes." "My Friend .' I the Chauffeur." "Scarlet Runner" and "Tlie Motor Maid." .Mr. Williamson yns a scientist nnd engineer nud was fo.r .?W'L ?0':, on.-tIlc editorial staff nr tin llrflnh p. Ho nil il Rlioil "T hi Life of Thomas Carlyle" In two Vol umes in 1881. Mr. Williamson wns born in Livingston Manor House, ou tho Hudson river, near 1'oughkeepslc, x. y. K rrlfcaf "-Ti.fn fir v t y 3 S I A?dmXil9mljrVwB9!mi& av t ,im. lr-A - a al D I aVPH..ar f I' ' ' I IT i " a, ." aaX 4 2.iVXtTtT K Jl " TBL aV H I w ssBBSfa1-iir---U!5V"''VJ 'sm. mmSSBL9UnJ't(l 1 a- al aaBBBaaaiafaajijaMja- ,.. , aaa iffBHaBBBBBaaagaaaawgriat. a a 21 BJ aKaLlMirB9affHaVBHrr' xlMngVHaanrtflPVaSRiUM u ZWA taVagtf U JMrnm-.?' J 'JalalalalaWV: U. ' m-WIL VfT agTaalalaMalaaT 13 E BMlMnPlS.lfiPS.IH i I n mk&mimVmmWBmWWmm&P'31&&J!l9SmWLi&uE&KmW 3 M miataHXiiillHsPr 1 m w mm f 1 m 1 T A aT t (H H Atar m aW aW ST a M aW M ouy jovnes wisely g If I Buying Clothes is a N s ga c! ...... r l.l.M fj I judgment. But buj fll Good Clothes. No N lg 9 matter what price you H 21 pay, the price alone n i Fall and Winter Suits are doesn't prove economy RJ 1 priced $45 and upward. the longer t h'e Overcoats, "Slip-on" and Clothes serve, the N Cheeterfield models, $40 mre economical they Ml M WS .. . . . CH And wrar isii'r n mil. Ml m v uouoie-oreastea overcoats, -- ..... .. M , ulsters and ulstcrettes, ter oi cltance there s M 1. K $45 and upward. a definite way of put- 111 I ting it into Clqthcs R 1 B all-wool fabrics and U m ll skillful railnrinrr nm til f rj duce it. Our Cloth- fl ' f i"K s reliable -orrcct U ll and in approved taste, R n lAnnnn iRrif7.p.rilQ .gamo m f If ltByfT"ltW'iC.ini .- T -H, 11 . m n a.-cric-iiiiiu'vMcsitiriiiiittiSinpeev m " IM I MAY NAME SCHOOL HEAD NEXT WEEK " No Definite Decision Yet, Says Beeber, but Hint$ at Action Soon CONSIDER PHILADELPHIANS 1 y Ileports from the committee on super intendence of. the Board of Education nppointed to select n successor to Dr. John 1. Oarbcr, who resigns October 31, Indicate, that a selection nt the meeting of the board next week Is n possibility. Dlniner Beebor Indicated as much after a meeting of the committee yes terday. "While we arrived at no conclusions during the meeting, u'e shall hold an other In n day or two and may have something definite to say within a fchort tlinc We have been giving this innttcr much more careful consideration thnu many believe. While' we have, not had many formnl meetings, we have met ench other informally on n number of occasions and discussed men for the post. Wo have ulso made a great many Inquiries." It is the impression among members of the board that the committee will nrobnblv decide on n small number of educators whom they inny'find eligible I nuil available from which they will be asked tu make n.linnl choice. There urel no candidates lor tlie ouicc, members ut the committee say. but a large number of men have been considered for the place. Among those said to be receiving serious consideration are J. George Beoht, deputy state superintendent of public instruction; II. L-. Wilson, superintendent of schools of Berkeley, Cnlif; Fred Hunter, superintendent of schools of. Oakland, Calif. ; Itandall J. Condon, superintendent of schools of Cincinnati; Dr. Charles II. Cbudsey, former superintendent of schools of Chi cago ; Payson Smith, state commissioner of education, of Mnssachtibetts; Charles Li. Meek, superintendent of schools of Mndison, Wis. ; Robert L. Jones, of Cleveland, nnd E. C. Brown, of East Orange, N. J. It is believed thnt some members of the committee are supporting a "dark horse," one whose name hns not hither to been mentioned. It would not be al together surprising if a Phlliidclphlau were chosen. Dr. Frank P. Graves, dean of the School of Education of the I'niverslty 'fi !Pa4 Your Cal- lin. Ouv Hands When r make sale w fad we aaaume an obligation to deliver aatlafaction not merely a good car. We feel there "la an equal obllqatlon on the purcnaeer'e pott to bring hia car ln"regularly dur ing the flrat few month (or In spection and adjustment. We have found that giving a cou pon book for a definite amount of aervlce Inaurea both of ua against mleunderatandlnga la carrying out me agreement. GmtBeTHOMAS Distnrmrrons' oVjinfroa cahaktj TniJCJS BRISCOE KISBEb OG JV. BROAD S l7Jt & VWPwr-BHrJl mmtkmmmmmtmmmtmm aaafeMMSMSrSaSNMaaMrtWMaaSSaWeW i ; i BtW Br. BVILDlNdBREVtTlES The first euential of iati fictory construction ir an accurate eitlmtte of coitt. Every AOERTHAW estimate is baled" ori years of highly scientific cost records, cor rected to meet the condi tions likely to prevail in a given case. m f of Pcnnsylvnnin, nnd Dr. Cheesemnn A. Herrick, president of Glrnrd Collcg'ej formerly an official in tho city school system, who Is thoroughly familiar with Its workings, have been mentioned a important possibilities.' Some members of tho board have ex pressed n preference for n school head to bo selected out of the educational system of the city. Dr. George Wheoler, Dr. Oliver P. Cornman and Dr. Louis Nusbnum, nssocintc superintendents in the city, have all been mentioned. I MAKING A HIT AT $50 w e nave maae such advantageous purchases in wool ens and trimmings and introduced such sound econ omies in produc ing our outp'ut without impairing tlie input that by actual comparison they eclipse any thing you can buy elsewhere, at $50 because the woojens are finer, tne sieeve, tne blade, and seam trimmings choic er, the workman ship more exqui site, and the style more elevated in tone, than can be produced at $50, except under the first-hand manu facturing contact maintained bv Perry's! FALL SUITS $35 to $95 OVERCOATS $35 to $100 PERRY &. CO. 16th &. Chestnut Sta. I iwunrrmnTi miingangixittiwBMini ! aw. wm -agacy-a m. vm ABERTHAWl CONSTRUCTION COMPANY! PHILADELPHIA WEST END TRUST 1 ! mi i y frJ AN EFFICIENT WOMAN wants new connection copjr writer or correapondenti exprrlenccdt lnltln tlr, Trraatlllty. Well luturmed. Good urganizer. 11 306', LlSllGIill ori'icr. The healthy man docsiVf have any age. He's as old as he feels, and he feels young. Feel old? Come, sec us. Let us give you a demon stration treatment. COLLINS INSTITUTE OF PHYSICAL CULTURE COLMNH IlLDa.. WALJJUT ST. AT 151K Public Speaking Can you get your message across at business meetings or club gathjr inga ? Do you speak with confidy or aro you nervous when calleJ to speak in publia? The CarnC ' course in public speaking, to be 0 .-a uy ua tnis tan, will give you real training in speakinir to crrouns al men. You are invited to the openifHT night, Thursday, October 7, at 8 o'clock. Particulars of the course pn r' quest. , Central Building i421 Areh'Stre ,. jW & V W3 Si :'A- ft SI ft rSI r v.'-4 h r & 1 i l 13 tQ --s M u ( a 1 I a Taaaaal ' V. ' ' , K '. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers