w o I '!!)' .1 A' I W ;w w JU " htf IA5" .i IvV re fe V rr, mi S ifJ . tt (m EVENING PUBLIC EDGEK-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY,, OCTOBER '12, 1920 MANY SUP FERERS ! FLOCKTOHEALER Father Hathaway, of Norrl3- town, Opens Mission in St. John's Episcopal Church SOME ARE DISAPPOINTED University Activities Scheduled at Penn Today 10:30 it. m. Senior election com mence. Ilmiitoii Hall. 12:110 p. m. Sophomore tluei rommittoo meet., Houston Hall. 7 '.15 p. m. -Pienton Club oi (Mill zation meeting. Houston Hall. K At West -100 persons. Including the . Wind, dfof. dumb and Inrae, flocked to Bt. John's Episcopal Church, German town Avenue and Sejtnour streets, last JilRht, to be healed bv faith In the prajrers of the Rev. Harry St. Clair Hathaway. Toe Itev. Mr. Hathawaj. rector of Bt. John's Church. Norrlstown. has opened the first hcallnu mislon lu the history of the Pennsylvania diocese of the Kplscopat Church. Many of the Miffcreri were disap pointed when the Rev. Mr. Hathaway did not heal them at once. Actual prarlnir and the laying on of hands wjll be. besun by the faith henler to morrow night. Pathcr Hathaway said , he desired to weed out the careless, the experimental and the curious. o that tily those with the requisite faith re- I ttalned. In his lecture Father Hathawav, like I Jame Moore HlcIon. lajman-liea'er f the Church of niiRland. emphasized ' tnat whatever heallnR power he might ' xerclse would not be his. but OoilV. Even as Mr. Hicksou. he likened him- ' elf unto a "pipe through nliicli flows I th water of llfc." "The healer," he ..nid. "is he v,ho Jinngs unto the sufferer the virtue of ? V"tIir lir," of ,hp ,if, nioro "bu" I ii llsp n dangerous term In nn ntircly new nay. he is God's medium. ij . ,maS'ne even an unworthy indi vidual belli ued for this divine pur pose. There Is almost nothing personal in It. Do. therefore, not look unon the Channel of the healing grace as different from the rest of frail hutminitv. I need t your prayers." Father Hathftum declared thnt sirk-a-rs, no more than siu, was the will of Cod. It vns the work of the derll. he aid. He quoted the vventj ix pas Mges of the nible referring to the heal ings of Christ and pointed out that in almost eaih one of them mention wns 'made of "greHt multitudes" that were 'citrcd. lu that connection, he emplia Ired that the Saviour charged lib disciples to continue that work EilG TOE HELD WORTH $800 Camdon Jury Awards That Sum 10 Boy Injured In Trolley Craah A Camden Circuit Court jury has' placed n value on a man's big toe. George TI. Tomllnson. Jr.. of 2fl)(!i Carman street, in a suit against the, .Public Service Railway Co.. averred Tnnt tnc ligaments controlling the ai- "pern or the toe were destroyed when i he. was injured, on Maj i.'2 Inst, in n I common Deiween two trolley cars on i ae iiemcnion line. J no (HFIluiru IOP was (XDJtUtCU ill)! wn " miow nisi us owner nnu no control over 11. tie was awarded .fROO. and n like sum was given to his father lor loss or services. MAYOR T0PRESIDE Accepts Invitation to Head Board at Olympic Banquet Mavor Moore hns ncrepted the Invi tation extended to him bv the l'hlla delphin Welcome Home Oljmplc iom nilttee, nnd will preside at the banquet on Thnrsdnv night at the Itellevue Stratford Hotel. Prior to the banquet n parade will form on the Parkway composed of mem bors of various athletic nsoselntlotis and other orcnnlratlons. The chairman of the parade eominltteo Is (hailc-l II FLAG 10 BE GIVEN T0LEGI0N POST Presentation to Bo at Stato Fencibles Armory Thurs day Evoning State Fencibles Post 142 will be the recipient of a silk American (lag. which will be presented to them Thursday eve ning lu the Fencibles Armory by the Old Guard. City of Philadelphia, an organization composed of veterans of previous wars. Walter C Rhoadcs commander of the post, will accept the Mag on behalf of the State Fonclblo I.eglonaires. The presentation speech win lie mane by .Judge John M. rat- the Old Guard, City of Philadelphia; Old Guard, 8tate Fencibles, nnd their lady auxiliaries: Logan Post. No. 370, and I'ost No. BO. Yeomen (f), Ameri can Legion, nnd board of officers, State Fencibles llattallou, Sixth llcslmeut, P. N. G. Logan post has volunteered Its or chestra to furnish tho music. The flag committee of the Old Guard, City of Phllodclphla, is composed of Colonel 3. P. Ross, Lieutenant Colonel Henry R. Ralguel, Jr., Major Harry Ij. Brewster nnd Adjutant John 13. Pepper. The entertainment committee Includes Andrew J. Shlckllng, Jr., Charles Dutkln and Gilbert Lieber. Tho William T. Shetrllne Post 08 icalUcd $.100 from n carnival held nt Fiont and Porter streets. This post meets In tho library at Broad nnd mi nor streets on first and third Thursdays, the commander being William L. Jen kins. Its present paid-up membership exceed 1000. The new home of the Joseph Faussct llellak Post No. 105, of which William II. Creamer. Jr.. Is commander, will be dedicated October 21. Mayor Moore JEALOUS OF VOICE HE KILLS HIMSELF Man Rushes to Kitchen and Uso3 Knife When Girl Cet3 Tolephono Call Orakiilow. exnlted ruler of Philadelphia 1 terson. . and a number of prominent officials will lodge of I'lks. ' Among the orcnnlratlons Invited nre lie invited to be present. Greatest Blanket Sale Ever Held in the United States! 3,000,000 Blankets Have Been Bought From the U. S. Government Part of the Purchase Has Been Allotted to Philadelphia Will be Sold Direct to the Public at a Saving of 50 to 75 on tlie Regular Cost For the convenience of everyone in PhiladclpKia Stores Will Be Opened in Every Section of the City SI "D ,' HT WEDNESDAY ale JDegms 1 omorrow October i3tk for a LIMITED TIME. Find the store in your locality and come early to pick your choice and avoid the rush. No Phone Orders. No Deliveries. Not more than six blankets sold to one customer. Angered when the girl upon whom ho was i-niiintr received u telephone call from another man, Keymour Ulan, twenty. six years old, 00!) South Fifty sixth street, stabbed himself with n butcher knife, the police say, Inflicting n wound of which ho died later. The ulrl. Miss Ethel AnrluW. 2.VJ South Sixtieth street, explained Un niltrtA Intnl. flint tliAFA tns llO rCS son for Ulan's Insane Jealousy, as the telephone call wni from n male cousin of hers, Ulau had spent tho cany cvenlnjt with Miss Aiirltsiiy. The. teiepiiono cu i raiu about 10 o'clock. He stood beside her when she nnswered and when he henrd a man's voice ran Into the kitchen, utoc, Aurliolv rnllnwnl him. and fniiml him ntnnillntr with the butcher knife, which ho found In n dresser drawer, in his hand. She tried to grab his nrm when he raised it piepuroior in htntihtni? himself. Tin rlmlireil her rush, however, fllld tnnlr flin lionvtr MmTn llllll Ilia left CllCSt, Just tindtr the heart. The girl "in to Ik. f.... urnnnilnir I'll! rnlttinll 1 It?.- imirielf. f hn Flftv-fifth and I'lno 6treets ntntlon, answered her nlaim and sent the wounded man to mc jiimti co nil a Hospital. . iir.rA ),n ,iiml rtliin reenvered con enlnnoiK-ss ntul freed tho clrl from nil blame. MUs Aurltsky was nt Ills bed to t'ldo at the time. , n one tusiuiiici. u 9 At Any of These Stores IB 5839 GERMANTOWN AVE. 1118 NORTH 40th ST. Z5Z4 ftfi31bIU AVE. IISI lULUfflBIA AVt. I 1131 WHARTON ST. 2522 DAUPHIN ST. I 1618 SOUTH ST. 1636 RIDGE AVE. j i a iiiimr.n .ii ivibs m ir i m h mw tA,u.m w. JlUtJ 11. O-AOl UI, a ii rt . nurn .d hx lfi'Hiiiu twvii nvu m m xj.tr vj vvwi i. JtJUJ IJ UVAJLinill I I Id. H a .-. icEz.t.)i .r. i .vi i vi i-ii m U I 'vmmaa'E''mC!xammMsma sllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiilllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllli lMlHllllllllllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllii: $175 FOR AN IDEA! READ THIS CAREFULLY Gold Glass Etched and Plain Borders Vases, Bowls, Compotes, Pitchers, Cracker and Cheese Dishes, Sand wich Trays, Butter Bali Dishes, Ciga rctto Boxes, Night Sets, Bon Don Dishes, Salnd Bowls and Stands. A gift of quality, distinctive, beautiful. Wrigfht, Tyndale van Roden, Inc. Reputed the Lnrgcst Distributors of High Grado Dlnncrware 1212 Chestnut Street WOMAN HIT BY TRAIN DIES Haste to Get Tickets Called Cause of Tragedy Mix Annie Mornn, llfty-llvo jenrs old, 051(1 Morton street, died in tho flormantown Hospital jestcrday from Injuries tceelved when she was struck by a train nt tho C'hcltcn nventto sta tion of tho Philadelphia and Heading Itnilnay. i Mornn was. sccotnDstiieTr'1 harles .7. MebartlmihTU; ...,., fPl. L.." "K bill Mies Mrs. C f-UM1M. to buy tickets. 'The safety niS't lowered. In n hurry to get ths tl.V" nnd catch the train, MIssTiloran'.iu'11. tinder tho. gates, according i , EW nesscs. Hhe ran across the iriit, " ...nn utntnlr hv 1A I..U .. i . .ucf till was struck by tho troln and lio train. ,mi. . ""J her against n fence at the .u.'l tracks. A fractured Rfcnii .."" "I cause of the death. wa tie Hints for Heating Save Coal Be Comfortable Buy a rub or oil heater for uso theso chilly mornings and eve nings. Save coal until tho sovcro weather nrrlvos. Plenty of heat when and where it is needed. Cost VA to 3 cents per hour. Headquarters for Gas Ranges all types Kitchen Cabinets, Refrigerators, Hot Water Heaters, Complete Ail Gas Kitchens. Holnrdn FlrrpUte Una lledtrr IMI "0,sr.toifisftM nT l.awion (las Heater Odorlr At Our Three Stores Gas Heaters fflWJk .."iirlrr Oil Hrnttr QnUtr H.l.relo (2 tipes. flrepl.te anil tiortnbte.) , , , , I.nnon OdorleM) (compart, unlaue nna n.i.. ,,.r..u..f t -. ., K anillT lientcwr. vciirvr- Copper llneu. I.nwimn A lunll.tr , lul.) Oil Heaters nbe;tr.,Il,7eVLsrl!3e.;, wtu Klsln IIa Mlllrr llumer,) AlilJoltiTpn,tnl " ,ronl' MTn ' JPHIUDELPHI ?ASRANGC vCO. Three Storei Cenlra! N L Cr" 13th & Arh Sli. Central 1026 Afch Sf Wcit Pha 263 South 52d Si. Wt PMlt. Store Open Mon., Fri. & Sit. Ett. S X WE ARE OFFERING $175 FOR SUGGESTIONS CONCERNING ADVERTISING D. W. GRIFFITH'S "WAY DOWN EAST." This production has received the greatest newspaper notices ever accorded any photoplay. Audiences applaud wildly, and sometimes shout themselves hoarse. Crowds flock everywhere the play is shown. Nevertheless, it is necessary that every human being throughoout the world be told about this. You would not know about the great heroes battling at Troy, or in Greece, but for Homer telling you about it. Wc must tell the people of the world Italy, Scan dinavia, from Japan to Australia, through every hamlet in these United States, about "Way Down East." Wc find it most difficult to decide what to tell them. They say such wonderful things about it; that is the trouble TOO MANY WONDERFUL THINGS. We must select only two or three things to talk about in our advertising, as space in a newspaper is very expensive. We try to tell by the APPLAUSE, but they applaud A LITTLE WHITE KITTEN going to sleep on the con stable's front porch. They always GASP and then applaud the tense HEART-STRAINING scene when Anna Moore accident ally meets the man who wrecked her life. But they applaud JUST AS LOUDLY when the sleighing party goes jingling by in a gust of wholesome revelry. The audiences here in Philadelphia applaud and sometimes stand up and cheer when the girl is snatched from death on the roaring ice floe, which, as one New York critic oaid, is "the greatest spectacle ever seen on sea or land." (N. Y. Globe, Sept. 4.) So, you see, we cannot judge BY APPLAUSE alone. Just what, then, shall we tell them about? Ministers and moralists have proclaimed u THE GREATEST MORAL LESSON ever published. It drives home the lesson that we must have the same kind of moral life FOR MEN as FOR WOMEN. SHALL WE TELL THEM THIS? Or is it the wonderful, uplifting unselfishness of a woman's soul told in the trtory of Anna Moore. Anna's betrayal by Sanderson, her upward ascent through the ONE GREAT LOVE with David, the farmer boy? Or that sweetest and tenderest love story ever told, the warmest and deepest passions of which human lives are capable; the yearning of tremendous unsatisfied desires? Or is it the COMEDY? The jingling sleigh bells, the rollicking barn dances, the Rabclaisan horseplay, the heart of the old New England s'cenes through the beautiful side of an old New Hampshire household? Or shall we tell of its SUBLIME BEAUTY paint ings which the art critics say "are fit to be hung on the walls of any art gallery?" Or is it the great BALLROOM SCENE, in which real society leaders, gowned in magnificent clothes from New York, Paris and the queen cities of the world, act their parts just as they live them in New York's exclusive homes? Or those splashes of MAD LIFE in Sanderson's "apartments" the lair of the old Polygamous ideal, where those beautiful women practiced the old lures and fascinations of the Babylonian tempters? (For this scene the stage beauties who never leave New York; the petted, pampered darlings of the great city, were secured. Those whom you have read about, the dashing girls of the Follies, the Roof Shows, the Beauty Palaces; the artists' models.) So we have decided TO LEAVE IT TO YOU, THE PUBLIC, to decide. What is the single feature of "WAY DOWN EAST" that STANDS OUT in your memory MOST FORCIBLY? We will give One hundred and Seventy-five Dollars CASH for the three best suggestions for an advertise ment pointing out the drawing value of Mr. Griffith's great production. We want YOU to give not only YOUR OWN opinion, but what you believe is the UNIVERSAL opinion. This you can only get by consulting ALL CLASSES of people which go to make up LIFE. The matter of expressing the idea is not important. The less you know about the theatre and advertising, the better your suggestion is apt to be. In writing your opinion, use one side of the paper only. Do not write more than TWO HUNDRED WORDS. It is not an ARTICLE or ESSAY we want just YOUR OPINION, your IDEA on advertising "WAY DOWN EAST." The prizes will be distributed through the hands of Mr. Whittaker Ray, manager of the CHESTNUT STREET OPERA HOUSE. Send your suggestions to Mr. Ray. Of course, you need no assurance of our sincerity. First prize, $100. Second prize, $50. Third prize, $25. Contest closes at midnight, Monday, November 1st) (Signed) JAMES M. ASHCRAFT, Advertising Representative, D. W. GRIFFITH'S "WAY DOWN EAST." NOTE Owing to cost, length of production and ironbound contracts, this production never can be shown at less than first-class theatre prices. Because of POPULAR DEMAND, "Way Down East" will remain at the Chestnut Street Opera House for TWO ADDITIONAL WEEKS. To avoid disappointment, order your seats in advance, for all seats are reserved. Mt II 22 ill eg ssa''"'"i,"'''fS?sy rr1 Will YOU Profit by the Experience of the Goodrich Rubber Company? The Goodrich Rubber Company of Kansas City, Mo. is now using 23 Dictaphones in its various departments. The records of this company show that since the installation of The Dictaphone there has been a 25 increase in speed and a 32 increase in volume of correspondence handled. Whether your office is large or small, we are ready to give you a working demonstration of The Dictaphone on a defi nite basis of increased output that means less cost per letter. Write, wire, or phone for a working demonstration today. THE Reg, V, $, rn. Off. tn4 Foreltn district The Shortest Route to the Mail-Chutc " BtitaXk. 3l Deere & Webber, Minneapolis, say: "Generally speaking, we find that operators transcribing from ThaJDictaphone can get out 20 to 23 J3 fo more letters in a day than when they were obliged to take shorthand notes and transcribe from the same." Western Union Telegraph Company. J. H. Willever, Vice-President in charge of Commercial Dept, says: "The Dictaphone is in extensive use in our various depart ments and is giving good satisfaction. After The Dictaphone was tried out experiment ally in the first instance, a short experience showed it to be a time-and-money saver. Our use of The Dictaphone has grown steadily." . Albert Pick & Company, Chicago, 111. Mr. Albert Pick, Jr., says: " Wc are using 55 Dictaphones in our Adjustment, Sales, and Purchasing Departments. The grati fying results that we have secured from these machines can be ascribed to the in creased speed with which our correspon dence is handled and to the convenience of being able to dictate at any time." Hamilton Watch Company, Lancaster, Pa,, says: "We believe that we were the first manufacturing concern in our city to use The Dictaphone. Our experience with The Dictaphone has been most satisfactory. It is a time-saver indeed." ' Phone or write for convincing demonstration in THE DICTAPHONE, Phone Kel " Allentown your office, on your work f 11 " M.in 2700 (Kcy'.ton.") LaU at 4U-5U No. S xth Street. Philadelpnw Offices also located in the following cities Wilmington HarmburK Tr,inn .Rcadini There is but one Dictaphone, trade-marked "The Dictaphone," made and merchandised by the Columbia jGraphophone Co. 'Li. . . . fi IHIIHNiyiUHJIIlrUMHIl nam r iwHHwmmmiMiwiiiB . 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers