Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, December 10, 1920, Night Extra, Page 4, Image 4

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II PLAN TO SEND COA
'
EVENING UBLIO IiEDHER-PHllABELPHlA, FKIIAY, DECEMBER 10,1920
L
TO N. Y. IN PIPE LINE
Water Pressure Proposed te
Propel Fuel Frem Penna.
Anthracite Region
Ujr tiie Associated Prr
New Yerk, Dec. tO A project te
brine coal from the anthracite regions l
in Pennsylvania into this Htv t'-rmsgh '
Vke feurteen-inr'n pip, bv water Tin h- I
sure, win given consideration tnc!n by
the city decks nnd hnlth mi"'. wen
re. I
The plan w.is submitted te Mayer
Ilyan by Reginald P. itelti.n. a mnm
ber of the" American SeeieH .f Mp
chanlcnl Engineers, which he'd the i les ,
ine session tedn of Its forty -llrsf an
nual convention. TIip miner un Im
tcrcted in flip idea and referred it te
the two commissioner, with n request
te mnkp recommendations as seen nn
possible.
Mr. Ilolten explained that between
thin city and Scrnnten. Pn.. thorp is n
fall in elevation of nbetit 2000 fpet and
that It would be ok easy te transport
coal In thin fashion a watpr. He
clatmpd 7.000.000 tens of renl could be
brought through the pipe every jenr,
which would amply supply the city's
needs.
. The engineers en the closing day of
their convention held three simultaneous
sessions of the power, design and ter -tile
sections.
SHRINE TO BUILD HOSPITAL
EX-JUSTICE HUGHES
GALLED 0 MA ON
President-Elect and Possible
Premier Confer en Policies
of Next Administration
HOOVER COMING TOMORROW
Dr. OCTOWO IlKKCUK
Newly appointed minister from
Cesta IUca. Dr. Iteeche Is the
first diplomatic if preventative te
the I'nlted Slates from Cesta Itlc.t
since the Tlnnce rrvelutinn nnd the
refusal of the I'nlteil States te
recefinlze flip new geernnifiit
Guardsmen In Reunion Tonight
The Infantry Cerps, National
Ciunnl, during the world war the lOth
FirM Vrtil'"i and new the .Second
I'PMisjlvniiiii Field Artlllerj. will oh eh
serve its annual reunion tonight in the
ftrinery m Ilieud Kireet near Diamond,
I The old suard. in inmiiiatid of Majer
$1,000,000 Institution Here Will Jehn T. Hiiches. mil paiade and hp
Hil rrlnnUH rt,iM,, , reviewed by Celeni I William A. Marcli
V, Crippled Children !auery C. Captain lMwnrd Hubhx.
,.. --- -. - , .-- ,', ,jji trv iituL'iiu iii'.i nv.iiii
tniiureii goon will lie nn nrruaury.
Krery Shriner throusheut North Amer
ica hat been uwpised S2. nnd thp
money will be used te establish such
an institution ns neon as it i possible
tft afwvilt-n lnn.1 n.irl tiynnt f.t,ll.lltifu
Tliere are alwut l.'iO.OOO meinhern of.
the organization, nnd nrarlv SI, 000.
000 will be nvailabV. Pl.ilade'phla ha
14,000 members. The fiwwment ha
been made payable witli the yearl i
dUPN.
W. Freeland Kendrich, head of tin j
Pliiladplphla Shrine. i.s enthusiastk
eyer the success of the movement. "We
plan te carry it en each year." he
said yesteniav. "That will cive us
enough money te erect a new hospital
every year. 'Hach will be in a differ
ent section of the country, nnd it is
quite probable the first will be in Chi
cago. II'., or in Rochester, Minn., for
at the latter city we can liave the
services of the famous Dr. Maje."
Hv the Associated Press
' Marien, O., Dec. 10. Heslnnlti(t his
premised consultation with leading
I figures of the nation. Prpsldent-p'prt
Harding had an appointment today
with CharVs P.vnns Hughes, Iteiiubll-
mm ,.Af.tn.ilnl nmnlnitrt In 1010. tO
talk ever policies and pronesnls of the
1 coming administration. Although it was
. understood that the plan for nn nssecia
.tien of nations had prominent place in
the conference, the coming of Mr.
Hnghps was gpnerally regarded as hav-
inn tn tn n1n Itli vnrleus ether nreb-
Mrms before the President-elect. Mnnj
times recently his name had been sug
icested for a cabinet position, nnd the
! fact that he was the first te be Invited
' te the consultations here was taken te
I mean that Mr. Harding might drslre lis
I advice In the framing of mere than one
j feature of his administration program.
Mr. Hughes' visit was unannounced.
I the President-elect having adopted n
I practice of keeping the names of his
conferees confidential until the day of
' their arrival here. It was said that
his headquarters probably would make
11 ?,
THE
COLUMBIA
GRAF ON OLA
iViiiler Piane Stores
607-609 S. 2d St.
OPKN KVKMSnt
:v.x:r.:y,sXi-,-,,'.'.v.., .
Men's gloves
that have the
very spirit of j
this Christmas j
Hecause this Is te be a
Christmas for the giving
of practical cifts.
Sturdy, stylish und well
made throughout All
the latest shades and
styles for men.
$3.50 te $5
1204 Chestnut St. US. 15th St.
1119-21 Market St.
t
cae5 .7rijten(3.
imvft& UtteA&Lut &&eet.
A Sale of IVemens and Misses' Dresses at
$25.00
Net One in the Let Werth Less Than $40.00, and Many
Would Sell Regularly for $45.00 and $50.00
WPpHE demoralized condition of the manufacturing and wholesale
markets makes possible many exceptional values these days,
and this is one of them. An average of a little mere than half
price for Women's and Misses' Street and Afternoon Dresses of the
most desirable type. Dresses of taffeta, satin crepe, embroidered
tricelette, beaded georgette, crepe c!e chine, crepe meteor, tricetine;
only one or two of a kind; sizes from 1 6 misses' te 42 bust measure
women's. If you are loekincr for a reallv poed Freck at a very low
nrice. b sure te see these. Every one is fresh and new. Best selec
tion will pe, of course, te early shoppers.
Make Darlington's Your Christmas Stere for
Furniture
Lamps
Furs
Waists
Silks
Silk Underwear
Gloves
Perfumes
Toys
Negligees
Petticoats
Lingerie
Hosiery
Sweaters
Leather Goods
Objects d'Art
Infants' Goods
Linens
Sewing Novelties
Handkerchiefs
Scarfs
Umbrellas
Jewelry
Bags
We hctve a cheerful, well-lighted store with spacious aisles; well selected stocks
of geed and artistic merchandise; prompt, courteous service. Darlington's has been a
favorite Christmas store with Philadelphinns for mere than three-quarters of a century.
.iiiUiic no Hat of future cal.ers. Several
of these names already have been learned
from ether (sources, however, and it I
understood that his next conference will
he with Herbert Hoever. Mendny pre
viously had been fixed for Mr. Hoever's
all, but he Is new expected here tomor
row, Ily making Mr. Hughes the first te be
consulted here about the association of
nations plan, Mr, Herding has begun
his "meeting of minds" by summoning
n lender from the rservatlenist wing
of his party. During the league fight,
Mr. Huglips proposed ncveral reserva
tions te the ppaec treaty dealing with
Article X, withdrawal nnd ether sub
jects. In the midst of the cnmpnlgn just
hm-d, Mr. Hughes was one of these
with whom Mr. Harding talked, and in
u day they spent together here In Sep
tember the league Is understood te have
been one of the principal subjects of
onsultatlen.
PLAN 0 EXEMP
I
CLEAN
ING J
OB
Civil Service Commission te
Held Public Hearings en Re-
quests December 20
CITY BEGINS WORK JAN. 1
The Civil Service Commission en De
cember 20 will held n public hearing
en requests (e exempt from civil service
many positions In the municipal street
cleaning and garbage reduction forces.
On January 1 the city will begin tit-
.Ar 1a) nliinnlni nrwl i Im fnl I Pf1 11(111
of ashes and rubbish in the nrea bounded
' bv C'elumbln avenue, w nsiungien nvc-
nue nnd the Delaware nnd Schuylkill
rivers.
The mete te exempt tnc municipal
street cleaners from civil service regu
lations Is the first step Injmlldhig up
a force te replace the workers formerly
employed by contractors.
At the public hearing, te begin at 11
a. m., consideration will be given te
reipiests covering the following posi
tions in the strcet-clcnnlng ferce:
1 Srec district superintendents at S!W0
a month, three stnble bosses at $107. eO
a month, seven foremen at $107.00 n
month, twenty -eight subfercmen at
$125 a month, 200 drivers at $1 n day.
inn i.tneV men nt $3.30 a day. 0f0 la
borers at ?4 a day, thrce timekeepers at
$25 n month, five clerks nt $125 e
month, two stenographers at ,100 a
month, five machinists nt $0 n day. five
1.1--1 l.l... ., CO .. .lav tlirnft Wheel-
UiaCKnUllMin III V" 'iJ ;'-- -
wrlghts nt $(l a day, three hamessmak
ers at ?I n day, two painters at $5 a
day.
Positions nt the garbage reduction
works desired In the exempt class fol fel fol
eow: One superintendent nt 5100 n inenth.
one csslstnnt superintendent nt $2.i0 n
month, one terernnn nt $107.50 n month,
ttve subferenien nt $125 it month, three
steam engineers nt $150 n month, seven
firemen nt $125 a month, one foreman
machinist at $7 a day, five mcchnnlcs
at $0 a day, one timekeeper nt $1. a
month, one utenegrnphpr at $101) a
month, nine operators at $5 a day,
eight laborers at fifty -five cents nn
hour, two laborers at fifty cents a
hour, twenty-two laborers at forty-fl
cents nn hour. MI
live long and
dc nappy
He svre te read
Never
Grew
Old .
By I. H.Ceixtat
i
ff
afefimeMm 8v&u Sex
s iv '.'.iv.y .v.'wr mLmnk !mm jmmimyj
l.- UlL,trV .. iM.&W T TrMTP" 333&flH
yinci7 '-jV'T.'-j ' mm f&r&r- ::$ miiiMc-:
wnwm k fir- m.9imr ?? i
QUALITY
Candy Quality and
Individual Taste
However fine in qual
ity a box of candy may
be, it must appeal te
your taste, else you will
say it is net geed!
The candy you like
best is the best candy.
Yeu find the kind of
candy you like by trying
various kinds.
V e u find out the
quality of the candy you
like by comparing with
ether candies sold at
about the same price.
Comparison tells the
story.
United Quality speaks
for itself when compared.
It lives by compari
son. It gains by compari
son. It thrives by compari
son. It proves by comparison.
12th and
Chestnut Sts.
swjy
Wft1-
w
Christmas Candy
Happiness
A box of fine Candies from the Happiness Stores
what could be mere appropriate? Asserted
Chocolates are most in favor at this season.
Rosemary Chocolates
One, two, three nnd five pound boxes. Compare wit
the usual $2.00 kind. A. POUND
$150
ith
Vogue Chocolates
One nnd two pound boxes. Compare with the usual
$1.50 kind. a POUND
$25r
Evangeline Chocolates $1
One, two, three nnd five pound boxes. Compare with
tK usual $1.25 kind. A POUND
Club Chocolates
80c
One, two, three and five pound boxes. Compare with
the umal $1.00 kind. A POUND
Arcade Chocolates
65c
One, two, three and five pound boxes. Compare with
the usual 80c kind. A POUND
Jersey Milk Chocolates
89c
One nnd two pound boxes. Compare with the $1.00
.Hid $1.25 kind. A POUND
Heme Made Assortment
A two-pound box, containing u selection of our choicest
"Heme-Made Confections. 2 POUNDS
$40
Milk Chocolate Covered Nut
Meats, Asserted
pne and two pound boxes extra fine.
$50
A POUND
Bitter Chocolate Butter
Creams
An original creation for thene who like u bitter choc
date best.
75c
A POUND
Menthe Variete
A wonderful assortment of mint candies. Various mint
flavors in asserted shapes and sizes. Just the thins for
after dinner. A POUND
94c
Pecan Nougat Leaf
Q7
Delicious neucat with a liberal coating of dimrv 0 V
curumel thickly covered with whole pecan nut meats. A POUND
Viennese Crystal Mixed
Our finest assortment of hard filess cmidie;. r T
Pure sugar, fruit-flavored S.ttutettes, Butter Cups, m
Dainties, Chocolate Straws nnd Stuffed Confections. Packed A POUND
in decorated tin box.
Milk Chocolate Pecan Rolls QQr
A center of the finest neuffnt, sureunded by selected "
pecans nnd covered with rich milk chocolate.
A POUND
SPECIALLY FOR YOUNGSTERS
PURE SUGAR HARD CANDIES
STICK CANDIES AND MOLASSES CANDIES, NUT CANDIFS
OF ALL KINDS, MINTS AND EVERYTHING YOU CAN
IMAGINE :: :: :: ,. prn Pi-iiiKm
50c 60c 70c
80c
SERVICE
In and out in half the
time! Ne waiting no
congestion.
Ne frills, no waste, no
useless handling.
Candy is delicate and
sensitive. Its original
purity and freshness is
best preserved by being
packed and sealed at the
candymakcr's tabic.
United Candy comes
te you fresh and pro
tected from exposure
and useless handling.
Prices are small be
cause the economies of
direct handling are
large.
The United C a n d y
Idea:
Better candy for the
money.
Served in better store..
Served in a b e 1 1 e r
manner.
The finest qualitv et
pure feed products com
bined into delicious con
fections and sen ed fresh
without lest motion,
waste or needless ex
pense. 12th and
Chestnut Sts.
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