Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, March 21, 1921, NIGHT EXTRA, Page 8, Image 8

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Wm LEGION FINISHES
Illll BIG MEETING PLAN
EVENING PUBLIC) LEDGBBv-PHIEADBIiPHIA, MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1921
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Arrangomont9 Made for Over-
flow From Patrlotlo Gatliorlnff
at Metropolitan, April 7
PERSHING TO BE SPEAKER
Arranifpmpnts vrllt have to be mni
for overflow inectlnc to orrommodiite
the expected rrcord nttondnnre nt the
nil American
tnim mcetlne In
the Sletrojiolltnn
Opera IIouho on
April 7. This dnte
linn been flnnlly
decided on, nftor
two tontativc
clinnnc", 08 the
doto for tho bt(t
rally under the
uitplces of the American Legion to
combat the spread of seditious foreign
propaganda in this country.
Committees from forty -five patriotic
and -"Ivk' organizations of this city are
co-operating to make the meeting ague
cefcs and foster the movement of pa
triotic American demonstrations in
other cities of the country. Judge J.
"Willis Martin, chairman of the Phila
delphia Council of National Defense
anil Public Safety, js chairman of the
committee in charge of committee,
(leneral .Inhn J. Pershing and Col
onel Frederick AV. Unlbrnltit, notional
commander of the American Legion,
have accepted Invitations to addrcpnthc
meeting.
Third Division Pictures
Motion pictures of the Third DlvlMon
In all Its actions along the Marne front
in 1II17-1II18 will be shown at the
Grand Fraternity, 1020 Arch street,
next Saturduy evening. The pictures
are official Array Signal Corps reels and
will be shown under the atiplcc. of
the Society of the Third Division, Post
No. 8. They cover the division s ac
tivities In France and Germany until Its
return to the United States.
Tii cony Post, No. 13H, is planning n
bazaar for tho first two weeks In April,
tnkintt place simultaneously with a nost
membership drive. A largo pnlil-up
percentage of last year's membership
has already been announced.
The monument committee of the
Twenty-flrt wurd lost week divided n
surplus of $."00 from the ward war vet
ernn monument fund, oversubscribed by
citlxens of that section, among mem
bers of the Hattal-Taylor and Thomas
Kmery Posts, whose members largely
live In the word. The monument com
mittee, headed by Mr. lianham, chair
man, attended meetings of the post and
presented checks reprecenting the posts'
nharc of the surplus.
The Elwood P. Tlce Post No. SO,
VestvIllc, N. .T., haH executed 'i'nn o
assist every ex-service man In Weetvllle
and surrmiiiilliu towin to ihoi.ii ui
vance his application for the New Jer
sey state bonus, Any veteran In need
of assistance In presenting his appli
cation Is invited to avail himself of the
post's service and present his claim to
the post officers.
An entertainment end small dance
will follow the Joint meeting of the
Shublu-Huchsbaura Post No Do and the
auxiliary tomorrow night at the Phila
delphia Library Uranch, Fifth and Ells
worth streets. The walkers of the post
Btogrd n hike through Falrmount Park
for the purpose of getting better ac
quainted and planning some long hikes
for tho summer week-ends.
DES
N AUTO CRASH
LIQUOR IS CLAMED
Uninjured Companion Hold
After Broad Street Aool-
dent Kills Motorist
SAY BOTH WERE DRINKING
Prosecuted by Wife, 6eeka Death
Despondent because ho was to ap
pear In court to answer charges of non
support of his wife, Charles O'Hrlcn,
twenty-two, East Fletcher street, at
tempted to end his life by drinking
poison Init night, occordlng to police.
Ho was found unconscious in a garage
near his home with a half-filled bottle
of the poison beside him, police say. Hoj
was taken to St. Mary's Hospital.
Thomas O'Donnell, twenty-five years
old, of .1411 Falrmount avenue, died at
0 o'clock this morning in the Metho
dist Hospital from Injuries he received
late last night when his automobile
crashed Into an electric light polo at
llroad and Johnston streets.
Pedestrians backed behind trees in
horror as they saw the machine, which
wan going nt a high speed, sway ana
run from one side of the street to the
other. In less than a seconu tue buiu
mobile mounted the cement curbing that
surrounds the pole, and with a crash of
fulling glass that could be heard for
I several blocks, came to n standstill.
ratroiman yranston, of the Jblftcentn
street and Snyder avenue station,
rushed to the scene. He found O'Don
nell unconscious with blood pouring
from a deep cut in his head. A pass
ing motorcar wns hailed and the man
was taken to the hospital.
Bay Uoth Were Drunk
Frank McOarry, twenty-three years
old, of 1210 Point nreexo avenue, who
was riding with O'Donnell at tho time
of tho mishap, was uninjured. Notic
ing that he was under tho Influence of
liquor, Patrolman Cranston arrested
him'. He was given a hearing this
morning before Magistrate Dougherty
and held without bail to await the
action of the coroner. Police say that
both men were intoxicated.
One boy met death and six persons
were badly injured as a result of auto
mobile accidents in various parts of the
city yesterday.
Nine-year-old Irwin Favonsky, 200
South Fifty-fifth street, died at the
Miserlcordla Hospital as a result of In
juries received when he was jostled
from a motortruck. His skull was fractured.
2?2Ka?2522!25
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IJLSheppacd &Sons
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ROUND TRIP
WrTu 17 tit. ddiUocl
Easter Excursion
Asbury Park
jLong Branch
Ocean Grov. Blmar
Sea Girt, Sprint LaV
A
Lace
Flouncings
Closing Out
some new Embroidered Net
Flouncings Jra, blue, brotfn
tind black
the $3.50 quality
now $2.75 the yard
.80
Pin Beach
bUnd Hslcht
ocean uata
Dorit hide skin
trouhle-healit with
Resinol
No amount of cosroutics can con
ceil an ugly skin. They only fin
in the pores and make the condi
tion worse. Resinol Soap cleanses
the pores, giving them a chance to
breathe and throw off impurities.
This is why when used with Resi
nol Ointment it rids the skin of
embarrassing defects, keeping It so
clear and fresh it can hardly help
being- beautiful. At all intggittt.
Barnacat Ptar
A.J aeaslda Park
(1
tfl "-! Park
" Lavallctta
IMi VTu Chulwlck
lk.M'tl Mantoloklns
Bay Haad
EUr Sunday, March 27
SPECIAL TRAIN LXAVX3
Mufcat StrMt VUmH TJO A. Ml
fUttwnlnf, UaVM Leu Branch 6.03
I. M.i AibUTy rrfc 017 P. M.; 8t
Girt 6.41 P. il.i Btuide HilchU 7.10
?.M..'.P1m Brack 7.46 P. U.
The Filet Luce Flouncings
$3.50 to $10 tKe ard are
just as interesting.
WSlmiUr Eitunlona April 17: My
U IS, K; June S. IS tod 17
i Pennsylvania System
vxmAmi&!cx&jazmasim(&sss&
Mote tlte Figure
Graceful, slender lines tkese
flouncings certainly drape most
alluringly.
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1008 Chestnut Street
I
KEYSTONE brings to Philadelphia
the Automatic Telephone
Within the next two months when Keystone engineers complete the
enormous task of converting the present manually operated telephone
system into the Keystone AUTOMATIC Telephone System, Philadelphia
will have telephone service that is quicker, more accurate, more
DEPENDABLE than any that the city has heretofore known a service
that will demonstrate to ALL telephone users the significance of
u Dial-Talk-Smile."
I kcrJi
Sixty ptr cant of ALL
Philadelphia butinf
call art Ktyitont calU.
PHILADELPHIA lu
rned tht Keyitone
irrvicc !j not only eco
non.icil, but that it ii
DEPENDABLE Sixtyptr
cent of Philadelphia's bui
nei telrphone traffic, !
handled over Key stone lines.
Watch this figure erott
ivhen the Keystone Auto
matic Telephone introduces
Philadelphia to a new set of
telephone service suadudi.
PHILADELPHIA hat outgrown tho
manually operated telephone system.
Philadelphia is too big for anything but
the BEST that modem telephone engi
neering provide; her need for quick,
reliable communication it too urgent;
her industries are too dependent upon the
intimate contact that the telephone
mokes possible. Philadelphia's telephone
requirements DEMAND the Automatic
Telephone have demanded it ever
since the days when the increased activi
ties of the war period created conditions
with which no manually operated tele
phone system could cope successfully.
Consider the newer but proven Auto
matic Telephone System as compared
with the old manually operated system.
Instead of passing a call by word of
mouth to a telephone operator instead
of subjecting your call to the thousand
and one possibilities of error and delay
that are unavoidable where the human
element enters so largely into the opera
tion YOU will simply turn the Key
stone dial and presto ! YOUR telephone
will be connected with any other Phila
delphia telephone in the Keystone Sys
tem! YOU will be the controlling factor.
The entire system will literally be at
YOUR finger tips as you turn the dial.
It DOES suggest the use of magic
Yet consider that one hundred and fifty
widely-scattered cities in which every
possible telephone condition is met are
using this system today and that eventu
ally ALL cities will be using it.
The work of converting the present
Keystone System is probably the biggest
job that any telephone company has
ever undertaken. Keystone engineers
are working now to that the change
can be made at once and WITHOUT
INTERRUPTION TO THE SERVICE
KEYSTONE TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA
Ctntral Offictit 13S So. Second St. PhiladelphU, Pa.
Look to YOUR KEYSTONE
Telephone Equipment NOW.
Key6tone dials are in place on Keystone instru
ments Keystone engineers are all but ready with
their central office apparatus it remains only for
YOU to arrange for YOUR Keystone service to
appreciate, when the day of the "cut-over" comes,
just what we mean by "Dial Talk Smile I" Why
not call Mr. Iilake at Main 1 NOW and ask for
particulars?
The breaklm of the stcerln enr
overturned an nulotnoblle In which five
men were riding nt netunlom pike nno
county line. Occupants of the car were
Harry lloyle, ail!.. Until fetrrrt; Run
nel t'rcrmnn, 2(1.15 Allegheny nventte!
Wllllnm Tlcrnan, .11(1." Oaul street:
James Carr, fliilO Mercer street, and
James MctJnrr, HUB Hnlmon street.
All Kent To Hospital
Farmers extricated the men from the
machine. All were sent to the Frank
ford Hospital,
Heven-vear-old Stanley Chomen.
2300 Fnlrmotint avenue, was knocked
down while crosnins the street near
his home by an automobile driven by
Edward .T. Sloss, 182(5 North Wlillng
ton street.
The boy's left leg was broken. He
was taken to the Qarrctson Hospital.
Sloes was arrested and held in $2ftQ0
ball hy Magistrate Carney.
James Rpenr, of Wallingford, will
have n hearlnc today before Mogls
trate Itcnshnw. charged with driving at.
automobile while intoxicated, Spear
was arrested by UcHcrve Policeman Mc
Andrew on Saturday night nt llroad and
Oxford streets. Spear, it Is said, al
most hit sevcrnl persons.
Do Not Be Misled
Blankets
Comforts
Bed Spreads
By a few warm days. March and
April have many cool nights, and
If you "let your fires go down"
as many do nt this season you
will find these lovely thlnga mo6t
welcome Ours Is a perfect as
oortment and the prices are mod-crate.
Dougherty's Faultless Bedding
Hair Mattresses Box Springs Bedsteads
1632 Chestnut Street
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I
We Stand for the
"Open Shop"
An "Open Shop" is one wherein
any man can work who wants to. Its
name distinguishes it from the shop
which is closed to all men who do NOT
belong to a labor union.
The "Open Shop" is by no means
new. American industries were all
organized on the principle upon
which the "Open Shop" rests. The
"Closed, or union Shop" is a relatively
new departure.
There, are several marked differ
ences between the "Open" and the
"Closed Shop." In the "Open Shop"
the employer selects his employes for
their ability; in the "Closed Shop"
employes need no qualification other
than membership in the union and
they are not allowed by the union
to work there unless they are mem
bers of the union. In the "Open
Shop" the employer determines the
quality and quantity of the output;
in the "Closed Shop" the output
is regulated by union officials, who
need have no interest in either
the shop, the product or the city.
In the "Open Shop" the conduct of
the establishment is regulated by
the employer, who has the welfare of
the industry, the employes and city
at heart; in the "Closed Shop" the in
dustry is regulated by radical leaders,
whose interests are often entirely
personal.
In the "Open Shop" the working
hours are devoted to productive
work; in the "Closed Shop" union af
fairs are forwarded in hours paid for
by the employer. In the "Open Shop"
every man is paid according to his
ability; in the "Closed Shop" em
ployes engaged in the same work are
paid the same daily wage.
In the "Open Shop" a man may
increase his income by his industry
and initiative; in the "Closed Shop"
neither virtue is encouraged.
Almost without "exception, the
leaders of American industries are
men who have been employes. With
"Closed Shop" conditions their op
portunities would never have arrived.
The "Open Shop" opens the gates of
opportunity for workers; the "Closed
Shop" locks them.
The basis of the "Open Shop" is a
full day's work for a full day's pay.
We do not question the right of labor to form unions. We are not
seeking to destroy labor unions. There is, however, an element in
labor unions, particularly among the paid leaders, who, through self
interest, seek to use the unions to create industrial unrest, misunder
standing between employers and employes, and to limit production.
These men, through misrepresentation and specious arguments,
seek to impress their unlawful and un-American ideas on the rank and
file of union membership. These paid leaders are largely responsible
for the attempt to impose the "Closed Shop," with its lack of oppor
tunity to the worker, on American industry.
The "Closed Shop" is the thin edge of the wedge to make union
labor a privileged class exempt from legal or moral obligation to the
laws and Constitution of the United States.
The "Closed Shop" would eventually deprive us of our rights of
citizenship of our blood-bought freedom it would nullify the Con
stitution of the United States.
As patriotic, freedom-loving citizens, in common with every
true American institution, we oppose the "Closed Shop" and stand
unequivocally for the "Open Shop."
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE
PHILADELPHIA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
1414 SO. PENN SQUAHE, PHILADELPHIA
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