fiiim ihimammmmfm wttfT Tii s sftiiislitorTiitll EfflHHE?:. ttiwy:.ffjcs. .Tq .-, vr,- : ' T . r - - 1 JZY if- $'4i m m T w $ i (1 T a Wz w.. r r f y. L, J- m, & it t-iil flr I R &- m mm ''"WRl jpeftT w .-'? . T?.7 T7W7k? '"'?.- ft.'1 j: -tii r -i' , -v J h h.kjC '' " ' '4- v T i ii 4 -.j- n,i , ' " ; c '. v. i-i .rv' , -v - ' ttv. f ' r-f TO'IjK' ' EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER MiLADEIIA TUDSDAY.' iJITNE ?, 1021 '.; fc -' . ( ,i ,rvt j'1. fi. okl .', f ? V. rfjtt AITH ASKS STATES 10 ACI Provision for Caro of Woundod Veterans Being Tampered With in Congress, Ho Says BULLETINS SENT OUT 1 Cfl5l21ACMhcQL Claiming thnt one of the most essen tial features of tho mensures designed to provide ndcQuato cure for tlie wounded veterans of the lato war Is b e I n ft tnmpered with in Congresi. Colonel F. W. Oalbraith, Jr., na tional commander of the American Legion, has ap pealed to the Do- ulvanla and all other States to urge Immediate action. . ho specific point at which the care fully thought-out plan to get prompt and effective consideration for the service- men h being nttneked. according to Colonel Oalbraith. is in Section (. of tne Sweet bill, which has been amended by a lIoue Committee, after It was re ported favorably bv tho sub-committee in charge of the bill. Compensation Prevented By the ninendment district offices to be established under the War Risk In surance Uureau are prevented from making compensation and Insurance awards, and from granting vocational training. This power was asked by the ,r?n ,nfter nn exhaustive survey which showed tho distress and some times the death among service men which result from delay necessary to . Stiim!t nctCtl uPn ' 'Washington. A bulletin sent by Colonel Oalbraith yesterday to all departments, and to all national executive committeemen of the Legion, follows In part: "You know that the American Legion has for more than two years urged upi.n the Congress that tho Bureau of Nnr Risk Insurance be decentralized and consolidated, or co-ordinated, with the United States public health sorvlce and the rehabilitation division of the Federal Hoard for Vocational Educa tion. "Enactment nt tM. ..- i. , - -- -------- . ...-. j,atuMl 1IIIU lUtV n.is miieii in previous sessions of Con $Te? J1'"""" n special committee headed by Mr. Charles G. Dawes, act ing with direct authority from the President, investigated the Govern ment 8 failure to make adequate pro vision for disabled veterans. After thorough study of the situation the committee recommended, on April f. 5aV consolirIatfon and decentralization of the above-named bureaus was abso lutely necessary if the distressing con ditions surrounding the disabled were tq be remedied. Many Hearings Held . On Ann! 11 Mr. Sweet, of Iowa, iiitioduced H. It. No. 3, a bill 'to estab lish in the Treasury Department a ) ,,WBH reau . and to improve the facilities and service of sucb bureau and further to nmrnrl nn,l mn.iu. n. JAar Risk Insurance Act.' Extc'nsive hearings have been held on this bill. There can be no doubt that decen tralization of the War Risk Bureau and co-ordination with the other two bu lcaus Is vital. Section 6 of H. R. .' o provides, in the following language: Thnt the director shall establish a central office In Washington, D. C. and not more than fourteen regionnl office, and such sub-offices within the territory of the United States and Its outlying possessions as may bo deemed necessary by him and In the best in terests of the work committed to the cterans' Bureau, and to carry out the purposes of this act.' 'Section 0, os amended, is unsatis factory. As originally worded by Mr. Sweet, it will do the Job for the dis abled. As altered by the committee of the whole It will be Impotent and unsatisfactory. "Senator Smoot, of Utah, has Intro duced a Senate bill that is virtually the same as the unamended Sweet bill. It Is satisfactory in its present form and will do tho job. "In order that our two-year fight for tho disabled shall not be nullified now at tho last minute when victory for the disabled Is within our grasp, It is imperative that you Immediately wire your representative In Congress to sup port tha Sweet bill, H B. No. 3, with Section 0 as originally drawn. Tour wire will influence the form In which II will be passed. I cannot overstrcss the necessity for haste In this matter. We expect the Sweet bill to pass the House in some form or another by June 17." aHi -"' i. AtaaBaBr. J. A. BRADLEY DIES; FOUNDED ASBURY Pioneer Also of Ocean Grove and Bradloy Beach Expires in Now York Central Nr Thoto. SIDNEY V. SMITH He lias been appointed examiner in -chief of the Patent Ofilco ST. CHARLES' HAS EXERCISES Catholic Seminary Holds Closing Ceremony of Year Many Speakers Closing exercises nt St. Charles Bar romco Seminary, Ovcrbrook, wero held this morning. Tho Rev. Joseph A. Whltakcr, S. T. L., presiding officer, uas the principal speaker. An address was alio made by the Right Rev. Mon frlgnor Edmond J. Kitzmuuricc, rector of the seminary Richard Carney, who will be ordained next year, rend a theological treatise ..., MTI, Vonncollr nt Ifallrrtn.. while an original Latin poem was re cited by Hubert Cartwright. of the preparatory side. Music was under direction of the Rev. James A. Boylan, D. D. BOUGHT SHORE LAND IN 1870 Now York, June 7. James A. Brad ley, ninety-one yenrs old, founder of Asbury Park nnd Bradley Beach, died last night. His death followed n general breakdown last winter. Asbury Park hnd planned to unveil a Rtatue In honor of Mr. Bradley on June 28, the fiftieth anniversary of the founding. Mr. Bradley began the development of Asbury Park In 1870, nnd yenrs later, after hls'first venture In seashore real estate had brought him ft fortune, he opened up the Bradley Beach section. Ho also was president of a brush manu facturing and Importing firm, trading under the name of Bradley & Smith. In 1S."1 Mr. Bradley married Miss Helen M. Packard, of Lowell, Mass. She died six years ago. Mr. Bradley's first investment In real ctnto nt Asbury Pink was S'0000, for which ho acquired 600 acres of property that is worth millions today. He set out with tho Idea of making It ART BODY TO CELEBRATE Fiftieth Anniversary to Be Marked Today The Fairmount Park Art Association will celebrate Its fiftieth annlvcrsnry tnilntv The celebration starts at 4 o'clock, when the members will nss.em blo at the east side of the fountain cir cle in Logan Squnrc for an automobile tour of Fairmount Park. After Inspection of the sculpture given by the association to the Park, the tour will end nt the Washington Mounment adjoining tho Art Museum. The guests will bo conducted through the museum, now under construction to the portico of the Fait mount Water Works, where Solicitor General .Tnmes t. Tlppk uill sneak on "The Utility of Benuty." Supper will be bcrved In the portico at 6:30 o'clock. wiiiHnBiM ! Tl. '..... nMn ..ITn. A S ECOND C UP Of Coffee n fashionable resort-nnd steadfastly op, posed effort of cafe owncro to obtain liquor licenses. Mr. Brndlcy main tained this stnnd fintlLHKKj, when he agreed to a limited number of licenses being granted. That wna the beginning of a bitter fight to increase the number of cafes, and wmo years later his strin gent rules regarding bathing costumes Irought still more criticism upon him. Finatly, finding opposition to his ylcws almost overwhelming, Mr. Brad ley sold his Interests In beach property to tho city for $150,000, refusing nn offer of $.100,000 from prlvnto indi viduals, and withdrew from tne public llfo of the Park. Jamea I. McMahon Following an Illness from pneumonln, James I. McMahon. whicly known con tractor, of Ocrmantown, died yesterday at his home, McMahon and Locust ave nues. ' Mrs. Thomas Nelson Page Southboro, Mass.. June 7. Mrs. Thomas Nelson Page, wife of tho for mer United States Ambassador to Italy, died hero yesterday. Sho was sixty three years old. Mrs. Pago was married first to Henry Field, of Chicago. In whose memory she dedicated tho Field collection In the Chicago Art Institute. Sho became the wife of Thomas Nelson Page In 1803. Tho former Ambassador was at tho bed sldo when death camo. Mrs. Page will be buried in Washington. DISARMING PARLEY Fi HVORED BY LODGE Agrees to Present to Senate Potitlon Signed by Women's Organization MUST BE INTERNATIONAL Washington) Juno 7. Senator Iltnry Cabot Lodge, chairman of the Senote Committee on Foreign Relations, has notified the Women's Committee for World Disarmament that he is strongly in favor of an international agreement for the reduction of armaments. His statement was made in reply to a letter from Miss Emma Wold, chairman of the committee, asking tne Senator to present her committee's petition to the Senate. Senator Lodge wroto as fol lows : "I have your letter nnd also received the petition which you sent me on the question of disarmament which I shall be very glad to present to the Senate. 25 Platinuni and Diamond Wedding Rings A most attractive assortment is here for your selection. A beautifully chased plati num wedding ring, encircled with 19 diamonds in individual square settings exceptional value $100. S. Kind &'Sons, mo chestnut st. DIAMOND MERCHANTS JEWELERS SILVERSMITHS lL 'r -C: I am heartily in favor, and .always hnvo been, of an intornatlonnt agree ment for general reduction of nrma ments. Tho President, I know, has this matter much at heart, and I am euro you may trust In his doing all that he can to forward It. It must be nn international ocrccmcnt. A reduction of armaments by one great maritimo, rower ami a coniinuanco oi increase In armaments by another would, In my judgment, lead to war rather than to peace ; but of tho value of International reduction of armaments there can be no question. It is something nil must believe In and favor on nil occasions. 1 was very glad f;o give my support to the amendment to tho Naval Appropriation Bill by tlie Senate requesting the Proi dent to call a conference on disarmament." P. R. R. Linemen Accept Wajje Cut Now Castle, Pa., Juno 7. After be ing out on striko slnco May 1 the line men of tho Pennsylvania nnd Ohio Elec tric Co. resumed their work yester day, an agreement having been reached lato Saturday night.. Under the terms of the now agreement the men accepted n cut of 17.0 per cent in wages, the samo as the car men who signed up last Thursday. Tho men will be paid a flat rate of eighty-two nnd one-holt cents an hour, the old scale calling for $1. Between forty nnd fifty men are affected in New Castle, Sharon nnd Youngstown. ' MAY SEIZE 3 BREWERIES , "Dry" Officers Suspeot More In Westmoreland Co. of Violating Law Washington, June 7. Further seiz ures of breweries in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, Is being consid ered by prohibition enforcement officers, It was learned yesterday. The appre hension of the officials of the Crescent Brewery, of Irwin, last week, for nl- leged manufacture of real beer i, t stated, marks the bc-glnhlne of eViill ston tho manufacture In w..(y'B County'of anything but beer who.? holle'Fontent comes wlfdln l. ?'Wi 'CHW, , fVimmnn renort thaf rt i " easily obtained In Westmoreland (&? ' arc being investigated by FcdernT'lI! ncinis, ii wua Biuicti, "v Of nineteen nrmvertio I. i. ' there are three thnt aro nli..T."?il been making .beer with inoro V.A per cent alcoholic content. ' ' Brond mnd iMnut Streets - J r7f(, A little bit different little flle 3jPi: bit better, That tells the story ll'JV MtM of the Ritz Roof. Dainty, preU !n fi CT flJl ' ty, cozy, cotipanlonable. Run wit 'a hi r9mm , up for Luncheon, Dinner, Tea ''ijyf4-, ,' Dansant, Supper. , iWivBIl H Dancing at Tea and Supper ( VLlWmMMl " lb I H At all our Stores j jT Bucmriu i I MSiClill I ilNtnrramMH ffl mmsMmsmmsmm 4ywt - ( $jsb Cream V PfegPL M BUTTRRMIIK ar ? MM Merely drinking Buttermilk isn't all the story. $&f$ It depends largely on what kind you drink. 1 bbotts Cream Buttermilk is made fresh every 5 Jay, made scientifically, and has the real But- lErayH icrmilky flavor. ,& ' Uet the Buttermilk habit see how much K& setter you'll feel I t$ Phone Ue to Deliver a Bottle Tomorrow 1$ Baring 0205 fwj Abbotts Alderney Dairies, Inc. M 31st and Chestnut Both Phones lKi ! infic City Pleasantville Wildtcood Ocean City $ lg $50 ft - : America's Foremost Cigar A nation-wide reputation built and main tained for 50 years upon demonstrated f ; quality. Girard has earned this distinction by sheer superiority. Thousands of Girard enthusiasts throughout the country can testify to this many right here in Philadelphia. Try Girard today. A better, bigger cigar than ever. GI R ARD Never gets on your nerves mm Fine The trouble with cheap clothes is that the wearer feels cheap. The knowledge of Fine Quality on his back makes a man put on a confident front Nothing is cheap about Stylebilt Clothes ex cept the price. That's because they go direct from our factory floor to our store. 1211-1213 Chestnut Street dxhts Shops In Principal Citiu KEWARK HEW YORK BROOKLYN PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO KWK wubb Braa -. GuiAnn F"Droker" JiP A national favorite Other iliei 10? and vp i'?'jii.".'kum wzamtt "TTi skil Eaaj X$ &f 1 Queen Anno Dining-Room Suite Mahogany, four piece. Inclosed lerver, buffet, 66-inch s oblong table, 48x60 inchei. All dovetail construction SPECIAL! Dining Chair Solid oak, golden finish; s t o a m bent; full-longth back posts and I tapered front legs; slip seat. p2.35 Living-Room Suite Over stuffed Ioobo cushions, spring edge nnd back, choice of tapes- $ioh try and velours JLOO Bedroom Suite 10-piece, complete. Walnut. A very desirable repro- $1 an duction LVD Dining-Room Suite 10 piece walnut Queen Anne, inclosed server. Buffet 60- lncn. Tablo 6- $ foot-48-mches. 235 Is Something Lacking In Your Home ? Every home-lover desires the manv nrettv llttln mU i.. that go bo far toward making the home attractive lamps odd period chairs, muffin stands, book rocks, tables, serving tables, mirrors, hall stands, davenports and so on. Come in anu oeo uur lurgo uaouirmcnis. vi far below present market values, We offer them at prices Open Saturday Evening IflUIgRWlSER 260-262 South Fifth Street- - I40iZ Sneet. 11 A Clearance of Gift Goods IIa MF . V m m m A ' A IP 1 w at Redactions of 25 fE have arranged this Sale at the time when there' so many graduation and wedding gifts to buy! And re membrances for college or school friends! And for those going on extended trips! Fans Lamps and Shades Baskets Door Stops Water Bottles Powder Jars Desk Sets Combs Necklaces Pins Earrings Pictures and many other things; small lots, of course, but grouped to gether on special tables and on sale at just 25 less than the regular prices. Hand Bags at $2.75 & Wonderfully at tractive Hand Bags at a special price! Moire silk in black and navy nicely lined; with frame and mirror. blue; fitted purse One shape is sketched. Hand Bags at $4.65 One of these Bags is pictured; the moire silk Is of a heavy quality and the linings are 'lovely. You will agree that they are worth ranch more than the special price of $4.65. m Good Things from 9 Climes pouted into a Single Glass! Coca-Cola was created to appeal to taste with a dis tinct and inimitable flavor. Coca-Cola is made de licious and refreshing to satiofy thirst. Coca-Cola is prepared with the finished art that comes from a lifetime of practice, & Sweetened and made nutritious with pure cane ES5a 'fcfj mnmmttutiU Htm tint ouiaor utfar. AUwon tKxrv on . tourvcf Coet'Col. sugar Flavored & With a Dcrfee blend of choicest savors Colored with the amber of caramel dark Alive with the bubbles of sparkling, pure water that come to obead at the top J Coca-Cola is an nnequaled combination of good things from Mother Nature that flower andicomtj to fruit in the sunshine of nine differ ent climes nine different countries. .10 An average of approxi-. maceiy 6,000,000 glasses and bottles ofCoca-Colafasold cveryday. That'o why dealers are able to multiply swp.vn that the genuine always be prouts by turn- ,... served why the legend overs in Coca-Cola below is a sign of popu- ymp at a rate inritv. which is a pace-maker for successful merchandising how thousands, of pros perous businesses have been built up with small invest ments an un answerable ar gument for sell ing Coca-Cola at the lowest possible price to develop the largest possible volume of business the cause for the public in general know ing the inimitable quality of Coca-Cola and being sup ported by the highest court m the land in (demanding Drink wtutiQUS AND REFRESHING Til COCA-COLA COUFANY, AtUou. O. 4 v- 7 y if - :,m 2?r?,j EPPl "Wvi-V-! '?Ayfr.fr'.AI ): W0'9 - U VV , ej'wk,j j 11 J V' -T ' .- i jjiiliiii.r,ii ' . E?3i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers