ff?jjiLiT'fiftBWSBwjBrail rfr PftT, . NEW TARIFF BILL titutien Violated, He Says, Delegation of Power of Cenereis te Executive llfrEARS 'SCANDALOUS ABUSE' JSKj WakhlnWnn. Mnv R. The eenstllU V '-vi',Sln.lll.. .. nM.tdnni tt (tin Tnrlff T..l4,.V.VWlJ V HIO rwBe.J..u .. ... 'tf&$SrSH, WnK the rrcsMcnt bread powers i-TOSSOT'e incrense or docreae rates and te nUMWtchange classifications the no-called h'vclllxlblc tariff plan wan attacked te- it. u'H, ", ne Bn""i eemuur n " kmhkm Mitann. Tie riteii manv numeruii'f iu ippert nis contention mm me iu rested in umiercss d.t inc wnsi wnsi Hen te lar and collect taxes, duties yhid excises and te regulate commerce ;Tf lureiju iiauuiia vuuiu uut ... VwTf aMMfitn- Wl.-t nU 1 WflU llnf tt It rfeiv"y;r;wi- ".r"z.xzr- ". : r . :.: "111M I i i i' J I, i J Iff MM" ' . aaSvWrV"' Vf f ;T-vn-rv ? in .nrtn "nfnrTnrw s fc&tect u t - iu v trr AS TARIFF STORM RAGES Hackneyed Arguments Arc Revived for Senate's Debate, With Dire Predictions by Beth Sides $ '! ur fundamental law, of jc-Si' i.'rent events have afforded se 'erldence . nor of the Indlffer ,? iiv v, V- . " - .i,-. w. - . tfrairwutiirul or the futility or. an nrKiimeiu YMr't' .vfyhimrlAsl iiMtM ttin UmltflHnna. Imnnnrtl ''.WU..UV.I I, If.'.. ,.. llimMM" ...., WHICH IF' some nadcu I.IT. . ...III. SPvJnV'whlch the Contention of these opposed ,-Tin einer grounds 10 h-kimhu unun.- W ' ibc uenirre.s( tnnt. it is unconsuiuuenm, 3W resarded. ir'Th! "ttde for judicial review of the I'rcsi- rV. tltnl'm Rndnn. Snnnfnr WnlMl Mild ri - .. u...n.'. ,........-- .. w int, wuere uengrcss iinn (incsaicu uu- rv5i"" tt,er'ty te t,ic Jntpl",,,'te Commerce I'M a :miniwien, me rencrai iranr iih tV' a WlsBien and ether like acencies, their findings had been made subject te re view hy the courts. "Tbe President," lie continued, "is et amenable te correction by the reurln en account of acts done by him in his eBcial capacity. If action should be brought against a collector of customs te recover nn alleged excess duty, pnid under a proclamation Issued by the President, he could net be cnllcd te tc- t tlfy, touching the evidence or informa tion unen which he ncted that It misht bt determined whether he exceeded the authority conferred upon hint or had ny just basis for his order. And tlucc the presumption would be Indulged that , ! acted within the reepe of his au thority and upon sufficient evidence the taxpayer would be remediless. It is net ,!! required that the invcetigatlun te be conducted by the President shall be . public. ' "A taxing system mere certainly ?, leading te Fcandaleus abutc could V- s j(WVt.riJ UK l-UMlVlt 111. lllW V1IUII1 IIIU ?) ' . 'President, burdened as he is nlme-l te - , the limit of human einhirniiin bv the duties new devolving upon him, give te 'the arguments of selfish, avaricious and importunate Interests the study requi site te test their strength?" 3-1 $-' r .ir m .;" . im. t m. t 1, u u- .K' " h? By n Sinn Correspondent Washington, Stay 8. "Old stuff" Is back In favor In the Senate's debate en the tariff, mid from the way senators and party leaders arc taking te it, Is likely te be offered te the country dur ing the coming campaign In much the same manner as for the past generation. There Is hardly a new line Jn It. The same old hackneyed arguments, the same old answers, the same old "guff," inc came predictions et uisnster If It Is or n t passed, the same charges nnrt denials and the same old partisan bunk which nobody but a Senater believes and net all of them are being hashed ever nnd rehashed In the same old way. "Mnn.l.,.,,.1" .... i.. r .- "Indcfenslblel A tnrlff for the trusts. An economic abortion. Fer goodness' sake don't perpetrate a thing like this en an unsuspecting public. It's crlmi nal !" Te which the G. O. 1'. replies: "Iyoek at the country! .lust leek at It I Millions of men lilleil. fnctnrlix closed, business bankrupt, ships tied vp nt the deck, railroads In receivership all because of your own confounded tariff Ideas. Vn uif' WW,, luinnmi In vnn hnfnpn Tim A ...!.... 1..1....1.... j nf I'niiinnlsn tonic. .- .. w...., ... iiinujiiuii i.iijiiiii.": " j i. . . ., man and the Amerlcnn farmer must be i I here are tliee wne point te inc protected. American Inilnstrv must hi, -O.u committee nnieniliiient, nntl te the safeguarded, rrnspcrlty ull'l only r-- 'hundreds te he offered from the Senate turn under a ltpimbHrmi tariff, mid Imer. nml ilcriare tne eiu can never op that's what this Is!" passed before November. 1 he belief is 'gnlnlng ground that It cannot possibly same tlld Play ,,,nHN ,m,, before then. The bonus will Whereupon Senators en both sides mini1 Inte the Senate seen, and Itself Is take another hitch In their belts. Lite likely te renMiinc four or five weeks of off another chew of cut-plug, grin sheep- .debate. 1'ntll then, and after the bonus Islily at each ether, and go nt It again, 'is disposed of. the tariff will have right right knew lug that the truth Is te be found of-way. somewhere betwecen the two extremes. This nllews five months, roughly, for It's the same old play with the same .the tariff te be debated and voted en, characters speaking the same lines, wlin ami put through conference. Cutting it new joke or two inserted here nnd off another month for consideration In there te "keep the galleries amused. conference it conservative estimate of All of which points te the tariff as the time thnl will probably be required the big Issue of the coming elections, te reconcile differences between Semite It will be. If politicians have their way. land Heuse hills there is left four Leaders of both purtlcs agree en that. I months for debute in the Senate. They are shaping their plans accord ingly. Thcte will be ether Issues, of course domestic nnd foreign policies, the Four-Power Treaty, the Icuguc of Na tions, taxes, railroad rates, Newberry, war contracts, conservation, oil leases, the bonus, nnd many ethers. Hut the tariff, It seems probable new, will over shadow them all. Tim hutnrv nf nelitlcai campaigns shows that elections are wen or lest, as n rule, en a single outstanding Issue. All ethers arc subordinated or simply contribute te the final result. Thai Issue, this jcar. Is likely te be the tariff. Thev're trIng It out en the deg Just new In this case the I'nlted States Semite nnd Inter the some arguments nnd stntlstlcs and heavy humor will be offered In condensed and canned form te I he country nt large. Politicians, lack lug originality, went something familiar te talk about. They like the tnrlff for thrv can discuss It for hours with never n comeback. Any twist can be given All Vague te Veter It is the one subject the overage voter can t comprehend, except in the vaguest way, and consequently, from the view point of the eld-tlmcrs, is the best sort Jl !L ti' 5E(fi IT" 'jF'j MEET INCH 151st Convention of the Dio cese of New Jersey te Open Tomorrow Morning $9,000,000 Beeze Mss Culberson's Floed 1 8 Planned Suiter Seeks Aid .'entlnurd from Vast One Continued from Fact One Tnsten, former Justice of the Supreme i with the New Yerk Telephone Company. Court of Pennsjlvania, as n spedal at- where he remained until the evening of temey general te co-operate with him i April UO. in investigating the Lewis lepert en Robertsen says he received a letter State, finances. three weeks aae from Miss Culberson niv ..u ,i,.v. , n i ,..i..i. winning him nn. attempt was te be O'HarraPrieNet for Jazz-Baby t Cfctitinned frem Pace On IMV WWII, itiU), U 1 allUllU 14 i k- re uw Wr- -"" -"- ""- r". - ......... SnW.'"W'wth n these desirable qualities," Mrs. wby ? Harra was asked, "and she peses'cil g?'V "Jn auumen uoeoeii nair, synthetic com-SW- 1',0I nd a high-water-line skirt, v&r euia tunc prevent nor treni winning Z.1i34?-t "Th' h .nl,l "nwiU .m ,.,. S'X: . " "" ;": . .."i,... w n nun HU ( six days for actual cnmnnlBnlnB . "'",'"" ,..,'.. "'.... aul""'1 remain before the primary. All re-I '"".VA ' .i. ""i '..'" ,' .i, vii in.- infill in mnii came te our home and 'Sutter of degree. I shouldn't eblcct If sin. V A'; fust n little hit tlmt Will- tnr nf n ). almost nil trlrls nre mnre nr lr.au 'I-TTJb these days. But this tendencv must A -. I.. . ... -. ' rt ... - m .. . : rt u nei n riirrirn rn nn ptipumn iv ima,.- I nnrr iiv inriner enrprnnp ,tiiit.,i.....i. iff 4 Jeans have a strong tendency te carry 'and wns defeated by Justice Kcphart peits agree that rincltet is mini u? stronger than ever. The machine is de pending en Allegheny and Philadelphia iniiwiPH. me western mnciune strong neirt. however, is -greatly weakened Internal dissensions, while tlm imle pendents of Philadelphia premise te cut down the Vnre ete te a point where, It will be easily submerged by the roll- i ing tide of Plnchet sentiment from the Interior of the State. Justice Fex. who Is -n former presi- ' dent of the Stnte Itnr Association and ' president et the Kasten Trust Cem pany agreed te serve without ompet.iatien. He Is expected here within n few il.ir and the report transmitted by Mr. Lewis ana such ether data as nre available will be submitted te him. Justice Fex served n a member et the Stnte Constitutional Revision Com mission and is famllllar with the State nevernmental sjstem. He is n Deme crat. He was named te flic Annellate !0 two men nJd they wished me te come te n hotel in Newark, Robertsen said. "The two men in- fn.mml t.iA tlift.' ti Awn T,i1.l ..Ta...... b ,llllil in." imv.i "IIV lllVIHI null (.ID ." ' friiti Wei.lilni.Tnli "They said there was a warrant for my arret In New Yerk, charging me with strnllng goods from the Itrltlsh War Veterans' Club, I have since proved that charge is utterly without foundation. "They told me 1 could either go te Ilosten with them and take n ship te a foreign pert or go te ew lerk robbery I . . . ------- ... iiuuiKii jiuit ui p,ir it, .ih jiur. mill uv """"i'1 i no nppmnunent and I need under arrest en the charge." At the Uritlsh-Ainerlcnn War Vet erans' Association rooms In New Yerk Is wns said that another mnn by the sniue name was nccused of thefts of c'nthlng nnd war medals, that Robert Robert eon had appeared at the ilub and, after being examined by the men whose val uables were ste'en, was completely ex-enviuted ft thlncs te extremes, usually with reme effect. "It Is net fair te say thet all girls with bobbed hair nnd short skirts are flappers, because many modern girls With the greatest natural charm nnd .watth feel Impelled te dress mere or leas in the advanced fashion, thinkim- that they must de se te be In style and in his hands up te aate. "With ethers, of course, It is merely the outward manifestation of an emp tlnrsH within. Unt with the real girls, the girls worth while, a certain nmeiint of this sort of thing can be put up with within reasonable limits, of course for the sake of the inherent geed qunl Itlra under-the surfece there te be developed. Knf , ff "Any way, toot xoensuness will be :i. wiecara eui ei mem lt tney nre Drought iM l' into direct centnet with the world after t- -t . laawlnaf ziAllaata " sjD'V - The first award will be given te TV, -. m lr t -7 s h ffi m 1ST KT fear- ' several years age. 1 Data Incomplete, Alter Ssjs The Attorney ('cnernl's announce- i ment of appointment of Justice Fex . wns accompanied by a lengthy state. ment by Mr Alter. In which he set iiirin ins views roemie te tne ronert llMllg niieus detnils im net complete and there Is no evidence the Stnte has lest any money. Ile further says he has asked the Auditor Genernl te instruct the accountants te obtain additional infoimatien and is assuicd they will co-operate. student from this year's graduating class, and the winner will be announced iw a tew wecics. m r . 7' U ui REPAIRING UNDER WAY ON WHITE HORSE PIKE v VjJ ' " yt r 'Vi.'- Read Tern Ud at Three Places Re t'" ...-..! ,. ,.. n I i -. . .. li V v"''""'""" """rijr nticncu ai aerun ur . - uuen progress is neing made en tne ' reminding of White Herse pike between rt:r? - sw...!! uu "-Hlil. J III- will 1IMIIMIU- I !Sf y ' tlen has been tern un from linn hii.fnn is ' te within a square of Station ucnue. .Hadden Helchts. In Rerlln one siile i?' Ml thp rend Is entlielv tern nn nml Pk 'V'Vwlthln a few days the work of lajlng 5"V !" Concrete will he stnrteil. -We 'i rpkA IllffhlVnV hftVVeen I'nlllilnil n.i.1 Klrkwoeil is te be 1 feet wide with a 40-feet driveway and 11-font sidewalk in each side. Frem Kiikwoed te lier--,)ln It will be CO feet wide with a .'!0. 'feet driveway nnd 10-feet sidewalk ?A11 of the towns and townships will .build sidewalks for the safety of the ''pedestrians. Sewers and water-mains pre bring laid at some plan h because !!.) tna piae cnunei ue tern up alter the $.?, (jverk Is finished. BS r.-K Becnuse of the heavy traffic en the K'JtuSij 7eunt Kphraim pike jesterday tiafiic r mpr V .M ....- w... .... .wii.ikiiid, .III KsKiS'rilute cnlng south and r-entuini'i'i two EwSfMi'n from Wllllnmstenn n ashed Inte l&HKw,SJetlier nute from (Jloueesler contain- r&ft inav ""'i .-.ui .mi. filllll,i ni ,,v ...... -i. .u.i.i ...-.iiih, aiiiiij i .M..A .1.......1 1.... .I.n ... 'tei'diit1- 'B"- iiniiiuhv-ii, uuv iiiu uvLuimiKS (SrA.'escaned serious injury. . cvj: - - : PINCHOT SA YS BOSSES' BLUNDERS AID HIM hQ.iit awr- F iMIi.f"c &,$?., fALSE RUMOR OF NEGRO ATTACK SJJRSJEXAS TOWN kfrntd Band Reported Seeking AX.-........ f.. D...HHM . 4 Hi!-. feiKlrvUl, Te?:.. Muy 8. (Hy A. P.) p-yrvjAXifspite rumors irein various towns in vfrt W ,cln,t' t,lut nned Negiees were "jST Minrchlnz en the city te avenge the ;rCv,2.,l)urnlng te death last Haturdaj of thiee 'TtiZ.wefreeB accused et the assault andjiiur :'ti$A;itr of a seventeen-j car-old white girl, ."' Jfce town is quiet tedny. ill. -U. King, city marsuni, said he psj; Investigated several reports, but ; in eacn case mey uau prevci laise. , that he expected no trouble. A ileus gathering of three-scere or Negroes near here yesterday dis d when advised that their meeting Ut possibly be misconstrued. 1,'rcpert from Cersle.inn tliut .'100 roes went en route nere uise proved Mt rouniiatien, uity marsimls the lilghways between Kirvln and ma report tnnt .egrees In their I'.sectlens are quiet and that (INrareea have been npn In 1 i . tassii-sjji.w, j . sr.siw i Pittsburgh. Pa., Mny K. (llfferd Plnchet arrived in Pittsburgh today te find thnt the wave of cntlius'nsm In" his favor had swept into PItsburgli ahead of him. Mr. Plnchet seen left for New Cnstle. I where he addressed a mass. meeting. He metered from New CnMle te Ilutlrr, where n second mnss-ms'ting took place. He will return te Pittsburgh before going te McKei-spurt tonight te address a mass-meeting. , I'pen his arrival today Mr. Pinchot Is-siied this statement: "Kxeepr rhe hard and loyal work of mj friends: nothing has heipeil se much toward n victory as the nvnlanehe of blunders se generously cnntributiii by the oppo eppo oppe sltion. ' "Fur example, take their efforts te aiinev unwilling supporters. My oppo nent made his tirst appearance in Illijlr Ceuiitx. On that occasion nil Alter reception committee wns nameil iu the Alteena napers. Next day tweutv mem bers of that committee made public an an neiincenient thut they had been lindiideil without their consent, and that they were for Plncliut. "Tney followed tlil-i up bj ir.ving (e ciiiiiiiiit Seimtnr Pepper te the A'ter I'andldac) b haiiig him present when the Vare-controlled ct. (iiminlttoe of Philiiilelihlii outraged all pelltlr.il ile ctney by indorsing Alter. Senater Pep. per promptly repudiated this tricl;. Colonel l)avid .1. D.nK of Hcrnntnn. iinnppesfd eandldnte for lteuteiuint gn rrnnr. was the next proposed lctim. ami he, tee, promptly repudiated tlie claim. "Itrelher Hill Vare arranged n te eeptinn of the Pennhanla delegation in Congress in Washington for Mr Alter with the announced purpose of securing nn indersement for Mr Alter Less than half the members attended the meeting, nnd of these who did some came out for Plnchet afterward "As the eapsheaf of this editice of blunders. Senater Vnre went te Wash ington with the purpe-e of tln the President te the Alter bite. II, fnllr.it Thereupon Alter himself made the same pilgrimage. The result was a definite repudiation from the White Heuse In emphatic' language which made it eleur beyond contieversy thut the President refused te he made use of bp the con tractor politicians and their candi date. " Iwent te mnke public acknowledg ment of the valuable, assistance thcp gentlemen have given te the cause of .geed goernmont, well as I knew they did net mean te de se." EARTHQUAKE IN NEW ENGLAND I'lttsfleul. N. II., Muy 8. A light earth check, apparently moving from , west te eas , rattled furniture and shook ' dishes from shelves lu ceme heutcs here late yesterday, The disturbance came at B;40 P. M. and lasted only a few seconds. I New Yerk. May 8. (n.v A. P.) Denial that attempts were made e ' drive Alexander 1'. Robertsen. Itritlsh war eterun. out of the country becnuse i of n love affair with the daughter of Senater Culberson, of Texas, was made tedn In the P.iirns' Detective Agency, which was retained te gather Informa tion nbeut him. Robertsen's moe mee ments have been of his own accord,' it was said. The lieu! of the agency here declared Robeit-en's charges that two detectives I had Impersonated Federal officers were . "bunk" nnd added that Jehn F. Kills, nlready arrested en a ehnrge of kidnap pi'ig, was no longer with the bureau. Hills, he asserted, was withdrawn from the case nfter Robertsen's aunt, living in New Jersey, had objected a month age te the wtiv In which he was being shadowed. When the "cli- i ent" who hired the agency te gather data en Robertsen requested that KllLs hae another talk with him. the de- iteitlve resigned from the agency unci I thereafter worked privately en the case, i the statement said. N. R. TURNER INDORSED Republicans te Urge Sproul te Name Solicitor as Judge L'asten, Pa.. May K Newton It. Turner. City Solicitor, (nltcd i (iiniiitssieuer nnd chairman of the &j j. ai,i. Vnii,,... an nn Northampton County Republican Cem inlttfe. has been Indorsed b.i the Execu tive Committee of the Count Commit tee te (loverner Sproul for appointment n- third Judge, succeeding James T. Woedilng, who died last week at Ilctlilchcm. The Indersement of Mr. Turner b the County Committee clues lint mean that (loverner Sprout will necessarily appoint him, but previous Indersements alwnjs lane been n cpeeted In the mniii. and it Is believed this one will gc through. If Mr. TurnerV appointment is made, it will mean n great deal of i hairy union-,' Republicans te fill the office's which he will haw te relinquish, unci sine the boom for his appointment started last week, nnines have been mentioned for each of the positions. Three members nf the Executive Cem. niltlce will he sent te Unrrlsbmg Tues day te eertlfj the indersement te (Joy (Jey (Joy erner Sproul. Metes s" im I Going te England HsSiaBaS.' i TasaisllKTr.i'T uHssBBBBBW ''' ls 'X''i V)i- aBBBBBW V IF: ' i l',('t: U wrmm sn mm:t t rntrnl Nea I'liote .MISS .MAU lU'SCH She will seen appear In a Uritlsli film presentation of Sir Hall Catne's "The Chrlstlau" I READY FOR COMMENCEMENT; Swarthmore College Program" Mere Elaborate Than Ever ' I Swarthmore College alumni will take a prominent part In the commencement ptegrnm In June, About 1000 alumni attended the exercises last jenr, and ef forts nre being made te bring out at .least IL'OO thin year. A call has been Issued te all the , classes from 1ST.'! te 1.S77 te join wlth the 1877 alumni iu their reunion, anil i special reunions nlse arc planned feri the classes of 1SS2. IS. 1 s2. 11K)2, 1!H)7, IIM'J, 1017 and UlliO. A banner1 , is te be presented te the class itb the. i largest representation. i , The pregrum will open Thursday. June 0, with the senior luncheon, and I en the next day will come tlie Class Day exercises, senior piny, alumni sup per, Alumni Association meeting nnd ether entertainment for the alumni nml alumnae. Alumni Day will be cele brated June 10 with sports, parade and ether features. The baccalaureate ser mon will be delivered Sunday, June 11, and (lie Ivy exercises will take place the came day. The commencement ex ercises will be held en Monday, June Yi, MAYEXHIBIT MONSTERS ' Director Brown, of the Zoological Gardens, Would Shew Them at Fair , Visitors te the SeMpil-Centcnnliil roll- will be greeted with strange sights If the suggestion of (' IJmerseii llrewn, director of the Zoological (lurdens, te construct life-siv.e reproductions of i antediluvian mepsteis unci set them up in cnarucierisiie ium minis me uanus of the Schuylkill Is cariled out. I "The idea Is net entirely new," said lr. llrnwii 111 cinnerurjng en Ills theme. "Can Hngenbnek, founder of the fa mous purk nt Stclliupn, near Ham burg, possesses nn e.hiblt of Old World monsters executed bj the sculptor Pal lenhurg. I merely propose te de for America what Stelliiigcn lias dene for Kiirepc." Dr. Hrnwn was formerly animal sculptor and taxidermist for the Itnsten Museum of Natural History, nnd has nlready done work of this kind en a uiluluturc scale. In St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church, Cam'den, tomorrow nnd Wednes day, the ifilst convention of the Epis copal Diocese of New Jersey will take place. The Right Rev. Paul Matthews will preside. The convention will open tomorrow morning at 10:30 with celebration of Hely Communion. The business ses sion will fellow, with three lnymen from each church who will sit with the clergy nt the sessions. In the nfternoen n business session will take place nnd an address will be given by Alfred New berry. At 0:30 In the cvcnlns n dinner will he served te the deputies and several t speakers will address the convention. On Wednesday there will he the closing iJtisiness session. The Ilev. R. K. Rrestell, rector of St. Paul's Church, Is chairman of the Committee en Ar rangements nnd Heward E. Thompson is secretary. Shet In the abdomen Saturday during n quarrel ever n woman, William Itrewn, colored, twenty-three years old. of -12." Washington street, Camden, dfed jesterday in Cooper Hospital, Camden. Wilkinson (Jreenly, colored, twenty nine years old, of 1113 Seuth Second street, who Is accused of sheeting Hrewn, will he formally arraigned in police court this morning en u charge of murder. "In his ante-mortem statement te Prosecutor Wolvcrten nnd Assistant Prosecutor Straw Urewn said Greenly shot him nftrrtthey quarreled ever Ida Themas, of e0 Henry street, llrewn said (Sieenly objected te his attentions te the Theinns woman. itreeiny is sniu te mvc drawn n revolver nnd fired nt Hrewn, the bullet striking him In the abdomen. Although mortally wounded, llrewn pursued Greenly, caught him nnd wrested the revolver from his ussnllnnt nnd tried te sheet Greenly, hut was tee weak te pull the trigger. Greenly said he shot In self-defense when llrewn nttacked him. Mls Sarah Chambers, eighteen year? old, of 1420 Hadden avenue, Camden, wns treutCd nt the Homrepnthic Hos Hes Hos pltel early today for a cut of the scelp. She was brought te the hospital at 2 o'clock this morning bv It. V. Jehnsen, twenty years old. ,of 1220 Princess street, who told the surgeons thev hnd been for nn automobile ride and col lided with another mnrhine between Clcnicnteii and Rerlln. Miss Chambers' injuries were net serious. She was treuted nnd sent home. Rebert Alburger. twcnt.v-eisht rears old, of blxth unci Mechanic streets, Camden, was sentenced te from the te tlilrty years In the Stale Prison by Judge Shay, In Camden Criminal Ceuit today, en the charge of having attacked his sister Ella, nineteen jenrs old. Je. seph Stein, living near Merchuntvllle was sentenced te three te seven jears en n charge of robbery. Matthew He! man, thirty-one years old, proprietor of the "Hurry Heck" saloon, nt 113." Seuth Fourth street, Camden, was held under $1000 ball for court by Recorder Stackheusc today, charged with' con ducting n disorderly house. JERSEY TAX RATE LEAPS Whole State Has Recerd Figure for 1922 Trenten. X. !.. May 8. (lly A. P.) New Jersey's aveiugc tax rate for 1022 is $3..r(U per S100 of valuation, compared with $11.41 in 1021, nn In crease of .121 and the largest rate In the State's history. The State Heard of Taxes and As sessment usch the nverege rate of taxa tion lu Its assessment of first-class rull rull rull roed property and also in the assessment of the tax en the gross receipts of trel ley, gns and electric companies, which ta takes the place of a personal ptop ptep crtv tax. I The total valuation for 1022 Is .$3,-8.-.2.27S.410, while the total tax te be i raised in approximately 5."J0 districts is I !137. 100,7.19.01). I.ongpert. Atlantic County, with a rate of $9,374, has the largest v.ite of any taxing district In the Stnte. Hnr- Identewn township, Hiirllngten County, I with a rate of $1.77, has the lowest I rate. The great' majority of the lax j uites nre Jn excess of $3,50 per $100 of valuation, Tlie rntes of the larger cities are: (Jersey City. $3.4SS; Newark, $3.7h: Trenten. $3.22: Camden, $2.S0; Pater- .son. $3.34: Atlantic City, S3.0S0; He- belicn. S1.17S: Passaic, $3,270: As- bury Park. $4.21; New Rrunswick, S4.07: Perth Ambey, $1.37; Ruyenm, Elizabeth. $3. IS; Leng Ilrauch, 1 '-'MlSWWIKliffiW !" J ,'wv-"yir"T -?;: -' - v ; ' jy.,i -tv . - 'mammmm kifv 'SaUAaawt the Save en Furniture in Van Sciver Rebuilding Sale J Opportunity knocks. It summons housewives, June Brides and all who contemplate buying ., Furniture te a realization of this Sale's advantages. Mighty and magnificent stocks of Furniture ; reduced se that our customers and the public generally will buy, ana euy quicKiy, w neip us mi tne blockade and push our rebuilding work. Q Everywhere we are overcrowded for space. In the Receiving and Shipping Departments, en our Display Floers and in our huge Storage Houses. "We have demolished seven buildings te make the new seven-story, four-acre structure possible. All this space is temporarily lest te us. Te over come this congestion we have reduced our prices te move the Furniture, and move it fast. Q The reductions cover almost every Suite and Piece en our sales floors, and are marked en the original green tags as seen as the Furniture arrives from the Factory. Special tags are used only where we have but one Suite or Piece of a Kind. These extra reductions comprise Odd Suites, Discontinued Patterns and Pieces from Matched Suites, of which there are thousands of dollars' worth all marked at the greater savings for quick clearance te provide immediate room. Savings that are without parallel anywhere. e i ft :''- Iifl mBSmmm H' , f ? i''ii ' ! f " w !wTO wijtjH TPtff WlW BmMmty iw laiaaniritflfllaaaaaTaTraaaTlTlT M liTaaa! li laT if " lillH ' -""RifHP, I' : I'', B aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaHVVSWjHfar7 a' .-TTJ jt ""-TIC -u T - -?-J ... VTT .TB kSWHKlmlmmkimSBtmmSfmf jS-e TaaaaaWI iZjFKmmSlmZr. ?, r ti 1WtMSM Oft&y, Illustrated from Our Floers in PannaltaSn,H,lJlne!."u-h.a lhl,Vth,at ?r.c?'1 ?"" a P,l,r.ed hemB of the Old Seuth. Just at It li qraclnn many a modern home oeaa 2Sty? J.ahr-d Nu.J7r,ey-edy' iF2riCei?nl,i' havine "deared Itself te thousands Ilka the geed old Period Designs of England, never ?h?m i.!.J aULeni .y!rfuL" a de'Bn. Zl$ In dignity and warm with the tradition that gave this beloved American Furniture Its early f..! ?!'' one ?J the ,theuand of Suites In Period and Modern designs that embellish our floors, and each of which can be had for far lets than you would pay for the tame Furniture anywhere In the United Statet. SOME OF THE GREAT VALUES DINING ROOM Wnlnut-flnlsh Queen Anne Dlnlns-noem Suite, i pieces ailSD.ne Wnlnut-flnlsh Suite. 4 pieces H72.00 Mahogany-finish Wllllam-nnrt-Mary Suite, 9 . Plecca aisifi.oe $305.00 Walnut Queen Anne Suite, 4 pieces, sa.'s.eu isne.00 Antique Mahogany DlnhiK-Iloem Suite, 10 pieces S4.Mi.ne IC60.00 Brown Mnhegnny Queen Anne Suite, 10 pieces $330.00 J862.00 Gray Walnut Polychrome Suite, 10 Pieces S07S.OO J850.00 Mahogany Queen Anne Suite. 10 pieces 8700.00 Brown Mahogany Queen Anne Suite, le Pieces SD88..10 $2100.00 Walnut Kcnuls'mncQ Suite, le P'ccea 1800.00 TABLES REDUCED-!;r:l LIVING ROOM $77.50 Jacobean Oak Llvlng-Roem Suite with Tupeatry-cevereU spring seats, 3 pes., fSl.SO MaheKany Llvlng-Itoem Suite, Tapestrycev- rreil spring Beats, 3 pieces fl3.80 $150.00 Mahognny-and-Cane Suite, Tapestry- covered spring seats, 3 pieces S12B.00 $235 00 Overstuffed 1oe:-o. cushion Sulte, spring scats, cewied with Illue Velour, 3 pieces. V.'o.l.eo $350.00 Overstuffed loose-cushion Suite, spring seats, covered with Tapestry, 3 pieces. ;?8.oe $325 Mahegnny-anil-C'ane Suite, loose cush- leni, Velour-covered spring seats, 3 pieces yio.i.en 0erstuffed loese-ciuhlon Suite, spring seats rONcrtrl with Mine Mohair, 3 pieces, 31S,00 $3C(),00 Miihognny-und-Cane Living . Roem L,ling-Uoem, Davenport nnd ether Tabic Suite, loose cushions, spring seats covered with Blue Damask. 3 pieces 1S37.00 Overstuffed loose-cushion Suite, spring seats, covered with Brown Mohair, 3 pc., 1560.00 Equally Great Reductions in Bedroom Furniture EASY CHAIRS $45.00 Tapostry-cevcred Chair $S7.B $49.50 Tapestry-covered Ilecker $39.75 $76.00 Mahogany Rocker, cane back with Blue Denlm-cevered seat 147.50 $82.50 Tapestry-covered Armchair, .. .155.00 $70.00 Tapestry-covered Chair 182.50 $86.00 Antique Mahegany-nnleh Armchair. covered with Tapestry $89.00 $85.00 Mahogany Armchair with cane back nnd Tapestry-covered seat S89.00 $08.00 Tapestry-covered Armchair, new $76.00 -i.riw. i i . w . '-i-' prices that will t.ave our customers many a dollar savin s deslCT ln Ml"Bany llnlsh with Queen Anne legs and a geed-sized drawer. 40x24 A wlde and wonderful selection. Best of all, at Fer Instance, you can buy a sturdy Library Tnble In. top, at $10.75. Other Tables at proportionate New Shipments of Wicker Furniture . A di:s,Play lh.at s the crewninfi; achievement of the Wieker Furniture Season. Artistic ceiXrs HUNDREDS OPXTp? phrlBcled t Jh, 5eTst ideas ln fabric? and Trr'riLST " Sf;DTS L HJIPS' Dainty ."d cheerful Desk Lamps, Table Lamps. Lamp up te $75.00 for a magnificent Fleer LamS ' Wn .0,, W, ,,tU5 as- ?7'B0 for a beatlful Reed Desk our values are as -incomparable a" ou r diSnIaVm,nmXad(1UartCrS fr Wicker F", "d say with emphasis, that Send for our Kew Wicker Furniture Felder Recently oft the press. Handsome Rugs ier 25 te 33J6 Less dnHflnuil . I 1- . 1 A speeM purchare-whicS SSS SL'eXa,"1'1 F " Axmmsier rnigs, xiz n., new $32.50 i Seamless Velvet, 9x12 ft., new $34 50 ' Axminster Rugs, 8.3x10.6 ft., new $29.50 Royal Wilten, 6x9 ft., new Axminster Rugs, 7.6x9 ft., new Wilten Velvet, 9x12 ft., new Royal Wilten, 9x12 ft., new $42.50 $24.50 $49.00 $69.00 'lhc greatest, Size Size 10.Gxl3.G 12x15 ft. Size 9x15 ft. Size 9x12 ft. Beautiful Summer Rugs at Unusual Savings atest, handsomest and most complete Meck nf Sum,., n . n. , .. ...,. . & - - "' "uia "i. niu lowest, prices 111 years. THESE OLATHA NOVELTY GRASS RUGS: $24.50 $29.50 $21.85 $10.00 Size 8x10 ft. Size 6x12 ft. . Size 0x9 ft. . Size AYtxlM ft. Demestic and Oriental RUKa scoured. de,,n .. ... .f.. 1 J, .. . ." ltUCS KM5ARFLAX LINE rt oiuuree, Cleaned nm .inrJ VUDOR PORCH SHADES The shade with the ventilator In tlu top ir.d pntcuteil selMinr.RlnB fixtures. Just a jnw of 'the niuny sizes nnd widths: G In. drop. XU.Uti nih G In. drop. s 311 I'ltcli 0 In. drop. M.25 ciu'h 6 In. drop. . p.it'h 6 In. diep, h.se lueh 0 In. drop, s 10.35 each 0 In. drop, f n.s.i c.ich 0 In. drop. S13.75 i-aeh 4 ft. wlde x 7 ft. 5 ft. wide x 7 ft. 6 It. wide x 7 ft. 7 ft. w Ide x 7 ft. g ft. wldex 7 ft. 9 ft. wlde x 7 ft. lu ft, wide x 7 ft. 1 2 ft, wide x 7 It. $13.75 .... $13,75 .... $9,75 .... $6.90 ART SQUARES. IVRV Ullfia Oriental Rugs repaired by our own Armenian exncrtfl WONDERFUL VALUES 11. .11 .., ;7;,,e,:VlunR?,ny:Iln.:sh Mantel Cleck ...new UI til, as VCX dial. Gunrnntrnrl ln,..l... 4 Yours for the asking The expert advice All our Furniture, and PurnlshlncH deliv ered in uliuelutely Hunt Proof I'added Vans. IN CLOCKS Mahefjany-fintsh Mantel -atneeral GenK. five-inch "eleht, 9 in .; width. 17 Fan. SW1,2-73- A BFeat Va,Ue' 1 rother des'irn3 from which te cheese. up Kar we.00 Interior Decorator, en hew te furnish -i t$tJl!!siMl '"TTaiErrJ Wl!lJHfa of our These who wish te EXTEND PAYMENTS for F,n, 7, r period of several ,nnH,a .,, ,;, ,... '? lwurMure or Furnh Hall Clocks, $50.00 up. a rOOm Or a Whnla Vinnae period of several months can make convenient n J X '?r ' Tniahlnga ever a """" nna satlsfactm-ff arrangements. SSk (8) n L&Va cer Ct, Stert Cleu si 5:30 J, M, Plilliliilii IIIIIIHIinnnmm, MARKET STRP.RT !7i7oev A "Op 8,30 A.M. r,M.. i Nnn.yhonie.C.lUo.iLn ylUt9 N. J. Cenntttient Ntw Jtnty, Cell Camim 210 Mstktt Strut Fttty Beats Un Ops sits Stsfs s&a'bUzs&t. 1 iiiiiii mmmmmmmmimMm 1 11 ,-i ,jm fJJ'f t MMMMMmumm""""ll"M"1" ""!:"..: 1 1 h 1 1 1 1 III if iiMM IM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers