HER WIVES' DECLARATION _k m ' j Am / - II .- ' ; ( 'I ! [ * if'' r-,' '£ v I liKi s^Smi i i mWm*. I j ■"H % | ! -""v mk ! •' ■ K® .5; ♦ ■ at I The Wives' New Dcchirntion of Indppondencp lias just been issued by Mrs. Bernard Colle, of New York. It follows: Kvery wife should have one evening for the theater. One evening for dnncing. Two evenings for bridse, or some other card game. Married couples should not retire till 2 a. m. All tliis was taken from her diary in court, for now Mrs. Colle is being sued for divorce by her husband. Twin Beds and Sisters Get Husband in Court Los Angeles, Cal., Feb. 12.—Twin beds and twin girls In a matrimonial mixmup that makes the latest farce comedy look dead. George married Ruth Graham, who twin sister, Ruby, is the image f George's bride. There are twin beds at the Dunham home and one night Ruby came to visit Ruth. George entered, minus a light and kissed some one. Ruby says she was the one kissed and she caused George's arrest. George denies it and is backed by his wife, Ruth, who is sure she was kissed. If the court believes Ruby's story and Hues George he swears he'll go on the hunt for the man who kissed Ruth. Lady Senator From Oregon Gives Up Toga to Fit Togs Portland, Ore., Jan. I. State Sen ator Katliryn Clarlc, of GlendaJe, Ore gon's first and only woman member of the up-per house of the legisla ture, has forsaken politics and affairs of state for the realm of business, and Is now busily fitting cloaks in a Los • Angeles department store. She served during the last legisla ture and was particularly active in legislation for the enforcement of pro- ! hibition and for the establishmnet of an school for girls. ! Senator Clark was urged to run for re-elf ' tion at the pre-ent election, but refused, saying she preferred a bus iness career. THE ESCAPE OF A CHINESE PROSTITUTE (Gardner L. Harding in World Out look For February.) Against the grimness of the coun terfeit gaiety of the night life of Nanking and Koochow Roads in Shanghai I hold a recollection that Hashes through those tawdry streets like a torch in the night. I can still see a little crowd of furiously hurry- | ing people that broke across my path one evening. In front of them was the flying fig ure of a girl, her little silken coat torn i and hanging by one shoulder. She! was ten paces ahead of her pursuers! as she passed me, her little face drawn i and blanched wih terror and exhaus tion. Fortunately, her pursuers were not ngile. A stout madam hobbled along; on little feet; two burly men in blue i peasant clothes lumbered along beside ! her, apparently the major-domos of her establishment. And all two ap-1 parently, the scudding little miss i ahead was a very recent inmate of: that est- blishment, launched on a gal- i lant and desperate break for free dom. The crowd parted like sheep. A few heads turned around out of curiosity, but none out of sympathy. Birth Contral Head Will H anger Strike if Convicted - ifL i ! •***. .!." . .' -©I f fcfrtM :■• M ■., 1 : ,-v '** i, *■ fi■ 1,,' '. ■ **— 'f •■■ ' ' ~ - ' u us„/. " * ' ' , r,' gggflEttSsS ! I~LRS J-lAKGARtT SAHGEI3 q; SoMT - Now- York, fob, 2. —Mrs. Margaret Hanger, had of the birth control move nent here and sister of Mrs. Kthel Byrne, who fusted In Jail for fix (lays until brclbly fed, awerts that if convicted of tho charge for which she la on trial tho will enter upon n hunger strike as did her sister, Mrs, Hanger fully ex ports to l o convicted and to receive a thirty-day term, ns wu* given Mis. gyrne. Workhouse officials are fully prepared to feed Mrs. Sanger by force Uier sho has refused food for. two days. JMONDAY EVENING, HAKRISBITRG TELEGR2IPE FEBRUARY 12, 1917. | The pursuers swept by. Suddenly I the girl turned under a bright street . light and began to pound with both ■ i fists against a kind of matchboard , doorway. A tall Sikh policeman started across the street from his traffic post on the opposite corner. Then the crowd closed in and it was all blur. When I got to the fragile doorway under the light the girl was gone and the Sikh policeman was dispersing the crowd. They scattered quickly, all but the stout woman and her two strong men. The woman scolded ve hemently and viciously shook her list at the sign above the doorway through which her victim hail escaped. Then the policeman "moved her on" in true Occidental fashion and the incident ! seemed to be closed. 1 This was my first view of the Door ; of Hope, the expressive name that I has grown up around one of the most | consecrated missionary works in ; modern China. It is a refuge from | tlie life of the -etreets that has been ; sought in its six years of dramatic ; ' xistence by more than a thousand Chinese women. RESCUING GIRLS IV SHANGHAI | (Gardner L. Harding in World Out look For February.) The little Door of Hope on the Foo chow Road is only a receiving "home i lor girls who escape from a life of shame. The real work of the institu- i tlon is done at the Industrial Home, i a wide veranda-surrounded frame ! ;| building in a suburb just outside of! Shanghai. The Mixed Court, or joint ■ Chinese and foreign board of magis-i trates, has officially recognized the enterprise with a number of generous ] granjs, and since 190G has invested ; | 11.200 a year on its obvious influence I ] for perm,am nt social betterment. Ihe number of girls in the home ! I fluctuates from 12". to 200, a small l cupful from Shanghai's well of 5,000 | professional women of the streets, 1 It is true (to which should be added' l ,0 00 or C.OOO more voluntary, or or- j j casional, night-women); but more' significant when you remember that, i in all, well over a thousand girls can ! now be counted as satisfactorily placed in respectable life, i The soundness of the Door of Hope, i ne\t to the trtiiy Christian consecra- ! tion of its effort, is its most note worthy characteristic. It is based on a btoad and catholic foundation among the forces for civic decency in Shanghai. Miss Cornelia Bonnell I first started it in 1901, nnd its active management is exclusively mission- I ary. Hut Chinese assistance has been ' absolutely indispensable. The receiving home in Foocliow! Load wus a Chinese idea and was , put through by Chinese donations. 1 Chinese co-operation finally drove ' j out the depraved custom of lending I i night-women through the streets on men's backs, and put the ban on the employment of the hordes of children that in the old days made the traffic a thousand times more hideous still, ! while Chinese-enforced laws protect I these reforms with the sanction of I educated official opinion. Great sc^ and lOc ■: Tuesday, February 13th | (1111 ) I V i ?j 15c Sterling Silver f* j 10c Fancy China p |j 7c Stocking jj* 5c Hat Pins, p* Men's Silk r* | 1 1 Individual Salts DC I Cups j|- Ct | or OC Neckwear DC \ — J % ' l* ' I Lot of §sc Silk ■ A 10c Peayl P* Jsc Handkerchiefs, p* J I 19c Box Writing-3 /\ 50c 36-inch Brown f > | Mousseline Scarfs. I ||C Buttons tL?C , U for 5£ j | Paper IDC MouSeuLjialf yd OC '' I 10c Cabinet p* j f 10c Spool p1 I 25c Worsted p J 125 c Knit <' 25c Ladies' Neckwear tOf J Q „ T r _ > | T —/2 C >-Oilecj *B |\ , 15c combination Funnels 50 25c Brooches .., 10<- jgg Honey F* T { Handkerchiefs IUC 10c Colonial Glass Dishes 50 10c Beauty Pins, 12 on a card ..-. 50 Comb Towels OC I .&} -- I 10c Fancy China Platters ... 4 50 10c Fleeced Jersey Gloves 50 ! A 7 s t * Lot cf 10c Sheet Music, 2 for 50 15c Curtain Swisses 100 *\ 1 j ' * 10c Lingerie Tape *. 50 15c 32-inch Unbleached Shaker Flannel .. 100 /' \ f i 10c Stickerei p®9 5c Hair Nets, 3 for 15c Cambric Muslin ......... 100 19 c Cut Glass HS\ ,(' 15c and 25c Stamped Infants' Bibs 100 J 10c Brown Fireproof p* j| *"=&(< | 25c Boys' Knit Toques 100 25c Stamped Doilies with floss 100 I 11 Ribbons, half V J 50c Children's Flannelette Dutch Suits, and 25c Instruction Books V JiF ' ' * Waists, 10c: Bloomers . 100 10c and l*sc Stamped Infants' Bootees .... 50 | f 12y 2 c Tight-Fitting Corset Covers, slightly! 10c Cushion Cords 50 [> l il & 5c Cambric Embroi- p soiled 50 10c and 25c Stamped Collars 50 I and 25c Jap S ■ SPUTTER'S \=^m 1150 c Girls' Tarn Ffa ftf < EXCEPTED \I 25c Stamped A O-Shanters J/ O lc to 25c Department Store | Pin cushions lUCjf If" "" )j Where Every Day Is Bargain Day < v| II 50c Skating Sets, 4g\ | 15c and 25c Stamped F* | ij scarf, io V- .) *- f f 1 \ f ~ a i t a r \p *' 10c Men's Cellar and g* j 50c Silk —f| Lot of 25c I I Cuff Sets; ivory back. C j Boas AUC Belts AyC Turkish Towels. A l/C Flannelette Skirts. AIJC A ALL THE NEWS OF FROM NEWSBOY TO STOCK BROKER Fred C. Landis Also Known as La Vaughan, Magician; Quits Heading System (i ' x , d'C *' ' {: h 1 ■ FUED LANDIS Knowno Also us La Vaughan, Newsboy Magician From newsboy d magician to broker, 1b a new phase In the "life of Fred Landis, For tour years he haa been a newsboy on Heading "Railway trains during daytime. At night he was a one-man show in the smaller to.wns along the Reading system. As Fred LaVaughan he entertained as a magician, vocalist and pianist. His next move will be to open a broker's office in Canadaigua, N. Y. Landis left for his new Held to-day. Landis was a unique character about Harrlsburg. His run was from Har risburg to Gettysburg. Sometimes he made trips eastward. During his lay off in llarrisburg this boy sold candy and refreshments to employes at local industrial plants. Work As Kntertaincr At nights he gave entertainments, appearing as ticket seller, ticket taker and performer. lie told a friend last week that he had a nice bank account and was looking for a place to go into business. There was a rumor several days ago that he had made a good strike on a stock- investment. Landis denied the story, but friends about the Rending Railway station said to-day that lie received a check on Saturday, the amount of which was in four figures, and that one hour later he had resigned his position. Landis has relatives in Canadaigua who will back him In business as a broker. Ice Derails Lehigh Train; Kills Engineer Reynolds Hazleton, Pa., Feb. 12.—Renjamin Reynolds, of this city, engineer of the !>hlgh Valley Rillroad train carrying silk mill girls froiYi Hazleton to Weath orly, was Instantly killed Saturday when the locomotive was ditched and upset at Beaver Meadow. Patrick O'Donnell, the fireman, escaped In- Jury. Later in tho day tho Lehigh Valley, In an official statement, announced that tho wreck 'was caused by Ice be ing on a level with the rails. This lee was formed by drippings from the water tank, The temperature during tho night registered t degrees below zero, Throo of the cars were derailed, but outsldo of Reynolds nobody Was hurt. GETS COMMISSION * A commission ns necond lieutenant In th Federal Officers Reserve Corps has heen granted 10, .1, Htaclcpole, Jr., of Harrlsourg, according to the current luijue of lite Army and Navy Journal, Mr, Staokpole has attended the train ing camp at I'lattabuig. PROFIT-SHARING FOR P. R. R. MEN E. Clarke Fowler Tells What It Means to Employes; Paying Plans Opportunity for Pennsylvania rail road employes to buy stock and sharo in prolits has stirred up Interest. Tlans were explained Tuesday night at a mu tual meeting by Superintendent \V. B. McCaleb and Treasurer James If. TJnn of the Mutual Beneficial Association bf Pennsylvania Railroad Employes. 10. Clarke FoWler In yesterday's Philadel phia Press says: "The plan of the Mutual Beneficial Association of Penn sylvania Railroad Employe#, whereby employes may purchase stock of the company on the Instalment plan, may be the beginning of an Idea which will germinate In the I'ennsyU'ania railroad Itself establishing a profit-sharing scheme, such as has been developed with great success by the United Stages Steel Corporation and other industrial concerns, large and small. "At the annual meeting of the share holders of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, next month, they are to be asked to authorize an Increase In In debtedness of $75,000,000. While It is generally believed the company will finance Itself for the year through the sale of general mortgage bonds, ru mors have been heard that a stot-k al lotment may be Included in the financ ing. There is $100,000,000 of stock au thorized, which can be disposed of by the board at its discretion. InMiilment I'lnn | "The proportionate amount of stock which each employe would be allowed to subscribe for would be dependent Gpon his earnings, and the company could f.ollow the suit of the Steel Cor poration and allow the men to pay for the stock In Instalments covering a period of, say two years. They wo.uld be charged Interest on the unpaid bal ances and credited with dividends as paid. The dividends would about offset the Interest changes, An arrangement could also be made with the consent of th# men whereby payment could be made monthly by deducting the amount of the monthly payments from their wages. While this would to all gencrnl re spects he a decrease in the wages of the workers, it would tfiean a saving to that extent, and thrifty workers would lind that they could got along with the smaller pay envelope. Then at the cud of the two-year perlc 1 the company would turn over to them the i stock, fully paid, anil lliey would have ja working asset, each share bringing them in $2 a year. Hy buying the stock j at par this would mean a six per cent. ! Interest on their savings. SHOPMEN GET EXTRA HOI K Tamaqua, Pa., Feb. 12.—Owing to the fact that agents of the Interstate Commerce Commission had "shopped" twelve of the Heading Railway Com pany's locomotives here, the local shops yesterday started working eleven hours, .the force being augmented by machinists from the shops at Heading. So great is the traffic congestion due to lack of locomotives the company la putting forth every effort to get them in shape. Siding's all along the Sha mokin division yards arc lillcd with freight. VETERAN FOREMAN DIES Samuel 11. Myers died Saturday evening at liia home, 62 North Eighteenth street. Ho was tho oldest member of the York Free and Accepted Masons, a retired foreman of the blacksmith shop in the local vards of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Ho is survived by one son, Daniel H. Myers, and a ,daughter. Miss Carrie Myers, a teacher in the Melrose build ing. Funeral services will be hoi* from the home Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Burial will be inado In tho Harrisburg Cemetery. Standing of the Crews HA II 111 SB UKG SIDES I I'lillailrliililii Division —ll9 crew first to go after 3:10 p. m.: 118, 101, 127, 128, | 112. Knglneer for 118. Firemen for 127, 128. Brakemen for 118 (two). Kngineers up: lilnck, Lefevor, How ard, Sober, Blsslnger, Ycater, Simmons, 1 Sellers. Firemen up: Cover, Miller, Walkage, j Newhouser, ilorst, BrymesseK ISverhart, i lJ*itSs. Hoffman, Paul, Koll. Conductor up: Feslcr. I Brakemen up: Boyd, Wilt, McNaugh ton, Hssig, Wingart. Middle Olvlhliiii —22 crew first to go , after 12:.*50 p. m.: 26, 229, 215, 242, 237, I 220, 223, 240. 2".0, 238. I laid off: 24. 30', 18, 29. "Engineers up: Snyd*', Buckwalter, L. A. Burrls, Brink, Blizzard. Firemen up: Crone, Eckert, Tlppery, Jr., lteeder, Pensyl, L. A. Gross, Gray, Adams. Conductor up: Glace. Flagman up: Anderson. Brakemen up. Kraft, Doyle, Jr., Yohn. Knight, Sebellst, Carl, Jury. \ uril Crews— Kngineers for 14. third 24. 38. Firemen for third 8, 12, 14, first 22, third 24, fourth 24, 80. 62. | Kngineers up: Clelland, Goodman, Hailing, Hayford, Watson. Beckwltli, Gibbons, Clegs, Ewing, Yinger, Star rier, Morrison. Firemen up: Klner, Rearolf, Stlne, Warner, Myers, Hardy, Wilhelm, Wal j tors, lli uiiw, Zcigler, Vuchity, Roden hafer, Black, Smith, Howe, Dunbar. RNOI.V SIDE Philadelphia Division—226 crew first to go after 3:45 p. m.: 210, 241, 244, 201, 220. Kngineers for 241, 220. Firemen for 241, 220. Flagman for 44. Brakemen for 10, 20. Conductor up: Iaynmn. Flagman up: Urnholtz, Middle DlOnloii —23s erew first to go after 1 p. in.: 216, 231, 233, 229, 219, 228, 224. I .aid off: 112, 101, 110, 10. Yard Crew*— Kngineers for second 108, 122, 128, 130. Fireman for 108. Kngineers up: Troup. Anthony, Nue myer, Rider, Hill, Boyer. Firemen up: Myers, Guilermln, Brandt. Reed, liackenstoe, Walsh, Ilau bert, Illnkle, Bron, Books, Rice. HEADING CIIFAVS The 23 crew first to go after 12.15 p. m.: 6. , The 64 crew first to go after 12.45 p. in.: 56. ■ Kngineers for 58, 9, 23. Firemen for 58, 6, 9, 23. Conductors for 58, 5, 9. 17, 18, 24. Brakemen for 6, 9, 18, 23. Kngineers up: Freed, pick, Griaith, Merkle. Little. Laudlg, Jones. ~ Firemen up: Stornsfelt, Wilson," Weiley, liurtman. Lot/,, Fabkler, Marks, Floyd, lenders, Beiges. Conductors up: Keifter. ltenner. Turns. Brakemen up: Poll, Adams, Newell, Khambatigh, Lehman, Edmonson, Kan us, Kuhn Dye, Kltnmel, Zukowski, Stephens, Kline, lleefner. Wise, Pax ton, Crosson, Shult/., Sollenberger, Belt ier. Martin, Knsminger, Beltrlok, Gul den, Kills, Shipe, lleckert, Meals, Ken ner. Bowers. Weiley, Seigfried. Tech High School Notes —With, tho midyear examinations completed Friday all the classes of the school began their class work for the second semester starting to-day. Hon. ors for tho first term will be announc ed in the honor roll by Mlbs Hammel baugli within a short time. • y —The Sophomore-Senior interclass basketball game will be staged In the scboill gymnasium to-morrow. Be- • cause of exams last week no contests were played. The first-year boys are leading tho league. —George L. Stark, editor-ln-chlef of the Tech Tatler has announced a meet ing of the staff for to-morrow after noon. 7