WANTS DEPORTED WITHIN TEN DAYS Emma Goldman Notifies At torney General Palmer, of Her Action New York, Dee. 18.—Harry Wein berger, counsel for Emma Goldman, who announced that she would waive her legal rights to ask appeal from the deportation order on which she is to be sent back to Russia with Alexander Berkman, her companion of years, and some 80 other Russian radicals, has forwarded to Attorney General Palmer formal notico of her action. Mr. Palmer, in a telegram received by Mr. Weinberger, stated that the formal notice was "necessary." and if it was forwarded direct to the Department of Justice it would be Extraordinary Sale of \ Georgette Waists ip \ Just In Time For Xmas \ Begins Friday Morning I December 19 j When we say extraordinary sale oi — Jf Waists we are not putting it quite strong TpA I tfpM enough as this sale is quite unusual and will /§ ' \ f $ surpass any waist sale held in this city for fu I. V /'/ quite some time and it comes just in time jj SB.OO, $9.00, SIO.OO and $12.50 I Georgette Waists / A ilMiM'' ' At $5.95 TvJPIE. ! \ This statement of the prices may seem strong, but it is simply stating facts as nearly \\\ every waist is worth SIO.OO and $12.50, in fact, they are all worth as much or more at whole- V\ sale cost than the selling price, all of the finest quality Georgettes and all colors: Navy, V\ Brown, White, Flesh, Bisque, Taupe, every wanted shade is included and all sizes, 36 to 46; V\ 10 different styles to select from and every one new and fresh. We are selling these Waists \y to you at several dollars less than they can be bought wholesale for next W season, so we would advise you to take advantage of this wonderful opportunity and supply yourself. \ Another Lot Georgette. Waists Worth up to $6.00 at $3.95 \a This lot included about fifty waists and are just a few of a style but ft til cost more than the- selling price. Tql' . ypv Handsome new styles in pongee and novelty cotton just received and . very moderately priced; will make ideal Xmas presents. 17 bJfflM \ ►A * rnARR/SBURG.PA. g p F* V If ou can talk about your ten-course dinners, with your Taney - rflfl M salads and entrees and desserts, but for sheer enjoyment it can't *| compare with that wonderful bread and milk of childhood days. If y°u want some real "eats"—food that will take you back on ' ■tt a . ulemorv trip to those bygone days—go back to the "simple life" once in a while and enjoy bread and milk, using for the bread gHOLSUM BREADS i "Takes You Back to Younger Days" t® ■dl Schmidt's Bakery Pill ■ THE HOME OF - g. h K THURSDAY EVENING. presented to the Supreme Court, which had been petitioned for Miss .Goldman for a "writ of error or ap peal" from the order issued for Iter deportation. Miss Goldman, in a statement made public by her counsel, de clared she now expects the United States Government to "keep its promise" and deport her "within the 10 days," the limit of which she said "will be up Saturday." She added that among several things she ex pected to do in Soviet Russia would be organization of a "Russian Friends of American Freedom" along lines similar to those of the. American Friends of Russian Freedom" in 1005 which aroused sentiment against the "tyrannies of the Czar." Would Sell Housing Facilities to Relieve Congestion in Cities Washington, Dec. 18.—Without a dissenting vote the House passed and sent to the Senate yesterday a bill ordering the sale of housing facilities erected by the government during the war to relieve congestion [in many industrial centers. The I measure also abolishes the United 1 States Housing Bureau, transferring |tlie properties to the treasury for | sale to private persons, either for : cash or part payments, j Debate on the measure centered j largely in an attack on the housing | bureau. Charges of profligate ex ] penditure of government funds were | made by several members and as | sertion was made that the Senate j Public Buildings Committee was ) conducting an investigation wtih a | view of determining whether it ! should recommend prosecutions by the Department of Justice. TO nVIM) BRITISH TANKERS j Philadelphia. Dec. 18.—The Pusey and Jones Shipbuilding Company, of [Gloucester, has been given a con j tract by a British conce-n calling ! for the building of three oil tanke'-s to weigh 8,500 tons ecah. Work will ibe started at once. They will sail tinder the American flag. TELEGRAPH WILL NOT GIVE WHITE RELEASE Woman, Also Hold in Danscy Case .Will Be Retained, Says Prosecutor • Atlantic City. N. J.. Deo. 18.— ! Prosecutor Edmund C. Gaskill de- j i nied lust night that he contemplated I the release or Churleft S. White, | j charged with the murder of Billy | j Dansey. and Mrs. Edith Jones. \ j charged with being an accessory ] after ttje fact. lie admitted, how-I j ever, that his men have dug up | | new evidence in the case, and that : i there was a possibility that addi- i 1 tional arrests would be made in the j j near future. I "Our case has not been weakened , iby any fresh developments," siid j , Mr. G.isktll. He added he .'ns still | jin search of the persons who one l , night about November 10 drove up j to the Folsom swamp In an auto | mobile and went into the swamp I after they had switched off the lights I ! ot the car. The prosecutor sus- j peots the occupants of the machine, j said to have been two men, know I something about the boy's murder. ! but he declined to state on what he bases these suspicions. Tells of Work Done by American Engineers in France During War; Pittsburgh, Dor. IS.—Houses and buildings built for the doughboys by the engineers of the American ex peditionary force, if placed end to end would reach the entire length of France and into Germany, Colonel Edgar Jadwin, U. S. A., told the Chamber of Commerce here yaster day, in addressing it upon construc tion in France. Colonel Jadwin was director of construction and forestry in France during the war. Other accomplishments of the en gineers in supporting the men in the front line trenches included the building of 8,367 miles of highway throughout the sections of France where the A. E. F. held forth, and the cutting of 55,000 board feet of cord wood for fuel for the army's comfort. Miners' Board May Be Announced Today Washington. Dec. IS.—The com mission of three men to be charged by President Wilson with the task of making a survey of wages and con ditions in the coal fields is expected to be announced to-day. It was learned that "the President w ill seek to have the commission reac i a final adjustment in the coal controversy, which will be a model for the settlement of all future wage disputes in the United States and will, in fact, place the wape system l JP° n a different footing:, as the President feels must be done if in dustrial peace is to be secured. The announcement of the names or the three men, one representing the operators, one the miners and the third the public, will be accom panied by a detailed statement of the field which they are to cover and the scope of the adjustment which the President expects them to recommend. < "readjustment of the commission, i iS j p by tbe Administration, wil do away with the suspicion with which labor invariably views arbi tration. It is the claim of the labor leaders that the workers always feel when they submit a controversy to arhitratmn they always get the worst of it in the award. Crooked Insurance Must Go, Donaldson Says Philadelphia, Dec. 18.—That the fctate Insurance Commission is run as a public benefit and not a politi cal adjunct, was the assertion of Thomas B. Donaldson,, Insurance Commissioner of Pennsylvania, yes terday at the Rotary Club luncheon in the Bellevue-Stratford. "Since April, 1919, 80,000 appli cations were made for agent's li censes to sell insurance," the speaker told the Rotarians, "and in order to prevent crookedness, complete ques tionnaires must be filled out by all applicants. "Crooked insurance companies are no longer possible," hfe said. Liquor Interests Place Loss at $400,000,000 Chicago, Dec 18— Liquor interests estimate their losses as a result of the enforcement of the war-time prohibition law at $400,000,000, ac cording to a statement made here by Eevy Mayer, chief counsel for the distillers in the middle west. He announced that a suit to recover approximately this sum from the United States Government will soon be filed in the Court of Claims at Washington. Attorney Mayer explained that this action is entirely apart from the proceedings attacking constitutional prohibition, to be submitted to the United States Supreme Court. MRS. JENNIE IVOMEU DIES Philadelphia, Dee. 18. —Mrs. Jen nie D'Olier, aunt of Franklin D'Olier national commander of the American Region, fell down the steps in her home and died soon afterward Her head was cut, but Dr. John P. Turner, who was summoned, said death wns due to heart trouble and not to the accident. "TERRIRUE TERRY" ON TRIAIj i New York, Dec. J B—Margaret I Murray, known as "Terrible Terry" to a gang of alleged counterfeiters I on trial in Federal Court here, tes-1 titled that Will'am Snvder, one of! them, had threatened to kill her If she "squealed." and carried a knife with him for that purpose. RESCUES BRAZING RARY Pliilm'c'pliia. Dee. 18.—Quick ac- Mon by Mrs. Elizabeth Weldy saved her one-year-old daughter Elizabeth from nrobah'e death when a couch on which the child was sleeping caught fire at their home. The fire j was started by the explosion of stdve , polish. CAN'T SU.FNCE HAYWOOD Chicago. Dec. 18.—Federal Judge j K. M. T.andis said there was nothir"; he could do to n>-ovont William D i Haywood, rad'opl labor lende-. from sneaking at Detroit next Sundn .■ ; The American Region nost at Detroit f had requested Judge Rnndis to issue an order forbidding the meeting. I PAYS WIENER SPITED UNCI.E I Philadelphia. Dec. 18. Cn'pt. I Clarence Wiener, who shot hiruselff at the Hotel Imperial, New To>-g. on Mondav ioornir". committed the deed for l'u> 'tncß". of ptjnlaVng his uncle. j, r, KetterH.uns. th's/.ty. according to Hannpn ""Swatter, a close friend. A TALKING MACHINE FOR THE FAMILY'S CHRISTMAS Christmas and music—the two are inseparable. Why not, then, a talking machine as a gift to the I family a gift which will last for years to come, giving pleasure and entertainment. Rishel Victrola . Cheney Every one of these instruments are well known and not in the experimental stage For quality of tone we acknowledge no superior. Mahogany, Golden Oak, Fumed Oak and Walnut finishes. We have so many different sizes and models with such a wide range of prices that we can suit anyone, $25.00 to $300.00 A Useful Christmas Gift new piece of_ this nlckltitened, ' FURS REDUCED ] . 20 °/o sl- 59 Each i Sauce Pans with lids .. I AU Kinds of Ems, Neck Pieces niul MuiTs. Also Children's Furs. _ Table : brary Table, 48 Tapestry Three-piece Suits with 78-inch Sofas, inches long and 28 Most of our suits are with loose cushions on sofa and inches wide; other chairs. We aim to get the best grade of tapestries for <L tables in a large va- t h e mone y that can be obtained. We are always care rie , ol( * en ful of the construction and workmanship in these suits yC_ an " Mahogany, dif- as t h e y should give long time service. ferent sizes and Some Tapestry Suits as low $155.00 vyneida i_,OmmUlllty frames walnut or mahogany 1/O •OU Par Plate ROCKERS 100 PER CENT VALUE (1 , .-i. msmgms&misawa zs-piece set sii- 1/ • if i Floor te7for 10 Xll| Rockers giyjpjaipM Vernon design is Covered with Brown Spanish M esp£ £ ially attracti f ve ! | \r\.' j[/ m '™ itation ' $20.00 natc^^Titis o silverTs ' $35.50 scientifically de Xw ®. igned to give Bed Davenports tW- 'lfi greatest pos- Why not select a Davenport, ' [Ban] service for the which is such a useful gift. Long {■ |■ ■' ' 'uUHSf* 1 mone y. or short Davenports, which car %Sjsir Jrulliw' -rai sl3 50 will buv be made into a full size sleep I V cornpie te,* iudin" [B Toy land Is a Busy Place M* """""X \ First Floor f lm JJSmti A\ Dolls, Games, Sand Toys, Teddy Bears, | \ \ gSi\ Doll Furniture, Rocking Horses, Meccano and \ J) \ J/TOl X American Builders, Roller Coasters, Go Carts, \ HHH it / X. ml H Painting, Knitting and Stenciling Outfits, X. 811 IIIII— —Cv* Wagons, Sleds, Drums. CRELbu, lES WE CHARGE YOUR PURCHASE AND YOU CAN PAY WEEKLY OR MONTHLY AS BEST SUITS YOU Cleaners, $29.85 is Machines. No bet the price of our Til l ter mac^ne made, Christmas Club. ■•m&r $55 00 DECEMBER 18, 1919, 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers