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ARTHURS' SKETCH TS APPROVED Artist's Picture Shows Dela ware Boys in Action in Argonne Section WILL BE PLACED IN STATE HOUSE Special to The Evening Journal. DOVER, March 9—The special com mittee authorized by an Act of Leg's lattice In 1917, to have a picture painted to be placed in the Stat" House, de pictlng the Delaware troops In Prance during the war. consisting of former Prcsldent Pro Tcm Barnard of the Senale, former Speaker Harvey P. Hall of the House and Secretary of Slate Everett S. Johnson, met here yester-' day, and had submitted to them by Slanley M Arthurs the well-known artist a sketch of the painting designed - Th - ä ÄrjjÄisHve: \rgonne District. In the forefront of the Picture I. shown the heroes! loan of Arc the Saviour of France: Lafàyctte, «ho aided the United Slates nd Washington, the Father of this I ountry, all three mounted on horse *tt» ... t*. heroes «. h. S' n the Delaware boys in uniform pushing their way through mud and barbed wire nets, while In the back tcroifod in the devastated and ruined - ction of the Argonne. showing build r;e, m ruin, tnes shot off. etc. The picture met the approval of the ommittee and Mr. Arthurs will now h< given authority to proweed with '' fun P,cture - \rt Gallery In New York some weeks seen, TEACHERS WIN TWO PAYS A 'bought the board should regard the wishes of the 159 who seriously need « d the semi-monthly pay checks. Mts. that the Stradlcy also commented janitors and clerks, equally Included with the teachers in the resolution, had given no chance to vote upon the oeen matter. Mr. Ostro also spoke of hardships caused many teachers by the payments only once a month. Mr. Campbell stated that he had been misquoted, that he was not opposed to Hie semi-monthly plan In itself, but he felt it would put to great a strain upon) ihe office force. The first vote showed the Guard" snildlv opposed but losing out "Â-r Draper. Moore, Stradley, Beck, loffman; nays. Messrs. Cooper. Kersey, Union. Palmer. Campbell. Total. y ea9 ' s, 5. The MU ' v ' , V e ? Uf V, a n t t r his Vote and'Vhe* s« 50 nd*p«lUshowed eleven members who had r-malned < hoo; No. 17 . In the flood area, w» ? ' 1 . lnteudcntSeoUlh.it It would .• ready for owupaney in a few days •■•bool No. 23 was forced *o be dis nd for Ikc | ! !v ''lav M-^ li!i- : 'M:ulvr-. . ' , ...... ... n. S.h5a!L . «ÎS lUM so nU . 0 . who i bla n'f ''jy 1 , .... a , d • .ntracled bwuse of the g moaphere of her school room. , The teachers commitl** ( p £' r ' p{ !, following reslgnaimna. Mi 8 s K M. K-nnedy. »reda Hiiimb g , carv.ln. The latter "as also in the new list of temporary appota *;: a mV!' 3 Horn Pe.rla JiV'® D '» Wuertz, Allro Lucey. T-ran&g • *' .ng on. Ulaibclh Roe Kalphp • ■" WPoInU* as, instructor of high r. cb0 ?i ?l, lJ rr'.L7'Lr d iH-.- u lb* 'Wilmington High ^' h °o The spring vticatloo will *« earlier I In, year, to <' om Pl> w'th th ■ >f Superintendent soott that it occur d. Easter instead of later. The sum of * 6 o 0 was transferred from the contingent fund to pay light .nd power bills. Plans for the new No. 25 School will he Inspected next week by the new buildings commute. . Ordering of commencement diplomas was authorized from a Philadelphia "Old Yeas, ii' I. O n t! th ; o ■ ,.nd St company. THREE STREETS TO BE WIDENED Continued from First Page, matter the directors divided to extend the widening from French to Madison streets. A resolution for that purpose received Its flrst and second reading. Ninth street from Market to Shipley may be widened at this time, but it is hardly likely it will be widened all the way to Madison street in the near fu ture, as the city has not the money •callable to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars damages for properly taken for street widening, I GEORGETOWN RE-ELECTS H.C. STEWART, MAYOR Special to The Evening Journal, ) GKnllGKTOWN. March 9.—At Hic i ejection on Saturday the following were] deeded : , Mayor, H. G. Stewart; Goiincllmen,j Dr John H. Hammond, Walter R. HH- 1 yard, Walter Roach, Andrew Marvel, James M. Tunnell; treasurer, Howard! •f. Cooke; collector. Joseph B. West;: •issessor, William T. Hobbs; auditors,! George Messick and George H. Short, All Uiese officers were re-elected with the exception of James M. Tunnel!, who! defeated Charles S. Richards. WOULD RETALIATE AGAINST ENGLAND Secretary of Treasury Prom ises to Protect Leather Workers in Tax Matter CONGRESSMAN LAYTON MAKES STATEMENT The committee of leather workers of the Stales of Delaware Pennsylvania am! New Jersey conferred with Serre tary of the Treasury Houston at Wash ington yesterday. The delegation rna(Je ja protest against the action of Great Britain in providing a 15 per cent. preferential taxon all goat skins from india, with a 10 ^er cent, rebate to all British Colonics. During the meeting Secretary Houston slated that he had received no official notice of this tax, but that, as soon as he did, he would endeavor to remed) 1 rssjsu lax on exports to the United States John A. Grant, of Wilmington, chair man of the delegation, and prominent In the manufacture of glazed kid. pro sentod a statement to Secretary lions ton ^'"'Ärs^ were'^com'USÏ SSSS JTS. ST-«* tariff, the American manufacturers would be unable to compete with t .clr Canadian contemporaries. Congressman Caleb R. UyUl urged Secretary Houston to h UB *L, h jf. P ®^T .given by Congress, to hl.s «ice In U13. He further stated : ;Thla cannot be Milled^by «UPtomaer. said Dr. Layton. Th e aumofuy given 'h® ÄiÄM J used "'The 'se^eUryTan àl Ä :iiro U fknow n s S lh a at f slÄ Ät ,B5 the neotec ton thf Industry Is seVking fm and sht* would not resent a per.'eclly [,gal and proper use of such power" The delegation, which conferred with the secretary of the treasury consisted of Dr Caleb It Layton Congressman Ïom Delaw^re. who"arranged for U.e hearing and the following: Delaware. John A. Grant. Lawrence A Burns. Rachael E. Gastelow. Joseph " " McGovern, Noon. Albert Drew« and J. Laughlln : Walter Underwood and Elizabeth Mc Keown: New Jersey, William Sears and Thomas Early. They represent leather workers. Pennsylvania. o* the town and school, a splendid tw tanl . chemical Are engine, fire plugs onl earb „irret comer and middle of each 'block' a bank with deposits of »350. 00 n. and a IW. 1 «^ A second statement ^nt-d to the U/Tn^vhn* J . 8 ■ Tb | g m.nmuc' to Popu«Uon tram s rice nu^ibe ij» P P ' 1 on tb ' e s; myr na-Cla> Urn prop ' 1 Tlie »ernnd delegation before the ihn»'''! was from Soaford. including Dr. Hollis and Capum BeHrldge, wit^Sn PfrWaident H. E. Stahl. This dele .gallon was seeking Information as l" the poMlblllty of securing a new build inasmuch as bolh Laurel and Lewes, in Sussex county are to have n9W buildings. After a discussion of the situation, the delegation wm given authority to have plans drawn and to a8c( , rta , n J whaf cowW be donc toward l,b ' ! «fibsoltdatlon of the schools ad to fu»afwl. Th* dplpgntlon left with bright hopes of securing a new building and betterment of education:;! cond|tion , ln general. _ _ WII IMIXTTOM AITTrt WILMIIMl I UIM AU1U war mimar U AI I LU. LN 1 URN HALL ______ The Wilmington Autopnobile Gom p any b as leased Turn Hall, French street above Eighth, for a salesroom and «ervlce station, while Its new building on Delaware avenue and Eleventh street, between Orange and Talnall Is being erected. It Is expected Turn Hall will be used fropt April 1 to September 1, and that the company's new building will be ready for occupancy by the latter date The building will be four srtories high, of steel and concrete conslniction. will take In the site of the present building and the old Avenue Theatre, and will have 106.000 square feet of floor space. K will accommodate 400 cars. CLAYTON FIGHTS FOR NEW SCDOOL MACCABEES TO HOU» R \KE. TTie Ofltecrs' Club of the Woman's Benefit Association .of the Maecabeee will hold a hake in the office of the W ilmington Gas Company tomorrow j morning, The Woman's Benefit Association SIMS SA YS NA WAR ON 4 WASHINGTON, March 9—The war vvas (prolonge,! four months by failure of the Navy Department lo act prompt ly on recommendations of Allied naval authorities and himself, Hear Admiral w. s. Sims declared today before Hie Affairs >îub-rom milter, testify j n g |q Us proba of the navy's war work. in tho first few months of Ihe war, be said, the navy pursued a "vaolDat Ing" and "tiand lo mouth polfey." . Sims, who was the first witness call- j led attacked American naval policy, and Secretary Daniels and In beginning his testimony charged: That the navy's failure to co-operate CALI FOR RIDS ON MISPILLION WORKI Government to Spend $25,000 Aiding Traffic Between Milford and Bay NEARLY $1,000,000 IN SHIPMENTS YEARLY I I Sealed proposals for Jetty construe tlon and repairs at the mouth of the Mlspdllon river, which rises on the | boundary line between Delaware and j Maryland, flows 13 miles between Kent I and Sussex counties and empties Into I the Delaware Bay about 16 miles above i tape Henlopen, will be received and | opened by Colonel J. P. Jcrvey at tlie office of the United Stales engineer. sixth And King streets, at 11 a. in., on \prii 5 . Th( . estimates of the engineer office for the work aggregate about W5.000. awtaSr t | 0n r , ara lU*l to the dredg d channel about Tj0 fo et: In making repairs to the „Istlng jetties by replacing the g!one where It has settled or fallen out. and in replacing the longitudinal tlm berS , V h,ch b,Ve b * C ° mC br0kcD ° r "ffS .rose. «, .s,,™,™™. pf MlsplWon provides for a chan nel 6 feet deep at mean low water from Delaware Bay to Milford, and 80 ^et W |de from the curve of Delaware Bay 'cross the flats to the mouth, protected, |by jetties along the north and snul.i. JsKles. 3996 and 5100 fee l long. rwp» ^thence 60 w " e •■.î'Jîlu wlth additional width at sharp bend»., ; m î *Z T CU X 0tti ? ,"ÄS! fr ^ fo,lr «J * h «ÿ ^ J ^* fo ^ Uth f\Si"Ä"non ^ Sc^'Ä^rtilleatg «gj m(>nt ' "'Z™' «-'»'m« ^d fl*h. firing h wVSltlS year prèvimillv It "» r T P « «» b " was »l.AoO.OOO. V»*" d r "f sW1 , 1 , 0 d ^ v i'!lpnt ^eomman leering^*the b0 ?U for warTmS" B n «-dS ^ of general merchan ^"were dlverled to the railroads. <ll,e dlvemfl tne _ —ouRirais NEW STORE SITE The Mctrnpolltant Five to Fifty Cent (Store Company, of No. 606 Market street| today took posees.lon of theHote.| Wilmington properly. No. 819 Martel ''trrrt. and will moj$ IU business to ground floor of the latter .n began at midnight. ,, , he rrop r rty a t No. «06 Market street, will expire June 25, and the 'place Is offered for rent after that date,, jby Harry T. Qrgham. Collector of Inter*' n , n(1VPnl)( , wn „ is nnP 0 f 11 , ow 11 er».l u y, the Intention of the Metropoll onnl nany to apend »».000 in re -modeling 1 ^ Hie first floor of the hotel bul i din(r ? W hjrh It has leased froip the nvvn , T Mrs. Mary A Taylor, of Allan ? lp C Hy. formerly of Wilmington, for a period' of ten years. The hotel build )na bas a frontage of *4 feet and a depth Kew.y back to Shipley street of117 J?eét An entrance way Is to be made on the CO nfh side of the Market sired front, j p . lf jj nR t 0 th.v floors above, which will b( . continued as a hotel, with nn office I « the second floor. The remainder of the nrst floor Will be occttpled by the Mdropolll »an store. Ttir p n tiro build ic* has been under lease to James H. as a hotel, since 1013. in addition to buying out Mr. Kane's lease the MetropolHan company also noV'over from him ad the flxturea and furnishings of the hotel x<r Kane has been in business in the v i < .in'ltv of the Hotel Wilmington or In .. . h i( e i bu (i d ing itself for the pasi {Wilmington Hostelry Taken Over Today by Metro politan Company TO RENT ROOMS ON UPPER FLOORS The Hotel Wilmington property was built In me early elvhtles bv John A. Boers. who was the first husband of Mrs Taylor, tho present owner, In the days when the old Grand Opera House in Ihe Masonic Temple across the street was the leading legitimate playhouse In the oily, many famous! actors slopped at the Hotel Wilmington Mr. Kane has made no plans for the future, except that he expects to stay wj,l ,lvff a rarrt p,,« ^Thj In Wilmington. ing a*t the home of Mrs. Wbann. No. 612 Rodney street, On Friday evening. Maccabees will have a St. Tarty in their meeting rooms, A. 0. U. W. Hall. March 19, the Patrick's VY KEPT EXTRA MONTHS tes- sacrifiées That Sims' efforts to g t "team work were delayed or unlllfled.'' That Daniels roiiunittod a •'manifest fully with the Allies resulted in necd outrage'' in making public one of Pirns' loiters regarding Admiral WII son and various other nav i oflbvrj and then sending it out by radio. That a "campaign of deliberate propaganda" had been resorted to by Daniels lo Injure Sims. "In so far «» tho navy was permitted hy the machinery which controlled It. U lived up to and exceeded It Iradl Hons." Pirns said He denied that be raised any question as lo the efficiency | of the navy viewed as a wiiulc. OFFICER IN SPANISH WAR DIES TODAY Continued from Firat Page, civil service examination, and was soon afterward appointed a postal clerk In the Wilmington postofflee. He was gen I eral delivery clerk for »ever&l years. I Colonel Stevenson la survived by his ' wife Mrs Louies R Stevenson his two dau?IUers Ellzabet h and M ar garel Ste . . .. enson, and his brother, William Steven son. • Colonel Stevenson's father was David Stevenson and his mother Sarah Eliz abelb warnm both native Delaware At one time Colonel Stevenson was > in the government service In Porto Hlc0 Durln g the Spanlsh-Amertean .taiinnsg with the rvli «ag tot? 1 s * h ° r ^ A th^nev ^.r^V'vvnn.rJ. gwj of M<! Sh { j t w m i,,* HRer-lew' .>cm ' i "*™* 1 be ln ,U ' erv,ew ^ ni ' . . . . honorable ' career. In the military -*«.,«1.^ oM Comnany r F , , npll ,ware ]nfan|r d oftober 26 'iw^he^hèlng In ( • p - . * f * ll lw ., n) ,l v <ftKri . ^ lB , jon P ,. d âe^onil Beutenant^Tm H r.avalrv June -M |ks 7- \mmmls KloVe, KiAt L^utenant Trooi B FlrU niv.lry, SepUmber *6 1W Healgned .. . , , ° ÄnlXed seaond lieutenant. Com us"' 17* 1 »? : ^ommUsùned'^^plaln. STeri.^^^mrsrned'Ä StembeT'i. mi ; ^ 00 i oneI . First Delaware Infan lrv ' lfI,lted Slat,,s Vollint * er * Mtt >' 1 ' <W - mustered out of United Stales ser v)cf - November 16. 1898. Appointed acting Inspector rifle prar tire, staff of Governor John Hunn, July «-,**» Appointed acting aaslrtant ad -1 - ,,,anl pPn> ' r ' 1 M,fr of Governor Hunn. A'lgusl 15. 190Ï: appointed acting as-; alstant Inspector ^neral staff of Gov ■ ans. Commissioned Hauten, mt colonel and assistant inspector general. Staff of Oov ernor Hunn, February 23, 1906. Retired from Slate service October 26. 1906. "Colonel Stevenson bad a long and enviable record In the military service of this Mate." said Adjutant General 1 I*. Wlckershana today. He was a ver ï, popular and efficient offleer. In addition to tots other nl ' lit ® r> ^ ) ' sillons. Colonel Stevenson was tn 1900 K commissary inspector of the L. 8.1 I ^ ^ ^ I ^ up |he Turklgh quefltlon t0 deviie nelllinf the entire Formal,Turkish question. Premier Lloyd Vt^Äo^ä^^ m „ nilln , have massacred In Turk | S h Asia Minor was taken to mean that opinion is being prepared for extensive nr ' 1 . lBh * pl n 1 ®" tb *T*' n .. d| , f 'J u ' » Sr Zi " ' r P °*' n * l0 P ro,crt Arm mans. Washington ~M^rh 9 ' , *L h ,.| l .' „ l „2!i d l„ «i.non. T 1 ll P * l ^" l J" rLI.-n,.'' JÎ* 'J„ tb . tb ', p f a l!r^„" nd u ^ " ,ftry S ,nf„ n f^' h n , 'Lr," . .1 " jn a j()n of " ' , jt ! '' '\ a \" p ' - \ •* .f t. ncr L • : . . # . . . , . . 9 0 J* 4 ''* b ** n by . ,he ^ r reported dl«-! l " T " rk '"."''„a ^ Warftt ™ b «* p n h 'V, es and 1 ll,kB is «°n»ideri\l m i , , robab !f' . ^' ,e «Rdode of the Turks toward tile European troops In Turkey has become increasingly hostile according lo »loesherc, since reports were circulated me Allies planned to take Con-1 stantlnople from the Sultan and keep] i ■ MÎ it. The strained situation originally was! the result of liie open hostility of the Turkish nationalist forces led hy Mus tapha K^mal and th*' recent wholesale massacres of Armenians by Hie Turk nationalists. It also is believed by of-i fielals here that the Turkish govern-l^ ment is playing jt« old game of Inter-1 national Intrlguo and Is taking adxan-j (ague of every opportunity to play the 1 AlHes off wInst one another. Ä iSs in tie fnleHcr of Anatolia. Many are also reported lo be deserting the regu- j lar army for the nationalist cause. The British have nine regiments of infantry and ten batteries of artillery at Konieh and along the Black Sea. according to Information hère. There are live divi sions of Grce.k troops at Smyrna. The Italians have two regiments of in fantry. two squadrons of cavalry and two batteries of artillery at Konieh and The KnucJi have Hie largest Aiden. force In Asia Minor, with eight régî mPn ts of Infantry, six squadrons of rax ,ii r y and twelve batteries of artillery | n cillela. Syria and Angora. w . H. C. MEETING, interesting musical and literary! p roirram was given last evening in No. ;m sfbo o) by the Washington Heights Ontury Chib. Mrs. A. D. Warner, pres .jdent of The Stale Federation of Wo men s Clubs addressed the meeting, j )r Joseph H. Odell spoke on "Shakes peare." Those who contributed lo the .musical program were Mr. and Mrs. ruymouth Mitchell. Edgar T Smith, Miss Kathryne A. Ross and Norris C. (Morgan. FIGHT OPENS ON PAPERS OF SCIENTISTS Continued from First Page. The Oakland. Calif , and the Portland, Ore., congregations already have In dorsed th? exclusion policy. Many other congregations, according to both D •. Davison of the faction sirs- j porting the board of directors, and another ardent Christian Science fol-j lower wiio may be said to represent i the trustee faction, have taken sl/nllar j 0 ^ivulcU 1 , (lft ono „paging for the trustee fse tlon declares th- schism has grown to such an extent that the entire world ä: : î i 1 calons from the control of the board " dTreÜora - Mr XHwlson said Iasi j nicht 'The' periodicals "The Moni- ] "The Sentinel." -The Journal," I... : H eraut" "Der Herold" and "The I Christian lienee Bible Lessons Qu.r »«22tTÄ, ihr faith In her deed of trual. ! ! It slated that the directors should ) 1&ve control. The suit of the lrus-| » p brought airainsl the Board of I>4- * I rectors to restrain the Utter from as sumlng Jurltwlietlon in the publication of the church', periodicals Is Contrary I to the manual if the Mother Church, . , , . Mpl p; ddy ." ! ".l/^'of^cong. égalions : drtaiMly^v/ 'lî'ced" lo'TxcTude "he j I,i r Da"o„ gave It as hl. ^* u H ban on the publications. '«-'church of Christ. Scientist. In London, by a vote of 480 to 220. decided to aup port the board of dlreelars. - u la ridiculous to say that there is no gchlsm in the Christian Sotonre Uiurch ..- a leading supporter of th«. trus t,. e faction declared "T»ie schism ls 80 gr ea t that It constitutes a grave) action. Bolh concede that a majority of the balloting arc favorabl congregations to the M> th'-r Church and strongly op authority, a'lhougti ■ The First The more publicity that ran I be given the dispute th better. In the ,. nd for «hole faiUi. It Is not a ( war i ba ^ j Ä going to mean disaster to j , he falU) of o} ir istlan Science, but It Is 1 « ure 1 .1 ,-pi le income from the publications wb | 0b u, e Mother OhurcJt faction Is seeking to abolish as an expedient! looking to the hearing of autocratic „„munis to more than »1,150, J a yw pro „ t . 'publication« means that the Income] ifrum the works of Mrs. Mary Baker ! Eddy, the founder, amounting alone to approximately »600,000 a year, will be I lost. "It would be the grandest achieve -1 j ment In religious'history If this thing! wore thrashed out to a finality. Any element that opposes carrying it fully through the courts Is to be compared to the pacifist elements during the war The work of the church as an or ganization Is at stake." I menace. l believe, going to mean the complete | reorganlial.on of the church struc nTäiiMp Hâ lI T UM P \ L rp\' NAME DANZEINBAKlîill S 01 |PfpPCAD PAAIM SUCCESSOR SOON 1 - ! Levy Court will meet at 10 30 o'clock on Saturday morning to appoint a sue- | Lessor to William H. Danzenbaker «» 1 ■- commissioner, r-pr■ - ' f|ll,n ' 1 land Benjamin A. Grove* arc promnni L mcnl | oned for the place. City Coun 1 <11 has appointed James T. Chandler as representative of the city on the mission. The third appointee will belt,, named by Governor Townsend, who Is 'expected to appoint the Democratic member of this bt-partlsan commission I At today's session. Levy Court Irans ferred »700 to the Seventh district ao r0lK1 ^ from unappropriated funds. I I In connection with the findings of! the condemnation commission on the ope n, n g of Hlllcrest road in Brandywine h.mdred, the court awarded 6 cent dam ages to properly owner* nmoiinlJng lo »10096. which with »16 62 expenses of lbe commission will be taken from the Brandywine hundred road account, To abolish these WOMAN IS HELD AS DOPE TRAFFICKER Naomi Laws, Negress, alleged lo be n nc of a hold-up parly of three Ne groeosnd Hirer Negresses, who robbed Hudofph Whiltcch of fo In \\ashing , ton street between Second and Third. < ' ra * nigh ts ago, was held in »1,000 ball or Hastings, in Mu- ( n l c PVT our * l hl« morning, on a charge j ^V' v ? y , a b ,mL " hltU ''' b „ , nl , V. d % {'^utb'ch was held up Naomi : & S AÎSÂÆ' ä;: sarsTasr« 0 f the affair, •ev- • as Hie ? If You've Any DouHa as to whether coffee is a friend to your nerves, drink two or three cupfuls at bedtime and think about it during the wakeful night. YjuH also think of POSTUM MVSTERV NOW i IN CORLETO DART'S DEATH Continued from Kind Page, had planned and upon tier return home oho found the door broken open and the child being taken out and sent to the hospital. j The room where the child died Is lighted by a combination gas and ctcc trio light, and the valves controlling i the gas and electric current aro not lh „ . i vu ted the nn, with Mrs ' j J^o %,Slled U,e roo,M " llh Mra ' ] Tbe coroner said this mo-nlng that L, b „ „bUlmvUhr rnm " oMb* man L., b , ,, , , , . , t0 yirow additional light on the ! woman of about 21 of (ierard curb | „ lled Sut ,. s Navv .iaht month) * Hnr i i* nu \> 0 n the l *, rnP where In <oulh American wal s she Ins lost ihr . child: » within less I lhan t8 months Mrs Corlolo. with little Dorothy, lived alone j n the home where the tragedy InCrrll' ^ i.e.l clothing of the child's bed m a JUP> ' * m0 ' n more than three Inches apart. The valves to the gas Jet, though loose and easily turned by a child could not have been reached by the child except by use of a chair. The bedding shows every evidence of a struggle on the part of Hie child and doubtless If anybody hail been in Hie house at the lime her cries and struggles could have ben heard, but had be-.-n closed and Hie a rather slender »ars Hie wife sled In the who ■ Shftwmul I lie dl-eoverv r.f t, ; .I op,"N • >n Hie lead The BABY COULD NOT SLEEPSHECOÜGHED SO ALL NIGHT u yy a Mother Thanks Father John's j 1 1 Is j to | be -1 ( Medicine For Good Health It Has Given to Her Children. | JTs |S| 11 " us Folber John's Medicine that m I cent letter "When Lowella was a year' , lb j s („. had a dreadful cold whieh left | lier with asthma and bronchitis which 1 no doctor »eemed able to relieve. After - I I» gan gixlng Her ha . otm s .!••; »nd how night now. is long as there arc com-.family. You may print this If you care belt,, do so for every word Is th- truth. Both my children are muck Improved since 1 gave them Father John's Medl ]cine and I have all the faith in the] world in Ute medicine." (Signed) Mra. l„ M Wray, 187 1'rospect St., Brook I lyn. N. Y No safer family medicine rin bo |found than Father John's M.dTlne be . «use it Is guaranteed fn from deo hot or dangerous drug, and is nil PUH*. wboh^ome nmirHhnu*nt II ha» h »d more than sixty years of succ -s'for jcolds, coughs amt as a body-builder. £*?*•• 'V . -v dßt. ral t. w V t :7zi ch.ingo In her mud» better site sleeps at I will never be without it children in UM $10.00 Puts the Gainaday in Your Home w> . g: rg urll : ÎL i w I Wringe* Washer For the small dewn payment of $10.00 we will »end yom a Gainaday and a demonstrator who will do a wholt WMS tor you and explain the Ga : naday way of dothes-washinf. The payments that follow are small and easily met. Electric Specialty Co., Inc., 849 Tatnall Street Lighting Fixtures Open Evenings. Phone 1954-W. 'cmwvooMfflw r 'JL# ■■ CHICAGO, March 9 (United Press,)-* Stato Senator William Block, of Wettl . 5 Virginia, left here by »pedal train at '* noun today to save women sutfregt I» this Slate form a deadlock. Bloch took (he train Instead of • ? preferred airplane when ht» wife ol>- Vs Jected to the danger of the aerial trip. Me said he would reach Charleston la ample time to vote to ratify the suf- ffi *;1 I finge amendment, I.___ its. T. Ml I I IN A so?.. I 1 ! | | I I ' 1 ) Sum (tie bricklayer looked (Ion a» the lou ver hotel-,I him llfty out ot th- hundred oud llfty dumagea bn hod «-.ni for Injury. "Well, what'a the Idea, why ao aad," _; ? the lawyer. "Oh." replie» Sam. "I waa Jn»t won dering who fell off that scaffolding — yon or me." We Hand You Back »25 out of every 1100 Just now on the special sale. Suits and Overcoats 25 per rent. 1-4) oft and yga don't get hurt cither. / N 9 W $22.50 to $45 Were $30 to $60 and will be much higher nast season. New Spring Models Hlrkry-Freemen Suita Kuppenlu-Imer Suits Stetson Hats Commonwealth Shoes Star Shirts Ml LI.I VS HOME STORE 61 h anil Market I 1 , = Special Plan New and Used Cars and Trucks _ 1 Leave Wilmington, Fourth Etre« Wharf. «n»i Pbiiari^iphla, ( hestout strett wa«rf, îSîr^iJîl 1 ÎSÎfa'i^p 1 M UOdÄ,rÄ# &ü0 A ou'satnr'ia>» ,.u.i Sunday», -.so. wm a m.. ».;to. 4 .in and too p. m. WILMINC.TON-PKNNfMiHOVE ROCTK Wilmington e.so, h.oo, 1000 a. m.. Throngh 1ar<;e bunking tnatlta M»»n It In non- f.»r anyone to truck <>r a guaras r«N*il, r<* built ami overhauled u»«d car or truck on a new car SPECIAL TIME PAYMENT PLAN Thla plan glrca cash adrantagea, Inirncdlat«* poNn^aaton of car or truck. No guarantees or endorsement! required. Promp*. Inqulri^a eanentlaL Cali or write. Do not phone. Owners' Autofinance Co. OflUre, 187 CHESTNUT '•TRKKT. Open Htillr, ! to f. Salesroom* : ÏIOR-lft-l? (ifrmtiitown Av*.. ÎI07-P-1 1-18 N. Mnmhall SL. rhlladelphia, I'» Oprn Dali«. rnlua** and Sundwja. TRtNSFOHTAnON. Leave Philadelphia. Pier 10. North Wharves (Race St.), 5 P. M. FREIGHT ONLY. Leave Wilmington. Freneh Street Wharf, 5 !>. M i To Philadelphia and Chester Slopping at Penn.sgrote FAST I REICHT \\D P\S*E\«ER SERVICE 12.IH» noon. 4 «.00, 8,00. 10 00 and 12.00 I» M. Loave 1'ennagrove 7.15, 0.00, 11.00 A. M., a.OO, 5 00. 7.00, U.Oü, 11.00 P. M. ami 1 . 00 . 12 45 A M