Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 24, 1914, Page 5, Image 5

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    EVENING 1EDGEK-PHILADElPHIA, THTJBSPAY, SEPTEMBER 2-t, 1014.
KING ALBERT'S ARMY
RETIRES IN PART TO
ANTWERP DEFENSES
Germans Menace City More
Seriously Than Ever In
vaders' Great Siege Guns
Reported at Puers.
ANTWERP, Sppt. 21.
German nnd Belgian troops nro fight
ing at Puers. Part ot King Albert's
nrmy has retired to the ramparts of
Antwerp. Tho German forco at Puers
is reported to have two of the great
slce guns that smashed tho forts at
Liege nnd Nnmur.
(Puers Is about eight miles from the
Jorts that protect Antwerp on tho south
west. This report lends to confirm
dispatches ftom Ostund that tho Ger
mans wcie advancing guns to bombard
Antwerp.
During tho last week the Belgian army,
lias rccolved reinforcements. The spit it
of the troops Is excellent and they nro
greatly encouraged by tho successes
gained during tho last few days In
eliarp skirmishes with tho Germans.
Tho German forces bent upon subju
gating Antwerp have their lino extend
ing westward almost Into Ghent. Their
artillery Is hard at work on tho south
bank of tho Scheldt, seven miles fron
the city. Hallway service has beon sus
pendod south of Ghent. Antwerp ap
pears to be menaced more scrloufly
than ever. Tho Inhabitants, however,
have not ceased to hope that tho city
lit escape a direct attack.
At Ghent, It is Impossible, because of
tho meagre reports received, to dcter
mlno tho progress of cvcntB across the
French frontier. It Is conceded, how
ever, that whatever may happen to tho
German armies In tho southwest It Is
certain that tho Kaiser's forces mean
to conquer Antwerp and to remain In
occupation of southern Bolglum, re
gardless of what prico 'they may bo
compelled to pay In lives.
A correspondent of tho London Chron
icle, a ho Is with tho Belgium army In
the field, wires that the Belgian army
Is pushing on townrd Brussels and Is
confident of regaining control of the
city. No stntement Is made of the de
tailed movements of the Belgians.
According to the Chronicle man at Lob
beke. Octavo Verhulst, CO yeurs old: his
tno brothers, Leopold and Arthur, 21 and
ID, respectively, were stood against the
charred walls of their home after It
hnd been burned and bayoneted to death
by Gel man soldiers while their iclatlves
looked on.
Another Ghent dispatch to tho Chronicle
quotes a newspaper as saying that -132
Inhabitants of the small Belgian town
of Tamlncs, In tho Kamur district, havo
been killed, presumably on account O
tome act against the Germans occupying
the district. The dead include tho priest
and tho local notables. After whole
sale execution, says the dispatch, tho
torch was implied so effectually that only
one house remains standing in tho district.
CHINA ADOPTS STERN
MEASURES TO BLOCK
WARLIKE MOVEMENT
President Orders Immediate
Arrest of Agitators En
deavoring to Plunge Em
pire Into Conflict.
PEKIN, China, Sept. 21.
The following olllclal proclamation was
posted throughout China today!
"Tho President has declared tho neu
trality of the ChlncBo Government which
all the people of this country should
strictly observe. During tho time of war
tho people may rest assured that thoy
will receive no harm nnd will have no
causo to fear.
"It Is, however, much to bo feared that
there may bo possibly somo merchants
and people who have not yet been fully
Informed oftho actuul facts of tho situa
tion, and It Is not unlikely that there may
bo somo bad characters, who, taking ad
vantage of this critical time, will circulate
rumors with a view to creating panic In
the minds of tho public and theicby create
disturbances. Wo have, therefore,
oiderod tho police and soldiers to exer
cise tho utmost surveillance over those
bad characters.
"The public Is hereby once more admon
ished that It should peacefully pursuo Its
da lly occupations und not listen to un
founded rumors. Tho public is hereby
cautioned that hereafter, should ony ono
comment on tho political affairs of tho
Chinese and foreign Governments In tea
houses, taverns, hotels nnd other public
place, and whoso gossip should so dis
tort tho actual nHicct of events and mis
lend Hio public nnd create panic in the
minds of the pcoplo, ho shall be arrested
and severely dealt with.
"Tho public should tiemblo and obey."
. I II I II 1,1 I I . 1 I mm
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5IS3
"LA FORCE NOIRE"
TERRIBLE WEAPON
IN HANDS OF FRANCE
Irapcrlfll andlioyttl Ministry of Foreign Aiftjlrs at; Vienna.
GERMAN EMPEROR MUCH
LIKE T. R., SHE SAYS
SOME PLANTS WALK WHEN
THEY DESIRE A NEW HOME
Currant Bushes Bend Over and Send
Boots From Branches-
Somo plants travel by actual walking.
Curiant bushes, wishing to multiply, do
riot wait for such a slow process as drop
ping their seeds to tlio ground and let
ting them, little by little, sprout and de
velop Into now bushes. They aro much
too Impatient for that: they know a
quicker way. They walk, nnd as th-y
walk they develop now plants The mother
bush selects a good, healthy branch: sbo
reaches out and carefully bends down to
the earth, and down Into the ground sho
sends llttlo roots from tho branch. Tho
roots collect the nouiishmcnt, send it up
Into the branch, and, lo, the branch Itself
is soon a flourishing currant bush, ready
to take another step In Its walk by send
ing out a branch of its own to grow root
lets and develop into still another bush.
In the same way, white clover, straw
berries, sweet potatoes. Wandering Jew
and many forms of grasses walk by
planting others llko themselves. Somo
of them 6cnd out "runners," which trail
along tho ground, llko the common ver
bena, trailing arbutus, numerous grasses
and trailing lycopodlums, und each now
plant or offshoot, as soon as It begins to
grow, sends out Its own runners. Thus
new plants am continually made.
Skilled gardeners nnd farmers thor
oughly undei stand how to coer certnln
parts of potato vines, for Instance, with
layers of soil, and later, by cutting tho
Mne near wherff It has taken root, to
multiply the number of plants.
Some plants have "suckers" branches
that spring from their parent stem un
derground and later appear as separate
rlants, and eventually the connecting link
or thread may be enlrely destroyed. It
Is In this way "by root," as we say
that raspberry bushes Increase or spread
out.
Many grasses spread in the same way,
and In all directions; some havo Joints
from which upright stems arise, and
which sond down Into tho earth roots pf
their own. Interlacing and binding the
soil and thus spreading verv rapidly.
Burn grasses grow several feet in a few
months The quack grass Is a typical
example of a fast walker and for this
reason Is greatly feared by farmers.
KINO OSCAR PEACE HERO
Monument Dedication Recalls His
Moderation in 1005,
On Hie Norwegian frontier the other day
there was dedicated in the presence of
10 imi persons a Swedlsh-Xorwegian monu
ment to pence. Strange happening when
ahnoit within hearing cannon were roar
ing, musketry volleying, men dying In
agnnl-s. nations wi ratling In fratricidal
hate Yet not so strange after all, but In
wonderfully striking contrast.
Only a few years ago Norway seceded
from union with Sweden. King Oscar of
the Ilernndotte dynasty, a man of gentle
onul patron of religion nnd art and peace,
rat on the throne. It was In his power
to launch tho army of Sweden against
the Norsemen, numerically Inferior. With
b wont of comm.ind i)e might have
arpnehert two countries in blood and tears.
J here were not wanting thco who coun
seled the shedding of blood the arbitra
ment r brute force, the lending of fami
lies, the wrecking of homes, tho heaping
r miseries on women nnd children. For
these are the meanings of war.
ut the gentle old man kept 'the peace.
Norway liccnmu a separate kingdom in
J. Haakon VII was elected ruler of
Norway In IW1 Oscar I died and Qustaf
became monarch of Sweden. No word
or war or hate has divided the two coun
tries. They separated on political lines.
4 ney parted In peace They have kept tho
piace And now they havo erected a
peace monument to commorate the peace
Jul parting mado possible by the heroism
or Oicar I. por t look genuine heroism
v. mJh vision of hU kingdoms, the
iiuniiiiatlon of dethronement by half his
subjects, and to resist the entreaties of
men to whom force and bloodshed are
standards of right.
The man who could thus keep the peace
Sn' f o held In grateful nnvm-
SSS "w.,i. VlV -
Writer Finds a Striking Resem
blance Between Two Men.
The resemblance of tho German Em
pel or to the seeker of a "third cup of
coffee" ha3 often been noted and com
mented on. Both are certainly unusunl
personalities. In a recent book by Anno
Tophnm, entitled "Memories of tho
Kaiser's Court," there Is much to Justify
thoso who see a striking likeness between
tho two men. As these aro days In which
gicat stress Is put on collateral reading,
possibly It would he well for those who
read "Memories of the Kaiser's Court"
to follow It with Lcupp's "Tho Man
Roosevelt." Miss Topham Is well quali
fied to deal with her fascinating subject,
as she was for somo years teacher of
English to the Kaiser's only daughter.
Ccitafnly there Is. something remlnls-
centlal In tho following:
"The Emperor's conversation at Its
best has a certain quality of intoxication
Is provocative of thought and wit. Men
have been seen, grave American profes
sors and othors of that typo not easily
thrown off their mental balance, to retire
from talk with his Majesty with tho
somewhat dazedly ecstatic look of peoplo
who have Indulged In champagne: then
they go home, and under the influence
of this Interview write eulogistic, apolo
getic charncter sketches of the Emperor.
It may bo asked how does he appear In
tho Intimacies of private life, to the in
ner circle of his court, to thoso who see
him In unguarded moments? Men often
change for the better, or sometimes for
tho worse, when they retlro from tho
public eye, but tho Emperor Is much the
same everywhere, ho has no special re
serves of character for domestic con
sumption only. At homo he inspires much
the Bame charm that ho does abroad, and
sometimes the same irritation. Unex
pected people, whimsical people, are
necessarily alternately irritating and
charming Just ns their moods happen to
pleaso or displease tho circle of people
whom they affect. He Is a man who Is
bound to get somewhat on the nerves of
those who surround him, to make his
servlco laborious to his servants, his sec
retaries, his courtiers, who live In a state
of continual apprehension, fearing that
thoy may not be ready for some sudden
call, some unanticipated duty There Is
no mora nlort place In tho world than
the I'russlnn court. 'We aro like the
Israelites at the Passover,' grumbled ono
lady; 'we must always have our loins
girt, our shoes on our feet shoes sultnble
for any and every occasion, fit for wnlk
In'g on palace floors or down muddy roads
our staff In our hand; nobody dare re
lax and settle down to be comfortable.'
Tho Emperor disapproves of people who
want to settle down and be comfortable.
In a Jolly, good-humored but none the
less autocrntlc kind of way, he sets
everybody doing something. He likes to
keep things -moving, has no desire for
the humdrum, tho usual, the overlastlng
sameness of things. No one who knows
the Emperor Intimately can fall to see
how early English Influences have helped
to mold his charactor, how Intensely he
lovos nnd admires English life ns apart
from English politics, for which ho has a
perplexed. Irritated wonderment and con
tempt. 'Not one of your Ministers,' he
said to mo on one occasion, 'can tell how
many ships of the line you have in your
navy. I can tell him he can't tell me.
And your Minister of Wnr can't even
rldej I offered him a mount and every
opportunity to see the maneuvers
"thanks very much for your Majesty's
gracious offer sorry can't accept It I'm
no horseman unfortunately." A Minister
of War! and can't ridel Unthinkable!'
He gave his short, sharp laugh.
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OFFICIAL AUSTRIAN LETTER OPENED BY ENGLISH CENSOR
A breach of neutrality by the British is alleged at the Austrian Consulate
as the result of the opening of this letter. It is said that it was taken from
a neutral ship.
WOUNDED GERMANS
RESCUED, NOT SHOT,
DECLARE BRITISH
Admiralty Denies Slaughter
of Survivors in Heligoland
Action Goshawk Endan
gered by Humane Aclivity.
LONDON, Sept. 2 1.
Tho Admiralty Olllce has Issued n 10
ply to tho statement of tho German Min
ister at Copenhagen, alleging that tho
English fired on German swimmers fol
lowing the naval battle near Heligoland.
The Admiralty states that when tho
Gorman torpedo boat destroyer V-1S7
was sinking, tho Goshawk ordered tho
British destroyers to cease their fire and
lower their boats to savo tho survlots.
Whllo this was being done an officer
on the afterpart of the X-187 trained
Its after gun on tho Goshawk and fired
at 200 yards range, hitting tho ward
room. It Is though that he believed tho
boat's, crew Intended to board and cap
ture his vessel, which was still flying
her' colors.
It thereupon became necessary to de
stroy bis nftcrgun, which was done with
a row well-placed shots, after which
every effort was made to save his life
until the Gcrmun cruiser Stettin ap
peared through tho mist and opened a
heavy flio on the British boats.
Thfj destroyers were torced to retlro to
nvold destruction. The Goshawk removed
her men from tho boat, leaving It to tin;
German prisoners, nearly all of whom
were wounded.
"It Is to bo icgretted," says tho note,
"that n bluejacket in tho forecastlo of
tho Goshawk, exasperated at the inhuman
conduct of tho Germnji cruiser.' threw a
projectile, which could not possibly have
exploded under tho circumstances, Into
the boat ns It drifted past the ship.
"This Is doubtless tho incident inferred
to be the German Minister nt Copen
hagen, and It cannot ho defended, al
though It was done under considerable
provocation It was surely a venial
offense, compared with that of the Ger
man cruiser, which filed mnny shells nt
tho boats of tho British destroyers which
were engaged In a humano and chivalrous
action."
ARMY RIFLES DIFFERENT
Most of Contending European Na
tions Have Distinctive Weapons.
The German Infantry uses tho Mauser
magazine rifle, model of 1S98, calibre .311,
Hrlng a "spit ball." pointed like a lead
pencil; velocity, 270O foot-seconds; sight
range up to 2000 yards. Cavalry uses
Mauser magazine carbine and carries
lances.
French Infantry uses the Lebel maga
zine rifle, 315 calibre, and the cavalry has
a carbine of tho bame make.
The Russian small arm for Infantry Is
a "3-line" rifle, 1901 pattern, holding fjve
cartridges; calibre, .299; velocity, 2033 foot
seconds, sight range up to 300D yards.
Similar nrm for the cavalry, but with
shorter barrel and with a bayonet used by
no other mounted troops,
Austrian Infantry small arm, the Mann
llclier magazine rifle, IMS model, calibre
.315. Cuvalry. carbine of same make.
Italy has for Its regular Infantry the
Mannllcher-Carcano magazine rifle, but
the territoiiuls btilf use the old Vetterll.
British Infantry and cavalry use the
Lee-Knlleld rifle, calibre .303.
The Belgians have the Mauser ride, as
havo the Servians, the latter using the
model of 1S99.
Bulgaria has the Mannltcher rifle and
carbine, and so has Rumania.
The Greeks use the Mannllcher-Schoe-nauer
title, model of 1903.
MUCH ILLNESS DUE
TO ERRORS IN DIET
YOU CAN BANK ON THAT
"They say money "talks."
"Yes. Mine eald, 'Save, mel" ' Boston
Transcript. wslw
Death Often Comes From Feasting as
Well ns Fasting-.
The militant suffragist campaign of
self-starvation suggests to Dr. A. E.
GlbBon that death comes as often from
feasting ns from fasting. In a paper In
Health Culture he sets out that wo eat
wrongly and not Infrequently stnrvo In
tho midst of plenty. We mnko our meals
of Incongruous food and then wo eat
prodigiously ot the Ill-balanced food mix
ture, causing auto-Intoxication or starva
tion. l
The food decomposes Instead of digest
ing and the netves nro sustained on
poisoned blood, ("ortnln fowls, no mat
ter how good In themselves, when mixed
In the same meal ferment and generato
toxic acids which result In catarrh,
asthma, rheumatism, etc., until the whole
Inward tract Is devitalized, and the or
gans so deranged that the fluids of nutil
tlon are Impaired.
Moat dlsenses, It Is held, are due to
errors of diet, and a too early old ago
Is dun to the struggle of the bystem to
hold Its own ngalnbt devitalized and
anemlo tissue caused by wrong enting.
The promiscuous eitor may triumph for
a time, but ho Is losing headway and
sooner or Inter dizziness, acidity of tlio
stomach and general discomfort come as
warnings. Then he takes to medicines
which are a more whip to tho nenes,
exhausting tho reserve forces. Medicines,
the doctor holds, aie not a source of
vitality any more than a whin is to :i
Morse.
Nothing can help us but food, so com
bined as not to give rise to fermentation.
31ero absence of meat, docs not change
the chemical principles of food Any diet
that admits acids, starch, sweets, fruits,
salads, milk and pastry at the same meal
undermines the constitution. Such unwise
mixture in a vegetnriau diet has caused
more Indigestion and catarrh than any
other violation of dletettu principles.
It Is not a question of purity of food
but the bringing together of foodstuff
that defy physiological chemistry. Tho
remedy Is a pioper combination of foods
And then comes the Individual tempera
ment and the atmosphere of ono's mental
life. Food that Is good for one Is bail
for another. For each Individual Is a
world to himself and the attitude of
mind lies back of the physiological na
ture.
So it U necessary that each individual
food Jn hU dally routln existence, and J
so solve tho perplexing question of life
or death as Influenced by a right or
wrong system of diet. The lest of life
rrallv begins at 60. Then It Is shown
whether the Individual has been eating
lightly or wrongly, whether ho has laid
up sufficient force to carry him Into old
ago or whether by senseless gluttony he
has used up his blrlh-piomlso of a long,
happy and useful existence.
Algerian Contingent Is Made
Up of Grim Fighting Men,
Relentless Toward Foe,
Devoted to Officers.
I'AIIIS, Sept. 2i.
"La Forco Noire," tho "Black Army
of France," ns tho Turcos now fighting
with the Allies nro cnlled, was organized
by Colonel Mnugln In 1911. The Turcos
uro Arabian light Infantry recruited In
Alcgrla. The force In 1907 consisted of
only nbout Wmo Senegalese. Coloriol MaU
gnln raised tho number to 00,000 soldiers
recruited from Sonegat, In the Soudan,
from French Guinea, Dahomey, Algcrhi,
Tunis and Morocco,
The supply of men from this source Is
almost Inexhaustible, and furthermore,
this source of supply Is out of enemy's
reach. It Is declared that so long ns
only one French port remained In Fiench
hands these terrible African fighters
could be poured In streams Into France.
The Boldlers of these districts are born
fighters. Death In battle is, to them,
the highest distinction one can achieve.
As a result they are relentless In the fury
of their attacks and absolutely fearless.
They never surrender. Their wonderful
physique nnd almost total Impcrvlousness
to pain keep them fighting on after they
have received wounds under which fight
ers of whlto races huccumb.
Colonel Mnugln once Bald of these sol
diers: "Ills sense of discipline, his devo
tion to his white ofllccrs and the fierce
ness with which he hurls himself at the
enemy urn wonderful."
General Langlols, writing In the Temps
In 1909, when the raising of tho present
Algerian force was being discussed said:
"Tho sangulno and fatalistic temper of
the troops of theso races makes It a ter
rible asset In a shock."
In an article In Gaulols General Bonncl
said: "On the wide battlefields of any
future war the Arabs, trained by Cau
casians and armed with tho terrible
weapons of war of the white races, will
prove unrivaled when the final blow will
have to be devoted to the enemy."
With the troops organized nnd equipped
In her African possessions tho republic
holds ana rules a territory as extensive
as Europe Inhabited by 20,000,000 peoplo.
The use of Arabs In European warfare
by the republic during the present con
fllct Is not the first tlmo this hflfl been
done. Napoleon employed African troops
nnd they were used also In tho storming
of Mnlakhoff, Algeria also was drawn on
for fighting monvlurlng tho Franco-German
nr of 1S70.
Tho eaily troops raised In Africa by
France wcrr recruited mainly from th
Ifnbylcs nnd AraliH. The majority of
thoso which came from tho Kabylcs wore
n tribe called the Houovues, who gnvo
their name to the Houaves. Tho three
reirlmentH nf Algerian tirailleurs who
fought In tho Franco-German war lost
97 olllcors and 2JS9 men.
MIND'S 'POWER WILL
KEEP THE BODY YOUNG
Men Have Ability, if They Wish, to
Defer Old Age,
In the October Woman's Homo Com
panion, Unlph Wnldo Trine writes nn
urtlcle entitled, "When Is Youth What
After Youth?" The principal point which
hr brings out Is the power of the mind
to keep thn body young and vigorous. In
the following extract from his nitlcle ho
touches on this point, and nlso Indicates
the divisions between outh, middle nge
nnd old age:
"That we have It In our power to de
tetmlne our physical and bodily condi
tions to n far greater extent than we do
Is an undeniable fact. That we havo It
In our power to determine and to dictate
tho conditions of 'old age to a. marvel
our degree Is also nn undeniable fact If
we arc sufficiently keen and sufficiently
uwnkc to begin early enough.
"If any arbitrary divisions of the vn
ilous periods of life were allowable, 1
should make the enumeration us follow x:
Youth, bnrrlng the period of babyhood,
to IS; middle age. 45 to 60; approaching
age. 60 to 75; old age, 75 to O.'i and 100.
"That great army of people who 'nge'
long before their time, that likewise
great nrmy of both men anil women who
along nbout middle age, say from V to
60, break, and, ns we say, all of a sud
den go to pieces, and many die. Just nt
the period when they should ho In tho
prime of life. In the full vigor of man
hood and womanhood and of greatest
value to themselves, to their families
nnd
DROUGHT CAUSING LOSS
IN FARMING DISTRICTS
Serious Condition of Crops in Chester
County Disease Threntened,
IMIORNIXWIMvE. I'a . Sept 21. Th
long-continued dry wenther In this section
Is working great harm with tlio growlnf?
corn crop, which Is drying In the husks
nnd unless rain comes within a few daya
the crop will be practically lost. The
threatened disaster to the Into corn crop
haw tn an extent tiffccted business and
tlio farmers are spending less.
Tim lotii.' drought has resulted In n lack
of wnfi r In mnny small streams which
furnish motive power for country mills
and wells on farmi hnve gone dry. Tho
mills hnve norcssnrllv censed to run, nnd
manv fnrmers whose wells nro dry nro
rompelh-d to haul their supply from
neighboring farm..
A fv scntteied cnes of typhoid fovor
have npprnred In the nearby townships,
while the town Is free nf the disease
Those ef,r, the health authorities be
llovp, have their origin In had water sup
plies caused by the drought, and an exam
Inutlon of the water sourres of all the
ilnliv fnims supplying I'hoenlxvlllc with
milk will he made and samples of the
supply taken for an.il.sls.
WOODBURY, NT. Sept. 21 -Thn dry
weather in this section Is netting to bo rt.
seiloim matter. Farmers nre hnullnff
water for their stock mid householders
aie carrying It. Ther" has not been any
rain for six weeks nnd this Is detrimental
to Wcot potatoes, very few of which
hnve been dug. Farmers say that tho
crop will bo verv poor unless rain comes
within n dnv or two. Lawns around the
city aie burning up and fields nro n bnra
as when tho army worm visited them.
The diouglit does riot affeet factories, as
moot of thoni hnve their own plants.
STUDIED DANISH AT EIGHTY
It would be too much to expect that
Prince lMwnid should havo learned Dan
ish Is piepnrntlun tm bis bilef lslt to
Copenhagen, but Glurlstoue thought It
necessary to acquire the language when,
at the nge of SO, he m.ide a visit there In
1S03. on board the Tantollon Castle. Ho
took with him a book on Danish und a.
dlctlonniy, and spent most of the tlmo
duilng the vonue In his cabin studvlnir
to the world. Is something that Is I the language. While the vessel lay In
contrary to nature, nnd Is ono of the dock and visitors were allowed on board.
pitiable conditions of our time. A great- , the (',. O. M. s.it quietly In his deck,
ci knowledge) a llttlo foresight, u little cabin, nhsoibed In Ills study and obllvl
carc In tlmo could prevent this in the i 0u of the crowd of e.mer faces peering1
gicat majority of cases. In flO cases out In at tho door and window. London
of every 100, without question." Chronicle.
(f.
vroni: oiui.vs 8.ao .. 31. and ci.osns at b-io v. m.
m vi, on i'iio.m: oitnr.its nr.i.nn :
57c
75c Seamless
Sheets
Sic 81x90 inches.
No mail or 'phone orders.
t ? ,ta,ltlar(1 anil well-known make
of bleached sheeting. Medium weight;
no drcssiiiff. Three-inch hem.
FrRST FLOOR, NORTH
HATS TRIMMED FREE OF CHARGE
Market Eighth Filbert Seventh
'
$2.00 lo $6.00 ! Jf
Corsets 31.DU
No mail or 'phone orders.
Popular makes in desirable models.
High, medium or low bust. In
coutil, batiste and fancy materials.
All boned with best corset boning'.
MAIN ARCADE
Despite the great advance in prices of all gloves we are able to hold;
Our Annual October Glove Sale
, And even morc remarkable is the fact that many of our prices are lower than were asked last pear,
. dltC to OUUiyiH i)l much rrcatcr nilnntitipa nnrl huuitia p.nrlier Innn hrfnrn. nrtll nnit itnvn. thminhf in
lujuiyre UIICNIHC8.
The Vast Majority of These Gloves Are Imported
i'i?n ,"' "le "'tra best American makes are also represented!
Tho wisest folks will buy for now and the future, for It's impossible to foretell what "Jumps"
(enrellj will make prices take later on.
Women's Genuine French Kid Gloves, $1
Regular $1.50 Value, at . . 1
Regular $1.50 Values, at
Two-clnsp style White, tan. gray, alfco whlte-wtth-black and black-wlth-whtte backs,
In Paris point, flat and two-tone embroidered effect.
uTi
oy-
W
Women's Fine $1.75 and
$2 French II 1Q
Kid Gloves, vl.I
Two-clasp pique. In black, white,
tan nnd grny; also whlto-wlth-black
and blnck-wlth-whlto flat
embroidered hacks.
Women's Long
White Gloves
Fine Imported kid; full-cut
arms; three clnsps nt wrist;
16-button length, 1 1 7C
$2.50 value OLtliJ
20-button length,
J3 value
FIHST FLOOR, EIGHTH
STItEBT SIDE
$2.19 I Kinds at
A New York Importer's
Entire Sample Line
of Gloves
Regular 50c to $1 OC.
eijs
For women, misses, men and boys
Be sure and always get
YELLOW TRADING
STAMPS
when jou shop here. We cive two for each
10c worth you purchase before noon.
Friday Bargains
85c to $1.00 CC.
Silks JOC
Striped Tub Silks:
Ish new
grounds.
32 to .1(5 Inches wide.
Extra heavy: all
llk quality in styl
strlpcd effects on whit"- and colored
Taffetas:
.16 inches wide, "month, fine weave
nnd oft dr.s tl nlsh A few de-
- sirable shinies onl.
FIR.ST FI..OOU. SOl'TH
$2 and $2.25 Bed Spreads, $1.65
One Is a white Mnrlll-R with a s,atln finish.
Prettv di-sifriih. Plain hfm.
Another Is tln i.Ios, 1 wovon. white crochet
in Mnrsi-IIlis erfects with uit-nut corners and
scalloped elt-'p
rirtsT ft-oor. xotitii
whTSbuJ Men's Fall Suits Here
We are practically putting a Five Dollar Note in your pocket in the case of
any of these three lines
(31 "Or A -';
m4 lit
Alii- nTfcv
ll ' yVVV N
IffiV
Regular
$15 Suits
1015?7ft.$20
S3;
$l Crepe
Night
Gowns,
MKr. ITT
I i I n t iluiiK il i-rlnkled
1 1 pf Mip-Mn inudi Is with
cut ton clum l,u Insertion
.mil tdire, ribbon run
SEi'OXIi FLOOR
These suits are In the latest fabrics, all-wool, In a wide ranse of tho most fash
ionable designs and colors
They aro splendidly tailored and will retain their dressy appearance in spite of
Ioiik service.
That Boy Wins
confidence In himself, and nnthinc
m such a readv nssnranr as In knnw
properly and stylishly clothed
BOYS' $8.50 SUITS at $4.98
Of worsted, cheviots and cnsslmeres. also navy blue serKe In newest Norfolk and
In two. and three-button. duuble-breasted stlas. with patch pockets and stitched
belt.
Also jcordurpyjuUs In new llKht and dark brown, with peR-top trousers and
watch pocket, lined throughout. Some with extra pair trousers
Resides, Russian and Bailor models of pretty blue and brown serKe. In retaliation
styles, with chevron on Meeve. And regulation style In fancy mixtures of gray
and brown. Sizes 2 to 18 years.
SECOND FLOOR, SEVENTH AND MARKET STRliKTR
iiiiiiimiiu inn
50c Camisoles, 29c
Shadow lace; ribbon s-ti.tps over shoulder; rib
bon run.
SECOND KLOnn
$1.00 to $1.50 Silk
Stockings
Limited lot of women's lnuiain silk Mocklnca
in black with top" !iiii.h.Ml in d.ilnu mlonnKH
- i id. gnld, l.iM-n.lor and put pi VII full fash
Inntd. with hlKh hpliciil In i li-, flfiiibU xik-h and
dinihln cut, i tups M a mi I .ii tuu-i h throw
nuts but iiothitiur t' affict w..n.
Ni Mali (Inli-rs.
FIItriT ri.OOR, si il Til
Of Particular Importance in the Salons of Apparel
ISix Styles in Smart
I $20 Fall Suits . . .
! Sibpirih aiima nil,. Tli. or nt l.A..:n, . i:.. :!-.. , .
; - w " - ",v- " i"i uicuiuiii wcigui serge anu gananiinc,
; in Rreen, hrown, hlue and hlack. Smartly tailored in the ultra fashionable
; Redingote effect, with -10- to 45-inch coats, showing wide bauds at hips, velvet
or braid trimming and lined with guaranteed satin.
With these are combined skirts of very smart side plaited and yoke top
fashions.
" i jyy
Women's and Misses' $27.50 Autumn Suits, gOQ
Of scrtje, gabardine and cheviot.
Include English cut-away and Russian skirted fashions, some of the jackets
bound with nlk braid , other tr.mmed wtth velvet, cord ornaments or fur
cloth, and all lined with yarn dyed satin
motors mclitde Hunter's green,
Skirls are excecdinnlu stuhsh. tan
dark brown, black, Holland and navy blue
Women's and Misses' $25 Top Coats i ft cq
I Pebble cheviot and Scotch mixtures m rich Autumn shades and showing 'rlDole
or Redingote tendency Many have plush or fur-cloth trimmings guaranued
I satin linings, and all fasten in high military fashion. guarantee
SECOND FXOOR
i LIT SltOTUKUS
I
V? :
At 2 vi
III 1
If
uV '-
I na A
I I iM 1
Jl I m
nilllllimiii.,,'
$1.50 Tea Sets at
Three- fb
pitco tV r- C4-
man Chin.t ,. XS'WF'f
the - vnl-JPTsTrSVV A?
loy deio-fA Vf-flVWjf
ration
1 1 h n, koii
hhnpo. Ten.
not, suc.ir
bowl with
cover anil ru-am pitcher
Tlllll I
c
mm
J 1 T-JT
M 'rrt' Y$)
mMteM
Ss-vr
HI
l.miR
$1 Inverted Lights, 49c
With tinted Klaus, hluul. . pink blue or a.
Complete with Kooj hum. i ,,n.l twit ind
THIRD FLOOR I
$1.75 Couch Covers, J)7c
lle.ivj tapsti in Dii.Miial dfslnns, fringed all
around. Tull length an, widtn.
THIRD l-'Mjoit
fiOc and 75c Heavy Cork OQ
Linoleum, sq. yd 57 C
Rxiiinant l-n,;ths Two and f.,r vaids wide.
I Iraso t,i inn si.-.s.
l'KIRTll r'Ulii:
Si RRX MOP and a 25c HOTTl-li SANLfiENIC
FLOOR OIL, Com. CQ.
plele .... DyC
.Mops havo a.ijiw.il
lmis handK-. fold il ,t f,.
retching undt i fin i I .
and allow full he i v . i
mop to pollnh am l.
!!itvily p.tddi-11 to i,r. s 1,1
'"irrliiK f w I w ,iu
Klitiitnutfh .lustuj ,i'i.
Si-tubbing on h.ui.ls rfn.l
knees. Tlllltl) Fl.mitt
(iff jp
mm
10e to $3 Embroidery
Remnants, 5c t$15Q
Clearui ce. if all
plr.es v n a in, P
lenstl"i for irr-'i m-l-n'ri
M TK U ' 1
lrt ai 1 or It. ,,,( rniiSBcd
'-- i r tit'iblo
IN OVR BIJ HESTAUIIANT-BESTO. EVEHVfHINO AT LOWEST PinCES-FI
Loonsrs lit uiioinrns
.'J