EVENING LBDGER-JPHI'i;ADl3LPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1917 POOL OF FACIAL SURGKKIMW tin Gorgas Orders Institution Here ior wcu6 wiuiwo Jfnysiognoiiues i0THER CITY NffWS BRIEFS .. ...n CJeneral Oorgas has ordered the S"'S, In Phllndelphla of nsschool ".rUc and Jaw- for ...en who may be frntd In war" nccordlne t0 a" mclal nn 1??- than twenty-five officers of the Mera. ."... rnm will be detnlled for WS wrvlce at the school. Dr. Wllmer &C,. director of Public Health and !hiIm already has offered the use of Charities. .. of .he faculty staff a", "his arranged for special clinical dem gind """'', , ,,pn.ni ward of the Phlla- ,tHw.-V . D Chailes Turner, dean of the P.vans v.. .. .. nonini s'urcery. will have 'jtVc. of the organization of the teachers' l It He will be assisted by Dr. Hermann r 11 in , French Tars Guests of War Club vnriv Krencn sailors ten iuuuj unci , f.orl' .-.. .,,. a fnr sovpml davs at the IK Service cTub. 207 South Twenty 0 hnd street They sent letters of appre u ,ticna ",,,,. Payne, director of .ft club, "and Mrs. U T. Sjtotesbury. :js Perm Men for Third Officers' Camp i Th University of Pennsylvania will bo 'liiivred to send seventy-five men to tho Mri of the scries of officers' training camp. .. will be conducted al all the cSinton nts and Fort Sam Houston. Fort Bliss ,d Chlckamauga Park, primarily for col- ttt men. 10 000 Christmas Bags for Soldiers iTrmihart Auxiliary of the Red Cross, ffiiert Store, has planned a big day for lm. .... . (hia -olt. when a drlvo will rmadooPetinOOOChrl:tnls!,K;fnr Vli!lr3 lite niiuiuHj Jrtu. . ii ..... lowiers. f . , . which will 1 ih real u 'i"r " .. - it. In full s'lnB for a wcck' wUn th0 iojan, "A Thousand Bngs'n Day." k To Eliminate Unnecessary Noises ! A leaflet on unnecessary nuies nus uc Ltf.rared by tho Hureau of Municipal Ile- 5 ''. . ,..,iio nf flio Philnrie lihla nub C I ...I. Amnni- tll .IlltllOl ItlCS (lUOtcd On r . .li.- iu 1ontin.il K.nknwxkl. dlrt'Cor I f the Philadelphia Orchestra, who ex- ' plained wny hick p:ui"u " i S" noises. Plan for Hoys to End Labor Shortage Schoolboys may meet the deficit In labor, t according to a plan of co-operntlon between the schools and Industries indorsed by tho committee of civilian service and labor 1 The plan provides for the employment of h toys more than sixteen years old. Building Trades Forni Association i new orcanlatlon the Credit Associa tion of the Building Trades of Philadel phia has been formed, with the follow- nj officers President, A D. Weber ; sec i rttary, M O Sellers, and treasurer William " . rru....... ... Ilnnrlnntirtnru lu fit IT.1 Lfl. lliumi,!-."" .-. ...- v. .. h , einsom sircei. ISLAND ROAD FOLK WIN ROAD DISPUTE Reach Agreement With City and P. R. T. for Modernizing and Maintaining Thoroughfare nI'i0iC.0mp,nlnt f.th.' Cle"-lew and Island f J1'1" napld Tran.lt Company and ?JrJ Pltyr,wn8 withdrawn fro,,, the Public Service Commission today when an agree ment between Interested parties was reached .. ThB .m"?' Ti,1K ,vn" beforo Commls. sloner Michael J. Hyan. sitting at City Hall, and the ngrecment, as made a-part of the record, was reached by Assistant City So llcltnr Lowengrund and Iloyd Leo Spahr. Vnder Its provisions the transit' confpany Is to pae with stones between ILs tracks on cither side of Island rond and on eighteen Inches to each side of the roadbed. The city Is to macadamize the main roadway and later on to build an asphalt roadway The Improvement when complcto will give tho complainants a modern thirty-foot wldo ". CHARGE FIVE MEN STOLE MOTOR ACCESSORIES Quintet Is Held in Bail for Further Hearir by Magistrate Harris Five men. belleed by tho police to bo members of a gang that hns been ss tematlcally stealing automobile accessories from machines In the neighborhoods of Fortieth and Wnlnut and Chestnut streets, were held under $Cno hail each for a fur ther hearing Sunday by Magistrate Harris In the Thirty-second street and Woodland avenue police station today The accused nre Louis Cherry, nineteen, 1857 North Judson street. Oeo'rgo Sellers, twenty, of C54 1 Westminster avenue: Jos eph Dixon, 2331 North Turner street: Frank Pengaro. twenty-three, of 425 North Franklin street, n.id Charles Tow no, thirty, of 920 Cross street They were arrested by Pollremen Campbell and Plerson. According to Special Pollremen McDowell and Baker, all but DKon bae been In trouble before. Cherry admitting to them that he - under Indictment for the theft of an automobile. CHILDREN TESTIFY MAN ROBBED DRUNK IN ALLEY topjrlRht Vnilfrwood k t'nderwood, CAPTAIN ROALD AMUNDSEN The noted Norwegian explorer, ac cording to a dispatch from London, went to the German legation nt Christiania on Tuesday and re turned to tho German Minister his German decorations as n "personal protest against the German murder of peaceful Norwegian sailors on October 17 in the North Sea." Alleged Thief Caught, but Victim Is Not Found Girl Says She Was Attacked In at least one station house the austerity of tho usual police hearings was dispelled today by the presence of three school chil dren, who yesterday acted as amateur de tectives, and of an attractive eighteen-year-old girl Charged with having assaulted and robbed a drunken man on Queen street be tween Third and Fuurth, Francis Del Frnnco, eighteen years old, 437 Christian street, and Joseph Antonln, twenty-two years old, 1912 South Tenth street wero each held under $1600 ball for a continued hearing next Thursday by Magistrate Cow ard, of the Seventh and Carpenter streets police station. Oazella Weiss, 406 Queen street, a school child, saw these, two men take the drunken man up an nlley, she testified. Jacob Les kowltz, 328 Queen street, and Harry Dia mond, 401 Queen street, playmates of Ga zelle, followed tho two men. They were, arrested at Seventh street and Washing ton avenue by Patrolman tlerson. Tho man who was robbed ban not yet been located. Ho told the children that $100 had been taken from lll,n' they testified. James Jones, twenty-three years old, who gave an address near Twenty-third and Locust streets, was held In $15Q0hall for court on charges of -assault nnd battery and attempted highway robbery today by Mnglstralo Coward, at tho Seventh and Carpenter sttcrts poll station. Mlnnln Jlyweck, eighteen years old, 1932 North Pattoli street, testltled that last night she was attacked by Jones on Lom bard street, between Sixth nnd Seventh. He grabbed her by tho neck, she Bald, and at tempted to snatch her pocketbook She screamed, nnd Jones began running down Lombard street At Sixth street ho ran Into Patrolman Hogan, of the Third and He Lnncey streets police station, who nr icsled 1.1m. SAILOR FACES MANY CHARGES Include Robbery, Assault and Possibly Desertion for Garner LANCASTKH, Pa , Oct. 25. Samuel flarner, of Urovvnstown, has been committed for trial to answer eight charges of robbery in Lancaster County, to which ho Is said to have confessed, and on the clinrge of as raultlng Mrs Mlnnln Dennis, near Lan caster, while she was alone nt home somo time ago. This he denies lie Is charged with u slmllnr crime In Heading ilarner also admits deserting from the battleship Ohio on March 7 and tho naval authorities havo been notified of his an est J. E-Caldwell (o. An Important Exhibition of PEARLS PEARL NECKLACES and NEW JEWELS Your Attendance is Cordially Invited I-A. WOMAN'S AID SEEN IN BERG'S ESCAPE Sender of Mysterious Telephone Message to Atlanta Police Sought For CITY'S OUTLETS GUARDED II u ATLANTA. Ga., Oct. 25. The ten German prisoners who escaped from the Fort McPherbon prison barracks Tuesday night are believed by secret service zents to be hiding In Atlanta. Notwlth itandlng a careful search yesterday and lait night, nothing definite as to their thereabouts haB been discovered. That the Germans could have received cutalde aid In their escapo from the bar racks through the 100-foot tunnel, dug 15 feet underground and probably begun the Jay after their arrival, October 6, was icouted by Colonel Van Orsdale, commander cf the prison camp. While other members of the police force, Department of Justice ngents and soldiers from Fort McPherson nre searching for the Germans and watching' every avenue of escape from the city nnd surrounding country, other officers are searching for in "woman In the case," who, late Wednes day telephoned tho police that she saw eight teen answering the Germans' descriptions come out of Cascade Wood, not far from the fort. The woman making the call was reductant to give her name to the police and aid she waB telephoning from the home a neighbor The woman game the name of Mrs. Wright. A thorough search of the neighbor hood revealed the fact that no Mrs. Wright lived In that section of the town. A thor ough Investigation of Cascade Wood re julted In no evidence being found that the Germans had been there. One theory of the ercape of the men Is that a sweetheart of Lieutenant Hans Berg, n of the escaped prisoners and former commanding officer of the Interned Appn.n, in Atlanta and that It was she that made " telephone call to the police In order J give the men an opportunity to escape from another part of the city by centering the search again to the vicinity of Fort WcPherson. Lieutenant Berg had made love to girls ' in various eastern cities, with whom he con- lanny corresponded, according to officers at tho fort To one girl In New York Berg rote several days ago: "I would give my life to be with you for M hour." , PROBE KATAHDIN'S SINKING Steamboat Inspectors Investigate Ram ming by Japanese Vessel Thft TTnltA.l Cnlni ..nn.l.nn lnn..An,npu , '""ay are Investigating the cause of Tues "ijr night's collision In the Delaware Blver, Chester, in which the Japanese munl- tueamsnip Tomko Maru rammed ana ' "Mc the lumber transport Katahdln. caus : one death ' A State pilot was on board the Tomko ' arU. LeavlntJ nnrt ultVi u Mn, nartrn rf i JJan'tlona. the Jap ship was going down "ream at a tvvelve-knot rate when It 'luT the Katahdln. The cook of.' the 'r. . .r hlD was drowned. It Is believed, trP ." D' K- Queen, master of the Katah tS. ioat '200 'n cash, which he left on rd the sinking vessel. LANDSLIDE BLOCKS TRAFFIC Four Thousand Tons of Earth on Pennsy Tracks fc.if Vur" division of the Pennsylvania wirJ8d ' at a standstill today, due to a tm i n'ar Esnr' '" wnIch more than tons of earth came down a mountaln- Vjr ,0 tne tracks at a point near Blooms .thfi' trains of workmen were rushed rom Bunbury. . Britain Promise,. Knfotv in Plntfpr lu !? 0S AIIE8. Oct 25. Safe conduct llwn panted Count von Luxburg, i2fr "rman envoy In Argentina, by up on which the count mIm touch VlctroU IV-a. 20 8Sl Hi J m PfS WTHfcK'fl !?ES gtTOTCgtTOCgiTOtTOiOTtVCTiCTil To iniure Victor quality, always look for the famout trademark, "Hit Matter'! Voice." It U on all cenuinc productt of the Victor Talking Machine Company. SisilfSffiP Vletrola VI-A. $30 Victrola V1II-A. $45 Victrola IX-A. 57.50 Victrola X-A. $8S ' ,"Out about November 1) See and hear these new Victrolas at all Victor dealers The Victor Company now announces the complete new line of Victrolasthe very latest developments of the world's greatest musical instrument. New models, with many new and valuable improvements and just in time for the holiday season. . That the public may comprehend the great variety of styles, we illustrate the complete line in miniature. But to properly appreciate just what these improvements have accomplished, it is necessary for you to actually see and hear these new improved Victrolas. Go to any Victor dealer's and he will gladly demon strate them and play any music you .wish to hear. Go todaythe Christmas demand for the Victrola is already on, and these new models will this year create a larger demand than ever. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. Important Notice. Victor Records and Victor Machines are scientifically coordinated and aynchronutd by our aptcial processes of manufacture, and their 9 uie, oae with the other, la absolutely caientlal to a perfect Victor reproduction. t .New Victor Records daaunatrated at all dealers on tha 1st of cacb month Victrola "Victrola" is the Registered Trademark of the Victor Talking Machine Company designating the products of this Company only. Warning: The use ot the word VlctroU upon or In the pro motion or aale of any oth.r Talking Machine or Phonograph products la misleading and illegal. n , i j ""nCZSLBCiMBi lbs Victrola XI-A, $110 Victrola XIV, $165 VietroU XVI, $215 Victrola XVII, $265 M m m I g Q'raffl mvmmsML'EW&c&tcMCQR Perry's Have the Clothes! ) n ivH wL i A f J 1 f Perry's "nocnK-llr:ASTKns FOR TOUMl sii:n Trlm-flltlng coat, buttons set close together; long, graceful lapels; outside patch pockets with square - finished flaps; variety nf run treatments. Perry's TItnNCir OVKKCOAT Willi belt nil around, some hurklrd, Fomo buttoned. Slant ed nuttdde patch pockets, or vrrtleal Innide liellnns pockets form-ntting or loose back. One of several models. You never saw such a whale of a stock in Suits and Over coats as there's here at Perry's! q Suits and Overcoats at S15, $18, $20, and $25 yes, at $15 whilethey last, but slim prospects of our being able to repeat such values at $15. A tip to be taken in time! CfAt $20 Pippins, both in Overcoats and Suits! I Overcoats at $20 Single-breasters and double breasters; Trench belters, half belters, pleated backs, plain backs, box backs, form-fitting backs; knee-length coats, long-skirted coats; velvet col lars, cloth collars, big, comfy convertible collars browns, light grays, blues, Oxfords, novelty mix tures skeleton lined, half lined, full lined with the added distinction of Perry fit and tailoring! lfl Suits at $20 Just take this one We've marked it $20, so it will be sold at that price while there's one of it on our counters but, honestly, $20 is no price for such a suit of clothes today ! It's a twilled weave in a dark mixture showing indistinct bars of red with a shimmer of color popping out here and there from the background; double-breasted, rolling lapels and regular pockets, with the snap of youth in every line! J Or, at $20, this suit of a brownish mixture show ing a faint herringbone weave a cassimere finish fabric cut on stylishly conservative lines. fl Come in and see them! t H . t Perry & Co., "N.B.T 16th and Chestnut.. Sts. '-,;;; .i 'v A : , . t. a i i i r f a .A v r,i tfft r a- ". t- MHaHBMHBa yyp " - - - i port Brat.