SePH ilma&$ fW "" vyr WL ' A. rA '&y, j lfWR ? r 3L ? V r p T G. 0. P. SENATORS ASK VOTES FOR SUFFRAGE EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1918 Conference Called for Early Consideration of Pend ing Resolution :. 1 By the Associated Press Washington, Aug. Republican Senator, In conference to day, ndopted a resolution asking their membership to support the pendlnff womnn's suffraRo resolution before the Senate and urplnB Its adoption at the earliest possible date. The action was proposed by Senator Pall, of New Mexico, and was taken on a viva voce vote of about thirty Sen THRICE WOUNDED, GOING BACK Former City Hnll Elevator Opera tor to Quit Army Hospital Wounded three tlmen In six month, , hilt ullll ..,, tifUt ..., ..nwr... . Mt ' III illl 1IIII 111 11(11 Hllli C'll'l IU S- back at the Frltzes, such Is the record of Private John P Zell, of this city. "Hero I am In the hospital n(taln," he wrote to his par ents. Mr. arid Mrs Harry C. Zell nfi 60 North Farsnn street. "This time the wound In not serious and I ex pect to be back on the flrlnfr line In a few days The Dutch paid dearly for netting me and. the other boys they g managed to win and we are going to make them .pay still more dearly before w n flnli.h with them " Young Zell enlisted In August last year and learned so rapldlv that he was Feni unreal! last winter. He Is attached ALLENTOWN HERO WILLI LEAVE ARMY SERVICE 7!,vi.i' s ,?Vf J.j Gassed in French Trenches, Leibig Was Sent to Meade Hospital Camp Meade, Md Aug. 24, A Pennsylvania boy who went Into the thick of things over here and who be came a victim of German atrocities Is going to leave the army He has given i that army eight years of faithful serv-1 Ice This soldier Is Klmer Lelblg, of. Allentown, Fa. Lelblg was gassed In France last winter when he was doing duty near the front-line trenches as a member of the Fiftieth Engineers. He i tors present, with lrtually no oppo- J," e ,49'h M,c',ln? Gun Battalion, one! spent some time at a bne hospital In Won. I announcing It later. Senator &&' ?fXV.en Kof Ant&ncel FrnM' wh"8 " w" '0Und ,hat h" he has been In France. Six months ago he was wounded for the first time and In the hospital two weeks. Thiee months mrn hi tmt ua patient one, to judge by his letter, ell was formerly an elevator oper ator In the City Hall and lRter worked m a machine shop at Kiurton. Pa. His father Is an inspector In the Bureau of ater. SPROULBEGINS FIGHT FOR GOVERNOR'S CHAIR high County Resolutions Hit Administration Wadsworth, of New York, who opposed the suffrage resolution, emphasized that the conference action calls merely for a rvote, without binding any Senator's action. The resolution follows: "Itesolved, that the Republican mem bers of the United States Senate in con ference urge that the consideration of House Joint Resolution 200, proposing an amendment to the constitution of the United Slates extending the right of suffrage to women should be proceeded j with at the earliest possible moment "Bo It further resolved that w shall i Insist upon suc,h consideration Immed- lately after disposition of the pending i Republican Nominee in Le unfinished business (the national war time prohibition bill) with all amend- menta thereto, and shall also Insist upon I a final vote on Houe Joint Resolution j 300 and all admendments pending or to , be offered thereto at the earliest pos sible moment, "Provided, that this resolution shall not be construed as In any way binding the action or vote of any member of the Senate upon the merits of the said Woman suffrage amendment." Republican senators regard their ac tion as placing upon Democratic mana gers of the woman suffrage resolution the responsibility for any further delay In securing a vote on the resolution, which has been pending since It was adopted by the House last January. Both factions held oft action at times when It developed that each lacked a few votes of the nnmber necessary to win. At present, according to polls of its friends, the resolution probably would be defeated by two or three votes The death of Senator Galllnger, of New Hampshire, a strong advocatp of the resolution, further weakened the strength of Its supnorters Those in charge, how ever, hae promised that It will be brought to a ote certainly before the November elections. heart had been so affected that he proh ably would be of little use again for foreign serlce. He wrs sent back to rh?eenrtweeVsUmNo,;vndheRlis,,on',e fto'M hl COUn,ry " '" dUty Rt ,h guest of the Red Cross but a verv Im-1 base hospital here at Meade. He has Allentown, r Aucr. 24 Senator William C Sproul, Republican nominee for Goernnr. followed the precedent set hy his predecessors for the last quatter of a century In opening his campaign today In Lehigh County. With Senator E n Peldleman, nom inee for Lieutenant Governor, nnd Rep resentative James F Woodward, nomi nee for Secretary of Internal Affairs, the Republican Gubernatorial candidate addressed a meeting of the Lehigh County Republican committee at Neffs. twelve miles north of Allentown Prominent Republicans from all oer the county mingled In the huge gather ing which gieeted the candidates on the State ticket. General Hany C Trexler, Colonel n M. Young and State Senator Horace W Srhantz. Republican count chairman, headed a reception committee, which met the candidates In AJIentown and escorted them to Neffs. ' The Wilson Administration was ar taigned severely In iesolutlons otTeied by a committee, of which Ralph H Schatz. nf Allentown, Is chairman The same resolution denounced profiteering and condemned the aircraft scandal. "We hold that patriotism and loyalty to our country," read a part of the iesolutlons. "arc not and cannot be, i party Issues, and we condemn the Dem- ocratlc party for attempting to make patriotism and loyalty party Issues be ar ... T? a 1 tween Republicans and Democrats In Majority jXOnorateS ACCUSed, I the forthcoming election. We condemn such efforts as putting partisanship aboe patriotism " Senator Penrose and Knox were com mended because of "their patriotism and broadmlndcdness in supporting the wishes of. President Wilson when he was in the right, and aiding him in passing a number of measures ngnlnst the narrow and pacifist action of mem bers of his own party " Pledges of support for all the Repub lican candidates were contained in the resolutions. Senator Sproul motoied to Lehigh County from his home In Chester GRAND JURY DIVIDED IN BALLOT PROBE Minority Dissents and Tries to Resign Scranton, Pa., Aug. 24. lajority and minority reports were presented today by a Grand Jury which has been Investigating frauds at the May primary election. Thirteen of the members reported : "We have decided to present no one for Indictment," after reciting that 147 witnesses were heard and the contents of the ballot boxes in the suspected districts examined "Of the odium and Infamy of the dt clared finding of the majority of this Jury, we propose to be acquitted at the bar of public opinion," reads a sentence from the report of the minority, pre sented to Judge O'Neill hy Victor Burschel, foreman of the jury The minority members presented their resignations from the Grand Jury be cause of their dissatisfaction with thp findings of the majority. Judge O'Neill declined to accept the reslgnatipns, and Plstrlct Attornoy Moxey severely ar raigned th6 thirteen for giving alleged ballot-box stutters a "clean hill of health" and announced that before the day was over Toitrrants would be Issued for the election officers In six districts and also for W W Jones, members of the Leg- I Islature from the Fifth Lackawana dis trict, accused of furnishing fake, bal lots at the primary election. At the primary, W. Phillips led Albert Davis for Senator by 200 otes. Davis attacked the returns from ten districts and secured a recount by the county commissioners. The ballot boxes were opened. They showed evidence of fraud Judges Edwards, Newcomb and O'Neill heard the testimony." The Court threw " out the vote for Senator In six districts. This action nominated Davis. Then came the probe by the Grand Jury. SEA RAID AT DUNKIRK BEATEN German Motorboats Repulsed, One Believed to Be Destroyed By the Associated Press London, Aug. 24 German motorboats attempted a reconnaissance in the neigh borhood of Dunkirk, Fiance, yesterday morning. They were driven off by Brit ish and Frencli patrollng vessels. One enemy motorboat Is believed to have been destroyed The Allied forces suffered no casualties been unable to do any strenuous work Lelblg has been notified that he Is to be honorably discharged from the army In a few days on account of physical dis ability It Is said that his friends In Allentown ar preparing a warm wel come home Leibig Joined the regular army six ears ago, a few days after his nine teenth birthday. He served on the Mex ican border nnd In other places He was transferred from the Infantry branch of the service to the engineering hranch last winter and was shortly afterward sent across He had not been there I long when the gas attack which laid him low was directed against him and his companions. No wedding march was played when Private Edgar M Brown, of Bethlehem, Pa1., and Miss Dorothy F. Snder, of the same town., were married here this morning Brown couldn't have kept step to the wedding march If there had heen one. Instead of walking to the altar he hobbled there on a crutch, and Instead of having a bridegroom's suit he was clothed In hospital raiment. The ceremonv took placp In the chap lain's looms nt the base hospital at which Rrown has been a patient for some months and was performed by the Rev. James M Mngruder, the hospital chaplain Brown was to have been married a short time ago before the departure of the Seventy-ninth Division, with which he had hoped to go overseas. A few days before the time set for the de parture of that division Brown was knocked down hy a motorcycle sidecar and his right ankle fractured The nurses and doctors had a chance to congratulate two others on their marriage, these two being members of the base hospital colonv. They were Lieutenant Millard F. J. Smith, of Little Rock, la , and Miss Anna M Schultz, 1729 Edmondton avenue, Baltimore, a nurse This ceremony did not take place at the hospital, but at St. Martin's Catholic Church, Baltimore. Two captains of the Lafayetle Divi sion have been ordered to the West Point Military Academy, presumably to be come members of the faculty. They aie Captain Francis G. Borham, of the Sev. enty-flrst Infantry, and Captain Thomas Slnkler, Jr., of the Seventeenth Infantry. PERUVIAN TROOPS REVOLT Leader Demands Declaration of War Against Germany i By the Associated Press Lima, Peru, Aug 21 Two hundred Peruvian tioops in the garrison at An-1 con, thirty mllen from heie have mu- i tinted Major Armando Patino, the lead-1 er of the mutlneeis. has Issued a revolu. j tlonaiy manifesto, 'which condemns the piesent Government in sweeping terms, calls for Immediate declaration of war' on Geimany, unconditional delivery of mierneu lieiman snips to t tic rntteu States and the sending of a division of Peruvian troops to France, and appeals to Peruvians to listen to the words of President Wllion and place themselves rebolutely on the .side of the Allies The mutiny liai resulted In rumors of a revolutionaiy movement throughout the republic The trouble, however, Is not seriously regarded. Seven! columns of loyal troops now are endeavoring to capture the Insurgents. Rumors of dls turbances.at Arequlpa and Cuzco are not confirmed. rnoTorr.AYS l'HOTOPLAVS The Stanley Booking Corporation THE fcllowlng theatres obtain their pictures through the STANLEY Booking 1 Corporation, which 1 a guarantee of early showing of the finest produc tions All pictures reviewed before exhibition Ask for the theatre in vcur locality obtaining pictures through the STANLEY Booking Corporation. ' All L lath, Morrta & !' utile Ave. Auiamura Mt.Dllyat2: Evrs.B:59 "TO HELL WITH THE KAISER" A t"il I f 52D AND THOMPSON" STS. PitrDLtLXJ MATl.NBB DAILY JUNK KLVtDOE tn "JOAN OP THE WOODS" ADPAnlA CHESTNUT Below 10TH AKLAU1A JO A. M to 11:15 P.M. BII.LIR BUBKK in "IN PURSUIT OK POLLY" til T irDIDrt BROAD STREET and fcLUfc.DlrL SUSQUEHANNA AVE. WALLACE REID In "LESS THAN KIN" MORE STUDENTQMPS St. Joseph's and Drexel in List New Array Training Schools By therUnited Press eeoted todaywfor organization of stiff dents army trmntng camps Included; St. Joseph'? College, Philadelphia ; Grove City College. Grove City, Pa ; Drexel Institute, Philadelphia; Geneva College, Beaver Fal's, Ta, ; Hobart Col lect, Geneva, N Y ; Manhattan College, New York city : New York State College for Teachers, Albany, N. Y : College of Dentistry, New York; Cathedral College, New York; Hastings College, Hastings. Neb ; Butler College, Indianapolis; Antloch College, Yellow Springs, O. ; St. Mary's College, Dayton. O. ; Loyola College. Baltimore. Md. ; St. Mary's Col lege, Oakland. Cal ; Bethel College, Russellvllle, Ky ; Georgetown College, Georgetown, Ky ; West Kentucky Nor ma School, Bowling Green, Ky. ; Inter national Y .11. u. A. v;onege. snringneia, .Normal EMPRESS MAIN ST.. MA NAM NK matinll; j'Aii.i VIOLA DANA In OPPORTUNITY" Mass. ; Southwestern Weatherford, Okla. School, FAIRMOUNT maVnK.ly PERSHINO'S CRUSADERS IT A Mil V THEATRE tail MarW.t Bt. rAlVlll-T ti A JI. I.. Midnight. WILLIAM P HART in "SHARK MONROE" tTM OT THEATRE Below Spru 3D 1 M Sl. MATINEE DA1L1 f'ARLTLB nLACKWEI.L In "THE RELOVED BLACKMAILER" GREAT NORTHERN "SkS!" THEDA BARA In "FORBIDDEN PATHS" lynrni A I BOTH 4 WALNUT PTS. llVlrfcJKlAL, Mat.. 2:30. Evs. 70. PERSHINO'S CRUSADERS T CAnrD 1ST LANCASTER A E. Lh.ADfc.rV MATINF.R DULY CECIL D MIM.K'S "WE CAN'T HAVE EVERYTHING" 333 MARKET ITl ",? OLOA PETROVA In "TEMPERED STEEL" MODFI 425 SOUTH ST. Orchentra mWLci, Continuous 1 to 11. ORACE D'ARMOND In "TUB CRUCIBLE OF LIKE" PAI APF 1214 MARKET STREET rVL-AVC io a. M. to 11 15 p. M DOUOLAS FAIRRANKS In "HOUND IN MOROCCO" PRINCESS "I MARKET STREET 1 lUVpOJ 8 :80 A.M. to 11 :15 P.M. PAULINE STARK In "ALIAS MARY BROWN" RFCPNT MARKET ST. Below J7TH 1XI-V-,I-,1, 11 A. M. to 11 P. DOROTHY DALTO In "OREEN EYEST RFAI TO GERMAN-TOWN AVE. Il-M I KJ AT TULPEHOCKUN ST. CHARLES RAY In ""'01 "THE CLAWS OF THE HUN" RIVOLI 6-D AND 8ANS,ws.T "TO HELL WTl THE KAISER' VfaMn.. A... TO HELL WITH "'" RUBY "AKKJj?" ST. BELOW TTH 1XW1-J 10 A. M. to 11:15 I WILLI 4M S. HART In "THE HELL HOUND OF ALASKA" M. SAVOY 12U MARKET STREET JnVy..L A. v (o Mldn VIRGINIA PEARSON inti ijiaiv Midnight STANI FY,"AnKET ABOVE 1BTH Jlrtl'ILCI HMR A w. to 11:18 pm MAE MARSH In "jiuiNr.r AlAl) VICTORIA ?$. fip",? WILLIAM FARNUM In "A SOLDIER'S OATH" BANDITS KILL 3UJS. MARINES Altoona Man Among Victims of v Santo Domingo Skirmish By the United Press Washington. Aug. 24 Three ma rlnea were killed and one wounded In skirmish between United State ma rines and bandits in Selbo province, Santo Domingo, oil August 13, .marine Corp headquarters waa Informed today. A great number of bandits were killed or captured. The marines reported killed were; Corporal Bascome Breeden, Archvllle, Tenn . and Privates Rummell W. Jones. 3236 Seventh avenue, Altoona, Pa., und 'Joseph S. Ilaydel, New Orleans. Private Thomas J. Ttushforth, Brook- ,brn, was wounded, but escaped after a .Mad-to-hand fight with bandits armed sylA machetes, , ,. M h 4 saarlnes were buried ssTSus THEATRES OWNED AND MANAGED BT MEMBERS OF THE UNITED EXHIBITORS ASSOCIATION BELMONT 52D AB0VB MARKET Elsie Ferguson N.&HIcSfNcr PFHAR 60TH CEDAR AVENUE Sessue Hayakawa " DrI,,lEPATFT3.?F CO! mFl IM M"1"' nti soth 60th ENID BENNETT in The Vamp COLONIAL atn'2ft5ManpM ALMA REUBENS ' Alts P. M. THE SPHINX" FRANKFORD ns Fno" av.. Enid Bennett ln "E biggest ""'" """" SHOW ON EARTH" II IMRO FRONT ST. QIRARD AVE. jwmuvs Jumho Junction on Frankford "L" Henry B. Walthall Vi?.!... I nfi KT MD AND LOrtJST STREETS I LULUOl Mill UO 3 30. Evi.-3(i t 11 Douglas Fairbanks ln "j.. NIXON 8SD BELOW MA-R.JBwTl2h , CHARLES RAY - 'J",. PHOTOPLAYS PHOTOPLAYS STRAND Gln' AT tiv0Br,, E' Bro4 EUREKA i0TH market tb. " - -rurDrTTnVw' s , .MARY.IIUES, WINTER r-n lalWlBTT AB V AV3Vii WANAMAKER'S Store Closed All Day Today DOWN STAIRS STORE Store Closed All Day Today WANAMAKERfS Cheerily Down the Steps Into the Down Stairs Store at Wanamaker's I - TTW1 Each step Is a happy stepping stone toward thriftiness, first quality and the convenience of having everything on one floor. The people smile as they come, for they know that, no matter what day it may be, there is always a surprise awaiting them of some specially priced merchandise the kind that every one wants. All Is Brightness in the Down Stairs Store, with plenty of illumination to enable you to see well ex actly what you are buying. No dark, dull corners can be found. And there is no darkness in the policy of the Down Stairs Store, for as it is part of the Wanamaker Business, so is it firmly woven into every one of the well-known Wanamaker principles. Fresh and Clean air pours in through well-adjusted venti lators, and fresh, clean merchandise comes in every day. Prices are low enough to not allow merchandise to accumulate. As a result, stocks are always new, up to date and attractive to look at. If you are one of the few who never have been in the Down Stairs Store, why don't you come cheerily down the steps and be surprised? 400 Summer Frocks Much Re ducedA Five Dollar Bill Will Buy Any One of Them At $5, any woman who gets one of them will save considerably and thoic m still plenty of time for .such frocks. All have been much higher in our own stocks, but to send them out hurriedly they have all been marked at one price, regardless of their former ones. There are regular and extra sizes among them, and it is worth a little looking to find your sire. Among them will be found Plain colored and figured voiles; I'laid and checked ginghams; Plain color Japanese crepes; White net. and voiles; Mack or vvhita China silk; Sometimes only one or two of a kind, but plenty to choose from. One Hundred and Fifty Dresses at $3 These, too, are much lower than their regular prices and they are of voile or gingham in pretty styles. (Msrkct) Inspiration for New Dresses The rustle of the taffeta and the glow of the navy blue color ing is enough inspiration for several dresses and suits. This taffeta is 40 inches wide and $2.25 a yard. Softly White Habutai is 38 inches wide and a pure white at $1, $1.50 and $2. a yard. (Ontral) Rompers for Chubby Children are heavy enough for the cooler days, as they are made of poplin or of chambrayThe' prices begin with a large assortment at $2.50. The white poplin rompers will do for best, as they are touched with color and have dainty hand work about them. Chambray of a better soit in blue, tan or pink is usedlo make really pretty rompers that are finished with hand embroidery or with smocking. The rompers will fit boys or girls of 1 to 6 years. Kiddies' Bloomers of white cambric are made with clastic at the knees. Sizes 2 to fi years are 55c; larger sizes for girls of 8 to 16 years are 75c. (Central) Special! House Dresses at $2.50 They are made of black-and-white striped lawn or of percale in plaids of pink-and-black, black-and-lavender or of tan-and-black. These were much more, and are, indeed, good enough to wear in the afternoons on the porch or when grocery-shopping. Dressing Sacques at 65c Lawn and percale dressing sacques in light and dark colors are practically all fig ured. The lawn ones are trimmed with scalloped col lars and cuffs and the percale ones are quite neatly plain with white piping. (Central) Working Nurses like to wear these uniforms of blue chambray or of blue-and-white striped gingham. The necks can be worn high or low and the hems are adjustable. Both kinds are well re-enforced under the arms "and are made with convenient breast pockets. These will do as maids' uni forms, also. $3.50. (Central) School Days Are Not Far Off and many wise mothers aie thinking already of the ever important question serviceable and pretty school clothes. Wash dresses are about as serviceable and pretty as any that can be had, and many of the new cottons are arriving al ready. Plain - color chambray and striped chambray, 27 inches wide, is 35c a yard. Gingham in prettily blended plaids of many colors and also in plain colors, 32 inches wide, is 40c and 50c a yard. Japanese crepe in white groundh with colored stripes, 31 inches wide, is quite special at 28c a yard. Sturdy cotton material for the kiddies' clothes comes in plain colors and stripes mosdy in pretty blues and browns, 32 inches wide, at 50c a yard. Cotton cheviots in tiny checks and stripes, 26 inches wide, is 28c a yard. (Central) Rosebud Nightgowns Prettily new and different, these nightgowns are made of white dimity with pink rose buds in it. The tops are pointed and finished with wide bands of pink batiste. $1.50. Hemstitching furnishes the only adornment to pink batiste pajamas and the ef fect is quite pleasing. Elastic holds them snugly at the ankles. $1.50. New Chemises Straight chemises of fine, bilkv batiste are prettied with lace'and embroidery. $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 and $2. (Central) To Keep Men Warm o' Nights The weather is cooling and the night winds speak -of Au tumn. Many men like to get into flannellet nightshirts about the end of August and we are ready for them. Flannellet nightshirts in s-oft, striped patterns show uretty light pinks, blues and lavenders. $1.65. (Gallery, Market) Rosettes of All Kinds will be made without any charge. Prettily knotted rosettes for the girlies' white frocks, full ro settes for babies' caps, and ro settes to wear on the hair will all be made to your liking. Excellent figured satin ribbon to make these of comes in 10 yard pieces of pink, blue or white. It is ', of an inch to 1 inch wide at 25c to 90c a piece. (Central) Prettying theHouse for Autumn Cretonne is rather a magic word when connected with the Autumn doing-over of the house! More and more it is entering into the plans of decorators and home-loving women, alike. Really beautiful cretonnes of the more expensive sort for upholstering offer a widely varied choice. Other cretonnes in lovely colorings are 30c to -45c a yard. Bris Bris Curtains for the lower half of the windows are made of white or cream-color scrim. They are all hemmed ready for the rods. 45c to $1.50 each. Flowers Grow Prettily - in Curtain Scrim All up along the borders they brighten the cream or ecru scrim that is waiting a few stitches to make it into curtains. The floral bordeia are in a Urge assortment of colors and flowers. 25c to 40c a yard. . (Chutnat) T? Small Gifts that you will find appropriate in remembering birthdays are well displayed on a table 'n the Jew elry Section. N'othing on it is over 35i ant' jet will find hot pins, liniMie .clasps, oanglu biacel-ts, ha- pins and manv kinds of pins all these in va riety. (Central) J" Fresh Sample Blouses 350 Marked $1.65 Every one would regulaily be higher in price. They aie all white and dainty and are made of voile, trimmed with lace and frills, and some of soft batiste or sheer organdie aie lather plain, with only pietty buttons, tiny tucks, and the like, for trimming. (Market) Coat Specials for Monday 50 sleeveless sports coats of velour, of white woolly coating and of colored linene are reduced for final clearaway. $1.65. Fine serge capes are mostly in navy blue. There are just a few of them left. Now $19.75 and $23.75. Odds and ends of cloth coats, some of them the better coats of our stock, are marked $10, $13.50 to $29.75. Silk coats will sell quickly at their final low prices of $5, $7.50 to $19.75. , (Market) When School Bells Ring Girls Want to Be In Fashion And it is a natural desire, after all, to look just as well as the other girls! New things are ready. Striped Japanese crepe in tan tones makes a jaunty school dress for girls of 6 to 14 years. The pockets are roomy and the straight waist shows box pleats. The maize collar and the pocket trimmings are embvoideied with French knots. $5.50. On the Middy Order is this dress of fine cadet blue gingham, so its popularity is assured. The skirt is fully side-pleated and attached to a white body. The upper part is like a middy with the bottom part turned up all around. The seams are all finely finished and the cuffs and the collar are trimmed with white braid. Sizes 12 to 16 years, $6.50. For an Evening or for the numerous afternoon affairs that high school girls go to, a new dress of dark Copenhagen blue taffeta would be most appro priate. The wide collar is a delicate maize color and the vestee is embroidered by hand. Sizes 14 to 16 years, $16.50. (Central) Women's White Canvas Ties Special at $2.80 Pair ' - Two hundred and fifty pair of white canvas ties have been much lowered in price. They are cut on long, slender lines the fash ionable last of the season and have light turned soles and high, covered heels. A woman will have an opportunity to save enough to help much toward buying another pair. New Autumn Footwear Oxfoid tics are decidedly the popular footwear to go with new suits and dresses. At $4.75 a pair, oxford ties of tan calfskin, black patent leather, or black calfskin are made with turned soles and covered heels. Also black or tan calfskin ties have welted soles and medium heels. (Cheatnnt) A New Supply of Snowy Table Cloths All of them are good quality and full-bleached. Hemmed cotton damask cloths, with a fine mer cerized finish, in several pretty patterns, are 58x72 inches, at $1.50, and 58x86 inches, at $1.85.' Meicerized cotton damask pattern cloths, 68x 68 inches, are S2.50; 72x72 inches, $3.25; 67x72 inches, $3.75. Half-linen damask cloths they have the ap pearance of all linen are in several pretty pat terns, 67x68 inches at $3.50; 70x70 inches at $.4. . All-linen damask cloths in various attractive patterns, 70x70 inches to 70x108 inches are $5 to $10.50. Napkins Full-bleached hemmed cotton damask break fast napkins are in several pretty designs at 15c, 20c and 25c. (Cheatnnt) Blankets At Less Than Today's Mill Prices Wise They are blankets that were bought many, many months ago and have just arrived. housewives will take advantage of this opportunity to lay in a stocK. Good white cotton blankets with pink or blue borders are 66x80 inches at $3.50 a pair. White cotton blankets with pink or blue borders are 60x76 inches at $2.50 a pair. Extra-fine gray or white cotton blankets, 72x84 inches, or plaid blankets, 66x80 inches, at $6 at" (Jan. Quilts, Also at much less than present prices.1 These, too, were bought many months ago, and they werea special lot then, which means that- they were bought at a lower-than-usual price at that time. Cambric or sateen-covered wool-filled quilts have floral centers and plain-color borders. $8, S8.50, $11.00 and $12.50. Bed Spread's Satin-finish Marseilles bed spreads at $3. Of fine quality, 78x88 inches, marked at to day's wholesale price. Special! Pillow Cases, 30c Each They are of good quality bleached muslin, 45x36 inches, and they are marked at the price we would pay wholesale. (Chestnut) Seamless Sheets Of heavy bleached muslin, 81x90 inches, at $1.65. Are also marked below market price. Rugs Plain Facts About Them Most of our rugs really the majority still bear old prices of months ago. Incom ing rugs are being marked much higher. That is why August is a good time to buy1 ruga for Autumn and Winter use. f Wool-and-Fiber Rugs of a close, heavy, durable weave are also attractive. There are, of course, wool-and-fiber rugs of flimsy texture, but we do not sell that kind. 27x54 inches, $2. 86x63 inches, $2.50. 7.6x9 feet, $10 and $11. 8.3x10.6 feet $9, $10.50 and 13.50. 9x12 feet, $11.50, $12.50, $13.50 nd $15. Wilton Rugs 27x54 inches, $6.50 to $8.75. 36x63 inches, $7.50 to $14. 4.6x7.6 fe?t, $21 to $28. (Che.tnnt) 6x9 feet, $36 to $49. 8.3x10.6 feet, $45 to $72.50. 9x12 feet, $57.50 to $77.50. Volvof ft n era in) ,.,. -, . " Wlltnn Velvet Kiivi Are All Seamless -, 6x9 feet, $19.50 tc-?25. ! 8.3x10.6. feet. S30 to S41.7B. A- 9x12 feet, $32.60 to 147, ir ' T-!Wti?k,.U(rDmi?,.rl ft i ;tX l irrm-w-imir- r rv ' i V f - r' toiiM fi "K. !-! U, 1 ' 5 !&3r&S ".4S "c J v, V iV'fi . a ; t. -s;. ,' '. "A-V '.W. la&'AVJ. -v- ) irjf.'i -u- ir "a KiK '- V i . -6-V -tll .,. ArJI 1 t 1 mi ji -' -- . .. sd-'X tth tm (ik-'lT"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers