won ltowl e not. ,t ' r fmPtffiW$$fiSrr1rtfS 'mBCent ON LIGHT WORK . y f , -BW -53 WJA 'it ?n ''A?- ''.V ' , 'I. M r. . " ' .. , S J V tlii'ft- Rs From Hospitals Apncc With New ibcs of Influenza IT fHalC to tnt Kvning rultte t.tdatr I Md, am., UCI . nouueru Vo been discharged from tho i here and who are rccupcrai- the Spanish Influenza arc lio nised Into a unit that Is called ent detachments and are be- ben light work until they have tanlned their strength and can take their places In tho rank schedule for the convnicceni Rents" was Issued In the form rdep this morning by Major Ocn- Carter, the division commander It rHWes most of nil that the soldiers MkU-'have plenty of rest and oppor tunities for an abundance of fresh air tUMl sunshine. Gn number of convalescent being rfpteharKed dally from the hospital Ut' equals, at this time, the num , hribfnew cases admitted dally i memhera nf Hie "eonulc'cent dc- 'jMhmtnta" will arise at the usual hour f.fcl tk morning-, and after the morning hm they v. Ill be fdveti calisthenics m...n ti -nn until in-in unci, mornlnc 1fltr1'wm "police" their quarter.". This' "WfcaHy takes about fifteen minutes l,10iJ0 to 11.30 the lads lll renu, I or attend to any personal inui- "they desire, Between 11 30 and i ml ihev will prepare for their noon K'itMraess. After eating they will rest N until '1130. At 2 o'clock they will go B ';,' ut'for another hour nnd u half of leaiHHnenics ana at .i-.iv unm u mrj ''ftCWIH raad' wrl,e nn1 batho during the' ri first week and during the neconil week 'f.thty will hike and bathe. The evening i-JJuttttn will be eerved at the usual hour.) ,-'ftr which the lads will rest until . ; , -$ Jrt.. From that hour until bedtime ' -tey will be permitted to do hat they I ft 'fant. , !r X BOldler. who had Just come back ' ' from a, ten-mile hike this morning s.i fc-., the schedule nnd exclaimed "tire look' i(h trtke afnothln' to do till tomorrow1 pro- &;iHram. i.ean me 10 mai nu. ,,( ' General Carter announced the asilgn- i'fment this morning of Captain John II ' ' Morrison to be the dlxlslon Intelligence offVer. The table ot organisations pro vides that this lt fclmll be held by a major, nnd It Is quite probable that the gold leaf will soon be given Captain Morrison He recently returned from Abroad Captain Morrlfon Is nn old Na tional (luaril olllcer II s home Is at nn Wert O When the Nntlonnl tlunrd of that State was sent to Krnnre he went along, nnd wan later transferred to a regular army unit lie has taken tin eoiiriv nf Instruction nt (ho school for staff ofllcers "over there" It Is now Major Frank X Tlonnamnn Tho rump's personnel olllcer illsrardifl his double Inrs for a gold leaf this morning, following tho receipt jester day of his commission as n major. Nino more 'noncoms'' hae reported hero from abroad nnd hive been nlgned to units of the I..ifnitte l)llslnn for training iurpor, nerordlng to nn order this morning by (lenernl Carter The lads nsslgned to tho Seventeenth Infan try are Sergeant Harold II Shield" Walter 11 Alcxnmlir nnd lloal M Sncllcnberger nnd Corporal Harold M McDonald Sergeant KrnnU llurke has been nfOcnrd to the Seventj-fllst In fantrj ; Corporal (leorge A llruo to tho SIxM -third Infnntn Sergennt John .1 ,Hnectnn to the Seenn "-i cond In fanlrs and Sergeants Ito s 'ilovirand Thomas H Hint m ilit Thirtj eend .Machine (Inn battalion fiiKr"i'v"' T "aijmNpj ' ins ii "'UBBIil .-' - - - - ' CAMP DIX ACTIVITIES TAKE WIDER SCOPE Hul Athletic Events Popular -r- ile to LjVZfX weather, thft Knlxhts 'w It he. abl take care of the. men In the various sections of the camp. t. A Sullivan, ot Kail lllxer, Mass, hut K of C Jurisdiction oer this camp hnd has taken up plans for Increased activities during tho winter months l.'nnitlm, f tin tffnilt ntlin fif llllttlg ,, ., r -t 1' f ry ' .. "'" ". :. " . . 7 ... ... i flllllS itlillH lr new I. 1 U. t" men in mo open nir ns mmn posilliie Ilio iiaiiuiiiiii t-tininiiinui'in . the lG.ld Depot llrlg.idn hno ieceled Instruction from headquarters to hold trntk meets In their urea tomorrow nnd Sund.iy afternoons, Tho 211th Pioneer Infantry will nlso hold a meet tomor row Where er possible hand concerts will bo glen nnd both afternoons glen our to wlioleiome outdoor sports. The ptoxrnm will bo unfler direction of Sol Metzgtr. V M. athletic dim tor. nnd besides races of nrlnus descrip tions and indurimcii tests thero will be a squad drill and u number of boilng matches. rit DIx, for the. patrhagter Is making i,,,.Jt,u.1!?' N? w" th0 mc' "''i tor Is the lirtlnir of th quarantine, but the present outlook Is thai It will remain u few days longer, TS. .VM .lf ihi "A k.j ?',. JJfal. MM (snip lilt, .V. J Oct. 1. Plans and specifications hae been re relMd by Prank Wandle, K of C di rector of actlltles here, for another hut to be known ns building No. S With this building In operation, whlc It Is hoped biforc the beginning of cold ri 9 a mi 19 iili fi yj" (icnuin and nrilliani In All SUf v 1NDNIK C 2CTTO-7rt"W ry&m , KTIslAir.NT XmiKTIsr.MI'.NT , 4 5 P Today is the anniversary of the Battle of Gormantown. Wnsh iiiKton laid wis-c nnd extensive plans for the attack on the British, the success of which depended solely upon the entile fiRhtinf: force working toRether in unison. A dense fog confused the brigades, chnnpinK what should have been a victory into n ictieat. Tho Chest nut street merchants have K""c to an equal amount of pains in mni shilling their forces for your benefit. Let no mistaken idea of patriotism befoir your minds. The welfare of the countty demands that business io on uninterrupted, that entire co-opeiation exists between tho pioducers and tho consumers, otherwise industiies and trade will lie crippled. SDgrcrmA S3yceMs j hM nli. . '.', ,i Z M $8.25 rs Itlns j t'ntut Itlnio 4 Carnt r.lng $28.75 $36.75 $54.37 Cut B I's On The Premise j ifc rmt HIlICK S'S? S1S.75 Ur nre Kt tit M-lllnc tliec dlnntontU nt $70 per carnt, tlcilt tlio fnrt tlmt thf hrlesa! mnrhft quotntlont fur till grAilc nrr J nml SUM) per enntt! mtihl DOl IW.i; Hntl TIU.UM: our prnflts At IhU time If up rnrril tnt tut Hint Ii fartlift from our mini! W'r purchased thrift iltninund In tltr roueh lone nto and Kladly Bl" r rutmnrr the hrne fit of nur rntfrprUi. Tlir nbor prlrr lncluilo nnj (! 14-U. mounting. Mall order filled promptly. Buy that Liberty Bond NOW! 0. " 3PHILA.STORES - a1- tJzPhAr. COR aih CHESTNUT 5TS ..if9! ; i E IT ever so humble, there is "S no place like homo!" How - many think that? Humble, i sweet iiomcs no loncer hold attrac- 1 tions, but they miRht if they had The Eyes of the Blind "DcGrccquc stared at him a moment. Then lie walked to the telephone. "'Ivill waste no time on ou, Hcnnig,' lie said. 'There arc many things that may be done to jour w ifc and child. Germany exacts the utmost payment of the debts due her, Hcnniij. You may die, but our wife anil child do you wish to hear them die over the telephone, UcnniR?'" From "The Km of the mind," Arthur isomers Roche's thrilling spy story in the October w m C. J Utppt & Son, vxcumvc lieprcaeniaiivca rax i2K F MAGAZINE (C?) i-t".U t- t 0V often do we hear women H siRhinp for the picturesque) spinets wishini; they onlv I'nulil hen 'something conifoi table to sit upon. I sound they jrive foith they would be I uic you ever notice chairs in mens i clubs? They do not belong to the I stiaistht back, sit-on-mc-if-you-dare 1 variety, they are substantial and ! comfortable, but I have seen others (which would make club chads feel i like park benches. This is the genu I inc English down furniture manu i factured bv II. D. Dougherty Com 'pany, 1G32 Chestnut street. It I comes in diffeicnt shaped chaiis, I chaises Iongues nnd davenpotts, is ' stuffed with down of the finest quality and covered to order. Isoth Oprn i i'i s &&? HTSrHHIWPKECa cuied of any desi e for an original, and doubh appicciatip of tho Stein wav Babv" Glands sold by N. Stetson & Co., 1111 Chefitnut street. One model, made of the choicest mahog any, with an inlaid border, and tuiaint iory name plate, is in out ward appeal ance almost a counter part cl the graceful spinet. But there the similarity ceases, and one icalizes the immeasurable difference between the old and the new. When the first choid is struck nnd the bril liant tones ring forth, one knows Open A Club Charge Account 238-210-212-241 North 10th St. ing could be more luxurious, and i why this inimitublc piano has once its arms enfold you a dilteient meaning. H i I fl fyvK LiJU Top Coall I I ) omB ' MfAMJ W M Men's $i W&i-P -? W W a"tl 6 feW-S -" m Trousers ' Top Coal. J J 'JU 5q,()5 ' ritPpr ca WVm $ $6 wgJL end YrAm a'"cs 9.95 irs Store Orders Accepted 1029 MARKET STREET ?' Store Open Tonight and Tomorrow to 10 P. M. Today and Tomorrow We Are Ready With the Best Men's Suits & Overcoats The Master Products h-l of 40 Makers V $5 to $10 Qawa1 nn Slut Ik - "" " or Overcoat I1 "Specialization Is real t.fllnn,anil r an. letallzlnc In Me n's i Clothes we hate col lected not only big I; anortments, but at prices inai are un-matchable. I,i 'Skirt HfnrlflB if i.;. zzimJ I"- r tare uai.i '.Slashed Pockets Slit Pockets Form Fitting t4 C.nnitpri'nfh'v I' Everv Wnntfrt I Material and rattcrn Boys' $15.00 $ Suits at . Ttl( bpt clllfc nf 1,n ; .. I 'v. , . "imicy in me city rGood, sturdy woolens in military styles sizes up iu io years. THE HILL CO 1029 Market St BMMKO METER wjBNui csiaMiy P?"j"" THE UEHLING CO2 METER For continuous analysis of boiler flue gases. Designed and built not to fit a certain price, but to attain a definite result. Recommended by the U. S. Fuel Administra tion because it shows the fireman just what ho should do every minute of the shift. Also Foxboro Instruments, Draft Gauges, Green Fuel Economizers, Fans, Valves, etc. (Ask your chief engineer lie Knows) BAKER-DUNBAR-ALLEN CO. 809 STOCK EXCHANGE BLDG. I Those Sprut' Slot. Ksre 1SUS h " -r SIM t: Uncle Nim iins let down , the service bais to women there aio otheis that are not only diopping, but which have already I I been cleared away. And the diction- j ary, too, will have to be cnlnrged, j when the coriect appellations for the natty damsels in unifoim nre detor- ' minml nnnn T110f Tn Env "vn- women" or "vcoladies"! I wish I knew Whatever tho name, it is for 1 them and other girls in the service that B. F. Dewees, 1122 Chestnut street, keeps special Seivice Shirt Waists, the fluffy-ruffles style not being permissible These blouses are strictly tailored, though some have a few tucks, and come in batiste, Ha butai silk. Men's-wear imported cicne, a Heavier weignt siik ana imndias. All have soft stand-up de tachable collars to match the shirt, and are worn with mannish ties. THE fourth Liberty Loan was successfully launched on Satur day. Never was a ship more heavily f-cighted fieightcd with the welfare of thousands of gallant and brave men who nie sacrificing their lives for the common weal. Yet, buidened as it wns to the watei's edge, it neither stuck on its ways nor will it bo swamped in mid stream. The river of enthusiasm upon which it floats is deep, the cur rent stiong and tho clear-sighted J Man at the Helm sails bv the short , est route to the Port of Peace. But I Victory, glorious and complete, must lead the way: for victory there must be men; for the men, ships, arms nnd food, and to procure these MacDon ald & Campbell, 1334-3G Chestnut street, urge you, with all the strength of their patriotism, to BUY LIBERTY BONDS. THE cultivation of pears is by no means modern. They were known nil over the ancient woi Id, and pears in this country nre of two distinct origins; those brought over by the French and English Colonists and those intro duced ftom the East. This week Henry R. Hnllowell & Son, Broad below Chestnut street, aro showing the beautiful Cornice Pears (lineal descendants of the French Due de Cornice penis), which now flourish in those wonderful fiuit valleys of Washington and Oregon They are bigger th'an the Bartlctts nnd more pyrifoim in shape. Their color varies, greenish-yellow, turning to clear yellow, with a blush any debu tante would bo proud to possess. The flesh is white, melting, very juicy and highly flavoied nnd. being an autumn pear, they last a com paratively short time. IF YOU ever say, "a silver tea service is easy to choose, nnd just the present to give them," drop in at Bailey. Banks & Biddle Company and see their collection. It will be a revelation. A hundred different styles to suit a hundred different pocketbooks, and every period repre sented. There a'e plain Colonial sets, one with a reproduction of a teapot made by Paul Revere, who. by the way. was an expeit silversmith: ornate Georgian sets: slender, fluted Marie ntoinetts gets with dainty medalliofls and bow-knots; Flornl Chase sets with tho bordeis of flow ers so skillfully wrought they bring old-fashioned gaidens-to mind, and Chinese Chippendale sets, the most home" has . achieved world-wide fame nnd won it I high place of honor in tht? musical woild. This 5-piecc dining-room outfit con sisting of colonial oak extension table and four genuine quartered oak .slip sent chairs, covered in brown imperial leather. Special , S2.-..00. Sold on Club Plan. PIANOLA-PIAN Lusicians an JM usic JUovers mm K311I PRICE $ 700 Settlement mny be mnile throuth nnr IlrntHl-rnym.nt Plnn, which nppllrt II the rent toward the purchase. Player-Pianos, so called; are not Pianolas. There is only ONE Pianola, made exclusively by the Aeolian Company and obtainable ONLY in certain pianos, such as the Steinway, Stock, Weber and Stroud all on sale at Heppe's. The most popular of these models is the Stroud. The Stroud has every patented Pianola feature, all the wonderful control devices which have made the Aeolian products the standard of musical excellence the world over. .It is made by the great Aeolian artisans and manufact ured under most careful super vision. Furthermore, it carries the complete Aeolian guarantee. Yet the price is extremely reason able. Call, phone or write for catalogues and complete particulars. C. J. HEPPE & SON v 6tri and Thompson Sts 1117-1119 Chestnut St. a W r HEXEVER thcic is a discus- mod about ihoosing our na- inmil flnnil emblem I always want to suggest the ten plant, for was it not to the squabble over tax ing this little shtub that we iwq our present independence? But when Boston gave her first big Tea Party in 177U the tea passed to the mer maids was not the kind enjoyedto day. Then it all came fiom China, nnw its cultivation has extended to Tmlm Hml Covlon. and these teas i ,., 1.l .. ,,nii.n.cn11r nrnlVrrpd to uieiiui-i. ...i.- "v'-;?"'.'-f-T:.i i tile imiiesc. I... uruiuuiH wm.nw 1520 Chestnut street, caines a deli cious brand which can be bought no where else, the "Bow Bell, Ceylon- Inula tea n is ai- ' v 1 II venient little tins, is a irugruni, light-drawing, inexpensive tea, le maining unchanged in quality de spite the war. HE lecent opening by Jacob Reed's Sons, MlM Ulicstnut street, of a new depaitment for exclusive "Custom-Service Ready-to-Wear-Clothes" was of especial inter est to men, as heretofore when in need they had cither to pin chase custom-tailored or teady-made gar ments. The. Reeds have now devel oped a special manufacturing organi zation which cieates. for them alone, clothing combining the good features of both, leady to wear without the bother of repeated fittings, yet equal to the best custom tailored produc tions in lit, quality, woikmanship and style. As only skilled designers and tailors arc employed, and only a limited number of each pattern is made, the results are a revelation of the possibilities of Readv-to-Wear Clothes wh.cn particular thought is given them. O ORIGINALITY is one of the gifts which cannot be acquired. You cither have it or have not, and the more you call to it the fnster it flees, yet the milliner nt Bonwit & Teller's managed to capture it and wicst the necret of creating unusual hats. In their display every whim of fashion in chapes, colors and ma terials is ropiesentcd, all charmingly feminine and becoming. Among tne novelties are silk duvetyne hats in nearly all shades, with mole, beaver or beaver-cloth facings nnd trim mings of French flowers or ostiich tips. One little toque has a soft, crush crown of dark blue velvet with a brim of shaggy terra-cotta beaver cloth, cut in front nnd turned back to form two tiny revers, and around the biim rambles, a chic wreath of chenille flowers in autumnal shades. AT"IIERE aro two ways of Hoover I izing. One you know about. having faithfully practiced all summer, anu win no nonestiy ginu when there is no further occasion for it. Tho other you piobably never heard of, but once tried will stick to all winter and never auain will forco its pleasure. To Hooverize by this j second meinou an mat is necessary is a Hoover Suction Sweeper from the House Furnishing Store of J. Franklin Miller, 1012 Chestnut sttect. It is an electric carpet sweeper nnd vacuum clearier com- j bined, with an electrically driven I brush of soft hair, which sweens and , shakes the caipet. bringing tho dirt to tne suriace, which is removed by the powerful suction, Thero Is no How Allies Are "The Minor Bee trim oc It?! t3 nm nr ? "8 n 9? Szebubs The despairing cry to Baal for help that rose from the false prophets on Mt. Carnicl in ancient .days is now duplicated by an equally wild cry to Berlin, and unless all editorial seers arc mistaken, the call of Turk and Bulgar for aid will be answered only by the roar of Allied guns. Germany's military might on the West Front, in Palestine, in Macedonia, is at last begin ning to crumble, the New York World believes, and while Berlin trembles, the reverbera tion of Allied blows "thrills the enemies of Germany with joyous expectation." Marshal Foch has kept almost every sector of the Western Front busy "and now one by one he is raising the curtain on the several 'side-shows,' " according to the Philadelphia Press. The leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week October 5th will make thrilling reading for every American, "reviewing as it does the chain of Allied victories in all the war zones. There arc four Maps (one full-page colored) accompanying this article with a complete index of places, railways, roads, etc. Other news articles of importance arc: , iF Gompers Defeats the Defeatists How He Administered a Thorough Drubbing to the Pacifist and Defeatist Members at the Inter-Allied' Labor and Socialist Conference in England I Your Share of That Six Billion Who Owne the Washington Times? The Success of Allied Propaganda Worse Anarchy Due in Russia Keeping Tag on Slacking Trucks American Machinery for Russia A Legal Status for Poets Germany's War Slang The Sugar Situation (Prepared by the U. S. Food Administration) Slackers Aiding the U-Boats Shall Germany Have Her Colonies Back? Canada to Run Her Own Railways Fighting the "Cootie" U. S. Potash to Rout Germany's Col. Roosevelt on Soldierly Life and Death Powdered Fuel to Relieve the Coal Situation The Kind of Religion the Soldiers Want PersonalGlimpses of Men and Events News of Finance and Commerce An Unusuallu Good Collection of Illustrations, Including Cartoons and Maps "The Digest" An Accurate Register of World Changes expensive of all, with pold, ornamen- ruDDintr on nap with the Hoover ami tation nnd a decided suircestion of n scattering of the dust when the mysterious East. emptyinK. t -r AVE you ever heen ton Business College? No? I thouerht aa much! I J Yet they are institutions which cannot afford to be ignored during j x this business crisis, when any one's services mny be needed. The Government classifies them as essentials, so it is time you woke np and stopped in at the Danks Business College, 925 Chestnut street, where a surprise awaits you. Instead of the dingv rooms and listless pupils of your , imuK'nuliu,, "u ""' '" a nanusomciy minisneu suite or oiiiccs ana reception room, suggestive of a university; large, light and airy class rooms, filled with bright and alert students (not all young nor of one sex), Intent upon mastering the practical work of the Commercial, Shothand, Secretarial or Civil Service Courses, with all their rnmiflcat;mi. Wc are passing today through what is undoubtedly the supreme crisis of the world's history, the most memorable c.ir of all the thousands man Iips seen wax and" wane since lie first appeared on this planet. Nothing is more char acteristic of the tremendous nature of the cataclasm that has fallen upon us than the astonishing changes that are occurring throughout the whole t fabric of civilization, social, economic, political, and intellectual. To keep pace with these amazing transformations ou should read "The Literary Digest," the great news magazine th.it coers all departments of human endeavor each neck in 'an informing, vigorous, and wholly unbiased wa). If you' want impartial, up-to-the-minute information on all the great questions of the hour "The Digest" will provide it. October 5th Number on Sale TodayAll Newsdealers 10 Cents jtepsry Digest FUNK A WAGN ALLS' I I miumotruMn j 1 I iwmi STATU covmuuMT M Xerve PANY (PMAm if Fmmn NEW SuwUrd DkUowL NEW YORK ' iv: - - ..' 1 1 t 'i lUK UHBSTNUT STK1SET ASSOCIATION ram-1 ' ""i- -Hi "tjB ''" j"' k n , 'p ' . - 'w " :My TIW &a3i.ii&fc.-ljAfc, , 'iii. ii-Hrti i ii i L HI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers