vrvt y. : '-y ; '5 R. ,' p-' - "fti, &-'r'' AlVC . -"'' w . ivj ? r ?4 iff frflj.iirr--rcT i-riir-" i mi -iTiir n r i 1 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGBR-PHIL'ADEtiPHtA; FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, IMS IfcMALlEW DIES IN ACTION it a ...'.- E?y."Sr. ,-. . 1 11. 1 .1 aa TA'ormer t.ciurai nign nui- ' IrtiSliiin While T.nnil. inT Snuari V - w - fe'.VAS. TEACHER OF ART 4 , . t C ',' jVIeela Heroic End Only Six Days Before Armistice Ts Signed W Cornoral Alfred P. Smnlle. .Ir. for- Wr Central High .School Athlete nnu , (captain of the Crimson nnil Cold trade ' Heami has been killed In action. He met Weath gallantly, leading his squiul Into battle, on November 5, only nix dns lie nor the armistice was sinned. , Corporal Kmalley was well known in 'the city's artistic circles. He nn a , teacher at the School of Industrial Art , Park avenue and Master street, and , "he married Miss Janet Shout, the noted I .Illustrator, whose sketches have f(,e- f quently appeared In the Kvnsisn 1'i-n- , l.tC Ledoer. Mrs. Smalley and her six 'months old daughter are llvinc at Kr- , denhelm Terrace, near the Wheel 1'umn, Chestnut Hill A vounser brother of i-oipnr.il Smal ler. Cadet J-'.vrri'U Smalle. also .1 for Wcr Central High School tr.uk team, captain, ,1s non at the artillery officers training camp. Kort T.-olm. Ky 'aptalti ISmallev wns a member of the mn.'hlne gun battalion of the 314th Infantr;.. and had been In Vranco since last July. Lieutenant junrpli .1. Molten, i. ported i "missing on S-ptemlier l'J. has evlilentl . rvejolned his unit safcl as his paicnf thave leceiw-il sneiul mm- d 'ted since then, the last lii-me w.i"-h n "KbVember ! Lieutenant Molt, m ".is with the Eleventh Aerial Corps and had seen eervjee for almost a ear He was one of flic, first nierlcnn uaM:s to ko over. He Is a Rraduate -if the I'liiwt-i lty of l'ennsvlvanla and while there I -was ft member of the Delta si fra- ternlty and prominent In the Masque and Wis. The official notlfl. atlon was re-i eelved by the young officers fnther ,u hln place of business, 25 South Sixth1 trerjf. There are 1731 nanirs on the .omhlned casualty 8ts for today. Including US ( Pennsylvnnlans. The total from l'hlla-' ..i.U.i nnrt vlelnltv Is tlftv-lhre". elgh- lem of whom have been killed in -tfon. nine having died of disease tn if wounds. Thirteen ni -wounded and ten are missing Lieutenant Harold D. ntr;m. of the Medical Corps, a son of former Select Councllmnn flaiemo l Antrim, of 104, North Thirteenth street, has been gassed and ts also suffering from trench mouth nd trench foot, according to n letter from tho voung ollicer llu Is a gradu ate of the Medical School .of th" 1'nl veralty of I-ennsyhaniu. .-iass of 101.. land joined the army medical coips mn hfter leaving college. He has been In franco since January of this ,ear. ' Lieutenant Frederick S. l.aubei t. of ftrdmore, wounded on October 14 and now convalescing In a base hospital, wrote his wlfo that he 'had a hunch' Ills time had come when the attack IS atarted on the day he was injured. A W-Tll' t-'aleco'f shrapnel shell, as large as a y- i . iimnn' otr.ult liim In the left leg. Biv- 33. nV him n mmiuund fracture. Ho Is a i "ve,ttrah of the Spanish AVar and was ... formerly employed at Midva.e. . '' "Wounded three times while carrj mg , S an.lmportant message from the f i out line , Si. - tnt !! reirlmental commander. I'riv.tte BS-Ti '.Mot fininhMI rruuleil the I,iHt two "hundred yards, hut ncromiilit-hetl his mission. For" this act of gallantry he has been decorated with the war cross. He Is a member of Supply Company No. 311 of the Quartermaster's Corps '.SKETCHES OF THE HEROES I'rlvnte Stanley A. Kails, killed in ac- lhn on October fi, coined a new slang phrase In his last letter home, written on Siplembur 25. rnh.n;ie.l Tin ' ' h favorite tnetu ITAxzies" Alia Honor Roll for iho City and Its I'ii'htity Today Kll.l.i:l IN ACTMIX I.IIH TKNANT S.fl AIIT 1.. MAttl .U H. J.klnti rurK irn'vioup'j ic,..-.. nTlrilllv ri.niKNCi: 130R North I'VM'lltIT SKHIIKXNT I.Ktl HltA.CKK. J1S Stsm Ilnlenlietm Terrser. I'liesinjit Hill y. n. oniiimiy rewn-,i ti iMrf ion7 2317 oc- alld been CllltrORAl. HICHAKl) l. UM". flld York roml. ... .,tl.r.li rmtroKAi. KiiUAiui ri.hisni. ronroiiAi. i.vm i-KRin-Tr. 21.1 !,' t.an e t l'rhte HAItlt (IWnSI.KV 3n.-0 U-orKp t Ktlllhl-.T UITCIIIH. .1323 North Murvm' HKI'lll-.V II. DI'FIT.I.. 30J1 Until at i:t,t0()l i. rACI,. 2H44 ArnmlnKo ae. JIVKIl FIIKKIIMAN. 314 Nnrlh t . l.n"- JOIIN A. CANNON, toil North Forty- thlr.l nt ,IHIV Kl.,. "M'l Arnilnco iie "TtNI.KV I.. IIAVR f.llti HstiKHil t. IIKN'.IAMIX II. ilMIZKR, 2IS Ul.lae ll.lllici II. lllliKK. Mia North llnlh- nnit n, MMKS II. i h. t." MNli. Vn I.-.3J Wi" Third t 1. 11(11 IIIKII (IP DISI-.WI-, I IM'III 224T ANT JOHN .1. IIHIMIIllTTli(IM"s Mil UN 1.IM. 2318 North .11. t Mt . ..,,,., n 'OIH'OltAI. ANDIIKU (i. (II. ( K. -2tn V,ir'' l'nr'-""h Kt WM.ONKU .KIIIN .1. MINN. If I. ..I.--Iv .in , Cnoltl, i.il r.poii',1 ' TrltateN iii:niui: n. iiai kk. a,.,n r.. innnn.i i .IAMIVX T lll(llll. ."3113 N",vh',,,!.,:' . itimr.it r j. run. Mrs is ?"a'h i'(t- M'rnth t I'KI.IX I.. WAIMi. 471. Minor .' IIAUK It. I.KIIIV -I "'"' ""k "' ,,t rl.'nwti. 'a itih.it or tot nii tiutroiiM, i:iii. limisfcv it- '- .,.' t . . : rni ,-i i' n ITh.ite IIIKI'll I". DAI.TON. 2733 P.irli- st nm nii:i) mi. i ii:n.nt Ni. llAlt(IM) T. fh rl. , nth "l ' ANTRIM. 11. t'M-lHlll riti.K i wniKin. i nr.n. -"i-"' 11'1 ) l.d!H--utcr 32JC, V. tin r,-i.ori..,l i MM I I.N N flmt'r-' -Mt(li:Nr HOWAUK 1 Soinr ' l nonn n n ' ' il.lttiKANI . . IWN-. COlirilltAI. It M.I'll OdlHIN cojii'rim l. ruoMVs .iiior.ni itMi.r.v. rimrim.''i'. 'vi'ii.MAM ,ai i.mr.R. ro'SKiiiVr.'nlATK'i.iM.i.Vjir.Jer fon ,Cnoft'.,-lallv r.noitcJ lrlnten -.AMI 111. II. VKI.DSTKRN. 2037 N.,.lli .nrVv'.i. Vami'BKI.i.. r.idie mn. iirilll Mlli.r. tii .ii'-r, . Ill (111 IlI.MIt. 220 Klh,T I'llll.ll- (iVlNANi:. 3IJ llodnnin il'nulTK lull reported i M1.MN(1 IN ACTION I.1I.ITKNANT .IHSKI'II II. MIII.TK.N South sixtn si . ., SMtl. HINT IIUtKV M MCIKIKANT ritANK s. IIOIIM'.K. PI I North Front it ' IIn '""... ,. ., COUI'OMAI. IOIIN .1. Mrl.NltOI.. .6.1 I ifltri'lRAI. .IOKPII IM!(IN. 7019 llo-.-i St I.. rrlratr Airi'.l. (lOVIIKlin. l2 Mum I1AKI. KAIII.KK, 122 s-traw bnr 1 nnM.ter. I'll. r;ti:i)i:iticK ki;ykr. WAl'.TKH N. nll.F.Y. .'0 West Spring THOMAS I.. I.AI'M.N, 7I2H DlnEham It noffi IIIRNKI.I.. st . 2432 South She.-- it. FELL ON THE FIELD OF HONOR s-cgtW.A.ivins- woooctecf. B.H.SPITZER' iiica. Corp. ALFRED P. SMALLEY OR. Kinca' H.A.HCIKB' ROBT. PITCH IE"' RCbprrcd Killed- EALPH F.OGDEN ' SAUERDLATT-K-illta." Corp. R.AZER' WouncTcJ" JACOB WOLF. WOUNDED R.S.HOKWITZ. J.R WOtJNPL-l) I France In .Tulv as a n ember of com-I his parents he was killed on September pnny H, 31Bth lnfanlr lie was em- 27. Tie was formerly employed as a ployed by the Philadelphia T.apid Trail- i sheet-metal worker sit Comnanv Ictur ftom Albert llenhen II. IlufTel was killed In action Hoik, a friend of nitcnie. has given the young soldier s uni le the hope trial per haps the (tovernnient report Is not cor iccl. Hock sneaks of Hltchle having been alive nnd well as late as October in. while the War Doparlmen' telegram ays he died on September 30 during the terrible battle of the Meuse. I'rlmle llenliiinlii II. pller, killed In I September 30, nivotdli'i: to u telegram to Ins mother, .Mrs am: . iiurrei, JVZX Ituth street Ho was with Company A, 315th Infantry, nnd was employed In tho postolllce here. Ills last letter, dat"d August 2', was received n few weeks ago. Durtel wrs twenty-two ycara old. NirlioliiH Heller, .Ir., son ot .Mr, and .Mrs Xlcholas Heller. 1214 .Snyder ave nue, is lepoited as missing In action action, was a men.ber of Compaq D, of ,Io , a u.mher of Company IJ, 320th the Sixtieth lnfantrv. according to the I telegram from the War Department re ' celed by his patents Mr nnd Mrs. , Adolph Hpltr.cr. of 2IU2 lllilge avenue. , Pihate Spltzer mis diafted at the age of iwcnty-nltie and following an Inten ne training nt Camp .Meade was sent I overseas last Ajirll Prior to entering , military llfo the noting soldier was con nected with his father In the furniture business. A brother, Hugo V. Spltzer, twenty-six years of age. has been sta , tioned at the Philadelphia Navy Yard ( as a chief petty officer for the last six ' months, and another brother. Rudolph. elghtoen years of nge. is In the students' army training corps ot the I'nherslty of I Pennsylvania 1 Private Harry A. llieke, killed In action, Is the son of .Mr. and .Mrs. louls , Illcke, of I I1C Xorth Hollywood street, i He was thirty years ber of Company I. I embarked for oversea following a long training a amp I.ee i ccordliig to the telegram received by ,wr. ami -urs. ijouis j tm imu . h Hollywood street. n of age nnd a mem-J lormcr I'oht I tfith Infantry He1 u;ir-i :.. r. eas duty last June "' '" " lnfantrv. and has been in the service since Mav Heller is twenty-six years old. Thomas MrConuthy died of pneumonia October 13 In France, according to n message tecelved by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hobeit McConaghy, 2348 North Thirty-flint street. He entered the serv. Ice in July, and after a short training period at (.'amp Wadswortn lie sailed for Franco In September. He was a member of Company F, Fourth Pioneer Infantry. Corporal McConaghy Joined tho colors In July of this year He Is survived by his parents, Ills widow and three children. Corporal I!il Sniirrblalt. killed In action November 5. met his death Just'a year and a day from tno note no was sent to camp witn a ceman draft contingent. He was formerly a policeman of the Thlid and Do Lan- cey -streets stution and was also at tached to the Iloxborough district for a short time. He was a follower of Magistrate Jimmy t.arey, and, falling under the displeasure of tho Vnre-Smlth combination, was banished to the far northwestern section of tho oily. Sauer blatt was trained at Camp Meade and went to Frame In July of thlB year as a member of Company 1-3. 316th In fantrv. He was twenty-five years old and mndo his home with his parents. Mr. n'id Mrs. Kellg Sauerblatt, nt !U Do I.ancey street Nergennt William A. Iilns, wounded, was one of the first young men from F.dgewntcr Park to volunteer his terv Invalided home as soon as he can stand the Journey. A royal welcome awaits him In Edft-ewater Park when he llnaii arrives. Tho young soldier was born In Edge water Park, la a graduate of the Beverly High School and was prominent so cially In that section. He made his home with hie parenUi. Mr, and Mrs. William Ivlns, at Cooperstown, the birthplace of Fenlmora Cooper, the novelist, which Is located about half a mile from Edgcwater Park, N. J, Corporal union omen, omciany re ported wounded, Is eighteen years of age and Is a son of Mr. nnd Mrs. Runnel Ogden, of 322G West Norrln street. The young soldier served with Company M, of tho 10th Infantry, a company that has only twelve men left out of their original quota. Following an Intensive training nt Camp Hancock, he embarked for France last May with the rest of tho now famous 109th and 110th Regiments. A brother, missel, twenty-one years or age, is now wun tne uanaaian moumeo Rifle detachment. He Attempted to en list In every branch of the United Rtateg service, but was turned down, owing to Home slight defect from a previous op eration. Itutsel was a noted football Player at the Central High School, hav ing held down the quarterback Job for two years. A third brother of this pa triotic family, Lloyd, enlisted In the navy at tho age of fifteen and Is Mow on board ship In foreign waters. Private Samuel (lovberg. Company F, 315th Infantry, who was reported miss ing since September 6, has been In a hospital recovering from an attack of In fluenza. Ho Is twenty-four years old and formerly worked In' a Jewelry store. He wbh drafted lost May. PrlTat William Johnson, Company E, 308th Infantry, of 020 Panama street, twenty-eight years old, Is reported wounded September 17, although a let ter dated October 10, and written by him to his parents, with whom he lived, makes no mention of his Injury. Ho Is twenty-eight years old and was nn ele vator operator. Corporal Jnieph T. IIlley, Company ('., 109th Infantry, wns gassed July IS, but haa recovered and has been pro moted to tho rank of sergeant. Ho worked as a clerk nnd lived with his mother at 611 South Front street. He Is thlrty-threo years old. Private Frederick lteyner. Company IC, 110th Infantry, of 2432 South Sheri dan street, has been reported mlsstni, since September 27, but letters from him lead his relatives to believe he Is hack on duty Fntll 191C. when he en listed, he was employed as a pipefitter. He Is twenty yearn old. Corporal Andrew (1. (Inner, Jr., Com pany u, ounn i-ioneers.-uiea of pneti Ave years old and was married. Before being drafted In August, 1918. he was a plumber. His youngest brother Is In the navy. He was tho son or Mr. and Mrs. Andrew O, O laser, Sr 214 George street, hut made his home at 2246 North Fifth street. Private Herbert A. Fisher, Company B, Fifty-first Infantry, died of wounds October 27. Ho was twenty-two yenrs old and wa,s drafted In November, 1917. Ileforo being drafted he was a potter and lived with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fisher, 97B North Hutchinson street. Private .lames V, Hughes, ot B363 Newhnll street, died of pneumonia whllo on n transport en route to France. Hughes, who boarded at tho Newhall street address, waa one of a Philadel phia negro quota to be drafted and sent to Camp Sherman, O. He was twenty three' years old. VENIZELOS VISIT DEtAVEi . . -fi Grecian Premier lo Wait to, Meet 'Wil in Europe New York, Nov, 29, The projected! visit of Ellptherloe Vcnliclos, Premier, of utecce, to this country has beeif'jfM postponed "In view of tho Imminent ajtf'i rival ot President Wilson In' Europe','' V.J said a cablegram received here by . ,'. the American Hellenic Liberal Aesocla ' tlon. The message, signed by th$ Premier i waa sent from London, where ho has recently been ndvlslng with Allied statesmen regarding Balkan question?. The Grocers Snickered when told that Mis Princinc Pure Phosphate Baking Powder would tell by the carload. But they in vestigated it arid bought seven (7) carloads to start with. Next they .ordered line (9) carloads to. keep going all in six (6) months. Philadelphia has dis covered that Princine is the great est baking discovery in 50 years. 20c full V2 lb. I Community Stores! TVeScrve ft You Save end other good groteri 35c full lb. Ifoa nftn. tlitn rnlinlrv fntercl tllfl World conflict He had been n member of the j monia on October 10. He was twenty National lluard of New Jersey, and his , term of enlistment had expired Just two days before Congress Issued the fonnnl declaration of war against tho Oerman empire. Set grant Ilns promptly re-en-llsted. was trained ut Sea Girt and later nt Camp MeOlellan, Annlston. Aln.. where he was assigned to Company II. of tho 114th Infantry, under Captain Stone, of Burlington. Tho 114th went to France last May and got Into action early In July. From then on the unit has been In the thick of the fighting Captain Stone was pro moted to major on tho Held of battle for his gallantry and cool courage under (Ire. Sergeant lvins, who was gassed early In October, but who soon rejoined his regiment, was going over the top one day shortly after his return, when he was wounded. He Is slowly recovering at a base hospital and expects lo bo' 2HS try regular army Crlvate D.nls was a graduate of tin- Central High School, class of 1909. and lived with his widowed mother, .Mrs. Mnry A. Davis, at ull9 Saiiaom street. 1'rUute John A. Cannon. Kllleu jn action, had only been back from n resr camp a few hours when he was sent over the top ami was Instantly killed , He was twenty-eight years old. wns drafted last April, trained first at Camp Meade and later nt Camp Greene, where he was assigned to Company A, Sixty- : first lnfantrv, regular army. He wrote , his patents on October 10 that ho was lust leaving tho front for two days at 1 a rest camp. According to the War I)e- oarttuent notice lin was killed on Oc- lober j The oung soldier lived with his father. Thomas Cannon, and his , three slsteis at 1011 North Fort-thlrd street i Corporal lilrhurd Well., killed in action on November S. was a member of Companv 13, 315th Infantry. He was drafted In September of last year, trained at (Tamp Meado and sent to l.-r.iri, In .Tulv of thi vpar. Weiss was ' over nere Is by lion- twer.'v-two years old, a i.oaptnaker by C7 ..!.. ((-." Mimed ii I'.iirs. irene ana uvea wun ins oruuier. h- ilianlCi Mare i,e aa His parents urim -velss, at 400.7 Old York road. The weie much puszled, telegram announcing his death arrived .tbut towards the end of the letter he ex- n week ago today and vesterdny a letter plained that he meant "Just pl?ln shanks' wns received from the oung soldier, tmare." Private Davis told of helping to ' written tho last week In October, saying Jake a number of fleiman prisoneis to tlmt he was well and happy, but very (the rear and said the Frltzies seemed i tired, as his legiment.had been hard much pickled at Doing capturen. I lie -it It for si weeks a brother, t.umumi Thanks To The Motorists of Pennsylvania od of transportation young soldier happened to be in New York wncn tne nrst registration uay rolled around and so registered there. He 'was called to the colors last winter, .trained first at Camp Upton and later volunteered for a sharpshooters' Job and "was given additional training at Camp Xlavcns, near Uoston, In the use of the Kpeclal Browning "hnipers"' gun. When .finally sent abroad he was attached to tCompany I of the Twenty-sixth Intan- Weiss. twenty-eight years old. Is at tached lo the quartermaster's corps and Is now In France, while another brother. IClmer, thlrty-ono years old. is a membeio of the mniine corps and Is also in Friuice , Prltute ltoherl Illtrhle, tailed In ac tion, was twenty-five 3 ears old nnd lived with on uncle. David Triehels, at 353a North Marvine street. He Joined the colors In Ma of this year and went to FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE By Charles 1. Ohrenstein, C. S. B., Syracuse, N. Y. Member of the Hoard or l.rituresliin of The Mother Church. The First Church of Clirlm, .-clentUt. in lloMon. Mas... tu be ilrllterrd in THE NIXON THEATRE Fifty-second Street South of Market Street Sunday Afternoon, December 1st, at 3:30 o'Clock ?i. M m m i Utv. i V1 "Matter Supremacy" it not a hobby or a hoped for condition on our part, but a fact which the teverett tettt right hers in Philadelphia have settled once and for all time. The Matter it not an ordinary truck. Not only will it do anything that any truck will do, but it will do far more than mott of them. To learn the reaton for this fact it it necet eary to look back fifteen yeart when a corps of the mott celebrated truck engineer in the coun try banded themtelvet together to produce a truck whote quality and performance would defy competition. , With thlt fact in mind, we have backed the Matter Truck with an organization every de partment of which it at near perfection at we .can make it. Thit, Mr. Owner, it what we offer you .nothing more, nothing leu. xf . A Size for Every Purpose Atlantic Gasoline has kept on the job ready to "put pep in your motor" and is just as good as ever and just as plentiful. This is due to the patriotic conservation of the motor car owners and drivers of the Keystone State, in their cheerful and unanimous response to the Fuel Administration's "Save Gasoline" request. Pennsylvanians put over a special drive to save 5,000,000 gallons during October and November. The end of the conflict found them saving whole heartedly even after the official request was lifted. Atlantic Gasoline the "gas" with the uniform boiling point played a prominent part in every war activity especially in aviation where mil lions of gallons of this "fighting" gasoline kept our planes flying higher and farther than those of the enemy. We take this means of congratulating the motorists of Pennsylvania for the part they played and to express our pride in the service rendered by Atlantic Gasoline. ATLANTIC ffllG ASOLINEi Ihe Atlantic Refining Company Philadelphia Franklin Pittsburgh Atlantic Motor Oils "Keep Upkeep Dotan " . - ' -. wQ&Ttivir s wa1.! IhI' ' ri .- -inrfmnTMtVRiilmn WTTflriMnSHrmr,ErmSFiSn y:r wL faV&TWMii&IaMsWMBBBsir V ir ? alsm v 'vt! kp ' f9BHBlsBH9B&jEry2SisiHH Jit'JliBi. i 'iris ' k 9m, "BGtsHssHlilRlffilRsUHBu'TsM m?M M r 'iV EIvsss9S!8a8PHBsssHBsvl sssssssssssBIVIK9sBJ- ' t&. issBHBsisHHKSKI AIL rKINCIfAL t4wftmndt THE road to Paris was wide, wide open. The Prussian Guard moved forward. Two days march, and the city would be in their murderous hands. Only a handful of Americans rushed over in motor lorriesstood between the Hun and his most coveted prize. If those Americans boys you used to crowd and jostle on your own streets had given an inch the Kaiser would be in Paris now instead of Holland BUT, instead of going backward with the others, the Americans went forward! Instead of delaying that advance of the Prussian Guard, they halted it forever. On that day Germany was Defeated: the Retreat began; Peace came into sight Over in the Hospital, a few weeks ago, lay a wounded Marine Orley M. Dunton-one of the boys who was there. His story of what happened is in December Hearsts. He calls it "Mussing Up The Prussian-' Guards? t IF you are satisfied with the dull, long old fashioned magazine "article," you won't want Hearst's this month or any other. But if you prefer short vital bits of history in the . making articles more interesting than any fictiondon't fail to read Private Dunton's story in the December Number of f. "Ma! Wft.' kiVjt 4 ir . rf . WW.. - c " . . .i...v w . ini &r-v i- A- AX-r s.v fcftWVIMjfr - m .,,,.. ,IF, !ppm,n 4 l(pippnnnpni .!&; t$frmi"M'mst!ui . -I.. - w - s hAm -Jm '11" "Win i-irnmm liiUfhil'iMn'
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