? . EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1919 79TH PARADE PLANS BEING PERFECTED DESPITE INDECISION Welcome Home Committee does Ahead With Work -Kuhn at Camp Dix Questioning Men IP Kuhn nrc 25 tomorrow ld!i the Tentative plans for n pnrnilc'W pnrt of the Seventy-ninth Division nrc be tafr laid by the Philadelphia welcome tome committer, while nuultltiR the final decision of the men of the division on the parade question. Mayor Smith and Major General Kuhn nrc expected to settle the matter or Monday at the latest, after committee will cither com plete the plans for a reception that will e rival the great testimonal to the Tnen- i-jjy -eighth Uixision or drop the matter entirely. General Kuhn Is nt Camp Dix today, lie will ascertain the temper of his inert toward the parade. It has been derided that the entire dhislon will not parade, but it is hoped flint all of the units in which bis proportions of I'hilndrlphiau.s are nerving will march, Maor Smith has announced Satur day. .Tunc 7, as the probable day of the parade. 109TH MENJJRGANIZE Forty Former Members of Od First and Thirteenth Meet Forty former members of the 10!lth Regiment, which was made up of the old First und Thirteenth I'ennsjlvanlii National Guard Iteglments. at n meet ing last night took steps to make the lOflth a permanent organization. Former commanding officerR will be asked to communicate with other mem bers of the regiment and urge them to attend a meeting in this city on No Tember 11, when the matter will be fur ther discussed. All of those attending the meeting were Philadclphians. ENGLE HEADS TYPOTHETAE CRASH! WATCHES VANISH Thief Throws Brick Through Jew elry Store Window and Escapes Watches and chains to the amount of $70 were stolen from the jewelry store of Theodore Lassen. ."SO.T Germantown avenue, nt 3 o'clock this morning. Access was gained to the store by throwing a brick through the display window. The thief was cidently frightened off before he had time to take any of the more expensive jewelry in the store. Holmes Press President Elected by Employing Printers and Publishers At the thirty-second annual meeting of the Tj pothetae'of Philadelphia (Km ploying Printers nnd Publishers' Asso ciation), held at the Huntingdon Val ley Country Club this week, officers for the ensulug jenr were elected as follows : ,T. Linton Kngle. president the Holmes Press, president; J. Howard Fell, secretary-treasurer William V. Fell Company, first vice president: S. Clayton Wicks, president the Riddle Tress, second vice president ; William T. Innes. Times & Sons, recording sec retary; llobert N. Fell, vice president of the Tranklin Printing Company, i treasurer. Hecause of his retirement from busi ness, occasion was tnken to present K. Lawrence Fell. Into president of the Franklin Prlntlpg Company, with a sil ver service. About 125 members were present at the meeting and dinner which followed. , TEMPLE ATHLETIC PRIZES Fifty-five Students, Including Twen tyelght Gjrls, Get Awards letters and medals were nwnided to fifty-five students of Temple University for excellence in athletic work. Twent eight of the award weie made to co eds. Miss Maigurct Gain, of 4'J West Louden street, Gcrmnntowii, n pupil of the nrU and sclent e course, was given Alliance Frnrtcal-T medal. Dr. lnet La Place presented the medal and made an addiess. The exercises, wliiih took plate lu the forum of the school, were opened with the singing of the "Marseillai'-e" and "America." tinder the dliection of Mis. Gertrude Has den Fcrnle. After n short tnlk on the necessUj of phsital t tunning, William A. Nicolai, the phjm cnl instructor of the college, nwaiiled the letters and medals to the athlctca. FRATERNITY HONoWhERO Acacia Members Get Portrait of Cap tain Gultfbyle; Unveil Honor Roll A portrait of the late Captain Wil liam F. Guilfojle was presented to the Acacin Fraternity by Acacians of the Franklin chapter last night nt the club house. 210 South Thirty-sith street. At the same time roll of honor of the members who served in the nrmj nnd navy was tint riled. Cnptaln Guilfojle died in France from the effects of gas after nlmost a year of sen ice. The ceremonies were attended hj the members of the Acacia Fraternitj, n body of college Masons jthc members of Aplhn Kappa Kappa, a medical fra ternity, of which Doctor Guilfojle was a member; friends nnd colleagues of Captain Guilfoylc and several members of the faculty. 6 AUTOS AND $8000 M0T0RVAN STOLEN Thieves Challenge Detective Bu reau's Statomont That Thefts of Cars Are Decreasing Motorcar thlccs gae police compla cency n jolt last night by stealing six nutomobiles, one n big nn vnlued nt $8000. The Detective Tlurrau the other tlay asserted thnt nutomoblle thefts nrc de creasing in this cltj. The $8000 motortruck stolen last night Is the property of Morris Marks, Third nnd Arch streets. Another vic tim of the thieves was Albert E. Stetser, of Woodbury, N, J., nn amusement park promoter, hotel proprietor- nnd newspaper man. Four other thefts reported to the po lice were: Automobile, valued nt $S00, owned by Klisc A. Smith, Wyncote, Pa., stolen from Hroad and Spruce streets; car valued nt $700, owned by Joseph Hlnnk, 4001 Glrnrd avenue, tnken from Fourth nnd Sansom streets; car valued at $100, owned by Lawrence It. Gllmore, l.'l.". South Sixty-third street, taken from Fifty-first nnd Wal nut streets, and nn nutomoblle, valued nt $100. owned by Joseph lloroeff. 8S!) lteldemnn ncnue, Camden, stolen fronv Eighth nnd Mnrket streets. ATLANTIC 9 POLARINE IF your motor sounds like the well-known anvil chorus, get fid of that carbon and begin to use Atlantic Motor Oils. And keep rid of it. Ask your garageman whether you should use Atlantic Polarine, Atlantic Light, Medium or Heavy. ATLANTIC MOTOR OILS Keep Upkeep Down Discharged Service Men Register with our Employment Bureau and have our Industrial Department find jobs for you. Your special requirements will be consitleted nnd eery effort made to get you with live concerns. This Service Is Free to You CENTRAL BRANCH Y. M. C. A. Bureau of Employment, 119 North 15th Street t lv I r 2- r ' In This Week's "Digest" A Valuable Colored Map OF The New Germany One of the most interesting features i is a full-page colored Map showing the new is signed and the old Germany as it was befo arqas lost by the treaty, those to-be awarde national territory. This Map will prove i information and can be cut out and inserted reference volume, where it will always be h There is a wide selection of authoritat included in this week's "Digest," among whi n the May 31st issue of The Literary Digest Germany as it will be after the Peace Treaty re the war. Tihe Map clearly indicates the d by plebiscite ' and those to be made inter nvaluable as a present and future source of in your encyclopedia, atlas, history, or other andy as a means of settling doubtful points, ive, timely and. very interesting lews-articles ch are: The "Hop" Across the Atlantic- The Exploit of the American Naval Aviators Considered From All Its Intensely Interesting Angles The Peace Treaty's Critics War-Risk Insurance and Red Tape Transforming Canadian Fighters Into v Farmers The Age of the Air Is Here New. Drinks, for. .Old Farming in Spirals Candy as a Food An American Artist Inspired by Alaska A Future Lecture Deluge More Light From Korea War's Credentials to Missions Lettonia A Description of the Country and Its People A Fine Collection of Half-tone Wilson and Wine To Help "Unchinafy" China Radical hell-fire on Paris "William Hohenzollern to the Bar" What Is a Normal Individual? The New Plant Quarantine What Do Fossils Die Of? A New-found Portrait of Burns Poetry Revived in Kipling Stones of Remembrance and Crosses of Sacrifice Best of the Current Poetry News of Finance and Commerce Illustrations, Maps and Cartoons A Word About the Editors of "The Digest" v tiThe editors of most publications conic into personal &..! ,! l, vi!lnn minlir tnrniifrl, crernl nrfirlea editorials, and s,o forth, in which they voice their individual views. Not so with THE LITERARY DIGEST, whose editqrial policy is strictly imper sonal, not a hint of,, the opinions of its staff on any question appearing in its columns. , t Nevertheless, the editors of THE DIGEST are a very real and power ful influence in the community, because they deter-, mine the subject matter of the magazine from week to week and its mode of presentation. Always their study is to be impartial and, self-effacing, yet they leave their expert mark on everything that they handle, for they are all proved experts, each in his particular field, whether it be politics-, art, science, religion, letters, or what not. They give you of their best, seeking for no acclaim, but constantly striving . to. present for your consideration all the news in all its bearings. .Their quiet work gives THE j-njt.a i its acknowledged unique distinction. May 31st Number on Sale Today-7-All News-dealers 10 Cents The A Mark ol I I Distinction to I I s I Boa Rpattbr oil 1 The Literary 1 X. Digest, J m WmTAQhALUi cm , I w-, ..i t - - -- - - tedrjDigpst PAN Y (PhWUwi eC .the FWlStW-Stand fbth WW TQK . . A...Y ' . STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER Three Ways to Buy Merchandise at This Store Our prices nip "cash prices" based upon our PURCHASE of merchandise in large quan tities at lowest cash prices (discounting all bills), nnd upon our SALE of merchan dise at. the lowest cash prices as paid at our countcis. Thousands of our customers do pay at the counter, while many others pay at the end of the month in which put chases are made a method having some points of convenience for both customer and Stote, espe cially when purchases nie con tinuously hca'y. There are still others who usually pay cash, but who oc casionally wish to buy a con siderable amount for which it is not convenient to pay at once. These customers eonio to our DEFERRED PAYMENT OFFICE and ai range to have payments fc Roods extended over a ccitain peiiod, pain the cash pi ice for the Roods, and a small percentage addi tional for interest and main tenance of the special depait-mont. Men's Genuine South American Panama Hats A remarkable assortment of leal Panamas, including the smaitest stlrs which well dressed men will wear this sea son. Prices stait nt $3.50 at which figino we have a special collection of thoroughly desnnble Hats, which aie "seconds" of a much higher priced giade. Pi ices for our regular lines lange from $5.00 to $25.00. The Season's Latest Straw Hats for Men Distinctively new nnd conserva tive styles, in diveisity sufficient to a.ssure all men of securing the shape that suits them best. There are fine split stiaws; sennit stiaws, in fine, medium and coarse weaves; Leghoins, Bang koks and Mackinaw Hats. Prices range fiom $2.25 to $(5.00. The lot at $2.25 is a special purchase of Sennit Hats and will be found on the Market Stieet Cross Aisle, First Floor, as well as in the Men's Hat Department. (HatB art, taxed 10 per cent nn any excess In prlve cnw JB nn ) Straw hi-lrls A. Clothlfr Second Floor. Market Street Kapt The Men's Clothing Store Has Been Providing Clothing Values of the Good Satisfying Kind for a Score of Years To-day, you can count on the fingers of one hand the num ber of Stores in America that can rival this one in the retail dis tribution of men's Clothing and you won't need all the fingers at that. The best possible Clothing values with a full dollar's value for every dollar of price has been the rule here ever since the Store's beginning. Careful comparison will show that that same standard of value-giving is rigidly adhered to to-day. We want men to have the best Clothing in the world there fore we sell, exclusively in this city, garments of the famous Stein-Bloch and Hart, Schaffner & Marx make. Prices for these range from $40.00 to $75.00. We also sell Clothing from manu facturers of like reliability, with prices starting at $25.00. That our stocks are ever abreast of the times in the matter of styles is evidenced by the new WAIST-SEAM Suits which appear in our lines at $25.00, $30.00 and $32.50. There are also faultlessly-tailored Suits of plain blue, green or brown flannel, silk lined and in distinctive double breasted styles, at $35.00. All-wool Blue Serge Suits, in a variety of styles to suit men of all ages, from $32.50 to $50.00. These are but a few sidelights in the great extent and comprehensive character of the collection which we have provided for the spring and summer choosing of men. 4r- LL mm Service Men ChanglnK from O D's to "olwles" are asking to hae their Division insignia sewn on the, Inslc'e pocket of the coat We are Bla'l to do this for all serlre men who buy I'lotlilnK here Thej can select their Insig nia from tho special collec tion which wn hae on hand for ihli purpose, and our tailor"! will new It on This terice is KREH there being no charge for the insignia nor the. hewing These Special Values Will Be Available To-morrow These values are only natural in the carrying on of such an extensive Clothing business as ours, llnusual activity leaves some particular lines incomplete and as we cannot secure replacements at the same pi ices the lemaining Suits must be cleared away at i educed pi ices. Now and then, our close and, fi fetidly lelations with famous makers enables U3 to secuie special price advantages in certain lots. Four Hundred Suits Special at $25.00 Single- and doublc-bieasted styles for men and young men. Of neat, dalk mixtures and of light, summery gray fabrics. Some silk-lined. Three Hundred and Fifty Suits at $28.50 Of neat fancy mixtures and of plain blue weaves. A lcmaikable collection of styles which will be ,well liked by young men and men of consoivative tastes. Some silk-lined. Two Hundred Suits Reduced to $20.00 Styles which cannot be le oidercd at the former prices therefore reduced for quick clear ing away. They are the kind of Suits which aie now greatly in favor with men and young men. Young Men's Suits Reduced to $15.00 About 200 Suits remaining from recent special purchases. Excellent styles, a good range of sizes and all exceptional value at this very low pi ice. Serge Suits, Two Pairs of Trousers $34.50 They are of fine ALL-WOOL blue serge and nie faultless in tailoring and style. They would be excellent value at this price without tho extra pair of trousers. This is an opportunity not to be passed by. Youlhs' Long-Trousers Suits Also Reduced Small lots of Suits specially de signed for young men of 16 to 19 years. They are now reduced to $14.50, $19.60 nnd $25.00. Strawbrlilce i. Clothier Second Floor. Eat Men's Madras UNION SUITS Exceptional Value at 80C This is a very unusual purchase of ATHLETIC UNION SUITS of corded madras of fine quality; made with elastic waist band. Light, cool, and now in great demand. They'll go quickly at this Golden Special price to-morrow 80c, which is much less than to-day's regular price. rr- Ktrawbrldse Clothier Aisle 2, Market Street DAILYWV (iys)OT VJ&SPECIAL& ' NOVELTY SILKS ARE IN DEMAND The Finest and Most Exclusive Novelties Designed are Shown Here in Profusion Choosing a plain Silk is a comparatively simple thing, but when it comes to choosing a novelty something that will be remembered by every one who sees it, something that will express your own in dividuality unmistakably, then, if you are a particular woman, you will want to make the critical comparisons that only a great variety affords. We have provided this great variety here, greater than you can imagine, greater, we believe, than any collction of similar Silks in this city. They are 35 to 40 inches wide, and from $2.00 to $4.50 a yard. t Straw bridge L 'Clothier Aisle 0. Centre MORE SUMMERY MILLINERY $5, $6, $8, $9 New Hats of taffeta, crepe Geor gette, Milan-hemp and transparent ma terials, in black, navy blue, whit, pink, jade green, orchid and pale blue. Also new organdie, gingham and sheet Fabric Hats, in large, medium and small shapes, trimmed with flowers, wreaths, ostrich feather novelties and new wings. The Hat sketched is of pink organdie trimmed with organdie, and with the brim beautifully beaded price $9.00. Smart Banded Sports Hats A full assortment of fine and coarse straws, some in two-color combinations, banded, or trimmed with wide silk ribbon with tailored bows. An excellent collection at $2.95, $3.95 and $4.95, with many exclusive styles up to $15.00. Tailored Trimmed Hats Reduced A large assortment of Hats suitable for immediate wear and for general wear and vacation time now $1.95, $2.95 and $3.G5. 5 -V Straw bridge & Clothier Second Tloor. Market Street, West COTTON WAISTS IN GREAT VARIETY Tailored models in scores of different styles white, stripes, light shades trimmed in white and white trimmed in color. Also a lovely collection of Trimmed Waists, of white voile, batiste and organdie, with dainty laces, sheer embroideries, chic little plaitings and frills, some with a smart little touch of color. Scores of models, from $2.00 to $4.50. W V StrawbrldKe t- Clothier Second Floor. Centra These Warm Days are Bringing Out The Summer Suits and Dresses The rush is on. Everybody wants something cool and dainty, or something smart and light-weight for out-of-doors ; and everybody is finding just what is wanted. Smart New Wash Suits, $16.50 to $22.50 Of linen and of cotton gabardine. Some made on long, pf"' fitting, smartly tailored lines the one of this kind shown in the sketch is of gabardine, price $20.00. Some are belted and have the inverted plait in the back; some pin-tucked" in panel effect, some box-plaited, also loosely belted models with coat slashed at the sides. An excellent line so varied and all so smart. White, natural linen color, wistaria, Belgian blue and navy blue. Prices $16.50 to $22.50. Fine Jersey Sports Suits, $25.00 to $75.00 With looselv-belted. straieht-line coats, or with coats smartly box- plaited in Norfolk effect, also some smartly finished with military straps on the shoulder. Plain colors and heather mixtures. Also in this collection are some smart tweeds and camel's-hair jersey. Vr- Strawbrldse L Clothier Second Floor, Market Street L jJEa 1 ff 3 - f'4- Practical -T Plaid Tissue Dresses at $10.75 In lovely light colorings. Made in the style sketched plaited pep lum, draped bodice with crushed girdle fastening in the back, with buckle finish, round neck and cuffs finished with narrow plaiting of white Swiss. New CottonN Frocks, $13.50 to $16.50 Voiles and ginghams, with flounces and tunics and bound folds, some with straight-line skirts with pockets. Figures, checks, plaids, in light and dark effects from which to choose. Taffeta and Crepe de Chine Dresses, $19.75 dels, suitable for street wear.ond for business. Navy blue, French blue, black and taupe. - r-V Wrawfrrld Clothier fwwd VKxir. Hr - - ' ' .. , . . . i r t Ml it jj il ml I If I iff I IVcffl Ml IB V I OutfitYourBase Ball Team at Little Expense 10 Complete Uniforms for Only $65.00 These Uplforms are of dur able genuine flannel an un usual quality considering the advanced market price of this fabric. No better obtainable anywhere at this price. Your $65.00 buys . Ten Shirts, detachable sleeves Ten pairs of full-cut Pants Ten Caps, in "League" style Ten Leather Belts Stockings choice of colors. Monogram or Three Letters of Your Own Choice on "Shirts Free! , - Etrawbrldi Clothier Fourth Floor STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER & iiiififltrinrri iiirmiiii : iiiiiiiv in irrriiiiii .' -imi X iP s Market SI. ElfiWhSt- i!i.iiimii ' ' "'I'rty'ttrff11' tc;! ,, " s nM J