ARMY HOSPITAL i IS MODERN ONE Operated by U. S. Medical Corps of Army of Occu pation at Coblenz With the Aaerjou Army of Oc- I cupation. Fb. 7.—One of the moat [ modem hospitals In Europe to-day I is tn Coblenz operated by the Medi cal Corps of the Army of Occupa- j I tion. The hospital is a combination I of American ami German advance ! ment in this line. . During the war, i this hospital, now used for surgical I j cases and known as American hos- i i pital No. 6, was a part of the gar- j rison of Coblenz. When the Ger- j mans withdrew they left all the | modern electrical appliances, and ' the Americans brought with them the latest improvements in hospital equipment which was used in furn ' ishing No. 6. Four other hospitals, under Amer ican supervision, are being operated in Coblenz, one of them with fif teen hundred beds. Within the oc cupied area, there are nine American hospitals, including the five in Cob lenz. Two of these are in Trier, one in Prum and another in Mayen. While these are known as evacua tion hospitals each of them is equip ped and is functioning as a base hos pital, being located in buildings either used by the Germans for the same purpose or in old German army barracks. The hospital staffs con- . sist of about forty officers each. Ap proximately one hundred nurses have been assigned to each of the nine hospita s. tn addition to a large number of enlisted men. The Medical Corps of the Third Army is headed by Colonel J. W. Grissinger, of Philadelphia, as chief surgeon, with Colonel H. C. Maddux, of Orange, Virginia, in charge of the hospitals. Money Is Needed For Syrian and Armenian Relief Pittsburgh, Feb. 7.—Cleveland H. i Dodge, treasurer of the American I committee for relief in the near east, i in a statement issued this week I pointed out that, of the * 100,000,000 appropriation by congress for re lief work abroad, only a very small part and possibly none of the ap- i propriation will go to aid the mil- j lions of men, women and children , who are literally starving in Arm en- ! ian, Syria and other parts of the world under Turkish domination. "It is the government's inten tion," said Mr. Dodge, "to use the J100,000,000 where there are re sponsible governments that may en ter into some arrangement for re payment of the sums advanced, in Armenia and elsewhere where the efforts *of the American committee for relief in the near east are direct ed. The need is of the utmost urg ency, and these people will not be able to derive benefit from the gov ernment's relief plans. "The Armenian union to-day re ceived a cable from the Belgian consul at Basra saying, 'learn with deepest sorrow that ten thousand Armenians at Mosul are naked and absolutely destitute, most of the refugees are dying of sickness and hunger.' " Germans in Mexico Want Money Back They Gave Eckhardt "Mexico City, Feb. 7.—The Ger man colony in Mexico City recently held a meeting at which was dls- I cussed the problem of securing some I sort of guarantees from the present German government for the 10,000,- 000 marks which were lent to the re- I called German minister here, H. Von I Eckhardt, during the war, for pro- j paganda and other purposes. The lenders at present have nothing j more than "scraps of paper" issued I by the former minister. REPORT HERMANN HANGED Vienna.—Doctor Bermann, head of the Bolshevist mission to succor Russian war prisoners in Hungary, | who was expelled and deported from I Budapest In compan ywith forty t members of the mission, is reported | to have been hanged on reaching the | Rumanian frontier. Bermann, was ! prominent in the Moscow Soviet and leader of the Bolshevist agitation in Hungary. Clearance Sale Beginning Thursday, Feb. 6 We have a large stock of shoes for men, women and children to be sold at big money saving prices. 300 pair* I fA j af ladle.' *yy I ahaea la <r7 / the lateat MB T/ I atylea and 35 value. J I W: P English jftf JTi models in / / \ soft tan and J black; $B.OO $3.98 Boys' School and Dress Shoes; $4.50 # o mm values Wft. / O Girls' School and Dress Shoes; $3.00 A Q values • i.'Rf 500 pairs of Endioott-John son clkskln working OO OC 1 shoes; $3.50 values Uptown Cut Rate Shoe Store' 1407 No. Sixth St. ► ; Iji FRIDAY EVENING. "The Live Store" • "Always RztiM e 1 > I y\. "Open Saturday Night" gj 35c and $1.50 £ .Brighton V / B £ y c £S" V Garters f f\, _ £i • _ l 1 C • A 1 Black s t*en r a. i9c y (Jur Greatest Strictly Lash Semi-Annual s^ c y MARK-DOWN SALE * Where Everything in Our Entire Stock is Reduced Except Arrow Collars, Manhattan Shirts and Interwoven Hose The Banker knows the ring of the dollar and You know we are having these "Clean-l *p j can readily distinguish the difference between the true and the sales so we can begin the next season with entirely new stocKS counterfeit and it'# just so with the buying public regarding sales. THEY —so when you make a purchase at Doutrichs you are not buying cloubtful know the difference between sales and recognize "genuine" reductions or shopworn goods for they are not to be had Here at any price —so if YOU that's why our sales have become so popular, our customers and their friends want to save money on High-grade Wearing Apparel this is your opportun are always able to get plenty of good merchandise when they come Here. ity Grasp it! Hart Schaf f ner & Marx, Kuppenheimer & Society Brand Clothes If you were on the inside to all the facts concerning- k. the future price of woolen fabrics you would know as we do that you are * not gomg to see any changes in the retail prices of clothing for some time and this "Live Store's" Mark-Down Sale should grip your attention and impress on your mind the won* advantage that is yours in having such worthy merchandise offered at such ex- • We are having the most successful sale ever attempted in this section of the State and we are glad we can be of so much service to the keen buyers who are anxious to get the greater values that can be theirs during this Semi-Annual Mark-Down Sale. You know we have plenty of good clothes, so have no fear that you will be disappointed for you can always get A x advertise —we don't ask you to take something else. Now we're ready to serve you and your I All $20.00 Suits and 4.75 All $40.00 Suits and Overcoats.s29. 1 lßa JBmKSBEi ! All $25.00 Suits and Overcoats.,sl 9.75 A1l $45.00 Suits and Overcoats.s33.7s I Wpl QQk ! All $30.00 Suits and Overcoats $23.75 All $50.00 Suite and Overcoats. 7.75 t 811 l All $35.00 Suite and Overcoats■ 52f1.7.v All $55.00 Suits and Overcoats.Ml ,7C 11 All $38.00 Suits and Overcoats.flSK.T.v All $60.00 Suite and Overcoats $1 £_ 7£ j All 50c Neckwear .... 39c All 25c Hosiery .... 19c WBBBjjSK 5Hr V f - .jl'T'ljii" iu.r J* "kU"! jr ,jr n." r"uri^'tiJ r m | AU$l.5O Shirts $l.l Q I IZ BOYS' xSIUsMI i All $2.00 Shirts . $1,59 ' 1 /AU $6.50 Boys' Suits & Overcoats $4.89 1 I i All $2.50 Shirts $1.89 |AU $7.50 Boys' Suits & Overcoats $5 89 iAU $3.50 Shirts $2.89 i j All $8.50 Boys' Suits & Overcoats gg 1 • i All $5.00 Shirts $3.89 j >AH $lO.OO Boys' Suits & Overcoats gy 89 1 i All $6.85 Shirts $4.89 | 11 iAU $12.00 Boys' Suits & Overcoats gg yg 1 Boys' Suits & Overcoats $1 Q 1 1 Vlj^KJ 304 Market Harrisburg, Street Pa. A 1 ; ffioiußßumliikmEOßXPa FEBRUARY 7, 1919. 13
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers