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l, " "nlV ' ,' . .,?' '-''l's'v i;' .!, of Club's Picnic Pre meiM-.- Party Injured w.... -Hits Wall (ACHINE SKIDS ON TURN V InlnrfVI. n,r,rtWU7thnnUheVnrc;tU.in TrirlM0f I-nborDay ' uJ, in Philadelphia al TIip mnjorlty were hurt , track crMhcd nto o con. '.;. turn near .wuoriii. rtf.'nt;. about 8 ociock iwi Cpjlecto of Customs . . I.. i i i. ..... i m. i .i i". ' i' ' ' ' , '2 I W r r to he t on',?IVrnkforcl Hospitnl. All itci ni""- " Ifffiuncl. construrtlon of the .1 HOVOl UW , ... nnil ' i There were un.v .- !' JX Tchicle nt the time nm were num.. . - off en on pnvc k C$3aBBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBBBiftv':A,BBB I fc 5 &SK laBaBBBBBBaBBBBBBarTC ' 'fc-1 1 m rvMaaaaaaaaaaaflHP ?miH I tmaaaaaaaaaW iVf :;. : ' .V r.,'jiBBBBranBBS''r i ', ' . ve.Y WKm&A rA'& i M them were nnnwi tftafow ot the Impact phjldns ur PIS to tfce Injured, bandaglns cuts LfcnilMS. . ,h 1WK to Mi. herc ,hey wcrc cnr. .'fS v. twentr-nlnc yenrs old, .i v,,r Wlrtart street. Srt Andmon. tncntyninc yenrs fln East Somerset street. Ww Kiln, thirty-nine years old, !??" n'iffith. twrntyekht years him Et Eikhnrt street. fin HtabeHi Henry, fortyonc On Annual UututK in tk. Inlurcd and their friends who ffihtt are members of the Fill- "r V.1..1. .hi., hn (is us minimi nut- GTittte Bn County vlllnBe. There 5?. im truckloads of the merry- ..v.- The first left the plnrc nt H Kii ljt night and the other about Im minutes later. BDf mue i . .- V . '". " El. Is a sharp turn and beyond It n torn o: ioro: . - -,,; b,u was rai """'.. ViiTl .":. Wnl to nreveni uimiiiiuuiir-.io ... Sorer If they failed to note the I""'.. . . oi'jrt r,tn.. ,ih.i j.:.ln tie (.crond truch. lhc -..n. was traiclins rapidly ns the Jrirtf DUKht to overtake the other rtlicle. ,Sharr failed to observe the turn in the road in time to swIiir .round. When it was too Into he iulW hard at the stcllnR wheel, but k. Vourr truck crasiieu mm iuc wnn. Tk. ichlcle skidded around into the I bidnay. burling men and omenm nil directions. Mo"t of those seriously lu burcd vierc riding in the back scuts. Inree of them uiacK. .ntierson una K!n were catapulted into the con- frete uali, suffcrins severely strained licks and almost going over into uic Mo. Motorist Calls Doctors Griffiths sustained u wrenched kivee kod manv ruts and biuiscs. and Mrs. rltory raftered from the shock nnd from itn tashes In the head. It N nlso Iisrid that she incurred internal in- utlfi. Others were "ut nnd bruised, but Escaped more serious uamnge. A rasslng motorist sped back to ftiiiwrtvillc and called un nil the iil. - icianiwithiu a radius of severnl miles. n icu muiuicn iuv.uL.il inn iiuti rcntupi. h picnickers. The doctors ordered i ol tne injureu to nie nospttnl. where ;hej,tre taken in automobiles bv Jo eph Fehn nnd William Clifton,' both if Keveportville. Elimination of the truck showed ill one wheel was completely crushed. it Trts sent duck to t lie village for re late and automobiles were obtained to itte the rest of the merrymakers to tleir homes. In the meantime their Winds In the first truck hnd gone home nuout Knowing of the accident. Thrown from an automobile In n l. Mon at the Hoosevclt boulevard nnd prtnHoru i;rock last night, Mrs. Mar kant Kai.ffman, twenty-eight cnrs mm -"? Underwno.l U Unilorooil Mrs. Jennie P. M'usscr, of Salt Lake City, Is the first woman to bo named by President Harding ns a collector of customs. She will have charge of the Utah district FUNERALS FOR THREE WHO WERE LOST IN WATER Services yill Erf Held Tomorrow fop Man and Boys Funerals for three Phllndelphluns who lost their lives In water accidents on Sunday will bo held tomorrow. DETECTIVE ADMITS 'PLOTTING' HOLD-UP Mahaffoy Says Ho Agreed to Proposal Long Enough to Get Evidence OTHER CONSPIRATORS HELD John Mnhaffqy, City Hnll detective, confessed to Magistrate Henshaw nt Centrnl Stntion today that last night he had entered Into a "plot" to Rtenl tin niitomnbllc and "knock off" an uptown restnurnnt. Mnhnffcy wns not In court as a pris oner, however, but ns prosecutor. The prisoner wns the detective's prospective "partner In crime," who snld he was Jnmes White, nineteen years old, of Chicago. The detective testified he was ap proached by White nt Fifteenth' nnd Filbert streets, with a request for a dime. "I'm out of luck myself, Ho." the detective testified he told the youth, who tried to mnke the "touch." "I'm .out of luck all right no job, no coin." "That's my case." Mahnffey tes tified White replied. "Just a couple of months out of the Navy. Ain t got a thing to (Jo. nnd not n red. hat do you say we pull off n little job tonight?" "I'm your man." said Mnhnffcy. "My pal nhil me." White Is nlleged to hnve said, "pulled off a couple of good hold-ups in New York not long ngo. Murphy, that's my pal, got pinched, but I beat It. "What do you saj If we steal a car? Then' we'll knock off n restaurnnt I know uptown. There ought to be n nood piece of change In it for us both." "All right." snid Mnhnffcy. "but suppose first j on come over to Centrnl METROPOLITAN MUSEUM ART ASSAILED BYPH1LADELPHIANS , , Artists Suffering From "Ghastly Lesions of Mind!' Say Cir culars Distributcd-t-Doctor Dercuni Quoted Services for Albert Iteinboth, of .'1001 Itorer stret, who died lis the remilt Stntion with 'me. You sec, I'm-a do oi nn aiinuic oi ncuie inuigcstioii wihib i tcetive." bathing in (Jieineiitun ivike, .. .!., win be held nt the home nt 12 P. M. tomor row. The Itcv. Forrest K. Dagcr. of St. Paul's Reformed ttpiseopnl Church, lirond and Venango streets, will ofli ciate. Iteinboth's widow, ten-year-old son and mother are suffering Iron, shock us the rcsu't of the drowning. Mr. Ilelu both was a milk dealer. It wns revenled jesterdny that Jo seph KutcMs, eleven jenrs old. who was drowiud while playing on n in ft on the Dclnwnre, hnd constructed the nift In cmulut'on of some hero of bojhond fic tion. The lad hnd jut received u copy of n story nnd hnd made the raft after the manner described In the book. When the number of bojs on the raft became too stent the ruft tipped over nnil the lad was drowned. He will be burled from his home. 1(107 South Front street. Funeral services for Joseph l'czzlllo, the twehe-yenr-old boy who lot his life while learning to swim in the Dela ware oil Whentshenf lnne. will be held White almost collapsed, the detective testified, when Mnhnffcy displayed his badee nnd grabbed his collar. Magistrate Hrnshnw held White in $000 hnll for it further hearing Friday. Meanwhile the police will Inquire intp the truth of the stntement thnt White nnd his "pnl" held up men In New York. White wns uot armed when arrested. BOBBED HAIR SAVED HER Bryn Mawr Girl Slightly Burned as Sweater Catches Fire Ilobbed l.nir proved It hod more than the one use of comfort when the eollnr of a sweater Mls Sarah K'ine, of I'.rwn Mnwr. wns wearing yesterday nt the nuto rnces in I'niontown, caught fire from a nintch tossed from a hotel bal conj . 'Had her hnir been longer, the flash of tlame which leniied from the collar from his home nt :i.'147 Almond stret. It ' w""'d undoubtedly hnve ignited it nnd caused more serious uurns tnau sue did suffer on her neck. James H. drove, of this city, was standing near when a cnreless smoker tossed the inntrh to the street below. He tore the gnrment from her bnck and extinguished the I nines. Circulars, condemning the current exhibition of modernistic art In the. Metropolitan Museum In New York, and quoting prominent Philadelphia physi cians ns Mylng Tliat some of the ar tists were unquestionably suffering from "ghastly lesions of the mind," arc being distributed through the malls in New York, Philadelphia, Iloston and other art centers. According to the pamphlet, which Is signcll by "A Committee of Citizens and Supporter of the Museum," the exhibition Is entirely unworthy of the Museum, nnd is n demonstration of the trickery of picture dealers In attempt ing to foist upon the public unworthy, obscene nnd degencrnte drawings. The circular has no distinguishing marks, but Is printed on paper of nn excellent quality and written by a master of Eng lish and an art expert. The circular quotes from an article In the American Art News of June 4, 1021, which told of the sanity 'of some of the "modernistic" painter be ing discussed by prominent Philadelphia pathologists at a meeting of the Art Alliance here. Names of such men ns tir Pl.nrlpj XV. Hiirr. Dr. Frnncls A. De'rcum. Dr. J. Mncflson Taylor and Dr. W. K. wadstvorth were used. These phvslclans were quoted ns saying the majority of the cubists, tublst nnd futurist artists depicted in their draw ings the snme features that are no ticeable in the attempts at drawing of Insane people. Dr. Wadsworth was quoted as sny Ing, nftcr he had studied the pictures ns n cllnlclnn, "the works' represented those ghnstly lesions of the mind nnd of the body which usually land people In the hospltnls or the asylums, but which sometimes permit them to wnlk nround, feed themselves. no!d a com mission iu lunncy and paint." was learned jestcruay that the inn had hud a nnrrow escape from drown ing nt the same spot two months ugo. I. 0. 0. A. IN MARCH TONIGHT. Colonel W. D. Kemp Will Lead. Broad Street Parade I Colonel William D. Kemp, oerseas lommnuder of the 110th Infantry, will lend a parade of 8000 members of the Independent Older of Americnns on lirond street, from Diamond to Pine, tonight. The order opened its annual convention at the Hotel Walton yester day. At this morning's session Director TuMin wel.'omrd the organization on be half of the cltv. Lieutenant (iovernor Ileidclmmi ns serted n bill should be introduced into the Lcglftlatuic proWdinp lor the Amer icanization and education of aliens. (Jovernor -Sproul, Mayor Moore and others will icview the parade. The first contingent in the parade will bo the 10!)th Overseas Hand, of Heart Post, American Legion, every member of it an overseas vcterun. One of the l.uge tlonts will advertise the Sesqui Cintvnnial to be held in this city in lll'JIJ. Among the prominent members are Chief Justice von Mo'-ehziskcr. Senator Snyder and President of Council Wcg- lein. Id, of 2137 Mart-ton street, suffered Penrose. Congressmen Porter and Cd- ijunts nDout the hip and body. She ' nionus, .Mayor uiunsey, ot thesier; as taken to St. Luke's Hospital. 'State Senator T. Larry Kyre, Judge Mrs. Kauffman was ridim- u-iih i.i. Raymond MncNeille. Stnte Tiensuier TOfDana, joi.n .1. Wiiultmnn. when their pnachlne wan Ktrnrk hi iii..thA- ..,. t.. pe eieitement following the crash the Krlver of the other inni'hine esennoil nn.l Iwarch in being made for him. The Munmans machine was badh dam- M in the crash. Baby Hit by Motorcar White nlavinir in thn utrvot ..A... I.iu home last nlsht. Otto .lordnn. three Kara old. of MS North Markoe street, MS (tmck hv Itn niltnmnl.lln itpit'nn I. v Charles Clark, nf Vmtv.eli-lilh vl...V and Merlon nomie. (Maik plcVed up i ;.,nr the toy and took him to the Presbv- Specia !v . l il0SPHl. where it was found "at be had sustained n possible fr.ic wred ahull nml cuts nnd bruises. ,: oarah Potter, fifty -eight years OW, SOI) SrllilllM- ctrnnl t.,ITn,.l ., V... wre or the right shoulder blade when an automobile In whieh she was riding col lided with that of John Steeus, of "urtletoo, treasurer of the Hy berry 'air, yesterday afternoon. ine accident oei'iirreil nt niiLllrlnn RIDES BIKE INTO TRUCK 13 Colllngswood Boy Injured and Taken to Hospital Stanley Stevens, eleven-year-old son of Alfred It. Stewns Collingswood. N. J., wns injuicd today when he rode a bicycle into n motortruck nt Knight street nnd Haddon aenuc, Collings wood. ' The bo's right hip wns finetuicd and llesh on his knees was torn. lie was taken to the West Jersey Homeopathic Hospital nt Camden. Wills Admitted to Probate The will of John Cnmblci Hybcrr.v road and Itustletnn pike, admitted to probate today leaes an estate of 2.", -170 to his widow. Mary A. Gamble. Other wi'ls admitted to prebntj- were those of Carl (J Pfeilspecker. 400.'! North Seventh street. $4500, nnd Marv Howe. 101 Shurs lane, $r!."00. The inventory of the personal estate of Frank Fnrrell showed u value of 0j0I LAFAYETTE DAY OBSERVED Anniversary of First Marne Battle Also Celebrated Here The birthday tf Lafayette. French soldier ntul st.ilemnii. who beft Hid ed the Americnn Colonics in their tight for independence, mid the seentli an niversary of the first I'attle of the are belli; celebrated todnv. 1 exercises were held in Inile- 1 endenre Square ut 2 o'clock this af ternoon. Residents of the French colony n tembled nt Independence Hnll nnd Joined the Citizens' Committee in com inemointing Lnfayette's birtli nnd cell hinting the srent allied icton. Ciloiul J. Campbell Oilmore was. cliairmiiu of the committee. Dr. Krnot I u Place was one of the sneakers. When the Washington -I..1- A daughte ofjfnyetto Hug was unftiiled oer 1ml" fe and Verce oad wlw'iiJtf' "w shaken up, but other- ( j.eudence Hnll this afternoon n similar 1 1 lliVi U..i . ,St"c"'(. who was on fla5i mniP nt the Hetsv Ross House. 1 1 ". At ?r ?.einn,.rr VM T '''.T1, "" unfurled over the City Hall. 1'niK l ni,. ,ollfr is in tlie riaukford Hos- ' t , Accidents hi Camden Mw Vent tZU ' ZTV"Vn , n. OP llm.nl. . ."",ns iu uuiiimi, ai- iff! n.ni? ,V"8 "noiisly hurt. Ki,i,W'of 5l M'rtle luenuc. broke' L Coopcr 1,osP!tol with a Mh5Tr:J;nJ.n'CT".-?' "Otltltnl li. "' u ,n '" cooper la a fin ,crscall was cut. drlvine Wiiu.0"1 T'i ,nu'k "'"'eh he was ..j ii " ullam Honr. nf Tt.....,i....ivii. Wl from a e,ni f -'V- U,"l!-n rcet. HPltal. aK ,rftt,p'1 l Cooper A ferfori" by rrailk Sloal' l'n Freeman fmrar ,lrivv,n b ?; tolng so" , ' "f 'F' " unlc no '"to one !."' on Second street, ran Are vnn n ( j . . ,i . folfc- j upe f Most Ho e Tl0- toxins fcl . ,ine,.r, bIood- Physi,aniCrt,.me"tally anS 5. iyrvc-Throwoff P Cofcnr UU- M"ywema?I our booklet? Wa bill ,AL CULTURE T . ,0.. WALNUT bt. AT 15TII Apartments Several attractive apartments are now available in The Hotel St. James Annex One room and bath two rooms and two baths up tu (he rooms and four baths The Hotel St. James Walnut at 13th St. Dr. Dercum Quoted Dr. Dercum is quoted ns having said that he founil present In mnny pictures "evidence of n disease of the color iftinsc nnd many other mental faculties." "As pnrtteulnrly disquieting works, savs the circular, "showing either mental or mornl clipse, we note the following; Nos. 'J. .1. 10. 23. 24. 31. 32. 34. 3.". These nre either Vulgar In subject, or corrupt In drawing, or childish In conception. The following are simply pnthologicnl in conception, drawing, perspective nnd color: Nos. 40. 41. 42, 43. 11. 47, 31. 32M10. 00. 71. RO. SI. No. 111. "Olrl Arranging Her Chemise," is vulgar in subject, ugly In fnce nnd form and weird in color. Much more might be snld. Hut the above will suffice." The clrculnr declares thnt the second moving force bnek of the modernistic movement in art Is human greed. Hut ' the renl cult of modernism, the clrculnr declnres, began with a small group of i neurotic egomaniacs In Paris who styled themselves worshipers of Satin, the I God of Ugliness. "This cult of salnninm." ny. the circular, "nppenlcd to n limit'-d mini -Ler of Duropenn lulntors and sculptors, for the most port men of no talent nnd I niidlcnpped by taints of hereditary, or iicqulrcd. Insnnity. To this clnso the cult of the ugly, nnd (he obscene, be cume the prime stimuli of their work From these, since the early sixties to the present time, theie cnire a steady out put of hideous examples of mental de generacy In the plastic art. It goes without snying thnt the work of these nrtlsis wns not zcncrnlly ippnncd. Their paintings nnd sculptors were re- . , 1 1 - m. .1 til..lHrtnu In lllFCti rcjrwnny ni xiiu- """""" Pnrls nnd elsewhere, nnd they were flouted as men of (Infective mentality or charlatans, piny Ing for sensation. Modernistic Cult "The Modernistic cult In pnlntlng nnd sculpture had hard sledding until ccrtnln picture dealers came to the rescue. A certain class of dealer snw In the cult something new nnd novel, n thev betrnn nulctly to secure the out put of the more frenkish of the new cult. This was accomplished by a smnll outlny of capital, ns the pictures were absolutely worthless, either as works of nrt or ns units of vnluc in the picture market. Consequently great numbers of pnlntlngs by Ccznnne. Toulouse Lautrec, Onugln. Vnn Oogh nnd other Kuropcnn artists, 'cubists, tubists, futurists, etc.,' were gnmered by the enterprising dcnlers nnd n miichlnvclllnn cnmpnlgn was orgnnlzod by the unload ing of these works. Editions dc luxe of the works of Ccznnne nnd Gnuniln nnd others were published nnd sold by pic ture dcnlers, who nnd loaded up witn their Ktuff. At the same Uimc every crnfty device known to the picture trnde was resorted to in order to dis credit nnd destroy the heretofore uni versally nccepted stnndnrds of esthetics. "Mnny of the pictures exhibit an other form of mania. The symptom of this is nn uncontrollable desire to mu tilate the human body. In criminal medical annals there are numerous cases revenled of this mania." The clrculatayd the principal ren son the protest is made Is because the nrt dealers 6cm to be trying to use the influenco "and authority of the Metro politan to unload "this rubbish" on the American public, In its denunciation of the exhibition the circular specially excepts the works of Courbet. Puvis de Chovanncs, Monet, Manet, one by Re noir and five of the twelve by Degas. mm today ramouiis Last Honors Arc Paid to Men Who Died in World War ONE WAS AIR SERGEANT Tlirec Philadelphia Soldiers received the military honors .nbscnt when they died on the battlefields of France at fu nerals held today. The funeral of First Sergeant George Merkle, who was killed November 1 1 , 1017. while serving with the Thlrtv seventh Aero Squadron, took plnce from un undertaker's chapel nt Nine teenth and Arch streets at 2 o'clock. Strgeunt Alfred Stephenson, who was killed August 10, 1018. flns hurled from the home of his father-In-law. II. C. Valentine, nt Mnwood Heights. Interment wns in Chester Rural Cemetery. , The bodv it Lafayette A. It. LIchcttl. Jr.. who lost his life in the drive on Chateau -Thierry, wns burled from his lute residence, 30 Cedar lnne. Although but twenty-one yenrs old when he died, the young soldier's enreer hnd been one of heroism. Fnllstlng In the National Guard In 1014. he saw service on the Mexican border. With the entry of this country into the World War he enlisted and wns severely wounded by the explosion of n machine gun nt the training camp nt Camp Hancock. Four weeks Inter, while still convalescent, he went over seas with the Keystone Division, re ceiving ti fatal injury during an enemy airplane attack in June. 1018. The funeral was held with n high mass of requiem in St. Laurence's Cath olic Church, Highlnnd Park, at 0 o'clock. Interment wns made in Holy Cross Cemetery. The bodv of Sergeant John Leonard Hillig. of 0003 Westminster avenue, ur rlvcu nt Hoboken, and it is planned to hold the funeral of the dead soldier on Thursday or Friday. Sergeant Hillig was n member of the rn .-('), iT tafunlrr; Hn wns killed1 Oclober 2," 1018, whllo taking prirt in the Mcuse-Argoune offensive. His fu- will "be held from tne iiome m rents, .nt Wellington and Clnto neral his pn treetfli 238,422 Use City Baths Attendance nt the public swimming pools under the supervision of the Hu reau of Recreation was 238.422 the week ended September 3. This total wns mode up ns follows: Men, 47,037; bovs. 147,050; women, 11,100; glrlp, 32,213. $10,000' Diamond Necklaae tl, Spring IjUic, N1.'.!., Hctit. (J.-J-MnM, Thomas Clifton Jenkins, of Pittsburg. reported to 'the police Thursday high thnt a diamond necklace: valued nt $10. - 000 and n pnlr of diamond, earring y worth $730 had been stolen from heir . . room nt 204 Mercer avenue, vhe"r h , and .Mr. Jenkins have been passing the Kinitmer. Mm. .TnnklliR snid she bad discovered the loss at 11 :30 o'clock. Gardner Appointed Manager Hattlc Creek. Mich.. Sept. ((.The Kellogg Toasted Corn Flake Company announces the appointment of James W. Gardner ns Philadelphia district manager, with headquarters nt 300 Chestnut street. Mr. Gardner is well known in his territory, hnving been there for severnl yenrs as a member of the Kellogg sales force before going to Memphis. Tcnn., ns manager in that territory. M r. rL 'ft V, AUTUMN ADVERTISING Fall weather stimulates business So does good advertising John Clark Sims General Advertising Agent 1524 WALNUT ST. Telephone, Spruce 5924 r- There are 210,000,000 eyes in the United States, and for twenty years we have been studying how best to attract them to prod ucts of merit. They are so busy see ing Jife go by, that commonplaces do not interest them. Phone LOCust 5540 THE ntCtlARD A. FOLEY ADVE RTIS1NO AGENCY. Inc. PHILADELPHIA A fr80NAL SERVICE COKPOIIATION W V " I think the way you han died the campaign was A-l in every respect," was the way a customer re cently expressed his appreciation of our service w F. O. B. FACTORV This high, grade 88 note fully guaranteed- BRAND NEW PLAYER PIANO Easy Terms arranged by fho Wurlitzer Money Savind Piano Plan WALNUT CASE IO.EXTRA nt rfcijrft 809-11 CHESTNUT STREET Ltr4iMT mi tvh hoooiph wuimtia THB Holmes Press. 'Printtts 1315-29 Cherrv Street PhiUdelphU FINE FRAMING PAINTINGS CLEANED AND RESTORED IDE KOSLNBACIl GALLERIES 1310 lVnlnut Mtrret $13,750 to $15,500 New Single Homes With garages. Being built now on Highland ave. cast of Bryn Mawr ave., t Cynwyd. Five bedrooms, 2 baths, ono block from trains, schools, churches and stores. All cop per gutters and rain spouting. May we !,cnd you full particulars? John H, McClatchy Builder of Home 848 Land Title Bldg. MWBHffH"'T"TO'MlMBHMB F In Hupmobile service you And a remarkable daily faithfulness, an almost total lack of costly repairs. THE HATCH MOTORS C? UI5TRI0UTORS 720 N. DttOAD ST- PHILA. l'HAMtFORn DUAM'.H rlinrlm J. Mcdoueh S737 frankford Mr. UKKMV.NTOWN DK.U.KK KrncM llrothrn Mm ne r & Mokblniton I.one JIMN LINK HKAMSK "" K, N Croiiinn, Jr. Meuart i. Lunranlrr Avri., Materfonl, fa. WKhT rillLA. 1KAI.KH Arnold Cumpbrll Motor Co, ' esih S. Walnut Hti. PIANO ME 7 keys for a singer's voice The great trans posing feature of the APOLLO PIANO makes it the pop ular player piano for the home. ISAM & MW?fA4 809-11 Chestnut St. Between 8th & 9th Street VI CTROLAS lftVl iwriiim. ii Ttwip namwoi V9HP4IH wwaH? kb GENUINE 1 BULL DURHAM tobacco makes 50 flood cigarettes for 10c We want you to have tho best paper lor "BULL." So now you can recelvo withcach package a book ol 24 leaves ol lUk. tho very finest cigarette paper In the world. d j7 -r -" IS JhJ&- lcbo.fZ Cups, Saucers. Plates FAncy Pieces Crown Staffordshire - Mintona -ffoyaJ Worcester and Wcddwood the first to arnva from abroad. Hi55 Plate Qlass in the home dlffv??''-' ". wi Plate Glass Tops impart an air of aesthetic elegance to the home surroundings. Valuable flat top furniture should be protected and improved in appearance by a plate glass covering. Plate Glass tops will safeguard all the exquisite colorings in natural wood. Send for Illustrated 'Booklet Founded 1864 HIRES TURNER GLASS COMPANY 30th and Walnut PHILADELPHIA yt "Prep " Clothes for the Young Fellow If ou have been unable to properly outfit your boy who is in thcst Long Trouscr age, it is because you h e not gone to the right shop. We specialize for the omig rclmw our clothes models have been designed with his. proportions in iev and lib tastes considered, and we also have abundant sup plies of shirts, neckwear, collars, hats and general out fittings that have been specially prepared for him. J Youths' Suits made in Correct Models of Serviceable, ell Wearing fabrics $2 ?28, $30 up to $45. JACOB REEDVS SONS 1424-1426 Chestnut Street Last Week of PERRY S Closing Sale at HALF PRICE! What's left of a Spring and Summer Stock that showed a wide range of Men's Clothes Wool en and Worsted Suits, Sports and Golf Suits, Palm Beach Suits, Separate Golf and Regular Trousers, Fall weight Overcoats, some Winter Overcoats car ried over; Raincoats, Reversible Cloth and Leather Coats, etc., etc. all to be closed out during this One Week Only at Exactly One Half their Former Prices! Men who buy them this week are going to get bargains that it won't be possible to get for a long time to come! $30 Suits for $15; $35 Suits for $17.50; $40 Suits for $20, on up to $60 Suits for $30. $50 and $60 Overcoats Fall and Winter weights for $25 and $30. $50 Reversible Cloth and Leather Great Coats for $25. Standard Rubberized Rain coats that were $10, $18, $20 to $30, now $5, $9, $10 to $5. $6, $8, $10 Separate Trousers Golf and Regular now $3, $4, $5. Terms of Sale Cash Only No Alterations No Refunds No Exchanges Perry & Co. "N. B. T." 16th & Chestnut Sts. I JI 1 i 1 "l illilL Va 1 iiis iS il 4 t litlll Fw i tf ins f.Ta?MC VPlP-iiW M:v-.M q EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY (Sept. 11 to Oct. 30, Incl.) $3.00 T War U. lie additional Ppfflnl train lrtt Kririlnc Ter minal 7.00 A M (Ptnndnrii Tlma). H.'OO A. M (IKnjIUht Tlnif), atopploir nt Colombia Are.. Ilunllncdon HI., Woynr Junction, l,oian and JrnUn tpn. Consult Atfcnts See Flyers Philadelphia & Reading Ry. .ataaaac' at -lR aTIaalaaaaaWfl .Jl; 3$ ttf r "ft r vr Ml . T r T ( -4 '.I ti ( a." rn r.ii J l' '.1 in 4 itr iM ti- WfU fit m. .", '"I ,.-,