Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 29, 1915, Night Extra, Page 7, Image 7

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    -
E V
flIANCE PRODUCES GENERAL JOFlSFT
if' TrTTnTrTanriT
WUKMiJilN W BRITAIN MEET CRISIS; -
SMASH SLAV OFFENSIVE
EVENING tEDGEB-PHirADBEPHIA', THtTttHTVAV JtJLY
20, lOiBi
f
liMMANS
Sh Hindenburg
proves Hero of the
IWar and Frees Ger
many of Doubt.
Wheat articles are the fourth of the
nprehcnsive review of the first year
Ifie war. iney wxu oe continued
f day during the week.
,ny CARL W. ACKERMAN
BEltLltt 3iy 29. In the western cam-
IIRtin uermnny mei now conditions or
I"?., wnrfaro and overcame iliem be
Sri the enemies were nlilo to do so. In
Tf.nntern war area old conditions of
ifillpK l(lVe proVnllcd throtigliout the
fSnnths. and Germany again has shown
Sft ehe Is as skilful with the old as with
;nw.
hit more valuable territory which has
"ilea to German arms In this war Is
6lgUm aim huiuiuijl rnuice. incHQ
Sfniurcd districts are far moro wealthy
fflfn re the captured Polish and Baltic
fjtM. Yet, without doubt, tho chief
juries Oi ino jemmii uruups nave uecn
iSSitin the east. Qermany is proud of
rtjfj ear's magnificent record In tho west,
WM Is tho march of ovents In the cast
'list" thrills tho Gorman people to their
jy, souls, In popular Imagination tho
BigM of tho Russian Empire was the
jjojffdlsqulotlng fact of the war.
k belldf was encouraged by tho Ken-
rai feeling that If Germany Were to hold
tepOTTi In tho great war. Franco must
HTnrerwhcImed before Russia's mighty
pillions could be mobilized. But Russia
fsme on before Franco was overwhelmed,
eirmany had to meet her enemies on
Kwo fronts nt once. The people ot tho
Empire trcmDicu last summer an iiussia s
loMes crept further and further Into
Eait Prussia while tho campaign against
tie western Allies was yet to reach lti
ltdtht. Germany was not afraid of tho
western campaign, but tho fact Is prl-
fcar'tho outcomo of tho Slavonic rush.
SLAVS CHECKED
.Then, almost over night, came tho news
that tho battlo of the Mazurlan Lakes had
teGrt fought and had resulted In ono of
Uia greatest victories ior uermany in uii
history. Seldom is a nation thrilled even
lit wartime as Germany was thrilled by
the news that Marshal von Hindenburg'
had cleared East Prussia of tho Invaders.
KotMng that has happened since and
nothing that Is likely to happen will equal
(Germany's estimation tho brilliance of
IPS Hlndenburg's succesi. Until tho
miurlan battle, uermany was not suro
Mlherself. Von Hindenburg gavo con
tjenco to his country and demonstrated
otabsoluto a superiority over the Rus-
jliiis that tho fear of tho Slavs vanished
ulllght dispels tho terrors of tho dark.
yonjlllndenburg- turned the light on tho
Rajjfans and they are now tho chief
aspiration of the contributors to Ger
many's humorous weeklies.
Warsaw has not yet fallen, but Instead
thjLpermans have captured Russia's great
suuaport oc utiaa, wntcn is second in
tapnttneo only to Warsaw and Riga as
aaVeutern ohlcctlve. The "Baltic oner-
fySsiii fact, would be considered a
gwwy record oi tne year b warraro
" xwusaia. uvea il nuiuui uiau uuu
n accomplished on that, oldo of
rope. But, In fact, the Baltic cam-
gn ranks last In Importnnco among tho
'eo great offensives which the Germans
.ve successfully develoDed ntralnat the
tlavs since last August.
Khe first of this Is the advance across
Ittstern Poland to the gates of AVarsaw.
rmany uelloves this drive alone, cqmlng
tfter tho earlier rotreat from AVarsaw, Is
Hgreater success, Judged purely as a
iwlitary problem, than nil' the victories
Jffit the Allies can claim.
It1 W flAT.mTA
.(Second In importance among successes
ualnst the Slavs Is tho freeing of
gaucia, Tnis campaign Is ranked In Ger
many as an offensive one, differing from
BSrescue of East Prussia, which was a
jgifenslvo thrust. TJie Gallclan province
)& German territory, but had passed.
iJEmosl entirely under Russian control
agen tne yermans unaertooK to rescue it
BoAustro-Kungary. The offenBlvo cam
gyrn developed by Marshal von Mack
Msen during the laBt three months is
jgylally praised by Gpfman critics, bo
tause, tho Slavs had so long a time to
srepare their defenses. When tho Gall
uan operations began It was becoming
iffSjr general conclusion of militarist stu
igSts that n properly entrenched army
gguia not oe driven back lor any consid
erable distance. The Germans, however,
Stowed that It could be done.
Ittbe winning of Gallcla has bound
tro-Huncrarv closer to th German
.Empire, and has banished all hope among
WAiues ot enticing Vienna or iiucia
gt Into making a separate peace. Fully
important, too, the Gallclan campaign
Lbeen the culminating Influence which
preventing tho neutral Balkan coun
sels fromN-nterlnir the war. Tho dlDlo-
w worn oi maintaining tne neutrality
Rumania. Bulgaria and Greece has
Pied marly sleepless nights at the Ger-
n rorctgn Oulce In the past months,
srnaps when the historians Degin to
Qe about the events ot tho past year
win rank above everything else in
sortanco the Influence which Ger-
yiJTs mighty victories In the east has
,wn me uantan mates ti tne mroo
heastern neutrals had Joined the
S earlier in the war, when Russia's
ngth was nt Its full, Germany doesn't
M think about the possible conse-
Masterly Tactics of
Leader, in Retreat
Saved French Army
From Destruction.
By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS
PARIS, July 29,-Gcneral Joe Joffre
must bo enumerated among tho great
French successes of the first 12 months
of the war.
This goei as It stands, whatever ho may
?r. m?y not do ' th8 'uture. I say
th s because Joffre Is not without his
i rites There are those who say ho
ought to movo faster.
Joffre already deserves the undying
gratitude of his country If ho never
strikes another blow. Ho refused, nt
Charlarol, to sacrifice his men for
brilliant but temporary success, though
ho rnust have known tho country was
waiting for him to make good; ho or
acrd that soul-slckcning retreat before
a superior foe when he knew that every
heart In France was weighted down by
doubt, concerning him and his army; ho
patiently sought and seized tho oppor
tunity ho was looking for; then Instantly
transformed tho BWlft German advanco
on Paris Into a disorderly rotreat; he
stopped short the mighty second Ger
man offensive in tho west against tho
Chnnncl ports and pinned his enemy
down for a long winter trench campaign,
where he held tho advantage; he won the
confidence of his men, Individually tin
most Intelligent soldleis In tho world,
giving them reason for their cheerful
coiirage, which never faltered, even on
tho coldest, wettest midwinter days.
Lastly, but by no means least, ho so
handled his resources In material and
men that now, at the beginning of the
second year of tho war, tho French army
Is tho finest fighting body in the melee.
Joffro was tho ono man In France's 40,
000,000 for tho Job.
JOFFRE AN ACCIDENT.
At that, Joffre was an accident!
That France had the right man for tho
place and at tha moment ho was most
needed was utmost pure accident, for her
sjstom of running tho ormy, until a year
or so before the war broke out, was not
calculated to develop tho man for tho
Job.
For some reason Franco had not seen
fit to nominate a generalissimo, a commander-in-chief
of her army, until Just
prior to tho war. There was simply a
Board of Generals and this board was su
preme. Maneuvers were conducted Just as ono
would expect a board to conduct them.
Tho Bluo Army, under one Bet of gen
erals, would take such and such a position
at iuch and such a time. Tho Red Army,
under another set of generals, would op
poso tho Blues, and to do this they would
hold fuch and such a line. Tho action
wo lid begin at a specified time, would
tjike a specified form and cease at a pre
arranged hour, the Blues and Reds then
to be occupying this or that position.
For a given number ot dajs this sort
of thing -would continue until tho final
event, which took place before tho Picsl
dent of the republic and his guests, for
eign military attaches, and the rest, whoso
tlnscl-tasselled tents were pitched on the
eminence overlooking the field where the
climax (according to arrangement) would
unfold Itself.
Naturally maneuvers under such cir
cumstances scarcely developed Initiative
on tho part of generals and their staffs.
Thje weaker ones and Indolent fellows
wero able to make about as good a show
ing as the best.
MADE GENERALISSIMO.
Suddenly all this was changed. Joffre
camo on the scene. The general unrest In
Europe showed to France tho unwisdom
of letting this situation continue and
Joffro was named generalissimo of the
army. How he came to be named Is not
cUSarly known; I have heard that General
Pau was tho tlrst choice, but he, for rea
sons of his own, thought Joffre ought to
be named. And Joffre it was.
Joffre was destined to have but one go
at playing war before actual war began,
but ho changed the rules radically for this
one. He gave tho Blue Army a city and
Its surrounding country to hold and he
told the Red Army to take it. He told
them to go to It. All methods were good,
there was no "time out" for anything
and he hoped tho best man would win.
There was, the dickens to pay, of course.
Easy-going officers were left far behind;
incompetency deyeloped in unlooked-for
places; whole commands got captured,
generals commanding, staffs and all.
There were all sorts of mix-ups, but
Joffre looked on and took in every de
tail. The newspapers hinted that the
maneuvers were a fiasco and that the
French army was in a bad way, But
Joffre considered the war game the most
successful he had ever -witnessed.
Ho had found tho weak spots In the
machine, and knowing them, he could
npply the remedy. He applied It and a
number of officers were retired.
War caught Joffro in tho middle of his
reorganlaztlon. But he fought It out
like a man until he won a breathing spell,
then he dispassionately continued his
merciless looping off of ofticlal heads. His
generals now average 10 years younger
than at the start and he has a tried man
ai every part of th? line,
Joffre has accomplished all this in a
year.
British Arouse From
Early. Apathy and
Face Serious Prob
lems Cheerfully.
By ED. L. KEEN
LONDON, July 29.-"Are we down
hearted? Not" wllh a hcavj accent on
Hie "no."
This is the slogan of British football
fans In the bleuchers tor the English
equivalent thereof) when tho home team
appears to be getting tho -worst of It,
And the more precarious the situation tho
heavier the accent.
Since the failure of tho Anglo-French
spring- offensive In Flanders, tho disas
trous defeats of tho Russians, the news
of the unsatisfactory progress of the Dar
danelles campaign, the development of
tho Flsher-Churchlll scandal, tho French
Kltchciier row, and the disclosures re
garding Britain's woeful lack of tho Im
plements of warfare, culminating In the
disruption of tho Cabinet, this attitude of
tho blcacherltes has become the attitude
of tho British public.
And when tho British public sas It Is
not downhearted It means It. Proof of
this lies In tho splendid fashion In which
tho worktngmen of the nation have nn
swercd the call for Industrial reinforce
ments (bear In mind that SO per cent, of
tho British public consists of working
men, their women nnd children); also In
the marvelous rcsponso to the Prime Min
ister's appeal for nn adequate supply ot
silver bullets. Never In the history of
any nation has a popular war loan met
-with such success.
APATHY AT FIRST.
For the apathy displayed by tho masses
In tho tlrst ten months of tho war tho
British Government has only ItBelf to
blnmc. Tho leaders ot the nation made
tho mlstako of entrusting the entire con
duct of tho war on land to one man per
haps a military genius, but with serious
limitations on the human side, Including
an utter Inability to understand tho civil
ian temperament. For seven months tho
wnr wm conducted In secret. Through
tho anonymous "Eyewitness" tho public
wan fed with nn occasional optimistic but
colorless story from tho front, the bur
den ot which was that everything was go
ing along splendidly, that tho Germans
wero losing heart, that they had been
compelled to put their old men and young
boys In tho tiring line and always convey
ing the Impression that ultimata victory
was a foregone conclusion. Not -dintll
March was a single newspaper correspond
ent permitted at the front, and even then
they were not allowed to tell tho whole
truth.
No wonder enlistments were slow. Tho
fact that Lord Kitchener was able to
enroll more than two million volunteers In
this period Is sure proof of the latent
spirit of patriotism in the British pub
lic But there was no entnuslasum such
as had been aroused In Germany by the
first-hand stories from the trenches told
by correspondents who were permitted to
go practically wherever they chose and
to wrlto pretty much what they liked.
WORKMEN BLAMED.
Tho worklngmen of the nation have
been severely criticised for their failure to
appreciate the gravity of the situation
for their strikes, their slackness and their
nlleged overlndulgenco in liquor. The fact
is they did not understand because they
were not told. So far as they knew vic
tory was assured anyhow. They went
along much the. same as In peace times,
and when they had reason to bellqve that
their employers were taking advantago of
them they struck. They didn't speed up,
either, because they didn't regard, It nec
essary or because It was their employers
and not they themselves who would profit.
As to tho charge of wholcsalo drunken
ness, the mere fact that tho Government
quickly abandoned Its proposed drastic
temperance measure Is sufficient answer.
But now It Is no longer "Kitchener's
war," It la the EmpIro'B.
Lloyd-George has told not only tne
worklngmen but tho entire nation the
truth. And the most striking illustration
of the British worklngman's wllllgness to
help tho Empire In Its grent need Is the
fact that, although it was Lloyd-GeorKe
himself who first accused him of slack
ness and drunkenness, the recruiting of
his new Munitions Army started with an
average enlistment of 10,000 per day,
WILL OBEY
If Industrial conscription should become
desirable, there need be no fear of indus
trial revolution. 8ald Lord Mllner In the
House of Lords the other day: "Theie
Is an idea that organized labor will re
sent being commandeered for the service
of the State, That Is Just what It will not
resent. 'If we are ordered to work for
England,' I heard some typical represen
tatives of tho working class opinion say
the other day. 'we will obey.' The only
trouble has been that so many working
men have feared that their labor would
not simply be requisitioned for tho de
fenso of the country, but exploited for
the benefit of Individuals." The govern
ment has guaranteed that there will be
no exploitation, and that guarantee has
been signed by labor's own representative
In the new Cabinet, Arthur Henderson,
nnd by Us various leaders in the House of
Commons.
This spirit of antl-downheartedness is
eeneral In England today. Tho attitude
of complacency on tho part of the upper
classes and or apatny among tne lower
classes has given way to ono of united
determination
TOREIGN VESSELS
0 GET U.S. REGISTRY
cetary Lansing Approves
plication of Company
Meed by Germans.
BIIINGTON, July .-Seretary ot
Winslng and Aotlng necrewwr
f th nn.rtm.nt of Commerce,
fgreed that American registry could
denied to U foreign-built siem-
urchased for the American -
Company, a corporation nuw
rd Q Wagner, of New York Th
ra according to t& inierniai
Department of Ctmnurw, were
ed in British. ScanainanviBn ou
tanean ports by a Danish agent
Jensen, and Thdr Lshr. ft
Prchnt with meow uppu
apltalist named Stlnnes. ox awo.
nr
Wd by the discovery that Germn
wa baik ot the enterprise, wu
Mn had been convii ted in .e"-
J having vloteUd that country a
tX in tiada With uerman in"
on. fur American n.iain n
by the Bureau ui fcavtauun
liive.t nation TUe department
afld iui the f8U valued V
of J . (KAi ieprentd Uerman
-ut ife t uhiiti onipany otter-
. i ti i. . Delaware
,( -! 'A. and
ment held that the fact th i, an Ameri
can corporation, with American officers,
owns a, vessel entitles It to registry, no
matter where the bulk of the stock of the
corporation may be owned, or where tne
working funds come from.
The Bureau of Navigation however,
warned Wagner that'll" his veseU sought
to engage In European trade they prob
ably would nnd their way to a prize court.
POUT OF PHILADELPHIA
Vessels Arriving Today
Str Bio Colorado (Br), Klo Jsnetro, nwr-
?& w&.. t
AST",JUanr,N''TKrtAntonio. (mil. United
Fr 'mwKu. 8tr.tb.tro (Greek). Bilbao.
,"i'. . Stli.Hitt T&1 Mlslnr Company
"S!"'; liAunfllli. MMrtr. and
iihadlSa, Mwetwnt. nd " Tranwor
UKr0SlKKa, La Fallta. MlU.t, JJ C.
Steamships to Arrive
FRP1QIW.
Nam. jJfHKS
2lttl2Maiiuwu ".'"BSm .
Amirallan TrWO" S2iiJ
Roomey
(Jpo Mnil
DaYouiD
N..to.
U av ai !
Ui a MU.MiiUu
Mam.kur Uarlaar
ulcau
Calif ornU
KtlwtuuUig
TMr
Oueau
Si oral Udrau,
bdWmu
ii ir-.i
BUd
July
.Jy
SS5B
Jiy?1
Iiualva
A tftiA A mA rffa
HUo li
Algiers i.ii
Pom Talbot J"
Mmel Ju y 8
Haaoawter
TurUt
CbrlatUnU
gas FUc
HoUwoam
London
laulqu
Uufl'.
Almoin uili
I li li
July It
July ii
July 17
July lti
JulylJ
July
July "
Joiy ii
J uii .
luiy U
Marriage Licenses Today
Henry O Itetnhard, Allentown, Pa., and
Minnie If. Bower., Scr.nton, Pa.
William Sl!er. 3901 N. 8th t.. nJ Loui
Miyer, 4102 N. Ke .
Itobert It Hunter, 11T W. Lehlih aie., anl
Miry Beat, 3J01 Illjbee. at.
Sercei Kraweiy.ko, 721 Eiffel at., and M.rya
Popltya, IKS Titan at
Michael Popusa. 01S N. Hancock at., and
Marra Kepak. 28 Naweombe, t.
nuaaell L. lioodley. 2315 N. Tth at., and Mamie,
B. Lut. 2S N. 10th at.
Dr Otto Itelter. 2813 WJf ava., and Holly
Davldowlti, Cheater Pa,
Edwin McCarthy. 1217 8. 21at St., and Sadie
Phillip., 5004 Market at.
Harry Cooperateln, 403 Taaker at. and Lena
Cutler. 403 Taaker at ......
Francla M. Oroaa 233 i K Bodtne at., and
Laura Adaroa. 443 Diamond a(.
Arthur M ZJeiW 22IS N. 15th it., and NellU
M V McCarthy. 621 N 16th at. .
William L. Zwlnk, 2120 S Colorado at,, and
Carila Fltiilmmona. 1124 Tre at.
Johanna Italic h. 131 N Marvine at., and Ma
tilda Keltbert, IMS Jeup at ....
Mariano J- Asuaro. 26 BrWe at., and Edlln
U. Ytartak.. 2463 Bridfa at
Jae. It Devlin 2246 FaWtharpe at., and
Sophia BiIbo 28M N Howard at.
Lewis M Sioltn. 413 Praaton at., and CwaUa
Boco"l 4SwatUh60ai N Marvtoa at . nd
Edith M Jahaaon. 400 Terraca t
Auaelo Sulla, 1218 Oarritt at . and Catartaa
iKtolomeo. 1218 Carrttt at.
r (Yltaeon Bavenaon 4111 Laneaatar ava., and
HloBOfa H Fattraoo. Palmyra-jr. J.
Wllttaw J JJallyi Tacony. and Httwsa Hohea
atein..Vraakfora. .,, . . , ..
Stern. 2401 N lHh it.
Four Couple Wedded at Elkton
RLKTON Md . July -four Paonayl
vania and one Maryland eoupla were mar
ried here tola momtoeT They war Wal
ter O Smith ad Kdlcn J Harri, John
Warita aud Anna Blown and Edward A
Faaaett and ilu M ualiahr aii of
l nu.rl.bbla Mum I Iv f.ll J
IN WILDWQOD'S BOABDWALK PAGEANT
tilllL 8TABBED FOll LEAVING
L0VEH SHE FOUND MARRIED
T
r, a.
intatunicd Asseiinnt Escapes as
loung Wonjan Goes to Hospital,'
ALfcEftTOWfr, fa., July .-Clfazed
with a fierce Infatuation Tor fcretty iiarjr
6ab6, U years old, Charlea ituestr, alio
U, stabbed her In the, abdomen as he
extended his hand to gay good night,
and the lies at the point ot death In the
Allchtown Hospital. Musser feared that
the girl wdutd never their relations and
lie made thteats tn her frlenda that he
"would kill her first."
The girl, tiring ot Stutter, who ehe
had heard had A wife, had told lilm sho
would see him no more. A few moments
later, when Muitser took loive of hi
"amnlty," he Inflicted tho possibly fatal
wound Mutter escaped.
HUSBAND PLEADS FOR WIFE
Jinn Intercedes When Woman Is Sen
tenced to "Correction."
After havlnir hla wlfo arrested as tho
was about to desert him, Charles Dudh, Ot
2845 North Woodstock street, raved her
from a threes months' sentence In the
Hoilse of Correction by pleading for her.
Mrs. Duck was about to leave her hus
band und her 1-jcnr-old child when she
uns arrested nt 13th and Huntington
etrccts by Policeman Qrendtc She had
taken IZ3 ot her husband's money for ex
penses. At tha hearing she could give
no reasons for her act and after a repri
mand she was sentenced by Magistrate
Qrells. The husbnnd pleaded for his wife
and she was freed on her promlso to sbiy
home.
TWO MINERS H$IT WHffif
, Htiv tmtrm
r-'-Bi1 - t ii
Carelessness of laborer Alleged Oaosw
of Accidatit.
MOUNT-CAtUlfet-, P ftn S8.-4aMt
Kottl, S years old and married, l Mm
rataehaley", & j-eara, stiiirle, ars 1 ttt
Miner ltospltal at fountain Hjirtori tat
a serious condition, as the ireanilt ot at)
etploslon of ga In the mine at drum
Itldge, hear here
Kostl It thi miner and FaKshaley 1 hU
laborer. They wero working In h daft
gerous place, and 11 Is alleged oHe of te
men opened nia sarety lamp, lsnltl ti
quantity ot gas. Doth are badly born4
on the head and may not recover. Mill
Intpector Evans in Invettigallcs.
-"" ..., ii B,iaim,
"Jacklcs" tnjoy Nnral Plitme
Bailors at the Navy Tartl are Wt
"aughlng today at filillo Jolua i-5
Navy." That I tha name of a mr.tf.jn
plcturo film they saw last night on Uai
bat Ilea hip Alabama. It showed them Jaat
how they might have acted when thy
first became ota of Uncle Bam'a aallors
If they had been tha subjects ot tha facile
pen of Lieutenant John J McCraeken, of
tho Alabama, who wrote th acenarlo.
They Baw themtelvcs In motion on their
good ship and they watched tha ontlea
of "Jllllle" Reeves in the leading part.
Bathtub Murderer Must Die
LONDON. July 3 -George Joseph
Smith, "bathtub" murderer, convicted
ohd sentenced to death after a trial1 for
killing three wives, -was denied a new
trial today. The Judges of tha Court ut
Appeals upheld the conviction and over
ruled tho argument of Smith's Mimol
that nO prima fade saso had been mttda
'against tbe accused man. .
JACOB REED'S SONS
All Wkite and
Tho seashore resort gave ltselt up to various Rayeties lost night,
nmong which were groups and individuals in picturesquo costume.
Tho picture shows Miss Dorothea Grob and her pet bear, who wero
prominent in tho parade.
RYAN HALTS PAYMENT
City Solicitor Says Company Cannot
Receive Money From City.
After litigation covering a period of
flvo years In an nttfcmpt to collect JSO,
(00 or a part of that sum. In payment
for making n special Investigation of
tnxablo real estate In this city,, tho Man
ufacturers" Appraisal Company, of Cleve
land, Ohio, faces another obstnelo to
day In an opinion Issued by City So
licitor Ityan. Instructing Controller Wnl
ton not to countersign warrants for pay
ment to the company.
The Investigation carried on by tho
Cleveland firm was In tho section
bounded by Arch and Walnut, 10th nnd
16th streets. Unable to collect tho ?S3.
000 demanded for the services, the com
pany and Councils compromised on $41,
COO, and before adjourning on July 2
Councils made an appropriation for this
amount to(be paid to tho company. It
is this pament which Is held up by
the City Solicitor, who holds that, ns
tho contrnct under which tho work was
done vn later Bet aside by Common
Pleas Court. Councils exceeded Its au
thority In recognizing any claim pressed
!.. II.. HfnHM'nnliiNiMi' A nnrnlanl tssrri-
pany,
Appraisal Com-
Striped Flannel Trousers
of our regular $5.00 grade, are now repriced
$3.75 v '
On sale at Doth our GarJen Pier Store at Atlantic
City, and our Chestnut Street Store,
Jacob, Reed's Sons
1424-1426 CHESTNUT STREET
tnd
Garden Pier, Atlantic City, N. J.
Hill ''
1
. How
At
HIS FIRST BIRTHDAY
w
Look
ter the First Year
Next Sunday the Public Ledger publishes
the year's review of the European war. All important events
in the unhappy family of nations are chronicled by journalists,
statisticians, historians and military experts. x
Each side of the controversy that diplomacy failed to settle is
presented by capable writers, and the results or diooav titanic struggles ac !"$
with the present status of field movements and official, parleys clearly outlined, heven ot
me Magazine Section's eight pages, as well as the entire Intaglio, aredevoted topfull
Magazi
history of the war. " 'it.
Special articles, late news, maps, photos and interesting AcommWl?JM
collected from the highest sources of information. Included -thfe unequaled presentation of.ar
features are
The HUtpry of th,W. by C. W. TT.
War Means tp the Kest ot tne wona. . oy ww j .. .. S.-- r -- : raiJL nftkt war"t e&ct
alee for Mstliig reaee AUr tne var, By ueorge . uw, f ..
"What the
"Rlements That M
on business and international trade
PUBLIC
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In the SUNDAY, AUGUST t
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