Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, March 28, 1918, Final, Image 6

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V. .....-vr v ' EVENING PUBLIC lVEDGER-PHltADfiLlPHIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1918
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WIT MEN
CARTOONISTS' VIEWS OF GREAT WORLD EVENTS
SENATORS PROTEST
HOG ISLAND DEFENSE
M'CLELLAN PRIVATE
BELIEVED SUICIDE
respondent coniltiuVs,,;7!
llshed in nn old cin 1.T. 2!5
which la visited dally hylh.fi!
and Crown l-i,. ,' l"9 Hft
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' .-'ViirTfcmar'tmonf. nf
&llJ' ..
gk'Vr, Justice
jp Mt, j .
IANE WILL NOT UESIUiN
JT&
Mred Illegal' Paragraphs
v.f LLaid Befora Attorney
ir l .-
' .?' General
Tagcfcfatt Editorial
V Booate Gernian Cause
r r1 ":
IV la Iew of bis drive, no dianco
'W lor liberation of occupied 'crrl.
Jtory In Franco and Helslum.
'"TUo sovontyslxmllo eu". hav '"S
(been Invented by Germans, K of
'"course, no surprise,
1 Alt technical Improvements, with
Exception of the tank, hao como
, from German side,
Germans oro Pcoplo of thinkers,
turning their talent toward the
favorable conclusion of the vvn.r.
Giant gun opens an endless per
.spectlve. Of all tlJs nothing may material,
'lie In this, war unless the conflict i
prolonged 8tU further by the
.Allien
.- No matter what the outcome of
the German offensive, It N ceitJln
,he Allies will not be able to mafce
' r. . t nllnnli
r
so treat ana cnuuniw u "i--v
fts to brlns ttietn appreciably nearer
their coal.
Omclals of the Federal C.oxcriiment
were notined today or estcrda's edi
torial utterances of the I'hll.idelphU
Ta;eblatt by Special Agent (larbarlno, ,
of the Department of Justice. Ho win
translation of the editorial to the Do
Mrtment of". Justice, nt Waahlngton.
which will determine whether the state-,
ments made are detrimental ' to the
i,
uuuiu uu..
Translations ot mo numui ""' invitation to u. pcaco conrertmce. wnicn
Tageblatt. whote editor". Or. Martin tney did not accept. In the meantime
Darkow and Louis 'Vemer, were haled they have experienced the completo col
Into the United States Court on a ti-ea- iu,,fce 0 itusui UI1,i the partial col
son charge and subsequently acquitted, iapse 0j Italy. The offensive Initia
te being examined by Attorney General tle In the wett went trojn them to
Gregory, I Germany.
(jarbarlno said he would communicate "About the liberation of France and
directly with the Vnlted States Attorney
General regarding tlu Tugeblatt idl
torlals. A copy of the editorial In tho
German-language new.paper was went
to Prof. Leonard A, reck, of tho Episco
pal Academy, for translation by United
States District Attorney ICane.
Mr. Ivane said Incidentally that there
was no truth In a rumor that he would
resign or that he had been asked to
resign.
' "Why should I resign?" mid Mr.
Kane. 'There was no
mere was no oungiing, lie
,-dded, "of the prosecution of Louis
Werner and Doctor iDarkow nr editors
the Tageblatt. If there U any le- l
faonsibiiity to te raced, i am wining io
V accept that responsibility
i
Btlll Under Indictment
frMr. Kane called attention to the fact
tlwt although Werner nnd Darkow were
acquitted they are still under indictment
for violating the espionage act, for which
they wII be tried in June. It would
.have, been much better, said Mr. Kane,
to have tried Werner and Darkow on
?the espionage-violation charge first.
Discussing tho trial ot the Tageblatt
Editors, Attorney Kane said that the
.Government had "faUen down" on the
Case and made this explanation:
v "Here's where tho Government fell
down: Although the Court admitted
-telrty-one out of thirty-nine articles and
documents which we offcied we had no
; evidence of the effect produced on the
minds of tho readers. We had no evi
dence It stopped a single subscription to
the Liberty Loans, that It caused a sin
rgle man to evade tbe draft or a woman
to -waste food. As I said, I doubt that
t.lf, we had obtained such evidence the
Court would have have admitted It,
"Had we succeeded In getting the case
;to a Jury, I don't think any one of the
Murors would have hesitated to declare
the articles submitted were, treasonable.
."The Government had doubts at the
outset as to the outcome of the trial.
J.'f'.but lawyers t,o!d us that wo were right
R,W ,to raise the question of whether treason
' T$v.could not bo commltt
'm t,on of ,!uch nrtlcleB
Tn,fcould not bo committed by the publlca-
f-tit tlon of such articles as -wo offered In
, V t The Tageblatt editorials, quiet In tone
fttt. T since the German-language newspaper
jf", ir waa raided by Federal authorities last
' t jTDecember, again assumed strong pro-
vt i German propensities.
tiv' & Apparently 'the newspaper feels t has
l h ?. ' achieved an Important v Ictory In the
Br' i"not guilty" verdict directed by Judge
(i '4l Dickinson In the United States Dfstilct
&-? Court. Its, leading editorial, published
fiC3 ' mj wilt. nw wuiu.MUi tciUlLI,
f'tlmll run. nnd emnhaslzeil thnt nnl.aj
fl IwttiA AlTla lmrrv nn.t uiirran.. m.ak
tllr,JC r- .- -.-.. .. uu...uv, ilium
,4 ejthe Germans are "the people of think-
,.1 ers."
'. ' J-j. 'Tlie Tageblatt grows enthualiuiii. nv
' the new gun and nroceeds to lmnn )
'J1 rt f1nm Amfli.fln Kltl.antiii ...l.i. .u-
j , "eslbllltles ot the new warplece.
? 't?-'jHers Is the editorial:
f . "A. reneral shaking of tho heads was
e.JKtfeo.answer of people to the report that
".ten aermans had bombarded Paris from
'-Oa' distance of about seventy miles. Moat
,3 ,kople regarded t simply as Impossible.
,io far they knew only of guns which
, aeuld shoot about twenty English miles.
,Tt Jump from twenty to seventy miles
... appeared a bit too great But later
rived reports leave nq doubt about the
tnac tms is a matter or projectiles
rrom a gun and not dropped from
tlDO.
Shi "''1 ' Bombardment
Nlftsr ronflrmt (h bombardment
lnaae admits that the shells were
; wale)! could lisve had no purpoi.
HTOT Intended to bo dronnxl
JNeides,' tho- French believe tn imv
leate4. the'.posltlon of the gun In the
Oobaln 'woods, seventy-six miles from
'Jparte, About the fact that German
wes u buu wnicn, can throw 9.
hells' over this dlstanco there Is
rfor. no longer any doubt
great tselialeal InnoratUni In tbls
, wfw im xrptwn or tho tanks,
tram " Uarm.n ,d., which, ol
iiMMfSBrprU.. That tb. CJer.
I aro pmtpl t tlUakcr has no
n.y are new simply
t Drombae.t .!-
lAat WMfM far th. Moment Is
MK.'HUio, oreatleo of
: Mra aad for Uu'f
i a ka -. . . .'
Of Oobaln ia, ahaaVWi.:
Kt an4 tor thtf prattut wob-
r aaparunonc. jsaea-M; K tbf
. wph7 v Ha, l-SIOT, WHIM
ranwBf agaioat )b
(let a number f'vaaaar
t nlavrt on - "-'-
i w mummr wwi paw-
aaaaaaaaaaaVBBSv'lC'fr.'' . .. .luirlijETi" ClSaSPJ?
KSf ril IOTM Bl IN fSCISs. f
FOE5 OF AUTOCRACY
arKsysfi
' and fortresses of the opponent without
. danger or Hurrlllce to ltKclf : It o.in de-
,.
Htroy the muijlrlnn dumpa aqd communi
cations behind tho front ocr n wide dl
tance. It can make tho moemcnt of
enemy troops hfhlnd the fiont ery dif
ficult. It can mako almost Impossible the
approach of enemy Meets to Us coast
And should It lie practical, which teems
probable, to placo such Runs on ships,
the control of tbe se;i would, at least
temporarily, be u very strlous unestlon
"Of ull thU notlilnff limy matrrlullrp
In thU nar unlriti It U prolonRrd ntlll
morr by tltr AIllpx. UlU perhaps the
appearance of this artlllerlstic monster
will serve ns a warning to them not to
,t It reach to tho point of further s,ur
prises. Procrastination has not proved
a Bd policy for them. In December,
19IB, they received from uermany an
Bilglum there can 1 no tart now, and
it looks even ns If the Allies would
lote unother big piece of French ground1.
In this war there has not yet heen an
I offensive movement of such a dimension
' and such Initial success as tho present
. nf the Germans In France. No mnttrr
' what tile outcome, It N certnln that at
the end the uriulet ot the AIIIph wilt not
he In u position In make to great and
enduring nn attack that It will hrlng
them npprrrlabl) nearer their goal."
T ATIOR RODIKS OPPOSE
RAN ON SHORE CABARET
.
Trades Council and Central Labor j
Union Protest to Atlantic
City Commission
Atlantic t'll. March 23. Tho first
Indication of organized opposition to
Mayor Bacharach's bill to iiboium board
walk cabarets, which has been Indorsed
by. the city clergy and 12,000 church
members; ex-Judges Joseph Thompson
und Allen 11 Kndlcott and Charles
L"vans. presidents of three of the largest
banks In the city, and many
hotelnien,
made Its appearance today. It wus u
resolution of protest preheated to tho
city commission by tho Atlantic County
Trades Council and the Central Labor
Union, protesting that tho bill, if passed,
will throw many workers out of cm
plojment and discourage pleasure seek
ers from coming to the shore,
The labor forces strongly indori-o the
contention of
William I'. Sooy, Director
of Public Safety, who Is flatly opposed
to the Ilacharach bill, that the remedy
f-,,- mltnrt mvIIj ta tlpornnu fntmnt
ship of hula dances and all other ob-'
onanie leatures. unurcn men are
fnrmulatlnir a counter-netitton r.illlnt?
upon the commissioners to further puri
fy the shoro liquor situation by re
fusing longer to grant licenses to "un
fit" applicants.
ajntFnfmnmnnmiiinmT ;ii)iHiriiHmmmiiimffinriinmiitnim)miniiitiiiimiriiiniifiiniriinimiiiiHiiiiuiHHiiiiiiiiinimiiiiHrim iiimnni;nimmii;irininrri'iiLniuinTiHi n:
Philadelphia, Pa., March 20, 1918
REMOVAL NOTICE
April 1, PJ18, wc will remove our Branch Office from
present location, 4U South 5th Street, to 230 .Market
Street, where, with greatly increased facilities, we will
be enabled to better take care of our satisfied and
rapidly growing clientele.
We desire at this time to thank jou for jour patron
age and confidence, and trust that the mutual feeling of
good will shall continue in the future as in the past.
UNITED STATES LOAN SOCIETY
OTIIUK Ol'l'H'llS LOCATKH AT
in NoitTic mtoAu KTnniiT
S548 OKKM.1MOW.N AVKN'fi:
ffi!wwwtrnuiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiuiiiii.i;i:ianiir!ui;iaiK;t:ki:iiuuii' iLLiiiiimiuinm n;iii!iiin,i:iiai:ii,ii,iiij ir!.i;i!i::;ii:inui:iiiUiii:u fiamnn.i'Liuiii:!)! iii'i'iiiiMiiiiiiiii-iOiiiu.uiiiMLTiitij
Mitchell, Fletcher 6 Co., Inc.
, x Grocers
Chestnut St. at 18th & 12th 5708 G't'n Ave.
EASTER DELICACIES
We invite inspection of a fine lot of (dec
orated Easter Eggs and Fancy Novelties
which have just arrived.
As for table delicacies we are headquar?
.tersfor Todd's Virginia Hams.. Park4 Farm
?Hams and Bacon, Street's Fancy' Prunes' and
eilMMrTthings which you will need for Easter.
vA
i - V'i'
P
Brovrn.ln The ChieagpHews
MAKING SOME PROGRESS"
VCiliiamo.inThe Detroit-r PreM
hattir
( - - --.--. - AAA A- A
WHEAT RATION; U. S. MUST SAVE
News From Fighting Front Leads Hoover to Resolve
on Drastic Measures to Curb
Hoarding
ttv.,1.! i -.,.. 1. n
t UMIIIlglUII, UUIUI1 a-O .
Tho bread ration of tnc rrencn.
soldleis who arc frlnB the onslaught
of Germans 'm aimlei has been cut be -
ciuso of tho shortage of wheat. This
Infoimatlou led tho food ndmlnlstra -
, ,
tlon to plan .rustic mcasmes to curb
hoarilliiB in this country.
Wherever there is evidtnep to sup-
port ti suspicion that tho withholding
of food on which nu depend tho out-
como of the war Is due to disloyalty
or proliteeering. It Is said piompt
action will be taken. State Admlnls -
trntors have been lemlnded that
the food law authorizes the leq
uistlonlng of ginin in tho national
emergency and hav been asked to bo
diligent In their investigation of cases
of alleged hotrding Thev will for
ward the evidence obtained to Wash
ington, where steps will be taken as
the Individual cases warrant
Wheut for the Allies becomes more
Imperative us the season progresses,
because of tho danger of loss In
shipping corn or potatoes utter April
ALIEN PROPERTY SFE
FROM TTN1ITST SEIZURE
1 KUiM LTObSi nniiUKL.
Mitchell Palmer Issues Statement
Rcgatding Exercise of Powers
of Sale
Umihlneloii, March 2S. A Mitchell
Palmer, alien propel ty custodian hav
declared in a statement that powers of
salo granttd to him In an amendment
to the urgent deficiency bill will be ex
ercised only In cases where, In the pub
lic Interest, he deems It necetsary to dl-
' vorco Geiman capital from Ameilcan
Industry, again assuring the ordinary
German subject that his properly is m i
no danger,
"Duo notice villi he given bv public i
advertisement of the time and place I
of salo and full description of properties
to be sold," said Mr. Palmer "Sales will
b made only to Ameilcan citizens who ,
satisfy tho alien property custodian that
they represent American capital exclu
sivity and that they do not proposo to '
purchase for the benefit, either present
or prospective, of the enemy. '
"There mav bo cases wheru tho nubile I
Interest may require sales by some other ,
method than by public auction Kach of
k.i.Ii .in . au , III Im ..ruLn.A . n ,1,. '
tUCll lnnvn ,t, .' inirtNi. iu ,1,1,
President for his determination and each
case will be Cunsidered upon Its onn
facts."
'HERE'S TO DEAR. OLD
wnw on short
X-' . 1 - A.. - A A
1. When tho lieilod nf irermln.itlnn
bets In.
IT .. Ar.,... it ,. .,. . ... .
I wn' 800.000 tons behind In lis Program
j of cereal export. Much of tho pro.
gram was to have been corn, but tho
1 Jrf'1? '" .V,'11' .t'lsnor,n,lon
oemjecl shipment so that wheat, which
e.irnel. In tho Hlr ,,, ' '
priority, had to bo neiit ubioad to
( uvert famine,
i As only wheat ntul barlev cin hn
shipped utter Amll 1 tlm '.i'.n ..
being asked to cut Its consumntlnn nt
I wheat to CO per cent of norm il ntul
eVeii that Facililce baielv will vtV.Jo ,
..supplies to meet demand unless every
'bushel held on fat ins nud In ware-
houses Is put on the matket.
ino .unicu i report of the Depatt-
. e A,., l,.,,n,.-.. ..i. .jV.r;''
Jh. ,? -'"" vuiii,uuUiU00l
;nA ...,.', , .' 'arms and
oy.uuo.uou uuneis in cevators. ri..q
ha S 7; ,taS l?"!PT:" " 'mP.Isoned In Xecht.
mills have dwindled fiom 8,000 000
bushels to 2,000.000 bushels a week.
The only lequlsltlonlng ordered so
iur na. i.-imi in vno
Casn nf
brotheis of German nurestrv, living In
New Mexico, who lefused all offers for
wheat which thev had raised umi im,i
'bought. No distinction was mado by
the administrate,, etWPen tho grain
ialed by the two men and that pur-
chased, una stored bv thein.
r
Important
Easter News!
c
MEN'S and young men's new
Easter Suits to the num
ber of one thousand two hundred
have just been received into our
stocks from
A New York Maker of
Fashionable Men's Clothing
They are the finest examples
of the tailors' and designers' arts
we have purchased in many days.
How we came by them is an
interesting story, but too long tb
' print here.
Suffice to say each Suit is a $30 or $35
quality, but we will sell them without
reserving one at
$22.50
For Easter Sunday Wear (
William H. Wanamaker'
1217-19 Chestnut Street
We Need
Your Help!
To Complete
$150,000
ft
For the
Philadelphia School for Chrittiaii Workers
,n
, , - ' Church - i,.- '
i."liWffi,..U-Mfi'..V
From The Palnrt ShowCLondon?
TROTSKY.!''
A. L. BENSON, SOCIALIST,
FOR WAR AND WILSON
will Fight All Opposed to U.
s., Former Presidential
Candidate Declares
VonLrr. V, V March 28 '-Allan I..
Kenson, Socialist candidate for President
In 101C, stands' solidly behind President
Wilson In a mass f'ght for democracy.
He also strongly favors a large Amer
ican expeditionary force In Fiance and
will n Id hi the defeat of any Socialist
candidate for any ottlce who Is opposed
to tho I'nltcd States plajlng an Impor
tant pait hi the war against German Im
perialism. I "According to the press.'
i-ald Ilenson
Is making
touay, -victor It uerger
speeches In Wisconsin in his campaign
for the Fnlted States donate in which
he demands? the Immediate withdrawal
of the American army from lhnopc. If
"?."" ""r '. " '"-""I ""I'o "" "e
mis ho true.
t ..'..n..i.. , .,.. ,. .
will he defeated Tho Socialists of He!
gluu, n
ronco and Fngland would. I ami
sine,
oppose such a move, iih 1 believe
I bellevo thertl Is less lirolltefrlnir
under I'resldent Wilson than there was i
under Lincoln, and I also believe that
Wilson deteets tho financial scoundrels
of tho present day no less than did '
Lincoln in his day. Ceitainly the Is-t
sues that are balancing In tho battle- '
scales of Kuiopo are far more mo- i
mentous than those with which Lin
coln was called upon to deal, and we
cannot falter.
the Appeal for
BY SATURDAY
MARCH 30TH
Committee Shouldn't Listen to
Whitewashing in Probe,
' Says Nelson
Washington, March 28.
Senator Knulo Xllson today protested
ngulnst the defense of tho Hog Island
project which tho American Interna
tional Corporation Is presenting, lleforc
tho Henato Coninurco Committee, In
vestigating tho alleged extravagance at
'Hog Island, Senator Nelson said:
"I don't rco why we" should sit hero
to hear this whitewashing eIdence."
Ho referred to tho testimony which
the Hog laland contractors hao been
producing.
Kenator Vardaman. of Mississippi,
broke In: "I don't think you can ssy
whitewashing. It sceins to mo they have
used n cry high grade of paint."
Senator Nelson Introduced hito the
record an editorial from a Philadelphia
paper which he declared Insinuated that
tho SerQito Commerce Committee hau
been "muck-raking." i
"I want to protest against any In
sinuations that this committee has been
muck-raking," he said. Ho also added
that tho letter had como to him aB an
anonymous communication, but added
that It came on the stationary of a high
priced Philadelphia hotel where he
believes some of tho Hog Island olllclals
arc stopping.
LAUNDRY STRIKERS RIOT
1 IN KANSAS CITY, MO.
Four Men mid Two Women Injured
and Martial Law Threatened
by Police Commissioner
Kalians Clly, Mo., March 28. Adju
tant General Harvey C. Clark was ex
pected to arrive hero today and take
' charge of the situation, following u night
i nf rioting by strikers and sympathizers.
four men nnrt two women were Injured,
I one man perhaps fatully. nnd half a
noicn mimury piams una restaurants
weio wrecked.
A mob led by two women and n boy
canjlng a largo Fulled states flag
hurled bricks through laundry and les
taurant windows. JJundles taken from
laundry wagons were burned. Many sa
loons, barber shops nnd manufacturing
Plants were closed today as n resutt of
Hie general strike. With homo guard
Infantry nnd mnchlne-gun companies
held in reseivo after dlspeislng the Hot
els last nlcllt. Pollen C'onimlftslfinpf .Inhn
i Hanson threatened martial law If Uotlnir
I is renewed. I
jHiior lenuers louav said thn 10,000
slrlkeis will bo Incre.meil in lr.nnn n-
SwKSryS "'"h"
BELLAK
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A TRUCK, for every purpose. To Ml truck users Jiereabout present and pr'J
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The makers are solid, substantial concerns,
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Full information at our Salea
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9
ft'TPARTT TTTV lMTr.T'r.lJ c nmn ,ixr
IhL--r"
r'rLaaat'S? ' vi. n v ,,. ?
Paul C. Little, of Westminster,
Md Found With His
Revolver Nearby
llniiip MeClellmi, Aln., March 28.
Hverj thing Indicates that Private Paul
L. Little, of Company t of the 11-th
Machine-Gun Ilattallon, whose home was
at Westminster, Md , committed suicide
)e3terday. Ho was found under one
f the warehouses with a bullet through
his left-eye and his nutomatlo revolver
of .G-callber beside him. He died ten
minute later In tho base hospital. Little
was on guard duty at tho time. Another
member of the company ntard tho shot,
amr going In the direction from which
the report came found Llttlo dying. He
was a son of George Little.
Ten lieutenants of tho medical corps
have been made captains. Seven of them
are from Maryland and tnreo from Vir
ginia. Tho Maryland men ale Frank 13.
Anderson, 113th Ambulance Company;
William H. Daniels, 113th Field Hos.
pttal: William T. May, 113th Field Hos
pital: Daniel f Hutton, 116th Infantry;
John McGulre. 112th Muchlnc-Gun Bat
talion; Louis Dlener, Sanitary Squad
No. 2; Dwlght Mohr, llllh Ambulance
Company,
Richard T. Hemsley, of Baltimore, the
splnal-menlngltis victim from Troop A.
military corps, was reported this morn
ing to bo lomovrhat Improved.
Plans Laid by LudcndorfT
London March 28. aoneral von
Ludendorff mado thn plans for the
German offensive, German war cor
respondents agree. The general on Fri
day was prescit at the scene of action
In order personally to control tho at
tacks. German great hcadquaiters, the cor-
WHY IS A A I
Steinwa
THE BEST PIANO ?
THE BEST PIANO
mi ! ill
1Ua tueJi nvM-n kin nj-t 4-
xiie iiiuisputituie jyruux
is found in the old pianos bearing the Steinwas
rtlTriP
liciiic
They are never
i stitution" is never broken down. After twenty!
ui uiui-v eais use, uie
are easily replaced,
and tuning restore
of
sremwAV
pianola una
DUO ART PIANOS
STEALING PIANO
STeflLINC
PLOVER-PIANO
EOISON
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PHONOGRAPH
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Wr
ittlu5V Philadelphia representatives of Steinway & Soni ,;
STETSON & G
M'l
I I E ETT. "
for Every
The Idea Back of a New and Better
Truck Service to Help ih This Haulage Crisis
From -ton to 7-ton Capacity
Jf rices From $985 to $5000
The Old Reliable
In Initial cost, upkeep, main
tenance nnd repair Old Kelt,
able truck hare net uniur
pacd record.. Many are
iincU by leadlnc truck nn-nera
In the 3Ilddl Weit, We In
fruduce Old nellable for the
lint time .Jo h. DilladelphU
dl.lrlct. IV, to 7 tona capnclly.
Our service
will be open dov
trucks and repajrs. In this respect our servieefo
cannot be excelled In Philadelphia. Competent.!
methanlcg familiar with tho trucks we offer .will o
CALL, WRITE OR PHONE FOR INFORMATION
OfflrA In ih npilv.iA rv..- n..iu:--
6063) for complete demoBsTration of such "trucK scVric..'ii r
m.mvu W get.
vtaiers wjamea Everywhere
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We b.llev. In con.'
erratlve lUtemenU
try to keep from blow
Ing our own horn. V.t
hero's a low iho of
such real $9 y.lut,
priced here at $6, thai
oven a tho. horn
would blow about III
Cordovan, R u 1 1 .
Calf, Gunmetnl .'
1
back you muit bring it ?
it it doasn't give you (
100 per cent, ieryice.
1336 South Pcnn SquafVP
(lnnr.ll. cn ...",'N
"'""t orner Ml, .nd Ju't
..,'.eL-J" t. "d ttrSMT I
... .rrt! mores opfn l!tenl.r
THE
rt j Mnl
v-4- Lj 4- si A - -.- --.? 'if!
ux otemway superiorly
worn out-
very iew worn partsi
and a little regulation"!
their original condition!
musical and mechanical!
penecnon. nere lies tffe
real reason for the eagel
desire of dealers to e:
change a new but inferifi
piano for an old SteinwayJ
Uprights m 'mahogan;
?550; grands, $825. Ti:
nnvmonta -i-P rlocirorl
j.v.u, " uvuiivM, N a
. . l
Purpose;
The Atlas
A llli. Illvwv ,i, in
ped with specially delfnd
uodlca for twry elan ol err-j
ice. .vieclianiealiy uepeoaaowj-s
built by mailer body inakeni
fully niilnn,l n,l rrailv for
Instant delivery with the IrP'Al
or uouy you renuire. iT
poumU capnclly.
ja
$
!
Day and Night Service
branch (333 S. Broad streets
M
and nluht for insoeclion ot.'-
be constantly In attendance to make atljustmeri(if'
and repairs aulcklv and economically Xt a
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