',.. '7 --r -v" '1", W CRISES VIVIDLY DESCRIBED BY EXCLUSIVE CABLES FROM WAR THEATRES IN FRANCE DESTROY i' IN AIR rmy Blinded by i, Who Bet on Achievements rNS SIX IN A DAY reaks RecordAvia- ant Cbaput's Heroic ath in Clouds 1r tVALTER DURANTY Ha to Evening Public Ledger i'iHt. bv Stw York Times Co, m French Arrnlea. May 13. run aviator naa given c .'. nut effentlvea In the Fdurlng certain moments of offensive it is impossiuic ..r 4tv Vmvn hanDened." he chief of staff of one of j. inuoli vhn nlftved n fpart in repelling the enemy 6your correapunucm. u. c. n a mtil!nn whV the nan filled to lmnart this nation, he answered: 'those few ot tnem who lines never returned to t fiviiitAhA nermann Fcarry out their nmbltlous uii.t. nn hiir ulr force by Ejn the. six weeks that pre- ononilve." xnnitlnnn are repeated BCe more Germans are gath- m for a mighty Biroae, iwiu aiii aintven nre taking 611 of the'boche fliers. Your ent revisited the airuome oi Stork group, me nrsi i inhirh the officer In com- tiu1 ttia were: Imerlcar.s have got another M afternoon." "and Baylies had shot down L..kln1o ... Mnnldldler all Slier. I met the victorious vino group uuui uuiii v... ater. Alter a momms, i .w M.ttnfl. Viv Imv rlnud.s. iriett the airdrome with a (mrade at the first possible Mm limfiliann n Knnck had i he would get a bochc before I also would get more wan nt the day. Attack! Eight German i. the haze. Parsons lost touch J. and, sighting elgnt enemy high over the lines about ding that the enemy maintain- altlurf li rflvd Alld !a. hostile biplane to the right. tig toward It. he saw anotner ftiln 4art fni-urarrl to Attack. I' did not know It, that was lbrlef exchange of shots, the tared to sideslip ncaaiong ior ads. then recovered himself on . keel, rarsons seized the op- fand plunged straight at the movements aaatn Decaine who seemed seriously ln- l American gae him a volley tnge. That enaea tne Dame. nerlcans had the satisfaction lie German plane crash to earth stance behind the German .v fl-Kad got 'him when he went Bind,"" said Baylies, wnose lory this Is. were the words out of his en the roar of an airplane e overhead drowned the con- tTho sound was the curiously BT drum, drum, drum, drum, pilots In the tent It was an ble signal. , a,ns another boche," eald Far- enever one of our men has (,'enemy he files around the tanoinr, culling ore me gas Blon. Perhaps It Is Fonck. I've beaten him to It and won Fonck, sure enough, but the Urn, for the "aco of aces' had three enemy planes In one r, from 3 o'clock to 4. m wg sunencang were sum lithe' other end of the field to Mlnema photographs, "to be aerlca. ' as the commander ck",rcounted thestory of Rent.. re" three of them together Ht about 6000 feet, between Mallly-Falneval," he said. ding my patrol, and went the nearest two. It was .for words. The first one r five shots. The other an. but It was teo late. I i' volley Into tho exposed rear u, ana ne, too, went down. U." . ought to have been 'enough ut In one of his patrol. ht have given us a chance at r. added one of his comrades. fc? uld have kent In closer ick replied, and continued to i some way behind me. and ' the boche would get away. gnt at mm ana Drought him three miles farther east." ftrue," added a comrade. at them like a flash of i quickly no one else fan : mm. Ana you ought to ow he swunr around on the an. The Diane soun over rly, he turned so fast; and ; Must have been killed before at hit hlra." ftnd 'Parsons re-entered at :.- ana i aner conrratulatlnr red they were not yet er were goinr out aga n F'clock. Hit at tvt Gees Weather aldFonck. "One dan't m lia.q; iiiia, Biicr so mucn 11 tot we chance of beating tne. group commander !Hituto' gnfthree more reams-, lust to make a ', the words were nwmes ot cabling I -matt notiflcatlon at j".' actually; did iMis.uenaMi on nw yarferiiiaa never be- klatory T French JrtoiiMjr rivalry taat i aneawac eaeaariHM ryoi fleers Is particularly attractlxe. It might be defined as half v. ay between the trainer of a college football team and that of an elder brother. Disci pline never surfers, hut superior and uubalterns talk together as friends, discussing past combats and planning new teamwork tactics for the future. I had lurther proof of this yesterday morning when I lulled another battle plane group, hardly less famous than the Storks, of which poor Chaput, one of tho best, was patrol leader. The major In charge, who Is the mot dis tinguished air commander In the French army, had tears In his eyes as ho told the story of the young ace's last light. .Lieutenant Chsput'n Death "Chanut went out with a patrol of four others on Monday evening," he said. ".Vcar Montdldler they met six German, nnd attacked Immediately, al though the enemy had a big altitude In advantage. The boys climbed with out trouble, and the battle was raging when six more Germans plunged down upon them from an even greater height. ' Chaput had already downed' one boche In flames. He refused to abandon the struggle, which soon became more equal on the arrival of six other French filers from another group. Chaput ac counted for another German before being wounded, and might now bo lllng had he not been patrol leader. Herythlng leads me to suppose that the bullets which pierced his left thigh and cut an artery might not have been fatal had he planed down Immediately to the French lines, only two minutes away, and got prompt medical aid. But It Is traditional that the patrol leader guides the combat to the end. "Another of our leaders. Captain de La Frecollere, found his mlttrallleuse had jammed In the midst of a similar big scale battle. The fighting was so hot that one of our pilots actually rammed a boche and both crashed together. Fre collere, unable to defend himself, had his wrist smashed by n bullet, but still continued to direct the fight until the sunivlng enemies fled. "That was on April SI, In Monday's light Chaput followed his example, lie was seen circling round without firing. as If hurt, then, suddenly realizing his strength was falling, he swooped down In a long volplane toward the French lines. He had Just enough force to make a successful landing, but It was too late. As brancardlers, who had run up Imme. dlately. lifted him from his seat, he fainted from loss of blood, with which the cockpit of his avion was flooded. He died as they were carrying him to a nearby dressing station, where his life might have been saved had he not re fused to quit the post of duty. "It Is a very great loss to French aviation, and even a greater to all of us who knew him." WARNS FOCH'S ORDERS MUST BE SUPREME Derby Says Bcauvais Pact Puts All Armies Absolutely Under One Commander GEN. PERSHING GREETS OUR NURSES ja.vs. cz.-iijti. r ' J.w ' . l v rrlllllllll'rairWflrrallllllllBB I Hit jBHUHi i aBBBIwf? & aBBaHalBBBBBBBBBBi aaalaHXnii'' i' '!HV,rV ' PRAISE BY BRYCE F0RLICHN0WSKY Viscount Declares He Is Good Witness for truth of History TWO BERLIN CAMPAIGNS One Military, in the Field, Other to Mislcud People by Scries of Lies (c) (.'ommlttfe on Public Information. General PerMiliiR i ilinun licre talking to an Anieriran lady, who is the matron of a IJ. S. liase hospital in Franrr. The work ilone hy Amcri can women for the Hcd Cro' in France is increasing rapiilly GERMAN GUNS WANTONLY SHELL TRAPPIST MONASTERY NEAR YPRES Destroy Shrine of Peace Which Monks Had but Recently Left. Used as Observation Point Is Excuse for Bombardment By CHARLES H. GRASTY Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Covurtoht. Dtt, 61 Jveio Vorfc Tlmra Co. rarli. May 13. Lord Derby's speech was aimed at what Is universally regarded as the bullseye of the present situation the maintenance of unity of command on an efficient working basis. With the Ger mans preparing another attack similar to that of March 21, General Foch bears the greatest weight of responsibility that any one man ever had, and the highest duty of every Allied Government Is to hold up his hands. An authority, commanding worldwide respect and closely In touch with the military situation, gives this statement: "General Foch has been selected by the Governments of France and Great Britain and the United States as gen-eral-ln-chlef, directing all the strateslc movements of the French. British and American armies on the Franco-British front. He has been charged by these three Governments with complete and undivided and IndUlsible responsibility for success or failure on the western front. Beapontlbllltj- IndUlilbte 'All 'three Goernment concerned have, In effect, solemnly pledged them selves to place at the disposition of General 'Foch those elements of their military forces which hs desires, 'and at the times and places wnere ne nesires to have them. His responsibility Is absolutely indivisible except by rescind ing the convention or Beauvais. "When he asks one of these Govern ments to give him such and such part of Its military forces, in order to en able him to carry out his plans and to bear the responsibility with which he Is charged, If that Government says. 'No, your plan conflicts with some plan of our own and you must subordinate your plan to' ours, then that Government attempts to share General Foch's responsibility. This It cannot do. Aralntt Former System "There Is no provision In the conven tlon of Beauvals for the responsibility being placed anywhere except with Gen eral Foch. Each Government Is In honor bound to do its beet to help him carry this responsibility. This re sponsibility can be divided only by rescinding the convention of Beauvals: by a revision to the former order of things, which brought us so nearly to great disaster ; by dividing the responsl blllty, as it was before, among three separate and Independent nations, who wage three separate and Independent wars and who vainly attempt to flght the common enemy by three separate and independent armies under three separate and Independent commanders- in-chief. "From such a reversion to the former order of things, God protect us!" Crest Forest Firs in Weitpbalia Amsterdam, May 1 J. Fifteen thous and acres of forest land near OehtruD. Westphalia, has been swept by fire, ac cording to a dispatch from Essen. M a. Ml ffct Y. M. C. A. SCHOOL OF AIRPLANE CONSTRUCTION ' ArriWKWI.CLASSES By G. II, Special Cable to Ei CorvrlaM. lots, bj With the Vrencli Armies In l'lanilrrn. May 13. I happened to bo nt the front of Cats Mountain Thursday afternoon German eight-inch guns were pounding the summit nnd particularly tho Trap plst Monastery, which they presuma bly took for one of the Frem-h ob servation posts. This modern abbey It Is less than a century old was a vast structure, spreading oer the cn-st ot the hill, nnd the white-robed fathers, whose rule Is silence, were only re cently persuaded to leave It. The mount Is of tho ime height as its nelghhor. Mount I'assel, about 520 feet, and theso two are the highest points of the chain that covers the Vprcs salient, flanks the way to Haze- brouck and Stomer, and overlooks the plain for many miles around. The front Is about three miles away to the south. All around us the country threw back hot sunshine In a riot of greenery. Suddenly the rich calm was lent by n terrific? explosion In the north wing of the monastery, and n brown cloud of smoke, earth and debris burst up ward to the sky. Thereafter bhell fol lowed shell In rapid succession, and with the accuracy that was posslblo to a point to well mapped Soon two delicate spires had fallen, the roofs wete In flame and bioken walls gaped to the blue heavens. An other shrine of peace had gone. There was nothing new in this spec tacle, nnd nothing of the Ic.ibt mili tary Importance, for the crests of the hills three miles belr.d the lines nre not occupied and no bombardment can prevent this or another hill from be ing used as an observatory, but I could not help thinking again of the horrible character of the struggle which cannot even spare a Christlnn hermitage Kverythlng points to the Imminence of a fresh enemy offensive and to Its chief pressure falling In the north Tho Vprcs salient must Indeed be a strong tempta tion. Amid the doubts and difficulties that are cloudlnc tho German horizon, its capture would bo magnified Into n first-class victory, even If It led to a no more substantial srquel I know of the Intentions of the Allied PERRIS citing Public Ledger .Vfiu Vorfc rimes Co. 'command in this regard, but every sol dier knows that Ypres was defended for three and a half vears rather for moral than purely military reasons. The Allies .have proved their loyalty In holding this lUlned corner of Belgium. Now that a I climax of the war has come, only bed rock military consideration can prevail. If men are spent to hold Ypres It will bo 'for hard reasons and not for nny nentl- ment. L'p to now. despite Its success, the Hlndenburg offensive has shown a fall ing scale of power. The first stage, he. ginning March 21, covered a front of nbout fifty miles nnd attained a depth of mriy itnifH witnmit reaching its ob jectives The second stage, commencing April 3, between the In and the I,a Bassec Canal, had half of Its width and only a third of Its depth The resultant attack on the Flanders hills, after a lone pause, yielded on April 25 a single valu able position. Mount Kenimel, and an ad. vance of about three miles on a frontage of twelve miles. Now the enemy has been everywhere anested The Allies have unified their command and their forces, and very little possibility of sur prise seems to remain. MRS. G. SELFRIDGE DIES I I Wife of American Who KttablUhcd l"ir$t Department Store in England London, May 13. Mrs. Gordon Sel , fridge, wife of the American who es ( tabllshed the first department store In England, died today of pneumonia. Mrs. Seffrldge was Miss Hose Buck i Ingham, of Chicago, and was married to Kelfrldge in 1800 They had ono son and three daughters. . ,!r'Slfr'J',Rn waR ,,or" I" nipon. Wis. In isbj. He whs a member of the firm of Marshall Field and Companv from 1890 to Iim.1. when he utlied fiom business. In ISO!), however, ho entered business nualn ns Selfrlilce nnrt i-m. ipany, establishing a lompletelv- equipped 1 department store In London Despite ,nr Hciit-int iFiuiuifi-y mat no would fall his store now employs' 41100 persons and Is one of the landmarks of the city. By VISCOUNT BRYCE Corvrlelil, IDlt. t"i Xtu York Ttmes Co. London, May 13. The secret memorandum which Trlnce Mchnowsky wrote as a record and vindication of his conduct while German Ambassador In England Is the most Im portant single dcument which has come before the world since the first days of tho war. It was not meant to become known during the war. perhaps not within his own lifetime. it wan written, not to Justify England hut to criticize the policy which tied Germany to Austria, and was published without and Indeed against Its authors will. It mav have been composed partly to relieve the writer's own feelings, an Impulse which those will unaerstann who aro prevented hy considerations or public duty from vindicating their con duct t.i the world. It may aio u" been due to a sense, natural to men who have borne a part In great events, that they owe It to posterity to con tribute what they can to the truth of history. Anyhow It has exposed him to danger and the persecution of the German Gov ernment, and this persecution is evidence ot the Importance they attach to It as a condemnation of their conduct. The truth of Its contents has been confirmed, If Indeed It needed confirmation, by the itatements of Herr von Jagow, late Ger man Secretary of State for Foreign Af fairs, and of Herr Muhlon, one of thn Krupp directors. A Man of Clear Vision Trlnco Llchnovvsky appears In this document an a man of clear vision and cool Judgment, an acute observer of social a well as political phenomena, a good witness both to what he noted dur ing his residence here and to what he knew of the action of his own Govern ment. And now let us see what he re cords. When the war began In August. 1914, the German Government entered on two campaigns, which It has ever since proa ecuted with equal energy and an equal disregard of honor and humanity. One of these was the campaign by arms. It suddetny Invaded Belgium, a peaceful neutral country, whose neutrality It was pledged to respect and which It has treated with the utmost cruelty, murder ing or reducing to the slavery of forced labor Its civilian and iioncomnatnnt in habitants. It has similarly enslaved the Inhabitants of I'oland and has enrour- nged Its Turkish allies to massacre their Innocent Armenian subjects. The other campaign was one of false hood, conducted by speeches and through the press, and Intended to mislead pub lic opinion It was an effort to dectlvo both Its own people and the neutral na tions by mendacious misrepresentations of the German alms, purposes and con duct, and by equally false descriptions cf the alms, purposes and conduct of Germany's antagonists, nnd especially of the British Government and British peo. pie. Kffert of German Mrs at Home Grotesque as all these Inventions were, they were repeated with such audacity as to produce some effect In neutral countries, but their chief and more last ing Influence was on the German people. A large part of the German press, In spired and controlled by the German Government, had for some time past been holding up England ns the persistent foe of Germany. It now redoubled Its false hoods, representing Sir Edward Grey as having plotted to bring about the war and as having urged Itussia to refuse a peaceful solution, and it added the equally groundless charge that England had secretly planned with Belgium to at tack Germany through Belgian territory. These fables, repeated Incessantly by Getman politicians as well as by the newspapers, found ready credence with the German people. Now what was the trulh7 The Brit ish people bore no hatred whatever to ward the German people. King Edward VII meant no harm to Germany when ho showed his liking for the French, neither did his ministers when they took sleps to removo the differences that had been causing trouble between ourselves and France, and again when they came to a friendly understand ing with nussln. These arrangements were made In the Interests of European peace nnd goodwill, not In order to damage Germany. British merchants and manufacturers never dreamed of fighting Germany to get rid of her commercial competition. British men of science and learning adopted the Immense contributions Ger rniny had been making to the progress of knowledge, nnd they had manv per sonal friends In Germany. British statesmen, did not desire to add to Brit ish possessions abroad, fcetlng that we had already all we needed nnd that the greatest Interest of the British em pire was universal peace. All this every Englishman knows. I repent It only because It has now re ceived not only confirmation, but also valuable fur'her proof In tho I.lrh novvskv memorandum, proof unsolicit ed and uncontemplated, and, moreover, unimpeachable because It comes from one who bore a leading part In what It records, and who never meant to let It become known. First, the memorandum bears wit ness to the pacific spirit of the British people. Secondly, the memorandum shows tha( the Httllude of the British Gov ernment and Sir Edward Groy, then For ernment of Sid Edward Grey, then For eign Minister, was entirely pacific. Britain Made Coneelons Thirdly, still weightier evidence of the good will of the British Government Is supplied by an account given of the concessions made to the German wishes In Asia and Africa. In pursuance of this policy the British Government went a long way to meet the German wishes In respect to the Bagdad railway It would take too long to follow out In this article the constant efforts of the British Government during the fate ful davs hefore the outbreak of the war to avoid the conflict by means of Sir Edward Orey's repeated plans of mediation and adjustment. The memo randum shows how earnestly he la bored for peace at Berlin, at St, Peters burg, at lenna, and how all his at tempts were baffled by the settled pur pose of the German Government to force the war. Neither when the war began did Great Britain wish to do more than prevent Germany fiom destrovlng Belgium and mortally wounding France. Sir Edward Grey spoko truly for the nation when, as the memorandum records, he said, "We don't want to crush Germany." What will be the result of these dis closures? How- wll they affect opinion In Germany? There must bo thousands of men who, like Prince Llchnovvsky. are not carried away by national vanity and unbridled ambition, but retain respect for the principles of good faith and humanity, men who desire to know the tiuth nnd will try to make It prevail. Have such men, now that a rent has been made In the veil of falsehood which the German Government has thrown over its subjects, the courage or strength to tell their rulers that they can no longer trust them nor tolerate a system which has disgraced Germany In the eves of the world and brought untold miseries upon her ns well as on the peoples rhe has attacked, or will the change In German spirit and German purposes be brought about by nothing but defeat In the war, defeat which will show that the yoke of military domina tion under which Germany lies prostrate, Is condemned not only by its w Ickedness but by that test which even wickedness must admit to be decisive, the test of failure? GERMAN ARMY NOW 5300,000 Decrease of 700,000 From 1917 and 1,500,000 Fewer Than 1916 1918 RECRUITS 600,000 Enemy's Total Losses in War 3,000.000 American Aid Valuable Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Corurioht, tmt. oy h'no York rimes Co. With thn American Army In l'ance, May 1.1. Authentic reports show the German army today numbers approximately 5,300,000 men, or almost twice the size It was jn Autrust, 1014, and 1,500,000 less than In August 1916. This Is ex clusive ot the Austrian army, which. In the calculations of military experts, Is a check-ofT against the Italian army. Careful calculations have convinced Allied military experts that from her own resources Germany cannot add more than 600,000 men to tho army this year, and against this Is checked an annual German loss of 1,200,000. In calcula tions of military man-power situation the potentialities of German activity In the Ukraine are always a factor. It Is no secret that the Kaiser hopes to place a Ukrainian army on the western front before the end of the war. The military situation as t man power may be summarized by saying mat trance, ungiand and the United States now face a German army of more than 5,000,000 men. Calculations of the strength of the British and French forces show the size of the task confronting America as to raising military man power. Information from Allied sources shows that there are now on the western front from Calais to Belfort 203 German divisions. These divisions average In size is.uoo men. mnkng a total of 3.654.000, This Is 1,200.000 more than the Germans had on the western front one year ago, and of the 1,200.000 Increase, "G per cent came from the Russian front. Tlw remainder represents recruits. Ilumanla Not n Factor The signing of a peace treaty by Ger many and Rumania will not add greutly to German military strength, for it is understood there were only five Germatr divisions on tho Rumanian front. There aro un the eastern front sixteen regular German divisions, three reserve divi sions and twenty-two Eandwehr divi sions, a total of forty-one. These divi sions are the poorest part of the Kaiser's army and only at two-thirds strength, making about 500,000 men. There are In German depots 300.000 soldiers, nnd on line1! of communication 1,000,000 more. There Is one German division in Palestine, hut none in Mesopotamia and none on the Italian front. These forces total about G, 4 63,000. Officers with Germany', allies and other smaller factors would bring the figure to about 5,600,000, For German losses of a permanent nature In the teient Somme offensive a figure of 300,000 nu; be fixed. This leaves a strength oi 5,300,000 as a measure of the military man-power at the Kaiser's hands, When the Kaiser started the war In August, 1914, he had an army cf 2.800. 000 In actual operation. One year later this nrmy had grown to 4,800,000. By August. 1916. tho Gorman nrmy num bered 0, 800,000. In August. 1317, the approximate size of tha German army was 6,000,000. Now It Is about 700.000 fewer than that. The difference be tween the present slzo of the army and that nt the high water In Auiruit, 191C, Is consequently 1,000.000. Ttecrults of the Enemy Since August. 1916, recruits havo been put In at a rate of 600,000 a. year, or 900,000 In all. This Indicates tho Ger man losses slnco August. 1916, were 2,400,000 men. The German army's total loss In the war Is placed at considerably more than 3,000.000. German divisions now havo 9000 In fantry, where they formerly numbered 12.000. The Germans started the Somme offensive with an Infantry superiority ot 300,000 over the French and British forces. Many German divisions have been disrupted .by severe punishment, and indications now aro that the enemy Is repairing the machine before hitting again. He has abundance of man-power to feed the machine as soon as It Is fixed. PEKIN-TOKIO AGREEMENT Chinese Premier May Publish Partial Statement of Demands Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Copurtohti 1311. bv Sew York Tlmts Co. rekln. May 13. In regard to the ne gotlatlons hy China and Japan, It Is understood that the military representa tives have reached an agreement which will be submitted to the Cabinet for ap proval and signature. The Japanese are insistent for Immediate signature. In fluenced by the Germans from the prov. Ince, tho Premier may publish a partial statement of tho demands, Feeling Is running high against the Tremler. The white Government forces have re covered a portion of tho lost territory In the south, but confidence In the Govern ment has not Increased and changes may bf expected at any moment. Teleirrams received from the northern frontier report Boshevlst activity. The trains on the Pokln-Hankow Railway now Include an armored car with mili tary protection against brigands. nniiniiBifM Datriotism Versus Hoarding Some clothiers are urging people to buy as many suits now as they can afford, in order to safeguard themselves against future increases in prices. We don't think this is the right attitude. It's just as unpatriotic to hoard clothing as it is to hoard food or any other necessity which is likely to be scarce; and the man who buys two suits when one will answer is getting more than his rightful share of avail able wool and labor. The kernel of true conservation in pur chasing clothing is t6 buy Clothes of Quality One good suit will wear as long as two 'cheap ones and save for other urgent needs the material and labor which would be consumed in the additional suit. V Quality of fabric and of workmanship are essentials which you should de ,mand in making clothing purchases they are the fundamentals of our buying and selling. Spring Suits, $20 to $55 Spring Overcoats; $20 to $45r HflHNrHUHHHMI l IH IwH 9n ," HylanJ Union Suits Hyland Union Suits combin.i comfort, wear and are reason able as to price. Mann & Dilks 1102 CHESTNUT STREET T nc tan shoul ildn't wag the dog. Your files shouldn't dictate the organization of your entire business. Inves tigation would probably prove this to be the case to a greater extent than you suppose. Files are the heart of a business. All documentary in formation flows through tf-m from every member of the body of the business. If the heart hampers the brain or organizing element of the .oncern, it's a sign that the filing plan is not natural to the business. Many filing plans are arbi trary inventions. They do not t.'plv the unalterable principles ot filing to the individual or ganization. Ambcrg Filing and Indexing is based on the filing laws dis covered by W. A. Amberg and proved by years of application in over 6 1 ,000 concerns. GET AN AMBERG ANALYSIS Amberg Cabinets, wood and Fteel, are standard and tha Indexes lit any make of cabinet Ask about your problem, or write for literature. i uUkw File and -UMJTlJ hdex Co. Pioneers and Originators of Modern Vertical Indexing Wtdener Building EsUbltrhed 1E08. rhon Walnut 4674 J' fi EsvMKMaBBBBBHBBBBBBBBBflBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBl HESu.KaHHiaWHIil.HHH! tlBBBBBBrlBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBF rlrrrlirHfrrrrrrrrHrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrH!r .?..- BBBBBaBBBBv WPj SBBBBBBBi BiiBBBBBBlBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBHPlBBBV' I BBBBBB9T7I-Xs3 tBBBBBBBVi " Ibbbbbbbhbsbb1bnrVbkk!bBsbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbpVnh. issK"; ? s4 i . xV "vt4 Tomorrow Morning YOU Can Buy an American Six in Philadelphia (As O. Kd by Louis Chevrolet) THE American Six is best appreciated when seen cold type cannot ade quately describe to you its beauty, its stUrdiness, its balance, its "road ability." If you are looking about for a new car which will giv.e you pride of own ership along with absolute dependability at low cost, then come' to our new salesrooms before you decide to purchase elsewhere. You will be .cour teously welcomed. t Price $1595, Plainfield, WJ. Penn American Motor Car Co. 'tf ,; t. .S -3-.,.... rl ' IT ' 'IT rr I! ,-W ? fr:fM33 Market Street a syly. M Km j&
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers