?7 it w a iv.,. :.j- -! . . .-" ; ' - ".t i? rf f , . ' I ?,; r. Tfl, i '. -ik tf J- v.i A.f&Mfr' , , f .J-Si.-,i i - '.. - . -iV, P&il U?jiV? jT T $'" s 'w-S "AH: fyi: T, A : , iH mm j ... i - u - is ('i -.i'WM'." -stnKao; . ' v- "-,"'" V 'I h .c aBwaf5Tt...'.i v v- - , ,".-,' "' "x . V' 5- , iI?;S?f:.! " EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1918 GUN AGAIN IN ACTION OTHER SPECIAL CABLE DISPATCHES FROM THE WAR FRONTS Tr 43 sr.. i. SIANS GIBE KRUPP PRIZE W F.r. -" -i-'- ; L - - ri 1 T 1 lpus urowas ixusii iu Mots Shelled by Dis tance Gun' &.& .is wps rY WITHOUT FEAR & tiS'" b Chase After Petty Thief lends Excitement to Teu- jgton Bombnrilmcnl Ktth . iSX,- fci'a Co6b to Evening Public Ledger jrioif. tilt, bv 'cn Vorfc Times Co. ESUji, Tarls, May 28. Prne renewal or tne uerman oueii f,. this time against the French rwitf was marked for Paris by the gumption of the shelling of the city PfrJUie long-range German gun after KJftpse of a month. The ootnoaru- st.of the Paris district continued ough, the day. The aim was poor the damage light. DfiAs, before, Paris showed no sign rtflght., This statement may seem ' astounding as to require proof. Jewels the evidence of what happened intone, neighborhood, which Is typical L'1V,. l1 Mf ;, t..W.l. ...j . Jne shell explosion seemed so close Bid definitely lo-Mted that crowds egah to run toward the supposed Wce to see the damage. It was a HA goose chase up and down streets e' through alleys, the ever-inrreas- crowa laugning hi me spun 01 flowing the leaders. A butcher boy , a bicycle-propelled pushcart full tsineat' leaves the bicycle to make iter progress through the crowd. FVthlef. steals' the meat cart. The kHtCher' boy yells and starts pursuit. Wita-eUDOn the crowd turns to cnase he .thief till he Is arrested, forgetting nil about the big German gun. gWp' nas me uerman gun oeen suem O'long?' your correspondent asked one fjthe leading French artillery experts (his: morning. 3TT uTrTho reason is ery simple." was the Blji' "but to enable your renders to illie It I must explain the origin and ature of these long-range guns The ot-of the wTiole matter lies In the fact at. (n an ordinary heavy gun only out one-third of the propulsive charge jspovrder has time to explode before yanell leaves tne moutn or me gun. 'remaining two-thirds of the charge Kptodes too late to be of use as a nUlstve force Why? slmnly Because i'tubs of the cun Is too hort to enable Vhole charge to explode and exert e; on tne sneu wnne tne ianer i snr out. it Is obvious tnat ir you l,ljCOlong the tube of th"gun the shell remain longer in tne connneu space tethe explosion of a greater propor- 'ofjtft,e powder can exert force. Con- iuy ine range 01 tne gun win ie (faU'ch greater. The Germans have (irelfi'lnserted specially made tubes, ttyor'iorty feet long, Intoune barrels fi'Dldlxteen-lnch naval guns which afbeert thrown out or service, but b.by thelr-masslve construction can flthe enormous force of tire ipxt. (Jon and prevent the comparatively ht additional tube from bursting. "lAirthe talk we have heard about the nans manuafcturlng these long- kHJMLXUna In dozens Is all nonsense. It sPfe'ctly' well known how manyslx- i-lnch naval guns tne uermans bad tthe, beginning of the war, and the umber discarded since then must inevi- ablybeon very small. A slxteen-lnch un takes three years to mase unaer etmost favorable circumstances, and fresh, one must, of course, be made to ace each thrown out of service. It Bhvloue, therefore, that the Oermans not have more than two or three old if wi? available for conversion Into Uig Jhas:- we have already destroyed (3.in use wnen me uuinuurunient 01 Bttrst started, and no shells had li.on Tarls since then because they jpo'euns ready to Hre on us. Per- I have no doubt that as soon us fciikfrmen get on to the gun which is iC,;vthe bombardment will again be uiiht to an end." m. KjflOEMIC ATTACKS SPAIN fietiBU Show'Teruliar Smploni King i-,zx', Aiiono L.onnned 10 lied liig-S'- . ......., ,. f'J? bnanon, -,i; c,. .v iit.vDin itius r,i- Mnic-! nas spreaa over npain anu ai wat 40 per cent of the opulatlon has Kt.n ''affected bv It. savs a Madrid dls- latch to the Kx press. i.K!rit 'Alfonso has become III and Is etionea to nis neu. it is tearea ne nas BlJn, A victim to It. Sypie aymptoms resemble Influenza, but any persons ainiciea wnn u nuve vHf m tne sirceis in h ni. AiiuiHry Reuvers have been suspended because .the eDldemlc P w ''Sst fc;r a! r. n u- it.. tttiii fq hircrail iuuct uuncver, w 111 $ft' Be Thorough fahlnton. May 28. The Senate ttsry Committee In Its InvejtlRR- iyOt aircraft production will make ry .'effort to avoid duplicating work j hViptpartment of Justice Inquiry. In K9 ot, unanes u. iiugnes, senator as. chairman of the subcommittee li-wll! make the Investigation, an- ed. '-" tr , .. . . . . , " TTTL 1,..!.. .1.. f-.f : oi waies mi tue aiiran . May !J. The Prince of Wales ;tbe Vatican yesterday afternoon ad' an Interview lasting half an With the Pope. The Prince was js txe lett tne Vatican. WINS 20TH AIR FIGHT Guynemer's Patlner Wins Triumph. Noted Austrian Aviator Killed PatU, May 28. It Is announced that Captain t'llln has won his twentieth aerial victory. The captain was a part ner of the late Captain Guynemer, the famous French ace. Paris, May 28. A dispatch from Berne says that Lieutenant Kiss, reputed to be the leading Austrian aviator, has been killed In an aerial battle. UNA GRANDE VIHORIA DEGLI ALPINI ITALIAN! 11 Ncmico Cede Importanli Posizioni Dopo Dispcrata Lotla A SCENE OFTEN RE-ENACTED IN FRANCE rubllshM and niMrlbutnl Lndrr I'K.R.MIT No. .141 Authorlxpil by th act of Ocloh'r n. Ifl.. on file hi the Poslolflce of Phila delphia. Pa. Uy onlr of the President. A H PUULKSOM. PostmaBter Ueneral. ItiiiiLi !?S r.iHggio. I.e valorose truppe itnllane hanno effettualo con pleno successo un Impiov Mto at tn ceo cbe ha loro permesso ill oc cupare ImportMntlsslme e stratcglche po sizioni sopra alte montague. I-'Italla non soltanto ha potulo mandare un conslderetole corpo di eserclto In aluto degll Alicatl sill fronte occldenlale In Francis, ma nello stcsso tempo che I tedeschl har.no rinnovato la batlaglla contro ie truppe anglo-francesl, gli Itallanl hanno lanclato un'lmpoitante offensla a nord-ovest dl Trento, icino la frontlera Itslo-austriaca. 1assalto delle fonnldablll allure dlmostra ad evidenza II valore dcgll uomini del generale Diaz, se si penl cne ie inaniagne. ora occupate. sono pcrmanentemente coperle dl rwn' in questa staglonc e perclo' i antaggl del dlfensorl erano tremcnrll Nonostante questl ostac lo gll itallanl n.inno occupato la Monunlta' dl Monte Zigolon. II Passo Montlcello. la plccola cltta- dl Presena ed un contrafforte della montagna ad est dl detto passo. 11 slgnlflcato dl questa operazlone non c' Interametite chlaio per I milltarl os-i'r-alorl. ma sembra certo cho gll itallanl non vogliono sregllere questo cttore per una grandc offenslva (ill Alplnl Itallanl In questa vlttoriosa azlone si sono copertl dl novella gloria. Gll ultlml dlspaccl dalla fronte indl cano che II nemlco per ben qiiarantntln ore ha opposto una disperata reslstenza e dopo aer sublto perdlte gral.nie si e' arreso e jjochtssimi i-ono sfuggltl dalle manl degll Itallanl SI confernia che furono fattl prlglo nierl ottocento settanta uomini dl truppa, quattordlcl ufficlall e che gll Itallanl catturarono dodlcl cannonl dl grosso callbro. quattordlcl mortal da trlncea. entlclnque mltragliatrlcl e parecchle centlnala dl fuclll. 11 comunlcato utllclalc pubblicato. leri. dal Mlnlstero della Guerra dice: "I.e truppe Itallane lanriaronn, h-rl. un importable attacco a nord-ovest dl Trento catturando parecchle posizioni sulle montagne. Ksse presera 8t0 prlglonierl. 1 "l& soinmlta' ill Monte f.igolnn. la elttadlna di Prenena. il Passo Monti- eelln, Pd un contrafforte della mont.-igiiH ad est del passo, fuiono strappale al nemlco." I.a vlttoria degll Itallanl e' slata iim- messa dal nemlco. Infatti Vienna leri pubblicava II seguente bollettlno uttl- clale : 'Gll Itallanl leri attaccarono e nostre posizioni a sud del Passo dl Tonale. U'na p'ccola sezlone delle nostre llnee fu re- splnta Indletro. L'n susseguento tentatlvo dl avanzata del ncmico fu frustrato." (liungc notlzla che l'lmperatore Carlo d'Austria ha uftlclalmente annunzlato che In quest'anno non prendera' parte alia processlone del Corpus Chrlstl." la quale, come dl consueto, percorreru' le principal! vie dl Vienna. Kra costume Imperiale degll Ahsburgo da circa un secoio ril prendere parte a oetia processione e la dectslone dellim peratoie Carlo ha prodotto enorme Im presslone In Amtrla-Cngherla perche' vlene a troncare una tradizlone alia quale il popolo daa somma importanza. Si crede che le condlzlonl seinpre piu' allarmantl della citta' ill 'lenna ab hiano Indotto l'lmperatore a non pren dere parte alia processlone. Anche la posslbillta' dl una nuova ri voluzlnne in Russia desta grande ap prenslone nell'lmpera Austro-L'ngaiieo. secondo quanto pubblk-a II "Czas" un glornale dl Cracovia. I.'estrema scarsita' del vleri rende sempre plu' critiche le j condlzlonl del popolo russo ed il gernie della rlvoluzione serpeggia e polra'l scoppisre da un momento aH'altro contro i 1 Bolscevlchl. e sara' plu' terrlbile dl qualslasl altro eveuto russo. i TERRORIZE RUSSIAN CITY ELLLLF Rat?? 4 ift JJet aaaaaaaKEti. nKBaVnKBBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVtM aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaK ? aaE ' tf JbbbbbbbbbbbbbbI 'VA' ll l? V-ib. jM4a9aflaalaaflaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaHa aSBtHgVJHB) -m''Wi W ' PmHaaaaaaaaaK? t IHPPPaaV " I ' xi& Yanl.ee soldier with a oulliful appetite 'tipilemcnt llie arm me peasant women 1 fimmlttee on I unii- inlorniHinxi. ith -otne lilliils ptircliased from t'rcnili GREAT BRITAIN CHARY OF ENTERING SIBERIA Willing to Help, but Docs Not Regard Time as Ripe Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger l.nnilnn. Ma 'IS Tin- 11101 e i'lot-l the nrlt.sli rjoxprn nient e;iniinpp iho project of Allitil in tenentiMi In Siberia tb. U'?fl Im-lincil it 1h to faor it. A month or two iiro of flciula were not indisposed to thp iflt'ii. if Washington uouttl a-afnt ami .Tap.in as ready to worK with her Allien; hut now, in the absence of an plgns emergence of a .ettlcd regime In lluc sla. and the consequent Itnpni-ftlhU.t of proeuring an inltatlon from a represeti tHtUo authority, there Is little to Indtiif the (lovernment to embark on a policy the ri'ult of which no one could foreser. One Hopeful Sign The most hopeful sign In the Hut-plan situation is the resolution recentlv adopted by the t'adet party refusing to make ue of German aid in restoring order. It has always been feared that the industrial and commercial classes. which form the backbone of the Cadets, would, through a desire to sae what they could of their properly from the general wreck, be more willing than other factions to accept the German as lib erators front anarchy, and the fact that they hae foisted the temptation Is re garded here a encoui aging It i un derstnod that it was the Jewish section of the Cadets who insisted on this firm stand, and absolutely refused to com promise with the Germans ('HilflH Not Vet Strmitr At the same time tlcre is no illusion here as to the immediate power of th Cadets. They are far too weak In num bers and have too smalt a following to Influence the situation greatly, and they can only be considered as a nucleus around which sooner or later the forces of order may crystallize The result Is that the HrltKh Goern tnent as yet sees no evident steps it can take to apslst Its Ally It Is carrying on Informal relations with the Bolshevist and transacting necessary business with their representatives u showing tu every way Its willingness to assist, and Is keeping clear from any Interfpiencf with Uussta's internal politics. Kurthei than that for th moment It cannot go. and it N forced by circumstances to adopt an attitude, not unlike that of ('resident Wllon toward Mexico, of watchful waiting. JAMAICA MAY GIVE FLOUR Mcrrluiiits. Overstocked, W011I1I Ship 20,000 Maps lo England Special Cnble lo Kvrninp 1'ithlir Ledger (ftpitwht. HHF, by Srn Tor, rim, t Co. KlnKdnn, .liiiimleu, M.i 1 - Tlif Itilt ish anihaPs-.Kior at Washington recently infnnned the Jamaica tloxei nnii'nt tliat the American authorities hail ilei-lileil tu rurtall JnmalcaV suipl of flour to alioitt 1 J.000 baps per month. It now ileelops that, nwlnjj to irtpnt Importations from llie I'ulteil Stntfh ami t'aniifla. there Is some 1e months' Mip ply nf Hour In the island Merchants are apptnuching the (loernnient with a proposal to whip L'O.nnn hiiss to r.tiRlanil m as to comply with the Aiiiulc.in re-Mricllons ::; 15 U. S. SOLDIERS GET BRITISH WAR CROSS Heroes Risked Lives in Luce Valley Moved Burning Car of Explosives SEES TEUTON TRIUMPH IN RUSSIA DESTROYED Yorwsiorlh Says "Lack of In- lelligcnl Direction" Is Indicated Collation, declared the newspaper, tool the standpoint that Russia could justly endure the loss of Poland, Lithuania and Oourland, hut that the exclusion of Uussla from the Baltic alloRether would create a situation which would surely be followed by an explosion. Hence Livonia and Ksthonla were promised to Russia, although a scratch of the pen could have secured them for tSermany. "The Russian Government," Vorwaerls continues, "has Oeclared Itself prepared to acknowledge the right of self-deler-mlnat'on of nations, which was to be ex pressed In free election, was the evacua tion of the territories In question. But Russia never made any declaration by which she delivered up Ksthonla and Livonia to the German authorities or the hereditary upper class. That is the Bit. nation. The German Government input choose between it's promise and the treaty. "Whatexer the end may he, the road which has been traveled In the east Blnco Brest-Lltosk Is an Indication of a lack of Intelligent direction of our foreign policy, than which no worse could be Imagined. The occurrences In the Ukraine, where, by the way, a va riety of Pan-Russian strivings Is en couraged, complete the plclure of this mad hugger-mugger." In commenting on the situation In the I'kralne. Vorwaerls says: "It Is no wonder that the Ukrainians who expected help from Germany for the maintenance of their national Inde pendence now feel themselves bitterly disappointed. They conceivably Bee In, what is really only a series of groping experiments, the execution of a Machia vellian program. The German "inernment'B policy appears only re cently to have regarded the dismember ment of Russia as Its greatest triumph, but It is now on the way to destroy that supposed tilumph." SOVIET GOVERNMENT OUSTS ANARCHISTS Battles in Moscow Headquar ters Before Some of Groups Surrendered GIItL, II. CONDUCTOKKTTE Mllli the llritUli Army In Iranre, May Kleven Ameiican officers and four' men have been awarded thp Hrllish Military ros MoFt of thoo(IIceiP took ,iart In the defense of the Iaicp Vallev i during the grat (.erman attack m i March, being incorporated In the 1m- 1 I provlsed army of Major (Jencial f'aiev I which held back the Hermans for six j da? after the.v had broken through the ' British line in the region of St Qu ntin (The four privates art cited for heroic ('(induct on the night of Kebtuari 1'J I At great rIM they removed a burning tear of munitions from an ammunition dump and plated it under ;i slanplpc flooding the car and extinguishing the , tlaines. Those cited are Colonel J N Hodges who commanded the American engineers with Major General Carey, Captain Henry C. Galster, lieutenants Daniel lierney, Krank A. Evans, Percy O. R Hamlin. "William A Jacques, Cornelius T MacCarthy, Hoy 11 Mcllenry, John W Sherrick, William Augustus Williams and William K. Williams; F'rlvatrs Thomas U. ArbucUle. Hichat d Pat kin son, Jr. Raymond Uib&oti Rickets and Aithur P. Terrell. Colonel Hodges had previously been decorated w Ith the DifcllnguMied .Serv ice Order lkrait. Diplomat Skip Willi Cah Am-trrdrim, Ma JK - A Berlin dip patch mi h Kiev ne,vpapers report thHt M KovaloVHkl. Minister of Agri culture hi the Vkranian Cabinet which wnj overthrown recentl.v, has absconded w th 5,000 000 rubles Copenhagen, May 28. The Socialist new .-paper Vorwaerls. of Berlin, mercilessly exposes the rvapive course of the (lovernment regard ing the Russian provinces of Livonia and Ksthonla duilng and since the making of pe.ico with Russia, the Ab ject hrlng brought forward by the offl elal announcement which it reports, that the (Invornineut had consented to de liver to M. .loffc. the Russian ambassa dor, a declaration from representatives of Livonia and Ksthonla of the inde pendence of these States, I The newspaper lakes as a text tlif doubts expressed on various sides as to the significance of the Oovernment's de livery of these declarations "from the I Klvonian and lOsthonlan barons.' and points oit that the official announcement I falls to comment on the Government's attitude 1 The Foreign Office, in the period when I the RtcHt-I.ltovk treaty was under nc- l.- 1.1.. T- 01 1 n . 1 i it I rwnir nic 1 i ami 1 upa ijhiki? iicr in CliildrenV Court New York, May '1. The Grand Jury Investigation of conditions Mirroundlng the employment of women as conductor ettes by the R. R T. In Brooklyn took an unusual course yesterday when fourteen-year-old Margaret Minn vmis called to teMlf.v m May fi she applied to the R. R. T. emplovment hurraii for work as a con ductors to. She declared at the time that she was twenty-one nnd swore to the statement. She was then placed on cars of the Smith street and Cnlon street lines and Instructed by a conductor. At the end of the third day her father. Gerhard Minn, learned from her playmates what she vv'as doing and promptly brought her to the Children's Court on a charge of juvenile delinquent The case Is still pending DENIES GERMAN PLOT I ri Ii Prif't. Sinn Teiner. Call" Gov ernment Statement 1'alf.cliooil Dublin, May IR -The folowlnc atate ment Iihh been made hy the llev. Malachl Mnrllranan: "As a priest and a member of the Sinn I-'eln executive committee for the iHit year. 1 clve you my word of honor that the Ooernment nfllclal statement tlnit neRotlatlons have been carried on between the Sinn Keln executive com mittee and Germany l a falsehood and that a Herman Invasion Mas never dis cussed hy the Sinn Keln executive com mittee " Uy ARTHUR RANSOME Special Cable lo Evening rnblic Ledger Copyrioht, tDtt, by .Vfio York Times Ca. Miiti'im, May 28. The Soviet Government has finally cleaned up the anarchist movement In Moscow. A few days ago strotiK Soviet forces appeared 'simultaneously before twenty-six different anarchist head quarters and demanded the surrender of all capons within live minutes. In many cases the anarchists yielded at once, but others offered sttong resistance. Where surrender was ions delayed. It Is re ported the Soviet used four-Inch guns. Ktronp patrols were In the streets, and order was kept by chains of Soviet sol diers. In one blR house, nfter the front had been blown to pieces, the anarchists put up the flg-lit In cellars, and only were dislodged by amo!c bombs. Three hundred arrests were made nnd a num ber of anarchists were killed and wounded. The Soviet forces lost three killed and comparatively a small number of wounded. The next day they went round to vari ous palaces and other buildings from which the anarchists had been .dislodged. Some were badly Hin.ished up. pictures were ruined, there were bullet holes in the walls and statuary lay about on the floors. Whole rooms were packed with valuable things stolen hy the Hooligans, who attached themselves to' anarchist groops. Doubtless counter-revolutionaries are making use of the nnarehlsts. A uumhei of llusslan ofTlcers were arrested with the anarchists Among the weapons captured was a tlennan mnchlne gun of the latest pattern. Thus the Soviet finally has show n Itself capable of up rooting a movement which all previous Governments had not dared to touch. GERMAN LOCKS BOMBED RrilWi Drop Three Tons nf F.xplosi.ve. on Bruges l.nnilnn. May 28. The Admit alty statement last night said: Homhlng operations have been car ried out against Matlakerke and "Ave tuugge, where hombs were observed to fall close to the lock gates of the canal. Nearly three tons also vvero dropped on the Hruges docks Wednes day night. All our machines returned aafely In homq waters numerous flights hy the escort patrol and other anti-submarine duties were carried out. Sub marines were sighted and attacked and enemy mines were located on sev eral occasions. Our seaplanes also carried out long reconnaissances over the North Sea. On May 50 Allied aircraft made n successful homhlng attack on the Aus trian naval base of Cattaro. A direct hit was obtained on barracks occu pied by submarine crews and a Are was seen to hreajc out. AMERICAN "ACE" MISSING Tarls. May 2S. Lieutenant Taut V. Baer, Mobile, Aln.. an aviator. Is posted as missing since May :;, ue mny have been taken prisoner, Lieutenant Baer Is a member of the American flying corpa and formerly' he. longed to the famous 1-afnyottp aquad. ron. He la one of the most brilliant American "ace3." He was cited by the French early this month nfter bringing down his fifth German machine. Just What You Need The Latest Creation in $6 White Buck Pumps 4 LOUIS XV HEELS Special at is I ' For 2 Days, Tuesday and Wednesday .Only There an excel lence of fin ish a cus tom - buill q u a I i t ,7 and ex clusive swaa- gcr to tins new pump that marks it the product of the hiahest charac ter shoe-making shop in America the finest $6 to ST quality through out, but our special price for 2 days is $4. Most shops charge a high price at the beginning of the season to leave room for reductions at the end of season! Not heret We charge a rock-bottom, upstairs economy price from the beginning a price so low that we always can sell more than we can obtain. That's why you should come in today, or to morrow at the latest for this new pump. This Wholesale Price Limited to 2 Days Royal Boot Shop 2 . FOR WOMEN juCm fld Floor Saves?S 1208 &-10 Chestnut St. AVOID DUPLICATION German Airships and Submarines Ap pear at Novorosajfk MoMrnvr, May 28. German airships have appeared over Novorossysk and (Herman submarines have entered the harbor, apparently for the purpose nf terrorizing the city. The transcaucaslau government has refused to'cede the city to Turkey, In accordance with new de mands made hy Turkey in the peace con ference at Batoum, which la now deadlocked. Novorossysk Is 320 miles northwest of Batoum, and these two cities are the most Important ports on the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus. Novorossysk Is the capital of the Black Sea province and has a population of about 17,000. Part of the llusslan Black Sea fleet was reported to. have taken refuge there after the Germans captured, SebaatopOI. y... ON JUNE 1st ALL PRICES ON TEINWAY I PIANOS WILL BE ADVANCED 10 SSr. it prices for; uprights, in mahogany, are $550 upwards: frimds, in mahogany, $825 upwards. , J? LNOWrur stacks are very complete. Liberty I taken in partial payment.; pMUstclpfel repTMCBtetirM of SUUway tt '3V BONW1T TELLER. &XO. 8hec5pedale5hopOrioinaUonb CHESTNUT AT 13 STREET HAVE ARRANGED FOR TOMORROW A Special Sale oj Women's Separate Skirts Summer Wash Skirts 2000 akirts of organdie, gabar dine, linen and pique. Fifty differ ent models to select from. 335 to 13.75 Separate Cloth Skirts at Greatly Reduced Prices A collection of 200 of the sea son's beautiful skirts in stripes, plaids and large checks, pleated and gathered models'pf serge and cashmere. Heretofore up to 19.50. ' ' I BtfandWfaitlock jjj L 1 1 m&WXj mwiw M $r III fflk. I , Eft1 fiiik ti J I ffMkWWY y v .lomeonc todau'HHr . ' tTxasvtHtflMfRssnll la 'III " had one more risitor (hat evening, ron S., a German officer. He came in from the field cold and wet. He passed his hand wearily over his face and covered his eyes with his palm. 'This thing', he began, 'this thing of standing old peasants up against a wall well, it's no business for a gentleman I ' " At last the truth about Helgium is being told in all its stark horror being told by the one man in all the world fitted by experience and talent to tell it to llie world our own Minister to Belgium, Brand Whitlock. Brand Whitlock sends the manuscript of this historic story, first direct to the Slate Department at Washington, and from the State Department it comes to Everybody's, where it is appearing exclusively. It is "The one great piece of literature to Do not miss the June cjome out of the war," says a member of President Wilson's Cabinet. It is an un precedented privilege for Everybody's Maga zine to be able to publish the story of Belgium by our own United States Minister still at his post of duty in stricken Europe. This story will go down through the cen turies. It has information you want an immediate significance that will mean much to you. Every word will electrify you. M rf I I yYt)OCL'V Here are some of the other exceptional things in the June number Tarn o'tha Scoots German War Ciphers 1 of stories by Edisr Willsra RiDosed bv MelvUio DivLuen Poi i ASfi,'"1 V "orles by Edisr Willsra hum dkrln, tender, gorgeously mot thrilling tales of an slrmsn's prowess ever put In print, , The Itullng l-ove A love-story told from absolutely a new angle. In which father and lover pit their brains against. each otbfsv ' Making seaworthy Bailors on Dryeit Land An entertaining description, of the training ba' for bluejackets, whore Commander Warren S, Terhune U turn log out everything, from an aero pilot to a shin's cook, for our greatly enlarged , .The Iluchess of slona A brilliant serial romance of the days' when knighthood was In the flower or its roegmtlcence. fins new novel Is by Krnst Goodwin, an BnglUb writer, who bu 1Hmt UD f" that bis work la cam. paratlvely new to Americans. .. .. 'plPruli, and Guns By Harold Titus. Another vivid word picture of how we are getting into the war. The Autocrat A story of stark realism, through which flashes a vela of unexpected teodornoss. RlDOSOd bv Melville DevLuon Post. An amatlng revelation of what the Ger man mind Is capable of and how our Government has protected us. The White Are Henry Kltchell Webiter master of words and emotions never has done a finer, more powerful piece of work than this hU latest sertsl. .W Can if They Can By Mr, Howard Wheeler, editor of rrteoe'v , who has Just returned from the front. A tonic picture of the mn on the fighting lines, and of the splendid spirit of the women of England who are keeping high their hearts at home as Inspiration for every one over here. Patriotism and the Flow.tall .Talbot Mundy. whose fighting stories have made him famous, here Issues a call for recruits la a field hitherto strange to Ms pen, A Confession Under DlfflculUes . A wonderful little bit of realism, which preserves the spirit or true ralth with none of the outward formef orthodox religion. After tho War T A new department by and for Etvv tmtti readers as opportunity to clarify vvmmi ftuu yrout ugw utwbeaoa m u pass. Recently used in Minnesota v Junq JZv ery body's to 8.75 :iFvf ij , ';, Reduced JBxvw&Jfy JWWyiljt DawM&jjprtia ;.'N9w &&QrW4 T rwfeJisw H .' if
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers