Sk ,iM yb i x -a i-' -- ii -tiii J i !--. ......... .iniil i i '. i r i .... .. 1,1 iii.,..,w.,.J.,M.i.i ..,.., n. .. m i MUm li ii ,.lil.....-ii. ! i m . hhi.iiiiIiii i ii " 1iim.iiiJww ii ! ,,,., mt. if u . Tfmfmi WOULD OUTLAW GERMANS FOREVER SPECIAL CABLE DISPATCHES FROM WAR ZbW& !& IN LEAGUE? PARIS VOW in ? ority of Writers Would Treat Germany as an UUICUSI )NDEMN GREY'S PLEA ITALY REPEATS MARNE LESSON Diaz Forces Show Same Re newed Strength That Marked French SHELL-TORN FOREST ON PEAK OF MONTE GAPPA mirs'WsrsrssiKiXSss'finvK-r-fTvv- -"-n-iwtrasT'l .vsrvx2fci&&m "!srr!re7mngluzt& l-Exccnt Pacifists Favor Or- wr ....:. , .... ....... ,nnizaiion ior rroiccuon r?l Airninct Tniitnna rss p 4.,. eial Cable to Evening Public Ledger CovtnrlBtit. Hit. I Xcu lork Times Co fiTU Trl. .lime .'.') iiffrv nftito r.til.1lehar1 In- VUrnunt "COfey, formerly Torclgn Secretary of fOreat Britain, on the necessity for the ficanstjtutlpn ot a league of nations was Jvt received badly by the pre-s nere, wnere tfffiJtho Idea of anj thins In the way of an i4 International organization which will ln- A TI .. .. ii-i.. r...n In rraaciuae uermany or aniiiuuH "cihwii ic ttef snouted hy the Allies, except by a mere jJSfc handful of tho more extreme Socialists $ Not that rrenchmen as a nation have sjfjs. any rooted objections to a society ot na- Ifflji tlons as such. On th contrary there rj,- 5; are no people In tne worm wno are muic Jjwfiinxlous than the French to live In peaco Srvrlth their neiEhbors and give an oppor- &3pt'iv tonlty for the- freo development of art Ik; .'science. tndustrv and Social colut!on of Xftif every nation In closo co-operation with iyi;au others pj?vT !finKihpvarA mnvineed In their bones E& ".that It is imnosslble to regard as am- & .tfclmr lint ahsoluteiv farcical the Idea of l. ftAnftvirina- tn nrniliflA fJemi&nV to t.'jT-v . .. . 1 -..... n 1. Ktif cnier inio a. muiuai arrHntivmciii o mv E-vr. ttronosed society of nattoni Involves Ifef 'JOermany has by her o n acts decHred rr j nerseic an outcast ana panau ninuus By" (nations, the French argue, and must In V"-ine nature ot tnings remain so. S-A I Uaina trilh Ottman) ev-er 1 That a league of nations for mutual ifctii protection against Germany and to crush fcXiWQermany until she Is powerless to do Kgi farther harm for all time Is not onl feasible but eminently desirable in tne interest of all other peoples. evcrv If? . TtL. 1 1...A .. 1nnrrl1K 11 I t V. Germany never, they say "What head of n. State sa s Premier $i Clemenceau's paper, IHomme Libre V Vould ever consent to put his name at the foot of a treaty with that of the $J criminal and lying Hohenzollern'' rtthe loyal President Wilson accenting ilf-from the hand of the Hohenrollern the K-l"'wn wltn which to sign a pact of tho R& reconciliation of their peoples? Never" K.P 4 A napllnmantnn mmmltlAa unci nr. " !! .1......1 -" -. . w PK BICU J5UII1Q l.'lt: IIIUII1111 U,U UUUl'l lllf tf"prr3iaency 01 ion ouursenis 10 tuiisiirt'r RTln nrtnii tlc.n unilpr w Mini n. Bnrletv nr Ph'jitlons might be realized It Is slgnlfl- Hicant that, aitnougn tms committee nn- lkAi4 Jfaa --A4tt. air mntitlio turn omt tronc. -mltted Its report to M Clemcnceau. as i'ljhiliead of the Government, on January 17, l&yVthe report has not jet been laid before gJtM Chamber. Efforts have been made iJiWOre than once by Socialist members to &tjbtaln the publication of the report, but sj4 far, and although "M Clemenceau hlm- tu moae nan a promise on one occa- , the report is still held back HCSo far as can be gathered there is IWwtually no support for the propoal USliere except among: professional pacifists WJ'sIt Is not surprising, therefore, that IwjVltcount Grey's pamphlet Is very freely r-i Handled by tho majority of the news AVlHlwr hr Thf .Tr.lirnal H'n Tlphntv In fr i .-.-, ... -an article which It entitles 'Reveries of ITOfcvCountry Gentleman " dismisses his ar- lBUlliCnUI B .lin 1I111U3S1U1Q 1111U CnilQlSM s'jaeas ot a man wno, it suggests, is vmable to realize the practical things of yabl1c life. &J( Tempn Conilfiirnalor.r '.-iX r The Temns. more moderate is i-nunllv pfo) ifndemnatory of the principle enunciated piysjifcy the British statesman. It savs- rJ"J .- "So lonB as Germany remains w hat fe.5Y1.w1e la sue exi'iuuea nerpeii uy ner own ymci irom any society 01 nations which SJf rtie cannot herself control after the Prus- XjBian manner. 10 try to convince her isjfolrr argument of the necessity, say of, iBivini up tne religion of forco and p..jreunquiEninE tne spirit 01 -sar is NEW LAND OF PROMISE AUSTIN WEST Special Cable .0 nvcnlns Public Idficr Copurlghl, D1S, hi Veie. 1 or. Time 1 Co Milan, June 25. Fragmentary details only have reached hero at present about the Alls, trlan defeat. Preparations for retreat bejond the Plave were discovered by Italian raiders In tho enemy lines In the early hour of Sundiv mornlns Instantly the Italian artillery began a furious bombardment against the passages across the river. At dawn General Dits ordered a series ot infantrj attacks alone; the 1 whole line, and they were pressed vvtth irresistioie energy uy 11 o'clock Italian regiments had smashed the enemy front at Montello, reocctipied the entire ridge and driven the now be wildered foe dow n the slopes. By the water's edge, there and at other spots where tho fleeing troops were massed In waiting to get nrrovs hastily Improvised bridges. Allied avli tlon squadrons. Including tho ploneei American corps, raked and pelted their dense formations incessantly and mer cilessly with a neT hai! till the pis Kigewavs were blocked with deid and wounded and the crimson waters of the Plave were covered thickly with wreckage of war. Interspersed with thousands of bodies After a short but violent bombardment had destroved the town of Nervesa It was recaptured thirlng the afternoon In a brilliant bajonet chirge Besides re covering all the guns lot list week, the Ittllans seized then? a large number of Austrian cannon intict with their muni tion stores Great puhlic rejoicings here greeted to night's announcement of the disorderly disastrous retreit of the Austrian armv across the Plave from the Montello heights light aw a down to the Venetian Gulf Although as 1 remarked in raj Trl dav dispatch a debarlc of the kind would not occasion surprise, o rapid a reali zation was not generallv expected, espe cially in view of the great leactlon It was bound to provoke at this Juncture of the already deeply disturbed Internal conditions of the dual monarchy These glad tidings enhanced bv simultaneous news of the Itillin success on tho i'rench front before Montdldier fltlv usher In tomorrow's s-olcmn annlversarj of the Franco-Italian victories at Sol ferino and San Jlartlno By the renewed strength that has fol lowed swiftly her momentary weak ness. It.il, with her allies, lias taught Austria on the banks of the Plave the same lesson which the Franco-British armies taught Germanv on the banks of the Miric, and the J.itln eagles have Foared to victorv from that Venetian plain which Field Marshal Boroevlc pointed out bo surely to the Imperial le gions as tile new land of promise ITALIANS CAPTURE 45,000 Unofficial Reports Ghc That IS'umber of Prisoners Spfdal Dispatch to Kirnlna rublic Ledger Copyright Ills, bj ew 1 ark Times Co. London, June 25 The Pally Chron icle was informed by the Italian embassy that up to noon Mondav 15,000 Austrlans had been taken prisoners by the Italians in the Piave retreat. But the Italian embassv's Information that 15 ona Austrlans had been captured is as et unconfirmed bv any official Italian dispatch An agenc message from Rome mentions the same figure as the number of prisoners taken, and pos sibly the Italian embassy got its in formation from that source, which ap parent! Is unofficial GERMANS HOLD UP REFUGEES Eetlionians, Fleeing to Russia, Perish Along Frontiers By ARTHUR RANSOME C . tV'' society of free nations. InveterateK ! S',ci,'af Cablc tuning Public Ledger ;jm3 against tne powers or prey. Is a Pircaiuy wmicji iuy uta iuicsuauuea wun C confidence as a normal stage tn cvoiu- 'j.Vtton, but to try to create a league In fj"'shlch would be found alike freemen and1 Wry-y'mttB. victim and executioners, those who ffj'Sjiave suffered and those who have not jiXTivxpiaieu meir crimes, vvouia oe u Diun- i5Tlie pacifist Pais alono pleads for the tjjs eeptance of Viscount Grey's Ideas and s;vgreta that ha and Leon Bourgeois are jt&ie .In tict nlnfa n.rtinl.l 1... T tnJ Jl -M V..W 4. ..... w...!.!..! Vj iituju tvMGnte ana cicmcnreau, ana mat tne i.Kr ao not ecno tne worda of the .!ajnerican President. h VT A I I A MV I IL'VI? A W UiV If ONWESTFRONTJOO &m , SSttrlwn Attacks nt Mont Ho R iirnv K'aHurled Back, Enemy Losing krf& HeavUy By G H. PERRIS (ffJfcwcW Cable to Evening Public Ledger .-'Vevvnont. tlf. bv Xtv York Times Co. .-If' Willi the French Armies. June 25. v?vfM not onIy ,n ItaIy that the "a"a's "showing their quality. They have ntly taken over from the Trench and ah contingents an Important sector tee western front Jylne midway be- the Marne and Rhelms. 'ftem the Ardre Valley one mounts a lope past the village of Bligny. f sjrbeat fields spreading on either rllHaC'Wtd reaches a moorland, partially ! with fir woods, which Is the out- ne spur of the mountain of as and forms the western buttress Rhelms salient. S-wUI be remembered hew the Ger- Kijeomimr down the Ardre Valley i Hte intention of cuttlne behind this atl'and reaching the Matne, took .village and the hill beside It. only wept back by the Cheshlres ana sires and their gallant irencn r. i amaller efforts of the same kind keen made against their Ital- ors. '-alter Saturday midnight a full l,' -with two other battalions In 'attacked Mont do Bligny and l.in.rushlng.the position. They ttaiy drives out by a coun- . M V heavily by tho Allied hi they rt- ofvr aht o;P, by Vru iork Timea Co Vloneon, June L'5 Although letters received in Moicow from Ksthonians "how that they would rather cf-me to 'Russia than remain under German rule, the elemental flood of refugees pours toward the frontiers This flood Is held up on the frontiers b the Germans, who fear the Infection of Bolshevism. Near Brysa there arc 40.000 refugees, most of them camping In the forests and many dying of hunger, and there ls much typhoid and djsentery. 2 Kt """""ft" t vKr 4at ;.ii ffi -nil-fir ,-i r 0 rS3H& 1Sm sft ml irl ril '4J Ml v. i a 4 HHHkwBEmSiI Wflai eIM II Ku!iJi' m W i i i m BMsjV7Hiv KJvtfaLaayayaVaayayaBMP9 1 m ?!p knatlkTX VayKQKCJE, wB bWb' 9bE KIbBIbK. SbV niiHmHMF'vwT'2 if y ' m-'JiJHHSmBlflAjs3t0Vi 4 . rwwi. "rt A -.V. A tt ' M .'. A i li uWJHWMWA WA ' 'J-W "sAV f Jkv . (c) tnderoofj anrl UnfJnoofl 1 Ins lnounlain stronghold licld b llic Italians ii the bulwark for their iMpnive Hpainpt a poihle Austrian offenme in the mountains on the northern end of the baltlelinc URGE ALLIED DRIVE ON AUSTRIA THROUGH ITALY OR THE BALKANS American Army Opinion Faors Crushing Blow as Means of Saving Russia and Getting at Germany By CLINTON W. GILBERT Special Corrcaponiicnt ririifno PiiMfc ledger With our men going to Europe at the rate of 100,000 a week the time when a larger offensive ftrategv must be 'idopted driwn near And that consld eiatlfTi makes all eves turn In this mo ment of Italian vkror and Austrian Washington, June 25 Military opinion heie Is tint the floods which prevented Atistila from supporting the men he threw acres the Plavo also will lumper Itnlv in undei taking a great counter-offensive The floods -vhlch conti United to Aus tria's defeat probablv will in the end save Austria. None the less, the moral effect of whit Italy has done will be tremen dous Hungiv Austria has been told tint bevond the Piavo lav food and loot She does not get food and loot. On tho contraiv, she has lost a hrge number of men. great military stores and many cannon Starvation and laclal dissensions will be felt more gravely in the hour of defeat. The in tertnl condition of Austria will be made worse The parallel between Russia and Austria, the weak partner of the Hn tcnte and tho weak partner of the Teutonic allies, holds to the point of the next move When the forced Rus. sian offensive failed, Clermanv at tacked and carried the war Into the heart of Russia until the country cried for and cot peace Milltaiy men i-av. now that the forced Austria offensive has failed, Austria should be attacked and the war carried Into her territory until that weak and totterins monarchy is put out of action. There Is a strong sentiment in the United States army in favor of attack ing Austria. With this sentiment Gen eral March ma or mav not be in accoi d General Foch's v lew, and it will be llkeb to control, is not publlclv known But below the highest rank tho strateg of striking Austria finds Kcneral favor, for the verv same ieu hon that Germanv a jear ago elected to strike at and knock out Russia Opinion is not agreed as to the best way of attacking Austria. Obstacles lie In the wav of bach plan of attack In tho shape of long and difficult com munications and the lack of shipping Moreover, eveij one wants to feel se cure about the West front to know that the Knglish, Trench and Amer ican forces there will be able to hold before attacking elsewhere. Tho West front Is, as it aluaj.s has been, civilization's line of defense. The West front strategy and psychology are primarily defensive The nations fighting there mean to win if they could, but first ot all to protect theli own homes, their lines of communica tion, theli capacity for joint action, their Paris and their Channel ports. Until tills country enters the war with 4 000,000 or 5,000 000 men this war will be a defensive war. When, as a whole, tho Allies and this country resume the offensive, then it must have been de cided whether or not a blow struck int the vitals or along tne flank of Austria would be the most effective. (aisisisjajaiaiaj'siasEisisiBSHHaisEEMSJHSisisiaisiajsi 1 MavJson & DeManj) r31 1115 Chestnut j Street Opposite Keith's Theatre Georgette Crepe Hats, $5. .00 & Original Prices Ranged up to ffj $15.00. m A worth-while saving on the newest ja models for summer wear. Large sailors, medium and small hats gl many with transparent brims fa Also satin sports and straw sports. m hats at $5.00. SIBlBM51B151B15igicMSlBlBI5fSiBBIB15i P22222S Everybody's Favorite A New England Shore "Hot-Weather" Dinner We have the reputation of serving the best Shore Dinners in town "tastin is believinV Xew England Shore Dinner, $lJ0O Olivet PiekUd Beet) Raauntt Clam Broth Mewed Clatna tdrov n butter) Hal LoUter or BoI t Shelled Crab Fried Chicken fou(ien fltl!f) Corn on the Cob French Fried Potatoei Combination Halad Cantalovp Pt or Icm Cream fJrmitaiso r-rjs Twelfth and Arch SU. CLAUDE M. MOHR, Mgr. Entrance on ittk Bt.) weakness toward the fouthcastcrn part of Uurope There are four proposals Pirst That the Allies should get at Autria and eastern Germany by the wav of Siberia fcecond That this tountrv should add to the Allied forces at halmica and Mrike up through beibia and Bulgaria at Atistiia Third That this country should send a large force to Italv to Join with Italy In an attempt to enter Austria bv Na poleon's old route through Lalbach fourth . nullification of proposal three, that tho Alllea snould undertake a naval attack upon trie Austrian poits land an expedition on the Ittrlan I'enln nila and take the Austrian line in Italv In the rear, approai.n!ng Lalbach and co-operating with tho Italian forces In muring the Slavic regions of tho Dual Empire. The common opinion of American military officers here In Washington Is that the Danubian front, as it Is gen eral called, is the weakest spot In the Central Powers It Is argued that a tight to a flnlh in the west will be a long and bitter fight, whllo once the Initial difficulties of transport and of the line of natural barriers protecting Austila Is overcome progress in the Dual Kmplre will be easy and rapid There is much more support In army licles for tho Idea ot co-operating with Italv or with Greece, or with both, In attacking Austria than for the Idea of co-operating with Japan in reaching dallcla bv wav of Vladivostok Army opinion is that, at most, onlv a few divisions of American troops should at tempt the trip across Siberia. A quicker way to reach Russia and form a rallvlng point for hntl-German opinion In the east is bv striking north ward from Italv, from the' Adriatic coast of Austria itself, in co-operation with Italv, or from Salonica A force of Japanese entering by way of Siberia might co-operate with the Americans acting in the Balkans If Japan should be willing to undertake a mllltar operation on such a scale, and if an agreement iould be readied re garding the terms on wliidi Japan's in tervention would be approved But the main task of reconstituting the cast front and taking military advantage of the weakness of Austria will fall upon the United States. TEUTON PRESS RANTS AT BAN ON LANGUAGE in Barring Study Puts U. S. Russia's Class, Says Wcscr Zcitung Special Cable to Timing Public Ledger Copyright, ioif, hv u ork Timrs Co The Hague, June 2t The 'Russianizing' of America Is the subject of an article in the Weser Zei tung. The paper has already expressed Its indignation at the prohibition of the German language In some ot tho Amer ican public schools, but now remark 1 that, according to the New York Times of Mav 10, the Union League Club has passed resolutions against Instruct'on In German in all the public schools of Amcilea and has expressed the wish that all German papers should be for bidden 'lhe Zcitung scoffs at tho reason given, that German Instruction and newspapers undermlno American patriotism It ex presses doubt as to whether these reso lutions villi be carried out In a 'land of iiiiiiimieu possiDiiuiea aim exnresscs nope mat President Wlkon has re- II. t lined some understanding of the rrall ties and consequences which, it alleges, audi steps would entail If lnphenated German-Americans have not had courage enough to protest against the war and Wllson' policy, s ijs the paper, their patience has limits 11 continues that up to the present tlm 110 news has been received bv cable eon Arming these reports, but comments that America was known before the war as the lard of the free. ) Are the members of such big political clubs, who possers a certain amount of political and historical knowledge aware, the Zeitung asks, of the odium which such a measure would bring on Amer ica, and do thev not understand that they would be bringing America down to thp level of 'Russia? America, the paper proceeds, is not menaced by a German inxaslon and there aro no fears of a German rising. It suvs that Ameri cans are too badly informed to know that French papers still appear undr gunfire near Belfort, Lunevlllo and Nancv, in despotic military, reactionary Germany, even In wartime, and that the Trench papers in Alsace-Lorraine did much work in peace. The Zeitung sajs tiwt America can obtain one result by tis measure, as after the war there will doubtless be a lepatrlatlon of many Germans and Aus trlans, by which America will lose her best and mot conscientious and Intelli gent laborers if thev know their own country. It adds, they will l'now that America has not so nianj advantages to ofTer. The paper savs that America ones her growing population largely to emigration from Rurope, but that this will stop, both for political and economic 1 easons, -after the war. it.raispiJM ocoiSTcneo U.S. atevt orricf Trie GEMUlNE CLOTH MFD. BY GOOQALL WORSTED CO. This label means the Qenulne. It's your Safeguard against imitations. The sanely dressed man in the hot days is he who puts his woolen clothes in the wardrobe and dresses himself in Palm Beach. It was not always possi ble to be well dressed and comfortably dressed at the same time, but Palm Beach has solved that problem most effectively. We are sticklers for "Quality Clothes," and if Palm Beach didn't measure up to our critical requirements we wouldn't touch it but we know that it s right, and therefore give it our fullest endorsement. Tropical-weight coat and trouser suits made of Palm Beach cloth. Summer worsteds, Breez-weve, mohair, silk, linen, $10 to $30. Flannel Trousers; white or striped, $6.50, $9, $10, $12. $14. Jacob ReedS Sons 1484-143 .CHESTNUT STREET Mmm lliiil mm r njR ITALIANS USE SEAPLANE FLEET TO BOMB AUSTRIANS ON PIAVE Tawny, Swollen River Gives Chance to Uso Naval Craft. Death Rains From Air Upon Foe Attempting Crossing By WARD PRICE Special Cable to Eiening Public Ledger t opnrloht. MM, by Xew York Time Co. Italian Headquarters, June 2S I had the fortune to be fij Ing over tho Austrian lines on the Plave with an Italian bomo Ing squadron during the hour which, If reports be true, inav .prove to have been the historical turning point of this great battle Day after dav, during the Inst week of warfare, this squadron from Venice has harried without mercy Austrian divisions, converging on those foot bridges over the Plavo which the enemy had hoped were going to be the wooden threshold of a great victory The country around tho lower Plave mouth was covered with water, but naval seaplanes were used against the enemy there They were a gay-looking lot as they slid out of their sheds onto a long Inne of water. Ten fast single-seaters were the escort (hardly necessary. It seemed, for the Austrian airmen rarely vcntuio near tho lhies), and In their midst (lew twenty bombing airplanes We rose In thundering succession and circled for height. For a while the whole circus droned around and arouild In circles Then we turned across the flooded Plavo delta toward tho enemy line. Inundations Wonderful I had been up and down that region often enough In boats, but I never realized how thoroughly tho ltalans had done their Inundations last Novem ber. The whole land, laboriously re deemed, has been drowned ngaln and the multicolored mud that the water has carried everywhere gives it tho ap pearance of a tinted geological map Only here and there emerge little forti fied fractions of dry land It needed but a few moments to be over the lines I could pick out an artillery observation post In which I was at Cavazuccherlna yesterday, while the smoke of Bhellbursts showed brightly against the green clumps of trees An enemy observation balloon behind his line was sinking fast into ItB nest. Three of Its kind went down In flames vesterday and would wait for no attack from these Italian hornets narrate of Aerial Rosebuds By now tho enem's aerial barrage had sprung up back ahead ot us a nose. Kay oi sooiy rosec-uds in the sky. The enemy wriggled evcrj where, some persevering a long way and some straggling to an alimess stop The foot bridges over the Plave were plain enough, but what tiny marks to have been hit so often by the Allied bombs? I could see nothing moving a- we cruised around, nor make out a single gun emplacement. I suppose It needs a trained eye to find these things I knew, however, what the pilot was looking for. It was cluster of trenches and huts close to tne Plave, in which are sheltered some Austrian reserves He raised his hand to show that wo were over the place. A jerk of the red bomb lever, then another. I bent over tho side to follow them with my eves, but could not see them A second later I looked over again and they were apparent! cvofe together and falling docilely earthward. It seemed a long time before a shoot of chocolate earth told that they nad struck plump on the edge of a twisting communication trench. My pilot dived at once after we dropped the bombs, to defeat the Aus trian barrage, which, evidently under the Imprepslon that we were coming down, apparently diverted one gun to accompany us with a fhcll or two on tho way toward the water. Italy's rontoona In Tlaee At ZOO feet he flattened out, and we flew back toward enlrs. The marsh was dotted with Italian pen toons mount ing long gray naval guns.. The pilot pointed to one and planed toward It. The crew waved a welcome and at-a score or two of feet above their deck the engine burst Into a roar again and we skimmed on In this way we visited a lot of lonely gunnern of the marxii, who have been marooned for monthn past In their an chored hulks and are delighted to see anv thing that moves Meanwhile, one had lost sight of the other seaplanes of our company. They had scattered about their several affairs, and It was only after landing that we heard that one was hit In trie patrol tank by the enemy's barrage and had to make a forced and rsky landing on the narrow canal. atm& s good SHOES "Economy Specials" IN Women's White Footwear A score or more of beautiful models of Snobuck and cus tom canvas in turned sole styles with corcred Louis heels or sport heel effects with welted soles. Beauti fully made and finished throughout. $7.00 Values .85 Many other styles in pumps. Oxfords and boots of white kid, buckskin and linen. 3.85 to 8.50 Other Economy Specials A splendid variety of $7.00 pumps and Oxfords in koko calf, patent leather, black, gray, ivory, green and Ha vana brown kid. Special at .85 White Silk Hosiery The lone wearing kind. Pure thread silk. Special 1.15 919-921 MARKET STREET 60th and Chestnut SU. 2746-48 German town Are. 4028-30 Lancaster Ave. 5604-06 Germantown Are. Branch Stores Open Every Evening. Hupmobile "Hooverized" Hooverized for Business and for Individual Use ! Unusual ? Of course it is unusual. These are war times, and they tend toward thrift. The Hupmobile meets conditions squarely. It is a lighter car than before, and, therefore, saves tires. It saves gas, it saves wear and tear on parts, and it has a new device that we call a heater, which so super heats the air that it makes your gas do double duty. No specious arguments are necessary in telling you aboutithe thrift and economy of the Hupmobile. Let us demonstrate what the Hupmobile can do. We will be glad to give yoira road test. Ability, Comfort, Economy That's the Hup The Hupmobile Sales Corporation x I,""- t u- - vw v rj&.i& ... i i,l!.'lii . i ... tlMieiIWlJfflMMP!tfJIWMiiil...M. m m. ' . , m. rkfe0H9JPfife: i .'iKVj,ri ' iaauB?m . .. 'hummnx2rr.-x7T-ti.' ' iw z.-LaswmtmakWkmjkmt.ri iwwji :'.,. m .-i-V-ira ""-1 , .T.--I .yr, ,.A -..:., . npn.iwi vVT iSWK? t. efiafiBDaiWBfc ait . 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers