KIlV JWBrWWnTMJF.' ilHHIUTl 'ZT' A"V .1 I -t?' ' ' i r W WT'MJ'fW "" j'tvr'TPrt tvr1 ' BB3int'JI,ft.i'.r' W. JJfiJ1' 'ii-'!OTC'i9 VWP7tW.aSi '.fl'KFWSf aro." "wsr- vY,f. '. . " fl ,. tL-f.iMv f tf, -4J- '",i r fWfiWWti C " .,''. w ju T,-jrpiV, ? " ltr Vt'h n,i, -7f T'JjW-1 V r.?TP""s?3!?5rJ; Uti! : -., ?Trj.XA " i -'-. , -. i vuV"i? t - - - - ; I'AiJivrtiW)". ' i r7?'i t! 16. 'i. vm H' -. r - ". j-'ill . JlJZ':yV2rJE'J&:C yw?Wi wim .... C-...V Wtof '- ir.'rsfex,-' . ' ' . V . . "ria AiY n'jjr ' v .,-v3u'il j--r c&-V .jr4;;"r! i . EV-KJNIJNi U&LiLV liiJiJJUJKK I'lllL.ADJbJLii'illA, TMUKSllAX, JUL. I o JtflcV v i IrTS TO PERIL OF ENEMY HOLD ON RUSSIA SPECIAL CABLE DISPATCHES FROM WAR FRONT x", ' - z " i'tof RESERVE I KA,SER CAlls GRAND - ' iUunuL ur vim. uiicro IONS USED IF it of Men Slackens; Upidity of Allied , Advance ANS MUST FIGHT iieit Have Done Wonder- Work in Aiding Foch's Forces Gcrninn Sovereigns Also Will Ue Represented French Reports Not Published Hern, July 25 (Hy I N S ) A Brand council ot war, at which all the German smerelgns and military chiefs will bo represented, has been called by the Kaiser. Kor the first time since the battle of the Mnrno bepan, said a dispatch from a German source today, German news papers arc not printing the communiques issued In the French Wnr Ollice "It Is an en or to underestimate the American infantry and to do so would onl expose the German people to sur prles, ' the Herllner T.iKeblatt was quoted as saylnK. It is nexumpd that the German censor has forbidden the use of the French War niriLP statements to hide the American "i WALTER DUKANTY Cable to Eiening Public Ledger ' an" remnjjciori aht, 198. bv Yew 1 orfc rimr. ro i the French' Annies July 2B. J tflUffMV niVICMW lUgh the official communiques HVIIITI J, Ukl l3hJL GERMANS PREPARING STRONG LINES FOR DEFENSE imore laconic, the battle I raisins ntnlshed. The iniuai rainuuy ; LlI1r nrnsrpss litis l)Cen plowed tw the German icerves, fluiiK k lavishly tn effect, it not "stnhllli!- n h Mnrne salient ot surplus pftWl supplies accumulateil lor the rmn offensive. irAlnir to the latest Information M enemy, hns eneaeed sl.t-thieeor sly-tour oi mc uii-"" - ---. ? his1 stratcEic reer o a fortnluht The Btaruins '" "-""-W tnnk 1B0O nrioners and a line ifhUlB north ot Montdlrtler Woilnci- tfi'ithtls completing tnw wuitri-o ..i Bteloni shows the condition of the 4 line divisions unsupported by ilSlt-class units. s-.VTo-v mnn rniflnwnd cinnot be 'A'iitnd-'to the dangers thrcateninc; its JVZfffV Ji - r,,n!lrto llw rmln liattlo fB at, j'ui'"-" -. -- -- eayet it has no cnoice nut 10 con- BtietO resist m an cosis in me i . . J.. ! a mh itirnn lilnn pltnitl Hem' awacneu "" mice ---.t .-... Ui- SOUBiy i-lCSl'lLW lc U-jToi,ui.r ui .iiiTatlnn. the enemy is htill heint; Etoianeuvered by the Allies, and the emeral strateRlc situation lemains as iVerable as ever. M"S Airmen's Great PerIro ;m 4U M CUT TO REGIMENT Only Skeletons Remain of' Units Opposing British ! Advance j RESIST DESPERATELYi Germans. Anticipating Attack, Are Putting Up Very Strong Defense i -Kj&szsmu r -STW i 7h VftPcyJ 5&rteme!. K jyVpS WRHEliIS CHATCAU-TrlIERfftyj;, ? li.S"- ewO!SEgE vJKaav -itv K uCONDE II rlMPCKTANT MICHIAVS FUCTHtST GERMAN AtWAHCE -AE5S IMPOOTANTrMMWAYS BATTUE LINP TOOAV ffijTtfwfc SHELL HITS TOWN'S NAME, DOESN'T KNOW WHERE HE WON WAR CROSS j American, Telling "Experience, Shows Each Yankee Thinks Own Gun or Gas Mask la Best in All Annies when you pot the , knack you can spit out ot it l'rl like (v keep the same (run and mask all the waytto Berlin, There's a village I'll know the' name of," Then the soldier renamed his search Of the files for homo town news. .RAILROADS ; Airmen's An, account of the magnificent serv. r5nuSren iiwuii'iu m m name i" clven to your correspondent to- y- at the headquarters of one of the g l?rencn h ucvia a .i nni ukil. the crosslns ot tne .name ny the irman brldce" six were reported in j Lit hv iu a. in. ivrn i-ierireii ior ifteen minutes at a time bv the effects airmens lire, ana me siauRiuer of n and norses wus lernuic, tone after another the Inttleplanes jiuld dive toward me onjective loose whole round pointblank and rise to t a new carinuce urum. lieforo n DoniDiue i"iii", okn carrying -Inch bombs welchinc; nearly fifty nds apiece, were sharlnu the work in 0. H. PERRIS Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger CnpMrmht I9M h'j .Veu Vorfc Tmn Co. With the French Armies, July :i A violent bombardment was main tained on the whole Hritlsh line south west of rthclms, from Vrisny to the Maine, throughout Tuesday nlcht Nevertheless, a further advance was made in the mornini? in the British rector, which now reaches from south of Oncu and Janvry hy Mery hamlet to west of fit. Kuplirnioe The British position 'Wednesday evopinf? was that thev held the boche within a crescent of fire, extending fiom St. I'uphraise, which is ours, on the north, passing to tle west ot Tfonllly and Courmas across the wood of nhelms by the east edge of Mar- fau, which has repeated'y changed devastation Dropped from a height I linn,1s!- to the. south of Kspllly and 500 to luuu meiers, me projectiles i'i"-, i" iiinuieia un mu ikhiii- fliy taiiea io linn n rarget "ralr"1 uuiut-r ui ine Ldurum wihju. her on the Bridges, or amidst the' ' """ l"e wooneu inns on me norm masses ot the enemy on the1""" """" "c lnP -Arnre. meieiore. tne Bks. As soon as a bomber un-' rr,en' nas necn squeezed nR by the his cargo he would plunge nnil i""l-ers. nne ne enueavors to retain wie ruined farms and cottagps in the the toe with his machine gun I4inen return iut i nuw- ni.m itiiti t the performance. That went i-iwlthout respite day and night, Mil I the enemy recrossed the river I.-, must have cost thousands or IJ&esldes ratal delays wnen eveiy itt was priceless. 'toj (he Germans dreaded the air ks was shown by the fact that nu- DUS anti-aircraft batteries and ma- cuns were Installed in the hills Hooking the river before the battle, tivery few of our machines were thus ed, although all had their wings 41ed. The Herman battleplanes were etty aggressive hut as usual, hesl- fed to tackle bombing planes In flying nation. When the latter swooped to "fSli Win hnmha ttioir y ara ..ffaw-t I v-nl , tirrt- i'Tt,1 cted by a strong force of spads up j , X 1 I6sr whlrh pnnroH In rnntlrn.il rntTi- 3r nlles and keep the Allies off by countpr-nttacks at the wings. When the struggle began on Satur day, the British had before them four Herman divisions, the SCth on the north, the 123d across the Ardre, and the 103d and 22d on the south. MtUfnni Ilaillv Cut lip The first named, however, was no more than a regiment, and the second had suffered enormous losses durini- earlier engagements For Instance, one of its leglments had only S24 men left. me. Hrillsn. who were formerly here and aftei them the Italians, had. In fact, reduced these units to hkeletnns. The nritlsh came tn relieve the Italians and actually attacked through ranks, Highlanders on the north and County troops on the south The Germans were expecting attack, but It was a great surprise to them to haB Britishers on them again. It must ue said that they put up a very strong with great success jii The boche bombing planes w'ere no- vnr-V bol1. rcriArfail n nrtlniv hi' j1ii till Jt eiried to reserve themselves exclusively i ""ense. At no point have Jhe British ;'d r'nlKht work. I r.nund It easy going The left has 'F ..J I'-f "(? ft Allied Tnctlrs rlmnsrd jThe i counter-offensive changed the Al- !r ;,-,. ;tC tics. In strong group" bombers. .: MIHHte Way was cleared by battleplanes, fMMtcked transportation centers such as -We. Flames. Bat-h-Oches. Cnulnnces nnri '' Asmlsne. The Imagination mlcht nl, titr. liMm&nHfl HArlnl hjftlc; ,-lU Hllr,lr,lt rtf gAiteB' engaged In a death struggle fpss miles of sky but in point of fact f if We,Oerman resistance to such mass at- . I CJKj.1 4I.OO .1..n t 1in.i..lun ., 'i jfcw, o luiiiiuni w iiuriniK uu ine I done well In reaching the west end of the large wooded plateau of Court on In the American sector of the south east the enemy made a strong- thrust against his tireless pursuers and, com ing down the load from Heurnrdv to Hpleds, five miles northeast of Chateau Thierry, ho seized this village and the neighboring hamlet of Trugny. An American counter-attack was promptly delivered and tho lighting continues at Trugny A slight advance was made north of Mont St I'eteie and Char- iiSSkirts of the fleet in an attempt to cut 'eves, where we are ,"ipr stragglers "iWA .. , now two miles b-yond Kie Marne Fortified farms .. 1-., i.. .. ..,, 4'n unit nhn. ,i,n.i .1,1.... . . ""r "1 " --iiuii a mi our ormBe- 'iSita h tkt fl,.. n h r , "";,'" I heads were enlarged. (The Americans 4? ZtWJZ , yn . " ? a,1 " have since recaptured Kpleds and Trug- W started a conflngratinn on Friday ,. ..ii, ljAt"has not yet beep extinguished. As, ''"eus; lheboche retreat was accentuated the Attack In Ardre Continues 3d Aflln' wnrl, .-o , l(Ml.ln 1... . l. -. t . r. . . . ..... . .... er L " ""r"" " "" lun-, me iiruisn airacK in tno .rnre alley "iH? n 0t the host"'' airdromes, caused continues, supported now by French frfif-.hT, the' abandonment of advanced fields .colonial troops on the right The small iaTJ boches were so crowded .is to cause woods west nf Vrlgny were occupied .-IWlUent accidents and great confusion. I dui mu one dav and further nrocress LS"flfh W8S aumenterl hy bombing them ' made beyond Doullly and St. Euphralse tS' vCnT" iiii?u iiuiiiuru jfiisuiicin unit iie Kuun f5P'nvoys on the roads also suffered ' """ brought into the British lines . r,iKtK1,, . t n..inr.- t ,-, veslerrlnv artprnnnn. ,..: mu'j. ijuiurkiit tine nimiunz - k3.a . ' ... .... " Tl,l.. I- . Rj-iyiane aipne aestroyeu twenty munition "" '" i; '.Mniim. nrohnhly Minions. -f,Tour correspondent talked with mere skeleton diary which was as full as any other of bold feats and natlentlv borne suffer- 'S-V" ,.",': ' I-.'r-'L ."""." '"P. but if the sensational phase of ;S"pv (r,, ".v. " ,rulH": I Toch s counter-stroke is over, we are. 2.?? w .1 n'. ' rlheFr(,nch., j heilevP, far frnm seeing all of its 'JET"1?!' foothall team, now a crack r(,sults Tne enemy ,s ho(ilng out dog- ?JrChen specialist' with an official gjj., but at a Kreat disadvantage The p. Vl Bii.i)ii u-iinnnn Hi.n eleven air- i crowded and tortuous line of his re- ttes. All refused to smoke and they .r(,,.. for it must he recorded .is n re. , .miuillb BlluilKri WHIM 11UUL Wine water The strain of air fighting the active period is fo crest that '.NMar.effectlve physical training can with- . -fMM It. Th pilots ft out twice alwavs. some -CTse! thrice dally In spells of two hours, treat until he reaches Pons, which of fers a permanently defensible front, are plagued by swooping bombers and machine-gunners while all his chief centers so"u of the Alsne are now under our artillery Are It is one of the most frightful warnings in military history of flank. A"?K Bpad can 'fly in all weather save' I tne , l'er11 of Rn '"sufficiently Guarded ; or, Dimuing rain nervous enhaus l'.s chiefly dreaded Its first symp ls nlehtmares. nf whlrh mnhino d jamming and two boches "diving on Major General Mnurirc in his arrompanvinp article mentions two Mronp, lines of defense upon either ofvvhich the Germans mav fettle down, thereby circumventing a further retreat. The first of these lines, both of which are delineated on the above map, runs along the hifdi ground to the east of Oulchy, by Nanteuil, through the Foret le Fere to the c.i't nf Jauleonne. If the enemy fails to stand there, hi next probable line would be from Hartenncs through rerc-en-Tardenois, along the upper Ourrn. toward Chatillon. Here he would be within easy distance of good railroad -upply lines whirh could he tapped hy a sjstem of motor lorries. Today's developments on the battklrnnt are portrijed on the above map as follows: 1 A violent artillery battle.is raging south of the Ourrq. 2--Thc Germans, in n violent counter-allark on the north bank of the Marne, succeeded in occupv ing the wood 1500 meters north of Treloup and the village of Cha'in. These have been recaptured by the French. 3 Violent artillerjing is raging vest of Rheims WAR'S TURNING POINTREACHED THROUGH FOCH'S OFFENSIVE Allied Commander s Problem Now Is to Keep Germany From Making New Drive, Says General Maurice Interest Centers in Where Trench War Will Be Resumed in Operations Between Rheims and Soissons Korn-pr Special Cable to Eveninp Public Ledger Cotturtoht. fl". to .Vein York Timrx To. Ijonrinn, July 23 (Delaved) It now looks as if the hattlefront was beginning to settle down. The Get mans have been fighting desperately hard on their flanks from Soissons, through Hnrtcnnes to Oulchy and between Tlheims and the .Marne, to cover the withdrawal of their cmharrassed cen ter. There, Ins not been any miteilal change on the Soissons front for some time, and on the front south of Hhelms, where the enemy must have had large leserves assembled for his offensive only, the British contingent, which had apparently come in fresh on the northwestern spurs of the mountain of Rheims, has been making slow progress. Interest now mainly turns on where the new lines of tier.rh warfare will he drawn. On the southern hattlefront, where General Do flou'te's American tu my is still advancing the enemy eems to bo attempting to draw In bis lines along the high ground tn the east of Oulchv bv Manteull. through tho Torest De Fere to the east of lnulgonne on the Marne Tf he falls to stand 'here his next most probably line would he from Hartenness, through Fere.en-Tarden. ols. along the Upper Ourcq, toward Clntlllnn. Here he would he within such distance of the tallwav, which runs fiom Bouv tn the north of Sols sons, nlong the Alsne tb Vnillv and thence toward Rheims, ns to make It imsslhle for him to supplv his troops without much difficulty by lorries and he would hive -to som extent, over come the tioubles from which he h-is suffered ever since the loss nf the mountain of Paris has prevented him from using the lallwav Junction south of Soissons. At present it appears im probable that a Franco-American counter-attack can force the enemy much bevond this line. Paris Was Foe Objective It is now evident from the news that the Crown Prince was In the act of reorganising his forces on the front between Soissons and Chateau-Thleiry at the moment when Foch attacked him. that he was as had been anticl nated. intending tn follow his advance sci oss the Marne bv an attack upon Paris from the northeast, and It is very likelv from what we know nf the enemy's preparation that he had in mind to combine this with another at tack on the Amlens-.Montdldier front, which would have enabled him to con tinue his favorite offensive method of simultaneous blows on two flanks of a greit salient. So Foch's counter-stroke has not onlv wrecked the German offensive which was nctuallv In progress, but must very materially upset their fu ture plans, and he has how started out to complete this upset hy his ittack at Montdidier, which even if, as appears at present, it Is only a local affair, should, combined with our own recent progress near Villers Bre tonneux, disturb the enemy's prepara tions for an offensive very effectively and so complete the removal of the By MJ. GEN. MAURICE rilrprtnr of Onrstlnn of the nrlslsh dancer which has hung over Paris for the last six weeks f.ermnn Losses Knnrmous Still more lmpoitant In its effect upon the situation as a whole arc the efforts which the Oerman Prince, has been forced to make to get himself out of the mess In which he was Involved. We know from bitter experience how- costly are counter-attacks which have to be improvised in midst of battle to snve a desperate situation, and we may be quite certain that within the last few das the losses of the Hermans have, heen higher nnd the exhaustion of their leserves greater even than In the first days nf their nboitlve offensive Still with all this, It is premature to conclude that we have jet succeeded completely in wiestlng the Initiative from the enemy on the whole front The German general staff nnd the military party In Germany have committed them selves so completely to the policy of obtaining a military decision on the western front that they aie quite cer tain. If they are given a chance, to make desperate effoi ts to save their faces Whether Koch Is strong enough .vet to enable him to prevent the enemy from getting such a chance remains to be sren In either event the situation has been so enormously Improved by what has happened during the last few davs that It can now be only to our advantage If the enems' is forced to listen to the councils of despah; and attempts to 1m piove his position by another offensive. For even If he were to make consider able gains of ground. It Is no longer pbs slhio for him to end this year's cam paign by leaving us In a position of such embarrassment as would have opened tho road for an effective peace offensive Further. If he does try t6 attack again, he will, at best end the ear with bis armies in the west, com pletely exhausted, while the American troops will still bo ltourlng Into France. Turning 1'iilnt nf 10IK CumpniKn Therefore, from every point of view, we may, without extiavagance and without expecting impossibilities from it icpard Koch's counter-attack as the turning point In tho campaign of 1D18. We should all extend our heartfelt con gratulations to the sorely tried capital of France upon her release from the Armv menace which for the last six weeks has been hanging over her It Is difficult for us here In England to apneclate how great has been the trial whirh Parts h.iR been endnrlnir w Ith citnli t-.illnnlrv hitt If wo met hnrk to 1 th days at the beginning of this year, when London was being bombed at each . moo- and lemember that, in audition to th Incessant air raids, Parln has! been subjected to an Intermittent and Irrltatln," bombardment and had before her tl,e pospect of seeing this inter mittent bf.'vhardment heenme a per manent aifd "ore deadly feature of her nally life, wo can begin to understand . what Foch's ounter-attack has meant j both to her and tn France generally 1 Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Copirloht. tMfl, to A'rio Vorfc Time Co. Paris, July 25. The American Roldler In France Is not only getting proud of his own division, regiment and company, nnd calls them pet names, but he has I also reached the point of having a per 'sonal affection for his own equipment. He thinks his gas mask a little bettet , than any other fellow's. Ho feels about his rifle as a man feels about his favorite tobacco, pipe or billiard cue In other words the American recruit has become thoroughly a soldier nnd his household goods for the tlmo being are the things he lugs around on his back to save his own life or end that of an enemy Here I in Illustration of this. A very high-spirited American soldier. Just from the front, carrying his rifle and forty-one pounds of equipment, trudged up three spiral flights of stairs in the New York Times office to eee tho American papers He stayed nearly all day. poring over the Times' flies, thus devoting 2 per cent ot four days' leave to catching up on home news. "France is a great country," he said, "but two things get on my nerves. I never can find out the name of the village In which I am fighting, and you would never know from the French newspapers that there was such a place as Glens Falls, X. V Xow, Glens Falls Is a regular place. I come from It." "Hell of a Time tn Strike" He was searching the Times' flies as he talked. Suddenly there was a grunt of delight. "Xow, there's something about Glens Falls right here," he saia. "1 knew there would be. It says that the paper mill men are not going to strike. Well, they'd better not. This Is a hell of a time to strike In America They are getting a lot mere now than 1 got In the paper mills. But jou would think that the French papers would say some thing ahout Glens Falls once In a while "Ahout that other thnig that bothers me not know the names of the places where we fight some French villages are Just one street nnd two long rows of houses Simetlmes the name of the village Is painted on the last house. We were fighting through one of these streets the ether dny when I saw the name, but before I had time to spell It out a shell blew off that corner of the house and I never knew where I was. "I felt kind of sore, because I had got this cross of war Just outside that vil lage the day before taking a message through shellflre. Xow somebody will ask me where 1 got It, nnd if I don't know, they'll say I'm a fakir" He showed me the cross of war on his coat, with a silver star added to the ribbon The cross was for making his way from one shell hole to another under heavy fire with an Important communication. The sliver had been added because the soldier had risked his own, life to hrlng In a wounded French lieutenant. He also wore a ribbon show Ing service in Mexico. "I want to get all dolled up In tho crosses and things like a regular French man before T go back home," hy admit ted. "Some fellows say they don't care, but all are crazy for 'em. I was hoping I'd get something all the time, crawling among those holes. Tlie Mar M'ns nifferent "Of course, the star was different, be cause you don't think of medals whep you've got a wounded man across your back." He turned from medals to equipment and thrust his rifle into my hands. "That's the best rifle In the American army," he said, "Just lift it Balance it I've used sixteen all told tn Mexico, the fnlted States, nnd France, and t'.iafs the best of the lot. Being a corporal and an expert marksman, I can generally get a gun to suit me "That one you've got In vour hands there Is almost human I believe It would load, aim and shoot all by Itself If I was too husv. It never gets heavy, be cause it has such a good balance. Just like a garden hoe after you get used to it. "When you're cllmhlng nut of jour own trench, that rifle sort of helps you up.and when the bayonet Is on and you're Jumping down Into a hoche trench that particular rifle of mine sort of hands you down like helping a lady off a trol ley car It's a great gun "That's a beautiful gas mask: best I've ever had. It flts comfortably, and mmL.bou?jHHH War Dishes From France 500 war-time recipes con structed in the homes of France to save food, prevent waste and yet preserve that delicious flavor for which French cooking is famous I This great help to the' American housewife w a3 obtained by asking subscrib ers to the French edition o The Delineator the largest magazine of its kind in France to give us their best war-time recipes for the benefit,- of their American sisters. They are being published monthly in The Delineator. They will save money and delight the'pal ates of the entire family. See the current issue. The elineator The MaqazinG In One1 Million Homes - ixEQsasxzn&g I my3 '' iV"l. 1 WM For Hair and Skin Health Cutiqura is Supreme If you use Cuticura Soap for cvery-duy toilet purposes, with touches of Cuticura Ointment now and tlicn as needed to soothe and heal the first siens of redness, roughness or scalp irritation, you may have as clear a complexion and as good hair1 as it is possible to have. hiimnle Each Free liv .Mull. Addreaa nottcard: "Cuticura, Drpt. 811, JRoaton." Fold everywhere. Soap 25c. Ointment 2.1 and &0c. g;,-miamwCTiB'r.i-tv itH are the commonest A couple y' rest Is the onjy remedy, flood as enoble an airman to survive yi less fit; man'vvould perish rejoin me ot a youngster shot mn a nuuet in the stomach last r,ln enemy territory south of tho ,J Stunned hy the fall, he soon re- I I consciousness and crawled from I tfMhed machine Into a nearby .ifhere he hid unir nightfall. in Upess he made his way two kilo- l I into, the American lines, narrowly f being shot oy a sentry, suspected sche ruse, Hiv. comrades have celved a cheery penciled letter In a hospital ' i Shout the air service areallza- fjthe value of the vjork has ?sa non-existent and all energies ted toward perffctlng team- hicsh 1 the secret of air sue- rt i-,w,as loath to discuss his own! i t a :sam; -jjowmng' a 'J not yery risky In Itself, but C'Wdlcloua use 01 cioua cover or ned dive from' & preat neignt. gi'3iii...W Planked Lobster A Treat A Delicacy. Hanover Sea Food is always the "talk of the town." We buy, prepare and serve only one kind "The Best." SaggStavSk sj.so Clam Cocktail . OKvit Beets KaiUhit Clam Chowdtr or Cold Cotttomma PlanWd Hanover LcblT Ktv) Aiparant JuHennl PatalM f Cream i"t Cain or Pit ist Cheat? felTea S JANOV ANOVER Twelfth aad Arch Sts. CULUDS M. MOHH. Um. Aen of America: Imitations! You know'that Imitation is the sincerest flattery. PARIS GARTERS are crudely and widely imitated more so, perhaps, than even our human desire for m praiseworthy dpprbval in- I vites. At no time could a man better afford to insist upon getting the genuine PARIS GARTER than ,today. A substitute is too costly at any price. It's economy to buy the better grades of PARIS GARTERS at 35P or more t ASTEIIM&CO. ftahrti Children's HICKORY Garters , jfr. -, Fill Me Up With Your Cheapest My Car is a Chalmers" Ever heard that order given at" a gasolinetfilling station ? You will if you just wait till a Chalmers drives up. At some of the larger stations you'll see a row of three or four red pumps. On each is a price, and in some cities the price will range from say, 2054, 2354, 27J4 to 30 cents per gallon. Watch the different makes of cars as they arrive for refilling of tanks. The "temperamental" ones will insist on the high-test gasoline only. And pay the high price. They will tell you, that, with the low-test gasoline, their cylinders fill with carbon, the carburetor will not function, and that the power produced is nil J Well they ought to know. They are driving those cars. The Chalmers owner is the exception to the rule. He stops at the first pump the cheapest, heaviest, low-test gasoline.- He knows he is buying a liquid that is practically kerosene. But he also knows his Chalmers motor will burn it and con sume it perfeptly. And if he knows all the facts he will appreciate also that there are more heat units per gallon in the heavy than in the lighter fuel. So his efficiency is greater at the same time that his fuel bill is less. Yes you have it the famous "Hot Spot" and the "Ram's Horn'" manifold as you find them in combination only in Chalmers Motor Cars, are responsible for that condition. You obtain a fourfold efficiency in a Chalmers we'll tell you how in the next advertisement Meantime, drop in and let us show you just what the "Hot,-Spot" and the "Ram's Horn" really are what they accomplish and how. Then you will understand the reason for the tremendous popularity of the Chalmers a popularity and a demand so great that every- body in the trade concedes, "This is Chalmers year." Chicago ; , New York ThHIj the TAWS . kaae mark .T377X V YJSSatV PIRIS CARTERS Nn mnfjil Il'i your uarente ol garter quality 207 A aa a iaaa f b aaraaiii ,m.-tipjw u i.BganiaaaaanBaaaaag,--aaaaaaaaaaar'aMaaaaaMaaaaaMiMMMBlMBaM aaaBHaaaiaaalaBaaaaalaMHlSRaflHiBVaaaalraat Touring Oar. 7.FaMencr f 1610 Toarlns Car, S.FauanKtr f X666 Standard Boadatar ... (IMS Tooting Sedan ..... KH Town Car landanlet Cabriolet, B'FaiMncr 91083 Umonilne, 7Fnaaencer Town Car, T-Faaaeuger . 9S0M Llmoualue Landaulet All Prloea F. O. B. Detroit Subject to Chance Without Notice v I SOSS OSS t30W CHALMERS MOTOR COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA i . . ; Ractf 2iL"W&M r ." . ... aW-W nUIWl. IJIUOU.PHVV y, . . -,, - -- -k or, Spruce 462 252-254 N6rth Broad -Street anus on a pa noon, you, must. V7HSaflAlaVaaaaKeC3Csw' ""..aMr, 4nnrk e .diving on "your m.imw.' w'wa. VZM . aw '(aa. ., a ftUAf .f Ah ..-. bMi$a Ev.' "ll'lJ fr - fgs" iv Z " '- it!a ', ZJtrz J.u tj f" 1 BiH PI53