iiHfnwppTT'y. -t bwhbkckvhbesx vsim'ji -fvi rcr- j wiiwMiHawnr'niwHBBVimTT7KmrirTr. jhuui ?wwiv iwW?'"r'i ' - ' . Aw?. ' lTW$rT& - iSV"i;;arawf'TTfV''1 VS it .fV"ff'-n- utr , -. s. , ; 'r'"tr F'' 'Wtt iSttStti t-Ws Ft'irTTi ii&V. Skl3&,l -..ra,V?rV ... ' ' V"h .'V.t,h . ',f sv T c e , --- V n A W II i 1 1 J " "- 1 . " Bj n ! H - n 1 WW BBHM Br M . ( V f B. ! MmM B H m m T BB - ' LVI I B IB.BB B U B- V 1 v VBI - T auwvi J. hajm.j JLJXUJJA. J. XXXXJXSLXAajlJX XXA-CXj J. JO. JLVKJJLaVJL KJXUi XJlfUJAXV ;X fi.OXCFi' " (.' V .,. ,t iTl J -:-.; As tlBEAND BRAVERY OF FRENCH MARVELS TO GERMAN OFFICER SPECIAL CABLE DISPATCHES i,, t f MAN MARVELS ?Af FRENCH PRIDE P$! Officer Writes Admir- igly of People in Occu- ftg, pied Territory fe COMPLAINTS HEARD HsSssggLj . . ichmcn JNever Clinch, but rtfyl Preserve Child's Faith in fjl ' V j . f Cruel Trials fa k By EDWIN L. JAMES V Sptcial Cable to Evening Public Ledger fijy Cotvrleht, tilt, bv .Vcio Vorfc rimes Co. jUi (With the American Army In France, I Sept. 12. ? In common with all other Americans Vwho have seen only to admire the SSpSliplrlt of Franco at war, the brave SLu , JPrench suffcrlnc most cruel blows but ' never complalnlnR, I have come to V9 .marvel at the invincible KnnI nt dm unconquerable people. But ot all the K- . tributes paid to the soul of France fe, surely none Is more eloquent than the ff following. It camo from the pen of high German officer. Read now fe'what he has to say of the French: "T hjLVA hern llvlnt? fnr vnnra rynrm 1 imm 41.1m 4nlABfl .,, ., !? .-.... 1. BVto month I have seen It becomo moro 5"' 'nltlable. And what Is remarkaliln la :. ,. .- .. .. ...- .. r ino r rencmuau a iuinu. ino rencu- l?' man who does not make any com- pllnt against the man who has settled "as his unwelcome gnest by his llre- P;b , sWe, and consoles himself with the IS weu-Known saying, 'U'cst ui Guerre. tff' .t.VRo when we eo home on Ip.ivn of wi" 'absence and we hear our wives nnd f parents whining, we feel like taking ly; BWn By ineir coai-sicoves and drag- jJging Tnem aown nero 10 ine invaded fc . ..kB.B FVin,, .Mll lfniti !. il.,, ti; TDUnirj' wm.v ici.i W1IUL lllllt f- .nlsery is theirs who have remained V.njaters in their own homes. ISftH "he Frencn or tne occupied coun. sST .try hate us, but don't complain. They 'fSTstate their prldo Is forbearance of com- fe '.plaint. I am never weary of marvel- ting ai mis K"t ui int'ir.M. out you. Uncle Fritz, and Aunt Mlna, of Mains . .or elsewhere, how would you hehavp rifthe enemy were In your countrv? fr'f'to judge from the small trials which El, Uyou bear so poorly you would lose all K?:, confidence, iou are always lunching. stp 7lrMM a1 Viiirt if the TTinrtpnhiirr hnm. H'ifi'inr. does not crush, as he Is wont trt o. a whole hostile army. "What the ihsilRrench could teach you Is this child's "tMaIs. Or, to express It more brultally, yi'm.: m Ipnlnus of their Imnprtfnpnt am ride. "Many Germans could learn a good t'iaeal at the school of misfortune which LtheHnhabltants of the occupied conn- T'-try biar up under so proudly. Let k-a. consider me question once more. Sfe?loW many French people in the ( VffOUrSo oi ineae ul luur jmrs nave tvWarned aerman; inol one in a tnous Ifihd. But I will wager anything that JnlMannhelm or Aschaffenburg. If the vwnCn ruiea mere, inera wuuiu dq no Lam .vlrl Hth vhmn fhA nnnmiBmr lkEw " "" ."".-:- ""- .: "" f-.ould not taiK in nis own language. K would oe a iaa xo speaK irencn. L',?'tf-"F,renchwomen and girls who corn- i ipfomlse themselves with Germans are '.branded. r Their honor Is lost even i,r should; the boche be such a fool as to HimarryHhem. But In an occupied Ger- EjnsianyT Let us remember Napoleonic .t Vtatimea," feiK"The Frenchman himself is never ln- .fee fact that many of our comrades go rmoro inuu iiuil waj i.u mcci iiim, tiiu I VAaanlte the little advantages he would rtterive ln.hls dally life. He has na r .national pride akin to passion. I ad ;WJmlr the French. 5ftl"lt every German man and woman BM' Awere in my country would he be com- fc1f.fc JICIICW IU nmtmp iiij .,m. j j fiifr nnwrrc i pianfs E?.flP " V""" """- " K,)Ha8 Two Battles With Germans and Returns Safely Twlth th American Armr In Franre, fc'jrpept. 12. (By I. N. S.). Three enemy liM.rtown Tuesday by Lieutenant Jacques FL?-lwmt. of New York city. it' kv-. Lieutenant Rwaat encountered several TX9 vlrAlrirAflMa KphlnH iTia Anamv linen nnd after tiiWairthrllllng battle, saw one of them EK tmble toward the earth. y:?.Un.lfA l. 9,o0 wtiirnliii In Inn Am,H. ilfTcan hangars he was attacked by several EJf'Qma,l aviators. He thinks that he , brought one aown in names ana seni Si-' another to the earth, out of control. I-?- rfjueuienani nwaais nquurun cum- L?-3i9lLraiiinn rt thn defitructlan of the enemv 8r;Sianes. bo that the young officer may be Eiisl-i!"" "" -" mt FOOD SCARCE IN HOLUND .Situation Grave la Last Warning fitft -of Retiring Agriculture Minister By the Associated Press Jv Aautardam. Sept. 1 The last act of SAvrlrailture Minister Posthuma before hniilnr nver his nort folio to tS 'iiOeseor, M. Van Yesselsteyn, was to send K , a .Wrc.ular to the svnods of the varl- S3;, Vi'ousr religious congregations of Holland a?iod BUPPly was very grave. mII tf-TThe retiring minister declared In this ,KiZaiania.r that, for the harvest year V&TSiltll-l H85.000 tons of grain and sub r t f f'sjitStes were available. Including 100,000 I ?'ir Smu nromised from America, this en- yijfmirint a continuation of the present l 11 BUMUT" uanx ruuuu oi uuoui seven rSi,riiBCs per capita until early July next. t.tfie moniiiljr iaio ui .uuouiujJijuii ot r,W tone. Mavfeon 1115 Chestnut Street (Opposite Keith's) A Special Offering! Wm-:'- a, i . t w . KILLED MEN IN LIFEBOATS U'Boat Bombards Crew of Nor wegian Ship It Torpedoed Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Copurloht, itlf, lu A'cu) York Dmr Co. London, SepL 12. Tho Chrlstlanla corres'iondent of tho Dally Express tele- graphs: "The sole Bur Ivor of the Norwegian ship Kglantlne, which was carrying charcoal, has arrived at Bergen and re. ports that a submarine sank the vessel without warning. Tho boat then bom barded the crew, who had taken refuge In the ship's lifeboats. The Oermans saw their letlms bathed In blood, but gave no assistance. The captain and Re men died of wounds on a raft, while the mate went mad. "The whole country Is Indignant. The Chrlstlanla press declares that the U boat .brutality has surpassed all limits." MUST ABANDON PAN-GERMAN IDEA Professor Delbruck De clares Germany Should Drop War Aims AROUSED DISTRUST U-Boat Politicians Condemned and Belgian Declaration Called Too Late By GEORGE RENWICK Speciof Cable to Evening Public Ledger Copurioht. nn. bv New York Times Co. Amsterdam, Sept. 12. fnInnrtrdn ' r"cl1 peaco H ,a "pessary L, ,n?ean; of a" "-German Ideas and war alms. That Is the key. nL?, V" aVcl hy I'''f''sor Hans S. f J",1"" lMtnown monthly, rreusslsche Jahrbucher ti,IIpaf;ank!i.decl:,rca ,hat not only are fn VB n'emlns largely Rullty of start re KVar' bu tUat they nre ma'nly retcponslbe for the prolongation of the struggle. They Pet up the theorv that Germany mmt come out of tho war so strengthened th-it nc power or coalition would dare attack her, and that she would be In such a position that all others ould glc way beforo her bv reason of the mtro menace of her strength. Thus, says the professor, dlHtrust has been aroused throughout the worK? which It will be difficult to dissipate Tho German Government, he adds, has never acted according to the Ilelchstag's Julv repolutlon, and the Chancellor's decla ration about Belgium was too late and too Indefinite. He expresses the belief that the de pression In Germany has been caused by the Pan-German war alms, and he seercly condemns the U-boat politicians who promised victory by submarine war fare In a few months. "So away with Pan-German Ideas." ho says, 'for our own sakes. for Pan Germanism Is doing moral damage to our people's character." Ho admits that the world has a right to demand that the German people give a pledge that tho Pan-German spirit of tho presumption of force, of hostility to culture and of barbarism Is not the Ger man spirit. Tho best means, he says, of showing that the ruling factors In Germany have finally Irrevocably turned Tan-Germanism out of doors would be to collect, all theiprewar Pan-German bellicose utter ances and at tho same tlmo to show by reference to the literature of tho enemy how much damage Pan-German agita tion has done and how It was responsible for bringing about tho catastrophe of war. The article attracts a great deal of attention In the German press and will undoubtedly give an Impetus to that capipalgn against ths Pan-Germans which is being waged by persons and In circles having considerable Influence on the public mind. Meanwhile reports of coming changes In the German Government are much discussed throughout the country. The International Korrespondenz, the organ of the extreme right of the So cialist party, believes that tho Prussian upper house will persist In Its attitude of hostility to franchise reform, and doubts It Hertllng will have the neces sary strength to te chief of staff in tho decisive battle for reform. It also doubts If his administration Is fitted for tho serious task of leading the German peo. pie through the fifth winter of tho war. Hertllng's paper government, the article concludes, has been a failure and a de ception. The Berliner Tageblatt thinks that the mention of Scheldemann and Erzberger as members of the Government is merely designed to rouse a conservative cam paign against them and to make them impossible as candidates for such an honor. There is a definite denial, of course, that changes are in contemplation, and It should always be borne In mind that certain of the reports that moderation Is progressing In Germany may very possibly be directed toward creating an effect In England In view of a general election. September Sale In Antiques and Repro ductions of Furniture. We have bedroom, liv ing; room and dining room suits. 300 Rockers, as illustrated, $15. 450 solid mahog any Sewing Bas kets, $6.75. 915 S. M. Lamps. Table Lamps, $1.50 and up. Floor Lamps, $8.50 up. P. SELDITCH 239 So. 3d St (Below Walnut St) & DeManp New Fall Hats Actually &m Ef' Worth $10 .; U r..A ttoen More than 200 charmingly new fall creations of velvets selected for spe cial selling for tomorrow. All the newest shapes and trim- mini 4YA4ta Autumn's most desired coloring l ERZBERGER TRIES TOOUSTHERTLING Catholic Leader Center of New Political Crisis in Germany REICHSTAG PARTY BUSY Will Try to Prevent Von Hintze From Making Ex pected Speech Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger CopiiHoM, 1918, lu Xew York Timta Co. The Hague, Sept. 12. Once again rumors of a governmental crisis are gaining ground in Berlin. It Is certain that something new Is afoot, but It Is difficult to say whether this moemcnt Is part of the general peace offensive or has Its origin In the fresh political combinations now In process In Germany. Tho Berlin correspondent of the semi official Cologno Gazette denies all rumors on prlnc.ple, but especially those relating to Important political changes, which his paper has not announced. He says that It would be an act of political Insanity even to play with the Idea of a Government crisis at the present Juncture. Meanwhile Internal and forelcn nrfnlr. arc discussed and often settled without tno Helchstag majority party being even consulted This clement is decidedly disgruntled, and Is striving after more parliamentary power. Tho famous Catholic leader, Krzber gcr, who has been somewhat In the ncKground since the latest Ooernnient upheaval, is the ringleader of this new movement, and Is organizing a strong combination with the left wing of the Catholic parts-, which will probably form a group with tho Progressives and So cialists He has been striving to un dermine Hertllng's position. Most papers deny the rumors of the Chancellor's resignation Although the Kolnlscho Volks Zcitung, one of his organs, Is obliged to admit that ma chinations nre In progress, It s-cofTs at "parlUmentarization." Erzberger has always belonged to the party which dlsapproed the U-boat war. "It is crazy, and you will seo tho re sults of It," ho said eighteen months ago to an Informant of jour correspondent. The f"ct that most Germans are now obliged to admit the failure of the sub marine war only strengthens tho Erz berger party. Tlio Itelchstag paTty leaders are very busy conferring these days, and It ap pears that they are trying to keep Von Hintze from making his expected speech, as they feel that any speech made at present will not bo moderate enough to further peaco Interests. The Foreign Minister hurried to army headquarters Immediately on his return from Vienna. Mos,t newspapers agree that no prog ress has been made In settling the Polish question since Von Hintze held his con ference with Burlan. The International Korrespondenz says that the crisis affecting the Chancellor ship Is duo to the delay In the reform of tho Prussian franchise. If the Upper House refuses to move in Us, favor. It asserts, the Government must resign and then it will bo a question whether. HertllngyJavijUonsr enough Hd-'-pontlnue me'Tfight. 5 All the papers agreo that no decision can be reached for a few weoks, until the grand committee of the Itelchstag meets. - Steamship Berwind Sinks in Port Bridgetown, Barbados, Sept 12. The owniiiouii, jjoiwiuu jrum ;ew jorK, nas sunk In the harbor. All tho crew are safe. ILtiiM PARIS SURE FOCH WILL BREAK HINDENBURG LINE Serene Confidence Throughout France That When He Is Ready Allied Generalissimo Can Resume Victorious Drive Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Copvrtoht, isis. bv New York Times Co. Pari., Sept. 12. From the viewpoint of a non-French observer the splrituat and mental physi ognomy of Paris today Is remarkable. Wo are at what Is universally admitted to bo a comparative pause In tho might iest aggressive military effort tho world has ccr seen. After eight weeks of continuous Ic torlcs tho armjes that tho Oennans be lieved to be hopelessly weakened and Incapable of further effort have recov ered by sheer hard fighting an enormous extent of territory which tho German mllltnry machine nt tho height of Its effi ciency required more than doublo that period to conquor. Tho Allies now find theiniehes faced by a. still enormously powerful adversary strongly entrenched In positions wnlch ho believes, or did until recently, to bo Impregnable. Tho view of Paris today, however, re gards the future with more sereno con fidence than at any prelous moment since the war began. Oono is all the vague unrest tint cxcd and disturbed the nation nearly four long years. The nlld rumors that formerly ran through the city almost hourly aro nonexistent. If anything of the kind Is mentioned, It Is promptly suppressed as tho work of some enemy agent operating by subtle and devious ways. Clemenceau's leadership of the nation Is acclaimed hy all, even by his political foes. The supreme military skill of Focli and tho Inestimable boon which unity of command has conferred on the Allies are realized keenly by the humblest rag picker In the city. The whole maBS of the population is as ono as to the entire Justice of our side In the war and the certainty of the coming lctory. No Taint of Bonus rarlflsm In spite of tho fact that humanltarlan Ism Is one of the most deeply rooted fca tures of French mentality, there Is no eldence here of the lrus of bogus pacifism. Tho lgorous action of Clemcn ccau, In the full knowledge that he has tho whole nation behind him since he took office, has drained the last taints of this person from the constitution of tho nation. Politically and morally to day tho Paris front Is Impregnable. And In this, whatever may ho the case under ether circumstances, Paris stands for the whole of France. With a spirit of this kind, tho famous Hlndenburg line, which the enemy ad mittedly succeeded In elevating to tho rank of a nightmare a year ago, has no terror for French opinion today. No Illusions are folt as to the formidable nature of the defensive positions Into which tho enemy has1 been now driven, but in the French mind the whole mean ing of what Is somewhat loosely termed tho Hlndenburg line has undergone a comptote change. Today it is regardedi here merely as a series of positions, most of which are undoubtedly strong, but no more to bo feared than any one of dozens of strong defensive .positions which have been overcome by Foch and tho Allied generals andithelr troops dur ing the last two months. .i It Is now realized 'hero that,the. basic factor In the great'HInffenburg 'retreat cf last year was not so much the In herent strength of the positions, of the line to which the 'enemy then retired as the fact that he deliberately left behind him and the Allied armies a broad belt of devastated country .which they would requlro months to organize before they would bo able again to assume the of fensive. Today this factor is virtually non existent. Tho Germans have been wwm mm lilt Hill driven right Into their positions of retreat with the Ictorlous Allies close on their heels and hammering furiously there before they have oven time to Install themselves In safety. Itlndrnbnrr I.lne Broken Moreover, as every expert points out, tho Hlndenburg line between Lens nnd rthelms Is no longer Intact. The British havo opened a seven or eight mile door In It above Cambral and In front of Cambral, It la Insisted here, there Is no more Hlndenburg line at all. There, at any rate, the Germans havo nothing but Improvised trenches to meet tho British attacks. Tho situation Is almost as satisfac tory, as Paris sees It, at the other end of tho battle. On the Allette, Mangln's men have secured tho Solssons plateau and are threatening to deprlvo the enemy of the magnificent defensive post tlons of tho Chcmln-des-Damos, which tho French occupied nearly twelve months In'conquerlng In 1317. Further, It la realized hero, the strength of the enemy line does not consist merely In fortifications, but In tho military value of the men defend Ing them. I,udendorff's shock troops, such ns aro left of them, aro no good as far ns their Special qualities go for defensive purposes. Moreover- both In quantity and quality, the available men of the enemy are now known to be most unfavorably rated as compared with six months ago. The belief is growing dally here that In view of all the circumstances, what remains of the Hlndenburg line can be successfully attacked, If Foch thinks fit to do so. The general opinion, however. Is that the Allied commander-in-chief will succeed In rendering the much aunted enemy lino useless to him by quite other means than by direct attack, even of the kind that Mangln has been cleverly employing lately. Bonaparte, It Is pointed out, found the key to Egypt In "tho plain of Marengo, and It was by the battle of Wattlgnlcs, In 17D3, that Carnot freed Maubeuge. Where Foch will strike the blow that wilt havo the samo effect on the Hlnden burg line that tho trumpets of Joshua had on the walls of Jericho, Paris Is content to leave to Foch himself to settle. The only feeling Paris has In tho matter Is the certainty that wher ever Foch Btrikes the necessary blow, tho Hlndenburg lino will surely fall. FOE'S GUNS WRECK CHURCHES Soissong Edifices Targets for the German Bombardment By the Associated Press With the French Army in France, Sept. 12 Since their defeat by General Mangln, the Germans havo undertaken the destruction of the architectural masterpieces of Solssons. With the same methods as they havo previously em ployed In burning or blowing up every structure In the regions out of which they have been driven, they are pro ceeding with tho demolition of churches and other edifices tn this town, rich In specimens of the beet work ot the archi tects of the thirteenth century. The cathedral of St. Gorvals la now the principal target. Enormous breaches nave been made In the splendid facade; the upper gallery Is three-quarters de stroyed while the lower gallery has been wrecked. The statues fall one by one from the tower. The ancient abbey of St. Jean-des-Vlgnes, in which Thomas Becket spent several years, Is also gradually crum bling. Both towers have been decani- tated, while the facade has been pierced. in many places ; me vault oi me lacaae has fallen In, and the rich ornamenta tion of the left tower his disappeared, with the exception of the statues of two saints that remain facing the enemy. OvaThere zzsw .imJSJK kOi BULGARIAN ARMY IS NEAR COLLAPSE Rapid Demoralization in Ranks Due to Irritation Against Germans WITHDRAW TEUTON AID Italian Commander Tclh Troops They Will Soon Defeat Foe By AUSTIN WEST Special Cable to Evening Public Lcdgvr Conrlohl, IMS, bv yew York Times Co. Milan, Sept. 12. The Secolo prints a special dispatch from Its correspondent nt Salonlca, net ting; forth details ot tho rapid demorali zation which haa de eloped In the ranks of the Bulgarian army. Until recently tho Bulgarians showed themselves Inva riably tn be tho most valiant fighters. but tho terrible privations to wnicn tnuy have been subiected. tlieir Keen irrita tion against the Germans and the with drawal from Macedonia of a great bulk of tho Teutonic elements that scrvjd as the bolts and framework of the Bul garian military machine, are one and all contributing to bring about a state of collapse, which Is Increasing aany on a remarkable scale. In the courso of a stirring address delivered to the Italian troopi their commander. General Momtlelll, Bald: "Nearly all the Ocrmans have aban doned the Macedonian front Tho hand ful that remain contlnuo to do us the honor of facing our Italian lines, but wo know them of old and fear them not. In fact, today we fear them less than ever. The Bulgarians are sick of German domination, which is draining their blood and famishing- them. More and more every day they are morally depressed, and their military discipline is breaking down. "The beseeching walls of their fam II lea that languish in the midlands are paralyzing their energy and causing their arms to drop to their sides. You, then, aro now superior, both morally and materially, to the enemy that con fronts you, and on those fitful occasions when under the German goad the Bul- Cutting feH 1 Out of Shave MoM mtsi ball the sJurlnf Una no brush, n lifter apply Gbu with the finger tips. MOLLE & Softens the beard btttaf tba soap and U fine far ba (ace. Large tube 2Sc at dealers WINTERS KKSSI.KU. Ine.. Distributor. Ifarette Blrtr., , i-mwnripnia I onlA 1 mwk&09ifa'UguHo& IP' 'HE talks wl The subjects Michelin Tires and Tubes are sold by Good Dealers Everywhere Factory Branch, 802 N. Broad St. Wholesale Only Telephone Poplar 1901-02 gara try to muster that little reserve of warlike Vigor that remains to them you never fall to overcome them easily. Hence you have tho right to claim that such a marked superiority of material and moral means as wo possess should speedily be assured an adequate oppor tunity of demonstrating Itself." AMERICAN USES ROCKS Escapes by Bombarding Captors With "Unmilitary' Weapons With the American Army, Sept. 12. Rooks and a steady nervo saved a private of nn American division In the Toul sector, who was taken prisoner by SSSSSr C5S55SS25S5E it j. Or to be exact $8,182,492,000 Revenue THAT'S more money than is now in circulation in the U. S. A. That makes Rockefeller's millions sound like small change. There isn't room in my check-bookj on the dotted line after the? dollar sign, to write this figure! a But you and I and all the rest of us over here are going to get together and raise this amount to' help our boys "over there," return Belgium tq King Albert, Alsace-Lorraine to France, and move General Pershing to Berlin. Most of us have got to begin to save NOW in order to have the money ready for Uncle Sam when the. payments are due. Under these conditions, no man can afford to pay more than is necessary to get what he needs. Dr. Garfield left it to your conscience last Sunday about wasting gas and running your car and it was all that was necessary. I'm going to do the same thing in regard to saving money in buying a hat, and put it right up to you! But I want to tell you one thing. Your conscience won't have to get permission of your pocketbook to buy one of my hats because' I have got a hat good kenough for anybody, and you can have any felt hat or derby in my store "MTAS 1307 Market St. This uritt ef tailvt ttslt it dttitmed I tilt thi uncertainty eul tf iirt-buiing. Your Experience which preceded this described a to determine the value of tires before discussed in these talks were: Weight Thickness Traction Tube-Life Price The Ultimate Tett is to Try Michelins. Nothing Proves Michelin Superiority Like Actual Use. Every ftft IVovtf Micfcriin Offt German raiders recently,; hut who ;ea caped and returned to his'' own", lines. The Germans were particularly exas perated at losing the prisoner. They had vainly sought to capture and hold-' at least ono man from the division ep-' posing them, but this one slipped through their fingers. The American was carried to the German trenches after having been surrounded. Suddenly he broke away and ran. The Germans did not lire because, they , feared they might hit each other. The I American stumbled Into a shell crater and bombnrded his pursuers with rocks. One of tho aermami leaped Into the . hole alongside of him, but the American f Vllled him with a trench knife, then dashed from, shellhote to shellholo until he reached the Amtrlcan lines. Bight Billion Dollars tor $z.oi. i-yln n. GUWVtW Store Open Evenings NikNvTjl bSiT A many tests by vou buy them. . Tube-Shape Cross-Sections Organization Tube-Fit Experience VM 4. 'A some in two-tone effect v JKS'V Jr ,-fi "j 7 J - . ' -J rZJ3 ' , W.J a -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers