eY!!?KrV !?' ,WNmW. ,7S-aaaSEiel!t". ' , v . '7s! . ' 7'X'TiR' i "f ,- "tTTT i - J '-v 43 ' ll'- if EK " ii. TW V '3 ' KTH f, P '.V - ll-l' m & W ON BLOW, ARMY'S ANSWER 'Flank Attacks Create, 'v Grave Peril for Four German Armies fc TEUTONS STAKING. ALL far . ''. - - ... . aiser 8 JMen r ight Ucspcr- palely, Galled by the Bit- lmnnee nf llntAnl & ' w. -rii.Tvn nun.vxTY ':MpKkl CabU to Evening Public Ledger i""rioi...Hof. i. ktf Xt,o Yoilt Tlnif 1 Co. f$( '.With the Freneli .rmle. Oct. 10. h:A The Allied armlei In adtnncc of the -if tateemen, have given the German nrrnla. tfcV proposals the only answer soldiers I ".n lt. i i-Lvoriiv neBiuiinp in imc "m i. !( i -i... fiahman i i'--l --. h- rlavs l- "We are -Lnn- h.. rlavs l - 'V e are "" Miking evcrvthlng." the Implication be. S4'.J1..k.T .L. .Mne must be, ''fw " -t ' ltt AAnialni itinr Rrr; . T " ..... .--1I-. .f,irniii man i urnimn m-ip- n..--- Yh Herman o-ii.Th1 Staff IS llUeruUy 7. -itj.!--. ..-..i ut nn- iliU moment 1.1 v iahiiK rii;iiiiiia) .. ' 'iVanco to postpone, as long as possl i bin-the evil day when the order for a -1 general retreat shall become Inevita ' bl. That day may not be far distant. i ramtr hs r&llm. South of there LViAmerican, British and French troops are righting their way yaru oy yaru mrousu what remains of the Siegfried line That , the battle Is hard Is easily comprehend- ed. A break anywhere now might precip itate disaster. i In the colassal batle. which mend t-srithout a break between the Olse and the Alsnr. and from Cainbral to the "Woevre, It Is not a auestlon for locul f "ucces or dffeat of one army. It Is oucBiion oi me iir ii four 15 er- ,m'an armies, those of Vim Hutler. Von ") Bernhardt, Von L'arlnwltz and Von Mud " ra, which, stretching from St. Quell , ,tln to the Alsne. are pressed closely by ; . the French armies under Debeney nnd 'Mfangln. They see, on each side of J them, armies to the north and to the ",'es.at yielding position after position and themselves obliged to wait with what composure they can for th- day when, fthelr flanks being turned, thpy will have to retreat, these four armies, together -.with" their enormous material, through '' country which can provide no more than adequate road and rallwaj faclli- ties for the retreat of one army ' Two Million I'arr lletreat If tha Germans wait too long the 1 four armies named will be between the 1 hammer and the anvil. Possibly eight 7 German armies, two million men, will fjTKave to retreat between Valenc'enues I;,!" ;nd the Meuse, and retreat In desperate S'V. lias A varri of snrp on u nindriv. iTutted road will then he as precious 'J .' If paved with gold. Men will tight ,for marching room ' The station of Buxgiiy. wheie the main 'railway Ifne from Cologne runs along the ' Banibre Bifurcates, has been under the I fire of British guns. M?A0cl- 'delayed). Koch and the Allied PT aAMira ffv rtermunv tblr utiHtrpr this morning, when the flame of battle blazed . tip afresh after a hrlef lull On the ex- Vtreme right the Kranco-Amerlcans t- ifjtacked In the region of Verdun. Further direst Gouraud and Berlhelut nresseil for vnard, against strong resistance along i-'jjthe Sulppe, and Franco-British troops -VHuscaed a uilve nortli and south, of M .uentin. in eacn sector or activity tne ' .French pay tribute to the extreme cour tage ano oosiinacy wnerewun tne enemy :ls fighting, but the armistice annexl has .cri-talllxed their already formed convic tion that it Is the courage of desnalr V , ' lefet Is Bitter None but soldiers, or those who have lived In Germany, can realize the hltter neaaof deafeat to the nation that boasted and believed that their fighting forces cWere invincible. In many quarters 1 have heard allusions to the dancer of accept- I J Ing the German offer If made later of '. evacuating France and Belgium as a ' preliminary to peace negotiations. It Is pointed out that llindenburg would be only too glad to get back without disss i"'.ter to the frontier, where he could organ- ilze resistance on a shortened line he- Vjtween, Thlonville and Mulhausen, with all'the advantage of communication In """hi' favor, and then throw in thr winds I Hie conditions -whereon the .Miles uc L :(Xptd thti evacuation. KRENSKY FOR RECOGNITION WTepiier RuaiHii PreimVr Buuki Ufa Regime in Lomloti '- :Sfexil'Cable to F.ienine Public l.ederr (talVrfwrinhl. tilt, by .Yeic York Time, fa. ju-' Jwj'f " J.eadon. Oct. 10. -The New York "iimer vraeiiiugiou aerpaicn announc ing the assumption of power by the 1IUI provisional aovernmenl creat. Iff 111. RlntA frtnlAntlnn u ITfa Vd oeen read, with much Interest here, Kerenky Is now In London as the rep ttresentalivn of that hodv and urirlnp on f.the British Government Its formal rec ognition, omcai circles decline, to igtato opinion whatever on the matter. rbut your corresnondent lesrns that the wi-euaiuuu is iu tvBji. uiiu eee, .i in Russia there are many govern- omental association nf all varieties of authority and stability and there w . 'disinclination to declare for any of them HANAN 6001 SHOES 1318 CHESTNUT ST. SHOES BUY UBERTY BONDS it i . MASTERL Y BRINGS RUIN TO ENEMY - Achievements of Foch, Haig, shadow Most Brilliant Pages of the Annals of War fare 'Americans Shatter Foe's Last Faint Hope it; ;. h. i Specie (,'efce to Evening Public Ledger foevrlaM, IHff u .Vew 1'orfc riinr Co. I With the Freneh ,rmle,' Oct. 11V I Kventa have, marched ho rapidly In the eleen week" that have pnaeed since 1 the AllleH recovered the Initiative In the west that It may be useful to re- vie very briefly ti.e stages of their victorious niarcn up to the Important 'point now reached. With at the outset onlj slight . if- ference of means, the tlerman direction has been markedly nnd Increasingly In- ferlor. Not forgetting the talents of the galmv of annv commanders, not forgetting the. Delglans and their -v,Hutrl iilmr th. nld of !. Italian am other minor force, this sudden ami Hweepinjt marine mum u aurinuieii m ' tti ,-lf.t mnianrl tiiulr MnMll.lt - . ....... .... ....-. I IIV W11II.-U vvs. ....... ....- -..!. -r1 1.1- lsi...i-eil. .f tlllttlnl n , ii,..,. i nnj ti.iiit.o- r. m it FffniM that their nchlevomenta already overshadow the most brilliant pages of I TUf central hlfihu-ay of Invasion and retreat in northern France always has been the valleys of the ft.imbre and the (tlse P It h.is again been, nnd will be in this war. The (Use near Noyon was for long th southwestern corner of the. front pointing to Paris, and II was on either side of the OIe that the last two (ierm.in offensives lefl huge pockets, one toward Amiens, the other Hcross the Marne The rutllnr off of thei pockets In order to recover a favorable front along the OIe. wllli certuln important railway" was evl dentlv Indicated as tlie first lllcd oli Jecllv"e. It vva rapidly timed by ibe two offensives of July IS nnd August 8. of which the first brought us to the Vesle nnd the Alsne, near Solssons. mid the second to the line Albert-Chaulnes-'lllbecourt. 'I Ids Turns tn Alltrp The (mil' having been leveled. It was now our turn to make offensive pockets. The general Idea of the second phase of the Allied rlpote of course I B'e only my own Interpretation was to maintain the Initiative and to extend the urea of attack, bringing Inlo p'ay s nvfildly as possible the numerical sttength of America, and. while every where harassing the enemy, to gain nd vnnlageous positions for the Inevitable assault on the llindenburg line In this phase .hiee acts are distinguishable Tim nisi was conducted by lieneral Mnngin ai ill renter or the fiout In Fiance south nf tin- lse, and was shrewdly calculated to have radlc.il ef fect on either hand On August 18 Man giu struck out fioni Algle foresl. and within a few- days he had reached the jAilelte nnd the plateau above Solssons. The second act followed on August SI. when Genetal Byng, notth of the Homme, carried the Third British Army east- waid toward Hapnume, supported the next day by I!awilnsons left Thirdly, mi August 2R. r.nmn General llorne"s thrust along the Arias-i'iimbral road, which attained the famous Dro- court-Queant switch. This swift multi plication of blows was worth something unprecedented. I.udendorff. In soldiers" parlance, refused Ijis center. Humbert, Debeney nnd ltawilnson. thus aided on their wings, hurried to N'esle. and the No.von drama continued to expend to the Inlenser rhythm of victorious en-igy. The thlid great phase, which ma) perhaps be regarded as closing Tuesday, witnessed laige breaches In the Hinden- burg Hstein. two Important enlarge- ments nf the battle, the definite libera- Hon of Vpres. Arras, St Quentln Ithelms and Verdun, and the destruction of the military power of Germany's two leseer allies. Hulgarla and Turkey. The last Geiman reserves aie being exhausted The eaiue Allied armies continue nl mol Incredibly to sustain Ihe brunt of the frightful struggle, but the Amer icans ate entering the line In a cease lessl.v increasing foiee This phase Is a new battle'of the wIiirs. TIM Ailmi.l 711 A(.i'n..ln'u ... ... M the AWiV and .m sJnen, he V ,"""" Ibrentenm ih .,.,.: i .. ' hold from the Olse and Pouoy-Ie-Chateau to Laffaux and Fort Coiule on the Aisne. On September 2 Generals Home and Kyng again attacked between Arras and the .Somme, and the same night the Ca nadians carried the Queant position. This time l.udendoiff had to with draw not only his center, but th forces I hazardously remaining beyond the Vesle and on the Flanders hills The armies i of ltawilnson, Debeney and Humbert ' advanced to the outworks of the Hinden nMiniiv,ni 11 uir uuinwi n .M Ui. tin II liurii burg line. In the sector., of .'.rubral and St. yuentln. Gencial Pershing's tuin had come The second act of the third phase Is the American-Fiench offensive of Sep tember 12, by which the St. Mlhiel salient w.ih suppressed and a base acquired for ultimate action In Lorraine, After this debut of the First American ' Army, the enemy's last faint hope was shattered. The third act came on Sep tember !!!. General Gouraud, from the center of the Champagne front to the Argonne. nnd General Pershing thence to the Meuse, attunked the German urmles of these parts. The fuuith act came on Septemfier "'. when ihe Belgian, llrltlsh and French forces, commanded by King Albert, broke out from the "per and Ypres. llueatcnlng the enemy's tenure of west ern Belgium, and necessitating the re treat of Yon Quast'a line on the La Mastsee canal. Meanwhile the llrltlsh AIE AN ECONOMY !. ., , . EVWGJ PUSlilp CAMPAIGN - - Pctain and Pershing Over- PEnms had broken the lllndenhurg line near Cainbral. On October 1. Debeney broke It by the capture of St. Quentln. Miingln had reached the Allletle beyond Mai- mlon. tlouratid and Pershing tollmen the necond great Herman ilefeimtve ol tlon between Monthol and the Meiiie. n. nhamlnmnent of the enemy salient j,, tn (.'hampugne. corresponding to the 1(,r,.1, the Mile salient, completes tle third phate of the battle. ,.u,fllj0,ff Oiitm.nemered i.u.ir.... , Hi er where throughout this 'erod;"" hort nnd et so full, the once ImlnclbU- l.udendoiff bus Ixen nutmaneuveie.1. It Is not pretended that his successive withdrawals have been voluntary or elwMlc; thy hm !"olvfd ,)!ri,!H5r iu--r iv-ri"'" -,-- ... --- - 0.tlfH) lir.lU.U.'-. H'l tllOUflaflllH Ol . .-- ,-- , funimn NtKl SfOre- OI UIIIUBUMUP III III-.- - . . ultima fftm. Tlu-v liaMs broken the spirit of the Herman people and produced n radlc.il Internal crisis. . URGE NO RESPITE FOR TEUTON ARMY Armistice Now Would Give Weary Enemy Chance to Rest m:ak knd of rope German Reserves Not Believed Sufficient to Holil Out Till Winter II) r.DWIN I.. JAMKS Special V.nble to .'i ening Public Ledger ( iiwumviI U' l)u Veil Vurfc Tliiielo. Willi the Amerlean Army In France del 10 Since July 15. when the ildc or wr.r whs turned, Marshal Koch has be.n wearing down the German army until i he point has been i cached wheie thfc ... ..,.. u n,i German hlgli commaim n.s .. nni, o." tapldly dwindling force of reseivcs with whli'li In meet new attacks. The first American army In the at tacks between the Alfne and the Meuse has worn out some fifteen German dl vllous. and believes that the enemy will have gteiit difficulty In getting the next tlfwen that he will need In this vector. All along the front, the Allied attack have been using up the German forces rap'dly. The situation may be pictured hy say ing that at this time the Germans have about ten divisions which have had four weeks' r-t, and that when they started the seiieii ot attacks on March 21 they had eighty-two dl- V vision" that bad rested four weeks oi , more Therefote. the German supply of flesh troops Is Hearing the bottom of the bucket , There remains pel haps live weeks of fighting weather. Those live weeks hold ' glorious prospects for the Allied army antl dlr" ptospect" for the German army, i We have manpower superiority and the Geunan. driven hack from their old established lines at inot points, must fight In the open, wheie manpower gen erally is the deciding factor What would a cessation of hostilities now mean for the German"'' It would mean not only thai the German com mand would have time to reit perhaps seventy-five divisions In Ihe next four weeks, hut Inasmuch as il would then I Probably be rather late. for big opera- .tlons. It would mean that tliey It would mean that they could start right nway the work of organis ing their damaged military machine, and restoring Its worn parts and doing rerwlr work which would be Infinitely more difficult than would bo possible j after five weeks more of drain on the dwindling manpower supply. The Amer- , leans therefore believe they have the ! bnche wheie they want him, and that ' they now have nhom reached the point j tow ii id which they have been fighting . since July IS, and that the Germans , . , . , , , - ! rh,0,,Id ,,,BN' "" "s".,e u,lle,H " '" cer" tain they ure in quit Next tihie get re--T I .T --gBf5-fc-Wi---te!tulfOt, S-SiPr--l-s-KSeCrt7. vftlM 5. IEjSk j.AWr ngbQfii n - t-H m Colgate 6c Co. New York EifUitM 1806 Ink fir me in ,r Jtaltr't uAndfW w ir ... ''' . , ..i"'w-. erne. .fci. TiEMjSR - telLADlCLPHU, . MTJr&DAY, ARGONNE FOREST WON BYALLIES Americans Have Taken Last Barrier in Natural Defense FOE FIGHTS TO DEATH Machine Gunners Hold on Till End and Enemy Losses Arc Terrific Hy P.DWIN I JAMES Special Cnble to livening Public Ledger lovuilahl. Itm. hv .Vetc Vork Times Co. With the Amerlean Army In t'ranee, Oct. 10. The bntlle now has given tt all of the Argonne forest. We have taken the Important heights Jdsl south of the village of Marrq. and from thence the line runs westward to where our forces Join the French at T.ancon The Fiench advancing toward Grand. Pie have taken Lancon and Grand Ham and have reached Penile. A glance at the map shows quickly what a small part of the forest Is left In German hands Attacking against ttlvislons freshly thrown In. the Americans pushed through the Krlemhlld line yesterday between Cunel and Itomagne after bitter fight ing, in which attlllery played an Im portant pait. Kast of the Meuse we held the post ilions won despite violent attacks by the Germans and we advanced our line to Hlvry and into Chaunp wood. Two thousand prlsoueis were taken yesterday The niai'hlne-giiti fighting Is very heavy, our troops went forward yes terday In a heavy fog, which proved a big help. Illiiody lighting The fighting is as bloody and difficult as any the war has seen. It should put an end to the present lalk about German niotale. Their machine gunners fight generally until they are killed and iffect a formidable barrier to any ad vance. The nature of the terrain gives excellent positions for machine-gun de fense. lepile the protection of the ravines, hills and woods being to their ad vantage, the German losses have In two days in the Argonne been, terrific. The losses In dead are particularly high, and the situation makes it difficult for the Germans to get nut their wounded Three of the four German divisions that were In the vicinity of the Aire vallev when our attack started on Sep tember 2B !.... Wa.i. ...Ilt..l.n...n n.4 I have been withdiawn, Hnd two of the other divisions that were put , Experience Tells Honlrii experience lias perfected malted rnilk just as H lias perfected many other milk products. Borden's Mnltrd Milk is pure made lv the pioneers in milk purity. It is nutritious food-drink, partially prciliceste.l. For the home luncheon for the kiddies oru bedtime nerfe-soother. , Insist on Uorden's at all druggists in square packages only. MALTED MILK Whenever teeth remember that Your choice of Colgate's is backed by the judgment of dentists. It is a dentifrice that cleans the teeth and stops there, as a dentifrice should. There are no harmful drugs in Colgate's. And its delicious flavor makes brushing the teeth a pleasure. Evidence that Coint.i li prelerred.br dcntit li con tamed in the tffida'it. and ether documents In lhi F.if rl-nre Cbett depontrd with Ihe Title Guarantee andTm.t Co. ot New York, They mar he eiamined br arcrrdited rem imttte a on ppiication to Col gate & Co. '-" - ? . .irw. In have been cut up. There are now aVout seven German divisions holding the front between the Argonne and the Meuse, There was rather heavy fighting yes terday In the center of the First Army's sector. The Germans are concentrating trops In the region of Cunel. Numer ous Area were, seen- onck of the German lines, notably at Dun and Fontaine, eait of the Meuse, where elements of the first army made a brilliant advance Tues day, Our air service has achieved crushing supremacy on the front of the first American army during the battle. Our planes bombed German front linen, their communications in the back areas and their troops concentrations. Klghty-t-o Danes In Air at Ones Our concentration of planes enabled our airmen to fly In large aggregations, agaliut which the ordinary sl;.ed swarms of Fokkers had no chance One lot of American bombing planes In action at ono time numbered elghty-tvvo. It was the greatest day's bombing we have yet achieved, I.ast night the air was filled with machines bombing the German areas from high altitude. There were many aerial battles be. tween pursuit morhlnes. A patiol of three American planes, flown by Meu- ' tenant A. B. Patterson, of Wllklnsburg. Pa.; I.leut. t,, ,1, rtummer, of Newark, X. J., and a third airman, was attacked by seven Fokkers. Instead of fleeing the Americans gave battle and brought down five Fokkers One of our aviators was lost. Our airmen also did valuable work for tho infantry liaison and artillery registration on the first good flying day for the two weeks. Two airmen, Lieutenant Krwln and Lieutenant Kslerbrook, on a liaison mis sion, ran Into one Garman over Gxermont and drove him off. Naif an hour later they met a German Monoplane and bi plane and forced the biplane down. The other fled. Ten minutes later they chased another enemy out of the way of their machine. .Over Sommer.ince they brought down stll another German, nnd, having completed their mission, engaged In another fight on the way home. DOUGHBOYS SAVE CIVILIANS Americans anil British Grcetctl a "Savior of Frnnce" With the llrltlsh Armi on the ftln-hral-Nt, Onentln Front, Oct, 10. (Hy I. .V. H.). Hcores of French civilians, old men, women nnd chlldten were, liberated by the British and American troops yesterday. In the village of Montbrehalii alone there were a great many French civilians. Thev had hidden In cellars for three days while the battle raged back and forth above them The old men and women tearfully em braced the doughbo)H while the children romped with them In the streets. The civilians all wore their best clothes. What they had on, they said, was all they had saved from the Germans. The Germans took most of the provisions sent hy neutral committees for the civilians. Pathetic scenes weie witnessed as merlcan and British wounded went ""H IIIIIUKO 1U l.J " II H'WMIU IIIO ICH1 ,-, rvMans cheered them v alllne them gaviore of France." yon brash your dentists say, "me Colgate's' Jpiiu ' m. O0TO8k l(: 11$ WILSONHOLDS FATE OF WORLD Faces Greatest Responsi bility in History, Declares Danish Newspaper SEES ENTENTE PREPARED Believe German Overtures With Sufficient Guarantees Will Be Considered Special Ctblt to Evening Public Ledger CopirtpM, lIJ, oi..Yeir York Tlmt Co, Copenhagen, Oct. 10T-Following are Danish press comments on the German peace action. Koetenhavn writes, refer ring to Wilson's fourteen points: "Unfortunately, the Central Powers did not then accept. On the contrary, they replied by the Brnt-I.ltovsk pence and great offensives In Prance, It would be Interesting to show how much Ger many and Its allies have lost since De cember, lt, by repeatedly refuting WllBon as a peace mediator. Such an examination would show In hat de gree the development hag changed Wilson's pear by negotiation to a peace by victory. The French press Is hardly wrong In supposing that Germany will not get an armistice without condi tions: and, aa Germany will not accept the Bulgarian armistice, the question Is: Can and will Wilson prevail on the Al lies to agree to a new formula acceptable to Germany? It Is unlikely." Tho Polltlkcn write: "The posslbll Hies of peace at any rate are greater than ever before. The situation Is dif ferent, because the chanrellor has now spoken. The next few days will show whether Wilson Is satisfied. The war Is at a fateful cross roads. Cither peace la approaching quickly, or we are near Ing the time where Germany will be aroused to the national battle for life. 'Never In history has a single man faced the responsibility Wilson now has, when, In truth, he holds the fate of the world In his hands. Millions are anxiously awaiting hl answer." The Berllngske Tldcnde writes.; "Ger many's sensational peace action comes at a moment when events don't portend Columbia Records How I Hate Up in the Morning An army song that's fairly sweep ing through the country with its irresistible doughboy brand of humor, sung to tne tune of a bugle call. Written by Sergeant Irving Berlin, U. S. A., if you please and sung by Arthur Fields. On the back is "Let's Bury the Hatchet--in the Kaiser's head." A2617 85c. IgwK fji&1 -Wrvr F 4is sHEr 'fe,L -fT ir"irL ghr ir9i WW' Buy Liberty Help Win the War Back up the boys over there those lads who 'left with songs upon their lips.. Keep them singing buy Bonds 1 Have you Biade MrUttUG-MrWu luaea t rlt.rtfy The Yeah. Are We Dh'i Weal D M.Ut CHumem " I iBtereartin I Sate.eea U. MIIUwm IVArUaaU I lelllMU Ohl Ye Ul Lai UiiWmImi hi.. iu..-wiu N.aa W.h. raaal SbetW Walta Cilsilll twIwlM, ' 3JJHBLgL!2i7 Ma-- a, disposition toward peace. With the chancellor'! speech comes newg from the east about the Bolshevist Govern ment's declaration which brings the whole Brest-I.ltovsk peace In danger. From the west comes the French state, mint of the Inhuman barbarism with which Ihe German armies destroy erery. thing on their way. They will be relentlessly punished, On the other hind, signs ro not wanting that the Entente Is prepared for German over, tures. If they contain the guarantee which the Rntente must demand. Whit has happened cannot be compared to any earlier peace feelers. The Central Power have. In fact, accepted the point demands of Wilson formula as the basis, but telegrams from London and Parts seem to Indicate that the Allies will not find this sufficient," GERMAN STOCK PANIC GOES ON Action by Great Banks Had Only temporary JMlect By th A mode ted PrM Zarleh, Oct, 10. Measures taken hv the great banks to atop a panic In Ger man stock exchanges had only a tern porary effect, according to the Post of Munich. Provincial capitalists took a certain Silver Tea Sets of Unusual Beauty Elegantly designed and of good weight, so that everlasting service is assured. One of the most charming pat terns is the "Adam." The pieces are substantially made and hand somely decorated. The delicate soft gray finish adds wonderfully to its beauty set of coffee, tea, sugar, cream and waste $280. S. Kind & Sons, mo chestnut st. DIAMOND MERCHANTS JEWELERS SILVERSMITHS Buy Liberty Bondi Mid'Month List to Get "Smiles-the Season's Sweetest Song One of those rare ballads whose exquisite. melody is a joy forever. Appropriately sung by Campbell and Burr, in truly magical tenor harmociy. On the other side is the beautiful "Waters of Venice," with new words.' A2616 85c. !ltiWIr7 arL ( Imtm m aiiVijRrJf Lser " TJL. HflftJIi m hi n i mm m ml . l. Bonds heard the iwurveUiM record of General Perthier' enn vim ia France? Atk any Columbia Dealer I play K for yen. t.vi'a Jam CAarM Hmrrit At It Agale Arthmt FUUi mmJ FemU Ue bua, Wl.t We W.et U Tl ftkmtmf Nmemt Ree CrnU Wllkmm r ,.... ' OrWaf Jmtm MWtae C, Semlmmn'e OHttnmtJmem I Waal Tam At ela I Print' Ortkir Cerrae Ore MCe ' J- a-l ia f al ft - . lime to grif what was transpiring an then threw blocks of stock on the 'mar ket. Thre were ho purchasers for tht securities, and the Post cays "It Is a genuine crash this time." Munition stocks, such as Daimler, are not quoted at Berlin, for there are no buyers, We Want a Man of Complete Printing Experience To take full charge of our Printing and Manufacturing Dept. Apply by letter only to Wr. A. Pomerantz A. POMERANTZ & CO. 152S Chestnut St. AMU tteia. AMI Mia. Me A Mil lta. Me MmmJ AMI! tUia. Ma A Mil tela. Ma It laTA-M I KaMLI Mla7. Dtlrm MmitJ aVaaaf 'tr aaaa ' ' ,t - ! . V- V c ) a:'. 7f r HH mil ..- ..- tfi AP BJCJisM. Jflni im 1 71? llmi;l ?aii HIraHF-jk f B mr K J el VLkt Jm WId5Tfr'r "Jt ' V laiiiiiiy tBHiiiiiiiiBBI A. u ;i a
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