gyy? nn ." r. ir,iri5, . t , r.1' . J, -M , '7f 1. , .j'. vtt j-Tvm i -f. i , i 'Vk.-.V V j . - HWTfi PUBLIC 3 tLEDGKBl R PHILADELPHIA', SATURDAY, 'APRIL1 12, 1919 & VP J I. Hi it i 11 I i N n tf,'X J- b K 1 r LV a x k 3. Tt, Vi 1 t" ifcfi is1 i Ready Today I (On to the Nfft nook FUnriO JohnSpafgo's New Book Bolshevism , (John Spargo spent months In Europe cntherlnr maUrlal for tlilt nook) What Bolshevism is and what it has done The theoretical and practical principles of ' Bolshevism Revelations in Bolshevist documents (never before translated) of democratic short ' comings With the. astonishing conclusion, and a par allel between the ideas of Lenine and Treitschke, that Bolshevism and Prussian militarism are alike in effect. BOLSHEVISM by JOHN SPARGO At All Book Stores Today $M0 HARPER & BROTHERS ( Est. 1 8 1 7 ) New York . D. Beres ford's New Novel THE JERVAISE COMEDY r By the author of "Jacob Stahl," etc., etc. Here is a wholly charming novel, a delicately woven and beautiful story that moves in the spirit Df Spring. It is full of delightfully amusing people and the highly humorous incidents of the action are narrated with skill and originality. At all bookstores. $7.50. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, VJJ . !-W"iJ-i f'Jr tir, -?" ?.L-Jr , A Great Love Story, by JOSEPH CONRAD This is supremely the love story of a young sea captain and Dona Rita, heiress to the huge for tunes of Henry Allegre, supporter of the Pre tender. "The Arrow of Gold" is a romance of Marseilles and the Spanish Coast, laid in the middle seventies when Don Carlos de Bourbon made his attempt for the throne of Spain. It teems with Conrad's personality. Never, not even in "Victory," has, Mr. Conrad written a story so direct and so moving; and never has he portrayed a character, either man or woman, so fascinating and so elusive as Dona Rita. Net $1.50 DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. Garden City, N. Y. JUNGLE In JUNGLE TALES OF TARZAf we have another entrancing narrative woven about .fye'. marvelous ape man, presenting newadventu'resi and'desp'erate encounters which befall him in the dark heart of his native jungle. All Bookstores NEW YORK H. TALES 2E Publishers, EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS, master creator of tales extraordinary, has surpassed himself in this, his sixth enthralling chronicle of TARZAN OF THE APES. Never be fore has an author created a fictional char-. 'acter so fascinating, sq universe ally interesting as TARZAN. A. C. McCLURG 4k CO, P'ubU.B.r. -' 1 J - 'tl' THE LONG-AWAITED CONRAD NOVEL IS OUT LABOR SITUATION ACROSS THE OCEAN An Admirable Summary of What European Countries Arc Doing for Reconstruction Kllslm M. Frledmnn, who edited a symnoMum of the views of Amerlcnn ii 10n .the Problems of reconstruct .V.. i lne wpr ,n America, has pro duced a companion volume dcallnc with uropean conditions. Instead, how er, of bringing together the opinions , 1?cn, 1 different industries about what should be done, he "has made a r.T""?1 a,?d ,1Iulating study of what "as actually been done. n i ok bein'' Itn n summary of e PIa"3 made for construction work Thi ?Ut, ?. 80ore ot different countries. ? fo"owfd fay tdy of the gen wai problems confronting Germany, Kng and nnd France. A whole chapter is given to the labor problem in Ger many, and another chapter to the' labor problem in England. Mr. Friedman discusses the English situation under u numDer of different headings. The j.rc-nr situation Is explained nnd compared with nrinnf ,i,tu: .i there is nn exhibition of the relations of labor and capital and the state. The effect of the war on the labor supply, labor efficiency and industrial unrest Is set forth. The emergency measures uu(hcu nre explained nnd the rccon struetlon programs of the Liberal and me i.abor parties are analyzed -lne book should be In the bands of every one who wishes an impartial statement of conditions abroad, because It sets forth just what every inquiring mind wishes to know. Its value is suggested In an admirable and thought provoking introduction by William B. Wilson, the secretary of labor, who reminds us that It is such volumes as this which help toward the solution of grave problems. kABOn, AND KECONSTRUCTION IN iui . f! '""a m. nieaman with fcrtfry ot lsbnr ii itiiiuuucii(m oy wil inra n Wilson. New York: B. P. Dutton A Co. 12,50. Rudyard have by a Kifilintr stramIe coin Kipling cidence gent Joseph Double day, n i Page & Com- Lonrad pany manu scripts of two very im portant books, published on the same day. Mr. Kipling's volume is his first book of verses for 16 years, and of its great importance we shall speak elsewhere its success in England has led to an edition of 100,000 copies, and it is called "The Years Be tween." Mr. Conrad's book is a very important one, entitled "The Arrow of Gold." Each year new readers are discussing this great writer. Published by Doubleday, Page & Co. d Book Full of Surprises DIAf! tlAUF The New Novel by GEORGE GIBBS Getitatanyboohtorel S 1.50 nit .THISISANAPPLET0NB00K, T jsa '.&?. J ;:.vjt.t7 iA,"MffVR .$& 5mk; KJi .tffiSttA .VK' 'VJ" 1 te'-si 'B Sw'A Vvi. sot J 1 3b JOSEPH CONRAD Who lias created an entrancing heroine In his new novel HUNS' NEXT WAR J. W. B. Gardiner Points Out Possibilities of Menace of Revived Kidtur So rapidly have events moved of late and to such significant and, at times, unexpected sues that manv books written only a few short months ago have attained antiquity since November 11. Partly In this class Is "German P"lans for the Next War," by .T. B. W. Gardiner. At least one hopes so hopes that out of the great conflict from which the Allies plucked victory and from which shattered Prusslanism had to sue world peace ot permanent nnd practical nature will ensue. Mr. Gar diner wrote his book about the time Uiu denburg and Ludendorff were burling their mighty offensive from Albert to Montdidicr in a frantic and, as It proved, futile smash both to Taris nnd the Channel ports. This was a year ago last March. Despite the gloom of the Kntcnt at that time, Mr. Gardiner had no feats as to the outcome. He was certain of Germany's defeat. He even predicates many of his passages on his certainty of the German Government's realiza tion that its ambition for wo.-'d domi nation and the triumph of Kultur would not come to pass out ot the lat" war. He foresaw defeat for the Central Um pires; he did not foresee the debacle" of Ilohcnzollcrnism nnd the social, politi cal and economic disorganization ot the "efficient" Teutonic sjstcm. This sit uation may modify or nullify Mr. Gn" dincr's suggestion ot a possible rcvlrcil of Kultur. Among sigaificant and substantial matters discussed by Mr. Gardiner arc (1) Germany's sjstematic devastation of Helgluni, northern France and Ser bia nnd Its destruction of the economic life and financial subjugation of those countries, ns well as of its own allies Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Tur key; (2) its shrew dlv calculated meth ods to increase the German male pop ulation, all in order to insure the suc cess of a possible "next war," by which It may aim to extend the'German Em pire from Calais to Bagdad, nnd CD 'the peril to civilization unless the vic tory over Germany is not properly capitalized at the Peace Confeienee, so that there will be no "next war, QFRMAN PLAN- FOR TIIR NKXT 'WAR nv J II IV Oardlner Garden City. N . Doubleiay, rare Co tl. America's Foreign Policy Now- that every educated person ts studying the league of nations plijn to discover whether It Is consistent with the traditions of American life, Profes sor John Holladay Latane's review of the American foreign policy Is of peculiar Interest. Professor Lntane Is not a little Ameri can. Ha finds for example that the Monroe Dootrlne wao the first expres sion of the doctrine of self-determination of which much has been heard In the past few months He also finds that America has alwas met the Issues which confronted It In tho light of the occasion nnd has not consented to be bound by any precepts of the fathers framed to meet conditions of their time., His volume Is an Illuminating nnd help, ful discussion of the whole subject which can be commended to all In search of Information. FROM ISOLATION TO LEADERSHIP. A Review of American Forelan rollcv, Jljr Tohn Holladay Latane. PhD, I.L. D , pro feaaor of American hlatory In Johna Hop klna Onlverelty. Garden City: Doubleday, raie Co AT THE FREE LIBRARY Following is a list of the new books added to the Free Library, Locust and Thirteenth" streets, during the week ending April 0: Miscellaneous' 'Aero Hiue nook. ' IIiimI, W. n "Arcountliie aa an Aid to Bualneaa " Bradford Oerahom "Whsa and Where foi"B of Navigation " Rrearlej, A. AV. "Ineots and Ingot Molds " ratlin A TV "With the Help of dod and a Tew Marlnei " Cheradarne. Andre ' Essentlalj of an En durlnr Victor"." Clark. D. H. "European Theories of the Cook! C W. "Steel Shlpbulldera1 Hand book." Cowlnr. K. V "Dear Polka at Horn " Croihv E. N. "Handbook of Flro Pro- Crov nomer "How llotlor) Wcturea Are Dover. A. T "Electrlo Motors and Con trol 8item" ... ., . . . Tarrlntton. Irank "Succeaaful Sales men." !rIrh"neeoM of Oovenrnent Finances." Hollldar, R C. (Ed) "Jojra Kilmer' two volumes ,, Hone. O. I. "How to Prevent Slcknees " Hutchinson, W. Z "Advanced Ilea Cul- Ja'ckson'a "Philadelphia Tear Hook " .Taromb W J. "RoilnT for H!nners " Kellv, n. W, "Shlnnulldln" Industry," Kendall. C X. "How to Teach the Bpe clal Suhject"1" ...... Klemln. Alt-Hinder "Aeronautical Engl neerln end Alrplne nln." Koch, r W-r-"War Libraries ' I.aaker Ed'vnrd "Ct"a and Checkers ' MacKa e. Perry "Washlnnton, tha Man Who Made, Us." March. T. A. "History of tha World War " Mo'res. M, J. (Ed.) "nepresentntlve Brit ish Drama.1' O.r-ncrand. I.- C. "Italian Women In In- """po'iren.-A. H "HrltUh Naw In nattla." Proctor. It. n "Iron Division " fleymour. Charles "How. the World Volel," two volume" Smith. O, c, "TNT Trinitrotoluenes Smith It. It. "Testbook of Advanced Ma. chine Work." Fiction Pnnd Max "The I'niamed " fnmetnrk. 8aah "llv of Vls)i " fiirwnod. J. O, "Nomada of fej (North." DMIon. Mary "Th American " Prance, Anatole "Amethyst Ulna." Housb, Kmerson "The Hepebrueher." Keys V. V "O'd 0v Homestead." MarVamara, II. S "rcrloved Sinner," Mcilllns, I. M. "Tweedl" " Onions, Mrs. Oliver "Land Olrl'a Love Stflry." Heine. W. M "Man Four-Rnuare " Itlckard, Mrs. Vlotor "Flr of Oreen Bo'iahs." Itoberta, c. a, D "Jim. tha Story of a n-kwnnde JJni," Pnalth .T. C "The Undefeated.' Vn Lo, P. K. "f""- h" Trnn-s.' PMl.An U. 1. Hfn Petlnt11 Icon rad creates a 1 great heroine Dona Rita, in "The Arrow of Gold," Is a Girl Whom Every Woman Will Secretly Envy When one 1nv down "The Arrmr nf Gold," Joirpli Conrad's latest novel, It Is with feelings of admiration, sym pathy and pity for the altogether nd- mirablc heroine, let the l'urltnn mor alists voulil Knv she deserves nothing but condemnation. Conrnd hns written r fascinating love story, with the plot of Don Carlos to selr.c the throne of Spain in 1R7." ns a background. The heroine omc had an affair with the Pretender, nnd hc is' loyal enough to his interests to consent to net as an agent for him in smoothing the way of his assistants in Prance. The French officials arc nil susceptible to her influence, tor she exercises 11 magic fascination ocr every man with whom she comes in contact. Her "en recr" began when, at the ago of seen teen, she attracted the attention of Henry Allegro, a rich nnd distinguished Parisian nrtist. She had tended goats In the Pyrenees in her earlier girlhood, and was liing in Paris with her uncle when thetale opens. Allegro takes her into his house as orto of the works of art which he is continually collect ings She Is described ns the perfection of feminine grace nnd beauty. Allegre died nnd left his fortune to her. The man who tells the storj he is the one who loved her best nnd whom she loed alone of all the men she knew as that Allegre's death had the charm tor of a heartless desertion. "It gae one a glimpse of ainn7ing egoism in senti ment to which one could hnrdlv gun a name, n m.stcrious nppropiintion of one human being by another as if in defiance of unexpressed things nnd for an unheaul-of satisfaction of an m conceivible pride." And Dona Itita. the girl, says in explaining the name which she assumed at his death : "My name Henry Allegre had taken from me, like all the rest of what I bad ome been." So she calls herself Mndame de I.astaola, after a little glen in which she had tended goats ill hei jouthful innocence Her storv is the tragic tale of one caught in the meshes of fate when too young to understand what was happen ing nnd who is compelled to struggle for the rest of her life. Yet bhc is honest nnd true. Hut ns she is iepr--sentcd as a type of the eternul woman, she is more than the meie punching of the men whom she knows. The hem, with whom she hides heis-olf foi m months in an Alpine ullage, is a ouug sea captain, who iidoios her with no reservations uhntetci, nnd he ten Ins her, what loe is. He tights n dm I oor ' . . l ... .lAn,l. n.,,1 tier ami narrow iv viuiii-i mum, u.i she, conscious of her limitations and of the light of a man to his life, heroic nil) leaes him just ns he is rceocung from his injuries and before he is able to ap preciate the weight ot tue uiow which separation will inflict. There nre four other women in the tnlc. each distinct tpos. unci four or five men move through the pages, each stirred in different wajs by love for the marvelous woman. No woman can ,,! tl,.. book without env.MHg the heioine that perfection of feminine charm which Conrad succeeds in per suading one Dona ltita possessed, and no man can tend it without paying his tribute of admiration to the masterful skill of the author in interpreting the emotions of men when confionted by the eternal woman. tup ARROW OF C.OI.H Il Joseph Con rad Clarden Cltj . Uouble.lco. Page Co BOOKS RECEIVED ARnow or GOLD Oarden CltS. L 1 Il Joseph Doublcilb), C onrad S . nine T11..TVVV,.I-'.V 11 Rudjord Klp- nil-. , ",'..'. Twianv Poire 1 o Binos of-"raib, vornisi- m."pwk By Albert Kleld Qllmore IloHon Page Tl'lE RlhlMS OP THE TIDE IIv. Ida VI Tarbell. ew lork ilacmltlHti c'ompanv MlsWlTLAND. PRIVATE SfcC-RETART U Oeraldine nonner. New York. D Ap pleton C'ompanj Jl S ,. ,, CRATER'S C10LD lly Philip Curti' New Ynrk Harper A Bros 1 cl HIE EYES I OP THE III.1NII Ilv Arthur Somera Roche. N Aork llcorgfl II Doran Companv. $1 50. A KMCIHT DP TODAY. Bv Elele HoKaril- Smlth Philadelphia: John i". Winston Cotnpan $1 40 BLOOD AND SAND By Bliieio lhancz New York E 1' Dutton A t'o Jl 110 MsN AND THE NEW DEMOCRACY B William A McKeevcr, New ork llcorso II Doran Company l SI. LABOR AND HBC'ONSIIirCTION IN El'- ROPE Bv Elleha M I'rledman New York: E. P. Dutton . Co. 2 W But Have You Read The TIN SOLDIER By Temple Bailey jdli Thousand At all bookstores. St. SO. PENN PUBLISHING CO.. Philadelphia. The Omar Khayyam of the Bible A GENTLE CYNIC Being the Book of Eccleaiastes By MORRIS JASTROW, Jr., Ph.D. LLD. Author ef "The War and The Bitdid Railway," etc, A delightfully human book on ths Omar Khayyam of the Bible with an exact translation of the original text. This most "mpdern" in spirit of tho Bibli cal books has nlways been n, favorite with those who apprec iate great literature as well as for its place in the sacred canon. The author relates how Kohe leth originated, and who wrote it (and it was not Solomon), why additions were made to the original text and the interesting story showing that multiple au thorship is no objection to the reception and authority of the? books of the Old Testament. An intensely interesting' exposition of that "uncomfortable interro gation mark," the first author who wrote under a nom de plume. S2.00 net. . At All Bookstores J. B. LIPPINCOTT CO. WILDES FAIRY TALES A New Edition Illustrated by Kutchcr, With an Introduc tion by II. L. Mencken A new edition of 0cnr Wilde's coN lection of fnlrj- tnles, linonn as "A House of I'omeKrnnnteo," lius come from the press. It anneals to popular favor on the strength of an Introduction by If. li. Mencken and some illustrations liv lien Kutcher. We are told that since Aubrey Henrdsley no more interesting worker in black and -white has appeared than Kutcher. The friends ot this young Itussian Ameiicnn might well have wished that the publishers bad refrain- ed from challenging comparison with Henrdsley. One looks nt once for that beauty of line which distinguished Henrdsley nbovc his coutempornries nnd one looks in vain. Kutcher's lllustra- tions arc imaginative unci poetic, but as a draughtsman he is a bungling ama teur in comparison with the biilllnnt joung Knglishmnn. Mr. Mencken's preface is interesting, hut it ought to have been written for another book. The Baltimore c ritic hates Puritanism ns bittcrlv ns Puritnuisin is supposed to hate holy water, nnd he takes occasion to .oy that "A House of Pomegrnnntes" reveals Wilde's love for beauty jinmarred bv the puritanical. As a mnttcr of fact, the collection of falr tales is one which would hiue delighted bej oid mensiiio suclt-n Morn moralist ns Cotton Mather, llach tale is a sugni -coated inninl lesson, didactic in I he extreme. The piefnce and the illustrations, however, will male this edition peculi nily interesting to admirers of Wildp's tales, nnd they will not prevent enjoy ment ot them bv those who read them for the first time in the artistic form in which the printer has presented them. '"V:'JUTC"Rn'8 "'''CTSTnATED EDt I ION of a lloueo of Pomegranates and ' tn atorv of Virhtlnzate and the Rose tl- I ocar Wilde with an Introduction hy 11 I, .Mencken. New York MotTatt, Tard & Col.' ' Machine Shop Books Philadelphia Book Company 17 South 9th Street SPRING BOOKS Lcacock Solves the Kniser Problem! THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA And Other Impossibilities By STEPHEN LEACOCK Author of "Nonsense Novell," "Literary Lapses." "Frenzied Fiction," eta. Cloth, fl.25 Net The thanks of many nations aie duo to Stephen Leacock, the gifted Canadian humorist, for solving the much debated question, "What shall we do with the ex-Kaiser?" He is coming (they are all com ing, Uncle William, Cousin Ferdi nand, Willie, Lizzie and the cntiie Hohenzollcin family) as immi giants to Ameiica. At least so Mr. Leacock tells us in thU, his latest book of ii resistible fun and humor. Romance Humor Surprises NURSE BENSON By JUSTIN H. MCCARTHY Aiiiior of "The Glorious Rascal," "If I Wcie King," etc. Cloth, $1.50 Net A charming modern novel, full of bright nnd sparkling conversa tion, refreshing humor and ten der pathos, founded on the famous play by Justin Huntly McCarthy, in conjunction with R. C. Carton, which hns just passed its three hundicdth performance in Lon don, and is scheduled for early stage pioduction in America. A Frenchman's View of PRESIDENT WILSON By DANIEL HALEVY Translated by Hugh Stokes. Cloth, $1.50 Net "Within the limits of a volume inevitably destined for an imme diate interpretation of Mr. Wilson to the people of France, Mr. Halevy has produced what is littlo less, in its way, than a mas terpiece." The Neto Republic. s. o. s. America's Miracle in France (Sen ices of Supply) By ISAAC F. MAUCOSSON Author of "The Business of War," "The Rebirth of Russia." Illustrated. Cloth, $1.50 Net This book, written under the special authority of General Per shing, Is a piece of permanent history and discloses for the first time the romance of the Services of Supply, which fed, equipped and transported tho American Expeditionary Force. THE LETTERS OF ALGERNON C. SWINBURNE Edited and with r.n Introduction by EDMUND GOSSE, C. B., and THOMAS JAMES WISE Two volumes. Cloth, $5.00 Net per Set This is the first comprehensive collection of Swinburne's letters to be made, and they cover prac tically the whole period of his adult life, from February, 1858, to January, 1909. OF ALL BOOKSELLERS JOHN LANE CO. NEW YORK Her Greatest Book The .TIN SOLDIER By Temple Bailey toth Thousand At all Doofcslorcs, 1,1, I'KNN ri'llMSMINCJ CO., rnllddtlphU, JACOBS i62o I 2.,-. CHESTNUT Cj BOOKS STRECT I STATIONERY.AND ENGRAVING 1T M AT iWCOH' Not a War Story The TIN SOLDIER By Temple Bailey Htl Thousand At all bookstore. tl.SO. PBNN rUDMHHINa CO., Philadelphia. "In the course of a twelvemonth or so there usually appear a number of novels that are more or less enjoyable, and a few that are decidedly admirable, but only very, very occasionally does one come across a book for which one feels inclined to give devout and humble thanks. Such a book as this is J. C. Snaith's new novel 'The Undefeated.'" " New York Timet 41.M net at Tour noolMfller'i. With the Help ot God and a Few Marines By BRIG. GEN'L A. W. CATLIN Who rominaniled the Hth Ken't "Marines at Ilellenu Wood "N'ovv ha? come a mater mind that wcvv the original picture In all Its horrlbl .3J, glory, and a master mind able to piece the confused strips of film Into a. harmo-- nlous and connected whole to unfold before our widening eyes." A'. Y. Sunt i S T.t 1 r.n ' t Cm DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & llllllllllllliiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiililliiiltiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiuVJi A New Revelation of Truth Always Has to Fight Its Way THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND refused to listen to Sir William Crookes and Benjamin . Franklin, but they went right on. The world eventually hears. THE SEVENPURPOSES By MARGARET CAMERON Tells the story of how a well-known woman-author herself formerly a skeptic about Messages from the . GREAT BEYOND became convinced that she is the messenger for t A Call to Brotherhood , A Revelation of a Nciv Philosophy of Right Human Relations and World Progress Whatever you may believe about its source, it is sure to be to you a word of comfort and uplift and vision of the New World that is forming under the inspiration of "THE FORCES OF CONSTRUCTION" THE SEVEN PURPOSES $2. All HARPER & BROTHERS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiinii Where do you, live North or South of Market Street? In citlier case read THE BOOK OF PHILADELPHIA By Robert Shackleton How well do you know your city? Mr. Shackleton's account is chatty, anecdotal, humorous but ulso informing and keenly analytical. He touches past and present. He explores forgotten nooks, finds a hidden church and a Pickwickian courtyard. And he tells you what outsiders think of the city, and leaves you feeling proud ot it. Perhaps you know nis earner volumes, "Tho Book of Boston," "The Book of New York." Many drawings and photographs. Boxed. Price, $3.00. May be had at any bookstore or from THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY, 925 FILBERT STREET, PHILADELPHIA What the finl two "teoiews' "I recommend Mr. Reed's urawing up mc terms 01 "It Is the most Interesting, Informative and Important, book aoout present day Kussia that has yet appeared In this country.' Veto VcrJt Sun JOHN REED'S . "TEN DAYS THAT Is an accurate and thrilling Revolution and accord ne icxjA; ef refertnee for thtfutatt". It contains documents, speechti etc, hitherto unpublished For tatt tetrytehcre $2,00, potlagt 15c txtra BONI 3c LiyERIGHT, Publishers :'.', , NEW YORK CITY " i 1 k dv the Author 6 fc "TheGotdenBouiH ?DlAf 1 CTAfclF uyALaJivnL i rjc New no vti toy GEORGE GIBBS Gettfatanyboohtvrn 4 i mr i. 'i trt.svnui ,ti i 13 AN Af FLtlUD Boon , M kVIlTH This ii an Appleton book Seventh Edition in Pres CO., Garden City, N. Y. ng Bookstores I- Established 1817 A say: book to the allied delegates who are I peace lor uermany ar. Versailles. Tht Dial shook: the woRi.n i M4 moving picture of the Bohhevl to the Dial will be used as "a uria m and is protusely illustrated. (400 p-p nm ? 1 V3 Mt5 '' WtV,Romer-,VMrtla SotuUt&vVJ r. VM i -V . A'- .'ft.'". ;:v ir '. tin Hi. Ul&jki i to v 5. AttH-' if, fcitry' S i ,A-J ,Vm ls: v "-' i i J32ri0?i, .j . .',v -. Ji,it' . v
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers