E235KES3E3 ' r v'" W l r- i caiw-vj 0-Vl i.tf' r, ;kVt."-; i w' V-T. .9.1 4 12 EVENING PUBLIC 'LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18,' 1910' La ti l& GRIN I c Minister Schmidt Doploros Cut in Product Made by Treaty Terms decMon" were rrnclicd n t ycltcrcltiy's sex-Inns ot the Couni'il "f l'our, iiud nil reserved piilijccth Mere put over until jl'rlday. when it 1 lioio! tlmt tlnnl di-po-Ition will be mnde or thorn. 'I In-ml--ltiK clnii-e- of llii Aii-trlnn treaty mny bo delivered to Dr. Knrl Urnticr, licnd of the Austrian nihpiun, on Snt nrdny. Th council nf foreign r.ilnitcrK ins (lie only orKtinizntloii of tJio fence Conference to holil n mectlnc tnilnj . ndmlrnl, mi n (lerinnn warship, nrtmill.v (lectured TiirKr.v In n state of vviir, nflrr n secret nRrrcmt'iit with the coiuiuittcK ot union mid proRrcsi, for whoso notion the TmRMi people wrro unt responsible. Members ot the Council of Ton woio seated when the Turkish delegates entered the room. Premier Clemeneeau nildreied the conference brlell.v. lie re minded the Tmklsli deleitates tbnt the audience bad been granted at their le quest so they might state their rae. Hie 'lurks also exonerated llie Miiltnn for the control of Danzig during the time between (iermnn evacuation nnd SOLDIERS TURN FARMERS , i-nji-h occupation. Tlie memorandum banileil to the (,cr- ' linnn plenipotentiaries Monday wns By (lie Assnclatnl Press printed tc-tunlly here yesterday, but IJerlln, June 1v Agricultural pro- added little to the general knowledge of dnMlon f.T,nr l,n l.een held clinngcmn me ircniy. 1 11c nieim.riumiiiii to a high mark, said Herr Schmidt, the Tlin ministers discussed the I olisli- frm t r,.Poiislldllt.v or the win- and rkrnintiiii problem, as well as plans ! urged that he lie permitted to remain in food minister, in an interview, Ccr many. be said, had malntniiied a re markable record by using every avail able plot of ground for the growth of something that would sustain life. Herr Schmidt declared the idle thou sands in the cities who refuse to go to the country nro not needed, since the deals hardly more preclselj with altera tlons and amendments than diil the of ficial summary, cabled Momliiv to the 1'nitcd States. It Is apparent from the memorandum that the "red letter treaty." communi cated to the (iermnus Monday, is the document of supreme interest to (ler rnnny and the world It will be necis- tlie Constantinople, sajlng Asia Minor bad been reduced to 11 desert by the The 1'nteute attitude toward Turkey shit remains a nistor.. The grout powers have not nnnouneed whether tale and the organization of the prov ljlng sections. Sometimes It ncrcca to luces were effected on the- pilnelple that' share with" n township the expense of the sovereign will of the people Is the creative force of a state. Complaint Is made that (iermnn states near the Alps would be deprived of defense and means of existence, their most important in duing n stretch of road "There are tvvb Improvements I would like to see on the Pennsylvania road," be said today. "Main highways being repnlred are lustries and most indispensable natural 1 simply blocked tin. Tho motorist ile pioduets being taken from them, j pending on Ills map Is confronfed with - I nn order to detour, but there Is no sign Porous Streets Bump Motorists Cmittmiel From Pnre One Itroad is one of the hlgbwa;s against which complaints hnve been mnde. There nie several breaks in that thor .-. !. !... ,.t,,,.ri,l frm IhplSnrV IO nwilll piMllli-lllliMi "J. xvnr had proved themselves to be very! amended treaty to obtain any exact or energetic and helpful and were doing even adequate notion of the innn.v .... .1.1..-. ..ii.i.. i .-Msiir,. n cod alterations, wbicli ore indicated in the "... ...h 1 " ... - -., ,... ... , ,,.., ,., l tlie loisnraoie 1 meniornuiuiiii tmi.v in imn- ...... ....... in certain sections, as "We, therefore, altered mis piiru- Knst Prussia 11111I1 graph of the treaty amended tlie RENNER PROTESTS "BALKAN HOT-BED" Austrian, Say Injustice Men aces '1.500.000 f'.iris. .hine Is 1 l!v A. IMVi eiinn ilisiint'hes leeeived here by the wnv of Music snv that Austrian news- L. It harvest. llecnuse housing conditions i n nililpil. tintlliilv "H'f lr,ivt!.i tn nnere I'olMi and Those familiar with tlie Itusslan laborers fonncrlv einigrated. ' treaty maintain that the Herman nu- H,r,,l ilm linrtesrs and returned to thonties can. nn the basis ot their homes, tinman vv inkers retuse'nmeiided Instrumeiit, make out a "ti to live in them. Shortage ot nuiming lng nrgiiiueiit for signnture. naseu oipapeis pnblisli ilisnntehes from St. fier materinl and coal complicated the sit ua-, r,)n(.,,ssi)n, obtained through mgoti.i- main sa.ving that Dr Karllteniipr.lie.nl tljn. 'lions. "r 'be Austrian peace mission, lias vThc food minister then discussed the n )lig otIrr to tnP head of the Or- handed the Council of I'ive a ineinoran economic, or what he called tlie "food nmn peace delegation, apologizing fm- 'diim drawn up hv di legates from the effect." of the allied peace terms in the denionstintion against the (ler- (lennnti sections of Autiin and setting nlionniinir territories in Silesia, l'osen. ' mans ni Versailles. ,1. . in,i. .. ... . - ,,, tn,- alleged liinisii, e uincli "men West Prussia. Kast Prussia, the Saar region and Sehleswig Ilolstein. lie Raid the western part of flermany was not Important from a crop standpoint, but termed upper Silesia as an "addi tional suppl.v source," and Pos,on and West Prussia as "oveiplus or excess districts' for sugar, potatoes nnd grain, the loss of which would be keenlv felt, lie said (Jermanv recentlv imported large quantities of potatoes from abroad, principally from Ireland, so that the weekly ration could lie inised from three to five points. 'Hie loss of the eastern territories, he said, would ne cessitate further impoitatiotis at n nilnnna Mfn of n nil Jl IIP!1 Asked whether he thought the coins- 1 nlu tvpist or secretar.v as a provoci- 1 memorandum iclntlve particularly to the gal Illicit fond tni.le of (Jermauy by tive net. I'l'viol. southern Catinthia, Styna and xvhich the rich inn u-iiro food nt enor- Tho throwing of stones and bricks 'western Hungary. mous prices while the poor were forced I occurred ns the automobiles of the1 The Austrian observations responding to go bungrv, will !" controlled, the (;,.rmans passed through Chesnev. U- '" (le fragmentary treaty first corn minister replied sndlv that he feared ' quencourt and P.aillv, Mibiirban points, "lunicated to the Austiiau delegation BOt, since tlie gi neral relaxation fol-'on their wnv to the roilvvnv elation at "''''" undergoing translation for sub loxving the armistice produced an epi- Noisv-I.e-lloi. At Versailles the dem- "nssion to the Council of 1 our. They demic of food law violations. lonstrntion was confined to hooting and i"lflk" n document so formidable in size Oermnnv's nevi harvest, esneeinllv I l-;n,r '!',. l'mml, militnrv elmiif - , ,,lnr "'c.v cause wonder regaiding the wheat, will he "middling good," said feurs, struck by bricks, weie more TTftt-t !n1,n,S.lf liiff(n. Iitntu ii'lll lm . ...inntlp ittlitT-nrl tlm ivaph tin, f !nr. In-lr. r,on .. Koln,.- h n.n.l n,n. I...nn .llnl I111 pOSSpSslOIl Ol til . . ,.-- .. ,.... . fount von Itroekdorff-lC.intznu took 1 another route to the inilvvay station , nnd escaped the demonstrants. The investigation by tho Petit Pa- risien seemed to show that the do- . monstration wns not spontaneous and tlmt n number of persons from Paris were involved in it. P.esides the dismissal of the prefect of the department of Seine-et-Oise and pressed deep regnt for this icpiehin-i till' act. whiih was lontuuv l- the !nw of the Sein.' and Oise, ami tlie pnliie commlssioneis hnve been dismissed from office. Dr. Theodore Melehoir, one of tlie five principal delegates, and 1'inu Dorl blush, one of the secretaries to the Ciermnn peace delegation, were struck nn the head with stones dining the demonslintion when tlie Herman dele gates departed from Versailles Mondjj night. Tlie demonstration ngainst the mem bers nf the Ciermnn delegation, necoid ing to the Petit Pnrisien. nppnrentlv hnd its inception in the crowd's in- teipretntion of some gesture bv n lir they consider turkey actunlly exists I oughfare. The holes are annoying not and refuse to say whetlier 11 trrnty will' only to motorists, but. on rninj' (lajs be negotiated with the Ottoman empire. 1 or ftrr ,t rnjn, to pedestrians ns well. The.v maintain that the present confer- I A w ,p .,nK,1K into a muddy rut, 7'Vcs'1 ositTon llC lmr"oso otll''""" oft.n squirts an ebony stream over The' near eastern experts of tho great i'!"' '''"filing "f men nnd women on the powers were denied admission to to- sidewalk. day's conference One of them re- , Here are some other points that need niarkid afterward Hint the diplomats attention. did not vvntit anv one there who knew; Seventeenth stieet nt Snnsom nnd nt nil) thing about the Near Hast. Chestnut streets. Maiket street nt Eighteenth. Part of the wood block paving there has sunk below the sireit level. Some of the rc- ! suiting holes are plugged with granite ' blocks. I At Tenth and Mnrket strrets, red I brick has hem used to repair (he wood 1 block paving. I Ninth stieet fiotn Chestnut to Mnrket 1 street has 11 number of bnd spots. Sevc- rnl deep ruts are an impediment to tin flic whiih is nenrlv nlwa.vs heavy. I P.itih-woik nisi exists at Nineteenth and Atoli sheets and on Nineteenth stieet bitvveen Market and Arch where 'wood blocks, gianitc blocks, bricks and cobblestones make lough going. 1 On Chestnut and Walnut streets, nt vnrious points, deep ruts border the enr I Hacks. On I, or 11st street between Cighth and Dnrien stteets the motorist 1 gets a little sccnic-railwav effect. De gressions and elevations stud the road way and a snail eiavvl is imperative. Out in West Philadelphia the mnin highwnjs are in fair (omlitioii. One glaring exception is on Lancaster ave nue hetwein I'iftv -seventh and Sixty third. Hut the eit.v explains that im provement theie will bo Impossible un til the Pennsylvania Itailroad finishes an operation now under waj. Motorists also complain of a section of Haltimore avenue as Cobbs Creek is appioaehed. There 111 e bumps galoie clong there, and the unwelcome "bang" of a blowout is constantly feared bj drivers. One of the streets in most urgent need of n general overhauling is (Jerinnn- I. Ilogle, secretarj of the Automobile Club of Philadelphia TO ACT ON NEW PM! Meeting of State Federation Heads to Be Held in Har- risburg Wednesday showing him the proper way to detour Some slates do this nnd follow it up with guiding signs along the detour road until the driver is back on the mnin road again. "Then, too, the entire surface of ronds here is oiled nt one time. Many, MUCH INTEREST IN RESULT a fine car lias been ruined in appear- mice because of tbnt prnctice. New York stnte olls"one-hnlf of the road nt n time, allowing the motorist to skirt nnd nvoid the oiled sections." 1 Ry n Staff Correspondent ! llarrlsburg, .lime 18. Kepresenln- tives of orgnnlzed lnbor from every section ot the state will gather here 1 next Wednesday to discuss the wisdom tO OUSt BurleS01lnl MWni!il nM independent labor party. USES JAIL AS HOTEL 'Labor Asks Wilson Cnntliuieil Troiii Pnire One fented. HoprcsentHtivo Strickland en denvored to get an amendment tn the resolution xvhich would urge that labor bodies individually work to get the piinciple of the resolution nccepted by their organizations. The major of McKeesport and the burgesses of towns in the Pittsburgh stel district were condemned in a reso lution offered for the first time today' The cnll for the mreting hns been Issued by J. II. Mnnrer, of Ilcuding, president ofg the Stnte Federation of Lnbor In pursunnoo of n resolution ndopted by the stnte lnbor convention here last month. - This resolution urged n conference to discuss "independent politicnl no tion" by orgnnlzed lnbor. .Mr. Mnuror said this nfternoon he had 110 idea whether the reprcsentntiv'es of orgnnlzed labor would decide to fom Unable to Get Room, Pedestrian Takes Refuge In Police .Station The housing problem wns brought home to Snmucl 13. Cnvln, 417 North Fortieth street, xvhen he endeavored to find plnces of sleep on his :Ul-inllc hike from this city to Tottcnvllle, L. I., which he hns Just completed. On one occasion, in Milfofd, Del., Mr. Cnvln found the hotels nnd board ing houses filled up nnd wns obliged to sleep in the rlfy Jail, where the lone polieemnn locked him in for the njght nnd xvent home. Mr. Cnvln. who Is an attorney here. mnde the trip In twelve dnjs, nvernging twenty-six miles n day. lie originally planned to walk 1000 miles on the trip, but wns forced to stop nt Totten ville when he bruised a tendon in Ids nnkle. From there he took a train to Oyster Hay, L. I,, xvhere he placed 11 wrenth on the grnve of Theodore Itonst volt. Mr. Cnvln is sixty-eight yenrs old. by Delegate Hughes, nt the instance ofjn new political party or xvhether they the committee ot international presl-1 would map out n line of action witbiii dints which will meet Snturda.v night to I tlie existing party organizations. aces I.. "(10,000 fiermnn Austrian ns tlie lesuit of the proposed ponce treatv." It is said that Doctor Itenner lias as serted that the settinc up of new stntcs in tlie henrt of I'urope would "crente another lint -bed of war. such ns the Iinlknns have been." According to tin so dNpntihcs Doctor Itenner has also handed the founeil n note covering territorial questions gen- orally, in which he calls attention to '"the great responsibilitv assumed by the Kntentc in submitting millions of 'tierinnn-Austrinns to foreign domina tion." It is said that he lias c.xpross- t cd the linon t tin t the i nnferenpo will I act on tlie suggestion contained in his insider tlie unionization of steel mi The resolution was referred to the leso lotions committee. 1 Kntlre Ifody tn lie Represented , The entire board of the stnte federn- 'tion, with repiesentntives of nil union I labor organizations, -including every I district of the I'nited Mine Workers in Peniisjlvnnia, will be represented Jit nnd fisheries to investigate tlie alleged' the confc'ronco, which Is to be held failure of Secretary of Commerce Hod- 1 in the stnte federntlon headquarters. Held to enforce the seamen's act pin- 1 Labor leaders from England will ex visions nimed neainst Illiteracy among plain the labor movement in (treat 2 HELD IN AUTO THEFT CASE Attempt to Steal Motorcar Charjjed to "Men Taken In Custody Snmuel Vishnevsky. twenty-ono jenrs old. Ninth street nenr Lombard, nnd Hcnuio Miller, nineteen jcars old Monroe street, near Fourth, were held today In .$(!00 ball r-ncli for court by Magistrate Pennock in City Unit ou charge ot attempted larceny. Samuel ,1,. Cohen, :i'J4-'JU Market street, testified that he bnd caught tho men nttctntpliijc to stenl his nutomoblle, which wns standing before his place of business. Wlshiicvsky wns caught by a traffic patrolman nfter n brief chase and Miller was caught by an employe of Cohen. Baron Alphonse de Courcel Paris, Jiinc IS. The death of Haron Alphonse dp Courcel, formerly French ambassador in London, is nnnouneed. lie wns eighty-four .venrs old. He xvns sen ator from the Seine-et-Oise. Hnron de Courcel entered the diplomatic scrv iee in IS..", nnd from 1SH1 to 1880 wns French ambassador in Ilcrliii. Mountain Valley Water ENDORSED BY ruruiciANB A remarkably efficient Natural Diuretic. Fnmed for curative properties in Bright'a Disease, Gout, Rheu matism, Diabetes, etc. A Trial Will Convince You Pure, Ta,ateleu, Detthlfti 718 Chestnut Street' . Tlionb YTntant ST Seamen's Act Inquiry A resolution wns adopted asking the House committee on merchant inaiitie crews o,E ocean-going vessels leaving American ports. Another memorial denounced bills in troduced by I'nited States Senator Cnlder and Uepre'scntntiv Could, pio viding for repenl of ceitain lnuses in the seamen's net rclntlng to wages on American vessels. These bills weie de clared to be hostile to til development of American sea power nnd to serve the interests nf European and Asiatic Itritain nnd the success tbnt the labor pnity there hns achieved. New York labor lenders nlso will tnlk on the sub ject nnd if it Is decided to orgnnize a lnbor pnrty in Pennsylvnnin xvlll prohnhli urge a similar party organi sation in the empire stnte. Following the conference a report will be mnde to n subcommittee which is to be appointed.- This subcommittee will report back to n meeting of the entire shin owners who under the seamen's act, shite organization wiiicn win dp cniieu duction while the meat supply will be the "worst chapter in the food story " Germany's harvest will begin ripen ing in mid-July nnd will be finished about the middle of September. For .the Interim Oermnny must rely on its Blender reserves nnd on fi d from abroad, principnlly from America. Ono half of the food expected from America now is in German harbors or .. .already distributed, Oermnny paying for Ml'0 Polioc commissioner, both officials f it 1,054,000,000 marks in gold. Allies Mass for Drive on Berlin Continued From Pore One people of greater Herlin were still with out actual knowledge of tho contents of the Entente reply to the German counter-proposals. The text of the covering note wns nil that was nvailnble up to thnt hour. Onlj those in touch with official qunrters were in possession of the summary of the answer to Ger many, ns no papers were published and the AVolff Hurcnu's report was the onlv transcript of the reply at the disposal of editorial' rooms. Tlie Inst officials of the Foreign Office , left yesterday for Weimar. An official telephone message received here just be fore noon from that eit.v indicated the government was disappointed with the reply. Herlin editors, who are still en are to offer apologies to Dr. von llaim houscn, of the German delegation. The police officials were held by Pre mier Clemeneeau to have withdrawn certain of their gunrds to tlie outskirts of Versailles, notwithstanding instruc tions given them ns to the methods of mniutaining order. WILUELM DROVE TURKEY TO W A R Paris. .June 18. fHy A. V.) The Young Turks, the former German om- 1 peror and Kussian greed for Constanti nople weie responsible for Turkej's entrance into the wnr, according to the statement nf grand vizier to the Council of Ten yesterday, when be plended for the withdrawal of the Greeks from Smyrna and the preservation of old Turkey intact, to insure penrr among .",00,000,000 Mohammedans throughout the world. length of the answer that would have been delivered had the Austriaus boon complete treaty. The Austrian reply will be made pub lic only in connection with the Allies rejoinder. It is possible that the latter 1 nm.v not be sent until the Austriaus I have had an opportunity to reply to . the missing section of the treut.v, no date for the presentation of which has ns jet been set. The extension of time grnnted the Austrian delegation for technical con sideration of icrtain of the pence terms cxpiied xcsteidny. j During the absence of President Wil son in P.elgiuin, the temps sa.vs, fie mier I.lojd Geoige will visit tnc bat tlefield of Verdun The I'ritish leader will leave Paris today, to be absent two or tlnee dnjs. Doctor Itenner is reported to have declared also that the new German -Austrian state would "form n second Alsace-Lorraine, doubly greater in size nnd condemned to remain without de fense, a considerable part of the ancient nation being subjected to much younger peoples." "That domination," dispatches quote him as saving, "could never be sup ported bj the former or exercised by tlie latter." Doctor Itenner is said to hnve de claied thnt the incorporation of terri tory of Gorman-Austria in tlie Czeehn Slovak state is in contradiction to the piiiieiples proclaimed by the Allies themselves, and he pointed out, the dis patches sa, that the German-Austrian 1 Gcrmanlown voiuic's Needs j All along Goimantown avenue from Hroad street to Hillcrcst avenue. Chest nut Hill, he sa.vs, there are numberless ' rough spots that inar thnt important ' highway. Thousands of motorists hend 1 ed for the Schuylkill rnllcj section nnd 1 the Delaware Water Gap run nfoul of j these bumps. It Is nlso an artery to ! the lower tier route through New York 1 state. I Thomas Cnhall, secretary of the Key stone Automobile Club, formerly the I Automobile Club of Delaware County, 1 believes that the streets of this city ' might be in worse condition. They nie in better shape than Hoston's tor tuous highways and byways, he de- 1 lares. The Keystone Automobile Club gives most of its attention to ronds in out- ns it stnnds are. the resolution says. being compelled to meet American sliipi owners in equnl competition on the sea. Leaders here thin morning dm not believe that the passage of tho resolu tion cnlling for recognition of the Irish republic yesterday had any benring on the strength or weakness of the radi cals in regurd to resolutions yet to be offered. They pointed out thnt the Irish re public resolution, pnssed with more unnnimity nnd 'applause thnn any pre ceding motion, represented the general sentiment of the convention without re gard for politicnl or economic nffilin tions. The radical representatives from the Pacific coast states were conspicuous in that they took little part in urging the Irish resolution. In fact, they studious ly lefrained from taking part in either the proposal of the resolutions or the debate on them. ither lute in the summer or early in the full. Politicians are understood to be keep ing a watchful eye 011 the new move of the labor people. MIM 0JA flic Most Fwulifu! Caring mcrica Attaining an ideal in the production of a motor car, and then maintaining that ideal to the perfect satisfaction of car owners is evi dence of the achievement in Paige Motor Cars. Tho PAIGE is hero in the various popular models nnd styles, nt prices ranjrinK from Sixteen Hundred and Ninety'to Thirty-five Hundred Dollars. GUY A. WILLEY, President WBKUWWUlBt niBRNtOOL Paige Distributors 304 NORTH BROAD STRF,ET. PHILADELPHIA A 3 l'hrre of the Turkish delegates whoi lovinp nn enforced Imlwlnv h,.. 'appeared today netorc the ouncil nf , . len are sum 10 oc lricnii the strike, decline to discuss the Fntente rejoinder until the text is available. The impression of those who engaged In translating the reply of the allied and associated powers is that It will be utterly impossible to sign, and that it Is probable a negntive reply will be wired to Dr. Hanirl von Ilaimhauscn for submission to M. Clemeneeau. , It is also considered possible that Count von Hroekdorff-Hnntzau, head of the German delegation, will not return to Versailles on account of the demon stration there against the delegates, re sulting in injury to Minister Giesberts. Herr Dorlblush. Attuche Meyer and others, all of whom were hit with stones. Herr Meyer's eye wns injured by glnss. Retlsed Terms Dismay Germans The changes in the pence terms, ns Indicated by the red Interlinentions in the text of the old treaty, are so slight I as to cause universal dismnv nmong those who hnve had the opportunity of 1 examining the document The financial I modifications are considered nuimpor tant nnd objectionable, and the terms governing Germany's admission to the I league of nations are declined to he un satisfactory. Government circles stnte that they cannot conceive whv the government should be willing to sin such terms, though it is ndinltted that the treaty will bo fully discussed, becnuse it is realized thnt serious effects, with the sprend of bolshev ism in Germany, would be entailed in refusal to sign. The Entente's answer nlo is considered nothing less than nn ultimatum. Commenting on the Allied reply to. the German counter proposals to the terms of peace, the Frankfurt Gazette says : J ''Whatever we do will be terrible. fe..- uennnny is in no posmon 10 reiuse ro Sign tne treaty wnen tlie signature is forced by the ultimatum. Let us re sign ourselves to the inevitable nnd hope , for a beiter future.'' Iq concluding a violent denunciation pf the trentment given Germany by the Allies, the Vornnerts says: "If thp ljntrnte'f. coveting note da-- 'scribes the xvar as the greatest crime t against humanity, it is certain there Is X", let another and greater crime against "'XT?!? ' humanity. That is this so-called X5. .peace." ""wifi t Count von Hroekdorff Itantzau, head tV ' sf, tho "German peace mission, has tele "' lcraphed Berliu, strongly protesting ?K,iaiBt tlm stoning Incident on the dc- " 'A . . , ., ,. Ail ,. L riurv, jk Liiv wfriiiuu iivivuiub iruiu lly to Prance, while Tewfik Pasha, former Tuikish ambassador in London, who hns not yet arrived, is reported to be nn Anglophile Appnrcntly there is considerable rivalry j between Knglund nnd Prance in gaining 1 the goodwill of Turkey, but the l'tomb high commissioner in Constantinople scored by giving the sultan tlie first news that the conference bnd consented to henr the Turkish delegates, nnd pio vided n French warship to bring the Ottoman representatives from Coustan tinople to Marseilles. The grand vizier said thnt n Geiman TTrtf or cnll tor neio and Interesting Itooktet ".oofe ino Into Your Own Eues." No. A Series of Eve Talks Hy Joseph C. Ferguson, Jr. Our Next Talk ld., July 2i1 HIO need of prompt and proper atten tion to eye troubles caused by accidents is shown by a re cent analysis of accidents that occurred in Ohio over a period ot ih montns. Of T ,4 17 HrnldMitH caunlne Ig L' m permanent partial disaDiiity. tho eyes were affected in 385 or latino or tne caaes. or tbese 61 cases were the rf sult of tnftctlon. This demonstrates as wo have constantly advised the ciulck need of medical atten tion when such accidents occur rioii't hesitate op compro mise by self treatment but get the advice and help of an Oculist nt tlie ciulckest pos sible moment Whenever the eyes heed attention regardless of the trouhle consult an Oculist If glasses are needec", hnve the prescription filled by a capablo optician. IFe no HOT Examtnt JSytj rrfirrlptlon Optlclam ,0, 8 & 10 South 15th St. eg S ASK any Firestone Truck -t Tire user in this city about his experience with them. Ask him about the kind of service he gets from our tire press, our other tire machin ery and our men. You'll get the reasons, straight from the shoulder, why oyer half the truck tonnage of Amer ica is carried on Firestone Tires. And when you put Firestone Truck Tires on your truck you'll find that it runs faster with safety, wears less and keeps moving on less gasoline. Let us prove these things. ThJji 'Talk- from a copyright ririt "M 'ui-i icrrvTQ, Bell Wyoming 4792 !'' J!ir Vrt-T There's a difference and a distinc- ,! . i ' Tjr'' I tion between Koof Gardens. Possibly Jl J! !X i K J "le '"'K difference at the Ititz lies in ! . i 1 mWHiW A s""?! its distinction. You're quite sure, ,t lit , rnM 'I'M ivCr A '"deed, of the cuisine, the service, ., i llBill ,F I Iyf1x'!$r s a"d nc persons you see here. And "; I IHhH Ii ill! V& I -t's tnf coolest roof in town. t ! ' 1 1 il i '. ' 1 1 I i ItO-W J I , fe rS&iilfi''- .v .Ti ' BBiUWI KSfe4r:.,-'YSv JSRf 'nOffiBllHll E&7V- dr ''( .''wtrJHAVHvml w& ' i'iPr"itnr 9t Bv"f I VrW JahEBHHMVM iS B SEA ' a . JEBzis . ."' ?"i-fpwB85a5agM HftVv''.''''. Jb.'-' ' 'HR.'.'-' I ml " " "I I- -m SMff?Srsi:.-iv I m "j3 -zMr -. sii3rrf:l'.iZ5.'iaF .sir. t tWKjlP. r Sl i nwnv wmamrv . Spruce 3854 7TS , , illllllff JjFi i ITT R I fll t BlBiMULXbflBKiu mLm H Jimi mi HES THE OLD RELIABLE GRAND old "BuU": He's the best there is. He sold over 500,000,000 bags last year. You know genuine "Bull" Durham never an enemy ; millions of friends. . Genuine "Bull" Durham tobacco you , can roll fifty-thrifty cigarettes from one bag. That's some inducement, nowadays. GENUINE Bull Durham tobacco O y OuRmnted bjr 4tus stivutecuvi c0 iKze&r. r TIRES (5 FRANKLIN TIRE ANERUBBER COMPANY 4312 North Broad Street 2121 Vine Street You pipe smokers; mix a little "BULL" DURHAM with your favorite to bacco. It's like sugar iu your coffee. si I ViftMaiU. PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. 1 1 i to 1-njjwiiujiinv. :Sif,Jwi,li.(8.,A,'?,); X !mj o'1 'ilbSft . .S n !" ' " s 'A .-s Vt nW ..". .i,1 ,J t -j W ". fi, -iiu MHHHIHMHiHHIBBiHDaMl &t -. '""BWHnBBBBBMakUAXAliaLflLLliBfl