Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 10, 1919, Night Extra Financial, Page 4, Image 4

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EVENING1 PUBETC LEDGER-PHIUADELPHIA, THfUKSDAT, JULY 10, 1919
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UftEXT OF PRESIDENT WILSON'S SPEECH ON TREATY BEFORE
-
ML V T " v- T T 7 .. T - -
fHM4ltiA Vrnm 1n flnn
f ,
. rtnlln nnd hclnftil nut of it. rrnicm-
Ifeerlnit the mothers and the Kilters,
- U L.C.... ..J At.- 1t..l. -C1 1.1 ...... f
luo wivvb nuu iiiu iiiur iiiimivu mi.
'VIM
at.
.nVrhey wore free men under nrms,
Vjioj. iorEPCiinR incir lurnis 01 uuijr in
il-V..' ... . ,i -. , . -. . .!... 1-
, aJHieitnldat ol tnsKR ot uoicnoe. i
HBTOud to have lind the prltlleee of
i 'Vejiar A.nrlatMl tilth lllpni Rnel of
M'eftOlne m j self their leader.
Ojut I spenk now of Tihnt the
tfyt Jk2"t t tnt' mpn "f oe skips mry
KJL-vriSISht ""d ,0 U"1 People with whom
Rjiff TVfrjr mingled with Mieh utter
ti simplicity, ns menus wno iism'u uim
to be of Bcrviro. Tlte were for nil
the yisiblc embodiment of America.
Deacon LlRlit for Millions
Vhat they dirt made America and
All that she stood for a Ihlng reality
In the thoughts not only of the people
nf Franco but also of teas of millions
of men and women throughout all the
tolling nations of n world standing
everywhere In peril of its freedom
"Tuid of the loss of everything it held
deer, In deadlj fear that its bonds
were ncifr to be loosed, Its hopes
forever to be mocked and di.ip
pointed.
And the compulsion of what thej
stood for wns upon us who repre
sented America at the pence table.
It was our dut to sec to It that eet
decision we took part In contributed.
MM nB .. n HUM fiMi tn Influence It.
!if to quiet the fe.irs and leallic the
k hones of the peoples who had been
rlhlilg In that sli.ulon, the unions
that had come by oui nsslstnnce to
their freedom.
It was our rtutv to do ierj thing
that it was within our power to do
to jnakc the triumph of freedom ind
of Tight n lasting tiiumph in the ns
surance of which men mirfht ever -where
live without ftar.
Old entanglements of eerj kind
Ktond in the wn promUis winch
wi. jrpvernments had made to one another
'I in, the das when might nnd right
were, confused and the power ot trie
tictor was without lestrnint. Kn
gagements winch lontemplnted unj
expositions of territory nnj exten
sions of socrcignt that might tm
to be to the Interest of those who hud
the power to insist upon them, had
been entered Into without thought of
what the peoples concerned might
wish or profit In : and these could
not alwajs be honorahlj brushed
nshfc. It was not easj to graft the
new order of ideas on the old, and
some of the fruits of the grafting
-may, I fear, for a time be hitter.
Support at Peace Table
But, with crj few exceptions the
men who sat with us nt the peace
table desired as slncenlv ns we did
to get nwn from the bud lulltunces,
the Illegitimate purposes, the elemm -
allzing ambitions, the international
counsels and expedients out of which
tnt sinister designs of (iermnuj had
sprung ns a natural growth.
It had been our privilege to formu
late the- principles whiih were ac
cepted as the basis of the peace, but
they had been accepted, not because
we had come In to hasten and assure
the, victor and insisted upon them,
but because they w ere readily acceded
to, as the principles to which honor
able, and enlightened minds eviry
'wh6re had been bred.
They spoke the conscience of the
world ns well ns the conscience of
America, and I am happj to paj nit
'tribute of respect nnd gratitude to the
able, forward-looking men with whom
it was my privilege to co-operate
for their unfailing spirit of co-operation,
their constant effort to accom
inodate the Interests thej represented
& to the principles we were all agreed
upon.
The difficulties, which wtre nnny,
lay In the circumstances, not often
in the men. Almost without excep
tion the men who led had i aught the
true and full tision of the problem
of peace ns nn indltislble whole, a
problem, not of mere adjustments ot
intbrest, but of Justice and right ac
tion. The atmosphere in which the con
ference worked seemed created, not
by the ambitions of strong got em-
ments, but by the hopes and aspira
tions of small nations and of peoples
hitherto undet bondage to the power
that victory had shattered and de
stroyed. Two great empires had been forced
Into political bankruptcy, and we
were the receivers. Our task was not
only to make peace with the Central
-empires and remedy the wrongs their
armies had clone The Central cm-
fires' had lived in open violation of
'many of the tery rights for which the
L war had been fought, dominating
JSfC' Nn Peopl8 "er whom they had no
"it natural right to rule, enforcing, not
obedience, but teritable bondage, ex
ploiting those who were weak for the
benefit of those ivho were masters
and overlords onlj b forte of arms.
There could be no peace until the
whole order of central Europe wa
- set right.
, - Creating New Nations
That meant that new nations weie
t to be created Poland, Czeobo-Slo-'
vakla, Hungary itself. No pait of
.ancient Poland had eter in ant true
f,- sertse become a part of (lermany, or
fA vf. Aunina, or ui uritt,
H- IJohemla was alien In every thought
F ,and hope to the monarchy of which
Is she had so long been an artificial
fk. part; and the uneasy partnership be
i ;i j, Itween Austrin nnd Hungary had beeu
i K-ae rather of interest than of kin
i? ip or sympathy.
The Slavs whom Austria had
rSVschosrn to force into her empire on
SUhe, south were kept to their obedience
'bylaolbinB but fear.
'Their hearts were with their klns-
V; " Boen In the Balkans.
At These, were all arrangements of
Zh power not arrangement of natural
union or association. It was the
r.latuArativa task of thou uhn unnM
i peace and make it Intelligently
bllsli a new order, which would
&pn the free choice of peoples
man upon the arbitrary
kwrlty of Hapsburgs or Hohen-
I f ' Rumania and Slavic State
?.v'''j ;More than that, great populations
l ' Itouna or sympainy ami actual Kin
If , to IKuraanla were also linked against
tkd2i tvtll in thn ronfflotYinrfi And.
ih i r -"
r tat-Hunjariau monnrchy or to other
nptt sovereignties, and it was part
' f toski of peace to make a new
Jljij$M4a ns ,vt" as a new Slavic
iSl.lilsierlnff about Serbia.
ft Mtural frontiers could be found,
fc lijsttA9a fintiln nr1 arifuRtment and
& rj . -r : ""i" ti
9MapHH!. A KU tpunxMNu; lu
look constantly forward to other re
lated tasks.
The (lermnn colonies were to be
disposed of. They had not been gov
erned : thet had been exploited
merelj, without thought of the inter
est or even the ordinary human rights
ot their Inhabitants.
The Problem of Turkej
The Turkish empire, moreover, had
fallen apart, as the Austro-llun-garlan
hnd. It had neter had anv
real unity. It had been held together
onlt bj pitiless, Inhuman force.
Its peoples cried aloud for relense,
for succor from unspeakable dis
tress, for all that the new dnv of
hope seemed nt last to bring within
Its dawn.
Peoples hitherto In utter darkness
were to be led out Into the same light
and giten at last a helping hind.
I'ndet eloped peoples anil peoples
read for recognition, but not tet
reach to assume the full responsibili
ties of statehood, wen1 to be git in
adecpiate guarantee of fricndlj pro
tic I ion, guidance and assistance.
And nut of the execution of these
great enterprises of llhert) sprang op
portunities to attempt what statesmen
had n"ter found the way before to
do; an opportunist to throw safe
guards about the rights of racial, na
tional and religious minorities b) sol
emn International covenant; an op
portunttt to limit and regulate mill
far establishments where the wero
most llliel to be mlsehletoiis; in
opportunlt to rffect a complete and
ststcnmtlc internationalization of
waterwats and rallwas which were
necessar to the free economic life
of more than one nation nnd to dear
main nf the normal channels of com-
I merre of unfair obstructions, of law
I or of prhilege; and the ter.t wel
come opportunlt to secure for labor
the concerted protection of definite
Intel national pledges of principle and
practice.
flraie Tasks Created b War
These were not t isks which the
conference looked about it to Find and
went out of its wn to perforin. Thet
were inseparable from the settle
ments of peace. Thei were thrust
upon it hi eireiimstnnc i ' which could
not be overlooked The wai had
crenti'd them In all cpiarters of the
world old established rel ltionships
had been disturbed or broken and
affairs weie at lce ends, needing
to be mended or united again, but
inulil not be made what thc were be
fore Tint hud to he set right bv
apphing some uniform principle of
justice oi enlightened expedience. And
thet could not be ndjusteel b mere
h prescribing i it n treatt what should
be clone. New states were to be set
up which enuld not hope to lue
through their first period of weak
ness without nssured support lit the
great nations that had consented to
their creation and won for them their
independence.
Ill-goierned colonics could not be
put In the hands of governments
which were to act as trustees for their
people nnd not as their masters If
there was to be no common nutlinrit
arnon; the nations to which the were
to be responsible in the execution of
their trust.
Future international conventions
with regard to the control of wntir
wavs, with regard to illicit tinfhc of
many kinds, in arms m in deadly
drugs, or with regard to the adjust
ment of manv tarjing lnternation il
administrative arrangements, could
not be assured if the treat were to
provide no permanent common inter
national agenc, if its execution in
such matters was to be left to the
slow and uucertain process of co
operation by ordinary methods of
negotiation.
Difficulties of Divided Counsel
If the Pence Conference itself was
to be the end of co operative au
thority and common counsel among
the governments to which the world
was looking to enforce justice and
give pledges of an enduring settle
ment, regions like the Knar basin
could not be put under a temporary
administrative regime which did not
involve a transfer of political sov
ereignt and whlrh contemplated a
final determination of its politicnl
connections by popular tote to be
taken nt n distant date; no free city
like Danzig could be created which
was, under elaborate international
guarantees, to accept exceptional
obligations with regard 'to the uc
of its port and exceptional relations
with a state of which it was not to
form n pnrt: properly safeguarded
plebiscites could not be provided for
where populations were nt some
future date to make choice whnt sov
ereignty the would live under,; no
certain nnd uniform method of arbi
tration could be Recured for the set
tlement of anticipated difficulties of
final decision with regard to mnny
mntters dealt with in the trentv it
self- the long-continued supervision
of the task of reparation which fler
manv was to undertake to complete
within the next generation might en
tirely break down; the reconsidera
tion nnd revision of administrative
arrangements nnd restrictions which
the treatv prescribed, but whirh it
was recognized might not prove of
lasting advantage or entirely fair if
too long enforced, would be imprac
ticable. League a Necessity
The promise governments were
making to one another about the way
in which labor wns to be dealt with
by law not only but in fact as well
would remain a mere humane thesis
if there was to be no common tri
bunal of opinion nnd judgment to
which liberal statesmen could resort
for the influences which alone might
secure their redemption.
A league of free nations bad be
come a practical necessity.
Examine the treaty of peace and
you will find that everywhere through
out Its manifold protlslons its train
ers have felt obliged to turn to the
league of nations as an indispensable
instrumentality for the maintenance
of the new order it has been their
purpose to set up In the world the
world of civilized men.
Thnt there should be a league of
nations to steady the counsela nnd
maintain the peaceful understand
ings of the world to make not
treaties alone, but the accepted prin
ciples of international law as well,
the actual rple of conduct among the
governments of the world had been
one ot the agreements accepted from
the first as the basli of peace with
the central powers. The statesmen
of nil the belligerent countries were
agreed (hat such a league must be
cicatcd to .sustain the settlements
that were to be effected.
Hut nt first think there was n
feeling among some of them thnt,
while it must be attempted, the
formation of such a league was per
haps a counsel of perfection which
practical men, long expeilenrcd in the
world of nfTnlrs, must agree to very
cautlousl and with inat.v misgiv
ings. Like .Something Written I pon Paper
It wns onlt as the difficult work of
arranging an all but universal adjust
ment of the world's affairs advanced
from dat to dav, fiom one stage of
conference to another, that it became
evident to them that what they were
seeking would be little more than
something wiitten upon paper, to be
Interpreted and applied b such meth
ods as the chances of politics might
mike available If they did not pro
vide a means of common counsel
which all were obliged to accept, a
common nutlinrit whose- dieisions
would be recognised as derisions
which nil must respcrt.
And so the most prnctcnl. the most
skeptical among them, turned more
and more to the league as the au
thority through which international
action was to be see lire d, the author
itv without which, as thev hnd come
to see it, it would be diliiiult to give
assured effect either to this treaty
or to tny other International un
ilcistiiidlng upcMi which thet were to
depend for the ninlntc nance of pence.
The fact that the covenant of the
league wns the first substantive part
of the treatv to be worked out and
iigniel upon, while all else was in
solution, helped to make the formu
lation of the rest easier The con
ference was, after all not to be
ephemeral The concert of nations
was to i midline nuclei a di finite c ov -en
int whuh hiiel been iigieid upon
and which all were convinced wns
workable.
'Ihev could ro forward with con
fidence to make ai radge me tits in -tended
to be permnne nt. '1 he most
prai ticnl of the confirees were at
1 ist the most read to refc r to the
league of nil ions the superintendence
of nil interests which did not ailmit of
immediate ele termination, of .ill ad
iiiiuistiative problems winch were to
litpiin i continuing oversight
What had seemed a counsel of poi -fee
tion hud e onie to seem a plain
c ounsel of nee essit .
Practical statesman's Hope
The league of nations was the pinc
tnal stitcwiinn s hope of vine ess in
manv of the most difficult things he
was attempting.
And it Ind validated itself in the
thought of ever inimber nf the con
feienoe as something much bigger,
much gre-atir ever naj, than a mere
instrument foi cair.ting out the pro
tisions of a particular treat.
it was unite rsallv lccogmresl that
all the peoples eif the wen lei demanded
of the conferenre tint it should create
such a continuing conceit of free na
tions as would make wars of aggres
sion and spoliation such as this that
has just ended forever Impossible.
A crj had gone- out fiom evil home
in evcrv stiu ken land from which
sons and brothers and fathers had
gone forth to the great sacrifice that
such a sacrifice should never again
be exacted.
Old Policies Meant Wur
It was manifest vvh it had been
exacted It had be-eu exacted becnuse
one nation desired dominion and other
nations had known no means of de
fends except armaments and allinnces
Wat had lam at the heart of every
arrangement of Kurope of over
arrangement of the world that pre
ceded the war. Itestivc peoples had
been told that fleets and armies,
which the toiled to sustain, meant
peace; and the now knew that the
had been lied to, that fleets and
armies hud been maintained to pro
mote nutionnl ambitious nnel meant
war Thev knew that no old policy
meant an thing else but force, force
alwa.vs force.
And the knew that it was intol
erable. Kverj true heart In the world,
and even enlightened judgment de
manded that, nt whatever cost of in
dependent action, etery government
that took thought for its people or for
justice or for ordered freedom should
lend itself to a new purpose and ut
terl destro the old order of inter
national politics. Statesmen might
see difficulties, but the people could
see none and could brook no denial.
A war in which the had been bled
white to beat the terror that la.v con
cealed in every balance of power
must not end in a mere victor of
nrms nnel a new balance. The mon
ster that had resorted to arms must
be put in chains thnt could not be
broken. The united power of free
nations must put n stop to aggres
sion, and the world must ne given
so much better. "I simply will not
nave mother cooking in this heaC
ueclnrtHl Susan.
"what H become of the swee
tooth of tho family if I stop?
mother responded, looilns,
hve young fnces aroun
and the fast disappearing apple pic
"I'll show you nt dinner to-night'
Susan finishkfL-Dgr luncheon Bllentl
and went t
"Seven packages of National Bis
cult Company Zu Zu Ginger Snaps
please, and a jar of mars
low whip," she on
mother, we're
in half an
Mothe
When a growing
to es
ba
handful of ZU ZU
sw
no fear. For what could be better for any
boyorgirlthanhealthfulgingerand
molasses and sugar and flour, per
fectly blended and perfectly baked?
JNAUUNAL 01M.UU I fo
COMPANY
hoc
"r'''-ir ftp inflt
OJNOJEn
Susan
&u zu marsamarnCTrcvYfetiea,
The only reason VsVv-J 4 good
things were not saltVO,,,. vJjQw
sert was because the family ran
out of adjectives,, ,
peace. If there was not the will
or the Intelligence to accomplish that
now, there must be another nnd a
flnnl war nnd the world must be
swept clenn of every power thnt could
renew the terror.
The lengue of nations was not
mercl.v nn instrument to adjust and
reined old wrongs under n new
trent.v of pence; It was the onlv hope
for mankind. Again nnd again had
the demon of wnr been cast out of
tho house of the peoples nnd the house
swept clean b n tient of pence; only
to prepare a time when he would
ter In ngaln with spirits worse
than himself. The house must now
be glviui n tenant who could hold It
against all such. t
Convenient, Indeed indispensable,
ns statesmen found the newl plnnned
league of nations to be for the exe
cution of present plnns of peace and
reparation, they saw' It In a new as
pect before their work was finished.
Dare We Disappoint World' Hope
Thev saw It as the main objee't of
the pence, as the onlv thing that
could complete It or mnke It worth
while. They saw It as the hope of
the world, and that hope the did
not dare to disappoint.. Hhall we or
any other free people hesitate to
accept this great duty? Dare we re
ject it and break the heart of the
world?
And so the result of the conference
of peace, so far ns (iermnnt l con
cerned, stands complete. The differ
ences encountered were ter manv.
Sometimes the seemed Insuperable.
ft wns Impossible to accommodate
the Interests of so great a boilv of
nntlons interests which directly or
Indirectly affected almost every na
tion in the world without many
minor compromises The treatv, as
n icsiilt, is not exnctlv what we
would have written, it is probablv
not whnt anv one of the national
delegations would have wiitten Hut
lesults were vvoiked out which, on the
whole, benr test I think thnt it
will be found thnt the compromises
which wero accepted as inetitable
nowhere cut to the lie irt of an
principle.
The work of the conference squares,
as n whole, with the principles agreed
upon as the basis of the peace as well
as with the practical possibilities of
the Internntioiial situations which had
to be faced nnel dealt with as fnc ts.
Special Treat With Trnnce
I shnll prcscntlv hnve occasion to
lav before .ton n special treaty with
Prance, whose object is the temporary
protection of France from unpro;
voiced aggression bv the power with
whom this treat of peace has been
negotiated.
Its terms link it with this treatv.
I take the lihertv. however, of re
serving It for special explication on
another occasion
America's Role in War
The role which Ameiica was to
plav in the conferenre seemed deter
inincd. ns I have said, before mv col
leiguos and I got to Paris deter
mined bv the universal expectations
of the nntions whose representatives,
draw n from all epiarters of the globe,
we were to deal with. It wns uni
versal! recognized that America had
entereel the war to promote no pri
vate or peculiar Interest nf her own,
hut only ns the champion of rights
which she was glad to share with
free men and lovers of Justice every
where. We had formulated the principles
upon which the settlement was to be
made the principles upon which the
armistice had been agreed to nnd the
jiarlevs nf peace undertaken, nnel no
one doubted thnt our desire was to see
the treaty of peace formulated along
the actual lines of those principles
and desired nothing else.
We were welcomed as disinterested
friends We were resorted to as
arbiters in manv a difficult matter. It
was recognized that our material aid
would be indispensable in the c'.ajs to
come, when industry and credit would
have to be brought back to their
normal operation again and communi
ties beateu to the ground assisted to
their feet once more; and it was taken
for granted, I am proud to sn, that
we would pin the helpful friend In
these things as in all others with
out prejudice or favor.
We were generously nceepted as
the unnffected champions of what
was right. It was a very responsi
ble role to play ; but I am happy to
report that the fine group of Ameri
cans who helped with their expert
advice in each part of the varied set
tlements sought in every transac
tion to justify the high confidence
reposed in them.
And that confidence, it seems to
me, is the measure of our oppor
tunlt nnd of our duty in the daS to
come, in which the new hope of the
peoples of the world Is to be ful
filled or disappointed.
The fact thnt America is the
Finally father summed up the
situation ;
'Mother," he said, "I'm goine to
hock your pride and add several
ears to your life. You do no more
summer; let Snsan pre-
serts."
Mother was hurt a little, but
irlele in her daughter's success and
ellef from n duty thatJbecame more
rcame that.
Where did you learh the trici?"
ather asked Susan.
ool," the cirl replied.
n times to be mm-
ot eat rake
plcy little
boy grabs a
Ing into
Ginger Snaps, have
re the
avor
leer-
&M-
J.iNT'
rwi7i
by supplying cleanly baked Zu Zu
mado ot boat mutwitU?, ft siivlag of
friend of the nations, whether they
oe rtvnls or nssoclitcs. Is no new
fact It is only the discovery of It
b the rest of the world that Is new.
World Hole Dates rVom War
With Spain
America mny be sulci to hnve just
reached her majority ns n world
power. It wnH almost exaetl.v twen
t.v -one enrs ago thnt the results of
the war with Spain put ns unexpect
ed! In possession of rich Islands nn
the other side of the world nnd brought
us Into association with other gov
ernments In the control of the West
Indies. It was regnrded as n sinis
ter nnd ominous thing b the states
men of more th mi one Kuropean
chancellery that we should have ex
tended our power be) nnd the con
fines of our continental dominions.
Fears Proved Groundless
They were accustomed to think of
new nelghbots ns n new incline e, of
rivals ns watchful enemies. There
were persons among us nt homp who
looked with deep disapproval nnd
avowed nnxletv on such extensions of
our national authority over distant
islands and over peoples whom they
feared we might exploit, not serve
and assist. Hut we have not ex
ploited them. We have been their
friend? and have sought to serve them.
And our dominion has been u menace
to no other nation.
We leileemeil our honor to the ut
most in our dealings with Cuba. She
is weak hut absolutelv free, nnd It
is her trust In us that makes her free.
Weak penples etei) where stand ready
to give us anv nutlinrit) among them
thnt will assure them n like friendlv
oversight nnd direction.
Thev know thnt there Is no ground
for fear in receiving us ns their men
tors and guieles Oui Isolation was
ended twenty .tears ago; and now
fear of us Is ended also, our counsel
and nssoclntlon sought after nnd de
sired. There can be no epic-stlon of
our crislng to be a wn'ld now-.
The only question Is whether we can
Red
Reduction of Catalog Prices
10-inch size $1.00
12-inch size $1.50
Concerted Numbers $1.00 to $3.50
Alda
Bori
Braslau
Calve
Caruso
Clement
Cortot
Gulp
DeGogorza
Anv Victor
Important Netic. Victor
RioKiii and Victsr Mtetuca
ra MJtntifirtllr eootdmAlcd and
tyndironutd in die pnttmnct
funufketuxe, and should be iacd
together to ream perfect m
procueiioiA.
Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden,
THE SENATElTf lTm"
New Lodger Plus Clothes Disappears
T" ' - Shortlv Afti- Arrtu.l
refuse the moral leadership that is
offered us, whether we shall accept or
reject the confidence nf the world.
The war and the conference of
peace now sitting In Paris seem to
me to have nnswered thnt question.
Our pnrtlclHitfon in the wnr es
tablished our position among the na
tions, and nothing but our own mis
taken netlon can niter It.
Call to Duty Answered
It was not an accident or a mntter
of sudden choice thnt we arc no
longer Isolated and devoted to a pol
icy which hns only our own Interest
nnd ndvnntnge for Its object. It was
our duty to go In. If we were Indeed
the champions of llbertt and of right.
We answered to the call of dittv In n
ivaj so spirited, so utterly without
thought of what we spent of blood or
treasure, so effective, so worthy of
the admiration of true men ever)
where, so wrought out of the stuff of
nil that wns heroic, thnt the whole
world saw nt Inst, in the flesh, in no
ble nction, a great Ideal asserted nnd
t Indicated, bv a nation thev had
deemed material and now found to he
compact of the spiritual forces that
must free mn nf etery nation from
etery unworthj bondage.
Light Ste earns on Path Ahead
it is thus tint a new role nnd a
new responsibility hnve come to this
grent nation that we honor and which
we would nil wish to lift to tet higher
lewis of service nnd nchievenient.
The sfncie Is set, the destiny dis
closed. It hns come about bv no plan
of our conceiving but bv the hand of
!od, who led us Into this wnv. We
cannot turn b irk. We can onlv go
forward, with lifted ctcs and fresh
ened spirit, to follow the vision. It
was of this that we dreamed at our
birth. America shall. In truth, show
the wnv. The lleht sti earns upon the
path ahead, nnd nowhere else.
These popular prices apply to all records
made by the following Exclusive Victor Artists;
De Luca
Destinn
Eames
Elman
Farrar
Galli-Curci
Garrison
Gluck
Heifetz
dealer anywhere will gladly
.
Jv,.
SXS,
'
KsialHy alwav.1
fnCJK "'T
-CT l.lhtttf
Shortly After Arrival
Lodging house keeners In IWst Phila
delphia are warned to be on the look
out for applicants for vacant rooms.
These applicants sometimes leave very
siiilclenl) earning with them valuable
propert) not tliofr own. ,
irsiercinv n strange .toting mnn about
p Two of Oar Best Prices
II according to the testimony of those who are buy
ing clothes heavily at the semi-annual
I Clearance iSdle
I $ 1 500
I with values up to $22.50, and
$1975
H with values up to $27.50.
M What about your verdict?
JLJPQiiality Clothes W
I 1514-16 Market St.
Ij Open Earnings Opposite Broad Street Station S
"lg jjj
.eeords
Homer
Journet
Melba
Kreisler
Kubelik
Martinelli
McCormack Wliitehill
Paderewski Withersooon
Powell
Zimbalist
play any music you wish to
Nw Victor fUtoraa icioa
toted1 at all dealers on iJm
let of cwdi outufa
"VictroU" 0 the (UrrMrW
Tttdcnurkof the Victor Talldnt
Machine eCeeapattv detegBattng
the product! of rub Company
ah
$
HS'f,
TKli-5
thirty years of age, light mmplcxloneei,
with fair hair and a smooth face, en
gngeel a furnished room at the home of
Harvey I. (Jallsgher. 40.11 Locust
street nnd .paid one dollar to hold tho
room.
He came In with a suitcase and left
a few hours Inter. It Is believed that he
will not return, for two milts valued at
S.V. belonging to Mr. Oallagher are also
reported missing.
Ruffo
Sammarco
Schumann-Heinle
Scotti
Sembrich
Tetrazzini
hear.
N.J.
J t.r ..
'4$W
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