a if w. ', i A m Ax fc 4 toift- ' UDPH W nHHniiirk nnni i nirn n REALLY INDECISIVE , fV HfPf Hf-W PMy l"JWpfv ffSTOgglSa rWH i p wfrTvTv '"v ' ,' iic. . . ,",'V ' ,".. ' ' " "i .si ' -'-.' .A ' EVENING PtJBHO XiEDGJDRr-PHlfcADELPHIA SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1020 V? qWv' fV ' 'I vv 4 Y. ' "V . V r tf 1 A , ! . '$ tantllng of 0. 0. P. Candidates , Unlikely to Be Altorod ' Next Week firt FOUR STATES WILL VOTE Dy CLINTON W. OILIIERT fioori or Knox Latest to Stir Up Republicans The Antl Saloon League hns do. Isuatcd London ns nn acceptable candidate for President. Penrose has started n Knox boom which finds some mipport In Chicago and elfcwhere. Johnson managers have applied for n recount In New Jcricy, where Wood wou the preferential prlmury. The uc In the California pri mary next Tucsdaj Is between Hooter and Johnson. I REV L TING AGAINST PRUSSIA All .7erej The machine Is against him In both stated, in .Maryland It H nnre , Correspondent of (he Ercnlng rnbllc i wn edly for Wood ; in Indiana, It Is Ledger iriemiiy 10 oou 10 near .lonnson, Dut, YVaiilnirir.n Mm- i ti. n, i really, prefers Louden or Httrdinc. It tU .f ; . T,Te .wil! Imeans to have Wood set a plurality In VmI i , V,ffK ,our imnorlnnt ' the state, nnd leave It free under the rinmaries, Maryland, in which .Tohnnon Indiana lnw to ghe the ntlite's totei to and Wood nre the contestant"! : Indiana, I 'larding r Low den, probably to Low In, which nil four lending Republican ' t,en' candidates are entered, but which will I-aclis Newspaper Support w1 i c n '8n' hetweeu .Fohnm and Johnson Incks strong newspaper vup 0t? ' Vl lltomla. in which JIooer i port In both states. Uut he seems to mKf hi, soiL. effort tning to take iuitc n better chance to earn both j.iohnson s state nwnj from him : and. , stuto3 than he did New Jvrscj . ' M.Knntn21iiV'. T" ' T7'''t- M ,,PrP 'H" silk locking commuter popula n !W . i?",? h nnln 0M "" lion in both umN of New Jerse were mJ ii MliIV,orni ... ' hat beat Johnson there. Indiana Is ltTr til c M?.n )r,";nV? "'" ,,nr' '' "re tM'i' Wteru state, nnd S thtn S n i0',' . . ' ,ohn""1 ,,arHr:i .TnhiiMiu haVdnnonstrated such strength HUlr rLuU tu,,Hl,?"n, "r T ln fci'llul st"s hnt he should show Tmi.L j?1!1, " w,in UOn "rminn p hl,: ' strength in Indiana, indeed. If he carries all three, he will l , , , , , , , , , , be llkeh to get the delecate- of onl I . ,n irylnnd. .Ii.linsi.n has the ludtm one. California. If Wood carrle the ri"1 l'"llntliin of Daltlmore. and he two lu which he is ruiinlns. he will be "n" '' fnrim;i. of western Alarj land, likely to get the delegates of onlv one. , who are largel (.ermau. I lie machine Maryland. Indiann requiring a majority I ,u ailnpd Is badlj worried. Tote to Instruct nnd no one tan get n In Indiana Wood hns one of his majority in Indiana with four cnndl- Most perfect oigaulratloiiM. The leader dates in the field lf it. Ii Ilognn. is hii extrennh ic- No matter who nrries In.llana. the "ourcefiil politic!".!! and the chief paper old guard will be llkclj to delhcr In of imli'in.t. the ImlluuunollH New, (liana's otes to Lowdeti Wood, get- lihtcs .lohnon with all Its heart. If It tlnjr, ,the votes of Man land and a lore wire nut for these advantages to Wood. plurality of the popular ote in Indiana. Johnson would appear a sure winner will not be one inch nearer nomination i hi Indiana Ah it Is, the state Is than, he Is todm Wood is in flip nnl- ilnuhtfi.1. with thp Tirns.urtu fnmHnir A, - v. . . ... .. '.. : rion or a candidate in tne nauni ballot ing in the comeutiou. In the lead, but kavitig pawed the moment when. If ever. tush of delegates to him would tnke pUce. Sees Wood Kllmlnitril The shifting one or two nn.ill state to him at Rtich a time does him no good. Wood haR shown the politicians thnt he can't win. That is all the ut to know about him Delegates would be useful to Johnson. he has so few ; but all he is likelj to get out of this week's primaries are Cali fornia's delegates. Indiana's otes he Is not likely to obtain, even If he car ties the primaries, for the reason already riven ; no tm of the four candidates entered can get n majority. Unless Johnson should get n sweeping Tictory in Mnrylnnd. the delegntcs of thnt state are likely to go to Wood. 'Johnson's strength is hi the iltj of Pnl- timore, but Haltimore's representation is not according to population. The 0f tidal proportions U in sight In Iudi mini uisiriuin i -n;iriuim nre oer- Uiin und Mamanu Johnson Hare Will He Close The icsult in both states is likely to be close Wood's relative weakness has been shown stcadllj since 'Michi gan He hns not developed the popular following to conduct a Rooseveltlan lumpalgn like that of 1012. There Is to Wood bandwagon I'utmlly, John son has not been able to repeat the Koosewlt campaign of 101'J. as seemed possib'e when lie got his great irtorj In Michigan He has more popular following than Wood Up bus been tiblf to do without a machine, and with lltth money, as much us Wood has been able 1 1 do with n powerful machine nnd with much monej. whenever the two hae cinslied, but he has not developed n big weep There is not any tidal wave for John sou. The convention might hac nom inated Johnson if he had shown his tidal wave, but he hasn't. And nothing Empire llll (iumvi. IV51IUC " HIV . t if EX-KING LUDWIG RETURNS a,KrSSM I'nblle makes lb necessary to consider his wishes in the convention. Itut, if he just misses carrying them, an he did New Jcrsej , this won't alter the fact of his importance to the Republican party en the stump this year. The popular primaries have cost a ?xeat -Jial of money, a great denl of ef ort and done nothing, except to reveal that Johnson Is the leader of the left wing of the Republican party. The) leave the nomination to be made In the convention, nnd they leave the con eiitlou at sea. All the candidates look 1 Hbout ns thev did before the first pri mary was lieiu. it was plain tnen tnat Wood was the leading candidate, but that the polltlcfans were against him, nnd that he lacked the personality to start a great iwpular movctnent to upset the organisation. Doubt was expressed in this corre spondence as early ns the changing of Wood's managers from King to Cooper o" Wood's nblllty to play the Iloosevelr. That doubt has been fully Justified by developments. Wood Is still today the lending candidate, with the organln tion against him, nnd without popular following enough to overcome the or ganization. So far ns th nomination i concerned, Johnson remains where he was b'foic the primaries, the last man whom the Hepubllcnus would willlngl nominate. He has confirmed his hold upon the Pro gressive wing of the party nnd revealed that that whig Is larger than wns Blip- P . .. .... .1 .(.I-,- I nA !.!. AAKn, nlnno tt tntlllnrX 1P Uiinllng wns at uic outset n camnmue " " mi ,......-." --. in the bockground. whom the machine Kongo, the llerlln rulers have stopped would like to nomlnnted. but whom it ,hort ht nothing, not even murder. The probably would not dare to nominate nnarian premier, Kurt Klsner. paid He Is thnt today. with his life for his policy of south tier- Lowden was from tne nrst n mme mnn secession. likel machine choice than Hording At the meeting of the HepubUcnn national committee In December 11 shrewd pollt leal obsener sohl : "Lowden Is the most nueiv nt tne lour leaning ciiiiimn" varla Prussians being Included aniong the "aliens.'' The Berlin government vetoed this law, and Munich imme diately countered with threats of seces sion. Similarly Munich has refused to obey Berlin's orders dissolving the Bavarian civic guards, nnd the new Btnuiinu pre mier has chteeorlcallv declared that lie will nctcr 'dissolve them, "een nt the risk of temporary separation from the South Germany Supports empire." , ,. 1 It is certain thnt this defiant policy Clamor to Break Up is Indorsed by public opinion in Bavaria. 1 ne pi'ujm ui soiunem iteriniuiy uru us By II, F. KOSPOTH Stair vCorrroixindriit of the KTfnln ldcr in swltwriana CorurloM, I)t0, bu Public I.edotr C. Geneva, May 1. Will the German empire break up after nil V Kvcr since the war ended all the en ergy of the kaiser's "republican" suc cessors has been concentrated on pre serving its politfcnl unity tinder Prus sian predominance. To nrevent the dismemberment of to impotence and therebj ticfiuitclv frus- rim nonnrntlat movement wn stifled in blood during the armistice, nnd Prtis- ian supremacy temnorarllv waxed even more absolute thnn in the knlser s time. But the revoliitlonar.N crisis in Ber Tin Im uii tmlnv lint not nliv too lil.t'h I lln linn niltrlitllv rpliVPll Southern ns- The Texas primaries are going to be pirntlons toward independence. Once for the nntl-Wllsou movement In the m0rc It Is Bnailn which Is heading IVmoeiatic part what the Mlihlgnn the movement of secession from Prus rnhiinrlps were for Wood, nnd the New ' sia. thouzh for rensons ver different .lrrxpi werp for Johnson. Thc will he the supreme test Tf Bailej wins in Texas, nn antl Wilson band-wagon will start If Burleson wins, the anti-WH son movement will be stopped. People who know Texas predict n mixed result, with the Wilson forces getting the delegates to San FrnncUco, nnd Bailey getting the state orgnnlza tion nnd the governorship, from which ho will return to the t'nlted States Sen ate. Th result is cvldcntlj in doubt. G. H. PARKER WITH P. AND R. restive today under the despotic rule of Prussian socialism as they weio under the autocratic regime of the Prussian rrus- on- nresshe ns Prussian militarism, and pursuing the same imperialistic alms. Above all they hate and distrust the Berlin government because it represents, in their ejes, only the class interests of the great cities and Is equally domi nated bv tfye profiteers nnd the Indus trial proletariat. Soldiers HiMe Socialism Munich Is full of Bavarian rclchswehr troops, some of whom have returned from the Uuhr district, whence thev had to be withdrawn becnuse the ferocltv they dlsplajed In fighting the Prusslnn Iteds exceeded eVcn the limits of Ger man military law. Recruited exclusively Germany, which would reduce Prussia' among the peasants and mountaineers ill III,' iint"nii "H'pi' , ay, nu....i..a t funatlcil opponents of Prussian social ism. Their religious fanaticism, unfor tunately, is equally intense. Anti Semitlsm nnd anti-socialism In southern Germany nre inevitably tinged with monorchism. The Bavarians. In particular, have always been greatly at tached to the Wlttelsbach dvnnsty. and if King Ludwig nnd Crown Priuce Hup preclit had not discredited themselves during the war by their absolute sub mission to Prussia, they would have nn excellent ihniice today of returning to power. I As it is. thej have Just left Switzer land, where they had lived since the revolution of 11118, nnd have te-cstab-llshed themselves in one of the roynl castles In llavarla. Thus, strangely enough,' South Germany hns become the stronghold of German monnrjhum nftcr Kapp1fl coup, while Berlin Is In continual danger of being captured by extreme socialism. " Of course, monorchism lu southern Germany wns always extremely demo cratic compared Willi Kaiscrism, nm um fact remain that even mo i-russian monorchism nro now looking with hope ovet to Bavaria and that many of them believe thnt the next best thing to a restoration of the Hohcnzollcrns would be the return of the Wittelsbachg and their ultimate promotion to the Imperial throne. . At the present moment, a monarchist reparation in Munich, which several members of the new government un doubtedly secretly favor, must infallibly precipitate Bavaria's separation from the empire. It is also certain thnt if Bavaria se roiiim thp smaller south German states will follow her lead. The nttltudo of the Wuertembcrg government toward Berlin is scarcely less uggrcsslvc than that of the Munich cabinet. ST. L0U$ RECORDS QUAKE Severe Tremor Indicated 200 Miles Southweet of City f St. Louis, 'May 1. (By Av P.)- The sclsmographle observatory nt Ht. Louis University reported thnt carth qnako shocks were recorded l',rllr nftcr 0 o'clock this morning. The tremors occurred about 200 miles south west of here, It-was Indicated, nnd con tinued from 0:01 until 0:17. An es-' peclally severe tremor, lostlng for thirty seconds, was recorded nt 0:10. Railroad Administration Comptroller Joins Reading George II. Paiker has been appointed1 Munich after Knpp's coup In place of comptroller of the Philadelphia nnd the former Socialist government, is still from those that inspired P.isner nnd his follow ers. Antl -Socialist and Anll-SemUlp This new menace to German unity is far more serious tlrin thnt which led to the Socialist KJsner's nssossinntion, nnd the Berlin government is nt its wits' end how to meet It For this time Ba vnrian separatism is i hamninnod. not bv the Industrial workers nnd their lead ers, but by the Clerical party chiefs nnd the peasants, who are Infinitol) more powerful, for Bnvaria is nn ngriculturnl country with a deiplj religious popu lation. The south German separatist move ment of todaj Isanti Socialist nnd nntl semitic. ,The cabinet of clericnls and peasant Jeadeis. which wns sot up in KNIGHTS OP COLUMBUS TOKN EVKNINO SCHOOL . VV inr llroRd nnd Vine Streets Drelnnlne Clsna In NAVIGATION will Mart Monday. May nd, 7 .10 p M Emplo iur spare time nnd qualify for THini MATK'M MCKSK in merchant marine Service and ox-nervlea men Invited to enroll. PETRONITE Composition Floors Quickly solvo tho question of bath, kitchen, laundry nnd storo floors. Last forever. Sanitary, beautiful, economical. Immcdlato service, da or nijjht. Phlla. Rep. Factory A. R. Rosie 531-533 N. 9th St 2315 Walnut PhiU., Pa. Spruco S41S Market 4225 Spanish T. represented, and Wood is strong in the rural districts. Johnson's position in Mar land and Indiana is much like his position in New Ttnmiintf rinllunv. Araew T. lice n nower. within n week tills new president of the road, announced todav.i cabinet lias sent three notes to Berlin. .Mr. Parker has been comptroller of protesting ngalnst measures taken b.v the United Stutcs railroad ndmlnistrn r.bert's ministers nnd openlv threnten tlon He Is n native of Kugland 011(1, ing that Bnvaria will withdraw from the entered the railroad business ln ISO!) empire if the nre not revoked Tjninjricc ot tl,e c"lca80i " ',i,(,r nor,!n , , He became flnniicial nssistnnt to Di- There can be searcel.v nnv doubt that rector General Hines. of the railroad the new Munich government wishes to Special ''nrlne Courses In Commercial Span, ltd. will rnmmenee Tuesday Kvenlni. May 4. lleulnners' tlau under Mennr llnnpln AUiinrru i i"".', "iiurr nrnor III.HIOII. I'rartlcnl. uetible bualness Spanish will b ftiitM in hnlh rlnaieM. Villi partleulam on request. t'JSNTRAI. YMCA 1421 Arch St. BONDS FIRST MORTGAGE STEAM RAILROAD BOND A first mortgage, on 416 miles of road. Also collaterally se cured on 3047 miles of road. Wc can offer 20,000 in $500 or $1000 denominations to net the investor 10J4 INTEREST Price 11(120 per SI00O bom! I'rlre S310 per SCOO bond Income M0 yearly per $1000 bond Income S30 yearly per (SOU bond MCown&Cq land titm: iii.do.. fiiila. Members I'hlludelulila Stock liichanie UNeQUALm PURITy Alleviates ditorders of advancing years and good for the jrounf ' PA.RADISE SPniNG COMPANY Dtuniirick, Maine Cincinnati, Ohio Mitchell, Fubtohb C PiMunr Annai Co. grK 4v MEW NO StATTKR ,TV1IAT CONDITION Our export method! iclve a now leais ot llfo to your present ahlrta no patching-. STANLEY SHIRT HOSPITAL 1602 MARKET EJUW . TOBUY-K32i cimJll MArininuvuii.uns OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT M South 8th St fi &VxM' --q-i'w- mwm at. June IS. 101 link hut-oft aavea trnUr No aplnab or drlo Ni complete without thrm. PoilUro aik your pinmoer -J V. "Mother Dear" an appeillnt onK for Mothers Day. hr C. Harold Lowden Mr. Lowilen wrots It as a tribute to hli own Mother, and ho haa aald ut what you want to aay. Tou will hear It In hundreds of fchutchea on Mothera' Day, 0t a copy for your own heart's rood. On sale at Preiser'. Wanaraaker't, noaewlc's, or tend 2 Bo to THE HEIDELBERG PRESS I'ublWiera for Dlicrlmlnatnra J8th and Race St. rhlladelphU wb mnr DIAMONDS GOLD & SILVER Jewelry of AH Klndnt Tllfhett rrleei raid Penn Smeltinj- & Refining Works "T'i Old aold Bhop" 006 Filbert St., Phlla., Pa. HOME VICTOR WATER HEATER FOIl COAI. Kew principles,, conetant'euB plrt 84 to SO tllpna, lc. at radiators, too. Ther la noth ing Juit a rood. Free book. Reeves Stove 38 & Foundry Co. So. 2nd. sfratMtalf F.nCCATIONAi; noth Bera Our rraduatti ar In conetant demand tat rooa.parinr poinivnff. win, aaorinaiM. the easy, apeedr aritera. Complete fauilneae ind aecretarial coureea. Day and Nlrht flaanAfl. Intenalva tralnlnv. Kiir any tine. Call or write for fall particular! and ratalorue. a-im. uijoinu-ori uullbui a uourre sk vommrree ion It ratnut Ht. r-hlladelatiU WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY aiAMDERB LVBTITUTE. A Hlah-Orad. aaaea rorm. Now. Nura- School for men and Women. Claaaea form. ler eeaaon. uarou now. na 20411 Arch Bt. Locuit 2.184. Inr for aummer teason, xr iimitea Secretarial Courtoi. Day' NlrhL THE TAYLOR SCHOOL Mt urctr Bhorthana Toucn xypewntinir, uook- Kaeplnr. Strayer's Business College, Pblladelphla'a Oreateit Iluatneaa SebeM 87 Chaatnnt Bt. rpona Walnat 1M LEARN TO SrE.VK COnREOTM' Prlyate Individual iraaona KiTen in r-nainn er nerirncea woman lenener. vev Phone Poplar 4468-W. Preneh by tx Nxsa at. stntrnrt camps Camp Wachusett $?. & uoiaerneea. i. 11. uirnieentn seaaon. aavea nn liuiu.iun A,, ... ui.iiiuiii rnvmrnvut 4,vi tiulldlnsa. Itoatlna. canoelnc. awlmmln. flthlnr, water and land aporte. New athletle neia. Aiuaio. Ramea ana nirnt. xutonnr n aesirea. bum. uoeKiec i arooa time every No tenta. Flaber Bev. LORIN WKRSTKR. I,. IT. D Uolderneaa School, Plymooth. N. u. for Savlll'a Hwan-nrcU fanceta. 1 THOS. SAVILL'S SONS 1310 W,U,LACE STREET If .lolinson curries nil throe Ntntra ' administration, in 1010, nnd in .lunn- prooke n roufllpt with ItprHn, leadinK ' this nick he will have just given con-jur of tliii eur linn mndo comptroller, to u definite broiik nrinniion to wnni 11 nireauy Known, me lip .isstimed lis nut cs wit l fact that he lias popular NtreuRth which Rending todny. One of its first the acts was to pass n law proiiditu: for the dcportntion ot "nnens trom un- Nearly Half a Million Voters HAVE MARKED THEIR BALLOTS FOR PRESIDENTIAL ?:Y CANDIDATES IN THE FIRST THREE WEEKS OF V I 1 I I I I ! - JASCO ASCO ASCO i-SPIC J II ASCO ' ASCO ASCO a j e-e pgniiii n r f C 1 I hc Literary Digest's" Mammoth Poll of 11,000,000 Voters THE LITERARY DIGEST is conducting the greatest poll ever taken, outside of a presidential election, to learn whom the American people want for their presidential candidates, and from present indications this poll will register the voice of the people beyond question. Individual ballots have been sent by mail to eleven million voters throughout the United States almost two-thirds of the total presidential vote cast in the last presidential election. Every ballot is maifed in an envelope, addressed with pen and ink, and delivered through the U. S. Post-Office personally to the voter addressed. Return postage on the ballot is prepaid, and the voter has only to check or write the name of his or her Party and the first and second choices for Presidential Candidates, with no other mark of identification, and then drop this secret ballot in the nearest letter-box or Post-Office Thus every vote cast is absolutely the free, uninfluenced, secret choice of the voter, unknown to anyone but the voter himself or herself. The votes which have arrived up to and including the final press-day of the issue of THE DIGEST for May 1st, include 25,000 received in the first week, 125,000 in the second, and considerably over 300,000 in the third. The next two weeks' returns, it may safely be prophesied, will place the poll's total beyond the million maik. Tile results are being tabu lated and shown in THE LITERARY DIGEST week by week. To the considerable volume of country-wide newspaper comment on THE DIGEST'S poll, the Boston Globe contributes the following observation: "When THE LITERARY DIGEST poll is completed every one should have a pretty clear hint as to how the C 01 M s C o A S' C' o, country is going. other stnk Among king features in THE DIGEST for May 1st are: The Public Organizing to Meet the Strike Peril A Nation in Overalls Disappointments in Census Returns The Strikes as Revolts Against High Prices The Destiny of Cabrera in Guatemala German Militarists Trying to Regain Power Collapse of Britain's Middle Class A Peril to South America's Peace Fighting Waste With Movies Causes of Olive-Poisoning Found The Latest Thing in Steels The Author of "Robert Elsmere" Dies As Labor Criticizes Music Neglecting Our Democratic Safeguard Americans in French Universities Can the Denominations be Merged A Call for Religious "Deflation" Our Part in British Indian Foreign Trade The President as Commander-in-Chief The President and War Military Forces and the States, etc. Florence Nightingale, "The Lady with the Lamp" News of Finance, Commerce and Industry Best of the Current Poetry V A Big Array of Illustrations Including Cartoons May 1st Number on Sale To-day News-dealers 10 Cents $4.00 a Year The ii Ttsa Harkoi Distinction to Reader of J The Literary Digest teaMfe FUNIC & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard dictionary), NEW YORK A rs ci o SI 04 Ai I O A S' c o, I i c o A s. S: Your Young Tender Growing Children Should Have the Best Bread Victor Is Nature's Best Replenisher VICTOR contains all the K3 40Vf f fe&3 nutriment, all the food a, value nature put into -S. " c the hnest wheat 'A S d oi A s c o A .Si s Yonnic Women nnd Olrln Camp Nehantic for Girls (Mikltt. On Connwtlnit count. 2 mm., St6.1,noot 11H. .H .111(1. HAHKV IIAVIPUN mno. S333 Klftlnc Nun Avr. I'MUdeloli r. sritivo itEflonTS ATLANTIC) CITY. N. J. tOem& "Dtctor" Breab Three Kinds Pan, Rye, Hearth Dread without competition, either in point of quality or value Bread being the principal diet of the Little Folks, it is highly impor tant that you see to it that none but the best is served in your home. In addition to the lifegiving properties of the wheat kernel as con tained in the finest of flour are the fats, the heat producers, contained in the best of lard, granulated sugar and purest of milk. Just what the bodies of your growing children demand to make them vigorous men and women. Besides, Victor costs less than ordinary bread. Sold only in our own stores, scattered all over Philadelphia and throughout Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland ASCO "f m m i r ASCO f"Wf p n pFp-- ASCO ASCO '' IP i,"n ii qp A, roi a s 9i o A S 8 A SJ c Oi i i A A S C o A s cl o U s c o A SJ rt: OJ 6 s C o A C o ' A S' C to A LS CI 10 . ATLANTIC CITY.N. J., , An. American. PLQaHotcl ofDisMcumRealOonvjort rtRBPItOOF QAIUOt. -trltrw "1-- ccittcoo. mfValterj:az& Tired ottib EuKpeanfJaitRestaaraBf. CW.OWMANV. COURTESY. QI7AI.ITY. SERVICE HOTEL KENTUCKY KENTUCKY AVE.. NBAn BEACH European Plan nates, SI. DO to M on dally. Artier. Plan J!l to 15 dlr. $10 to 125 wkly. Eleator: electric llghta; telephone eyery room; running water In rooms; private bathi. Pnonn 3105 N. II. KENNADY. BUCKST0NE VIRGINIA AVENUE AT BOARDWALK American A European plana. Hot A cold ita A (rein water batha Open all year. UAVIU MKIIU JAIK V. 1VAU3U jW On-ntr jtn. Uanagir Lai aa make yon feel at ham fntbe "City of Bebait Health" Hotel Morton Benin End Vlnrlpla. Aril Canfielty tM. IJJjjaJor. prlrato hatha, ete.i alwaya p ROQUOIS South Carolina ATaoua. adJaoMttobafck.1 I Cap UO.IUaapatronaat,miuk.daBCliss. I 1trieUrmodni,Ubla and aatrlM azeauanb I Ur aoXaiium. Booklet. A. yrmnckla TRAYMORE ATiANiicQrYl THE PENNHURST Ocean end Michigan ave. Alwaya open. Every appointment WILLIAM R HOOD . HOTEL CONTINENTAL Alwaya open. Alwaya ready. Tarma mod erate Phone or write. M. waleb lAineaa. Try CLARENDON Hotel lrclnla Are. near lleocb. All rooma wit hot and cold running watcri prlraU hatha. Hotel Raven Rovd chl Ave. and i ioici rvuven roya B6aCh. Telephone .1221-W. Running water. PrUate batha Elevator. ISAAC HOWER. Westminster Ky- Av- ntar Beach. Elev. vrcauiunsicr t0 t prlvatl bathg. run water: 115 wkly.; S3 OO up dally. J. Rubra. HOTEL BOSCOBEL $?& tin up weekly ,Phon 11T. A H MARION. PHILLIPS HOUSE Maaaachuaetta A . nr Deoch E. P Phillip! New Clarion KY- Av- Rch. Oarage new Clarion B;oU1.t B K, hqnifacb. i i j s OrKAV CITY. X. J. THE BREAKERS Only Roardwalk Ilotel Diet kltrhen attached' for ue of convalea centa Oarage K A. Young. Mar. TArn MAY. K. J. MISS HALl'lN wlihee to announce the open k oi 1IU1 lal nrlv I prlvato batha. Inr nt linTlr wivnunn AM afnv lit. Special early eeuion ratee on 1K0 roomi. 64 HUENA VISTA SPRINGS sssssam .kfir8nS mm A itrlctlr aedtra betel with euelleat table tmi Mrrlea. IMMiMteUtht.ceMtiirtM. AWlaae 2MO feel. SploJI4 readtf golf, uanlt, ete. . Open June lOtli to October let Addreia until June 10. Inhn J.Glbbona.MgT. Hotel Rennert. Baltimore, Md. J EAST BTROUDSHPRO. PA. MAI'MUIURSV IN, Eaat atroudaburg. hady 'lawn, 10-acra grove') croquev, tenn' J bathing, garage: booklet. MRS. M. U BACH. ' ' - iS Woodleiiyh 8t"m ietn ll5IIi vrooaieign nrV,te bath room,, ,J lood. farm attaohed. owner trained ny't,i Automobile,. r0cn, for eueata1 cara. for booklet. Aiflreee M. wileabeth Laraj 'tfot ASCO ASCO ASCO ASCO WKBpySYILUI. p4 4 : " ?. ) 1 f-1' Hi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers