. ... ■ , . ■ - : • V 1 ■ . ■ . - . WEDNESDAY EVENING, TEUSGRAPEf ' r APRTL 24, 1918. "The tears live ina^ Afterwhile This so called man, who is attempting to conquer worlds with brutishness and barbarism, will be marooned on the island of his own failure isolated, whether he be in hell or still on earth and alone with empty ambitions of Prussianism, ugly, world despised greed, and the torturing memories of needless, fiendish (destruction, merciless murdering not only of enemies and their helpless families, but of GERMANS AND GERMANY. % * To exile and "draw" the power of this champion brute, who has been preparing for years to undo the centuries of pro gress and civilization, we must out-fight him, out-man him and properly equip our men with every modern means that brains can invent and produce—and THE JOB MUST BE DONE QUICKLY AND WELL—this necessitates cash and lots of it the x\merican people who are the government must supply it. Every Liberty Bond Sold Brings America That Much Nearer to a Successful Finish % • . Unless it is absolutely impossible for you to afford a bond, don't let a single tomorrow find you without one. } . This Page Contributed to the Government in the Interest of the Third Liberty Loan by the Following Uptown Merchants Consylman & Co. Steckley's Shoe Store Jewel Tea Co. A. B. Tack Latimer Willis Fisher & Cleckner Bessie L. Zimmerman Brown & Co. B. Handler H. J. Wolford George's Drug Store N. Brenner Commercial Bank E. L. Rinkenbach Eli Goldstein Clark's Drug Store J. H. Tripner Robinson & Co. Wagner & Smith Bogar Hardware Store* The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. Ryder Hardware Store
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers