'sfmtft&t&0Hit n ? avgyiam LBpaaB-pmiPBEgg money js1 ar jE$r jrai to make 3TJS? MATRIMONIAL MARE 00 "BJSTELLA." THE GIPSY Modern Conditions Have Glticn Va an Interesting Social Problenl in the Homes Where Husband and Wife Go "Fifty fifty" on the Money Question. 1 " ' ' ' ' ' f By BLIBN ADAIR L! M5DEHN civilisation h developsd rriany queer and wrlou types. anA th queerest of them all U the worn in who marrie ror rhoney, I t most Inclined td agree ivltli the ruetle whose fa mous remark. (here Ain't na Ich animal," made when he eaW a. si- lrnffe for the llrst time, i history oy now. For by no stretch of the Im agination can I conoelve a woman who marries for money alone. She might convince herself that her Croesus needed a home, or that he should be protect ed rom the deafening horde of f e m I n I n o cau cat which surround him, or she might even be In that blissful stato wherein he Imagines sho Is really In love. But to marry for houses and motors and Jew els and money, to lay herself open to the loneliness and unhapplness, to rounds of Useless bridge and tea parties, and the like noverl don't believe there Is a woman alive who would detlberntely make, that oholco, that Is, If she knew 'whab'she rma putting herself in for. The trouble all lies In the fact that women' who make mesalliances of this kind either refuse to consider tho conse quences or close their ayes to them. Am bitious mammas aro almost entirely to blamo lor this stato of mind. They begin vjlicnti girl la too young to think for her self, and teach her the fatuous and de ceiving fallaates by whlah they mold her tothelr designs. They forget that tho V JiiTf iCj f fffi Vr Art! fiWH II A l mind of 40-otfd yearn is entering Into" a vain 'competition with' the mlntlnnlmrj eager mind of n. girl. Fdrtunately for the Amerlcrtn nlrl, ehe ,1s too Independent and Individual In her thoughts ror such a ivaiiiiciii, oovner or inier sno emerges irom neu aneii or irresolution ana as a result she marries some rising young capitalist whoso sole and visible means of support I a small salary. It neces sary, she1 helps out tho family budget by taking a -position herself. Thnt Is how the money prohlem Is met by more of our yaunff couples to today than one would suspect. And why net?, I know one couple who take turns cdoklng their breakfast, and a Jolly time they have of It, too. They" lenvo tho dishes Until night, start their flretess Cooker, and leav for thrfr r. SPeatlvS Offices. At nftnn thev hnVA n quiet lltllo lunchaon together, and 6'30 nnds him waiting at tho elevated nteps. In tho ovonlntf they go out together, to a movie or any other place they happen to fancy. Isn't this trud companionship? A truer and happier couple couldn't be found. This spirit of comradeship, which Is tho soUt of the real hbmo. And when tho monthly bills come In. they don't argue, they don't ask rach other 1m- von, uu.it im miliums questions tnoy go .....--..., .i.iu ,n.y uiu uuin, unci inu belongs to tho one who worked for It. Isn't that a pretty good solution of the money problem? Compare It wth tho man who nogs about tho bills, no matter how good tho reason for their1 size, and you can readily Un derstand why women nd longer marry for money. They know there is too much real hannlnenii In thn omer lire, ana there isn't o woman allvo who wouldn't tnke happiness before wealth. ramalnder LfflTOV)kV Mm;JSSimL Bi m smly jr ,.1." -iKjimmm. a-Jmtmm m m I., A JGSk ,.i?57'-:sBE "r. sflsK r :m iti Not m mi ?. M&&-? ,- mm.-, $ A issiiiiiHsiilHsiiH Mm 1 Tlio Dim Sweat Woods Beautiful gleoiW eof t dusks in the noon day fire Wlldwodd privacies, closets of lone- de Chamber from chamber parted rriiix wa vering arraa of leaves Cells far the " lfS2J prayer In the soul that grieves. Pure with the sense of the pAeslrig bf alnt through the vrosd. Cdol fbf the dutiful weighing of 111 vmn good - O braided duk of the oak and W ((nodes of tno vine, . While the riotous noonday aun of the Juno day, long dd shine i Te held me fast In your heart and I "la ypu fast In tninei But now when the sun la no more no the riot Is rest. .... And the sun Is await at tho ponderous gate or the west, j.-- the iv, the slant yellow beam down tno i a r.L i.ik aaitn Like a lane Into heaven that lead from a dream -Sidney lnler. LADIES. DO NOT GRIEVE; WEFJNDITWASN'TEVE Who Ate tho Apple, After All, Mid la to Blamo for Man kind's Fall 'Twas Noah. MRS. SAMUEL CHEW .WOULD LIKE WOMAN FOR HEAD OF SCHOOLS WATCH YOUlt STEP! "More Sympathetic, Thor ough and Far-seeing Than a Man," Says Leader Among Colonial l)ames. WHY WOMEN TEACHERS FAVOR WOMAN LEADER "He TrmiM not object to worktnr un der n womnn." "A nomnn superintendent might ob tain eqUiil salaries for men and. women teacher, which should be the rale." "If she would obtain a law whereby teachrrn could marry, few teachers would take advantage of It." "Women ran control bojs as well a men can control girls." The movement for a woman superin tendent of schools to succeed the late Pr. William C. Jacobs was heartily In ' dorsed today by Mrs. Samuel Ohew, .a member of the board of managers of the Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Dames. Becausq1 she believes, the office Is one Which a. woman should nil, Mrs. Chew stated that she would work for a woman candidate. "I feel that It Is tho proper position for a woman," she said. "A woman Is more 1 sympathetic, more thorough find more far-seeing than a man.. These are quali ties which tho office domands. The fu ture welfare of our country depends upon the thoroughness of the children's training. "Women are especially fitted for that. "I do not know personally the three women who haye been mentioned for the offlce, but If they are eligible I am highly In favor of their becoming candidates. T believe a woman should bo elected be cause she la a woman, ahd I will do all In my power to help a woman should she become a candidate." The three women whom Mrs. Chew had In mind are Miss Katherlne n. Puncheon, head of the High 8ehool for airls; Miss Margaret T. Magutre, prin cipal of tho George Washington Publlo School, and Dr. Lucy L. W. Wilson, head of the biological department of the Qlrla" .normal ocnooi. TBACHCns FAYOR WOMAN. Women teachers in the public schools disagreed with tho contention of Henry II. Edmunds, president of the Board of Education, that the teachers would not favor1 having a" woman superintendent. Most of them Inclined toward the view that conditions among teachers, SO per cent of whom are women, would Improve with feminine rule at the head of the educational system. "All I ask is the appointment of a person, ntan or woman, who will give a 'square deal to every one from high school to kindergarten." said n superin tending principal. "Aa for the objection that a woman would not be able to man age boys more than 18 years old, I am auro she la as capable of doing that as a man Is of teaching girls over that age. I would resign at once If I thought I could not teach boys over 16. The possi bility that a woman superintendent might cause, a law to bo enacted enabling women teachers to marry Is not attrnn. tlvo to mo There are too many wpmsn now waiting for appointments, and If teachors wero allowed to retain their position after marriage, half tho girls, who prepared for the profession would not have tho slightest chance- to bo ap pointed." " SALARIES MIGHT BE DBTTEREp. "If a woman was head of the schools. wq might ba put on an equal salary foot ing with men teachers." said another assistant. "Men are not entitled to more inoney than we, fpr we must wo.rk Just as hard and our hoqr, re Just as ipnr, The ; examination w pass are Just as dlf ficult Women, In my opinion, are equaU ll P"W of managtnr boy more than U year old as men are. The in, Buepce of a. woman with good sound . 3lw ,Bfheffi would take advanaqi a bill enabling them to retain1 tWfw,T. JJpn after marriage, for W WouM Vw to give to their homes n4 efclldiwj the thy glye tQ thetr proTowtea, RBd to dS brth wh,4 b IwpBMnrt-mn. too! har cr majjy unmarried women WA' f. r aWolrtmi!t that t ,14 btt "I am Jut a vrlUbig to tMU under a woawn a a man," coin , teaehw. "To pU a wowan r fe( ortUw waukr b u dntNMtrau that a wua lJaa Mb4 of Brforojlfc teftdsHea. tku alsk bt bate tried in oihLsiM a4ST, r tht i-wiad.iphiilia wemett'whi p )Wt tifK m Uk ai.n. but wL hava aaver had h opportunity." Dancing Masters Busily Contriving Now Puzzles for Winter's Whirls, A simple Itttlo combination of one-step, two-step, canter, walk, hesitation and walz. This Is tho decision of Philadelphia dancing masters, who fool grieved bc causo ao many people had troublo learn ing the now variations of tho tango last season. In tholr campaign to make It easier for disciples of Terpsichore thla year; easier but new. Tho Dancing Mooters' Association Is holding' meetings twlco a month at vari ous summer resorts. If no new dances are developed, it would appear, there will not be much work for tho dancing masters : but this Is not true. There la such a thing as reviving old dances, and Indications aro that the ono tlmo famoun waits will bo brought back and burnshcd up next winter. Hardly anybody remembers It. And the tango? Discarded, of courso, until everybody has forgotten It, too. ESTELLA, MEMBER OF GIPSY BANE?, QUITE ACTIVE, DESPITE US YEARS Crooked and Withered With Her Age, She Watches Her Great Grandchildren at Play. ESTELLA, crooked and withered with her 115 years, squatted before her gipsy tent today watching her great grandchildren. Swarms of (lies buzzed around tho little camp. When tho gipsies moved their quar ters to tho sheltered green mounds near 70th street and Lansdowno avenue, thoy brought Estella with them, for they feel a camp would not be n homo without her. Entolla Is In her teens for tho second tlmo; sho is 1,007,400 hours old, which Is lie years. All this week, whllo tho nut-brown men wero busy setting up their gay colored tents over wooden platforms, sho squatted In tho sun, chewing long stemmed weeds, and watching her great grandchildren. As tho story Is told, Estella bocame a mombor of tho wandering band at tho ago of 102 years, never before having been a gipsy. Sho had been tho wife of a merchant In old Madrid, who. being Im provident, had left her without resources daughter, contributed to her support. Then this woman came to Spain and took Estella, at tho ago of 102 years, back to tho United States with her to Join In tho nomadic llfo of this glpBy band For U years sho has roved this country with them, and until a few years ago shared In their work of making 'beads. Whllo the men aro busy tinkering, and the women doing fancy work, Estella sits nearby Ilka an oraclo, whispering words of wisdom to the younger genera tions. Bho likes nothing better than to stare straight Into the faco of tho sun. (.or watch tho fleeting , clouds, and her .. .... .w j.w,iici.-ii-ii urc saiu 10 oe never falling. Her eyes are terribly bleared from the Intehse glare, 'but she Is still healthy, and knows nothing of dieting. She cats and drinks almost anything, faometlmes tho food Is not tho freshest or the cleanest, and sometimes very far from bolng cither, but this never worries her, Gipsies aro not very cloanly people. THIS COUPLE DOES NOT LIKE HONEYMOONS Too Tall, Mr. and Mrs. Georgo Schnoffer Are Objects of Too Much Curiosity. Why did Qrorce Scliaeffer, of Quaker town, who Is 8 feet 7 Inches tall, and his bride, G feet 2 Inchei, break their honey moon f llecnumi their respective heights at tracted too much attention In restau rants. Ilecauae cTcrjboilr osirled them on trailer cars. Itrcaune they were followed tr crowd. Ilecaune they indured difficulty In pur chasing clolhlnc In stores while shopplnr out of town. Th troth i out! b.,riTL,iriLl An a-old eleee of etay wl tho "' Br !U assertions eVefy ,lj II Find, out Err ne'er ale th apple. Here's evidence, though Noah Wd It. That he's. In fact, the one who did Jt. ,A a msW of fact, It was th fruit of the cassia tre, and not ot tho apple, that waa eaten. Ere. maligned by laky person who wish they didn't hav to work, ond by other who wish to live forever, for committing tho "original sin," had nothing to do with It Noah, whoso chief cjalm' to fame heretofore ho been the episode of the Ark, wa the culprit A book telling all about It ha Just been issded by tho University Museum. It I written by Dr. Steven Lankdon, pro fessor of Assyrlology nt Oxford Univer sity, who translated a Sumerlnn tablet owned by the Unlvorslty Musoums. He found that history was all wrong about Paradise and tfyo reason for leaving there, and' several other thing. The tablet goes Into details. It defi nitely located Eden a 100 mile from the Tigris-Euphrates sourco. Into tho garden after the flood camo Noah. Ho had a wonderful reputation a a marl' ner: second to none. In fact. Therefore, they gavq him n. Job as gardener for ono Enkl, a god. Ho was told not to eat of the cassia, and, of courso, ho dis obeyed, Before this everybody was an "oldest Inhabitant" tho last king ruling fur 61.800 years. And ho might havo been at It yet it ltrhadn't been for Noah's appetite. WOMAN B LIBERAflg FROM CORSET SUB mow aiyies wu xako C Caro of Comfort, Health Hygiene. Woman' right to enjoy the W a comfortable, w ell-fitted corset 11 bo Infringed on after all. Tho batk step In dres which waa heraldePii new as a return to the wasp'tit. , of the past ho been discovered te. been a misinterpretation of the slon "nlpped-ln waist" A slight variation from last year! like figure Is In rogTle, but only t. extent of following nature's own but line. , t Nature herself ha set the sUtidtk this season' mode and wo are to"wt corseted figure more neatly- i&tX). ever before known In tho histeryer etry. V7$ "There 1 no Indication here er rf that thero 1 to brf a return to the bK waiip-llko waist of tho past in eor, said William IU Hande, a VhafiS corset maker. "In fact, quite the emf,' I true. This season tho corseted Art! to be more nearly ideal than It h," beon. Tho na,turot line of tho (hrS? to be followed, which mean a UfL about ID Inches from th.o hip te i thc line of tho average, normally nij woman. ' -52 "It I true that there is a varlatieiS last year' mode, which waa the tat. ure, absolutely devoid of curve. Th that tho waist wo to bo 'nipped iISi been misinterpreted to harbinger a S to tho pinched wAlst" "a Tight corsets. It Is nld, have WJ sponsible for one-half of the nervonrt eases of women1, ' Compression of the jvalst Interfere?! the portal circulation. Which Is .iffiS connected With tho liver an"S organs, according to a promlntnt !S physician. "' wffi Tommy Gets a Surprise IN SPITE 6f the fact that Old Man Owl had called and frightened Tommy Tlttlc-mouse away from tho cellar door, he could not give up the Idea of explor ing and seeing for himself the wonders that the garden creatures thought It con tained. "I should not have tried to ex plore at night." Tommy said positively. "Of courso, I should havo known better. Old Man Ow wilt get me yet If I am not moro careful." (For Tommy knew as welt as nny one that Old Man Owl was laying for him and would never bo con tent tilt ho had caught html) "I mutt stop my night adventures and explore In NAVY BLUE SERGE AGAIN LEADS THE STYLES FOR FALL &HiMiHvirKflaSSf5 fHsK&l&&k "' sssssssssssssssssssssssssssPatT fllHsfljl ffjry WissssssssllsssKiJOiS iPsHsslHsHBsllll li SkijBbpJKSSiPHJ9 MlKl&m ssssK3iK flLMslat AMEHICAN style for fall are Xi coming In with startling rapidity considering the fact that it Is August They reflect the best productions of our finest whole- Bale houses, and the results are more than Interesting to the fash ion follower. The tailored suit is a distinctly American institution. and styles In, this particular lino Interest any and every woman, be cause a fall or winter suit la a foregone conclusion. The most economical woman has to havo a suit Tho complications attending the manufacture of foreign materials make It almost Impossible to get Imported goods, so tho result Is a decided tendency toward plain fabrics. For Instance, the Dry Goods Economist predicts serge, gabardine, poplins, whipcords, nov elty checks and stripes, mixed goods of all description, and wool velours as the prime favorites for tailored costumes. Among tho dressy materials, velvets of all kinds are extremely good. Pur trimmings will continue the rage, even on blouses, continues the Economist Today's Illustration features a fall trotteur modeled on the lines of the latest autumn garments. The coat Is long, like almost all those shown In the advance styles. The material la navy serge, with a very short ripple skirt The high-buttoned collar gives a very chlo appearance to the wearer, and tho normal belted-ln waist lino Is slightly trimmed with military headings. The military note Is continued by deep cuffs of self material, also braided. Tho hat is made of velvet, from a design in vogue. These all-velvet hats are the newest things for late summer and fall wear. proviacni, naa lert ncr wmiout resources j bur In ni( 7.i V.i -,i .i f, '1 at his death. After that a woman sho bScterioIoifn nr.iiT,entifl? '6ochl"B nn,d had reared, and whom she calls her Tm v- ? "hlng, Estella. today, is . ,--. .., nv (. ilyK ulu U(iy, 0nB (IOCS .,: rFBara l"o walk she takes a con stitutionals, but sho drifts hero and there among tho tent, giving words of advice when spoken to, but othenvlso reserving her vocal onorgy. She treads about tho p.uso inner pare feot without the nld of a crutch or walking stick, and nover wears shoes. When the gipsies fold their tents and set the wheels of their van In motion for distant fields Estella takes ?. S shoea' I""1" them away carefully, but sho noVer Uses them, and TUt.0"!."?"1 to cvcry ono Unwarranted. When the band gather together at night beneath the stars, and one of tho younger boys brings put; from his tent a battered mandolin, then sometime Estella, filled with the spirit of tho scene, can be . if m"er some unforgottcn words or a Spanish love song. But she usually PUUS her tattered null ntinut h.. c. long before the rest lie down to sleep and Bho ddzes at various intervals thrqughout tho day. Estella stood today looking at the time scarred van which transports them across the country as It rested near the tent. She missed the horees Asking her daugh ter what had become of them, she learned that the men had sold them, and she was oil?. J1, J.he b?nd ePcts to remain in Philadelphia all summer. Sho did not seem to care, as she merely- shrugged her shoulders and sat down. SUFFRAGISTS TO CELEBRATE Birthday pf Lucy Stone Will Bo Oc casion for National Observation. Tho anniversary of the birth of Lucy mono, rounoer of the Woman's Journa', will-be celebrated Friday by suffragists throughput the country. The Woman's Journal has often been called the suffrage bible, and ts founder is hailed as tho Ideal suffragist. Extensive preparations are being made for trie celebration and tho programs will, contain many novel features, varying from .balloon ascensions and "reworks to an all-day pilgrimage to "Su1".'.? ton8 hom" Bt Orange, N. J. The Michigan Suffrage Association will offer competitive scholarship, to one of the State institutions and the New Jer sey organlfation will place a bronse tablet on the Orango hofre. The speaker will Include many person prominent In the suffrage movement, among them National Suffrage President Dr. Anna Howard Shaw,-International Suffrage President Mrs. Carrl,o Chapman Catt and Lucy Stone' daughter, Miss Allco Stone Blaok-Well. Picturesque Hats Big, shading and graceful, al most anything may be used to make It Even the scrap, bag may be resorted to In order to find odd bits of material, such as silk, cretonne, etc. Linen and straw In bright, pure colors are employed An orange-colored straw ha a white linen band and edge, with a bunch of red and yellow fruit for trimming. A hat of dark green straw Is trimmed with a green band and a bunch of green grapes. A hat of sand. colored straw has red band with yellow and blue linen flowers, A green straw hat has a crown of daisies made of jrwiuw iinen wun green centre. The rim 1 encircled by an edge of yellow fringe. A white straw has flowers of white linen with blue, red or green edges and yellow cen tres. A blaok straw has a yellow band with red flowers and green leave. A hat of black openwork straw Is bound and banded with red linen ribbon and trimmed with three flat red and white flower. Streamers of red linen are attached. Honeymooning may appeal to some newlyweds. But Is a different Btory with ueorge Schacffer, an ex-pollceman, and his wife, Mrs. Angle Schacffer. They consider themselves the happiest pair In Bucks County. They simply brought their honeymoon to an cnu today. They wantod to bo let alone, llko all honey moon couples do. This was Impossible. Schacffer and his wife were marrlod July IT by tho Rev. Dr. W. F. Spldle. After thq ceremony they decided to go away on an extendod honeymoon. Many trips were mapped out First of all they Intended to see Broadway and the Brook lyn bridge. Then they Intended to view Niagara Falls, N. T. Everything went well until their re spective heights began to attract too much attention. It finally became so an noying that they couldn't go anywhere unless a crowd composed of nowsboys, children, shoppers and others followed them. Whenever they entered a, restaur ant diners stopped eating. The diners would lay their knives and forks aside. On trolley cars passengers would look" at mom. Tno conductor would also look at them. While tho noncymoon lasted thoy had occasion to vslt stores. But the sales men couldn't accommodate them. It seemed that thqre was nothing in stock 4to fit Schacffor apd his iUrldo. ' Another Salad Help f 1 6 Meatless salads are a dainty luncheon dish for hot weather meals. All kinds of combinations are used, such as fruits, vegetables, string beans, potatoes, toma toes, nuts, seafood, In short, almost any tasty. combination of odd and ends may be used. A substantial hard-boiled-egg salad Is nice for a change, when pre pared with mayonnaise or French dress ing. Russian sauce Is favored by some. A novel hard-boiled. effg sllcer Is shown in today's illustration. It Is used just like a pair of Bhears, only the rings cut the egg into smooth slices, firm and even. This Isn't easily accomplished with tho ordinary kitchen, knife, and for picnic, use the slloor Is most practical. It sella for 65 cents. Mr. Garden Toad juit leaned back against the tide of the cellar door and laughed and laughed. the afternoon when the garden creatures aro napping. In the everting I must atay tight In my nest" So tho very next afternoon, when the un shone fiercely and the garden crea tures were lazily napping. Tommy Tittle mouse slipped out from hU homo and ran over to tho cellar dqor. "I'll declare." he oald to himself after he had looked at the door carefully, "If all thono garden folk had not made so much fuss about that cellar door, I would bo Inclined to say that It was a most ordinary 'cellar door, and that It doubt less led to an ordinary cellar. Quito the eame kind of a cellar that Mrs. Tommy nnd I leveled In-i-but, of course, it Isn't iikc man, i,et me see I think I can get In this way." Tommy1 was Just crawling up by tho side of tho door ready to slip Into a holo ne naa spiea, when, who should hop 'k-plump by his sldo but Mr. Garden Toad I "Hello there. Tommy, what are you doing so elyly,?" he asked, right out so loud that way, "Hush!" whispered Tommy softly, please, please. 'Mr. Garden Toad, don't talk so loud. I am trying to expjoro this cellar -while tho garden creatures are nnpplng. Don't wake anybody Want to get down In tho cellar ana if ,.n (ii.aln .whit., .(.am mm.. ,, . jW "Now. what In tho world do yoifftS to go down there for, I'd like to miA asked tho toad curloualy, M "Because It Is a wonderful place."!! plied Tommy. "Haven't you hctraTi the talking about It7 Don't you fi; thnt all tho garden folk are InterestM, it? I mean to bo tho ono who txtfd It and enn tell all about what ltrv tains!" And Tommy twirled hlWS proudly. 2 Mr. Garden Toad Just leaned "S against tho sldo of tho cellar doofl. laughed nnd laughed and laughedfB Tommy was almost offended, "i ,, eee anything funnyl" ho said. w But tho toad only laachctl h ti.31 "To think you, who till months arolft! down there, should bo trying so hillt explore! It's too itinnyl" and he la? ngaln. ! Do you mean that this cellar! leads to my cellar?" asked Tomni'l cellar?" - US "To be sure It does," replied thelS "this Is merely tho other side oltS house. You know alt about that fctfc without cxplonng-oh, dear, thl'i amuso mo! Why don't you slmpIrK whnt you know already?" .jj? Tommy guloed his surnrlao ..ts9 back home and that evening heTt6lhs he knew of tho cellar and was oulii Vtnn aft., nil -' I Copvrlght Clara Ingram JudtiP "The Great White Way j 1 C2S8 ) I (r& White Cream Cleanser For Whito Buckskin Nubuck: White Leather and. Canvas Shoes. When white shoes are perfectl?7 white, what a symphony of chr.V tuuicsai Oome In for a 10c trial box. 10c and 25c a box Soli everywhere p.nd by j P. P. Lagomarsino & CoInc.' IH1 AHCII HTIIEI5T Distributors 5S " fil 1 M rmmi i : 3 2 'EstablUbed 1863 $ r W l; ESTABLISHED 1880 MRS. A. REICHARD Stamping and Embroidery Hemstitchinir. 10c per yard" PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERNS 1113 CHESTNUT STREET PEIRCE SCHOOL America's Foremost Business School Fashion Hints Circular skirts are finished with biaa band of plaid material Sva dresses have the elon gated waist line, suggesting the IBQye'Sge. Carry a parasol of gorgeou hue and a small handbag of brilliant taffeta. ' P hand-tainted pearl button and dyed pearl button n odd. shapes are to ajpear oa autumn waists A SMART TAILORED STJIT of ? 'BtWratt petticoats are tax&i Chestnut and 12th Sts. bj ! I jm. 1 n sSpeoial Sale Tuesday' Corduroy Skirts Washable Velvet Corduroy Smart sport slUrU of white corduroy (as illustrated) but ton front model, with patch pockets. Exceptional Value 2.95 n The NcwPcirce ,aS?X. Buildtng at H2Q Pine Street is a monument to fifty years of success in preparing- young men ana women for busi ness ppsitions of high responsibility. PAW, TEItSf wni, BE) OPENED Iff ffEW BtJILDma Pine St. west of Brnnr? I 8e6j8e3eeeeeefiP BANKS BUSINESS COLLEGE 11 xou mean Uulnrus Ftv of our classical colltru mnit universities furnish thj piictlVaj du catioa eojoysd by ou rraduital lute,?"". Mb. and Chcatnot Btrecta E. M. UuU. A. M a?inJS2.u. Alter Oct. 1st, Ptnn Mutual . Busin ess subject, uch as Shorthand, Tjw wrih'np;, Accounts, Bookkeepa Rapid Calculation and Tim English, taught by specialist. Ask for Catalog T-34. Phone Dfamond 031, TEMPLE UNIVERSE & Bread St. below Herb ffelUdclphliu l r i i ,lBfctWsiHIBiwl m The Phillips Brooks School li'flfi Vfll1 rp i " ' .TTm Swwjhmere Preparatory &0k.oi STRAYER'S Business College Will mak( exceptionally atUMlKtj irln a bujlneii education. 0 1.807 Ch jstnat It, Falls. Central Ed ideational lasiitj " JSlo priraratorv ut f S-n7..rt,?."3r " oonnooc. " Educational Sjrsttm. You should k ' unlqu work 3000 SludccU !' Central Y if. C A. lilt Arch t- 8HIMHINO X- - eaKTRAL NATATOWLS jf Mrvr uw k&d )f. i. muai.w. T HSf"'1 ?"K4 '.J i lfli i',r"w3-SK!.' T't!T& AIt. IU wUn Uu. SOa Jw JtsVA Jj. oHHSna
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers