Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, February 11, 1916, Night Extra, Page 11, Image 11

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EVlSNINtt LEDGER PJUULADKUJH1A, Fill DAY, FEBitTAKV 11 1010.
.
11
4
IrME NOVEL OF THE YEAR. SHBSgS?
OME
V JLV JL jL
BTKOPBin,
W ., hn exiled hlms-lf In South
T C5LU When i M aw hl ,T-lti. All.
I ImflftCA L.!V5".j ....ma inn Wflvne.
ell
nt .... li..p
Al-n.. "w.vnn. sent the "young. man
t-eiu
First his
i i n man
proniftftcy. Later
thfl
tit.fj ;.hukeRbecu of Allx's Intimacy
h AK.BI.S Ww York. After lome rm.
jjtt ihlt 52f5,aunter irt on a Peninsula
W' ?Jnmnith of the Ban Frnnclwo
.hfiTii tn. v?HvI. - iiv with hr and
V nirtf. nu Uv.-- --
ri
hl
A'VeloSnf .he jumped orTth,
cine- 1 ,h.Lf Vulllni out of the station
tnlo ".',.. iione. II" went to Aincn n
lrl A'W Sfflr... Ills efficiency earns
lrK rA; Oern-;, old i homy
F?,?iniiw All Ignorant of the fact.
I Brt'f;1";1!,: the father of a boy hack In
til Hill. .'.. ..Via nw surround nns. and
Jpl ,'""., siarRBrll. the Rlrl. has uJn.rt
W.IV JSoli "Skte. an well ns herself, to
flf ft? Jtl? S upon n number of Improve'
.Men, ''iSL JJKit.it li tho system of
". TJS,i,lR which ho hope- will en
ifef'ffif i !Wie5.Uvt. i the naWally rich
utl . ... i .1.j.. nnrllrl MaPa
WreafuASlri
5 ind IM ?!"K".'.a.inA. herrv marries Mar-
H?i. romnlei-d ditch. Upon tno prim i
iMtM"!f.ninilon. Gerry marries Mar
trltn . . - ....... .Am. (tl.lnnpA In the
IE iU,irl,Mrlnr of Oerry and his Irrigated
l ."' V.n!rry to heep his starving cat-
"V.JTh? house V " crv. "it Is that of
f wc.Lme?-hl2 son. and Margarita's.
I JeMhSSIT AHx li "till walling. Col.
I -"Whl. fallen In love with her. but
l i&.&a!tly rcfus" to allow him to pro-
tffi. Kemn. a Texan rrpre-entlHir on
i .,,kLJ. Silild firm In South America.
"'?.nfu with Oerry. Together I lev
T . i. returning I. cber's norses ana
llt'lli after "ho drSSght and aro at Weber'.
Mint, i
' chapter xxvu-(Contlnucti).
t . . ii
fTA PAtlOLB C31CU1I temps, 10 biiciiko
t j de rctcrnlle " Ho smiled to hliiisclt
V.i the twisted mcanlnp; tho lone silence
Kf Wi companions Bavo to tho words.
"Vbcn the smllo left his fncc. He rc-
msmbered tho nrgumont. inu uisuuui u
ill have for supcrhiiman truths tells us
'Sit It Is dancorous to bo silent with those
'it would Keep nt n distance, for words
J7s nd are forKOttcn Between mon. but
jrfence-actlvc sllencc-ls foievcr Ineffnce
ilhle True life tho momenta or life thnt
if,,.; a trace-Is made up of silence. Not
!Mjilte silence: that l nut another nnmo
ifor sleep.' t But tho active sllenco thnt
?tarni the life of every day Into life where
'in li Intense, whero there Is no ban
tlothlng forblddcn-where InuRhter dare
f tot' enter, whero subjection Is submcrKod
...i... nitnl1. In remembered.
(wry felt that this nctlvo sllenco had
F i '. lt... Tlmon ttinn wem VItii
come upon " .',"', i,i"
lome into mo "' i" " "
fiooi He felt restless nfrnld. Ho tic-h-u-d
to spcah. Ho wns on tho point of
Mixing wnen i.iuuer iut uuvn u v.......
inftlr. clasped hla hands and broke tho
.siicnc ! . . . v ., i t I...-...? .u t.i.i.
r'Wstnigmi ureamcu i nuuiu mu ii
. i-.... l.An n.,.t M'Vtort T .vnlfn tin
ids cold sweat wna on my forehead, bo-
S,,Mmlas' ?.Jttr from lh0 thlB' I'""
you to lt.8 at drMma ennnot foow
n?t?Pind ftnd 8,lcneo fal1 "PO" ll'c,n
Sfm ;..l f-eher stared straight In front of
i ii . un,t0 tho nlBhl- 1IS fnee worked
n?,. i 8h,llB S'.e.ro "'fUBBlltiB to kcp his
Ii,, iiett' U?cn h0 bcKnn t0 "Pent'
r.f .'..'. words wero scarcely audible.
I don t know why 1 want to tell you two
about why I am here, unless It Is that as
wo Bat here so quiet I felt that you knew
llA"7th'11 J'o1' kncw nil that I know and
that I was on tho point of knowing nil
that you have known. Tho llttlo lies of
lire suddenly became bljr and hateful, and
I saw In my llfo a monster Ho that tho
sllenco was exposing.
"There nro lots of men with tho begin
Pi.i my story- Il'fl common and takes
little telling. I was born In Pennsylvania.
o were mighty poor farmers, but I got
all tho schooling there was within walk
ing distance of home. My old man snw
to that. When I was still a boy our llt
tlo bank took fno In It wasn't doing
much business then, but a couple of yenrs
later tho region struck oil and the bank's
business soared by leaps and bounds. It
turned Into as good a Bpouter as nny of
the wells. The family thnt ran It became
rich and went to higher Jobs or out nl
together. Tho start was shoved up, nnd
about the time I wns of ngo I wns han
ding more money than I'd ever known
wns fn the world. Tho nmount I stolo
was an even thirty thousand, nnd I got
away with It. It was easier to do 30 yenrs
ngo thnn It Is today. I got nwny with It
nnd then It got nwny with me. It lasted
me a year nnd four months, nnd I saw
the end of It up tho coast nt Pernnmbuco.
"I date my birth from the day I spent
the last rtollnr nnd woke up. I worked.
Nothing wns too small or too big for me
to handle. I got something to risk nnd
then t risked! It. I risked It ngaln nnd
ngnln. After nO yenrs I could draw my
check for thirty thousand, plus Interest,
and I did.
"I sent tho check to tho llttlo bank
back home. I wnlted two months for the
nnsner nnd then It camel my check torn
across nnd a short letter saying that the
loss had already been met by n bankers'
surety association. I wioto tho associa
tion a dozen tetters and somo of them
took some writing. In the last I offered
fourfold tho thoft. There had been plenty
of Hlblo In my brlnglng-up. They wroto
back that It was no use that I could
keep on climbing In price, but It was
their bUBlncs to Jnll me for IB jears tho
first chance they got nnd they'd do It tho
minuto I set foot whero they rould grab
mo.
"Thnt letter frightened me. I began to
leallzo thnt what I'd been working for
wasn't money, or honor, or rehabilitation
but Just tho right to go hack tho right
to go back home.
"Nobody had been lmrdcr on mo thnn
my old man. For yenrs nobody In tho
houso was allowed to say my name nnd
If he saw n letter from me he threw It In
the fire, opened or unopened. But some
how It got to him that I had offered to
pav fourfold and that I'd been refused
and that turned him. It wns tho fourfold
thnt did It tho divine nnd sacred meas
ure of Justice. Ur started to light for
mo ns hard ns he'd over fought ngalnst.
And then ho died nnd my old mother
died. Letters stopped. My brothers nnd
sisters were coming up In the world.
They couldn't afford to own a thief much
less fight for him. So tho letters slopped.
"t spent money then I built mo a
house In Pornambuco that wns a wonder
palace nnd I started In to forget. But
when you'vo been remembering with all
your might, tho color of tho paper on tho
walls of home, the lay of the woodpile,
of tho sheds and the tumbling barn and
stables, tho holes In tho fence, the
friendly limbs of apple trees and the
smell of hays when you'vo been coddling
baro memories of slmplo things like those
for 15 years, you enn't turn around on
your Inside self nnd forget.
"There's a ling tho sight of which
makes my heart como up Into my throat
nnd tenrn to my eyes. You think I mean
tho Stars nnd Stripes, hut I don't. I
mean the Blno Peter that files at the hal
liards of big ships nnd snys to everybody
that takes tho trouble to look. 'Wo ca:l
today.' Over the tops of the houses 1'vo
seen thnt flag blinking In tho heavens
like n bit of deep blue Boa married to n
white cloud nnd to tne It nlwnys snld,
'We sail for home today.' I'd shut my
ejes or close the blinds, but what wns
the ue nt thnt? Night nnd day I could
hear the hollow of the great horns a
blast Tor good-by nnd nnother for a chal
lenge to the sea as tho big boats headed
out for homo.
"I couldn't stand It. I came up here.
And now List night, I dreamed that I
heard It In my sleep up bete. Gentle
men, a man without n country Is In n
bad wny. but n man without n home,
oven If It's n hovel well wo all know the
old song." Ho paused to master his
voice. Then In a whisper thnt they Just
caught he added, "Homo Is the nncor of
ii man's soul. 1 want lu go Home."
I.lchcr stopped talking. Tho rovcnllng
silence hnd ilono Its wot It. It hnd brought
them close so close that ho had spoken
lest they tuko his soul by assault.
Ho left them and went to his own room.
They s.iw ho was an old man, boond tho
years ho had disclosed.
They did not spenk. They wero nervous.
Kemp mailo it clgnrctto, puffed at It onco
or twice and then threw It nwny. to roll
another a moment later. His thoughts
wero winging nway to tho fork of Big nnd
i.lttlo Creek, whero a three-room shack
stood In tho shadow of tho White Moun
tains of New Mexico. Ho had thought It
small, mWeinble, crniupcd. But out hero
In the wilderness, thousands and thou
sands of miles nway, It came back to his
lslon, glorllled.
The pmllng, gentle waters, fi Insert near
tho mountains with tall, still pines,
banked down the valley with friendly
cottonwoods, seemed nnother element
FARMER SMITH'S
A&'jQN.0cA
frJSW Ail
38x
RAINBOW CLUB
GOOD-NIGHT TALKS
Some of our members have been Rood enough to tell me that they have
ltd a laugh or two while reading these "talks."
I am very glud indeed to hear it, for I hnve tried to get a little numor m
tare and there, for if you can make your readers laugh, you nave tnem
i'btcrfttcd. . ,
. R..I. nnrenn io HWn n VimiRo nnrf most, of us have our doors and windows
cJose3 all tho time we do not let nny one peek in upon our real selves. Wo
tfmM not let folks tret too intimate, but when wo laugh wo open our houso
fe wee'bit and'let others see a part of our real selves.
Likewise, when you mako a person laugh, .you make him open the front
T door, as it were, and the next thing you say is listened to witn more attention.
t " If, for any reason, you happen to make Willie Jones angry, do not leave
lira. that way, for tho thorn of anger will stick a long time, pernaps iorevur.
Hake Willie smile before you leave him, or, better still, laugn.
.P..t,no Willin ilnenrvnrl tho Kpnldlnf Vnll rfaVO him Or deserved what
s ,...,,..... r "-."",... ui. ,..U
Wit was that made mm angry, or percnance you uru ruuiiy ui iumv j.
ttlf and. will find it out later. You can see that it is always best to leave
r8on smiling, for we remember a sunshiny day more often than a day
of clouds.
Kt Your editor has enjoyed many a laugh from your letters because the
Pmmor wo get is UNCONSCIOUS we tire rapidly of a child who "tries to
M funny."
W To tell a funny story, tell it SERIOUSLY. FARMER SMITH,
Children's Editor, The evening euukk.
M'
"Wanita and Kawasha
'" (Continued)
'WHAT HAPPENED BEFORE
Two little white children wero stolen by
r Lilian. .ulian .t.au .. n ... Vmlll!?.
Jliilr skin was dyed bronn nnd thev did
lot know that they were not really Indians.
tt osy thy set out for a marvelous cae
1UI hlch they had heard the chiefs
IIL Th.v illinu....! It IVhllA thev
2gf iplorlng the cavern Kawasha. the
Bills boy. fell and sprained his ankle, and
ms.tl fire which they had built at tho
Bh creid all oer the cave. Wanita
9 Utile girl, dashed out through . the
"mis nd called to a white man. John
Uirihali for aid, lie succeeded In putting
. ine nro out, out wnen no rusneu
IJM tie cavo Kawasha was gone. Finally
Wit dlirnvara.1 him . .!.. m In a ...r.1
(jaa tl the rave. The white man carried
'SS.0" When Kawasha regained con-
rtiu "" """ Marshall put tno two
ifiWJ? 'n bis canoe Hnd proceeded to
Ii . ""fit " bis camp which was located
SJif Jf. across they spied Great Chief
P5.K,ather. the terror of the Mohawks.
RfJWItg.on the Bhore of the Island.
K.H! co'ldren hid In the bottom of the
ita. .. """i1 " vouev of arrows was wnu-
iin.iK.' una J.?"" iiarsnaira nena, Dut Dy
wwiyg up the rlv er a piece ho managed
W lot Chlf think he was not going
Kr..T& l'nit' In the meantime he tells
KA u2ren ,hat 1" "lust go back to the
J5SiJ5i".u" on " In his tent, there la
'SS frJi.."8 ""-n of a cave where a treas
S faJ?? " .Wanita tells him that It Is
jr- moy nave just been In.
fcvy do you know7" interrupted
fcnv man' excitedly.
0h, we've heard many times!" put
-...-,", u.ciumessiy.
ELor moment the while man hnd
K$rt forgotten hfe plan of getting
lm lsland. The shower of
epm had long since stopped, and
ging cautiously over his shoulder,
Sjcaeovered that the chief was no
fewatching them.
5n hily Paddled back toward
nLt n a few minutes he was
Japing careiullv out unnn thn sandv
K!" ?6 P?1!ed the canoe hiKh and
21 W the grass, lifted Kawasha out
g? vea nlra comfortably on a mound
mT .. tay there wth yur
Ct .he whispered to Wanita,
Ea to. e had' himsei'- "Quick 3
Uf7?f lU IJteal UD and cet th mnn?
HI Wme back and bind Kawa-
i Wtie."
cautionoi., i .j j
-Hwiln' "" "ur.Bf'
1 t to tr. , -...!.. ...l
feLin!VM.t of the tent.
T uj ne near, jie took a
FARMER SMITH,
Evening Ledger :.
I wish to become a member of
your Rainbow Club. Pleaso send
me a beautiful Rainbow Button
free. I agree to DO A LITTLE
KINDNESS EACH AND EVERY
DAY SPREAD A LITTLE
SUNSHINE ALL ALONG THE
WAY:
Name
Address
Age !
School I attend . . . . :
step. In one more minute he would
have the map, and
The white man stood immovably
fixed to the ground!
There stood Great Chief Red
Feather, looking straight at him from
the very door of the tent!
(To be continued.)
and is losing no time in working out
the idea. Kathryn brought many lit
tle Bcashorc girls into the club nnd
we hope that they will be as fond lof
"us" as she i3. Mnny thanks to tho
Frankford RninbowB Helena Al
berts, Frances Grandback, Florenco
Adams, Ruth Colson nnd Esther
Stehlc our "little Frankford Rain
bows" for the shiny silver quarter
that rolled out of their last letter.
Thanks also to George Tanguay for
his remembrance and a wee note to
tell him thattthe little boy who re
ceived the overcoat needed it very
badly. He is now happily and warmly
playing in the sunshine ns a result of
your kindness. Doesn't that mako
you happy?
Do You Know This?
1. Build as many words as you can
from HARMONY. (Five credits.)
2. Mention a city in Nebraska that
reminds us of February 12. (Five
credits.)
3. Name two places in Philadelphia
of interest to strangers (Five
credits.)
TIN MONGV.
Those who wish to earn money after school
and on .sal unlays should write a letter to
Parmer Smith.
FOH SALE
ClIKERKUf. rOSTA1.3. 1 cent. 2 cents, 3 for
A cents and - for .1 cents, by Hose Klsher. a
member of the Ilnlnbow Cluh who wishes to
make money for poor llttlo children. Farmer
Smith will turnlih address.
Our Postoffice Box
Hurrah! another little out-of-town
boy is collecting "rays for the Rain
bows." The member who looks so
seriously at you from out the picture
gallery is Francis X. O'Brien, of
Wyndmoor, Pa,
We are very glad
to greet "person
ally" the young
man who has sent
in so many clever
drawings.
Miriam Branni
gan, Woodland
terrace, can write
stories and draw
pictures. If they
are as well put to
gether as her lit-
vHHsVmeJbbIK
VX A
dj tO"
Francis 3? O'Brien
tie letter, the Rainbow Club will be
very much favored with her contri
butions. Mildred Greenspan, South
5th street: We are very happy to
know that you aro promoted. What
grade are you in now? Kathryn
Jones, New Hampshire avenue, At
lantic City, thinks it a fine plan to
make scrapbookg for the "shut-ins"
This Is
the Wise
Shopper's
Check
A NEW ROYAL
MODEL
AVe were showing white
shoes this season weeks
ahead of any other Phila
delphia shop. ,
We are going to have a
big showing of advanced
spring styles
FEB. 14th TO 26th
2 ROYAL WEEKS
The styles we are going to
show then other shops won't
have until weeks later.
As to their quality! You
will never equal them at
other shops any time for
less than twice our prices.
OUR PRIZE
CONTEST
starts Feb. 14th, too. Call pr
write for explanatory pam
phlets. Exclusively for
women.
Royal Boot Shop
1208 Chestnut St fUa
dFL00RSAYE34$g
from the aullen river rumbling across
tho night from Its cruel gorge The bil
lowing range, stretching; away from I.lttlo
Creek till It met tho sky, crested with
twisted junipers nnd evergreen ccdnrs.
with Its famous grftrnmngrnss undulating
under coql breezes from tho snow-capped
mountains, seemed to call to his lungs
with soft, breathing noises. And the
mountntn-tho mountain thnt winter and
summer hnd kept Its white, dazzling sum
mit before him, leading him back from
tho far round-up and tho trail to the llttlo
shack In Its shadow. A swelling came
Into hl9 throat. He tried to cough It up.
Hut ns long ns ho thought of tho moun
tain, tho thickness stuck In hi" throat.
Ho took from his pocket a treasured enke
of tobacco and with Blrong teeth tore off
a generous portion. Then ho roso nnd
wnlkcd off to tho corral.
Oerry sat on alone. Thoughts were
troubling him, too. What was ho doing
hero? Who wns this Margarita that hnd
twined herself Into his llfo? Was It his
life? And her little boy-black-l.nlrcd,
black-eyed, oUvctlnted he was his boy,
too. He was Oerry Ixirislng's son No,
not that-not Qcrry Lansing's. Gerry
Lansing belonged to a tlmo that wns fnr
nway. to a hill whero white houses with
green blinds peered out from the dark
ness of domed maples, from the long
shadows of up-pointing Irs nnd from the
caves of flaring elms, the wine-cups of
heaven.
Oerry felt his spirit nylng nwny to
wnndcr In cool lanes where birch and sas
safras and rioting laurel burned Incense
under a kindly sun nnd slender wood
maples bent under tho breeze ngnlnst
sturdy hickory nnd nsh. It led him to
look back upon tho glory of tho mountain
ash In nutumn nnd of tho turning of the
leaves. A sigh enmo quivering through
nil his body nnd escaped from his
trembling lips. "I am nlouc," ho
breathed to himself.
Never had ho been alone before never
llko that. Tor the first tlmo In moio
than two v. cars be thought of his mother,
of tho Judge who boo been n fnther to
hltn, of nil tho Hill, of Allx. and then,
of Alan. Whcio were Allx nnd Ainu?
Suddenly tho vision of Mnignrltn nnd her
boy pushed In between him nnd memory
Ho sprang to his feet. Ills manhood rose
within him and battled with her nnd
tho child ngnlnst memory. Ho started
off Into tho wilderness. His sandals shot
spurts of sand and dust Into tho air
behind him at every step. Ho smelt the
dust
Above him, the myriad stars shone, dry
and far, fnr up In tho heavens. Heaven
wnB farther from tho world tonight thnn
ever before.
Oerry came back at dawn. Tho herders
wero mounting to round up tho slock.
Oerry saddled his horse and went with
them.
ciiAriEn xxviu.
DI3KP In South America, on the ragged
frlngo of tho outskirts of progress,
Alan Wayno wns pushing a long brldgo
neross n. drlcd-up watercourse. Ho wns
sick, tired and disgusted. Over and over
again ho had grumbled to MoDotignl thnt
It wns n Job for a mason and McHougal
had patiently answered: "I'm tho mason.
Mr. Wayne. Do ou llo bye a wee and gle
tho fovcr n ehnnce to get out of the body."
Hut AInn stuck Jealously to his lob Ten
Percent Wn.wie might ictlio on bis laur
els, but be rould never be tirntrn
Kverv third day the fever In his honei
seized his body In a grip thnt could not
bo denied, shook It till it rntlled nnd
cast It down limp, eold and hot, teeth
chntteilng nnd then clenched nnd thru
chntteilng again. Hut on tho davs be
tween Alan made up for tho lnpe He
became a devil hanging on tho backs of
his men nnd driving them to superhuman
efforts. Terror held thorn. Thev weie
Italians, fnr from home. A wlldeines
strctolicd between llirnt and tho sen. The
sen Itself was none of llielrs, it was nn
added hairier. A mndimin had them In
thrall. Terror drove them. It was a rnco
to finish tho brldgo hefnro lie kllloit them
"t mil going to bo slrk," he hnd told
them In cold, tapld woriW, "I mil going
to bo sick, but befoio I'm UnMicd the
brldgo is Mulshed, or "
Tho giant gang-boss. McDougal, stood
by nnd nodded solemn coiillrnmlloii.
When AInn wns III by ilav MoPoug.il left
him nnd drove the men in his stead, but
when the hour for knocking on came
with the sudden eclipse of Iho sun by tin.
hnilzon lin hurried to Al.iu's tent, llsbrd
hltn out ficun some corner on the lloor,
wrapped lilm in blankets, dosed him with
(ltilnine, tempted him with poor, svc.ik
broths and nursed him, uuprotestlng,
through the night.
Met'oug.il linil followed AInn into
strange lands and stiniige places and
seen him In many n deep bob', nnd
through It nil AInn hnd been tho s.ime-a
purring dniimn at unlit. He hnd been
the snne until tills damiird tilp Into tlu
Hrnzlllaii wllilernons, and liero a change
hnd come over hltn. There were times
when be talked and what be said wns
"No more trips for me, MrPoug.il. I'm
a consulting engineer fioni this on " Mo
Dotignl had heard innro than one man
talk like that under fevei ami lie frowned.
tring to remember onn f I hem that hnd
ever entile back.
Ainu wns Inured to river fever. He had
fought it often, and when lie saw the fetid
pools of stagnant water in Hip ilrlrd-up
water course ho knew ho would hate to
fight It ngnln Somehow, some night, n.
mosquito wns bound to got at him, and
tho fever would begin. Ho doubled his
preventive dose of quinine, but he could
not double his spirits for tho battle. Ho
enmo to tho Held with n gnawing nt those
sources of health nnd ft culm mind and
sure steep. Sleep did not cams as of old
after tho day's work. Instead, he tossed
nnd twisted on his narrow cot ftnd finally
would turn on tho electric torch to read
two letters over nnd over again.
CONTINUED ToMonnow.
jl' AT ALL OUR STORES -Sp
it) WHERE QUALITY COUNTS and LOW PRICES PREVAIL
It will pay you to
buy your Butter and
Eggs at the Stores
Where Quality
Counts
GOLD SEAL EGGS ct" 33
The largest and freshest Eggs that money can buy or hens can
lay. Fresh from the nests to you in sealed cartons containing one
dozen each.
Henfield Eggs CBrtn 30c
Second in quality only to Gold
Seal; good fresh Eggs and fully
guaranteed.
Selected Eggs Don 2Sc
Every Egg guaranteed good,
and you can always depend on
the guarantee of R. & C.
GOLD SEAL piSIfe BUTTER, 38c lb.
The highest grade of freshly-churned butter made. Its uniform
fine quality and flavor make it the choice of particular people,
HY-LO Butter, Lb. 33c
Fancy creamery butter that is
equal in quality to many high
priced "Best" butter sold in stores
outside the Quality Chain.
CA-RO Butter, Lb. 28c
Absolutely pure butter of finft
quality, like all our butters, a bar
gain at its price.
There arc many other attractive values this week-nt verjr
R. & C. Store, whether it be located at
21st and Market Streets
Downtown, Uptown, Gcrmantown, Kensington, West Philadelphia,
Manayunk, Roxborough, Logan, Oak Lane, Overbrook, Bala, Nar
bcrth, Ardmorc, Bryn Mawr, Lansdowne, E. Lansdowne, Llanerch,
Darby or Media.
isoo & Crawford
Grocery Stores for Particular People Throughout ihe City and Suburbs
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"XTtTlVES and wives and wives hundreds of wives wives and wives and
VV wives a thousand wives at breakfast!
-And what do you think they ate?
They all ate barley!
For all of those thousand wives and for King Solomon slaves prepared
the barley food. For you it has been prepared not by slaves but by a
new and exclusive process, better than any that Solomon, in all his wisdom,
could command in appetizing and distinctively delicious form Cream of
Barley.
Those thousand wives they probably didn't agree among themselves
often but they all agreed on one thing. From Wife No. 1 to Wife No. 999,
they all agreed on barley food because they knew it agreed with them.
And Cream, of Barley agrees with everyone, because it is the most sus
taining and digestible and appetizing of foods. For tomorrow's breakfast, get
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