Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, June 14, 1919, Night Extra, Page 5, Image 5

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jtJdtttCfc SWtoKS 'IJ1BR--PHILAf)LPHIA; SlTTJKDAX XtJlSE U 1919
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fetfOorirfalif. ins, bv Btaar Met ilurrouohal
rpEEKA had become a mother.
, Tarzan of the Apes was Intensely
.... .i ,. i- --a
pvimeresiea, mucn more bu, hi mut,
, than Taup, the father. Tarzan was
Wcry fond of Tecka. Even the cares
jJLof prospective motherhood had not
m entirely qUenchcd the fires of eare-
PTfree youth, and Teeka had remained
fra good-natured playmate even at an
Lege when other shes of the tribe of
Kerchak hud assumed the sullen
dignity of maturity. She yet re-
Hlnined her childish delieht in the
t. 7. . a " ,...,-..,
primitive games oi lag ana muu-Hiiu-go-eek
which Tarzan's fertile man-
I" mind had evolved.
K. To pay tag through the tree tops
lr' in an pxcitinr- and insnirinc nastitne.
.ttm . llllAJ J ,A l.. .A Al. 1 11-
tarzan aeugmea in it, out mu uuuo
his childhood had long since aban-
f doned such childish practices. Teeka,
If though, had been keen for it always
iC nfiHI isnnrt.lv before the babv came:
ti but with the advent of her first-born,
even Teeka changed.
The evidence of the change sur
ly.,' nnapH and hurt Tarzan immcas-
One morning he saw Teeka
The Third of a Series of Jungle Tales
of Tarzan, Each Complete in Itself
x
IVl'P
I. 1 L1--
i" f uraoiy.
sat
hniiattiul linnn a Inur liranuli llllrrffinc
1 1 - Duua.vuu MA.,,. ivn ....... ...&&...b
4 anmAflilnr. nlnen tn ar nrv Yironnf.
a weo something .that squirmed
it and wriggled. Tarzan. approached
i filled with curiosity which is common
to all creatures endowed with brains
, which have progressed beyond the
H microscopic stage.
Teeka rolled her eyes in his direc
tton and strained the' squirming
i!v,.
I-?
A
f mite still closer to her. Tarzan came
if nearer, eeira arew away ana Durea
if her fangs. Tarzan was nonplussed.
t In all his experiences with Teeka
. never before had she bared fangs at
him other than in play, but today she
. AlA .f lnlr i1otTfi,1 ToMnn row Ilia
sj. u.u ..v " r., . --A--.. "".-
brown fingers through his thick,
black hair, cocked his head upon one
side, and stared. Then lie edged a
bit nearer, craning his neck to have
a better look at the thing which
Teeka cruddled.
Again Teeka drew back her upper
lip in a warning snarl. Tarzan
reached forth to hand, cautiously, to
touch the thing which Teeka held,
and Teeka, with a hideous growl,
turned suddenly upon him. Her
teeth sank into the flesh of his fore
arm before the ape-man could snatch
"it away, and she pursued him for a
short distance as he retreated in-
grudgc against him, and his man
mind told him what the mind of an
ape would never have deduced that
Taug's attitude in no senso indi
cated hatred. It was but the in
stinctive urge of the male to pio
tect its offspring and its mate.
Tarzan had no desire to battle
with Taug, ndr did the blood of his
English ancestors relish the thought
of flight, yet when the bull charged
Tarzan leaped nimbly to one side,
and thus encouraged Taug wheeled
and rushed again madly to the at
tack. Perhaps the memory of a past
defeat at Tarzan's hands goaded him.
Perhaps the fact that Teeka sat
there watching him aroused a desire
to vanquish the ape-man before her
eyes, for in the breast of every
junglo male lurks a vast egotism
which ilnds nxnrpssion in the tier-
ItS continently through., the trees, but .formance of deeds of derring-do he
's. xeeKa, carrying ner oaoy, coma not lore an uuuiuutu ui uie opposite sex.
r. ii. !.!- A A ,1,A I .... ...
At the ape-man's side swung his
6
f II Ifiu
1 MHBB8$pm$m WmfM
she-ape's cub
thought thnt
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
reigned wit U
before him, and hei Over and over upon the grass
this other was .bent rolled Sheeta, growling and scream-
With ing, clawing nnd biting, in a mad
effort to dislodge his antagonist or
upon robbing him of his piey,
an angry growl, he chaigcd.
Taug, warned by Teeka's ciy, came
lumbciing down to her assistance.
Several other bulls, growling and
bnrklng, closed in towaid the clear
ing, but they weie all much farther
from the balu and the panther than
was Tnizan of the Apes, so it was
that Sheetn and the ape-man reached
Teeka's little one almo't simultanc-
get some poition of his body within
lange of teeth or talons.
As Tarzan leaped to close quarters
with the panther, Teeka had run
quickly in and snatched up her balu.
Now she sat upon a high branch,
safe out of haim's way, cuddling the
little thing to her hairy bicast, the
while her savage little eyes bored
ously, and thcie they stood, one upon (iown upo the contestants in the
-J
k
M
m
i?
I? .
i
I'
overtake him. At a safe distance
!$& T.moh efnnnorl nnri iin! trt 1amnl
, his erstwhile play-fellow In uncon-
coaled astonishment What had'hap-
pened to so alter the gentleTeeka?
iZif one, naa so coverea mc ining jn ner
i, arms uiui lurzun nau nob yet ueen
J, able to recognize it for what it was,
but now, as she turned from the pur
suit of him, he saw it. Through his
pain and chagrin he smiled, for Tar-
ls ,zan had seen young ape mothers be-
,J 'fore. In a few days she would be
l ' less suspicious. Still Tarzan was
1.1. a A, ...n n a vil.A. Al.nA 1 1 'A .1. n
uuiv, it nao iiui. Aiiti biiab ivciuti
of all others, should fear him. Why,
not for the world would he harm
her, or her balijj which is the ape
word for baby.
And now, above the pain of his in
jured arm and the hurt to his pride,
rose a still stronger desire to come
close and inspect the new-born son
of Taug. Possibly you will wonder
what Tarzan of the Apes, mighty
fighter that he was, should have fled
before the irritable attack of a she,
or that he should hesitate to return
for the satisfaction 'of his curiosity,
when with ease he might have van
quished the weakened mother of the
new-born cub, but you i.eed not won
der. Were you an ape you would
know that only a bull in the throes
of madness will turn upon a female
other than to gently chastise her,,
with the occasional, exception of the
individual whom we find exemplified
among our own kind, and who de-
K lights in beating up his better, half
because she happens to be smaller
nd weaker than he.
r xuizuii ituiii cume iuwt.ru uie
young mother wanly and with his
line of retreat safely open. Again
Teeka growled ferociously. Tarzan
expostulated.
"Tarzan of the Apes will not Imito
Teeka's balu ?" he" said "Let me see
K."
"Go away!" commanded Teeka.
0- "Go away, or I will kill you."
- "Let me see it," urged Tarzan.
"Go away," reiterated the she-ape.
t .' "Here conies Taug. He -will 'make
F , vou r?o awair.. Tauir will kill
l.lhis Is Taulkbalu."
1 A onvnffflTrWiwl plnoo Vialiinrl Tiir
i apprised Tarzan of the nearness of
!j? Taug, and the fact that the bull had
heard the warnings and threats of
his mate and was coming to her
succor, t
b Now Taiig, as well as Teeka, had
beep Tarzan's play-fellow while the
" bull was still young enough to wish
tu ....... r m vj J
X iy jjiuy. unce lurzun nuu suveu
i Taug's lue but; the memoiy of an
ape-i8 not overlong, nor would grati
tude rise above the parental in
stinct. Tarzan and Taug had!bnce
measured etiength, and Tarzan had
ueen victorious. xnai iact laug
could be denended uuon still to re-
.jTiember," but even so hq might read
ily face another defeat for his first
1 born if he chanced to be in- the
proper mood.
i From his hideous giowlfe, which
nqW jo.sfe in strength and volume, he
3 seemed, to be (n quite the mood. Now
Tarzan feJt no fear of Taug, nor did
the , unwritten law of the jungle do-
'"fcltu.d that he should flee from battle
f" wiy maieuntesB ne arm to
Tarzan closed, Ills lone knife ready in one strong hand
e
y
you,
long grass rope the plaything of
yesterday, the weapon of today
and as Taug charged the second time
Tarzan slipped the coils over his
head and deftly shook out the sliding
noose as ho again nimbly eluded ihe
ungainly beast. Before .the' ape
could turn again Tarzan had fled far
aloft among the branches of the up
per terrace.
Taug, now wrought to a frenzy of
real rage, followed him. Teeka
peered upward at them. It was dif
ficult to say whether she. was inter
ested. Taug could not climb as rap
idly as Tarzan, so the latter reached
the high levels to which the heavy
ape dared not follow before the for
mer overtook him. There he 'halted
and looked down upon his pursuer,
making faces at him and calling him
such choice names as occurred to the
fertile man-brain. Then, when he
had worked Taug to such a pitch of
foaming rage that the great bull
fairly danced upon the bending'limb
beneath him, Tarzan's hand shot
suddenly outward, a widening noose
dropped swiftly through the air,
there was a quick jerk as it settled
about Taug, falling to his knees, a
jerk that tightened it securely about
' the hairy legs of the anthropoid.
Taug, slow'of wit, realized too late
the intention of his tormentor. Ho
scrambled to escape, but the ape
man gave the rope a tremendous
jerk that pulled Taug from his perch,
and a moment later, growling hid
eously, the ape hung dead downward
thirty fee above the ground.
Tarzan secured the rope to a stout
limb. and descended to a point close
to Taug.
"Taug," ho said, "you are as
stupid as Buto, the rhinoceros. Now
you may hang here until you get a
little sense in your thick head. You
may hang here and -watch while I
go and talk with Teeka."
Taug blustered and threatened,
but Tarzan only grinned at-him as he
dropped lightly to the lower levels.
Here he again approached Teeka
only to be again greeted with bared
fangs and menacing growls. .He
sought to placate her; 'ho urged his
friendly intentions, and craned his
neck to have a look at; Teeka's balu,
but the she-ape was not to be per
suaded that he meant other than
harm to her little one. Her mother
hood was still sa new that reason
was yt subservient to instinct.
Realizing the futility of attempt
ing to catch and chastise Tarzan.
Teeka" sought to escape him. She
noose was stopping the circulation depths of the latter's abysmal ignor-
of the blood in his legs he was be
ginning to suffer. Several apes sat
near him highly interested in his
predicament. They made uncompli
mentary remarks about him, for each
of them felt the weight: of Taug's
riiighty hands and the strength of his
great jaws. They were enjoying
revenge.
Teeka, seeing that Tarzan had
turned back toward the trres, had
halted in the center of the clearing,
and there sat hugging her balu and
casting suspicious glances here and
there. With the, coming of the balu,
Teeka's care-free world had suddenly
become peopled with innumerable
enemies. She saw. an implacable
foe in Tarzan, always heretofore her
best friend. Even poor old Mumga,
half blind and almost toothless,
searching patiently for grubworms
beneath a fallen log, represented to
her a malignant spirit thirsting for
the blood of little balus.
And while Teeka guarded bus
piciously against harm, where .there
was no harm, she failed to note, two
baleful, yellow-green eyes staring
fixedly at her from behind a clump
of bushes at the opposite side of the
clearing.
Hollow from hunger, Sheeta, the
panther, glared greedily at the
tempting meat so close at hand, but
the sight of the great bulls beyond
gave him pause.
Ah, if the "she-ape with her balu
would but come just a trifle nearerl
A quick spring and he would be upon
them and away again with his meat
before the bulls could prevent.
The tip of his tawny tail moved
in spasmodic little jerks; his lower
jaw hung low, exposing a red
tongue and yellow fangs. But all
this Teeka did not see, nor did any
other of the apes who were feeding
or resting about her. Nor djd Tar
zan or the apes in the trees.
.Hearing the abuse which the bulls
were pouring upon the helpless
Taug, TaVzan clambered quickly
among them. One was edging closer
and leaning far out jn -an efTort to
reach the dangling ape. He had
worked himself into quite a fury
through recollection of the las oc
casion upon-'which Taug had mauled
him, and now he was bent upon re
venge. Once he had grasped the
swinging ape- he would quickly have
drawn him within teach of his jaws.
Tarzan saw and was wroth. He
loved a fair fight, but the thing
which this ape contemplated revolted
across the little clearing about which
the apes of the tribe were disposed
in rest or in search of food, and
presently Tarzan abandoned his at
tempts to persuade her to permit a
close examination of' tho balu. The
ape-man would have liked to handle
the tiny thing. The very sight o'
it awakened in his breast a strange
yearning, xie wisnea ios cuaa)e ana
fondle the grotesque little ape-thing,
It was Teeka'a balu and Tarzan had
once lavished his young affections
upon Teeka.
But now his attention was diverted
yHhe vaicfl of Taug, The threats
dropped to the ground and lumbere'd I him. Already a hairy hand had
clutched the helpless Taug when,
with an angry growl of protest, Tar
zan leaped to the branch at the at
tacking ape's side, and with a single
mighty cuff, swept him from his
perch.
Surprised and enragedthe 'bull
clutched madly or support as he
toppled sidewise, and then with' an
agile, movement succeeded in pio
jecting hinjself toward another limb
ajfew feet below. Heie he found a
hand-hold, quickly righted himself,
and as quickly clambered upward to
be reyenged upon Uarzan, but the
ape-man was ptlierwlseyengagea- and
ance, and pointing out how mucn
greater and mightier was Tarzan of
tho Apes than Taug or any other ape.
In the end he would release Taug,
but not until Taug was fully' ac
quainted witTi his own inferiority.
And then thc-Mjiaddened bull came
fiom bencath(and instantly Tarzan
was transformed from a good
natured, teasing youth into a snarl
ing, savage bea'st. Along his scalp
the hair bristled; his upper lip drew
back that his fighting fangs might
be uncovered and ready. He did not
wait for the bull to reach Tiim, for
something in the appearance or the
voice of the attacker aioused with
in tho ape-man a feeling of bellig
erent antagonism that would-not bo
denied. With a scream that carried
no human note, Tarzan leaped
straight at .the throat of the at
tacker. The impetuosity of this act and the
weight and momentum of his body
carried the bjill backward, clutching
ana ciawing ior support, aown
through tho leafy branches of the
tree. For fifteen feet the two fell,
Tarzan's teeth buried in the jugular
of his opponent, when a stout branch
stopped their descent. The bull
struck full upon the small of his
back across the limb, hung there; for
a moment with the ape-man still
upon his breast, and then toppled
over toward the ground.
Tarzan had felt the instantaneous
relaxation of the body beneath him
after the heavy impact with the
tiee limb, and as the other turned
completely over and started again
upon its fall toward the ground, he
leached forth a hand and caught the
branch in time to stay his own de
scent, while the ape diopped like a
plummet to the foot of the tree.
Taizan looked downwaid for a
moment upon the still form of his
late antagonist, then he rose to his
full height, swelled his deep chest,
smote upon it with his clenched fist
and roared out the uncanny chal
lenge of the victorious bull ape.
Even Sheeta, the panther, crouched
for a spring at the edge of the little
clearing, moved uneasily as the
mighty voice sent its weird cry
reverberating through the jungle.
To tho right and left, nervously
glanced Sheeta, as though assuring
himself that the way, of escape lay
ready at hand.
"I ifm Tarzan of the Apes," boast
ed the ape-man, "mjghty hunter,
mighty fighter! None in all the
jungle so great as Tarzan."
Then he made h(s way back in the
direction of Taug. Teeka had
watched the happenings in the tree.
She had even placed her precious
balu upon the soft grasses and come
a little nearer that she might better
witness all that was passing in the
branches above her. In her heart
of heaits did she still esteem the
smooth-skinned Tarzan? t Did her
Eayage breast swell with 'pride as
she witnessed his victory over the
ape 7 You will have to ask Teeka.
And Sheeta, tho panther, saw that
the she-ape had left her cub alone
1 among:, the, grasses. He moved his1
dared indulge might stimulate his
momentarily wailed courage. Tho
cry of the victorious ape-man still
held his nerves beneath its spell. It
would be seveial minutes before he
again could bring himself to the
point of charging into the view of
the giant anthropoids.
And as he regathered his forces
Taizan reached Taug's side, and then
clambering higher up to the point
where the end of the grass rope was
made fast, he unlojasp.dsjAgnd low
ered the ape sloj2iMp;ing him
in until the dutchinggpk fastened
upon a limb.
Quickly Taug drew himself to a
position of safety and shook off the
noose. In his rage-maddened heait
was no room for gratitude to the
ape-man. He recalled only the fact
that Taizan had laid this painful in
dignity upon him. He would be re
venged, but just at present his
legs were so numb and his head so
dizzy that he must postpone the
gratification of his vbngeance.
Tarzan was coiling his rope the
while he lectured Taug on the futil
ity of pitting his poor powers, phys
ical and intellectual, against those
of his betters; Teeka had come close
beneath the tree and peering upward.
Sheeta was worming his way stealth
ily forward, his belly close to the
giound. In another moment he
would be clear of the underbrush
nnd ready for the rapid charge and
the quick retreat that would end
the brief existence of Tepka's balu.
Then Tarzan chanced to look up
and across the clearing. Instantly
his attitude of good-natured ban-
teiing and pompous boastfulness
dropped fionfhim. Silently and
swiftly he shot downward toward
the ground. Teeka, seeing him com
ing, and thinking that he was after
her or her balu, bristled and pre
pared to fight. But Tarzan sped by
her, and as he went her eyes fol
lowed him and she saw the cause of
his sudden descent and his rapid
charge across the clearing. There
in full sight now was Sheeta, the
panther, stalking slowly toward tho
tiny, wriggling Jbalu which lay
among the grasses many yards
away.
Teeka gave voice to a shrill scream
of teiror and of warning as she
dashed after the ape-man. Sheeta
saw Tarzan coming. He saw the
either side of it, baring their fangs
and snailing at each othei over the
little creatine.
Shcota was afraid to seize the
balu, foi thus lie would give the
1 apc-inan an opening for attack, and
i for the same reason Tarzan hesitated
I to snatch the panther's prey out of
'harm's way, for had he stooped to
accomplish this, the gicat beast
would have been upon him in an in
stant. Thus they .stood while Teeka
came across the clearing, going moie
slowly as she neaicd the panther,
lor even her mother loc could scarce
oveicome her instinctive tenor of
this natuial enemy of her kind.
Behind ner camo Taug, warily nnd
with many pauses and much bluster,
and still behind him came other
bulls, snarling ferociously and utter
ing their uncanny challenges.
Sheeta 's yellow-gieen eyes glared
ternbly at Tarzan, and past Taizan
they shot brief glances at the npes
of Keichak advancing upon him.
Discretion prompted him to turn
and flee, but hunger and the close
proximity of the tempting morsel in
tho grass before him urged him to
remain. He reached forth a paw
toward Teeka's balu, and as he did
so, with a savage guttural, Taizan
of the Apes was upon him.
The panther reaied to meet the
ape-man's attack. He swung a
frightful, raking blow for Tarzan
that would have wiped his face away
had it landed, but it did not land, for
Tarzan ducked beneath it and closed,
his long knife ready in one strong
hand the knife of his dead father,
of the father he never had known.
Instantly the baiu was foi gotten
by Sheeta, the panthci. He now
thought only of teanng to ribbons
with his powerful talons the flesh of
his antagonist, of burying his long,
yellow fangs in the soft, smooth hide
of the ape-man, but Tarzan had
fought before with clawed creatures
of the jungle. Before now he had
battled with fanged monsters, nor
always had he come away unscathed.
Ho knew the risk that he lan, but
Tarzan of the Apes, inured to the
sight of suffering and death, shiank
from neither, for he feared neither.
Tho instant that he dodged be
neath Sheeta's blow, he leaped to the
beast's rear and then full upon the
lawny dbck, Durymg nis teeth in
Sheet's neck and the fingers of one
hand in the fur' at the throat, and
with tho other hand he drove his
blade in Sheeta's side.
demonium which now
the jungle.
Bitten and biting, tearing an
torn, Sheeta battled for his life,'lfc"J",
t .1J 1 A !.! r..
Numa, tho lion, would have heeli?''a
tatcd to have attacked an equal nam- jy
ocr oi tnc great buns or the tribe of
Korchak, and now, a half mile awar,V
hearing the sounds of the terrific
battle, the king of beasts rose un-fi
easily from his midday slumber arwlviV
slunk off farther into the jungle. 'i$
Aicsi-uuy ojiuuui a turn ana jlln
bloody body ceased its titanic strug-v'I
gles. It stiffened spasmodlcalIy,&wj
(111U.I..J nH.l ....... A!11 ...A At.- I 1t?H4 x
XI1U.UVU unu wua still, yet Hie UUI13 s .V'-JiB
continued to lacerate it until thai'f"I
beautiful coat was torn to shreds.' ,- 1
At last they desisted from
physical weariness, and then fromi'!
the tangle of bloody bodies rose a4$S$i
cnmson giant, straight as an ar- 1
row. .KwS'l
He placed a foot unon the dendSK
body "of the panther, and Hftinggl
his blood-stained face to the Mitx-1. 43
nf ihn nntintnrUI knnir.H. ........ ... $
-(,..., w.,u..w..a. ucaitiia, Kuve voico .
to the horrid victory cry of the bullTv3f
dealing, and her lcrocious voice
urged Taug nnd the othei bulls to
leap into the melee.
Thus goaded the bulls came closei,
redoubling their hideous clamor, but
Sheeta was already sufficiently en
gagedho did not even hear them.
Once he succeeded in partially dis
lodging the ape-man from his back,
so that Tarzan swung for nn instant
in-)front of those awful talons, and
in the brief instant before he could
legain his foimer hold, a raking blow
from the hind paw laid open one leg
fiom hip to knee. '
It was the sight and smell of this
blood, possibly, which wrought upon
the encircling apes, but it was Taug
who really was responsible for the
thing they did.
Taug, but a moment before filled
with lago toward Tarzan of the
Apes, stood elbse to the battling pair,
his lcd-iimmcd, wicked little eyes
glaring at them. What was passing
in his savage biain? Did he gloat
over the unenviable position of his
recent tormentor? Did he long to ba ' ' " " Wl
see Sheeta's great fangs sink into,.,,,, ,,, . ,.. TV '. Y . 'SSKj
liie nvtvi.. .....I : . .. .. . . U-u.j
ape,
VI
One by one his hairy fellows off.ffif'J
aU A..iu tr , m .. ... "El
int.- tiiou oi vercnaK louowcd hiaicvS
example. The shes came down from 'n
their nerchps nf snfofv nnrl t,nU
and reviled the dead bodv of Sheeta. &&
The young apes refought the battle &; A
in mimicry of their mighty elders..' J
Teeka was quite close to Tarzan. He., L
turned and saw her with the balu $&
hugged close to her hairy breast, and -v&,jj
I'm out nis nands to take the little 'JJi
, uAtiVbVMIL UltZl. AtM'KH Wflll Ifl V
the soft throat of the ape-man ? Or
did he realize the courageous unsel
fishness that had prompted Tarzan
to rush to the rescue and imperil his
life for Teeka's balu for Taug's
little balu? Is giatitude a posses
sion of man only, or do the lower or
ders know it also?
With the spilling of Tarzan's
blood Taug answered these ques
tions. With all the Weight of his
great body he leaped, hideously
growling, upon Sheeta. His long
fighting fangs buried themselves in
the, white throat. His powerful
arms beat and clawed at the soft fur
until it flew upward in the jungle
breeze.
And with Taug's example before
them the other bulls charged, bury
ing Sheeta beneath rending fangs
and filling all tho forest with the
wild din of their battle cries.
Ah, but it was a wondrous and in
spiring sight this battle of the
primordial apes and the great, white
ape-man with their ancestral foe,
Sheeta, the panther.
In frenzied excitement Tecka
fairly danced upon the limb which
swayed beneath her great weight as
she urged on the males of her peo
ple, and Thaka, and Mumga, and
Kamma, with the other shes of the
tribe of Kerchak, added their shrill
cries or fieice barkings to the pan-
his arms, and coming nearer, licked !&?-
nis inghtful wounds. - ,?"
And presently Taut wHo
escaped with onlv a few scratches &V$
came nnd squatted beside Tarzan '$$
the little balu, and at last he tofc i
leaned over and helped Teeka with '
the clofinsinn. nnd tVin V,Ani: - At.-m'1
ape-man's hurts. .M?
tvj$a
The next comnlein ".liim.1. t.i.m wS.1
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left r$
will appear Sturday, June 81.
Buyyour coal now
!!
A
YM
The price will be much higher.
Wc handle only the verv ' fo
vsl nrnm sts. a 'v4
m JJJL.0 1 LUAL
Hi s
Satisfied customers for 30 vcaravtn,
2n iho A. ... :rv?vy
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Our business has Increased tromfy'M
3000 tons a year to 160,000'23aff
ftr
We serve you right t K
isie
Huron 1 AH.kc ftni
vnuiiuviu WUM
Largest Coal Yard in PMla.tij
Trenton Ave. & We.traorela.'
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'BBS!"!!,!! "BDBI llllS. II Si
,,UI1- nAi lil is h e h 9 m m liS B B. PPIH H
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A New York hotel of chejw
cter and distinction, for
travelers who dicriminmt
.
iKlBoil
Seashore
Excursions
TO
ATLANTIC CITY
OCEAN CITY
WILDWOOD
and CAPE MAY
V $UJ.DAT
!om Chestnut or South
treet reiTr
rain to Wlldwood and
Laudlnc (Caps May),
leava eaahora points
Extauvloa badonlnr June
KWR
7.30 A. Mil
AddltlonisBt
Shrllenger'H
U JO A. hl.m
neturnlnrfi
. 6 00 P. M
V nll
In the Middle of New York
When you're in Hotel Pennsyl
vania you're convenient to all
Manhattan.
At Seventh Avenue and 33rd
Street (opposite Pennsylvania Sta
tion), the shopping district is just
cast of you; theatres immediately
to the north; business and financial
districts in easy reach by rapid
transit lines thatareriitii t at hand.
There's a subway station (local and
express) in the building; bus and
surface lines are at the door; the
elevated's half & square east.
When you get off your train in
Pennsylvania Station give your
bag to a red-cap and take elevator
(on the same level as your'train
platfonn) to' the hotel's' lobby
without oing up to the street.
m
i'1
Hotel Pennsylvania
m
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Statler.operated
Oppoitte Pcnntylvanta Terminal, NEW YORK
The Largest Hotel in the World
2200 Rooms, 2200 Baths
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