R?rwiP"wi,'WTW"" V3;eVTtw:mPPrBeBW3'F- '"J . iP.ViBWWMBPiif ' 'VBSWTW ".'-", ' I .T'MWW'rjr'" - w-y ,,-..,,.; -4 J ', .'. J, pi-gpr . '- jl - 'lie,- wu-u 1 r , ) l , i r ilO DBDGBR--IHIEAi)ELPHIA, FRIDAY, JUNE- 20, 1919 'jf; nil . ,va ' V M r TO ENTERTAIN AND ENLIGHTEN" $41 rW . )?! tm rs!JSEfsa?p'ra7airaHniwfflasjwijf fc. J 'A ' ' v 41 ill DONN BYRNE is perhaps, the foremost of the younger genera tion of writers. At the working out of a roman tic story exquisitely told he has few rivals. See, for example, his "Green Isle" in the new Hearst's. Along with it in July you will find short stories by Stanley Olmsted, Albert Payson Terhune, Arthur Somers Roche, Robert W. Chambers, Frederic Arnold Kummer and sev eral others. In every number of Hearst's at least six excellent short stories. m THE OLD MILL-WHEEL CAN American manufacturers compete with Europe under new conditions? That de pends 1 The wages paid to labor in America are about double those paid in Europe. That means our workmen must be twice as productive as the foreigners. That means we must get cheaper power. Sec "Scraping the Moss 'off the Old Mill-Wheel" by Dr. Henry Smith Williams, M.D., LL.D., in the "Science of the Month" a regular feature of Hearst's Magazine. The object of Hearst's is to entertain and enlighten. Through all its entertainment, however, runs a certain serious purpose a definite mission. And that mission is to discuss, elucidate and solve so far as is possible the vital questions of homefamily and public life that people everywhere are themselves considering and discussing. ELSIE JANIS ' I ""HE most popular girl that ever went to Europe. Ask any soldier. For six full months this brilliant young actress spent her whole time with the American soldiers in France singing to them dancing with them visiting the sick and cheering the weary. And she is writing for Hearst's in her own witty way the story of what she did and saw on the American fighting front . See, for example, "Exit Queen Nurse" by Elsie Janis in July. SEEN "THE JEST"? HAVE you seen the Barrymores in "The Jest," the drama sensation of the season? Have you read "The Mastery of the Far East" by Arthur Judson Brown? If not, get Hearst's for July and look them up in the PLAY OF THE MONTH and the BOOK OF THE MONTH. It's the easy way every month to know for yourself what books and plays well-informed people are talking about WHY WORRY ? "TXHY worry about July ist?' T ' J. Abbot asks Willis 33 of the 48 United States, are dry already, and in the 15 others a large part of the territory is dry under local option. Moreover, the Anti-Saloon League is not going after cigar ets, coffee, tea and the like. Mr. Abbot has made for. Hearst's a most interesting survey of the whole prohibition situation. See the July Hearst's now on sale. " Spiritualism is the one biggest thing that has come into the world,' ' writes Sir Gonan Doyle, the English author. "Consciously or unconsciously, the hearts of all the bereaved mothers and wives are crying for it." See "The Body and the Spiritual Body" by Sir Arthur Gonan Doyle. PLAIN TALK FROM A GOB F we release from the U. S. Navy now that the war is over all the men that seek discharge," said a well-known Admiral, "one of our des troyers will have only eight men left!" Our Navy must be the greatest it must have plenty of the best American men. In "Why We Won't Go Back in the Navy" an Enlisted Man tells seven things the U. S. Navy might do to keep its sailors enthusiastic. Can any real man from God's open country loiter about New York City without corroding his very soul? That is the theme of a masterly novel by Arthur Stringer now running in Hearst's. Competent critics pronounce "This Light Must Live" the best serial now in any magazine. Effi ) P IS YOURS RED? or Yellow? All men, writes Frederic Arnold Kummer, are either one of two colors red or yellow. It takes some pretty hard raps to dis cover the true colors of Kennedy, the ex-soldier. But one little encounter with the Bolshevists was enough. "Red or Yellow" is one of the famous "What Would YOU Have Done?" series stories for people who like to do their own thinking. The magic of the Sheikhs El Djebel the Eight Castles and the 50,000 Has sanis in white turbans and white robes all are known to Tressa Nome, the blue-eyed American girl. See "The Slayer of Souls," a new series of stories by Robert W. Chambers, starts in Hearst's for July. BRUNO LESSING stands alone! At delicate satire and a gentle sparkling humor that lights up the homely inci dents .of everyday life, Bruno Lessing seldom meets his match. His monthly story is as much a part of Hearst's ast Penrhyn Stanlaws's front cover. If you don't know Lessing, read "The Tangled Web" this month. Bruno Lessing, Bert Leston Taylor (B. L.T.) and Kenneth C. Beaton (K.C. B.) all three every month guarantee Hearst's the best of American Humor. THE FLASHLIGHT PICTURE IS it easier to commit a given crime undis covered or to discover who committed a given crime? A hot debate on this question led the millionaire members of the conservative Arm chair Club to agree to commit a list of twelve crimes. But circumstances changed the amateur criminals into serious and very earnest detectives seeking to prevent the very crimes they agreed to commit See "The Flashlight Picture" by Arthur Somers Roche . ''I don't say I discovered Ole Hanson," writes K. C. B. in his Hearst's article, "but I came as near it as anybody. Anyway, my rubbers were hidden in his office closet all the time" See what Ole Hanson has to say on "Opportunity' in Hearst's for July. TO DIVORCE OR NOT? F all the contributions to the literature of Divorce few have been as powerful and fascinating as Gouverneur. Morris's novel "The Wild Goose." So realistic that liter ally hundreds of readers have written and sent in stories of their own actual divorce experiences. (See for instance, "So I Married Dan" in Hearst's for July.) Two other great serials one by Arthur Stringer, one by E. Phillips Oppenheim, are also running. Always three "Best-Sellers" in every number of Hearst's. TF YOU are not interested in a magazine a bit beyond the ordinary if you don't particu- larly care for & magazine that will make you think you won't want Hearst's this month or any other. BUT if you want the works of the world's great writers; if you want the words of Jthe world's real leaders; if you want the thoughts of the world's great thinkers; "don't fail to make sure each month starting to-day with July of your regular copy Matty newsdealers report that their supply of Hearst's is sold out completely a day or two after the magazine arrives; Only as many copies are printed as are ordered in advance. etf Wr JHHI Kf vpHb- VPS 1PPJP- To avoid disappointment in getting your copy each month, you are advised to buy your Hearst's at once and to leave a regular reservation for ah future numbers. A Magazine With a Mission mtbVH ?u ' i V--Pfe-'? S.!!? '; v ' -' ' 'V?V1 ,bjHf '''tSiPSy -'' "' ' ' ' W'' ' '' ; $V- ? '' ' ' ' ",rH"r " - '. rW! .,''v4i m i St i ' 4. w I. :n YA 31 M 1 M m $ 'sr kl ,?l 1 .141 l -1 '& Ji 1 4 . V 4 -','? I ".J " 5 it m -i wr-z . urn jW '.-3 -V ?w UX-h4 .ftra jiWiY a-v
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers