t I 'LrJ I Iff & I? t lite 3 vi m m m I m IK. I ife ' ft n ,-ri EVENING PUBLIC 'LEDaEHPHlLABELPHiA; MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1919 ' When MCCALL STREET Goes to Market A MILLION, three hundred thousand baskets, each containing at least half a dozen purchases, would be a mod erate estimate of McCall Street's daily marketing. Think of it! Think of the gigantic market basket it would take to hold 8,500,000 separate DAILY purchases of Spices, Baking Powder, Crackers, Preserves, Smoked Meat, Soft Drinks, Extracts and all the other things the thrifty housewife buys. This vast quantity of household neces sities supplies the daily needs of the dwellers on the longest street in the world. For if the houses of McCall's Magazine readers were on a single street, only 25 feet apart, they would line a thoroughfare stretching from Boston to San Diego. Some of the housewives of McCall Street go to market, basket on arm. Some select their goods and have them sent. Others telephone for what they want. Bu each and every one has the same buying suggestion McCaU's Magazine. ' And McCall Street's tremendous market basket overflows with goods adver tised in McCall's Magazine, because the women who enjoy McCall's splendid fiction, its authoritative fashions, its vitally impor tant household articles, cannot fail to be guided in their daily shopping by the timely messages which McCall's advertisers present to them. THE McCALL COMPANY, 236-250 WEST 37TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO BOSTON ATLANTA TORONTO PAT T ' MAGAZINE ; 'j3W-" ' N. It t fi -- rr.y' & ' M 'J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers