i iOs"f r ' i. rii h '13 nffF EVEOTN'Or' PTOLIO IEDaEEr-l?HIEADBLIHIA, WEDMJSDA, JAOT&BY 22, 1920 , ii M m w m r"3tfi mm m H mi ipf A UH-W. . $nl i?ffGiV MENU EXCHANGE AD VENTURES WITH A PURSE -CYNTHIA'S ADVICE ms. WILSON GIVES SOME POLISH RECIPES Economical Ways of Fop Bgn Housewives Are Worth Noticing and Copying in These Days M Schnecken Is a Dessert Used by These People Which Is Good and Nutritious By MRS. M. A. WILSON ICvtwrtoht, 1010, bv Mrs. A. A. Wihqn. All rtonts reserved. ) , TpHB coal regions of Pennsylvania "jyare.thickly populated with foreiuners, nd one need but visit them in order to 8co" that they have brought to their neip homes in this country the methods nd recipes that are centuries old. The Polish housewife is vtiy thrifty and Iqoks well to the wnj'i of her household and she utilizes each bit ot food because she Knows very well that willful waste makes woeful want. Naturally she still clings to the Old World custom of a liberal supply of vegetables and a minimum of expensive meats. So let us take a trip to mar ket with her. The dealer knows that the foreign Tiousewife will not pay fancy prices; she expects just weight and carries with her her purchases. For this reason the store merchant does not need elaborate equipment or delivery service. My visit to the PolHti housewife In the mining regions of this state and our trip to market was very inter esting and enlightening on many points. The little that I Know of the Polish language stood me in good stead, for shg carried on her entire conversation with the market men in her own tongue. For a family of eight, four men in the family, doing hard, laborious work, we purchased ' Two hunches of beets with untciltcd tops. One dozen peppers, One-half peck of potatoes, Four turnips, One-fourth peck of onions, Four carrots, One-fourth pound of cheese. Two and one-half pounds of neck of mutton, One and one-half pounds of shin leef, One package of farina, illow Uio Menu Was Prepared I Polish Jtelish Beef and Farina Soup Beet and Onion Relish I Mutton Stew With Vegetables Schnecken Fruit Sauce Coffee You know the Polish husband is a $$Mi Ha works hard and takes great pleas- wishes, above all things, that his wife and daughters learn to cook in the true American style. In the small towns and settlements in which he resides, be -finds indifferent restaurants and, as he'is a home-loving man, he spends very little time in these places; and no matter how humble his home is, he would glndly invite jou to break bread with him. f Polish Relish Cut the tops from the beets and wanh in plenty of water. Cook tops until tender in boiling w ater and then drain and chop very fine. Now mince two ounces of salt pork fine, place In a saucepan and cook slowly for five minutes. Add One cup of sliced onions. Four peppers, choppid fine, Tico cloves or garlic. i Cook slowly and then season to taste. I CnMad nr, rv hronrl illisf U1I With 1 paprika and serve. ueei anu i-anna noup JVash the shin of beef, place in a saucepan, cover with three quarts of cold water and add Three onions. One "clove or garlio, no fagiot of soup herbs, ok slowly for two and one-half hours and then add one -half cup of far,ina. Cook for one-half hour and season and then scne. This is a very thick soup. Beet and Onion Relish Cook the beets until tender, then remove the skins and cut into slices. Place in a deep dish and add Bfs onions, cut in slices. One lay leaf, One teaspoon of thyme. Two tablespoons of sugar. One teaspoon of salt. The Question Corner Today's Inquiries l'. Describe a pretty waste basket seen in the shops. 2. What material is of good enough appearance to look well as a tray, and at the Eame time easier to keep bright than silver? a. How is an nttracthe and inex pensive nightgown trimmed? 4, What will clean oak woodwork? 5. Is it correct to wear patent j leather pumps with an evening dress at a formal affair? 0. What home-made paste is good for cleaning bras? Yesterday's Answers 1. Adding a little bluing and a drop ' of ammonia to the water in which cut glass is washed will make it , shine. 2. An attractive base for an electric lamp is a small Dolly Drake in bright, painted metal. 3. Bows of ribbon are used to cover completely a net boudoir cap. 4. A light but durable lamp screen is made of enameled tin, 5. The necessity of finishing the sides of a small apron can bo avoided ' by bordering it with washable ribbon or tape. 0. A convenient and easily managed trousers press is a folding box of pasteboard that keeps the trousers firmly pressed down. , SMALLEST BHOS i wtth EASR anJ COMFORT whrU .-- i WW M1 WWW VI MAGUIRE'S IRISH CORN PIASTER Vtfeka to yew fet like poaUjt tt&afL wo. 1AIM TtfcM cii Ttlw Them Out by tbt Root Ask Mrs. Wilson If you have any cookery prob lems, bring them to Mrs. Wilson. She will be glad to answer you through these columns. No per sonal replies, however, can be given. Address questions to Mrs. M. A. Wilson, Evening Public Ledoeb, Philadelphia. One tcaipoon of paprika. And vinegar to cover. Mutton Stew With Vegetables This is almost the same as we would cook it with the exception of n few caraway seeds which are added for flavoring, Schnecken Place in a mixing bowl J nice cups of flour. One teaspoon of salt. One tablespoon of baking poicdcr. Sift to mix and then rub in one-half cup of shortening and mix to a dough with one-hnlf cup of water. Roll out one-half inch thick on a well floured pastry board. Now spread thickly with brown sngar, chopped nuts, cinnamon, one-half cup of cam died citron or orange peel. Roll as fbr jelly roll and then cut in slices three-quarters inch thick. Grease a baking sheet well, add four tablespoons of melted shortening. Spread the pan with onr cup of brown sugar. Lay the slices close together and bake for twenty mimics in a moderato oven. Itcmoe nnd turn from the pan to a greased paper and cut; then serve with fruit sauce. Adventures With a Purse I tfriTf H HAD just a fe'v of them that 'Vcarne in last summer," she ex plained, "and we sold them in no time. It is almost impossible to keep them ou hand. And this new stock that we have reccivec' will not last any time." She was speaking of novelty luncheon cloths in pale pink or pale blue, with a delicate design of white running through them. They are made of mer cerized cotton, nnd, in addition to their attractiveness, they make practical covers, for they keep fresh and crisp longer than a white clotlu For the sum mer cottage, or just to use for luncheon at home, they are very nice. They cost $0, are 54 inches, and you had better see about them at once, for.as I already have said, they aie not going to be available very long. The estimable writer of the Chaffiug Dish once said that the minute one reads an article beginning ".venbody knows that, "etc.." one immediately may be sure that one is about to read of something nobody ever kuew or heard of before, in spite ot this, I shall begin this adventure by saying that every one knows that the time to take care of one's hair is before it starts to fall out. Afterward, alas! it is too late. And one very good way to,take care of it is by the use of a good tonic applied with a hair tonic comb. This comb differs very greatly from the comb that takes the tangles out. It is a little four or five toothed affair, with thick teeth that are hollow. To the handle is attached a bulb. The bulb is filled with the tonic which is thus forced from the bulb through the teeth of the comb, and so into tne nair. ne tonic is distributed evenly, and gets way into the scalp, which is where it does its best work. One of these combs costs GOe. To tell jou that frequently n bit of fresh lace and a good pressing will "perk up" that afternoon dress, or evening dress, is telling vou something you already know. So instead I shall tell you of a shop I know where a most interesting sale of silver and gold laces, edgings and flounciugs is being held. Many of the laces have been re duced to half price, and it would be quite possible virtually to make over a dress as new with the addition of some of this lovely lace. I fancy that the sale will not last very long, for every one is liocKing to it, so you nnd better stop therj the very first minute jou have. Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Editor of Woman's Page, or call Walnut .'1000, for names of shops where articles mentioned in Adventures with a Purse may be purchased. Y. W. C. A. Notes Events in the life of the An "n army of occupation during the las' 0!lr can be traced in the numerical chart showing the number of meals served in the Y. W. C. A. hostess house in Cob lenz. which has just been received at Y. W. C. A. headquarters in Now York For instance, the greatest number of meals were served between April 10 and April 2v This period just follows the time that General Pershing visited Cob len and presented the Distinguished Service Cross to six generals in the park in front of the hostess house and in cludes Easter Sunday, when 1550 men and women with the A. E. F. had ham and eggs for breakfast there the first time eggs had been served at the hostess house. Special arrangements had made this possible and the line for breakfast stretched almost around the park even before the doors had been opened. The third army carnival is also in cluded in this period of time, when a huge refreshment tent was operated in co-operation with other welfare organi zations at the carnival grounds in ad dition to running the hostess house res taurant at a record speed. Cuticura Soap The Healthy Shaving Soap CatkwrmSecf thavvithoatng(. Everrffbtt-erSe. That Buy Anything from the leading Mores of I'llllB., Wll. ralnrton, C'umden and Mlantlo 'lljr Easy Terms FRAMBES & CLARK 1112 Che.tnut St., Phila. 640 CluAacUa Tk Was,, Atlantic Cltr STORE flRnFIK V pill "Cinderella's Daughter" By HAZEL DEYO BATCIIELOR Comrtaht. ISttl, bv Puolio Ledger Co, Sj-nopsis Virginia West, whose life has been comparatively uneventful until she enters boarding school, begins at once to meet experience once she is there, Kathleen Fostrr, one of the older girls, becomes her best friend, and through Kathleen she meets Jimmy Foster, the man she marries. Marriage brings disillusionment to Virginia, and she realises that it was not Jimmy him self that she loved but the ideal of Jimmy that her imagination had created. With his depth she is left with no money, and a short time later her baby i? born. She has the choice as staying with Jimmy's people or of making her tcay in the world, and she decides to try the latter. At school she has shown a penchant for acting, and she asks Bill Lyons, a friend of Jimmy's, to help her. Kathleen has been engaged to Bill, but has broken the engagement because he is poor. A sudden legacy that is left to him causes Kathleen to change her mind. She is quite willing now to marry him, T WANT to go on the stage." Vir- - ginia blurted out. There was an ominous silence while the producer eyed Iter with that owlish glance of his. Then he spoke: "Plenty of people do, you know." If Virginia had but known it, Parks was the one man in the city who would have admitted her to his private office, but he had made it a rule of life never to pass anything that might lead later to a chance or n find. He had stumbled upon some of his best plays in just this way. Up had been known to sign con tracts with unknown authors who had despaired of ever finding a producer who would lake a chance on their man uscripts. Virginia was gaining confidence. "Yes, I know." "Any experience?" She shook her hend. "What do you think vou can do?" Virginia had a sudden inspiration. She would sing the humbug song nnd do the little dance that went with it. She smiled at him. "Maybe I can't do anything." shcsaid, laughing at him like -a little gamin. It was such a change from her former demure attitude and her tragic eyes were so filled now with roguishness that he stared. Then she was on her feet and had begun the song. There was nothing particularly new about the words or music; it was the typical song from the typical school play, but it was Virginia's acting of the part, her complete forgetfnlness of self, the way she sang the words, everything, that surprised Walter Pa?ks. She fin ished the dance with a flourish, nnd then, picking up a letter tray from the desk, she came over to him and began to ply her wares. The words rippled off her tongue laughingly. She wus Anatolc, the ped dler, and a rogue apt to be arrested anv moment. If nnj thing, Yirginin carried off the scene better than she had ou that night long ng- when she had plnyrd tho leading role in "Love's Locksmith" and had met Jimmy for the first time after ward. She finished and put the tray back on the desk. Parks was looking at her narrowly and vouchsafed a single word, "lira!'1 Which might have meant much or little. "Well?" she said eagerly. "Not bad," he grunted, still with the cigar in his mouth. Virginia clasped her hands nervously. "You'll give me a chance?" "I don't Know. I have a small part, but I don't know whether j-ou could do it or not. The pait itself isn't much, but the impression that the character is supposed to suggest is everything. "Let me try!" "You're supposed to be a girl under hypnotic influence. Now let me sec how j-ou would come into a room, walk across to the mantelpiece and take a box from there." He leaned back in his chair, and Vir ginia, with wildly beating heart, walked over to the extreme comer of tho of fice. She tried to drive cerj thing else out of her thoughts but the fact that she had been hypnotized, nnd she came across the rooms not slowly, but with an indescribable motion that was half walk and half glide. It was stealthy, furtive and yet not overdone. She reached up to the mantelpiece for the box, and, securing it, without a look about her, walked out. At tho other end of the room she flashed around and faced the imperturbable figure in the chair. "Well?" she said breathlessly. "I guess we'll try you out," he said evenly. Virginia's heart leaped. "Sixty dollais a week. It isn't much money, but, then, it isn't much of a part. Want it?" Sixty dollars a week I Did she want it ! Did a starving man want food ! Tomorrow Virginia tells Iicr news. .' y . J3 7 i l - TvnT A perfect Blend Just the right amount of one kind of tea leaves exactly the correct proportion of another I Result the clear color and aro matic flavor of Tetley's Orange Pekoe Tea. "TETLEY'S tea Blended right made right 'packed right tastes right. It's downright good teal NOTHING BUT PLAITS FOR ITS TRIMMING Don't feel that jour dress is not trimmed if it is plaited, for plaits are all the trimming you need now. Narrow tucks in groups malic the lit of this bodice and the plaits of the skirt are held in by a narrow baud at the ankles A Dally Fashion Talk by Florence Rose IT WAS the Paris dressmakers in their wartime effoit to cut down the cost of making clothes who started the ball rolling in favor of plaits. This provided a means of decoration without actually calling for any decorative fab ric. , An entire frock might be made from one sort of fabric if some of it was plaited. And sometimes very fetching little. plaited frills were made from bits of material that would otherwise be useless. Tucking was another means of securing decoration w'ithout trimming material. Plaited skitts have by no means gone by the board and the very fact that the plaited skirt can never be the one chosen by the woman who must limit her wardrobe to a few garments, the woman who must sit in an office all day in the frock in which she expects to go to luncheon or to afternoon tea or even to dinner this fact puts the plaited skirt into the realm of tilings exclusive. Thus its vogue is likely to endure. Iu the frock today I am showing you the new way of treating the plaited skirt, producing au interesting variety of the ban el silhouette. It is a straight plaited affair and is held in place nt the ankles by a band of tho material. There is nothing freaky about the skirt, however, and the ankle band docs not suggest the hobble of another season that made walking a practical impos-sibilitj-. The skill of the plaiter was called into play not only iu the making of the skirt, for there is a narrow plaiting to finish the edge of the collar and cuffs. Then there are groups of narrow tucks ou the bodice, which is held in at a slightly elongated waistline by a narrow belt. The material ued was a toft silk of the new shade of green, u little softer and yellower than jade. And the accessories for one must always consider the accessories in get ting the right effect from smart clothes the hat is of heavy beige linen. The rolling brim produces the still fnshion able off-the-fnee effect. An absence of trimming of any sort contributed to its smartness. FRENCH GIRLS GET ADVICE War Brides Here Told How to Buy Economically Practical suggestions-to French war brides were given Inst night by Miss Helen Simpson, of Haddonfield, N. .1., at the Y. W. C. A., Eighteenth and Arch streets. Iu order to economize, she said, it was especially necessary that they should understand the butcher and the baker. The speaker urged specially that the following sentences be memor ized accurately: "That is more than I wish to pay," and "I want only one pound of steak." The French war brides meet at the Y. W. C. A. every Thursday nnd ,lla. cuss topics in their own language. a H ml a J I ' Ml mfC II u In VI V" j "S)sX(Qr7l ill " fl i Ul Vk JhJ ii'm III 11 ii f Please TeltMe What to Do Br CYNTHIA Agrees With "N. Y. S." Dear Cynthia I hnve read with in terest tho letter of "N. Y. S." regarding the "Smacking Subject," and must say that I fully agree with her. I bclieve'a girl lowers herself n great deal to at tempt such a thing. If anything goes so wrong as to warrant it. she should be lady enough to leave her acquaintance men ana mere, nnd forget about mm entirely, nnd not make n bad matter worse. "JUST A GOB." "Kensington" Comes Back Dear Cynthia Conccrnlne nee. "Bobbie," I released my first yell in captivity in this Inrco nnTU beautiful City of Brotherly Love and contractor rule on May S, 1883. It was a great success. I mean the yell, although later a considerable improvement began to be noticed in the range nnd carrying power, l couiu rcacb out after the high notes and not even scratch them with u finger nail. By these letters you may have crown to believe thnfc T have an angelic disposition, sockets for wings nnu am quite proncient on n narp. Nothing could be further from the truth. Honestly I've thrown my share of "spit-balls" at the teacher and "swiped" as much of the girls' candy ns the next kid. Also wnited for "tattle talcs" after school and was "tickled skinnv to bust 'em a couple between the cars." Proving,- ns you'll readily ad mit, my mother's pet theory that hav ing been born with n "frown" J! was bound to make a "racket" iu the world. Ah,, those happy days! How ignorant we are of its sunshine and laughter. How pleasant are some memory pic tures of the long-bjgone past. Later I had my vanity badly perforated. I dis covered that dad had done the same stunts nt school nnd, therefore, that mine were not original. Sitting down oue eveuing while alone I solved the problem. Animal spirits were something handed down from parents to son and ancestor to ancestor. Something like carbuncles, n healthy appetite and Ca nadian dimes. Knowing full well that only successful authors, actors, politi cians and prize-fighters can blow their "own horns" end still remain heroic, I'll abstain from megnphoniug my vir tures from the housetops, suppressing u terrible temptation lurking in my bosom to make a good impression via the usual route. Less-favored individuals must keep off the grass and put distance be tween them ami the "gas works." Re ferring to jour last question, Am I single? can say yes. Up to date there isn't a feminine pulse that quickens or maidenly eyes that brighten nt my foot steps. Candidly, I've been "unmar ried so long that if I had a wife tho txeprience would so be strange 1 wouldn't know what to do with it." KENSINGTON. Approves of Cynthia Dear Cynthia 1 have for some time been an interested and amused reader of jour column, and I wish to say, whether jou be man, woman or child, jou certainly had a good, sensible mother, which, unfortunately, some of jour readers have not. I would like to say a few words to Anna C. and others who approve of "slapping." Do you know that wheu jou carry on like that it is not you who is criticized, but jour mother and father? Surely you have some respect for them, but no one would know that by your behavior. I am not- an old maid, etc., as jou like to think of de cent people, but a high school girl of sixteen attending a private school. I have lots of men and boy friends whom I would no more think of treat ing after your fashion than I would fly; also, these same friends of mine have, tho same opinions. When I go to parties I' have wonderful times, as do the rest of my friends, even if I only "o out on Friday and Saturday nights in school time. As two girls wrote this evening about having good times minus boys, so can every one if they wish to and the boj's will then find they are no t the only peas in the pod. (I found that to be only too true), and they will have more respect and inter est in you. So, think of that. I want to thank j-ou very much, Cyn thia, for listening to me, and with good luck for the future. A JOLLY SCHOOLGIRL. MARY A. WILSON School of Cooking 241 South 23d St. r . I C, 8. Nnvul CommlAtiMry School i.te JDomrotln SHrnco Sum. Srkool Instructor ( Vnlmiiity of Vlrrlnln Fbon Sprncr 7S3 RcRtntrallon Dow oprni rlitua tun Jan. rr s 1011! 8ofWpsQ(foom Post-Show Exhibition Visitors at the show were un restrained in jtheir expression of appreciation for our ef fort to give them in the new Scripps-Booth the best light Six that money and engineer- . ing skill can produce. Many have requested further opportunity to inspect these -models. Therefore we will continue the exhibition of all show models and several others in our Show Rooms week of January 19th to 24th. La Roche Brothers, Inc. 1214 N. Broad St The Woman's Exchange Cleaning Furniture To th Editor of Vfoman'a Faae: Dear Madam Could you kindly tell me how to clean tapestry furniture, whnt to uso and how to go about it? Also, is thero any way nt all to provent dust from coming through tho hot-air radiator? I try nnd try to keep my library table, dining nnd bedroom fur niture free from dust, but I bclievo it to be an impossible feat on account of tho heater. Please accept my best wishes for your column nnd many thank yous. YOUNG BltlDE. About the best thing to use for this kind of furnituro is carbon tetrachlo ride, which can bo bought at the drug btorc. The directions are given on the bottle. There is nothing to do to keep the heater from blowing dust about. It's just one of those things that arc and have to be. If you dust tho furniture every day you nt least have the com fort of knowing that it is not your fault that tho dust will gather. Keep tho furnituro well oiled and the dust will not show so badly. A February Birthday To the Editor of Woman's Paao: Dear Madam I am going to give a birthday party iu February and I would like you to tell mo of some decorations and games. We arc nil children and I will be nine years old. I am not poor, but I would like you to tell me of some thing I could work on out-of-doors and cam money. P. P. M. If you will send me a self-addressed envelope I will send you some games that would be appropriate for your February birthday. Since there arc two holidays in that month, why don't you combine the decorations? Use red hearts and cherries and hatchets for jour decorations. In the center of the refreshment table have u branch of n treo filled with red cherries made of cotton ao.d led paper. I am afraid you arc not quite old enough to cum any money. The thing for j-ou to do is to play hard and have lots of fun, so that when you nio old enough to work jou will be strong nnd well and able to work hard. 15ut per haps you could arrange to run errauds for the people in your neighborhood nnd ask them to pay you for each tiip. That would not tak,e up all your time. Do you think you could do that? Dates In 1880 To the Editor of Woman's Page: Dear Maduni Will you please answer niee questions Whnt clays did October 1, 1880, nnd May 17, 1880, fall on? READER. According to tho calculations I have made from the perpetual calendar in the World's Almanac, October 10, 1880, came on Saturday. May 1", lbbO. came on Monday. Does this re fresh your memory? To the Edttor of Woman's Page: . To Soften Sealskin Dear Madam Will tou answer this question for me inthe question corner of your paper? I have got n piece of sealskin fur that goj; wet and made the skin very stiff. I would like to hear of pometnlng to soften tho skin nnd make it the same as before it was wet. CONSTANT READER. A reliable furrier tells me that the best way to soften fur that has been wet is by rubbing it with the hands. If it is not too largo a piece it would be better to remove tho lining and n b carefully and gently until the fur is soft again. But if it is too large for that, simply rub, being careful not to tear or disturb the lining. EVENING GOWNS S CLEANED ON SHORT NOTICE Quick Service Cltanlnr lira's Clothri We call and deliver. Pbone: Poplar 7660 1113 Chestnut 81. S. W. Cor. BZd Sannom Sti. SS17 nermantona Avenue CLEANERS AND DYERS iSiftSSa 1616-28 N. 21st Street Tor quick service, phone for Dept. I. BARG THE WOMAN WHO IS ALWAYS ASSERTING HER OWN RIGHTS Never Seems to Care That She of jucrs iv ncn. rpHE long lino winding back from tho cashier's window in tho bank sighed with impatience. Tho woman at tho window had finished her trans action, but she was fctlll standing, firmly planted directly beforo tho coun ter, carefully arranging things in ber bag, She could have dono that any where, and Involuntarily tho crowd pushed ahead a little and bumped into her, Sho turned round long enough to givo an outraged glare, and then re turned in a leisurely manner to her ar rangements. Later in the day sho lunched in a cafeteria. Another line stretched out beforo her this time, for she had al ready "run tho gauntlet" with ber tray. But she was back again with tho salad that sho had just taken to a ta ble. Pushing aside two persons who wero standing together waiting for their coffee and waffles, sho thrust the plate across tho counter. "Put somo dress ing on this," she told the attendant. "It's ns dry as n piece of punk. When I'm entitled to dressing 'on salad and havo to pay ns much ns this for it, I want "plenty of it." Sho established her self before the counter and coughed enthusiastically, without raising either hand from the tray she was holding. Do you recognizo her? Sho is the woman who always stands up for her rights. Sho had a right to stay as long as she wanted at that bank win dow, and she was not going to move until she was good nnd ready. Sho wa3 entitled to moro dressing on her balad, nnd it made no difference how she "mussed up" tho line or destroyed the peace of mind of those who were wait ing for lunch she was going to get that dressing. She always knows her rights, but it never occurs to her that she may be trespassing on the rights of others in claiming her own. YOU meet her very often in the (theatre. She sits in front of you, and when she takes off her coat she throws it so far over tho back of the seat that it rests warmly upon your knees all through the performance. She has a perfect right, you sec, to put her coat anywhere she wants to, regardless of the convenience or rights of any one else. It is a sorry day for you when she TOWELING Tie pirtiailirlouiewlfo buyifcTARTEXbecauM it hit tbe linen woven poin wv, which nuket it dunble and beit for drying diihet, leavi&f no I luioc muage, jret it jii puiiiiue more than ine ordinary. H ami ttmmfti tn fihtit. Stlittlttdim iter is. Woman Buyer - Wants Position As Bayer ot GOWNS, COATS & SUITS 10 Years' Experience Address B 120, Xedgrer Office HOT WATER ON THE INSTANT WITHOUT MATCHES, DIRT OR BOTHER It Isn't necessary to ".lent up" a "Lovekln" every lima sou t hot water. The Lovekln Heater reaulres no attention: sou always havo hot wate the II. O. I. Send for booklet. LOVEKIN WATER HEATER COMPANY 39 Laurel Street JIIIU Willi J 1 1 in Spare Your Rugs Save Your Energy Don't wear out the life and looks of your ex pensive rugs by, the ojd-fa'shioned sweeping and beating. Get the Electric Cleaner that gathers up every t speck of dirt, dust and lint, leaving the nap soft and even. The OHIO-TUEC Electric Cleaner Will aave your time, and temper, while cleaning your carpets and dra peries better than ever. See it demon strated at your electric dealer's or m $& W&m niecmcauppiy o. J&S ftV.fc-.t riUviiTl A'A'O FASHIONS Is trespassing on the Prtvtlem OS ona Kjiaims tier Uivn mores Into tho apa"rtmenl !.. - bb.0 has cultivated a habit of tnit the floor with her foot whelvcr P 1 wnnts to emphnsizo a remark aa . seems to do It simply beZsesatlfe to know who lias n rieht tn ii I not to! You'll find he? cvervVr that it Is her right to demand a nuar ter extra every time there arc tire. shirtwaists in the wash instead o the usual two. She may bo the saleswoman with tho languid air, wlio fcelsTcrv strongly her right to bo utterly 1? pendent of employers or patrons. Sh0 may1-be the impetuous young person who thinks that it is her right to "fK without any compunction about how she ' But whoevor she is, wherever she lives, you'll know her as soon as you sco her. For she leaves no doubt In anybody's mind that she has certain lights which must bo acknowledged certain privileges which must bo grant ed. And she is nlwnys climbing ail pver somebody else's rights and nrivi. leges in order to stand up-nnd nss4i her own. " Woman's College Drive Extended , Th5 campaign of tho Woman's Med ical College of Pennsylvania closed of- flciaLny.ay Wltl1 tbo oal still nt most $100,000 awaj'. However, the workers have decided to extend thu time and make an effort to collect the re malnder. The total pledged is Slfio 833. of which $30,044.81 was collected during tho last; twenty-four hours. SALADA" If you love tea and your quest is ever for the perfect cup, "you will find it in "Salada." If you've neVer be fore cared for tea, "Salada" will make you as great a devo tee as Samuel John son, "who with tea amused the evening, with tea solaced the midnight, and with tea welcomed the morning." and at amazingly low cost Approved by Philadelphia, Pa Trrrrr znnc mm mm .mm niii phone us. See also the Free-Westing-house Electric Sewing Machine. H. C. ROBERTS Wholesale Distributors Philadelphia H run mammmmtmwMw -. t V it. iV i rf 1 . M4 t&y to Sfm Uh St., vuaiea IJ tl$!i i ii Mi in j r i ii.y
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers