V. . v.n? . S .tvV' WB? dUT V y.tA. At ' ", i: ft n :n t evening Iptmtio viM)iBiBmii)ECPHxa:, irfcRSDAx M&Bofl is, 1920 ,, ? "fppw - -S '' (j !.) "'- ? MRS. WILSON TELLS HOW , GOOD COFFEEKAN BE MADE Three Ways of Browing This Beverage, but All Require Care and Accurate Measuring of Ingredients t7 RIBS. M. A. WILSON A TURKISH merchant Introduced coffee In England on a return trip from the Orient, bringing with him a flrtek servant and a forgo quantity of ten coffee. The Greek servant was 5n adept at roasting and blending and SrtMriD this delectable drink. P this merchant set his servant tip In k,ilnMJ In St. Michael's alley. Corn, hall, knllon' thus Pn,Btf thc Br8t niCIdonhrdeothcr English cities tk coffee houses quickly became thc ,! and by 1C88 It was thc custom of philosophers, writers and other public men to gather in theso places and hold forth on long arguments over steaming niM of Mocha. Thus the coffee houses became the resort of famous nnd popu- Oarraway, Coventry, St. James,, Pilne's, In Uacnnal lano, ana aims rtffee house, in Covcnt Garden, shared to this wonderful popularity. The coffee plant is today widely and ienslvcly grown. Many varieties on St market mako it possible for the hoosewifo to select a blond that will HfiMw I wish to state that it is mUttken economy for the housewife to tar poorly blended coffee This coffee rMolrcs iargcr quantities to make a litufactory cup, and no matter how c a quantity Is used, while it will See 2 strong liquid, It will not have the drilcato aroma and flavor of a cup if coffee made from a choice blend. This plays an important part in the fact that cither the nip of coffee is dc cWrfly good or indlffcrontly poor. C In pulchaslng a higli-Krado blend of roffto tho housewlfo has the satisfaction of knowing that she needs loss of it. Many arguments are put forth in fa tor of tho already ground coffee. Yet T Jm old-fashioned enough to desire to ind my coffee just as it Is required. Do Jot leave coffee in tho bag, cardbox or container. Turn at onco into glass jars ud eeal securely; this prevents evap oration of the essential oils and flavor- How to Mako Good Coffee There are thrco recognized ways of making coffee : ....,-. .. First. Using the old-fashioned pot. Second. By percolation. Third. By filtering. To make coffee by tho first method: Bo sure the pot is thoroughly clean, rinse and add the nmount of water nee wary to mako required number of cops. Add , One tablespoon coffee for every cup of usltr. Stir to mix and bring slowly to a boil. Cook two minutes, then add Tiny pinch of salt, Four tablespoons cold water. Stir and let stand a few moments and it Is then ready to use. Making coffee in this way requires coffee coarsely Percolation The method of making coffee by per colation Is too well known to need description. The coffeo must bo finely cround or pulverized. Mnny compluluts of coffee made by this method are of (leaning the percolator. To clean, place percolator in a large pan deep enough to cover tho percolator two inches deep with water. Bring slowly to a loll. Boll ten Vninutcs, remove the percolator nnd wash with soap and vater. Scour Inside and out with steel wool. Wush In warm water, rinse under plenty of cold water. Set in a sunny place, where the air will have a chance to remove tho coffee odor, If tho percolator is cleansed In this manner once a week It will make as perfect a cup of coffee as when new. Third Method Filtering This method is used entirely by the French, and is known us French or drip coffeo. Several styles of china or fctono. coffee pots aro on the market. With these pots aro used thc Japanese paper filter; they aro easily kept clean and mako an attractive appearance. The old Creole housewife uses a large china or atone pitcher. To Brew Creole Coffee Fill nitchcr with boiling water: stand in large saucepan of boiling water to heat pitcher while water is coming to boll to make the coffee. When water bolls, drain pitcher, wipo dry. Now take a square piece of cheesecloth and tie over top of pitcher to make a well and tie cloth securely around the out side of tho pitcher. Add desired amount 0! finely pulverized coffee and tiny pinch of salt; pour in pitcher necessary amount of water; cover pitcher with napkin and then saucer. Ileturu to me saucepan containing thc boiling wa ttr and nlaco where water in sauce pan will keep at boiling point for ten minutes, uemove napkin nnd cnecse n' fnd P'0,0n..,t8 keeping qualities. IS ow In cold weather when the milk is Placed In wagons for delivery with a temperature nnnroachlnar z. h i..,f ter fat coagulates and comes to top of Jar as clotted cream. If the housewife iaB 10 strain the cream, this lump of cream in the coffee causes globules of rat U ride on top of the coffee nnd also hurts the coffee flavor. So strain the cream, remove this clotted cream and use in mashed potatoes or other vegetables. The French housewife al ways adds hot milk to the coffee for her morning cafe nu lalt. Tho Ude of hot cream or milk will wonderfully 1m prove the morning cup. Please Tell Me What to Do By CINTHIA Praises Letters In Column Dear OvntMn T rrnllv nin.) .-.! and tell you how much I enjoyed read ing the letters of "Voyagour' and "Pe- fltn" Mttilol. j ... . ". irujm uuuearea in your column. UV some trlrk nf fain no I... been able to see the old-fashioned girl unu mo oia-iashlonod boy side by side. It Is a Shame therft in mioh n unlf Of both. ' What n fnnlloti lltfta r.trl "r.m" IsJ sho has a friend, a loyal, true blue jriJ, who is anxious for her welfare. She has a priceless Jewel, but she docs not seem to rcallzo it. "Petite," my child, do not do anything that would cause you to lose this very, very good friend of yours. Take heed of "Voyu- gcur-s" letter nnd Cvnthla'n ndvW and do not get silly "modern" notions into your head. I have a friend like yours, ana 1 would not exchange him tor a dozen of the other boys I know. I guess you think I am somo prudish old maid, but I am just a young girl llko yourself, twenty-one years old, and full of the joy of just being alive. Referring to "Voyngeur's" letter, 1- am Very clad tn kii thnr. nno nt Mia nun has backbone enough to speak his con victions. I absolutely agree with hlra in all he says about the so-called "mod ern" young lady, and she is certainly not tho proper companion for .the man who is striving to be a success. Slio will be a drag and hindrance to him in his work. However, the extremely Old-fashioned" at wnnltl tint mnlrn the proper life companion, either, Sho would not keep pace with her husband in his march forward, and trouble would be thc inevitable result. lint, "set a Ctrl like mother. lust like tho one that married dear old dad." One who will put her shoulder to thc wheel and help her husband: one who is not above thc "demeaning" duties of housework; one who still be lieves in tnat merciful, but Just God. A cheerful, lauguing, optimistic, sensi ble elrl will sooner or later find her self at the fireside of tho sensible, am bitious man, making happy plans for the future. Girls, cirls. take heed of these let ters ; they arc two of the best that have ever been published in Cynthia's col umn, und there is a big lesson In each one of them. The boys also want to tukc notice. Pick your friends wisely and well, be good pais and chums, und don't forget the old adage: "A friend in need is a friend Indeed." BETTY BONNET. There Were Several Answers Dear Cynthia About a week, ago I saw a qui'Htion tn your column, tne answer of which I would have liked to see. I wonder if I missed it in the Sat urday paper of March 13. The question was something llko this : A says that boys who go with lots of irirls marry soonest and B says that boys who do not run around with girls J marry soonest, is a or u-ngni; ior my part, I think there Is not much difference, though 'tho smartest boys get nicer girls for wives. Am I right or wrong? I hnvo never gone out with any, as-I must Btudy very hard and -am only sixteen. Therefore, I do not know much about them, but I'do know that when girls have dozens of beaux when young they have none when it is time to marry. But it's always different with boys. They have more freedom. I will not ask about your identity, but will believe that you are just Cynthia, with twinkling bluo eyes, gray hair and a big, sunny love and wisdom, a wholesome and well-spent life, doing all you can for others. NOBODY FROM NOWHERE. Mnnv nersons claim that the Cirl or man who has a great number of friends is harder to please than one who has Fhoto by J. Mitchell Elliott. MISS ELIZABETH GUILDS STEEL Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Thomas Steel, of tiio Wood-Norton, Gcrniantown, whoso engagement to Lieutenant Gcorgo L. Richard lias been recently announced The Woman's Exchange A Senior Play To the Jjditur of Woman'a Paoe: Dear Madam Having read many vnluuble articles in your column Z havo decided to ask you a few questions. Where can I secure plays? That is, plays that can bo produced by seniors in a high school with the same number of boys and girls in the class. The ages rango from sixteen to eighteen years. As I am the secretary of the class, I have been asked to securo such and would bo very much pleased if you would Inform me where these plays may bo had. M. E. D. You can get plays of this kind from a nublinhing house. Publishing com panies Issue catalogues in which plays of this kind are described. If you send for them, I am sure you will find oue that would bo suitable. iou will Und n list of publishers in the business di rectory of the telephone book. Another Party To the Editor of Wma'i Vase: Dear Madam I am a girl, sixteen years of age. I am going to give 'a birthday Dartv. Will you kindly send me some games for a birthday party for girls and boys about sixteen years of age? Could you give me some suggestions on how to decorate the table 7 What kind of favors would bo appro priate? A READER. I am sendlmr you some games. Deco rate the table with n low bowl of flowers standing on crossed wido ribbons. Have a cuud estlcK at tbo cud of each ribbon. making the four candlesticks outline the centerpiece. Have place cards of the ribbon with the names written across them in gilt letters. For favors havo cither real or paper flowers at each place, and have thc ones for the girls tied with big bows to pretty hatpins, and thc ones for tbo boys lastencu to pencils or Drigut colors. THE GLAD SURRENDER By HAZEL DETTO BATCIIELOR CopvrloM, 1011, bv rubtto Uiotr Co, Women of Today It all goc to ptovc that there ii after all only one reason for mar rlage, and that is love. Granville Burton' married Laurel Stone for other reasons, and discovered his love for her after their son was lorn, when Laurel's attitude toward him had subtly changed. No longer did he want Laurel to mother Ms two little girls. Ho wanted her because she was tho one icoman.. NOVEMBER found them settled again in tho Madison avenue house, and they had not been in town a ween De fore Laurel had a typewriter installed in her boudoir. It stood on a white tablo near a window ana Laurel began to work regularly two hours or more every day. There was a foverish im pulse urging her on to do something bo sldo manage efficiently the house of Bur ton. Her own attitude toward Gran ville had settled down into a polite cor diality and Laurel was finding her mo ments snatched with Ted and WInonn and Tom Benton among tho happiest that she ever spent. They would meet either at Wlncna's apartment or at a small restaurant and talk about affairs of tho day, people who did interesting things, now jobs for women, everything about which they could talk or argue. At these times Laurel was as sho was in the old news paper days, eager and cntbuslqstic and yet there were times when olie talked thnt a certain little hardness crept into ... ..j. n prtnln lorlcal reason had displaced the simple childlike faith that had been one or ner cnici cnannj. auu yet this charm had not entirely dis appeared; It would shine out in her cye sometimes when sho was excited about nnythlng. It made Winona feel that Laurel was still Laurel under the sur face hardness that she had acquired through experience with life. It steracd Incongruous to Granville to go by Laurel's door and to hear the faint far-off tapping of the typewriter. It was something to be jcalou iof, and it was something into which his life did not enter at all. Ho had read her first story when it came out; read It at his office. It seemed very wonderful to State turn the leaves of the magazine ind to jcome suddenly on the heading, "Small Town Pride," by Laurel Bur ton i Miss Rhodes had read it and she remarked in her crisp, efficient manner that she thought it very good. "I am taking a short story course at Columbia," sne cxpiuin j y,- W7;"m . nijUi-ni. Abotlt MISS RhUolTarsh, lefrthe office? Day after day for nearly three years she had como Into his room to take dictation. Her blue sergo frocks and sheer cuffs and collar had always bcep a part of her. her sleek little head with Ite rather nroutl carriage had given her an air of SisUncUon. He had always accepted Miss llnodes as an unusually good ste nographer, who did her work well. But ?n had i never thought anything about her private life i until lately, bccUusc he had never thought of her m a woman. He paid her $40 a week and she was taking a short-story course at Columbia in her free time. How won -nVrful were these women of today, how woith while, nnd his .thoughts leaped to Laurel in her ttlng-room taimlng on the typewriter. They wanted tHo tilings for the joy of doing them, women like Miss Rhodes, and Laurel nnd Winona. And once ho had thought that Ms money, and his power would bo enough to make Laurcf happy. He had Uiought to chate a woman with wings i tea round otVeasures that only women like Marion Worth nnd others like her thought sufficient;. He remembered the feeling o i pr do . . "j ik .i,.. no hnueht the ruby no nun ic.u v.. -- -- . . . ,. ARTIST CONSIDERS FORTY THE IDEAL AGE FOR WOMEN i i i i s At This Time They Attain Perfection in Bdauty as Well 'as Poise, Mentality and Tolerance T&frte the necessity of a wonderful ring, and ho had wanted to give his wife the finest thing that could be bought. There was nothing of sentiment about it. lie had examined several rings, picking them up from their white velvet beds to scrutinize the stones npd the settings. The ruby had appealed to him as some thing different. Its blaze, its splendor were so dominant, so defiant, so worthy of n princess: Now he often watched it flash and sparkle from her flngct with a dull ache in his heart. It was a flaming bodge ot his ownersaip; u told the world that she had a wealthy hmband, but what else did It mean? Did it stand for anything Intimate be tween thorn, his right to kiss the starry eyes, to hold her In his arms? ISo, he hod no right to anything personal about her. Ho was too proud to force his at tentions when he knew that sho did not want' them. Their life together had settled into a commonplaco routine where neither expected anything of the other nnd yet underneath each was hoping for some thing to happen. Granville never saw Laurel unless it was under Jhe most formal instances. He grew to wonder, what she did with ber intimate self. He remembered the time when he had called on her in her little flat and she had been willing to share ber personal self with him. It seemed like a dim and wonderful memory to him now. And then into tho well-oiled ma chinery, of their lives together a cog slipped. Tho baby fell ill. (Tomorrow" Tho baby's illness shows Granville the' breach between himself ana Laurel.) Oil Floor Mop For oiled or polished floors an oiled floor mop is almost a necessity. Several makes can be found on the market, or one may be made of old stockings or any discarded woolen or flannelette ma terial. In a Farmers' Bulletin on "Farm Homo Conveniences." obtain able free from the United States De partment of Agriculture, the following directions for making such a mop are given : ' Tho material is cut into 1-inch wide strips, which are sewed across the mid dle to a foundation of heavy cloth. This is fastened to an old broom handle or used io, a clamp mop. handle. into a solution made of one-half cup of meitca paramn ana one cup or kerosene, and then allowed to dry. To keep it moist It is rolled tightly dnd'kept in a paper bag away from stoves or lamps. Hartuna Brown Bethlehem, Pft March 18. Rav mond C. Hartung, of Ardmore, Okla.. recently a submarine officer in tie United States navy, and Miss Dorothy Brown, dnuehterof Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown. of Bethlehem, were married yesterday in tiic home 01 tne onac's parents. They will live in Ardmore, Okla. that he had given her. The New England Woolen Company h in "Geopodrow" So we muit sacrifice oU onr ! stocua i We need money badly S Woolens, Silks. Dress Goods . and Men's Wear at very low price. Giro nu a trlatt Good exchanged it not satisfactory, after they have been cut from the piece. Como In TOia M unu kci ineie wonaer uareaintt n-niu uicy imi. Jener HUU Shlrtlnr. S4.0O' S-08 value. I'er yard 30 InchfH Chiffon Tuffeta. lllack 2'25 icue loch Serge. all colon, f 1 .10 mxi quautr. rrr yarn... ... I Incurs pure Imported IJncnJ ST.39 .80 Tolue. l'er yard. ........ J.-00 (IikmI quality, rrr yard 40 in st.sn 06 Inches iU.vool Camel's Hair Cloth. ........ Imitation Fer yard. Urn Quantity Striped & Flald X'S0 BO Inches all-wool blue and 2--5 black Nrxsr. . 3.pp Tlue . , . . . . Mprclal quality black and bluo 2'S5 Hatln. ta.00 value Jz 60 Inches Chiffon Broadcloth. 3's0 All colors. S.V0O Talue Lot of Foulard Voiles, best de- 45c DD sisn ami invu iiuiuiij, truui.i wi.ui.nHil. nt lin.l. W JCH?t.a T7.rt7ii nt1 fir... flnftrift tn hfl Kfllii fit fl small margin of profit during thla sale. Don't mistake the place. NEW ENGLAND WOOLEN CO. Get off car at ith & Balnbridge Bts.. and walk South on the East tide. not c Ait. ci. c v ... aiU ...j mr.... ysmummi'' " W- -m ' luuuuo;,,,,,,!,,,, ainuifg. uemove napmn nn cnecse- " -" v ,1. 'r7 :., .,i doth containing coffee grounds and f'wer, and is less likely to marry early, xjtve. ThlB method extracts less of we objectionable acids than any other method. Points Necessary for Successful Cof-fee-making First. Use good blend coffee. Second. Grind fresh each day. Third. Use fresh water just after ft comes to a boll. Water left to boll loses much of Its naturul gases und makes a Dat-tastlng coffee. lourth. Keep coffee pot Immaculate J clean. Many complaints about coffee in win r are frequently due to tho fact that J?tin- Source' of water reservoir or J5tea freezes over, preventing free circulation of air in water. Second. Housewife falls to allow if L,n.BI)lRnt t0,run a sufficient length ?n lme to ,dlserd water that has been id house pipes all night. These pipes rL ?r8 l ,eM Prous nnl absorb it i. ' ,VBiag. wnte1, tter "as lost Th. ii, 8 HB By l0n6 "oiling, f. 1 imiIk or cream "ed in our cof. mLSSZ or ra8rs .the iua,lty of thi raay is pasteurized to ellmlnato bac if at all. A.K.N. BUTTER Philadelphia wives and mothers aro good housekeepers good judges of things to eat It waa theso good iudces of butter who told our dealers that A. K. N. is "Philadelphia's Finest Butter." Insist oh A. K. N. at your dealer's. H. R. AIKEN Wholesale Butter, Eggs, Margarines 138 N. Delaware Ave., rhlla. A Scholar Today A Furrier Tomorrow Tho Fur Industrial School of Philadelphia is more than a more college, it is an institution. Here a young man can becomp proficient in one of America's most remunerative trades in a very short while. Ask a Furrier what he earns? Then write for enrollment blank. , Jacques Ferber Urcretarr 1316 Walnut St. This Ut the fourth of a periea published and copyrighted by the Fur industrial School of Philadelphia in the interest of "KolrtlnjF better workmanship aid Americanising a worthy trade 'tl tlie Perfectly Loned CORSET ybursfbrthe Asking WEAR LA RESISTA and keep your figure young. SPIRABONE stays placed at the hip, combined with LA RESISTA designing, mold tho figure and create, as well as preserve, exquisite lines of Youth and Style. Adaptable to any typo of Figure Bade Laco, Front Lace, $4.50, $5,00, $7.50 and up Spirabono obtainable only in La Reiitta PERSONAL SERVICE Private corietterea tit all La RetUta conett. Thli icrvice ia Identical with the penonal aervlce at out Fifth Annual Salon In New York and can be obtained at STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER And all fint-clan merchants WHAT age would you like to bo if you could stay there always? Many women seem to be in favor of sixteen, although no matter how many different ages thero are represented when you nsk that question the answer is nearly always n chorus "Just the age I am now." Wo don't know whether there's any ideal age or not, but we usually like "this" one pretty well. Hut on artint, an English one, too. has on- nAimfirf rnnc men? is an uicui mtu. More than that, ho has announced that this Ideal age is not sixteen, noc twentv-one. not "twenty-odd." or even thirty, but forty I, isn't tnat a shock r nero we ve been all theso centuries, thinking that if a girl wasn't married at least live years before she reached forty sho might just as well buy herself a cat and be irln tn llko tea. "She is cood-looklng," wo have admitted, referring to one of our "older" friends. "Jjnc noids ner nge very well you know she's easily forty.". We've had so many jokes about fair, fat and forty, the forty-year-old double chin, and one cynic has even gone so far as to remark that when a woman wears pink it's a sure sign that she's either in love or forty. If we're younger than the unfortunate who has "crossed the line," we gigglo and say, "Well; when I' am her nge, I certainly will havo more sense than to dress ns if I were still twenty." If we're ojder we wiille tolerantly even while we exclaim, "Why, she's nil of forty; she ought to know better than that." We all have our little criticisms to offer of the woman who is forty. And when we're forty ourselves? Why, then we feel just exactly thc same ns we did when we were only thirty-nine! And we wish thnt people wouldn't innko so much fuss over a 306 days' difference. BUT along comes this pleasant artist gentleman and remarks that the woman of forty need not "glvo up ull hope" (what a dlssgrccable phrase that v BdSfl tPtAMOA IWHNITUi roustt I He JWU.W- FolUhliic Dose Quickly Piano Polish Thla preparation baa been used for over SO years on the blarhtat- J crmrte PIANOS and ,VUcrsi KURNrrunn and u the VAnNISII and pre vent It turntne blue. It product a luatrellKe newwitn the ullirbt. ?t effort. Try It on your AUTOMOBILE. 50c Can: 3 Cans, SI, Postpaid NF.W I'lANOS. SIDft to (950 NKW rUVYEKS, S425 to SZtCO mmoviNcm SS8-S3S.S4e-S42-SU.Sta ' NORTH OTII Sr. is when it is used in that sense I It takes for granted so officiously that all she bos been doing before that is hoping that somebody would marry her). He declares that the woman of forty just simply eclipses all her sisters of various teens or twenties, or thirties. The woman of forty, he says, is at tho per fection of her beanty and has attained n settled mentality which she did not possess before. "At forty she is an Ideal companion, pieasantiy matured, tolerant ana under standing. Only the ignoramuses in life fiud joy in the society of young girls or undeveloped women." With this somewhat swcenlne statement, he com pletely reverses matters. If this be comes tne tact, we will bnvo the young gins or next year striving to acquire tne poise, the manner and the intelligent understanding of tho woman of forty. And, oh, how many women of forty will be relieved to cut away the make-nn box, the skillful hairdresser and tho hard at "that poor old Miss SsmB,'- j. cause she was nil of forty and wanted, ') so badly to bo only thirty, 70a vrfco.hawer : been afraid to hobnob with forty-yen'-.,! nlclx fnp fear of bcin thoUKht tim HIM ' ' age, had better watch out fotf ye .J " - A selves' t Some of theso "old maids0 wWA .- U& be thought more charming ,thaa yM'r ;" -ia "Jf you don't watcu out!" ' -,(! -, But how do yon feel abont It, rim ; who laugh, you who scorn nnd wnw ' . h tolerate, aa well as yon who turn ' ,.. reached this ago of forty? Do yoa thtafc, ', ,pr it is tho ideal age for a woman? I RELIEVES PAIN t..UI.l - ... AAmurlrAia I Poiltlveljr excel all competltena-tW i fact, baa none. WIRT ELECTRIC HEATING PAD ii V' Sim 11 r- o reUevea pain In manner far auperlor to the cumber- ome hot- water bottle. No possibility ot ihock. San-' ltary waahable aup-on covrr. V any cur rent, &5M$c mnmtmwi w & youthful clothes with which they have t c. , n j.. c-l - ' been trying to make themselves look I standard tlCCtnC OOppiy t.O nun ineir age ; 1 l "a . I9tn etracc, amuat.. a-a. You young girls who have lauehed so D " P '0 S.ZCor. 60Ti S IVfARKET " FRIDAY AND SATURDAY OJUR GROSS PROFIT 5 TO 10 NOT 00 WHAT ABB YOU PAVINOf Always Plenty tor Everybody Everything In Saleable Sizes Another Big BEEF Sale! 1Mb Itoaat (any cat) 2"o Hambnre Steak ......,,. ISo Chuck Itoaet (beat onta) lSolnoUr or Croaa Cuta...........ao jan llolled Pot Boast ISolSUwInr Beef (brlabat) ......JSo All Kind STEAK MEATS, 28c lb. HAMS AT COST! Keamlar llama (8 to 12 lb.) . ..30o Sklnbaek Dams (7 to 10 lb.).. 30c Cottar Hama (small) 36c 1'lonlo Hams (4 to 8 lb.) 20o YEARLING CHEAP! Phonldem Tearilnr ......... tto French YearUna; Chovs. ...... 83o lcs Yearllnf .........SSo lAn Yearllnr Chaps. ....... .SSo PORK at ONE CENT a Pound PROFIT I'resh Hams (whole or cut) .30o lb. I Wlioulder Pork (plenlo style)... Slo Shoulder Pork (city dressed) .. ,27o Presh Sausaro lie LOIN PORK ROAST (Best Cuts), 25d lb. ONE CENT BARGAINS Boneless Bscon L'Solh. Pure Leaf Lurd 24c lb. Table Butter (80c hind) 75o POULTRY tJNDERPRICED Boasting; Chickens 40o Htewlnc Chickens 3j0 Oleomarrartne ............. ,40o Nut Marg-arlne 30e Strictly Vaa at 0 cents a prA(:f Our CO a dor. in Fresh Laid -ggS L dozen Trimi prfceOaiC cartons V; i'-mtmmimmimmmaammmaitmmm 9 1 1 'JssbbbbbbbbbbbI I V- --l ' rfiiainair rii m nrnni; ir 1 i m i i"inriiuinaim n l"i """" o" Wiiirfw i nwi ' i n i ini'w p.'jji n i tonrum "" mbmii iujmi 'ivBi f 1919. By H. O. WILBUR & SONS, INC., PhiU. Pa. jw IT HaaaalaHka 1 JaBBBBaaLW LbbbbbbbbbbIk CsmI 4 4.HaW f sVJj-3 r bbLbbbV B'jRHfvaC Mt'- Z VaH U LaV aaaaaLaBBKvvJsBBBBBBflk'm. Lbbbbbbbbbbbbbb lf'J iJr i? ViTSsbbbbbbbt T MV V EV v 9 r HH l Lv la I ml m 3 So Near and Yet 5SiifAP,7u?Iea5 ?ou lculriy ask your dealer for Wilburbuds, the only genuine Chocolate Buds. No other w.wuu.iC oniectipn compares or begins to equal these delicious morsels of Solirl Vn.ii. n i.. tm wholesome and pure, and entirely free from any substance that might injure the digestion of the young. Safeguard yourself and your children by always asking for the genuine article. b t:.&: " ..v. v .tX5tf r mhUi-L ' -)a('"''' ' ' Lhi-,,,..,. .. .......innah lliijhnrii n ft--- ;,, y s . Wilb af af urbuds The Only Genuine Chocolatt2 DVDS M Trad 1 '. -. 'ft ......Vj'J.n i i :r st' m , . V! ,K....,.i.''t-ivr w Matk.IU.U.StlVt.6f: Waar ., ii t; 1 i f i MA pm iijWiiifi- ruftimrrwn t mm Al. 'ii'-? ,.-.1 C 1-tl' C .y&. .1 .V I .. 'L!iX .fvtyl