; - 'f 'A' ' $v 7n'' w W S'N 'l V'' '6 ILi vr- i.- v J 3 M - . ' w$j$ i- ..irt.' .itf ' ; ftftt0 e Bbss or a Raise By J. P. McEVOY , a .i,1 vfaht fc Di.n I or you'll be. corapollfd to 'K i on h m nml leave xno qora t ffl! nn Its back you fn' .hMMcd voiir fppfcn to your M ei.y,. to -hen you jo tt ": rJS KH? ,0? "j1 begin to wonder bow K k OP "uddwly nml says briw- 'W well, well, what is it, what Ito-i1' . .m.,1 morning. mornlnj, good morning. (Turn. Br I ctn t0 w0 you nboUt Borae" WrN. whftt l8 U? (Muses.) Ye, Johnson has been here longer nnd so ha WlnHcr. and Urnlmm, too, and Smith. You knbw I ouKhtn t to let one of them go when they vc been here longer than you. (I'Cts that dink In. By that time you ve glvon' up nil hopea for a raise and you are concentrating on keeping the old Job at any price and tho boss w 11 ,0 'ho old fox. null, tr e to (Continue write, mx"'.' well, you aeo I've been here .11 thinking, maybe, that mayhe .". ..,n nu dm I'vt been here time now, and I thought that for J Vf.ibe what? Maybe what? I'm awful Jt "this T morning. (He known what "& trying to say, all right enough.) 1 hougbt maybe ' well, you ,'. like this. I've boon hero for VJ time now and I thought that ).er SSI Ewbe you'd ha willing to to SV well, willing to sorter - - T .a l.l .! . BIAtMA MAWS gffttr (dcsperswiy; " " ".. ." nny. t . mnnM. i. w It? ill's slmot mlrnculouH how they can I' " .v . ..& ..MatlmAn It's (vtant matt things oui w i"".v. ... .,.... ":". k...lnac. hrnltli. I "yei, that's the Idea-yon see I've kJn net for 80mc tim( now (You Cjn to ramble again, but he cuta you SrSiort. He Is beginning to realize tht you have been here for some foTand jou sorter ) Just because you've been around hero (of tome time, do you think that en Hilts you to a raise? I thought we ir paying y" n "lary not n Pcn- "?i .. ... U' llttn tlilo T'tro nr. vi. you sec " "" "". " . Jlrre sorter thought Oh. you've K thought? Vel. IWe Hortcr iJmnht too. In fact, I've been sorter ' ITou start violently Cuta? Maybe I'll be lucky ,0 kcc'1 tll.c ob l got lot Contlmfe "Yel.; I sorter thought I'd 1t to trim the payroll down. (Suddenly) How long nave you ocen lire now, anywny. iwojcmo. Oh, only two years. ioi very long. fijicUEES GALLERIES 1507 Wnlnut 8t. Nfiv Klclilnc" hr W.UEHINKEY and TROYE KINNEY rfcttiNos itnsToriKD For tired aching feet One or two teaspoonf uls in a foot-tub of water. Just let thefeet rest in the solu tion for a few minutes. It relieves Iho soreness, stops the burning, softens the callouses. Trr'it. Drug and Dcp't stores, 15c, 85c, 65c $1.25. SylphoJathal Permtrly called Xnlpho-Nmpthol 8o you sec If you insist upon having n raise I'm, nfrald I'll be compelled to Well suppose wo let It ride as It la for' ii While, huh auppose we do, huh? AH right, I'll see about it. (To sec retary). Hrlng me the payroll. (To you. I guesathnt'll bo all.) ,Krer thank you, thank you (You didn't get the raise, but you've Btlll gqt the Job, you hope). HOLD-UP "VICTIMS" HELD Police Suspicious When They Tell Conflicting' Stories Thrilling tales of two hold-ups which wcro told tho police today by Krbano Mansion and Joseph Lanicus resulted in tho arrest of tho supposed victims. Samlon, who lives at Sixtieth street nnd Lansdowne avenue, snid three men held him up with revolvers at 8lxty lifth street and Hacrford avenue and robbed him of $1000. Then, according to Sanslon, they beat him with the butt end of revolvers and threw him in the btrcet. Sanslon sold he fired several shots after them. Ho rclatAl this tale to police of tho mxty-flrat nnd ThompHin streets sta tion. Dut tacb tlmt he told the story it had variations, so the police Instead of huntlnjf for bandits held Sanslon on tho charge of carrying concealed dadly weapons. Lanlcus, who Jives at Sixty-second nnd Itncc streets, want to the Mlseri- (ordln Hospital suffering from two light millet, wouniis. ut toki pnyncians ne had been held up nnd robbed with Sanslon, but later said the robbery took flncc near Sixtieth And I'lne street. Police detained Lanicus after he had been treated. WHY DO YOU CODDLE CORNS? A SimpU Touch Cmn &4 Than and At Ones Why pare ft corn and keep it? Why pad it and let it remain? Or why treat it in old ways, harsh, crude and uncertain? Millions have found a new way. It is Blue-jay the plaster or tho A touch applies it, and tho liquid. pain stops instantly. Then the whole corn quickly loosens and comes out. The way is gentle, scientific, sure. A famous expert evolved . A world-famed surgical dressing house produces it. In it freeing thousands of people why not jiom? Try it on one corn and you will always let it end yours, Start tonight. Your druggist has Liquid or Platter Blu eiay ' Stops Pala Instantly Ends Corns Quickly Old Time Prices AT THE MARKET ST. BEEF CO. AITV Legs of Yearling Lamb. . istWsV 4 VI I I Fresh Hams fall sizes) . . M U Legs of Yearling Lamb . . Fresh Hams (all sizes) . . hDCCCCII k'n of Pork for Roasting UltCdvELU Fresh Country Sausage. . C lb. City Dressed Shoulders of Pork 15c lb. Lean Picnic Shoulders, any size. .12V2C lb. Regular or Skinback Hams 25c lb, Own Make Sauer Kraut, 10c Quart City Dressed Spare Ribs.. 10c lb. Best Country Scrapple, 3 lbs. for 25c Half Smokes or Ham and Boef Bologna 12'ic lb. Breast of Lamb, 3 lbs. for. . ,10c Fresh Ground Hamburg. 12'je lb. Sugar-cured Corned Beef, 12'2clb X.-L. Oleomargarine, 3 lbs for 50e Lean Boneless Bacon 25c lb. Finest Creamery Butter in -lb. prints, 45c lb. ; MARKET ST. BEEF CO. !i 5221-23-25 Market St. 5939 Market St. I ' KtortH niirn 7 ISO A. M. rtndr to wult en triut. Cljino A .VIoHc ahon ' (mm,(lncludlnit WrdiifMlur). Krld nnd Hatorriar we are own until PiJO P. SI, New prices and Pierce-Arrow value )r Q 11 O T iercc-Jlrro The announcement of price reductions amounting on some models to $1000, must be of decided interest -to any man who considers 1 hat the engineers who are today responsible for Pierce Arrow mechanical fitness are the very ones who twenty years ago launched the car, and who have since developed it every step ofthe way; 1 1 hat three years ago these engineers produced the Dual Valve engine and made the strongest possible claims as to the power, flexibility and economy of that engine; That 6,000 uscrB have since tried the Dual Valve engine and their verdict justifies and upholds the engineers; That not content with this the engineers have improved and refined the Dual Valve engine in many ways, and that the designers have been skillful at expressing the power and elasticity of the car in the low graceful lines of its bodies. FOSS-HUGHES FowHughes Company list and Mwkct 5t Philadelphia Rending Lancaitor Wilmington Bethlehem t Philade near everybody eats COLONIAL ICE-CREAM "PHILADELPHIA 'S BEST" ivnww '.itjiv, :.'! V ice cream HEREVER people eat YY anywhere and ever3rwhere Phila delphia's fame has spread as the home of the nation's best ice cream. And in Philadelphia where people know good ice cream nearly everybody eats Colonial. Its rise in the popular favor of Philadelphians has been phenomenal. Unknown 18 months ago, today Colonial Ice Cream has more than a million friends and is welcomed daily in thousands of homes. This year, you and other Philadelphians will eat 15,000,000 quarts of Colonial Ice Cream. Stop and realize what that means! Sufficient to serve a dish of Colonial Ice Cream to every man and woman, youth and child in the United States. If this immense quantity were measured out into quart cartons and placed end to end, it would stretch 1500 miles a road of Colonial Ice Cream from Phila delphia to the Gulf of Mexico. To satisfy this craving for Philadelphia's Best ice cream, more than 3000 progressive merchants are always ready to serve you. Experience has taught them that Colonial is the purest, smoothest, creamiest and finest flavored ice cream in Philadelphia and that means in the whole country. The next time you want ice cream we suggest that you look for a Colonial sign and you will get "Philadelphia's Best. " AH! SO PURE jf Are You One of the 3,000 Dealers ? If you are not one of the 3000 Colonial Dealers we want to know why I Why shouldn't you double or even triple your sales as hundreds of Colonial Dealers have dono? Why do you pass up the busi ness of thousands of people who want Colonial Ice Cream and will buy no other? Why don't you benefit by the truthful, aggressive advertising Colonial Ice Cream is doing and will continue to do? Why do you put up with hap hazard deliveries when Colonial deliveries are as regular aa the sunrise? Why should you handicap your business when by simply writing or phoning us you can arrange to become a Colonial Dealer? Think. Then act wisely. Phone Market 5400 or Park 4701 COLONIAL EAT S0ME irvZSTti EVERY DAY A.1U WrhW ' ," ' :SI ?' a y ' p '& N ii i HI 1 8 m n l .'5 Mr, 4j $T r &H&Sto)'Wtt)'' &$f 'ifVjV kf. -k"v ,'Ut .ft'jWU .yfctft & n-A Stint'3.1j,(n M-v - J5?'4, WlvJfUtt?H .t&A.JVi.w iatW,' Ko.t&itdrtl jte-Jwu- ..A- m ""ir
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers