Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, November 24, 1921, Night Extra, Page 11, Image 11

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPBlA, THttK&DAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1021
11
DREAMLAND
ADVENTURES
Dame Instinct
nr paddy
i
Jflcfc and Janet meet a queer little
M wemfl Me weeds. She it
name Instinct, godmother te the
birds Md leasts. They coma across
a fitrce-teokine bear, whose cots are
hetti b'J Oame Instinct.
CHAPTER IV
The Brown Bear's Lessen
THE blc brown bear reaxtd up en
hl hind Ukb. He Wiped In aston
ishment at Dams Instinct, who Imi
boxed his card. The little old woman
looked se small bfMdft him that Jack
nnd Janet expected te see him grab
Itr and snap her head off.
But the big brown bear did nothing
of th "Ort. He shivered and shook,
lust like a school boy who waa ex
pectin; a thrashing.
"Don't yen knew better than te be
rude te persona you meet In the
weeds " demanded Dame Instinct.
"j.y.y-.ves, m-m-m-ma'm," gasped
fhe blR brown bear. Btammcrlng werse
tbnn Perky ftqulrrel had done.
Dame Instinct looked him ever crltl.
csll.v, her ejes showing ehe waiin't
pla'fd.
"Why aren t you fatter?" she
thrilled at him. "Don't you knew
winter is clese at hand and you will
tare te go te sleep nnd live en your
fat until spring?"
"i'-yy-yyes, m-m-mn m," stam
mered the brown bear, then he looked
wlitfullr at .lack and Janet and licked
bis chops. "Perhaps If I had a nice
boy or girl te eat I would get fat."
Ills hungry glances made Jack and
Janet creep. They didn't want te make
that big brown bear fat. Dame In
stinct's next words made them feel
mere comfortable.
"Nonsense." she said. "These are
my helpers nnd you cen't cat them.
They would Hnulrni se hard Inside of
jeu they would give you a stomach
ache. Vliat jeu need Is plenty of
acorns. If you were net se lazy you
euld find plenty of them. The next
Tallev Is leaded with them. Yeu go
ever there and cnt until you can cat
no mere."
"T-t-t-thank you, m-m-m-ma am,
mumbled the bear ns If anxious te get'
away. "I'll K right ever there and
begin eating at once."
But Dame Instinct was net yet
through with him.
"Walt a minute," hhe said. "Hare
veu found a. cave yet for your winter
nap?"
"N'.n-n-no. I haven't had time te
leek for one," mumbled the brown bear,
hanging his head ns if much ashamed
of himself.
"What?" shrilled Dame Instinct In
a high voice. "Didn't I tell you last
eek te find a cave nnd make It snug
for veur long nap? Old Man Winter
villi 'be prowling nreund here before wc
knew It. Hew dare you disobey me?
Put your head down here se I can box
jour cars."
The bear towered se high above little
Dime Instinct he could have kept his
ears from being boxed by simply hold
ing his head high, nc seemed In
great fear of little Dume Instinct, how
ever, ns he held his head low. Slap,
alap, slap, slap! He hnd" his cars
leundly boxed.
"New be off with you te find a cave,
and I'll Ke alone with you te see that
you de it," snld Dnme Instinct climbing
back with Jack and Janet, who stilt
sat In the whecllcss auto.
The humbled bear set off en a run
te find the cave. Itigbt behind him
hopped the whec'.lera auto.
The benr raced through the weeds
until he came te a rocky hill. Over
this rocky hill he ran as fast as he
could, poking hla nose into every nook
and cranny among the rocks. At last
he found the opening into a cave. He
After-Dinner Tricks
I. ' j
Ne. 1G A Broken Match Itistercd
A match is wrapped in a handker
chief rtnd I hen broken; opening th3
handkerchief, the match drops out un un
Lreken. Anether mntch it) previously run
ealcd in the rent of the handkerchief.
It is this mntch thaf Is broken through
the folds of the cloth, hence the mar mar
vcleua resternticn.
Te repent the trick, using any hnnd
kerchief, the performer holds tlie cloth
te a spectator s ear, se that, he can ac
tually hear the match blng broken,
yet the restoration Is again mcom mcem
plished. The match Is net really broken. Tht
performer merely snaps his finger mill
with his thumb nail. The sound exactly
rewmblcs the breaking of a mntch, and
will deceive the keenest observer.
Copyright, 10S1, bu rulUe Lttleir Company
pushed Inside nnd found a snug, dry
chamber.
"Is this geed enough, sweet Dame
Instinct?" he nkrd very humbly.
"Humph! It will de," suiil Dame
Instinct. "New you mnke u weft bed
of boughs nnd brnnchen, niiil when j en
have done that you can go leek for
acorns te grew fat en.' Hut remember
I'll be back this wny In a day or
two, and if I find your bed isn't mnde,
and that you haven't put en fat, I'll
box your cars and spunk you besides.
Come, my helpers."
(Away flew the vthcclless auto, car
rying Jack and Janet te meet ether
queer godchildren of Dame Instinct.)
THE DAILY NOVELETTE
AUNT JINNY'S THANKSGIVING
LEGACY
By Jehn Dawsen
"Twrisa vjneixiA bassutt,
1V1 Wareham read, l'etunket." Aunt
Jinny turned the envelope ever and ever
nnd ii pslde down. Frem whom oeuld It
be? She couldn't read the postmark
because it was blurred nnd t-he didn't
recognize the writing. Aunt Jinny hud
no correspondents
Slowly she ripped the tlnp with an
inserted hairpin, took out tliei folded
paper within: opened It up. letting fnll
n thin hlun oblenc nlln: mid rend. Then
Mie gnsped and sat down suddenly in
the old rocker which fertunntcly hap
pened te be behind her. took off iter
snectacles and rubbed them, replaced
them and rend again.
"Inclesed please nnd my personal
cheek for 51000. It is yours te use
provided you bend me no thanks and
ask me no questions.
"Yours very truly.
"LEMUEL liASSETT."
This was the communication from her
relllng-in-wcnlth third cousin twice
removed who lived at Cherry Tep Hill
ever in Tuckcrten, whom hhe had net
met since the day of his wlfe's funeral
seme twenty years age when she was
the only ene who could comfort his
threo lltt'.c children left motherless
Why should he de this thing?
Puritanically, Aunt Jinny felt lm-
nelled te send the check back te its
owner as something te which she had
no conceivable right. Uuen, little by
,., ... . ,1
nine, ucr imagination, long ennucu neu
confined by n $."00 a. yenr Income, be
gan te expand within her. The things
she could de with $1000!
There was her nephew Harry strug
gling along with n large family nnd
a sick wife; there wns Cousin Lctty,
another peer relation llke herself, only
hopelessly crippled with rheumatism :
there were the destitute families down
In the hellAw whose men were out of
work ; there was the newsboy, Dick :
eh. there were se many that she could
help with that thousand dollars.
Aunt Jinny decided te keep the
rlw-k.
She let no (linn slip nwny n,fler her
ilrolfcien. That er,v afternoen1, In her
faded old bonnet nnd rusty coal, she set
rut for the little bank downtown, ear
ning high hop., n beating heart, and
I In her worn reticule a $1000 check
mm a carefully thought out list.
Thete was te be a cheap automobile
nnd a year's supply of oenl for Harry
and n new cook stove for nis wife; for
Cousin I.ctty a roll-out chnir nnd some
warm tiudcrgiirmpitts; for Dick, the
tewbbey, an nil paid up ceurfe at busi
ness college; for the three families in
the Hellew, three Thanksgiving dinners
ordered. And there were ether leaser
Lcnellclarles.
That evening Aunt Jinny rank once
niore Inte the old rocker, tired but
happy. All she hnd left te show of her
munificent check was a crumpled list
with every item scratched. Oh, yea,
she had also the memory of many ra
diant, faces, 'many protesting thanks,
nnd the tears in Cousin Lctty's old and
faded eyes.
Suddenly Aunt Jinny sat tipTlght.
Just suppose there had been some mis
take! Suppese the check hnd ranlly
been Intended for seme one cite and
had been mistakenly addressed te her!
An unsual sound breke In upon Aunt
Jinny's frightened reflections. Down
the lonely read a car was slowly com
ing, feeling Its wny. It drew up In
front of the house. It stepped.
A moment Inter an unmistakably mas
culine step sounded en the tiny perch
and the front deer reverberated with u
determined knock.
With the expression en her fnce of
one who gees te meet n dreaded if
deserved Nemesis. Aunt Jinny bravely
rose and turned the knob. Yes. It wns
Lemuel Hnssctt, for all his fur coat
swallowed hlni up completely.
"Miss er Virginia Bassctt?" he
wanted te knew. "I want te talk with
you."
A moment later nnd Aunt Jinny wns
sitting opposite him much ns a crlminnl
faces his judge. There was an awk
ward pause. Then, after a prelim
inary clenring of his threat, Lemuel
began :
"I I had hardly expected te call upon
,ou se Koen. But, well, you forced me
te II. This er well, this is the hew
of it: I gave the bank Instructions te
let me knew when you cashed your
check. I had a young fellow hired te
keep tab en hew you spent it. I hud
him engaged indefinitely a week, a
month, n year. As it was well, you
certainly gave him a busy day!" I.am
uel paused and chuckled.
Aunt Jinny relaxed. It wasn't as
had as she had feared. Then she arose,
Atnrtled. Fer the mini hnd risen, tee,
and was standing ever her.
"Listen, Jinny," he began gently. "It
came te me the ether dav that 1 was
getting en in years and that I hnd a
darn let of money, with no one' te help
me spend it. My boys ere well fixed,
and nlwnys will be. I was thinking
ever the women I knew nnd I remem
bered you hew geed and gentle veu
were with the children the day 'mv
wife was buried. I said te myself.
'There's a tine woman for you, Lem
uel!' Then I wondered about the
money.
"Hew would you handle it if I rent
first? And I decided te test you. That
explains the check. And why, Jinny,
you didn't spend n single pennv for
yourself! I wnnt you te marrv me.
Maybe we're tee old te talk 'about
love "
He paused at the leek in Aunt
Jinny's eyes. "Maybe maybe net,'
she murmured.
KffiffiffiffiffiraffiraffiffiHW
i ;
5 i
I A
The Puzzled Superintendent
Suddenly Thought of
"LEDGERGRAMS"
and he get what he wanted.
If you, tee, need an intelligent, skilled,
experienced electrician, machinist, plumber,
painter, tailor, cook, knitter, operator or ether
skilled labor, a LEDGERGRAM will carry your
rush message.
Many efficient people are waiting en the
receiving end of LEDGERGRAMS these tiny,
inexpensive classified ads, se potent with pulling
power.
The quarter-million daily circulation of the
. Public Ledger gives you almost instant commu
nication with THE RIGHT KIND of people.
Phene your message NOW te our Classified
Advertising Department. Bill will be mailed
later.
Bell Walnut 3000
Keystone Main 1601
iHlSiffl&lJOTJi
WANAMAKER'S
DOWN STAIRS STORE
WANAMAKER'S
New Straight Ahead for Christmas
Wanamaker' s Down Stairs Stere
Charming New Dresses
$15, $18.75, $19.25
A number of sample- dresses are obtainable at these prices and
each one is a prize. There nre tricetines and Peiret twills, embroid
ered, beaded or trimmed with heavy black braid.
Canten crepes, heavy Russian crepes and crepes de chine are used
ih the silk dresses. The excellence of the materials and the delightful
simplicity of the styles will recommend them te women who are par
ticular about their clothes.
Sizes for women and young women.
"Hundreds of Practical Frecks
at $5, $7.50 and $10
Fer business, shopping and afternoon wear there are many, many
frocks of serge, velour, jersey and tricetine, showing interesting atyle
variety. Among them are navy, brown, reindeer and henna.
(Mnrket)
$58.50 $25 $42.50 $65
Coats te Be Proud Of!
$25 te $75
This is, probably, the best assortment of geed Winter coats at
these prices that we have hnd since before the war. Materials are
warm and geed, furs arc lovely and linings are harmonious. It seems
as if there is no limit te the styles from which one may cheese.
Coats With or Without Fur at $25
Velour, Belivia nnd pole coats are in tailored, sports, wrap-like
and fur-trimmed models. Beaver-dyed ceney is generously used en
many and all arc lined throughout with silk.
The coat sketched is of silver-tip Belivia in blue or brown, with a
(lowered silk lining. It may be worn in Tuxedo style or closed.
There is an excellent group of coats without fur et $35.
Fur-Trimmed Coats at $39, $42.50 and $49
The furs include raccoon, Australian opossum and bcaver-dyed
ceney. Seme of the coats have cuffs and bands of fur as well as
cellnrs, nnd the fur is such geed quality, glistening with health and in
prime condition.
A model at $42.50 is sketched with a cellar of particularly pretty
Australian opossum. The material is belivia, in blue, brown or grouse.
The coat has an interesting back and a plain silk lining.
Beautiful Furs en Unusual Coats at $58.50
Nutria, Australian opossum, skunk-dyed opossum, mole, black
w elf and gray wolf are generously used en coats that are distinctive
in themselves by reason of style, material and tailoring. Materials
are various belivias of line quality and linings are all delightful silks.
Wraps, Capes and Coats of Distinction
$55 te $75
Beaver, mole, nutria, Australian opossum and wolf are lux
uriously used, and one notices the beautiful, linings. Considering the
furs, the materials, the linings and the careful finish, 'the prices are
little short of amazing.
A charming cape at $65 is sketched. It is of soft, close belivia in
navy or black, trimmed with mole and lined with brocaded crepe.
(Market)
Women's Fine Capeskin Gloves
of Christmas-Gift Quality
Of unusually soft and pliant Seuth African capeskin these
gloves arc in the colors and styles that women like best. All are
washable, of course.
$2.85 pair for strap-wrist gloves in tan, brown, beaver and black.
$4.50 for strap-wrist gloves, with gauntlet cufTs, in tan, brown,
mode, gray nnd pearl white.
$4.50 for 8-button length gloves in mode, champagne, gray, tan
and brown.
$5 for 12-button length in tan, brown, mode, gray nnd cham
pagne. Seme in meusquetairc style.
(Central)
Seft White Blankets, $7. SO Pair
Best blanket value wc remember in the last ten years or se!
Splendidly warm and firm blankets with a hundred per cent
wool in the filling are 72x82 inches. They have pink or blue
striped borders.
(Central)
A Trim Feet and a Well
Turned Ankle
have never been of greater importance te the feminine
appearance than they are today and never easier te
achieve.
Well-cut, well-designed footwear can new be had
in great variety at a very moderate price in Wana
maker's Down Stairs Stere. Pumps and slippers, for
daytime or evening, ax-e te be had in
9 Different Styles at $9.90
Silver-cloth slippers, with one strap and a silver-finished
button, have high or baby French heels.
Black satin slippers, with baby French heels, have one
strap or are perfectly pluin.
Tan or black calfskin one-strap pumps have baby French
liccls. The tan ones can also be had with high French heels.
Plain tan calfskin pumps have baby French heels.
One strap pumps of black patent leather have many per
forations nnd baby French heels,
Special for Children $2.90
Scheel shoes of sturdy tan or black leather are made
with wide, comfortable tees anl have soles that will give
satisfactory service. Sizes fi te 2 in tan; sizes 8M, te 2 in
D'HCK' Ohitnat)
f ET'S make our lUts.
- Let's start shopping
early se thaf we shall have
plenty of time te cheese
the gift which will' best
please 'each one of our
friends. Let's make this the
happiest Christmas we
have ever had.
Wanamaker's Down
Stairs Stere is brimming
ever with Wanamaker
merchandise of guaranteed
quality at its every-day-in-the-year
fair low prices.
(Ceratral lisle
Oppertwies
for CMstaas
Bleemer Dresses
$2.25 and $3
Solid colors and checks attrac
tively trimmed with piping, a bit
of black Btitching or smocking.
Sizes 6 te 10 years.
Women's Silk Stockings
$1.25
All-silk with mercerized tops
and soles and seamed backs.
Black, navy, cordovan, gray and
bronze. All regular sizes.
Women's Fabric Gloves
75c, $1 and $1.25
76c for lisle lined silk gleves
in 2-clasp style. Brown, beaver
and gray in all sizes; black-and-white
and nil-black up te 6Vi.
$1 for 8-button chamois lisle
gloves in white, mode, tobacco
brown, champagne, grouse, gray
and black.
$1.25 for imported strap-Wrist
duplex chamois lisle gloves in
white only.
Women's and Children's
Ribbed Underwear
40c each for long-sleeved vests
and ankle-length pants of finely
ribbed white cotton. Sizes 2 te 12
years.
65c for women's combination
suits, ankle length and with
Dutch neck and elbow sleeves or
low neck without sleeves. Slight
"seconds."
Women's Gift Underclothes
50c and 85c
50c for striped fiannclet short
petticoats with scalloped edges.
50c for satin and crcpe de
chine boudoir caps in dainty
colors, attractively trimmed.
85c for heavier striped flannelct
short petticoats.
85c for white seersucker
bloomers.
85c for flesh or white sateen
bloomers.
85c for nainsoek nightgowns,
square necked and trimmed with
hemstitching and lace.
Four-in-Hand Neckties. 35c
Rich, dark colors or some a bit
gayer. Pretty patterns te suit
the discriminating buyer!
13th Street Aisle
Opportunities
Women's Corset Girdles
$1 and $1.50
Really most comfortable are
these combinations of elastic and
brocade or ceutil. Just enough
for support and net enough te
hamper one's most strenuous
avocations!
Clarien Records, 55c
Hear Irving Kaufman sing
"Tuck Me te Sleep in My Old
Tucky Heme." There's a very
geed fox trot en the ether side.
Novelty Girdles
50c and $1
Weeden bead, celluloid and
celluleid-and-mctal in pretty color,
combinations.
Nothing Se Dear te a
Little Girl's Heart as
a Set of Furs!
Hew her eyes would shine nnd
little hands happily pet the soft
fur if seme one should give her
such a set as the one sketched!
It is of squirrel at $17.50.
White ceney sets are $3 te $8.
Gray ceney sets are $3.50 te
?10.
Silver coney sets are $12.50.
Squirrel sets are $8.50 te $50.
Summer ermine sets arctf ?0 te
$27.50.
Natural raccoon sets are $30.
Nutria sets are $25 and $30;
mole sets are $30 and beaver sets
are $50.
Women's Smart Scarfs
Animal or lined scarfs of fox
in taupe, brown or black are $25
te $40.
(Market) ,
FOR MEN
100 All-Weel Twe-Trouser Suits, $30
100 All-Weel Suits, $18.50
Men who knew geed cloth when they feel it and
appreciate geed tailoring when they see it will be well
pleased with these suits. It's like putting money back into
your pocket, sir, te get all-wool Wanamaker suits at such
prices.
These splendid suits were marked down from our own
stocks because there is net every size in each style.
At $30 these remarkable two-trouser suits of fancy
cheviets and oxford suitings, are in semi-conservative
styles. Sizes 34 te 40 in the group.
At $18.50 men's and young men's suits of fine fancy
cheviets in gray and brown mixtures. Sizes 34 te 42.
(Onllrrr, Mnrket)
Specially Priced Gloves for Men
In the Gallery Gleve Shep
At $1.50 duplex chamois lisle gloves in gray and buck color;
in gray with black embroidered backs, $1.65.
At $1.85 capeskin gloves in dark tan shades are eutscam sewn
and have spearpeint backs.
At $2.85 gray mocha glevc3, eutseam sewn, have plain backs.
Second selection of leather.
$2.85 also for fine buckskin gloves, eutscam sewn, with embroid
ered backs.
$2.85 for light-weight Seuth African capeskin gloves in dark
shades of tan, eutseam sewn, with spearpeint backs. (Washable)
(tiallery. Market)
Woven Madras Shirts, $1.85
It's an occasion worth taking immediate advantage of if you need
shirts, men!
Unusually fine patterns in blue, green, lavender and black stripes
of various sizes en white grounds.
Sterling Silver Belt Buckles, $1 te $3.50
Engine-turned or hammered silver buckles of the kind that men
really like. They make fine gifts.
Geed leather belts te wear them with are in brown, tan or black
at 50c te $1.50.
((.tiller?, Mnrket)
1 i "
$3
$10.75
$23.50
lime
Ne Scheel and a Fine
te Outfit the Girls Tomorrow
i Mothers and daughters will find the Down Stairs Junier Stere
brimming with pretty frocks, warm coats and all the clothes a school
girl needs. Prices are much lower than they have been in many
seasons, low enough te make home hewing a questionable economy.
Tub Frecks Start at $1
and there is a charming assortment of clear-colored gingham dresses
i T. er (jre?sP betwcen $1 and $10. The little suspender dress
sketched is of club-checked gingham in brown, green and blue with
a plain-colored chambray waist. Sizes 8 te 14 at $3.
Serge Dresses for Warmth
Navy blue serges are bnghtrned with gay embreiderv, appliqued
medallions of orange or red velour, or trimmings of braid. Some
nave pongee guimpes.
Girls' sizes are $7.50 te $15; junior sizes, $10.7e te $23.50.
And What Excellent Coats A Geed
Medel at $10.75
is of uncut Belivia or heavy coating in blue or brown. It has a soft
fur cellar, is lined throughout, and it will fit girls of 10 te 14
(bkotcned.)
With an Australian Opossum Cellar at $18.75
A heavy-weight snug little coat of Copenhagen or brown coating
is topped with this fascinating cellar. Sizes 7 te 10 jears
At $20 and $23.50
$20 for a geed sports coat of navy or brown velour with an
inverted pleat down the back, raglan shoulders and a narrow belt
lined throughout; sizes 14 te 16.
$23.50 for the blouse-hack coat sketched for junior girls. It is
lit Size's lTte1 Hi a bcfnerette cellar an(1 lind therugh-
(Market)
A Flurry of
Christmas Handkerchiefs
Prices are lower than theVe been for a long time, which
: ","""." -"-""a siuic 1-. pure linen or silk
in quality is impossible.
Fer Women
Madeira handkerchiefs, e.k.
Hand-embroidered handkerchiefs, ejc te $1.
.- , r LIoreeroa iiaiulkeruliiefs, seme
2ec and 35c.
Colored border handkerchief?, wonderful
UilU OUI'.
a mistake
tape borders,
assortment, 25c
Lace-trimmed handkerchiefs, 25c.
i ntiuieii naiidKcrcniels, lue and 25c each.
Plain white linen handkerchiefs., 15c und 25c each
Fer Men
P1jili white lincn handkerchiefs,
uui uiiu iuc eaen.
-ec und 50c; extra size,
initialed nandkerchiefs, 35c and 50c
t Colored border handkerchiefs, 75c and $1.
Fer Beys and Girls
Beys' silk handkerchiefs with colored borders. "0c
Children's linen handkerchiefs with nursery
embroidered, 18c each or 05c for a box of three X
(('mitral)
each,
figures
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