fii- ..'" "' V f; Va' JW. t i .l u TUVSJlflNG lBblO;X,BI)aBR-rPHIi;MLHIA, EBIPAY, PE0EMB15B 23, 1921 i .... i-a ItV A ' V FROM NOW ON By FRANK L. PACKARD (AVTIIdR OF "THE MIrXcLE MAN") Cevuriaht, lOtl, In) VubUe Ledger Cempanv nun iii:niNH thi: smnv .u Ilend'reen. whii hs , corns ud ,VJt fh Sum te manhneil In nn fn i 'feJ.ni or "hlrnnery, Is nerely temnteil 'KSmhl eniPler. lloekl Hkarian. ""K him le Pan rran-lree te KK 100 Mtf?.i llarllii K. Twleman in rtcoue rfc.t. th i money, only te flntl Hkarvan t,,,1.nt -two thuirs lo.de the nam MX Th.v learn laVe liaK taken tha ""Kfc an" Ml a trap for him.- from y. I eluilia b tiurBUiTd In a wild !jfeftebtl chaw. unit akuilis about the SKirn. neaffy (arlnr and ret-cod Jf rK bla thlrit Ih ditch water. At ?,?,V .umumbi! te, a (favor and la '!'' Viaiimiii. m a heHDlta I. There he i found J Joe narjan. a .lotecuye . who irl'f w foam , where His meney In hl.l- threu'ih whleh Henderiiun sets a Jail aenn liiiu.s Aft.. 1 .viii uniti! i ANJU HKHi: ITCONTINUKS nlVU jcnl Was It only five years T since lie lifi'l steed In the deck In tint courtroom, nnd the Jutlge had eon een ..nccd Iilm te live carY Tlie scene wis Vivid nnd distinct enough ! IJvcn the nics tlmt wwinncd the gulf between the new nnd then could net efface tlint scene, nor dim It, nor rob It of n single ttirk nnd naked detail. Tydcman had ten there Martin K. Tydemnn, that nrlnce of royal sports. Tydcman wen .bout tlie only matt In Unit courtroom whose prewmee had made him uneasy ; md set Tydcman, tee, was the only man In that courtroom who had been friendly toward him. It van probably due te the old mlllienairc'fl plea for len iency that the cenfenee had been five ars, nnd net ten, or fifteen, or twenty, :. -wevnr It miiriit be Hint the erect, mire little figure en the beach, with the thin, straight lips, had hntl the right te pwneuiivt. ." -i tow. Dac Hendersen stirred uneasily en the edge of tlie cot. He drew his hand lowly ncrew his eyes. He lintl wished from the start, hadn't he, that It uil?ht hare been some one cIms rather than Martin K. Tj demon V Hut it bad been Tjdeman'B money, and the hundred i,Acin,i dnllnrs nlenc was all that had counted, and Tydcman wus dead new, had been dead two or three K'tirs, and en that feore that ended it didn't itf The dark eyes, that had wavered nu itractedly around the cell, narrowed wddenly, and from their deittliR n ni.lprlnff llre seemed te lean us sud denly into llnme. Ilut there was another Kore tlmt was net ended 1 Beekie Skm1 Tanl Baldy Vlckcra, llunty Mett nnd the rest of llaldy's gang had lied spe ciously, smoothly, ingeniously nnd with convincing unanimity. They hnd ad mitted the obvious riuitc frankly be cause, tliey could help thcmHehcs. They had nuinlttcu inni meir iiuviiiiun nun licen te steal the hundred thousand del- Jlars tliemscles. Uut they hadn't stolen It and tlmt let tlicm out; nnu uiey proved that he, Dave Hcndetsen, had and that saved their own hides. Ale they bad net implicated jjoekic &nar- ran. Thelr stnrv had been very plausible ! llunty Mett "confessed" that, en the morning of tlic crime, no nail overheard Beekie Sknrvnn nnd 13ave Hendersen making their arrangements nt the race course te get Tydcman te put up the inency te tide Boekio Sknrvnn ever the crisis. He. Kunty Mett. hnd then left at once for San I'ranclfun, put the deal up te Baldy Vlckers nnd Bnldv's gang. ndtney had waited ler uave Hendersen teatrhc. Naturally they had watched their proposed prey from the moment of Ms arrival in the city, intending te rob Mmtthcn the money wns in his posses posses lien and before he get bark te the race ceurtc tlmt night; but instead of T tin man turning the money ever te Dave Ilendersen, na they had expected, Dave Hendersen hnd completely upset their plans bj stealing the money himself. and this had resulted In the prisoner s attempted getaway, mid the automobile (base which repiescnted their own ef forts te intercept him. The (link pvps wcre nlmnct closed fwiew, but tlic gleam was still there Benly new It was half mocking, half JlWtriumphant, and was mirrored in a grim rnuic that iiicKert'd across his lips, lie had net denied their sterj. Te every effort te obtain from him n clue as te the whereabouts of the stolen money, ne nnl remained ns miiti nnd nitre nitre 'Pensitc n.s a stene: eninlerv. thrents. the hint of lighter sentence if restitution were made, he hud met with silence. He had net cen emnlesed a lnwer. The wljeutt had niipelnted one. He had rc .tfuscd te confer with thp lawjer. The j'lIawKr had entered n perfunctory plea ,Jef ''net ciillt." TIid grim smile deepened. There had ,ibeen verj geed reasons why he had rc j'Jjfused te opt n his lips nt tlmt trial nircc el till-in. in the IW place, he was kuiI ; hi the second plaee there wasltoekie Skurvan, who had no suspi cion tlmt he. Dave Hendersen, knew IM truth thnt lay behind llunty Mett's 'terj ; nnd m the third place there wns 'ne hundred thousand dollars. There il te lie mi hedging. And he hnd net 1 huk'u: Thnt wus his etud. Well, it M paid, hadn't it. tlmt i-ieed? The hundred theusund dellnis was almost his "OR there weie only slity-thne dnjs t. He hnd bought it with his creed, "ought it with live sears wrung in bleed ed sweat from his life, live jenrs that ed turned his soul sick within him. lie 'dpnid Hie pun.. KIe .u-iirs of sun- lltbt In- Im.l ..I..... r.. .1.... 1 1-.1 uwusand dellius. the .Mars that had "-"Kni in iiring tl He liked Mlllman ; nnd somehow Mill man seemed te like him. A gentleman from the tip of his fingers wns Mill man nnd he took his medicine like n rentlemitn. Mlllmnn wasn't the name thnt was entered en the prison books there It wns Chnrlle Keith. It was strnncc that Mlllmnn slinnlil j have given him his confidence ; he could npver nuite understand that, except that It had seemed te come gradually ns their friendship grew, until llnnlly It wns nlmest the basis of that friendship Itself. He had come te trust Mlllmnn ns he hnd never trusted any ether mnn, nnd lie hnd come te believe in Mlllmnn ns the soul of courtesy nnd honor. And jet he had net been quite as open with Mill man ns Mlllmnn had been with him; he had net spread his enrds upon the table, nnd Mlllman had never asked te sec them ; nnd somehow he liked the man nil the better for that. It was net that he did net trust the ether; It wns because bin cenfidence was net the sort of cenfidence te give te nn honest man and Mlllman was honest. .There wns n queer twist te It nlll Dne Hendersen smiled grimly again. It wouldn't be fnlr te mnke an honest mnn n party te the secret of where that money was, for instance, would it te mnke nn honest mnn nri accom plice after the fact? And there wns nn doubt of Millman'B clcnn-cut, cour ageous honesty. The prison stripes could net chnngc thnt! He knew Millman's story : A nasty bit of work en the Bnrbary Coast, and viciously clever. Mlllmnn, n. stranger In the city, nnd en route for n long trip through the Seuth Seas, had been in veigled by n woman's specious plea for help into n notorious resort en the night In which n much -wanted member of the underworld was hard put te it te give the police the slip nnd Mlllman nnd unsuspectingly made himself the vehicle of the ether's escape. The dctnlls were sordid; the woman's story pitifully Impressive; nnd Mill man's chivalry hhd lc,d him. Innocent yf' "Was it only live je.irs slttee he had steed in tlie deck!" " of tlic truth, te deprive the plnin tlethes sound of the services of one of their best men for the period of sevcrnl months while one of the slickest counterfeiters in the United States, and the woman with him. had rondo geed their getawnj. It didn't leek innocent in the ejes of the police and Millmnn hnd stoeil for two jenrs cenWctcd ns Clinrles Keith te save the name of, Charles Mlllmnn, nnd these thnt be- longed te him back in New Yerk. He t had been found in a very unsavory j place, nnd no nmeunt of explanation could purify these surroundings. Mill- I man had never snld se in se many ' words, but lie wns buying n little woman's pence of mind back there in New Yerk with two years' hard Inber. And meanwhile he was supposed te be somewhere en u trading schooner In the out-of-the-way Hes of the l'ncitic. er1 something like that mnbe it wns Bor Ber neo en u hunting trip lie. Dave Hen Hen dereon, didn't remember 'just precisely hew the ether had fixed it. It didn't matter! The point was that tltcy had made .Mlllmnn one of the convict 11 brnrlnns in the prison, nnd Millmnn hnd beieme his tutor nnd his friend. AVell, Millinnii wns nnether he would miss. The day nfter tomorrow Mlll mnii's time wns up, nnd Millmnn would be Rene. He was glad for Millman's sake. rie steps and n half from the rear wnll of the cell te the steel-barred deer, nnd live nnd n hnlf steps back ngnln ever nnd ever. He wns un accountably resiles-, tonight both in body and iiiind. He had spent his live years, less the time thnt had been man umitted for geed conduct, and less the sixt -three dajs that still remained, net altogether le his own dIednntage in an educational t.en'-e. In that respect he was satisfied he was new ready te leave the pil-en nnd make the most of te pitch that one seamy room nt Too Teo Toe ler's and the rotten race-track exist ence into the discard, nnd he wns ready new, equipped, te ploy the part he meant te piny. He had spent the years here learning net te cat with his knife, either literally or metaphorically. Hut there wcre only sixty-three days left, and there wns still one thins he hadn't done, one problem still left unsolved, which of late had been growing Inte nightmnrc proportions. In the earlier years of his sentence he hnd put It nsidc until the time enmc. That time wns here new nnd the problem wna still aside. He had made nil ether preparations. He had even communicated secretly, by means of n fellow convict who wns go ing out, discharged', with Square Jehn Kelly, of the Pacific Coast Saleen in Snn Francisce, with whom he had in vested his savings tlmt JJISOOO nt 0 per cent. And he had had foresight enough te de this months nge in order te give Kelly time te pull the money out of his business nnd have It ready in cash ; for he wnsn't quite sure where the law steed en this point. Falling te recover the proceeds of the Tydcman robbery, the lnw might confiscate these savings If the law knew anything about them. Hut the law didn't and wouldn't. Square .Tehn had sent back word that everything wns all right. Uut there wns still one problem left te selvc the way, ence he was n free man again nnd outside these walls, of getting thnt hundred thousand dollars away from under the noses of the po lice nnd then giving the poliee the slip. And this, grown te monumental pro portions In tlie Inst few months, rese befere him new like sotne evil familiar thnt hnd tnken possession of both his unking and sleeping hours. And there came upon him new. ns it hnd come again nnd ngnin In these last months, that scene in tlic hespltnl when he hnd first opened his eyes te consciousness nnd they hnd rested ou the face of the man who had run him te earth Bar jan, Lieutenant Jee Barjan, of the Frisce plnin-clethcs sqund. And Jee Burjan-'s words were ringing in his cars new; ringing, somehow, with n cursed knell in them: "Don't feel yourself! It's n. hell of n long time in the pen! And If you think you could get nwny with the wad when you get out ngaln, you've get another think coming tool Take It from me!" An acute sense of the realization of the tangibility of bin surroundings seized upon him nnd brought n chill te his heart. That hard, unyielding cot; these wnlls, that caged him within their few scanty feet of space; hit keepers' xeiccs, that lashed out their com mands; Uic nnimels, of which he was one, that tolled upon the etemnl treadmllt of days whose end but fore told another of like liotrer nnd loathing te come! Barjan had told tlic truth; mero of the truth than Barjan cvec knew, or could knew, that he had told. It had been n hell of n long time. Leng! His face, as lie still paced the cell, grayed tinder the prison pallor. Oied, It had been long! Yenrs of dnmnnblc torment thnt hnd shut him out from the fiecdem that he loved! It had been :i I rice beyond nil reckoning thnt he hnd paid for that hundred thousand dollars. But he hnd paid it! He had paid it paid it! Hi had gene nil the way geno the limit. Was Barjan, right in ene thing, light in that ether thlntr ns well that nt the end they would bent 1.1m? His hnnds curled into knotted lumps. There, were net cneuzh Bnrjann for that though the world were peopled with Bnrjnnsl The thought hnd brought a chill of dread for n moment, thnt was nil. He hnd paid tins price ; he wns net likely te forget what thnt price had been ; nnd lie would never yield up what thnt price hnd bought. True, he hnd no plan for thin Inst play of his worked out In detail, but he would find a way liecause he must. He wns probably ex aggerating what the police would, or could de, anyhow! At first when lie hud come into the penitentiary, they hnd tried te trap, sometimes te wheedle him into disclosing where the money wns, though they had long since given up these tnctics nnd left him te him self. But suppose the police did wntch him new when he cot out. He could afford te wait te wnit n long while until the police get tired, perhaps, or lK-rhnps came te the conclusion thnt, nfter nil, they had get the wrong man. They would net forget that, though he hnd refused te say nnytlilng nt the trial, he had net been se mute In his altitude toward Kunty Mett nnd Baldy Vlckcrs, who had "sent him up"; nnd Barjan would net forget, cither, that In the hospital thnt day. with scarcely strength te spcik. he hnd threatened te git even with the gnngstcr nnd the Kunt. There wns n psychologies fnc fnc ter In tliis. If he, D.ivc Hendersen, innde no effort te get the money, showed no sign that he had any knowledge of its whereabouts, might net the police In time come te the far from Illogical con clusion thnt they might better have watched five cars age the men who hnd be glibly acted as witnesses for the Stntc, the men who hnd. admittedly, themselves attempted te steal the mon ey? It wnsn't unreasonable wns It' And he could afford te wnlt. The $3000 from Square Jehn Kelly would keep him gelnj for quite ft while! He wn: a feel te 'et this thing mndden his brain with its constant terturlnjr doubts. It was their move net tils. Frem far nlenz the Iren gallery ngaln a boet-liccl rnng with a dull, metnllic sound. Ic was tlic guard, probably, coming te rnp old Teny LomezzI ever the knuckles. Dave Hendersen stepped his rc3tles.i pacing, nnd steed still In the center of the cell te listen. Ne, tlie old bomb-thrower wasn't talking nny longer; there wnsn't any sound nt nil except that beet-heel ringing en the iron flooring. The sound came nearer, nnd Pnve Hendersen frowned in n puz zled way. The guard was net alone. In nny ease. He could distinguish the footsteps of two men new. It wnsn't usual at thin hour for any ene te be out there with the guard. What was In the wind? The warden, perhaps, making nn unexpected round, or His hands gripped suddenly hard and tight but he did net tqevc. There came Hashing ever hint once mere the scene in that hospital ward of the years age. The cell deer had opened nnd closed. A man had entered. The gunrd's footsteps died nwny outside. The man speke: "Helle, Dave!" It was Barjan, Lieutenant Joe Bar jan, of the Frisce plnin-clethcs squad. It wns the scene of five jenrs age. That wns exnetly what Barjan had said then : "Helle, Dave!" And he had answered: "Helle, Jee!" But he did net answer new. "This is n little Irregular, Dave." said Barjan plensantly: "but I wanted te hnve n quiet little chat with you, jeu knew, befete" lie stepped forward imd clapped his hand en Dave Hcndctmin'a shoulder, nnd lnughed ''well, before you changed your address." Dnve Hendersen mnde no reply. He moved back from the ether, nnd snt down en the edge of his cot. "There's n couple of things I want te sny te you," snld Bnrjnn, still plens antly. "And the first of them Is thnt I want te tell you en the level just where you stand. Yeu're going out of here pretty sOm new, Dave. I guess you ve get a better line en thnt than I Iinvc eh?" He laughed ngaln goed-humorcdly. "Get the days counted, haven't you, Dave?" Ne nnswer. Dave Hendersen's eyes were fixed en the ungainly lines of the tee ef'hls prison beet. "Oh, come en, new, Dave'." Barjan's tones were still hearty nnd jocular, but the heartiness nnd jocularity, ns though disconcerted, lacked some of their orig erig Innl spontaneity. "Leesen up I Yeu ve teen n clam for five yenrs. That's long enough. I've come up here tonight te play square with seu. Yei knew thnt whatever I sn gees with both of us. I knew you nren't holding nnytlilng ngnlnst me personally just because I happened te be the one who put the bracelets en seu, nnd back of thnt we used te be pretty geed friends. I hnven't forgotten the tips you used te give me in the old days and don't you think 1 .have, cither I Kemcrabcr when that old skeleton with the horse-hair cover pranced nwny with a forty-te-one shot? Bennie Lass, her nnme wns or was it Beney? Kcmembcr? She get the hec-hnw but my missus get the swcllcst outfit of gewgaws and fixings the old girl ever hnd before or since. Yeu wissd me up te that, Dnve." Ne answer. There Mcmed te be some thing curiously significant in the un- eeuthness nnd the coarseness of that beet tuc-Jmt the significance wns irri tntingly elusive in Its nppllcntlen. There wns silence for n moment. Bar jan walked the length of the tell, mid back agnln, "All right' he said, hailing In front of the cot, "Mnjbc we'll get along bet ter en another tack. I'm imt beating about the bush, Dave" his voice was n little harder, crisper, sterner "I went te knew where that hundred thousand dollars Is. But I told .ou tlmt I'd put ou straight first en where you stand. New, listen 1 We've played both ends te the middle. We believed that tlic story Kunty Mett ami Baldy Vlckcrs told wns true ; but both men had .1 record, nnd you can't he sure of a creek en his own say-se. We didn't take any chances, nnd se we're sure new. Theso men were wntched net for a couple of weeks, or a couple of months, but for the last four jenrs. They don't knew where the money is, nnd they never did knew what you did with it nfter you handed them thnt automobile end te tlic ether, iei en n t bMM3gj, i smash nnd bent It for the weeds. kind of game. . 1-m talking MrWftV,, : "f..i limit i I'm mi le von! And n,,d " knew U Come en new, Dave, I ,& (lilnl that dnj. jen remember, Hint jeu ntress. f ,. 'folic ceirtliiucd tomorrow could never get iiwrtj' with It,- nlid that's ns true ns I'm standing here tall.iiu te you new. leirve get some iiriniis Dnve ti-c 'cm new for jour own snkt Frem the moment jeu step outside thee wnlls leu're n miiikcd mini, nnd net for Just fl little wlille either, but for , IlrllKanC Celer! very durable nil your life. Thej II never let up ei, ?lnic little rift Price. $1.25 ea jeu. JJavc. i.ei mat sinx in. inu u jiln't only just old Jee Bnrlnn jeu'w get te feel. Talking racjs Dnve, jour numbers up en the iienru en everj 1UHuwmvnwiuvivvmutl Parchment r lower Marvelous raeslmtlea of tha Natural, i A Charm- nir lime lilt i-rice. i..e eacn. A. L. DIAMENT & CO. IftlS Walnut Htrert ii nil at Strafford. Ta. police track in this country from 'ii( juuttuviUMVMWUWWUtMi f (M) JgJ W nance a Sank Supplies Slank floeks . bound AJoesc leaf Lithe&raprun6 lYintmgj Ivnraviirt iCuLc ,!! irasain i lama empemn .329 Market Street I Law operating cast DKJv ' Tftenecerd of Quality I W vs. ... . 1 1. ..r .!...... 1 ubJUKiiileii i hiv .i.i,i,.r. .i.. I Hint bundled thousand dollars net ns 'e Ins m,I. n whimper into his tolce. I " Vrnw ""'i' 1,I,,NJ'"S '! ,V.'P Ui.'!',r' in Hill, lrj 1MIIJ jlr n imiiii lint u at, 1'll.t lilt 1 llennsnn l.ii c.m i.i.. i,...i. i i..i deads en tin until ,u I n ni, .: ' .'.. " "" V " " Hint veprcsei ''"!; !'' .'"' Mri"K ntiv.rM'LT.r $ig mz ni- v.: inui can't fit an OKch Recerd I ChrfaHnfi aftj4nM Un. - vranf n Tt 1M f. j.t phonograph, tnaldng the party lively. Atk year dealer ler 4479 I Te,ck Me ,0 S'"P In MT Old r .uirj nema IVOCalJ I My Senny Tennene (Vecal) QeneraJ Phonograph Corporation New Yerk Ne 85c 10 in '4k&A 5ttC JF 3 .s 'f Inrnd dour, nml tlnm ,ul,l,.l i, "jkb-i1 h,s shoulders, and teluxed, wlie would niiiKe it pnj dhl- mf host) fnc jeurs of servitude ented its purchase price. ltiK , that amount, for the rest zf ml ... !"' luililliei "Ut he liiul ?,n that sceie? IL pciiiti ntlit " tins in a iew, cool way. wen, hadn't he, even It wns net often that ry would de fee n mnn ih-ll'u I, nh. Innl jl.i.. r..,. Kaii.'h i 1","1 "tcrcd it n crude, tiu Imv.. i ,n-s,i'i,,l,1 t' a crooked book beok boek Knir' i '? 'diiiutlen what he hnd ne- Wed liefnu. l,n I....1 .... r Ii. .., ', "" ""' "1" HWIiy 1IOII1 ,""" Ime1 nt ten i nnd he could invt.s i1'1"1'0 "uw- hcn the clothe -.... i wince. (i,i, pftS3 nnj where for ("g-un.- ... C-hirfle MillVnan. ' "' '" iere? l11'? " ,Mh ,re11 Mlllmnn hnd ,. tr..",le s,0d. of course, just whv ""'I line ci .inf e .,....n in i.i er.r ..i, . ' . I'ui'ii. Jin i in n .", nt'11 i0 Millmnn thnt it iuxl I of his life, if he tool; enre of it. It meant comfort. Independence. luxury. lie didn't want any mere. Tlint was tin- amount he had nlrcudy fixed and decided upon even befere the opportu nity had limn- te take it. It wns his first jub but it wns equally his Inst. And It was his Inst because he had waited until, nt the first attempt, he hud get all he wanted. lie wasn't coming hack te the penitentiary nny mei e. He wns going out for geed In sixty-three dajs. .Slxtj-thiee dajs! He wanted no piker, low-brew life nt the end of theso sixty-three dnjs when he get out. He had had enough of that! That was one reason why he had taken the money Ml fr.ii.. ,i ....iiiun umi, u null ii?m ft i .P Ty. Blmilni: his pliu Jllaru Vl" l"u'1 "f a hundred tl.eusun,; ' cat ein "liars that ;,C7' u,"1 0t milt ,in ,B ",r ,,,m ""m hath " i ' l.1""1," kl,"w "f course, l he, I)ne Hendersen, unu ,,.. ... ..e ..i ...i '.".' "."" "that wus about all 'ttrlb,t..i"i,r' in."(l ',r' ''uturnlly se, r illlh,,,,,1)a',p """Iwwn'H. thirst ' I'pHili nml ediicui nn .. ti.. .- IyZ''f,1',!'-''''r'.tgoed that in '"ally f'hi '"'"B the surface Ami lH. 1,0,t(r "attire. i.il hreV ,,1 ."lJ"1,'."'. !'", rr..t,Tn J. ' .. . - -' i, XI. 111. '! i-n ..... .i " -- .nu II ' 'J law i &i ;a ."'of Ids better nature ,$" "' .Mlllmiiii. ,1 r ' ITOM'il a pntlseiiil f- 1 'ouch pieKrt.s ninde uleng the :eemelT,,,('',l,,utit,,,,,' "'"'1 MUn l"iit into th0 prison. for there hadn't lies mnn liiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiLiiiaMiiiiiKitiiiiy A nice fat geese for Xmas? Fancy, Fatted Ge Every Mether Will Want This Beautiful Christmas Drawing "j'"! in hict Tint the problem tlG 'Virfmie IT.. ....... UYjniy M. ayrss hS?i i''f'Ui'" "'"'" 'he """lie of hint ,,,) ,;...... .. ,. . Iltlle,,, I. ' "" '".' " eci- . r, .UI( mcuwiia will, lleuin; "' en Comic Imr 30 lb At all our Meat Markets fij 1 OTOBCB CO. g Make it a point te order next Sunday's Public g? Ledger from your newsdealer, in advance, and be g? certain of getting the full-page drawing by Frank fife Gedwin, entitled "The Christmas Wishes," Vf which will appear in the beautiful brown tones Wjt of the Rotogravure Section. Yeu will also want te see: The Amazons of the Kansas Ceal Fields mobs of women attacking coal shafts; new pictures from Petrograd; Marshal Fech riding a balky mule; greatest collection of Benjamin West's paintings; the French Revolution en the screen; release of the Irish prisoners, and happy little hospital babies en Christmas morning Order ueur newsdealer le reserve ueur copy new . SUNDAY PUBLIC ggj LEDGER It will be a great edition next Sunday' Public z::z:"r"zr:r"r t tndPe,nt-NewS, tien, Sports and Advertising. 1 ' E ealurces' Comics, Magazine Section, Rotogravure Sec' B : W tien. Snorts nnd Arlvfrt;;n ii wifimUKtMOmtMOfQnmfmiMCmmQK iiiij Ymi'll Enjdy Your CHRISTMAS DINNER in The Palm Roem NEW YEAR'S EVE Special Service De Luxe, Complete, $7.50 Fer Reservations' Call WALNUT 6800 THE HOTEL ST. JAMES Walnut at Thirteenth Street Thornten - Fuller Automobile Company ' ' Hist of 10,, 1 Phene, Spruce 10-10 DODSE BROTrlEriS MOTOR CARS -- TUUGSZ2IfnwOl IHimillJII inn illlPi Plum Pudding Ice Cream di PJUIP,pudding is almost as old as Christmas itself. Plum Pudding Ice Cream, as SUPPLEE alone makes it. is something new, made from our private formula. Rich Wf i jnUtt'- ralS!ns5 and currants, it brings back memories et old fashioned plum puddings that were plum puddings. In response te the widespread inquiry, "are you going te have plum pudding ice cream this year?" we announce this appropriate weekly special, one of the SUPPLEE Private Brands an exclusive feature of SUPPLEE Service bete. tWs"disPh U rherivld a' Cream fr" iote "" mbrture f t -a S IPPI Vc n my cmbln,nB 'we courses of the Christmas feast in one. any quantify te SS? ' t' yU "" big "S" "" are & ' f.i.h y inSantr fe" "ctsast IZZJ " " sumtaSSMb WMk'y a!Kcial- Each en,: hclps cnvinK "' seldom equaled never excelled ICE C H "PA 1 1 liiL',,. wJMMnSsv I iiiiiiiHift,iiiiii:iiiiiiiaiii ":fl s SUPPLEE SUPPLEE ICE CREAM : Ontef the SUPf JLEE-WIUS-JOMESProdecb r ' i i 1 i h fl il ,?j i i :i n " I . 4. J. . f. , , ,,M,.. , a. ,'.nM : 'kfSti-, I ,,. ,' 'QZSmtm, TaAWt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers