ii.' h- &, or. r . ILiJJ vi 'i ' ! ' m "-,, aw.i s Frem New On , tfy FRANkli. PACKARD . (AUTIIORtOtr "TBE MIRACLE MAP") ) cevvrleht, ittt, by FubHe Ledger Cempanv TntB ItKOINS THE STOIIV Dv Jtndr(iii nicala tlOO.OOOwhlcli lftrlln Tydnnmr xlvea lilm.fer tloekln Skarjan te rrceup raring leaata tuu tiin money nu atrves lira yr rrlten. atubbernty kaaplnr Ilia mouth, hut. both te thj police anil tn old nun VUrtin fn rMun rArlnv Iemcr. H Cidi tlie money and. arrvea lira yrnrs In ifliVara after th loot, 4 Only Mlllman, wiiien mat. 1ne,re vhara he hoi hidden iht menay.andailvlaa him te Klvti It hack la lt owner. Aftrr-a aerlM of lulventurtf which Jirlrm him Inte contact with Jloe'o Caprinne. an old nun leader, and hl Tawnet and wnmnnlv rtrurhter. Tereaa, riava mi a te hunt up eh DaKO fleorae. fi whom h haa.n. 4Mier from Nlcoje. hl contain' n. secret coda which la In tended te flouhln-crert, ltendsraen . and lecura tha menpytw raprline and ha KamBllcea. .When Tereaa flnda thla out Tementrla. nreualnr her father te a fit of ancer, which eauaea hla aud iin i datlit Tereaa fellow Unnflaraen te Kw Torki find lie haa hern drumred te urn in Dage Oeerse a hotel, nod aela Ibeut .te outwit htr father' friend. ? P... .l ....n-M n tlnl Willi inrnn neLFi nil ..." - - :- the treclia te Bet the menev, men d:u lienderann - i... r.nm i a nriicreii fen. mna YinST reform and an fiencU life. When v, leeks for tha money It cene Tljan vi leeks for tha m , te hla KUfpfl't'T; AND 1IKIIK IT CONTINUES at9 (7nnrllt.ne ntera hnewa he levea liar OTirAlT!" His voice was rough wllb W emotion. "We'll talk strnlBht ahete isn't nny ether way. I I think riertd you. Tcrcsn, Hint night, the tnt tiine I fnw you, when you Floed ' en the threshold et your father's room Tonight I knew that T love you, and "Dave!" ... "" Hia held had lireustit her very close atln te hlra. He could sec a grcnt ' crimson tide flood and sweep the white and suddenly averted face. ..... "Walt!" he said again. "I think I lisvc learned ether things as well to te alcht that you care, Teresa, loe, lint fhst the stolen money stands between ou and inc. That Is what I mean by buying uu, and your love, with n fake. If I returhed the mencv en that no count it would net be beeauc I htid mddenly become lienest which Is the one thing nbevc nil else that you asit for. U would net be for honesty's mie, but became I was n hypocrite and dWienest with you. and wai lct ,i.. thn tnnniT co lipcatifn I was net ting something for It that was worth mere te me than the money because I wss making a geed bargain that was cheap at a hundred thousand dollars. "I can't make myself belicv thnt I ftcl a hense of honesty any mere to te nltht than I did the night I first took that money, and I would be a cur te try te make you think I did. He could feel her hnnds tremble in hl; he could see the sweet face, the imen rene from it. deathly pale ealn. Her Hps (.corned quivering feri word, but she did net speak. And sud tljnlv he dropped her hands: and hN ewn'hands clenched, and clenched again, at his Hides. There was lilting mock err at himself stirring and moiling in Ui hrelll "YnU feel I YOU feel " A telce cried out. "She's, yours! Take her! All you've get te de Is change jenr tune; sneii ocyeve yen se u 'Teu're net honest, why don't you steal W?" "Listen!" It seemed as (though" he were forcing himself te speak agalnRt his will. "There Is another reason ; but, first, se that you will understand, there is Mlllman. Tt Is tee long a story te tell you all of it. Mlllman Is the man I poke of who Is henebt like jeu. I teM hlra when I was In prison where tht money wa, and I thought he had doable-crossed me. Instead, he gave it btek te me tonight that Is hew I get it se seen." He laughed out sharply, harshly. "But MiUman said if I didn't rlTe It back te the estate of the man from vhem I took it. he would pay it out of his own pocket, because, for me, ha.had been a thief, tee. De you tin tdnutand? That's why I aaid I didn't knew what I waH going te de. My f0jII don't knew yet. T knew well enough that if the police were tipped off tonight, and get the money, that would let Mlllman out of paying it: but that's net the point. I can't squeal new, can I! I can't go sneaking te the police, aadsay: 'There It Is In Dage Geerge's safe; I can't get my own paws en it tin, se I've turned honest, and you n pa nnd take It! T wouldn't like te face Mlllman nnd tell him the mencv hid gene back that way because I couldn't help it because it had been trten from me. and I was doing the meg act in a piker play!" She stepped toward him quickly. "Dave." she whlepered tremulously, what de ou mean? What are you eing te de?" m going te get mat money irem ueerge, lie saiu in a nat voice. tet that money If l go tnreugn hill aealn for it. an I've been through itll for It already. Then maybe it'll go back where It came from, and mnvbe )t won't; but if it does go bark, it'll go bai-U from Davj llfndeiMJii wit Dage tlceige!" Slieiliiiched frantically at l.fi aim. "'e. no!" khe cried out. "Listen!" he said. "Yeu haie you meant that money siieuui ec re- 'rftirned if it were within your pecr te fiyemplisli it. 1 understand thai. Well, mh matter what the result, te Dage Gterge or te me, I nra going down there te get that money if I can. But if I get It, I de net premise te return It. Remember that! I premise nothing. Be you are free te leave here; and If you think, and perhaps you will be right, that the surest way te get the weney hack Is te co Instantly te the rellce. I shall net blnuic you. If the police can beat me te it beferp I settle Mltb Dage Geerge, they win that's all. But in any fase, it is net safe for jeu te stay in this place, und te " "I was net thinking of thnt!" she uld In u low voice. "Ner shall I leave thla house until you de. I I urn afruid for you. Yeu de net knew Dagu Gterge." Be did net stir for n moment; then, with Bonie great, everw helming m pukn upon him, he took her face in both his hands, and held It there up turned te bla and looked Inte her great dark eyes until the lashes dropped and hid them from his gate. "Teresa," he whispered low, "there in tome things that axe worse than Umg a thief. I couldn't lay down T hand new, It I wanted te, could T? I can't quit new. can I? T can't erewl, I took that money; and, "whether 1 mean te give It back my Wlf, or keep it, I'd rather go out for teod than tell the police It'B there, 84 ate the tineer for an honest man toned honest because lie had lest his aArve, and didn't dare go after the neny and face the risk of u show down with Dage "Geerge, which was the aly way in which be could tuy dls wnatt. Teftsa, you see. don't you?" flit TfJtce was passionate, hungry In km earnettneis. "Teresa, what would de play the game, or quit?" at. . 'a8bB lifted, and for a moment ae dark eyes looked steadily into his, wa then they were veiled again. "I will wait here for jeu,'' alie filiq, beaten down nnd submerged, nnd put te rout, until' out of the chaos nnd turmoil, dominant, supreme, nrese fury, merciless and cold. Dave Hendersen crept along the up per hall. The pocket flashlight in his hnndj one of his purchases en the way East, winked through the blackness, the round,, wlilte ray disclosing for a sccend'a space the head of the stairs; and blackness fell ngaln. He began te descend the stairs cau tiously. Yes, that was it fury. Out of that wild riot in his brain that was what remained new, It drew his face int6 hard, pitiless llnea, but it left hlnr most strangely cool nnd de liberate nnd the mere pitiless. It was Dage Geerge who was the object et that fury, net Nlcole Caprinne. That "us Birnngc, 100, in a way I it wns rsicole Caprlane who had done him the grentcr wrong., for Dnge Geerge mm jiu were man tue etiicr's satellite. Hut Nlcole Capriano's treachery deemed tempered somehow by death perhaps by that slim figure that he nnu icic standing out there In the dark ness perhaps ; his brain refused te rca son it out te n logical conclusion ; It held tenaciously te Dage Geerge. It seemed an theuah thorn wn n ntnrni "physical Itch nt his fingertips te reaclr ii uiroat-neiu nnu cheue tue oily, lying aaaaaHaLR& jHS BBbBBBBBBVaBBHttu!vWjiBSBDW' BaHaRaaHflnaflaflHr : liBBBWcwSSaH0tBSS-? i mwBmtimm here." Neither argument net1 cxpestu Iatlen hnd been of nny avail. She was still above there whiting. " IIe had reached the head of the lower flight of stnlrs, and new he halted, and steed motlenJcss. There was1 n sound from below. It wan neither Imagination nor fancy; it was distinct nnd unmls tnkablc a low, rasping, metallic sound. Fer an interval of seconds he steed there HstculnfTMhen he shifted the flashlight, switched oft new, te his left hand, nnd his right hand slipped Inte his pocket for his revolver. IIe moved forward then silently, noiselessly, nnd, as he descended the stnlrwny, paused nt every step te listen intently again. The sound, with short) almost negligible Interruptions, pe'raistcd; and, with It new, it seemed as though he could dis tinguish the sound of heavy breathing. And new it seemed, tee, as though the blackness were less opaque, as thbugh, while there was ntlll no object discerni ble, the hallway below was in n sort of murk, and as though, from somewhere, light rays, that were either carefully guarded or had expended, through dis tance, almost all their energy, were still striving te pierce the darkness. Tight-lipped new, n few steps further down, Dave Hendersen leaned out ever the bannister ami hung there tensely, rigidly. It was llke looking upon seme weird, uncannily clever effect that had bpen thrown upon a moving-picture screen. The deer of Dage Geerge's room was wide open, and through this he could see a white circle of light, the rays thrown away from and In the oppeslto direction te the deer. They flooded the face of a safe: nnd. darkly, behind the light itself, two figures were faintly outlined, one, kneeling nt the safe, thei etner ueiding n uasniigiit and standing ever the kncellne mnn's shoulder. And new the nature of the sounds that ha had net been able te define was obvious It was the click of a ratchet, the rasn of n bit eating veraciously into steel, as the kneeling man worked nt the face of the safe. Fer a moment Ma eyes nnrrewed. half In Huddcn, angry menace, half In per plexity, he hung there gazing en the scene: nnd then, with nil the cnufien 'thnt he knew, his weight thrown grnd itially en each separate tread te guard against a protesting creak, he went en 'down the stairs. It was strange damnably and most curiously strange! Was one "of these figures in there Dnge Geerge? If se, it would account for the presence of n second man thp one Teresa had heard coming down stairs. Hut. if se, what uas Dage Geerge's game? Was the man going te put up the bluff thnt he had been robbed, nnd was thercfore wrecking his own safe? -That was an old sag! Hut what purpose could It serve Dage Geerge In the present Instance? It wasn't ns tlieuch he. Dnvp Hendersen. nod ceniuicd Ills own flashlight stabbed a lane of light through the blackness flip, naclcncp te Dnce smile from the suae, smug fare of that Geerge's keeping, nnd Dage Geerge waai rBOing XL. "l'u hypocritical bewlnc I'lCIIlP flint-. Imrl offered him ft glnss of wine, nnd. like a damnable hound, had drugged him, nnd Wns thnt n pound, a sound of move ment, of seme one stirring below there, that he heard or only pn cxnggerated Imagination? He was half way down the upper flight of htafrs new, and hp stepped te listen. Ne, there wenied te be nothing only thnt silence that pal pitated and made noises of its own; and yet, he was net satined; he could Jinve sworn that he bad heard some one moving about. He went en down the ntalrs again, but still mere cautiously new. There wns no rea'en why there shouldn't be wme one moving nbeut, even at this hour. It might be Dage Geerge him hpU. Dage Geerge might net have gene te bptl agnln jet. It was only nn hour, Teresa had said, since the innn had roine upstairs und stolen the mono). Or it might be some accomplice who was with Dage Geerge. He rpmcni bcred Teresa's reference tf the band of blacklegs ever whom Dnge Geerge was in command; nnd he remembered that seme ene had come down the stairs be hind her nnd Dnne Geerire. lint. Teresn lieibclf hnd evidently been unseen, for tliere had been no nttemnt te find nr Interfere with her. It hnd probably therefore been well, nny one! i It presented possibilities. It might hnve been an accomplice; or I rung guest, it there were ether in this unsavory hostelry; or n could take this means of cunningly se curing it for himself. Dnge Geerge had stolen It and, logically, the last thing uage ueerge would de would be te admit he had thought that no one, MYO Mill hian nrtd himself, had known nnythlrig nbeut the presence of thnt money In New Yerk tonight, it appeared, that a most nmaaing number were net only aware of it, but were ititlmately Inter csted'ln that fact I IIe sm;icd n little in the darkness, net pleasantly, ns he crept new, inch by inch, along the hall toward the open deer. He, tee, was Interested In that Backage of banknotes In the safe I And. age Geerge or the" devil, it mattered very little which, there .would be n nhowdewn, very likely new n.grlm and very pretty little showdown, before thd money left thnt room in nny one's pos session save his own! Frem 'ahead, lnaldc the room, there came a slight clatter, as though a tool of some sort had been dropped.er tossed en the fleer. It was followed by n mut tered exclamation, and then n sort of breathless, but triumphant grunt. And then n voice, in a guttural undertone: "Dcre yeuse nre,, sport. Help yer self I" Dave Hendersen crouched back against the wall. He wns well along the hall new, and qulte close enough te the doorway of Dage Geerge's prl prl vate domain te cnnble him, given the necessary light, te oee the whole In terior quite freely. The deer of the safe, In a dismantled condition, was swung open ; strewn en the fleer lay the kit of tools through whose Instrumen tality the job had been accomplished; nnd the man with the flashlight was bending forward, the white fay flooding the Inside of the safe. There came suddenly new n queer twitching1 te Dave Hendersen's lip?, and it came celncidcntally with n sharp, exclamation of delight from the rann with the flashlight. In the man's hand was the original package of banknote, its lern corner identifying it instantly te Dave Hendersen, anil evidencing with equnl certainty ie its immediate possessor that It was the object, piu sumably, which was sought. And new the man with the flashlight, without turning, readied out nnd laid the packnge en the desk behind the safe. The movement, however, sent the flash light's ray In a jerky half cirele nreund ihe room, and mechanically Dave Hen Hen dereon raised his hand n,nd brushed it across his eves. Was that fancy what he had seen? It was gene new, it was dark in there new, for the flashlight was boring into the safe- again, nnd the man with the flashlight seemed intent en the balance of the snfe's contents. It had been only a glimpse, n glimpse that had lasted no longer than the time it takes n wntcli te tick, but it seemed te have mirrored itself upon Dave Hen Hen dereon's brain se that he could still see it even In the darkness: It wns- n hud dled form en the fleer, close by the bed. just ns though it had pitched itself convulsively out of the bed, and it lay thpre Fjprawled grotesquely, nnd the white face had seemed te grin nt him iq n horrid nnd contorted way nnd it was the face of Dage Geerge. The man with the flashlight spoke want te take any of it when they wise up te thin in the morning. He can leek it ever for himself. Tell him I want him te see it before I monkey with It myself. Yeu can leave your watch maker's tools there. Yeu ought te be back In n little better than ten minutes if jeu hurry. "We get a geed heur1 and mere yet before daylight, and before any of the crowd that work here gets hack en the job, and until then wc get the house te ourselves, but that's no reason' for wasting any fleeting mo ments, se get n move enl Sec?" "Surel" grunted the ether. "Well, then, beat it!" Footsteps sounded from the room, coming in the direction of the doorway, and Dave Hendersen slipped Instantly across the hall, and edged In behind the deer, that, opening back into the nail, afforded, him both a convenient nnd se cure retreat. The smlle en his lips was mere pleasant new. It was very thoughtful of the man with the flash light very I He cared nothing about the ether man, who was new walking stealthily down the hall toward the front deer; the money wns still In that room in there! Alse, he was glad te have had confirmed what he had al ready surmised that Dage Geerge slept nlone in the Iren Tnvcrn The front deer opened nnd closed again softly. Dave Hendersen stelo silently across the hall again, 'and crouched against the opposite wall once mere, but this time almost at the deer jamb itself. The flashlight? full en, lay en the desk. It played ever the package of banknotes, and sent back n reflected gleam from the nlckelwerk of a tele phone Instrument that steed a few Indies further along en the desk. The man's form, his back te the deer, and back of the light, was llke a silhouetted shadow. . It was nulet. silent new in ' the house. Perhaps five seconds passed. and then the man chuckled low and I whcezlngly. Dave Hendersen grew euddcnly rigid. I It startled him. Somewhere lie had heard that chuckle before somewhere. It seemed striving te stir and awaken memory. There was something strange ly familiar about it, and- The roan. . ' ft , , 7fr- . still chuckling, was mut tering audibly te himself hew. "Burc, that's the depei xne own ewn own plen th? Cunny the Scorpion! Nice name! Well, we'll see who gets stung l I guess ten minutes' start nln t geed annual, fine it nnmn nne.'a cnatine the Scorpion, he won't have be much time te chase me. Yes, I rus this hwnjre i ittue away wuu me goeua. w " lime there's been anything straightened out, and even if he squeals if he s caught, I guess I'll be far enough away te worry netl" Dave Hendersen's face had grown as white and set as chiseled marble; but he did net move. The man leaned abruptly forward ever the desk, packed up the telephone, chuckled nualn. nnd then snatched the receiver from the hook. And the next instant, his volce full of well-simulated terror, he was calling wildly, frantically, into the transmitter? "Central! Central! Fer Ged's sake! Quick I Help! I'm Dage Geerge. The Iren Tnvcrn. They're murdering me. Get the police! Fer Ged's sake! Get the police. Tell thorn Cunny Smeeks is murdering me. Hurry! Quick! Fer Ged's " The man allowed the telephone and the unhooked receiver te crash abruptly te the fleer. The cord, catching the flashlight, carried the flashlight with it, and the light went out. And then Dave Hendersen moved. With a spring, he was halfway across the room and his own flashllaht stabbed a lane of light through' the I blackness, and struck, ns the ether whirled with n Btnrtled cry, full en the I man's face. It was Iioekle Skarvan. Te be continued tomorrow Reception for Cernell President I Dr. Livingston Fnrrand, president of! HAMl.tl Tf.l..l,. It, ...... v.. .... I umcii university, will VIHll I'lllladCI- phla en Saturday next as tiie guest of the Cernell Club. Inthe evening a re ception nnd dinne,r will be tendered Dr. Fnrrnnd at the Bellevue- Stratford Hetel ,by the members of the club, at which the new head of the university will eutline his plans for further ex tending the institution's work. pit". -i r- f' ? nnJnit" R0 or "' 'et nlone ,la"nt "' suddenly ever his shoulder te his com At the feel of Ihe stairs Dave Hen Hen dereon discarded that theory as unten able. But if, then, neither one of the two in there wns Dage Geerge where wns Dffge Geerge? It was n little beyond nUrihnlW tn mere coincidence the fact thnt u couple pnnlen "Yeu've pulled n geed job. Mngget!" he said npprevlnglyr "Ilettcr than either Cunny or mc was looking for, T guess. And se much se that I guess Cunny lmd better horn in himself be fore we close up for the night. "Yeu .beat it ever te the joint and pf marauding safe-breakers should hnvp bring him back. Tell him there's some happened te select Duge Geerge's sale queer stuff in this safe besides what we tonight In the ordinary routine of their nefarious vocation. Coincidence, "ns nn explanation, wabii't geed enough! It looked queer extremely queer! Where were after nnd what we get some ennc stuff, that'll mabbe interest him, 'cause he said he wasn't .very fend of Dage Geerge. I don't knew whether he'll :inr.EriieNK srnuci: 28ss- Fur Storage and Remodeling at Extremely Lew Rates LUIGI RIENZI CORRECT APPAREL FOR "WOMEN 1714 Walnut Street PRE-INVENTORY SALE Greatest Values Ever Offered 50 DINNER AND EVENING GOWNS 79.50 formerly te 150,00 FROCKS FOR THE SOUTHLAND SPORT WEAR FRENCH FLANNEL ' SPONGEEN CREPE KNIT PIRETTA JERSEY 25.00 39.50 te 67.50 FERNCH HAND-MADE AND HAND-DRAWN HANDKERCHIEF LINEN FROCKS ;you nevkk pay meke at nruNzri 9 resher by" aDay a prowling guests tcivant, for some unknown icasen. nosing nbeut, if any of the disreputable, mini wcpi in uie pince nt night the i cook, or the greasy waiter, or the bar tender, or any of the rest of them ; I though, in n place -like this, func- ' tiennrles of that sort were much mere lil.ely tu go bark te tlipir own homes filer tlicii wuik wn ovei li would i.nr be at nil iinlll,pl, Hint Dnge tiieice, in iiew of his Hillside npr- iikleus acthilics, kept none of the staff said i about the place at night. uave Hendersen's javs closed with a vicious snap. TselesH speculntien of this sort get him nowhere! Hp would find out seen enough! If Dage Geerge were net alone, there were still several hours till daylight; nnd he could wait his chance with grim patience. Ha was tencerned with only one thing1 te square accounts with Dage Geerge in n ' way that would both satlate his fury i and force the man (e disgorge the con- ' tents of his safe. His jaus tightened. Tliere was but one, single, disturbing factor. If any thing went wmng, Teresa was still up Htairs there. In every ether respect the stage was set for any eventuality. IIe had even taken the precaution, befeie doing anything else, te get their vnllses, hers and his, out of the place, since in nny case they meant te steal nway from this accursed trapjiouep of Dage Geerge. It had been simple enough te dispose of the baggage via the fire escape, and through the yard, and down i the lane, where the valises hnd found a temporary hiding place in a shed, whose deer, opening en the lane, he had discovered njar, and simple enough, with Teresa's help in regaining the liie escape from the ground, te return in the same way ; but lie had been actuated by mera than the mere idea of being unimpeded in flight if a critical situa tion subsequently' arose though In tils, his ulterior motive, lie had failed utterly of success. Teresa had agreed thoroughly In the wisdom of first lemevlng their belong ings : but she had refused positively te accompany and remain with the baggage herself, us he had honed he might induce her te de. "I wouldn't be of any use (here, if if anything happened," she had salu ; I l might be of some us FOR. YOUR. CHILDREN Pure, fresh milk is vital te children's health Teach your kiddies te drink plenty of it. But be sure the children's milk is the freshest they can get. Scott-Powell Milk is delivered te you the morn ing after it leaves the cow. Its purity is unvarying. Give it te the children use it yourself. Fresh miik is Nature's chosen energy builder. Yeu can't drink tee much of it. SCOTT-POWELL MILK comes right from the inspected herds and sanitary dairies of beautiful Lancaster County. Ne time is lest in long hauls by rail. Our giant glass-lined tank trucks speed the cool new milk te Philadelphia in four hours. The smooth, seamless glass tanks protect Scott Powell Milk from any risk of impurities. The most efficient delivery possible-developed through years of constant working for a msner amnnara ei Milk Service deposits the milk at noer Dei ere tne sun rises again "fresher by a day." your (c) s. r. d. ISO CHA1TKU X. The Rlan With Ihe Flashlight an silence sepmpil llle .n, ,.. rnny, livim.'. lirpaiiiimr iii,, eemjii te beat, and pulsate, until the aruiim throbbed with it. It seemed in li i l O0lae ,na" uiseerunnt chorus, m? icfl cve,'.y human emotion vied ' svriv OTllPr nilR hnr It iia.n .'. :r . " - - ' .mi. uver u fhe rout SCOTT-POWELL 45TH & PARRISH STS. ?;&!;-,. Our .,..,!.. ,au.pm.nJeu,ry urn, c.ty , J cei'atX M.y ,., DO : Hun jgSC0TTy0WEUl might fur. i er ."" ,lle rusti savege liene In i trl,lmPmnt leve! lKlity i Mil iTX t ' " "'ninny -, joy. ana a IZ '..iU? y ,f(,ur Aml the chorus rose tVStiniMe1j "I"1 K "" as though PifiR n !& wwtem bottle ww Joined, J"H first one strallt after another wii Was Wild Rese Guilty? Ilravent hnetea she had metne enough, (hit breexi, tnrntst, icell'petseil gill of the plaint, te murder rtch and ruthless James Cunningham, ,, f?uf suspicion felt, tee, nn Ktrby Ticne, the ttalirart and gallant coicleu nephew of the murdered man. Hew the Uce ran down the mystery ii'teld vividly in "Tangled Trails" Wateh for the gripping first install' ment Saturday T THIS GIANT TANK TRUCK lined with seamless, sterile glass-c-carries Scott-Powell Milk from the country receiving centers te the Philadelphia Dairy, keeping the milk at an unvarying temperature of 38 degrees. The curved glass walls re duce by seven limes the surface in actual contact with the milk, replac ing the old system of metal cans, with their accompanying metal sur faces and lengths of seams and rivets. This mere sanitary centRinm man,, -.1 . 11, - UUUiViO n cieuner mi crv sJ yx-r pfv K CPr0 ialV. canei milK iresner by a day.'' J STORE OPENg AT 9 A 'ii 'i A. ST. CLOSES AT 530 I M. H,H Snellenburgn L M. ENTIRE BLOCK-MARKET ll!2t0l2V! STREETS . M i V Friday Ushers jin Noteworthy Savings in Our February Sale of Furniture Al Yeu Can Avail Yourself of Our Easy-Payment Club Plan ka-'ll Breakfast Roem Suits $19.75 (lill-Vi- "U US1 r. tiens. A W - " aa ' S i - iZZZZZXZr? J . t t '" - 'T'j -; Gray Painted Suits, With Decorations, as Four chairs and drop-leaf table. Painted i?ray witl Shown gray with rose decera- a fit,,, ii .i S35.00 A - " E 3 $195 jjS53S Oak Dresser and Chiffonier $20.00 Chiffoniers S22.00 Dressnrs $10.85 $14.95 Dressers $30.00 ChifTeninrrf $17.85 $40.00 Dressers $24.85 $30.00 Dressers $29.75 75 $60.00 Extension Tables, (JOQ HF Willow Arm Chair $3.W One bhewn. Quartered oak; plank top; 6 feet extension. Several patterns one shown. Dining: Roem Chair; Special $2.89 Illustrated. Willow Arm Chair at I $4.95 shown. CSsS r -Wl I I iWI If WiUew Arm Chair $7a.95 One shown $35 Brass Beds $17.50 2-inch Colonial pest beds with massive caps and eight 1 t inch tiller reds. At. shown. 1 tA n $10 Iren Crib a( .TCx'iJ b $4.95 ii i ft i ES ILL tr'-jSv -- I If il ii In Ft II MMM ENGLANDER v KOLDAWAY BED ;ir.6i"chcs $16.95 3 feet wide . . . .$19.75 I'rlte Include Seft lrclt 1'nil & nepulai full - size crib with strong link spring. Shown. Pillows at Very Special Prices! JfL 1 An Indispensable household ac cessory where smnll space must be put te the best possible use can be stored away in a closet when net in use; finished in rust proof gray enamel. Fer emer gency purpose nothing better has ever been devised. $2.00 Pillows, for 95c ca. $1.00 Pillows, for $1.95 ea. $5.00 Pillows, for $2.95 ea. '' -y ' ttub .fir ' Soft-Tep Mattresses All Regular Bed Sizes, 1 or 2 Parts, frf -4 k Special Price... tftO.lD $25.00 Bex Springs $9.95 n A Diamond Link Spring Frames, Special Q A W Price. 5! SmaU Btzea only. Let. llmItj4..'H t I SMCI I r'lnirniC: TTll. VI II i i i lM !-. i V. : N. SNE :(. $ & f t ". ... .'"rVv 7"1!. H '.