Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, February 17, 1922, Sports Extra, Image 19

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    ISA
OL
foeihinq andHeAllriej
Improves bad
Complexions
Try it -,
Doniletapeorsluiw
bar you from society
when the simple use
of ResinolSeapand
Ointment is sure .te
relieve the condition,
A standard skin treatment
w
RAWS, STEWS, FRIES
SPECIALTY, Luncheon, '40e.
ZEISSE'S HOTEL
620 Walnut Street
JOHN O. II. MEVKBB. rfep.
PAINT
1 'and
VARNISH
and
Varnish Stains
PER
QUART
Mixed ready for
uae. All the bent
color.
W. T. GRANT CO.
920 Market St. - g-fc.
RHEUMATIC ACHES
QUICKLY RELIEVED
n lHE raclrine' aermirinv rtinii-
matic ache is quickly relieved by
7 Penetrates without rubbing.
:
Fer forty years, folks' all ever the
world have found Slean's te be the
best pain and ache liniment. Ask your
neighbor.
Yeu can just tell by its healthy,
stimulating odor that it is going te de
you geed. Slean's Liniment is clean
end non-skin-staining.
Keep Slean's handy for these sudden
nd unexpected attaeks of neuralgia,
lumbago, sciatica, lame back, stiff
joints, sprains and strains, bruise,
bad weather after-effects. ,
" ''At all druggists 35c; 70c, $1.40.
Slea
Linimentfae)
EnttteStecks
Men's Suits
Verceats
92QVAUJI
W
LVALUE
JLUKf
0
&WALUK
$40VALUJES
This eals peitl. AVAl rk
? AT V U DAY " W m m
n ie a t Hu r m m
''i delay. Tie ATaM W
avlnge re real SBf ST
una Leiitt.ildc mi.l true aurpnee
n "V..u 'A.'1" nuallty of the cloth.
aiivitV,1.' IfMnxu nationally
a ii E?118 :" -MAKES Included
u le all ntvra
MEN'S FURNISHINGS
at HALF PRICE!
I.Sn Rhlrta
Si Hilrt
S 0 Shirt-
?5
1
$1 r
$5 Pure Silk Shirts 0 rft
rlne heavy quality "like In ''Oil
.'".. '.' pattern. j
00 Union Suiti $1 0
$1.25 Skirts and Drawtri ....62 'it
$5 00 Mecha and Cap GIetm. .$2.50
Men's Pantt Half Price
Hub
Hteree it biniiuuia Mcminn
dine and Standard Quality
25-27 NO. 13TH ST.
fln.n
t-irnlnga
Stere Ordera
Accepted
8S35B&
as
pMCNSJEK fr- ? V
Vf "VS v.'' " K
(-,
t 1
j
ittiHLi&
rav
'
Vf
I
Mt Price I
I V I
.ii i r
Ifie&QlJ
CHAPTER XLI . ' "
HIBO steed en the threshold and sent,
a swift glance around the room. lie'
had expected te meet James alenc.That
flrrt Riant leek of the lenf eyes lore
named him that Nemesis wns at hand.
But' he faced without a flicker of the
litis the destiny he had prepared for
himself.'
"Yeu write me note come see you
new-," he said te. Cunningham,
James showed surprise. VNe, I think
neb." ,, '
"Yeu no want me?"
The Chief's band fell en the shoulder
of the Janitor. "1 want you, Shlbe.i"
"Yeu write me note come here new?"
"Ne. I reckon Mr. lane wrote that."
"I plenty busy. What you want me
for?"
"Fer the murders of James Cunning
ham and Ilerlkawa." Before the words
were out of his mouth the Chief had
his prisoner handcuffed.
Shlbe turned tl Klrby. "Yeu tellum
police, I klllum Mr. Cunnln'lam and
Herlkawa?"
"Yes."
"I plenty sorry 1 no kill you."
"Yeu did your best, Shlbe. Toek
three shots at ten feet. Rotten shoot sheet
ing." "De jeu mean that he actually tried
te kill you?" James linked ip surprise.
"In the Denmark Building, (he ether
night, at eleven o'clock. And I'll nay
he made n bad mistake when he tried
an' didn't get nway with It. Fdr 1
knew tha the man who was nimln' te
gun me was the same one that 'had
killed Uncle James. He'd get te werryln
for fear 1 was follewln' tee het a trail."
"T)lil vnti rernenlr.D lillll?" .lack paid.
"Net right then. T was tee busy
'luckin' for cover. Safety first was my
motto right then. Ne. when I first hail
tlme te figure en who could be the
gentleman that was bb eager te make
me among these absent, 1 rather laid
It te Cousin Jhmcs, with Mr. Cniss Hull
snivitlfl nn mv liar of KUMlCrtS. ThO IPI
l-'ew had n searchlight an' he flashed it
en me. I could bee nbeve it a uannanna
hendkerchlef ever the face. I'd seen n
bandanna like it in Hull's hands. But
I had te eliminate Hull. The gunman
en the stairs had small, neat feet, no
larger than a woman's. Hull's feet nre
well, sizable."
They were. Huge was net tee much
te call them. As a down eyes focused
en his beets the fat man drew them
back of the rungs of his chair. This at
tention te personal details of his con
formation was embarrassing.
"These small feet stitck In my mind,
Klrby went en. "Couldn't seem te get
rid of the idea. They put James out
of consideration, unless, of course, he
had hired a killer, an' that dldn t leek
reasonable te me. I'll tell the truth. I
thought of Mrs. Hull drcised as a meu
an' then I theiiglit of Sliibe. ,
"Had you nuspcctcd him before
This from Olsen. i,.-,i
"Net of the murders. I hntl learned
that he bad seen the Hulls come from
nyunde'a rooms an' bail kept nulet.
Hull admitted that he had been forced
te .bribe him. I tackle. SI; bp wltl It
an' threatened te tell Urn police.
Evidently be hccaiM frlgbtene. an
tiled te murder me. I get a note makln
an appointment at the Uemnhik Bu d
lng at eleven In the night. II e writer
premised te tell me who killed I my
uncle. I took n chance niiwent.
The cattleman turned te Jlrs. mm.
"Will ou explain about the note
V The gaunt, tight-lipped woman reue,
as though, she had been called en at
school te recite. "I wrote the note,
she said. "Shlbe "?, iue. I lldJ
knew he meant te kill Mr. Lane. He
said he'd tell cverj thing if I dldn t.
She sat down. Shp had finished her
little piece. ... ..
"Se I began-te focus en Shlbe. He
might be playin' a lone hnnd, or lie
might be a toej 'of my cousin Jnmcs.
"A detective hired by w "
leate James' office. lmt d idii ; ab ab
selutely settle the point. ""
have t-ecn semethin' an' be blackmallm
him. tee. That was the way et it,
wani't IV?" He turned pelntblnnk te
Cunningham. ' , , .
"Yes," the broker said. "He had m
rleht net enl me. but Jack nnd Phyl
lis, tee. I couldn't let him drag her
into it. The day you saw me w th the
i-trnlncd tendon I had been with him and
Uerikawa in the apartment next te the
one Unde James rented. We quar
iclcd. I get furious and caught Shlbe
by the threat te bhakJ the little scoun sceun
drel. He itavc my arm wme kind et a
jujutsu twist. He was at me every
ihn. He ncer let up. He mnt te
ble'cd me henvll. We cenldn t rerac
te terms. I hated te jleld te him.
"And did you?"
"I premised him en answer seen.
"Ne doubt he ennie tedav thlnkin
I lie was coin te get it." Kirev went
baek te the previous question. Mxt
i tiur I naw Shlbe 1 took a leek at his
! feer. He was wcnrln a pair e shoes
1 that looked te me mlght llke these
unrn bv thu man that ambushed me.
They didn't have any cap pieces across
Ithe tees. I'd noticed that men wnue
' I.. ...,., ul.nnllii nf me It Jit rllck IIIG
iiu nun e.iwv... ...v. -. . -
that It would be a geed idea te leek
mer his quarters In the basement. Shlbe
had one human weakness. He h n
deotee of the moving pictures. Nearly
eer night he tnkes in a show en Curtis
vtieet. The chief lent me n man, an
last night we went through 'his room
at the Paradox. We found tncre a.
lliitmlight, a iianuannn iinmiKercnici
Iwllh holes cut in it for the ejes, an'
In the mattress .flMOO in big bills. We
, left them where we found them, ter
we didn't want te alnrm Sliibe."
1 .. . .. i i i ..i i.i... .. ii...
Tin janitor iuukvu im nm'n
emotion. "Yeu plcntj dcll man," he
"We hadn't proved. jet thnt Shlbe
was geln' it alone," Mrby went en,
paying no attention te the interruption.
"Seme one might be uslu' him ns a
tool, llerlkawa's confession clears that
up."
Klrby handed te the Chief of Police
the sheets of paper found in the upart
ment where the nlet wns killed. At
tnehed te tbese by a clip wus the trans
lation. The chief read thl labt aloud.
Ilerlkawa, according te the confes cenfes
inn imil been in CuuiiinKham's rooms
upenging and pressing a bult of clothes
when the promoter came home en the
afternoon of the day of his death.
Through a half-open deer he had seen
his master open his pocletbeok nnd
leunt a big loll of bills. The .figures
en the oiitside enu showed that It was
a treasury note for $50. The alet had
told Shlbe later, and they had talked It
et or. but with no thought In llerlkawa's
mind of robbery.
He was helping Shlbe fix a window
screen at the end of the hall that eve
ning when they saw the Hulls tome out
of Cunningham's apartment.
Something fnrthe in their manner
shuck the valet's attention. It was in
thu line of his duties te drop in aul
risk whether the promoter rletucs
needed any attention for the next day.
He discovered nfter he waH in the liv
ing room that Sliibe was at his heels.
They found Cunningham trussed up te
a chnlr In the Mnnfler room. He was
unconscious, cWdently from a blew in
(he head.
The first linpulse of Ilerlkawa had
been te tta him and carry blm te the
bedroom. But Shlbe interfered. Ik
pushed his hand into the pocket of the
smeking-Jaiket nnd drew out a poekct peekct poekct
benk. It bulsed with bills. In two
sentence Shlbe shr-trhed n plan of op ep op
ciatlens. They would steal the money
and lny the blinne for U e:i the Hulls.
Cunningham's own testimony, would
convict the fat man and bis wife. Thu
J-r at.. . l"- 'r .. "V
i , i.i
TOQQ15
B,
Frank L. Packard
is the author of the new serial . He
wrote "The Miracle Man,",,, and alie
"Frem New 'On, ".one of. the meit
popular tcriah publlahcd in thii
paper.
"PAWNED"
is unusual, even for tueh e matter
of romance at Mr. Packard, Think
of people in pawn te de the bidding
of etheri. That't the ttrenae theme.
Begins Tomorrow
evidence of the two Japanese would
corroborate his. ,
Cunningham's eyelids flickered. There
was a bettl of chloroform en the desk.
The promoter had recently suffered
pleurisy pains nnd had been advised
by hit doctor te held a little of the drug
agalnft the place where they caught
hi m most sharply. Shlbe snatched up
the bottle, drenched a handkerchief
with some of Its contents, aud dropped
the handkerchief ever the wounded
man's face. ,
A drawer was open within reach of
Ctinnlnghani'H band. In it lay an auto
matic pistol,
Thu two men were about te hurry
away. Sliibe turned at the deer. Te
his dismay he saw that the handker
chief bad clipped from Cunningham's
fare and the man was looking at blm.
He h'nd recovered consciousness.
Ciinuliigham'H cjch condemned blm te
death. In their sfcly depths there wns
a glenm of triumph. He was about te
cull for help. Sliibe knew what that
meant. He nnd Herikuwa were In u
strange land. They would be sent te
prison, an example inade of them be-
Shlbe steed en the threshold and
cause they were ferclsncrs. Automati Autemati
cnl y, without an instant of delay, be
ucted te protect hlnielf.
Twe strides took him back te Cun
ninghnra. He reached across his body
for the automatic nnd sent n bullet. into
the brain of the man bound te the chair.
Horikawa, te judge by hW confes
sion, was thunderstruck. He was an
amiable little fellow, who never hud
stepped outside the law. New he was
caught in the horrible, meshes of n
murder. He went te pieces und began te
sob. Shlbe stepped him sharply.
"Then they heard fceme one coming.
It wiih tee Inte te set nway by the deer.
They dipped, threuih the window te the
lire-escapc, nnd from it te the win
dow of the adjoining apartment. Ilorl Ilerl
kawa. Mill sick with fear, stumbled
against the rail as he clambered ever
It and cut his face badly.
Shlbe elunteered te go downstairs
and get him, some sticking plaster. On
the way down Sliibe had met the
eunger James Cunningham as he came
out of the elevator. Returning with
llrst-aid suppliesNa few minutes later,
he saw Jack and Phyllis.
It was easy te' read between the lines
tha.t Shibo's will had dominated Ilorl Ilerl
kawa. He had been afraid that bis
companion's wounded face would lead te
his arrest. If se, he knew It would be
followed by u confession. He forced
Ilerlkawa to'hlde in the vacant npart
hicnt till the wound shduld heal. Mean
while he fed him and brought him news
papers. There were battles of will between the
two. Heiiknwn was terrlblyi frightened
when he read that his flight had brought
suspicion en him. He wanted te gie
himself up at ence te the police. They
quarreled. Shlbe alwas gained the
temporary advantage, but he saw that
under ii grilling third degree his
euntrymnn would break down. He
killed Ilerlkawa because he Knew, he
could net trust him.
This last fact was net. of course, in
llerlkawa's coufesslen. But the dread
of it was there. The ulet had'eome te
fmr Shlbe. He was teuUiiccd in his
shrinking heart thut the man meant te
get rid of him. It wns under bome
impulbe et sclf-protcctieu that he had
written the statement.
Shlbe-heard the confession read with
out the twitching of a facial muscle. Hu
shrugged his shoulders, accepting the
inevitable with the fatalism of his race.
"He weak. He no geed. He get
yellow streak. I bessum," was his com
ment. . . .
"Did veu kill him?" asked the chief.
"I killum both Cupnln'lam and
Ilerlkawa. Yeu kill me new majbe
es."
Officers led him away.
Twe Minutes
By HERMAN
Hi bbbbbbbUe19 IBlMnTl VHjII ltflMVijVflY)9VA1 -" fS
Here and There With Schivab
FEBRUARY 18 is the birthday of Charles M. Schwab tomorrow mark
ing his sixtieth. Congratulations, Charlie!
Somebed once lemarked te Schwab's parents who, by the way, bome
tlme back, celebrated their blxtleth wedding anniversary that Charlie had
proved hlnibelf quite a wendciful and resourceful business inau, that he was
constantly building.
"He was always like that.' rejoined his mother. "When he was a Httle
fellow he used te show lslters all the different btunts he could de. And
when they patted him en the back and told him what a bright boy be was,
he would pipe up, 'But here's something else I can de!' Charlie was always
adding te bis boyish accomplishments."
This trait et scuwuus, mis -uere s-Bomciniiig-cise-i. can-de" Instinct,
continued into manhood, se that bardfe a jcar gees 'by but sees something
uew nnd constructive that he is doing.
Napeleon was fend of siijinB: "M power would fall were it net supported
by new achievements. Conquest h3 nnide me what I am and conquest must
maintain me."
Something of the )amc idea hns been tqe animating motive of Schwab's
care'er. "Toe many big men," he ence said te me, "expect momentum te
carry them along. Momentum Is till right te help, but it is all wrong te
depend upon. It's a lucky man who discovers that" before It's tee late."
Schwab tells an incident of the tlme he took "charge of the Carnegie
works at Homestead, an incident that cannot be tee often repeated.
"There was a jeung chap employed there us a water bej," he bajs. "A
little, later he hecame 'a clerk. I had the habit of going eer the works at
unusual hours te see hew everything was moving. I noticed that no matter
what tlme I came around I would find the former water boy hard at work.
I never learned when he left.
"New, there seemed te be nothing rcmnrkable about this fellow except
his Industry. The only way In which he attracted attention waa by working
longer hours and getting better results than utiy ene else.
"It wns net long before we uccded an usslstunt biiperlntcndcnt. The
ex-wnter boy get the job.
"When we establlshcf our great armer-plate department, there was net
the slightest difference of opinion among the partners as te who should be
maniigcr. It was the jeuth with the penchant for overtime service, the man
with the desire te go, glow nnd become.
"Today that ex-water bej, Alva O, Dinkey, is the head of n great bteel
company and very wealthy. Ills ilsc was predicted en his willingness te
worn una ni iiu?sien re cuniu as mug
und au) height te hu reached,"
ry-V"v! teu H '; ? VO
- it V! , . .'
j--. ' t-P' ..
BBBBBBtBBBiBBBeBBaflwHBBaBBaBieBBBBBBBBaaBBBaBBBaaBBMUitaCbfcjti r irfifcrn ijnwt maBel
WlLUAMMatLtODKMHt:
AUtim f "A Mm Feur-Bfumrr,
' -Gutuifht Put" etc.
CopvHeM, Hit, by William ilaeLtei KaMe
Ph villa Cunnlnthatn came
up te
bend,
TCIrhv and nttpreA htm' her
"You're bard en Jamee. I don't J" wgelden down en bis cheek Just above
uhv veti'rn ae hard. But you've
cleared us all. I say thanks awf'ly for
that. I've been horribly frightened.
Thiit'.hft truth. It seemed although
there wasn't any way out' for us. Come
and sec us and 'let's all make up
rVin.ln Klrhv." .
Klrby did net say he would. Bdt be
gave hci his strong grip and friendly
smile. Just thert his face did net leek
hard. He could net tell her why he had
lirlil hln cetiiln en the' srlll se long, that
it had been in punishment for what hu
had done te a dcfcnscleHs friend of his
In the name. of love. What he did say
suited her perhaps aa well.
"I like you better rignt new man i
ever did before. Cousin Phyllis. You're
a geed little sport an' you'll de te ride
the river with."
Jack could net quite let matters stand
as they Ah. He called en Klrby that
evening at his hotel.
"It's about James- I wants te see
you," he said, then atuck for lack of
words with which te clothe his Idea. He
prodded at the rug with the point of
Ills cane. ,
"Yes, about James," Klrby presently
reminded him. smiling. ....
"He's net se'bad aa you think be
Is," Jack' blurted out.
"He's as selfish as the devlt, Isn't
he?"
"Well, he Is, and be isn't. He's get
n generous streak in him. Yeu may
net bcllcve it. but lie went'en your bend
because he liked you."
"Come, Jack, you're tryin' te seduce
my judgment by the personal appeal,"
Klrby answered, laughing.
"I knew I am. What I want te sa
is thlH. I believe he would have mar
rled Kstlicr McDean If it hadn't been
for one thing. He fell desperately in
levc-wiyi 1'bjllls afterward. The odd
sent a swift glance around the room
thine Is that she loves him. tee. Thev
didn't dare te be aboveboard about it
en account of Uncle James, lliej
treated him shabbily, of course. I
don't deny thnt."
"Yeu can hardly deny that,' Klrby
a creed.
"But, damn It, ene swaKew doesn't
make a summer. You've seen the worst
side of him all the way through."
"I dare say I have," Klrby let his
hand fall en the well-tailored shoulder
of his cousin. "But I haven't seen the
w'erst sldu of his brother Jack. lie's
a geed scout. Come jip te Wyoming
this fall tin' we'll go b'untin' up in thu
Jacksen Helu country, What say?"
"Nothing I'd like better," answered
Jack promptly. '
"We'll arrange a date later. Just
new I'e get te beat it. Geiu drlvln
with a ladv."
Jack scored for once. "She's a geed
scout, tee."
"If she Isn't, VI say there never
was one, nis cousin asscnieu.
CHAPTER XLII
The New World
Klrby took his lady loc drivinc In
a leutcd tliwer. It was a Colerado
night, with a Mung moon looking down
through the cool, tare atmosphere found
only in the Reckies. He drove her
through the city te Berkeley and up the
inn te inspiration reiut.
They talked only in intermittent
snatches. Hoe had the gift of cora cera
radeshin. Her tenztic neer rattled.
With Klrby she did net need te make
talk. They had ulwaya understood each
ether without words.
But tonight their silences were filled
with new and awkward significances.
She gucsed that nn emotional crisis
was at hand. With all her heart she
welcomed and shrank from it. Fer she
knew that after tonight llfe could neer
be the same te her. It might be fuller,
deeper, happier, but it could nothehl
for her the freedom she had guarded
und cherished.
At the summit he killed the enslne.
They looked ucresn the alley te the
inns nimmca Dy nigra .s vcitct dusk.
"We're through with all that back
there," he said, and she knew he meant
the tangled trails of the past weeks Inte
which their fate had led thcni. "We
don't hnve te keep our minds full of
suspicions nn' try te find out things in
mean,. secret was. There, in front of
us, is Ged's world, wnltiu' for you an'
me. Rese."
Though shb had expected it, she could
net escape a sense of suddenly stilled
pulses .fellow ed by a clamor of beating
bleed. She quivered, vibrating, trem
bling. She was listening te the call of
of Optimism
J. STICK '
at nn
here wns anj work te be done
tf.W'f - "
rii a-
Vwaf e 'te' 'aiaYei'teiiadriNr ctearlaSrrei (im
we voices et me world.
A flash of soft ejrs' darted at him.
He-was te be her nmn,' and the maiden
heart thrilled at1 the thought. Sho'Ieved
all of liltu alie knew his fine, clean
thoughts, bis brave and vlrlle Hfc, the
sidendid -body that was the exnresslen
of bis personality. There was a line of
where he bad tdidvcd. Her warm eyes
dared te'' linger fondly there, for he
was sun casing at inn mountains.
Ills ejes came home te her, and ns
he looked he knew he longed for. her in
every fiber of his being.
He asked no formal question. She
answered none. Under the steady re
gard of bis eyes she niiitlc it j mall,
rustling .movement toward him. Her
jeung and lissem body was In his arms,
a warm and palpitating thing of lire
nnd Jey. He held her close. Her ryc
lushcs sweet his cheek and sent a
strange, delightful tingle through his
bleed.
Klrby held' her head back and looked
Inte her eyes again. Under the star
light their lips slowly met.
The read lay clear before them nfter
many tnngled trails.
THE END
$5778 FOR POOR FOUND
Interest Frem Buchanan FuncTLIei
In Lancaster General Account
Lancaster. Pa.. Feb. 17. The new
city Administration has discovered that
JftiiTa In merest from u trust lunti ler
the peer of Lancaster, established by
former President Buchnnah, a resident
of Lancaster, lies in the city's general
funds account, and it will new be used
in relief work.
The fund in question has
grown,
largely through ether legacies, until It
amounts te $47,000. Seme of the In
(crest has annunlly. been used for buy
ing coal for the peer, but this unex
pended balance will new be used for
general relief work.
Uncommon Sense
By JOHN BLAKE
rIE law of the herd may net nlways
be righteous, but it is safer te com
ply with It as long as it is net abso
lutely oppressive.
There Is no statute which prevents
jeu from wearing bright red trousers
and a flowered silk' dressing gown down
te jour work. But jeu will discover
if jeu attempt ithat it is net wise.
Te affect te despise public opinion is
mcrelv foolish. It is" net necessary te
truckle te it, or te rule our lives ac
cording te the passing ideas of the
majority.
But there are some things, hardened
into custom by long use, that wc must
de or be estracised. Fortunately most
of the law of the human herd is Just.
Ana ns civilization becomes mere pro
gressive, each new statute that is added
is wiser and mero worthy of obedience.
IN CIVILIZED countries the law of
the herd compels man te be polite te
wemnu, te be honest with each ether, te
be kind te children nnd te confine am
bitions te objects which can be honestly
attained.
The law Is frequently violated, but
there are punishments for the violators,
and thesu punishments arc frequently
Imposed.
flustering and boasting Is against
the present herd law, and the blusterer
nnd booster seen discovers that pcepld
walk uway and leave him te de his
boasting te himself.
The open practice of most forms of
On SALE at 708 MARKET
A. S. GOLDBERG, Philadelphia
Rubber
Hip Beets
n.95
Vvl. $5, $6,
U. S. ARMY
Brand New
and Perfect
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Officers' SHOES
$2-95
pr.
Value $4.50
Brand New
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Large
Assortment
Raincpats
$0-25
Brand New
Values $6 te $10
A.
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Intimates She Will Refuse, at She
It Retting for New Play
, 1ptcM Cabte IHtpatch. Cepurtpht. If tl
Paris, Feb. 17. A big hair dresser,
with Croix dn Guerre nnd Legien et
Hener ribbons In his lapel, betokening
heroism in the trenches, wns waving her
blonde hair when Peggy Joyce, still
abed, received the correspondent jester
day-afternoon at the Rite Hetel. -
"I was out stepping last night andJ
must bnye drunk tee much champagne
ami danced mero than was geed for
inc." said Peggy, who was attired in
a filmy pink night robe which revealed
a generous expanse of thrent and gleam
ing shoulders ns' she squirmed around
te permit the coiffeur te manipulate his
combs and curling irons.
"A French film cempnny has made a
geed ener te me ie preautc u iih.hu.-,
she said, "but the picture requires two
months, and I came te Europe te rest
up for a new. pley. 'The Lever-ln-Lnw.'
which I am te star In next sea-
"'Millionaire Husbands T Have Had,"
Peggj's book, will be finished bofero she
returns te the United States next April.
The book will net mention any one by
name except the husbands, she Kays.
Ocean City Flahermen Dine
The fourth annual banquet of the
Ocean City Fishing Club nt the Rltz Rltz
Carlten last evening was featured by
the singing of the Kelly Street Busi
ness Men's Association, comprising a
number of well-known Philadelphia
business and professional men. There
were soles by William Ciebhardtsbauer.
Wesley Knox, Daniel Houseman and
v.. .T. Deener. William E. Mcehan.
superintendent of the Philadelphia
Aquarium, spoke en "Fish of the New
Jersey Coast and Other Fisb." There
was also an address by w. w. T-yers,
president of the Ocean City Fishing
Club.
The Law of the Herd
evil are net approved by the majority,
who arc quick te make the man who
fellows them feel their displeasure.
It is often said that this law has
suppressed genius and made progress
Impossible. But It hns mere often sup
pressed what was mere pretension te
genius, and forced progress into surer
and safer channels.
fTUIE man who flagrantly and openly
runs counter te settled public con
victions upon any subject Is merely
handicapping himself. He must be a
greater genius than any .vet born Inte
the world te get away with it.
(teerge Bernard Shaw preaches vio
lations of the law, yet no one mere
rigorously conforms te it, even in his
writing. Compare, for example, the
excellent clear prose of Shaw te the
wild and fantastic erse forms of the
futurists, end you will understand what
wc mean.
We may net believe In law, but we
must abide by it, for it is the influence
that steadies the world. Wc may think
that the herd is often wrong, ns it is,
but if we try te run counter te it wc
suffer, nnd usually wc suffer needlessly.
Copyright, lets
Corporation Publicity Mia
Dealre .Connection. Thoroughly experi
enced In preparing nnd handling puhHdty
nnd advertising- for cnrtxiratleng
Knew,
CUUIIG DII.III .IIU UUHIIirPK.
n 517. LEDGER OFFICE
Gloves
20c
Imported
Scotch Weel
Value $U0
rcaaYGETOr
Pure White Weel
Flannel
SHIRTS
Made With
2 Pockets
$1 .IO
Brand New
POSITIVELY NO MAIL ORDERS FILLED
S. GOLDBERn
Market St., Phila.
t
A
f TATftffErat
GeraaaUwn Naretty SkM
t W. CHBLTEN ATB.
In addition te our larsa assortment
a email let et unueual ,metIfr has
Juat coma In Krench Taptatry Weel,
Beade nf all klnda.
Phene Oermantewn itS9
4 0 OS) O
Reduction
Werth While
Boudoir (O A A
i Lamps CeJvv
Fleer T.ampa nnd
Flxtnree nt
Ileal Marin
CH Oar Ettimttt
ftasstflt
Original
U.S.
Navy
Shirts
and
Drawers
60c
s.
!.
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Manerfaetaret I
EBOEK CO, M N.
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J,. D. HEBU
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Mate) S7I4
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jSS001
I "WELCOME STRANtEfcr: i
A.KMIK'I' XAi.Br.s
x . . ... .!
X imported woven raaarasi
i and Fine Repp $1.50
SHIRTS m
Were $2.50 te $3.503 for I
! A11 $1.00 Ties cat te 50c a
:;: AU $1 .SO Ties cat te 65c .'
'. lerat eurijr wnne inHrinrai la
Abewaltnai
11 N. 9TH ST.
X
Open Kva'a One Stere Only '
U.S.
Army
All-Weel
Brand
New
Trousers
$1.95
$4.50 Value
ST. I
Large Let U. S. Army Style
SHOES, $1-9J5
" pr.
$4, $5 & $6 Values
Brand New
Khaki
Pull-Over
SWEATERS
Brand New
Sa
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