RPwBsSPSBBPI ts!fi: V.T-.1M Msfii? WW ' v KS&W " w fair Aj3i U Xt I ',111'IV I.Ullfll V wv mri -wtw !2Wv.5jl-i2iM:v fit.' ffiRU-FHFTjAU "WTT i - w . I f . Rm K I.i' SI. Jtt Trtjl M frj 71 B I It I s K.I pm it ? V. m M? tSn- i I W .-' !.. M, ltff BS?n RS" M" m 'iga9 n& irirn rw ih 'MLr, OOFING MATr.RtAf.M Munufntliirpd by. (.J. BKfHlKR til, SO N. 2I Tltr"Kf H SONS OF ST. PATRICK .Jl H i'!;:. " . '- r. r? j tJW-.? .- 9-' GUV .: PB MMmT ner.! i" rm m &. t i'iiiiii.v i lf ' I Jfe tlimwxlbeds. U ; i - ' Wfc, II ) i ' S ,. . ". IK 3rV5yjTDPNT j ?W NEGLECT '; !b&teurEyes $ - Ke State OdticilG .U lrAftiwi.Lr,4 C .. n. ...... ,gr igwnamcLurtNtvtwiNW t ! I . tt. , I ' A A W TO MARK E RIOT f x Sehaler Pepper and Governer Sproul Expected te Speak at ' Birthday of Irish Society 4- - - -' ruurautu NAB WOMAN WITH DRUGS Police Say They Found Depe en ' Theft Suspect Catherine Harklns. of Mildred and Vim- strctta, was held In $600 ball by Magistrate Ceward today at Central Station, chanted with htrinf narcotics In her possession. " t Members of the vice squad arrested her last night after, Jeseph Mitchell, of Camp Dli, complained that the woman hnd stolen $244 from him. She had $07 Vhcn arrested. Hlie will be given another hearing. - , " - i '"i W'.W, iii'iiM JT ' " . ' . .,.-... gan ! ii ' n IT 151 YEARS AGO Weaver STORE ORDERS KniiMr Ann in BUY ANYTHING ANYWHERE AND PAY US ON EASY TERMS S. R. Weaver, Inc. 1112 CHESTNUT STREET Roem 21 ii ml 33 T iti? I'.lfliller HvWSiJ.'.mi'lH- fHil.- 'M ! OPPOSITE uisssssssaag 1887 INDEPENDENCE HALL 1922 Lighting Fixtures! New ! We display the latest spring designs. Distinctive! The patterns areoriginn areeriginn areoriginn 'tiens exclusively with us. Beautiful! These fixtures are true works of art. Economical ! Our prices represent u real saving in dollars. WALKER & KEPLER 3JTrrfH531 CHESTNUT ST.rvrTrrt Don't wait for time te heal that rash ReslnolSeap and I Ointment have $ven connen and permanent relief te thousands of skin sufferers Wry don't yeu$ve them a chance te heal yeurskin? RESINOL 5oeihinq &nd llc&linq " -mi i T!u illnncr teniglit marking the lMut minlverarr of the Friendly Sens of( 1 St. Titrlck l planned as the nlftfiest event In the hltery of the cnelety. ! MemberM of the society who live at I I distant points will travel many mlW te Jein In the celebration which will bd held nt the llellevue-Stratferd. Among these who have been nslccd te nddress the members are Senater Top Tep ier, Governer Sproul. Meer Moere, rengrcvjtmnn O'Connor, of LeuNlana. Dr. 11iikc11 11. Conwell and Ilev. .leseph M. Cnrrlcan. of St. Charles' Semlnnry, nnd Cengri.!iman Philip K. Campbell, i of Kniitiis. r .TihIbc Iteccrs. president of the se ciety, will preside nt the opening of the dinner Willi he transfers te Judge Patterson the geld medal which Is em blematic of the etnee of the prcKldcnt. Themas James Meuglier will step Inte he office of icc president. TIip miisli- !ilas an lnteretlnc fenture of tlie annual dinner, will be provided by the chorus of the Kelly Street ltiiMnes Men's Association, with rdwiird J. Doencr. piict president of the eciet. wielding the baton. The merchants have been rehearsing bcverul new number. A smoker nnd entertainment will be eld tonight In the church hall nt 1.122 North WiltinmaUer street, under the auspices of the St. Hese of Minn Catholic Club. A boxing exhibition and bag pipe placing will be the features f if the evening. Th6re will also be sev eral vaudeville acts. The Itev. Jehn J. Cunnlf will talk en "The Life and ,-llnbltH of St. Patrick." I Tint Philadelphia chapter of the Pi Sigma Delta will held a St. Patrick's D.i) ilnuci; tonight in the Hits Carlten. Talent from the lending theatrical sue sue ecme have been engaged for the oc ec easliin. A eIemn pontifical mnss vns cv'e hrnted this meinlng in St. Patrick's Church. Twentieth street, below Locust. Itlshep (.'nine celebrated tlie mass, which marked the end of a umetin. Monslgner .lames P. Turner was the assistant jirict, and th Itev.. Jehn Mnllln and James Sullivan were deacons, The Hev. Wlllliwn (jiiinn, missionary among tlie Itiilhins, prencheil, and the Ilcv. Tliemas T . McN'nllj was the master of ceremonies. MINA DOLORES' RECITAL Interesting Program Given at the Academy of Music Feyer Mlnu Doleres, soprano, gave her an nual recital in the foyer of the Acnd einy of Music last evening before nn t enthusiastic audience which nearly filled the auditorium. Mis Doleres showed her usual excellent taste In the choice of her numbers, which embraced about the entire range of compositions in tlie lyric form, every school being represented from the undent Italian and Kugllsh down te works of the present day in several languages. In technical work they ranged from Mo zart's apparently simple, Iit reallv enormously difficult. "Vel che Sepete," through the gicat Herman elns( song writers down te short seuks by living composers. Miss Doleres una in excellent voice, although apparently n little nervous in the lirst group, which had some ef fect upon her intonation. This, how ever, were off us the program pro ceeded. The finest group was that composed of songs bv Schubert, Schu mann. Ilrahms nnd Franz, undoubted!) ! thu four greatest writers of songs that hnvc ever lived, and each of the songs chosen h one of the great master pieces of the composer. Of the later songs the best rendered were Cadii.an's "The Moen Dreps Iou." Saar's "Mttle (Irny Dee" and Tschalkow Tschalkew sky's "At the nail.'. I The rendition! of the entire pro gram was thoroughly artistic, and each song was sung in the l&ngunge In ' which it was written, thereby gaining greatly In cen'lstncy and effect. One epeclel feature of the program was a Hebrew song, "Yem Klppur" (Cry of Atonement), filled with the charac teristic Hebrew melnnchelv nnd splen- I dldly rendered. It was the first per formance of this song in Philadelphia. LITTLE BENNY'S NOTE BOOK By Lee Pape MAKES SHORT WORK efPain. Sloar&Jer rheumatism 1 lumbago neuralgia spTttiris,stmins weak backs .stiff joints AxlldnuilitOSc.70c.MO Slean: Linimentte 31 Mcs Sick Skins Weil Om of Dr. Hebsen'a faarilyltantdlM. 5erUr, hIUiroeniptaionBofrli iSSSSSS I was coming lienie from s!,oe till ' nftirnoen and nil of a smldin I saw n pin rite In frunt of me en the pave ment, me thinking, llirrnj, geed luck. And I steeped eer te pk It up feel ing glad and then I qulik steed up str.ite agen feeling rerry, because some thing ripped nil of n miridln mid I pu' in) hand bnik nnd heer It was a hi,' p'nee In the sect of my pants, me thinking. Heck, geed nlte, wat kind ei geed lucks that ? Wich jest then I saw Mar) W.nMn W.nMn ceming and I ipiick sat down en some seme seme bed) s frunt steps with a Upiesslen a" if my pants illdent hae ene, thing te de with it. and Mary Watkins mine up saying, Helle Ilcnuy, wnts )ou sitting therefer? Im waiting f r somebody, Im waiting fur some fellow lives In heer, 1 scd, und she sed, I dldent knew cny b'iy cd in there, I neur taw en) go I. or cnything. He Jest meed heer, he's n friend of mine, I sed, and Mar) Watkins sid, O wilts lie like, Is he nice, I'll jest wnit heer a little and wen he comes out )e'i cuu intcrdu e us. Me thinking, (ioed nlte, gosh. And I sed, Theres no use waiting, ou weuldcnt like him, you'd think he was fcarsc. and she std, Wy. wv would I, wnts he like? and 1 sed. O, he's the limit, he is, he's euy get , teeth and 2 of tlicjuti 1de.su se he en) ixpects tu iune ,'1 seen, and he'ey sine.iks )ei. nwt te see the wa) his c'nthes leek, his shoe laces W nllwn)s undid and he never wears a 'tie und (i wls )ou awt le see hew ilerty his nei k gets. Well hew de ou h.ippiu te knew rfiltc characters, you srcl he was a friend of )ours, If thatH the kind of fiends )our frends are well then Im net eni of them, sed Mar.v Watkins, And she wnwked nwny proud and I threw the pin away hard us niythliu, thinking. O jes, geed luck all rite, 0 rs. And I quick inn lieme the back wa). running sliiewajs wencver 1 went past enjbndy in case they mltu happiu te leek erreund. WANT TIIK BKAI. TBUTn ttieut llellw(sdT He much him been M vbuut that little Jrfm tpwn of mllllenalris who titcsm' rich overnight. Hetd the truth iuiui noiivweoa in iu ii ' In Seetlsa of 1857 Anniversary Menth 1922 15 Off 7t Ml WY J0W -Jwm Ar dvrm v j MEN If Yeu Place Spring Orders New $60 Suitings About 100 $AC Selections tJ $65 Suitings, $50 $70 Suitings, $55 $80 Suitings, $65 te $115 Suitings, $100 Get Samples This is an open and above beard preposition. The reduc tion is real the quality the best te be had. Hundreds wait for this sale it's established we've held it for 25 successive years at least. Order New Don't Put Off Save $15. aVXW I Hre Iff Embick Tweed Its Immense Vogue ISA matter of something worth while at a med- erate price. When you think of tweed you usually think of something somber. But these are net. In glorious pinks, blue, rose, tan, jade, orchid, periwinkle. They about fill up the full sum of com manding beauty when worked out in the different combinations in which the different garments match. Hat Cape Jumper That Match Te Order $ 62 .50 Cape, $3250. Jumper, $22.50. Suit, $60.. Hat, $7. 50. Ceat, $45. Hats that you'll want at prices you'll want te pay. At $-00 Bebette Twill Silk ' All colors. At $7.50 Banded Leghorns, bound edges. At $10.00 Ribbon and straw hats. At $12.50 New felts; all colors. Oia - Bey & Girls LOalS 24 te 6 Yrs. In the much-wanted tweeds in the pastel shades; individual in style; custom tailored throughout. Anniversary $ 1 y 50 Dresses, 2 te 8 years. In im ported Swiss, gingham, pongee, plain and figured dimities; smocked. $7.50 te $15 Special W H. Embick & Sens 1618-20 Chestnut St. r.,ViypA in M n. I 'i t WV W&9 Is Your Kitchen All-Gas? In these days of labor - saving, comfort promoting devices, no woman should be without the convenience of a Gas Range, Gas Water Heater and Gas Iren. When all the kitchen work is done by means of gas heat, you can be sure of greater convenience, cleanliness and economy. We new have en display new Gas Ranges, with many attractive features. Seme are finished in enamel. All are built according te American Gas Association specifications, insuring, geed material and workmanship and perfect cooking results. Call or ask its te Bend a representative THE UNITED GAS IMPROVEMENT COMPANY .;, ," ( : , ,, -i The Presidents PlatifdM Effective today in 60 Regal Stores A' V h'V. i v. 'H ' . f. .' J THE World has passed through. a period of Inflation and' Deflatien.1 j '' ' The War is ever. Business is fast getting back te normal. Ey.efy ' one is? making a 'readjustment-anti rearrangement of business policies that. they were forced te adept when the War turned' everything upside down and inside out. ..'. vNew everyone in this organization has both feet en the ground-once mere; I'm bade en the job, and I've put this.business back en, the old. ;Platform that I adopted when I started this business 28 years age, that is, . , ' One Profit One Quality One Price i. A , " urn ii i PWBttttiff raW 'ffxwm TSWtKrntxixA W ssMilMw'sftl1ssTW L- -rKihH ' WHEN I returned from France, after the Armistice, I found that some "Multiple Stores", had introduced "Multiple Prices." I guess they were afraid that War Prices would scare their old custom ers away, se they introduced "Multiple Grades" and "Multiple Profits." r Coming direct from the Training Camps en the ether side, it looked te me as if Business in America was trying te multiply everyone into multi-millionaires. When Business Men talked about Profits, the figures they used sounded te me like another Liberty Lean. The disease was contagious and the germ spread in our organiza tion. New, I'm net going te have an Endless Chain of Prices in the Regal Chain of Stores,' and starting today, we are going tecut out "Multiple Prices," "Multiple Grades" and "Multiple Profits" and de business en our old Platform of One Profit One Quality One Price The Leather'Market jumped like a sky rocket when the submarines shut off the leather supply. We first had teraise our price and later had te change the price, and then introduce different prices te keep in touch with the Leather Market which jumped around faster than the Stock Market. New the price of Leather is back and the price of Laber is coming down, and shoes which were sold for $16.00 and $18.00, when we went, ever the top, we can new sell for one price, $6.80. All Sizes and Widths, All Styles and Leathers. In ether announcements I'm going te talk about "Factory Facts" "Stere Savings" and "Cutting the Cost of Distribution." I'm going te tell you hew the $6.80 price was made possible this year by putting the knife in Leather Costs, Averaging Laber Costs, eliminating unnecessary Over-head, Reducing Inventories, Increasing Production and Cutting our Selling Cost in two, by selling All Leathers. All Styles at One Profit and One Price. JJ FOR MBN REGAL SHOE STORES In PHILADELPHIA FOR WOMEN 1226 Market Street Men's and Women's Shoes 732 Chestnut Street (Cor. 8th Street) Men's Shoes Only LT ' President Jljl .Ja. m s J Ira 11 1 W Wa l NZ See Classified Ads en Pages, 29 and 30, vrrtl I r'J 'V .1 I 1 m t h- ?! 7S9TTfTT777TTt; ,aM uiiMy's ruDin ; it i-V V.v.i & pt'imM.-'w " " . . 7 . X ' I MmsiM !tS' f . ';, r, l-y38fTk,ps7Swire;5 t. M-'.i'V fiiJS&i A. fM l ,4. Li .V r. X '',i A UB-K. rv9i!..ir$t aaa