Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, March 22, 1922, Night Extra, Image 12

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LEGION POST PLANS
E
TO BUILD NEW HOM
Members of Legan Unit Shew
Increasing interest and Re
cruits Are Expected
KIN TO BE ENTERTAINED
Inrreavtnic Interest liy the former
service men In the activities of Legan
l'est, 370, American Legien, nml the
mlditien of new
members have ml
vnnced the plans
of the organization
te ebtiiin n per
manent li e in c.
Many nhares of
building nml lean
stock for the
building fund were
Mibserlbed nt the
, ln.t meeting In the Legan Library. One
et tne new members is t lie iicv. Francis
Htever. pnster of the Legan ltuiitist
Church. The ptt Is ntlvertlRlng for
mere members In the neighborhood
newspapers nnd In the motion -picture
neuses in tlint section.
Yeu Can
Actually Test
fhe Wisdom of
YeurBequests
or. New Yerk, of Fifth avenue In ue
xunnhlnc, of a uhep window that was
n glimpse into fairyland, or coieritu
east side strretH and the mystery of the
river after dusk all this and mere
Annie Laurie role about, while her
shoes showed stubbed tees, and her little
gloves had patched fingers and her hat,
well, she refused ecn te consider it any
longer.
One afternoon the temptation was
strong and she stepped before the tiny
shop nnd breathed In the scent. of trail
lug urbuttis.
"I 'mu
must hnve some!" she told the
bent old woman.
The little bushy, fragrant sprays of
sweet blossoms were tied in whlte tis
sue before she asked, "And hew much
Is it. please?"
"Seventy-live."
She searched In her pocket and she
felt In her pure, but all she could find
was fifty cents. 'Her cheeks burned
with embarrassment for there was an
other customer in the shop with his
'back turned,
"I think you dropped this:"
Annie Laurie looked up into n pair of
very blue eves and almost believed nt
first she had dropped it. Hut this time
she was forestalled.
"I believe you live en the fleer nbevc
me, nnd I believe I rescued jour bulb,"
he said quietly, "and ) think if I'm
net mistaken, you're Annie Laurie
WnreV
"Oil. but hew did jieu knew?"' she
asked in u shaken voice.
lie did net tell her that any one could
rend n nnme en the letter box.
"I knew nu'e never done anything
like It before, spoken te n mnn who
LittiiMLalfiSLiI I i'ii' sJfrMjjfe
TOM?
t&WSSfs
riii . . , till t t l 4. II ""U i iniuiv, cihiih.ii lit i man tMK
J he next nice rig : wl I be held April .,,,.. becn introduced." he explained
t the library, Oh erk read un.MNng- ..,, j hel)0 ,.,, wm.t ,, a'livtllnf
at
ner avenue. An Interesting program is like lt nglUn llllt ,., fr0n tlc Seuth
li til tit nviuHniifl 1... Mia I, uluetnl utiiAiir 1 '
Committee. The members are planning
a minstrel show and dance for May 5.
ami'I knew you rer-tndria'waper
It was the one thing that could have
touched Annie Laurie Ware.
"Perhaps " she hesitated.
"Thnfs Just what I think 1" he fin
ished jubilantly. They steed quite still
eutside the tiny shop, and the man
pleaded: "I wonder If you'd let me get
some violets, a handful, or just a rose
te celebrate?"
"Hoses," Annie Laurie smiled, and
then ns he darted into the shop she re
peated the formula te herself, "as
usual."
They walked up the -street together,
and the man with blue eyes said
"Loek!"
Annie Laurie gazed down from the
heights nt the street that seemed almost
like fairy street at the ether side of
the little perk.
"New Yerk is an enchanting place,
isn't it?" the young mnn asked.
'"It's almost like a city of dreams,"
Annle Laurie answered tremulously.
The young men gave one swift, un
derstanding glance at her face before
they turned back.
"It is the city of my dreams new!"
he said.
Lawrence Textile Mills Cut Wages
Lawrence, Mam., March 22. The
wave of wage revision In New Kngland
cotton mills struck this textile center
jesterdny, the Pacific Mills, formerly
employing 10,000 persons, nnd the
Mverctt Mills which employ 12000 an
nouncing cuts understood te approxi
mate -0 per cent. The Arlington Mills,
with 7000 workers, announced f.n In
definite . shutdown, effective Saturday
because of "unsatisfactory business
conditions."
IET us suppose your
r Will contains pro pre
visions for a trust fund
te be used for certain
specified purposes. Yeu
believe that the terms
li l of your Will cover every
i possible contingency. It
might be reassuring,
however, te actually ob
serve that trust in oper
ation, while there is yet
time te remedy any un
foreseen defects.
This can be done by the
creation of a Voluntary
(or Living) Trust, which
operates during the life
of the maker instead of
after his death. A Liv
ing Trust, if made re
vocable, may be altered
or cancelled at any time.
The above is only one
of many uses of the
Voluntary Trust. It is
extensively used in
building up a "personal
sinking fund" against
business reverses or old
age. It may likewise be
used te provide a son
with a college education
or a daughter with a
' f marriage portion.
The Hrcen-McCrackcn Pest plans te
organize a building and lean association
In connection with Its plan for n new ,
pest home. The pest wants u .? 100,000
headquarters.
The second anniversary of the
Women's Auxiliary of Olney Pest, Ne.
."88. will be observed tomorrow evening,
when an entertainment will be held in
the Olney Public Scheel. The women
will have the pest members ns their
guests.
Assistant United States District At
torney Jeseph L. Kun., Stnte Repre
sentative ltenlamln M. Geldcr and
Francis S. Lewis, vice cemmnnder of I
the Legien lu Pennsylvania, will be en
tertained tomorrow night by the Stern
Price Pest, Ne. 41". nnd the Women's
Auxiliary at 1317 North Iiread street. ,
Alterations nt the headquarters of j
Kurmnn-IScnnickcr Pest, at' 4120 North
Klghth 6trcet, will be completed for the
meeting tomorrow night.
The Themas Roberts Reath Marine
Pest Is planning te held a dance at the I
New Century Club. The date for this
affair has net becn set. The member
ship drlve of this pest is meeting with I
success. j
Yeeman (T) Pest held its 'regular
monthly business meeting last night at I
.Sydenham and Locust streets and made .
final arrangements for a minstrel show
and dance te be held April 27 at Apelle ,
Hall.
mW'nSSBUmi- iSfinBk
GllflAlB
TMJST
HfMfiiY
GO
Bread and Chestnut Sts.
Philadelphia
Capital and Surplus
$10,000,000
Member Federal
Reserve System
THE DAILY NOVELETTE
CITY OF DREAMS
By Jessie Douglas
II7HAT de people de te get ac-
Wqualnted?" Annie Laurie Ware
thought desperately.
She was walking nleng one of these
streets in Harlem where the buildings
seem te form a canyon, where the ave
nues arc usly crosscuts, where there is
no vlstn te rest the eye.
"New, if I should just step this man
rnmhie nml siiv. I in se desperately ,
! lonely that I'd like te cry.' I wonder
' what he'd de. Call n policeman, I ,
I s'pesc. " . , I
' Annie Laurie had come quite close
te him new. and she saw that lie hnd
keen blue eyes and two pleasant creases
1 in his cheeks, that he glanced nt her '
1 casually aud that when he did she felt .
' the bleed color her face.
"Just ns theush he knew what I was
thinking!" Annie Laurie went en dls-
conselntely. as she turned the corner. '
"New, if I looked back and he looked
back and Wlij. Annie Laurie, I'm
! scandalUcd at jeu!" she told herself.
She stepped a moment before n shop
windew: it was a very tiny shop with
just enough slass te bhew Bosten ferns,
a feathery spray of lilacs and some
narcissus blooming In the shallow
bowl.
"He'd say 'Would you rather have
lolets today. Annie Laurie, or just
ivc as usual.' "
"Anything I can de for you, mhs?" i
Annie Laurie started. She realized
she had stepped lenjer than she need
before this window, nnd she blushed nnd
looked down nt her glove, which was
quite while nt the llnser tips where it
should hnve been ::rny. and hesitated,
"Yes. I should like a bulb," she
said, boldly, "and some pebbles and a
very, very little bowl."
"I'erty-tHe, miss."
Annie Laurie just had fifty cents left ,
and she realized with a pang that It
I meant she would have no lunch tomer
1 row nnd she hoped there would be no
I deln with her pay envelope.
She snuggled her precious bulb under
her arm and mnde the journey back te
1 her room without further adventure.
"It must have sun and it must hnve
water," she said aloud as she set It ,
in the open window ledge,
i She let the water drip ever her bulb
and heard an Irritated voice ascend
.from the resiens belew: "Hut I don't
need any water, thank you!"
Annie Laurle peered down, and the
voice peered up, until she found herself
looking Inte the verj blue eyes of the
man she had passed.
"Oh, it's jeu!" she gasped.
' Then overcome nt the betrayal of her
words, bhe pulled in her head, and in
her embarrassment dislodged her
precious bulb. She heard It se rat
tling down the areawey amid the sharp '
clatter of her pebbles, nnd as she buw
her little bowl shattered into fragments
1 she gave n heart -broken wall.
1 "I'll see what I can de," n tjmpn
thetle veire called up te her, ,
! "Remember, Annie Laurie, hew jeu
I were brought up!" she warned herself.
When, five minutes later, a breath-
I less ming man with laughing blue eyes
presented her with a stubby brown bulb,
Annie Laurie, with drooped lids that
I hid nil the light of her dancing eyes,
answered primly, "Thank jeu vcrv
much."
That was all.
That "thank you very much" pre
cluded all ether conversation. Yeu
couldn't talk about the weather sud-
I denly or even about having seen a cer
tain person uererc, se tlie young man
thought, when a prim little guardian !
held the deer.
And Annie Laurie back In her room
was lonelier than ever.
"I knew he's nice," she wailed. "He
has eyes like little Ilennle, and his
voice nnd I shall juft have te go en
the same ns ever, dying of loneliness,
going down te the office In the morning
and cenilnj back In the evening, and i
wishing In the meantime."
And she did. '
The ache in her heart was getting '
harder te hear nil the time, and if It
hadn't been for the flve dollars she
could send each week te a little frame
house In St. Petersburg, she might have
given up the struggle nnd fled home.
iter letters were .lull el the charm
See the local ALPfMdeal
er
C3iE-T3 af.-k:.' ! Ie3-'-...f. ..-: .WraHBKL
fl';';' ''-V-'-Vv'fyfl'. .'. '. .1 lw. . : vLli?
- H' iTrlmilTTTBM
'Mf
'MSftfJi?
w
-he
can give
you a copy
of "ALPHA CEMENT Hew te
Use It," which tells hew te plan a perma
nent foundation, hew te build the forms, mix
and place the concrete, reinforce, waterproof, etc
The helpful, 104-page ALPHA Handbook deals
with scores of cement improvements around
home and farm. Costs you nothing te get a copy
from the ALPHA dealer. Just tell him what
you have in mind building. When you are ready
for cement he will tell you why he likes te sup
ply ALPHA, which represents thirty-one years
of experience in cement-making.
ALPHA Cement is tested
hourly while being made, in
order te insure Onifermly high
binding power.
mpHm
'-HE GUARANTEED 3?
CI- PORTLAND 5?
CEMENT
Alpha Portland Cement Ge.
EASTON. PA.
14 S. Dearborn St., CHICAGO, OX.
t MAM MOISTlM05
New Yerk
Baltimore
Botten Philadelphia Plttabnrsh
Battle Creek, Mich. Ironten.Ohlo
PUntm mt: Alpha, N.J. Ccmenten.N.Y. Jamaavllla,
N.Y. Manhelm.W.Va. Martina Creak. Pa.
La Salle. 111. Ironten.Ohlo, BaUtvet, Mich.
W I ; VAIsl
(opuileM, 10JS
bj VTrleltv
Pharmaceutical Ce.
Buy Spearmint
fromyeurDrug'
gist or send te
us for FREE
SAMPLE
0s t; M
W I I
, I
ALCOwucamrwT-w J
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The Correct
Way
te use
SPEARMINT
TOOTH PASTB
is te use it. in" very
small amounts.
Spearmint is se high
ly concentrated that
you need use only a little te give your
teeth a perfect cleansing.
Spearmint is a pure, undiluted denti
frice containing absolutely no water.
Se by laying it across instead of aen
the brush you obtain the best results
and enjoy Spearmint's delicious flavor
te the utmost.
A Little Qees a Leng Way
By using Spearmint Teeth Paste
in the manner here prescribed you will
get 320 cleansings out of every tube.
Compare this with the results ob
tained from ether dentifrices.
SPEARMINT
TOOTH PASTE
is a splendid teeth paste for children.
Mothers have no difficulty in having
their children brush their teeth with
it, for kiddies love its delicious cooling
flaven Ne Qrit
Spearmint contains no grit or harmful abra
sives and cannot injure the enamel of delicate
teeth. Spearmint helps make teeth white and
beautiful, gums firm and healthy; the mouth
fresh and clean.
31 JlS. Randelph St., PlUUdelphla, Pa. I
Pltae tend me free sample tube of Spearmint
Teeth Paite.
Name
Addreu
My Drugilit'a Namt.
Addfeu,
TTZ TTT. . HB.l-V- , , tTITTIaBTVlnTnnnBHHIHBIH
7'ftM--Krsrv
N - - FOUNDKD BT YEARS AOO - ' -;p.-vi. '""WfflSfflT&Vn
i , . f ! l-;,1
The Heuse that
H-vmiA DiiSlf
ntuuc euui
S fel
li
!J
Inaugurated the One-Price System in 1881
rv' r
C. J. lleppe &' Sen
Central Stere Uptown Stere
1117-1119 Chestnut Street N. W. Cor. 6th & Thompson Sta.
Florence J. Heppe
(Ben 'e the founder
'President
The
best-built pianos
are at Heppe's
When the Heuse of Heppe
was founded 67 years hre a
policy te sell only the best
pianos that could be built
was established.
Today the same policy pre
vails of selling only high
class Instruments .including
the pre-eminent
Masen 6c Hamlin
and
Henry F. Miller
Grand Pianos
We sell some low-priced
pianos, but no cheap ones.
When you want a reliable
piano, irrespective of price,
come te Heppe's.
, Bargain Department
Reconditioned pianos that will
plve veu excellent service at a
very little price.
At 4 11,7 Chestnut St.
Heppe Upright Piane C9QQ
Schumann Upright C1I2C!
riane Ebony JHJO
ifendelsiehn Player - Piane
Mnhegany 81- $325
nardman Grand CQ4
Tlanc -Ebony afUtiJ
At 6th and Thompson Sts.
rtatltt f Davla 1 Ofi
Rosewood apl-SO
Rosewood P-&-J
S(wieOMf i ee
French Walnut aplUiJ
Constantin Sternberg
makes records exclusively for the
DUO-ART
producing Tiane
Yeu can hear at Heppe's, or better in your own home,
the wonderful interpretations of Constantin Sternberg's own
original compositions. The Due-Art is the piano supreme
the ONLY piano which will really reproduce the works of the
great masters as the masters would have them repro
duced. That the Due-Art is used only with the Stein
way, Weber, Steck, Wheelock, Stroud and Aeolian
Pianos, is another evidence of its pre-eminence.
Come te Heppe's te hear and try the Due-Art.
vv
jjgjg9QaSB9B
Rachmanineff chose the Victer
THIS great composer-pianist, in
aligning himself with ether famous
world artists in music and song who
chose the Victer as the instrument for
the rendition of their work, attests the
pre-eminence of the Victer and gives te
Victor-Victrelas an' .indersement of
transcending value.
We sell Victor-Victrelas exclusively
because Victer goods are the best ob
tainable. We would sell and urge our
patrons te buy ether instruments if we
knew they would measure up te the
Victer standard. Our long experience,
however, proves the superiority of
Victer products, and we back the Victer
goods because they give complete and
lasting satisfaction.
Heppe Victrela Outfits
Victrela Ne. 50, $54.50
with six 10-inch double-face records
Pay only fl.00 weeldy
Victrela Ne. 80, $110
With 10 worth of records
Pay only $3 weekly
Victrela Ne. 90, $135 '
With $10 worth of records
Pay only S1.7B weekly
Victrela Ne. 300, $260
With $10 worth of records
Pay only S3 weekly
Nothing but Victor-Victrelas sold at Heppe's
A Gift
which we don't tell
We want it te surprise
you. Accept the offer
made below and we
premise te delight you
with a lifetime gift
See what you get.
MaVHCAMl
SSTERILI0vl
iED,
Mil IT
liraw LLlm
"JJMl 1 1 .-r
uiaijj iTn"1
1 ' I II 111 I
J
aaVriTll IV5
miunuursj
A Surprise
Your grocer has it for you free
This offers you a secret gift. We want it te surprise
you te be better than you expect.
It is for women only, and will last a lifetime. It is the
latest thing of its kind, and made by a famous maker. It
is something te daily enjoy. -
It is a luxury, se most women de net have it. Net one
in a thousand has one like this.
tThe gift is at your grocer's. Accept, the offer in the
coupon, and he will present it te you. But this is just a
short-time offer. Please act new.
Super-Grade Milk
. Deuble richness thick as cream
SP
A Richer Milk
The finest milk produced
in America
Over twice as rich as bottled
milk.
Absolutely free from germs.
The result of 20 years of
study te bring you the finest
milk in its finest form.
Van Camp Products Ce.
Indianapolis, Ind.
New the grocers of this section
have a super-grade milk. The Van
Camp experts have spent 20 years
te perfect it.
It is produced in the finest dairy
ing sections of the Middle West.
It comes from sanitary dairies and
from high-bred cows. It is guarded
byevery precaution.
A cream-like milk
In each of these sections milk
fresh from the tcew comes te a
model cendensery. There, at low
heat in a vacuum, we evaporate
most of the water. Nothing is
added te the milk, nothing but
water is taken out.
It comes te you as thick as cream.
It is ever twice as rich as bottled
milk nearly 8 per cent butter fat.
Use it like cream in coffee and en
cereals. Add an equal part of water
for drinking. Dilute still further
for cooking, and you still have a
rich, whole milk.
Fer every purpose you have ster-'
ile milk, utterly germ-free.
It costs you less
This ideal milk costs no mere
than ether evaporated milks. It
costs you less than bottled milk
and saves you all the waste.
It comes in small cans and tall
cans, se you open what you want.
It keeps until used up. With it you
always have en hand the richest
full-cream milk, and you never
waste a drop.
Fer selected cities
t
The production of such milk is
limited. We can never supply mere
than one home in twenty. Se we
select certain sections and offer it
there alone.
New this section is one of them.
Frem this time en all grocers here
will be kept supplied. Se we want
every home around here te try this
perfect milk.
That is why we make this offer.
If you will try a dozen cans we will
repay you amply. Your grocer will
present you your choice of two
gifts, both of them exquisite.
Then you will knew the finest
milk your home has ever served.
And you will have a lasting gift
Cut out the coupon se you won't
forget.
This
Offer
Geed for a
Short Time
Only
The Secret Gift
, is at your grocer's
Buy from your grocer 12 cans of Van
Camp's Milk, at one time or as wanted.
Cut out from each label the picture of the
can our trade-mark. When you have 12
of these trade-marks hand them te your
grocer and he will present yw the gift
ft
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