n'.i IHH SffiW&lcS 9fc' &r?35raz3t? "K,J-J1W-' t'iTl TiK 1 S-r-m,YiVT VlTTTal Tl ri JCJVJ21J.V JTUJDJJJW ilvjaj JTJL&A 13 msm&mwv miaamiamwmmmKXwmMmMBmv p i mi im iiiiib i ' in iiMiiH ipii i iim i ii i i ii pjwiw i i fc - "-V IVYTSEWt . MT' BHflffiMSiKtfWWBw "'" " f ..:r'T',,- . --. ,y.-,rvnn..- ; i v. i hit i .. .1 . ... 1 .J 11 AI J &a :. IV JV m 1(W m m )A Bi cf il3flil ' MMMtSS HENV DINNER VAIA CARE SCRVtt - . .1 . VAiI1any LUNCH .XJZKXAl, 7A.MtBRM. .fttSTAURANT AW COFFEE SHOP tfXAHP CHESTNUT STS. tL-l fbT sr!' i 4000 Square Feet Manufacturing Space " FOR RENT 612-614 Chestnut Street Freight and Passenger Elevator Service Immediate Occupancy Apply Mr. Dallas 606 Chestnut Street 4 maanxascc The finest 1mm eutter in r merica: 48 lb Sold only in Asce Stores lMrniriil flhMMKmiii!iL,!:!iaiiLiir!ini!iri1rntiiLn isnviwm menu J&Zk ikTuiarKkvj ii E" Grews Thick, Heavy Hair JS-cent Bettte Ends all Dandruff, Steps Hair Coming Out Ten minutes after using Danderine you cannot find a Bingie trace of dandruff or falling hair and your will net Jtcn, out wnai wui you most will De alter a tew ' ...i ..... ... ...... u,l. tweaks use, wncn you see new nair, :trm.ui"i Dl mwwwwwW&SmwwwwwwwwwwwmWmn BSKSk 1 mmmWWW mmmmmmmmWKjf ' fTtflL. mMmmmmmmmmmW m V I&$f&$m ia mWT i "I ' ' & ' gmWW P V I"-? -J' 'Mtisfsiisiaai K mWW&'' J&H&W 7BUmmmmmmmm rvLmmwwwwwwwW&mK HlHalBLaLBaLal I ' ' WmmMMMmW' ' 9Lm aaaagpjBJBJBJBJBJBJBJBJ ,miMM,u ' ' aaBBBBaeaaaaBaa ji5tlsa ana downy at nrst yes dui i "$;2X- ., hairfrnwttlir .ill ever the 'ifg'T?, n..j..l.l. .T,. Leir ...l.e. Jf V S,SJCaiP. iflUUIilMIV IB IW till. I.UI TT V-W.x''4rmmx ahewers of rain and sunshine fe.'ara te vegetation. It gees right te ?yV -,lt .- lM(flrrM9ia anrl efrrnartfl. Webt' roots, invigorates and strength Wftemam them. hclDine the hair te grew B'ew wkJJiit, strong and luxuriant. One ap ? 'llisatlen of Danderine makes thin, i. colorless hair leek youth- :ht, lustrous and just twict, t.Atm. "PAWNED rON"T! Don't cry, Claire!" Jehn -' Ilruce whispered, and laid his hnnd etcr hers where It crushed the let- tcr In her lap. "I believed It," ahn said, "t did you thnt wrong. There is no forgive-, nejs for micIi meanness of soul ns thnt." Ne," .T0I111 llrucc answered gently, 1 there Is no forgiveness because there is nothing te forgive. It was only an other nleoe of that nilsernbln hound's cunning tnnt triCKecl 11s both. I did net appreciate what he was after in thnt reference te jeu J I thought he was only trying te make the letter bullet-proof In its plausibility for Larmen's benefit 1 never thought that he would show it te you." She had net drawn her hnnd away, but her face was still hidden ; und for a moment there wis silence between them. "Claire," Jehn Bruce said In a low , voice, "the night I left your house you sau mat, ratucr tnan regretting cmr premise te marry Craug. you had come te be glad en had made It. Cen you still say that?" Sbe lifted her face new, tear-stained, the brown eyes strangely radiant through the wet lashes. "Yes." she sold "I nm glad. Se glad because I knew new that it was worth It all te many, many time ever." "Claire" his voice was lower still "I left jour house that night, angry, jealous, misjudging you because you had said thnt. Yeu u4ted for forgive ness u mlnute age when there was nothing te fergive: I usked for forgive ness from you uftcr that night, but even then I did net knew hew fnr be be jend the right te forgiveness I had gene." She stared at him in a startled way. "What what de you mean?" she breathed. And new Jehn Brnce's face was alight. "Yeu hnvc confessed your love, C'nire!" he cried passionately. "It was net fair, perhaps, but I am past all that new and you would net have confessed It In unv ether wn.v. Olnd 1 I was a stranger that night when you bought my life and tenignt jeu are glad, net becnuse my life is new or ever could be worth nueh a sacrifice as jeurs, but because leve has ceme te make you think te, swetthenrt. and jeu care run rnrn fnr HIP." "xeu knew: tier iace was unum? i net tell you hew near te death he came today? I choked the truth out of lum. Yes; I knew ! I knew thnt it was te sae my life jeu made thnt premise, that you sold ctrjthing jeu held djar In life for me but it is ever new! He wns beside, her. He raised her two hnnds te draw her arms around ins neck. She strugclcd back. . "Ne, no!" she cried wildlv. "Oh, jeu must net jeu mnst net!" "Must net!" His voice rang his ehnllenge te the world. The bleed was pounding in mad abandon through his veins. His soil itself seemed utlnmc. Clecr, closer he drew her te him. "Must net! There is only jeu nnd me and our love en nil the earth! But still she struggled und then sud denly the tears came. Oh. jeu are be strong "e strong. she sobbed nnd like wime weary eh lit iii finding rest her hrnn dreitped upon his shoulder nnd Iny Iiiddett mere. "Claire.: Claire'." It was his soul that spoke. ; He kised the silken hair, and fondled It; and kissed the tenr-wtt eyes; nnd hi cheek lay aeiilnst hers; und she was in ills arms, and lie held her there tight clasped te that she might never go again. 1 And after a time she sobbed no mere ; , nml ii,.r hand, lifting, found his face and 1 touched it gently, nnd creeping upward, I hruhd the hair back from his fore fere headand then suddenb she elnng te I him with all lier strength and drew hl I head down until her lips met his. 1 And there was no world about them, I i and time was non-existent, nnd only I they two lived. , It was Claire nt last who put his arms I from, her in a, wistful, lingering way , I "We have been mad for n little ' while," 'she whispered. "Tnke me back i home, Jehn nnd and jeu mu.st never try te see me ngaln." I And something seemed te grew chill nnd cold within Jehn Brucc's heart. "Net that. Claire'." he cried out. I "Yeu de net mean that that, after this, ydu will go en with with tomer- , row morning!" ' A brave little effort at a smile qulv ered en her lips. "We have had our hour. Jehn, she said; "yours nnd mine.. It can never I be taken from us, nnrt I shall live in it all iny life; but it is ever new. rs; 'I shall go through with It tomorrow morning. There is no ether wny. I must keep my premise.-' "Ne! he cried out again. "It shall never ba! Claire, jeu cunnet mean what you are saying! A premise like that! It was forced upon you lntm innnlv, horribly. He would have mur- i dered tne " "But tonight you are nlivc, she an swer 1 quietly. "Alive! Yes!" he said fiercely. "I am nllve, ami " "It Is because you arc nllve that i premised." she broke in gcntlj. "II" kept his word. I rannet breait mine." "Alive!" Jehn Bruec laughed new in sudden, bitter aueny. "Alive yes! I And de ou think that I can walk nbeut. the btreet. nnd talk, and smile, nnd suclc the honey out of life, while you 1 have paid for tt with a tortured soul? "Claire, jeu hnll net! That man Is Ne, wait! There is mvse f. He called me u sniveling hypocrite. Yeu shall knew tun worst et me uctore jeu knew the worst of him. There Is net i , much te tfll because he has told jeu. , I n n a gambler. All mv life I've gam- b'ed. As far bark as I can remember I've been a rolling stone. My 'Iff has ben useless, uteris" worthless. But 1 was never ashamed of it ; I never saw I any reason te he ashamed until jeu came into mv life. It hasn't been the same since then and It will never be Im snme acnln. Yeu have given me something te live for new, Claire." i She shook her head. "Yeu de net urgue well." she said softly. "If I have brought this te you, Jehn, I nm glad se glad for this, loe Oh. I cannot tell jeu hew Kind I nm, for, because I loved ou, the knowledge of what your llfe was hurt inc. Hut J nnd taitn in you, aeun, as I alwajs shal' hnvc. Se don't jeu see" the brave little smile came again '"Hint this is a reward, something tan- , gible nnd great, te mal.e still mere worth hin thr, premise that I made?" He stared at her. He swept his hnnd acre.-. his eves. She seemed ehs secmen te ou uupi'ihk uhj mm, mm uejenu uejeui us reueu. "Tim, mini !" hn said desncratclv. v.iii mi id von knew him but veu de net knew him. He 1 the lieud and front mid bruliiH of u gang of creeks. I knew ! He held me n prisoner In their I dlrtv lair, n hidden plate, n eel nr even In the slums like rats they were. He, iu n nrimlnnl. und n dangerous one I n-iiiln he mnsiiuuiides with his medi cine. Ged alone knows the crimes, if ..,,. nr nnv. that he has net com- mined. He is a foul, unclean and filthy thing, debauched and dissolute, a mera I leper. Uinire, ue you uuuenwiw an white. "Yeu knew about about tliat her te i,,m ni.nilu t0 jav licr llen( encc i mental absorption fn wliich his phjslcnt night." she faltered. mere upon his shoulder but new she p,v ",ul b;PV " wasfj o'clock. Jehn Bruce had both her hands im- ilf;, him and he was Jehn Bruce. At 11 o'clock nrisencd new. .v i ii , .... it i -or was it 12? last night he had left Yes I knew!" He laughed ?h i Johh -landing by life deer of the strance buevanc ; puss en. triumph. a"TvI,7. ,:?.... .,.ii.,ji, ,.i i trnvclliig pawnshop, nnd slnce then were Sbrant in i 1 Is xeicc. "DM Crang ' .. I thfn wn 'tiling ,n her eiee I c ,,, around hIn). JIc WM semc. An Unusual Remance of 'People Whose Vary Betag Is Pledged te De the Bidding of Others By FRANK L. PACKARD Auther of "The M tract Man," "Frem New On," fc. repirlanf, list, hy FuWe Ltdetr Company EWJt . (JIM SBF -l laflsfafUl ISd xpBmwBmmu WMSmmliJJimmmmWi 'I'd rather see Iter dead," said the old cab driver brokenly. Ilruce made no answer this that bis life is pollution and de filement, thnt love te him is lust, that your innocence " With a broken, piteous cry, CInlrc stepped him. And again he stated at her. She did net speak, but in her cjes he tend the torment of n far greater and fuller ap preciation of the prien thnn he, he knew, though it turned his soul sick within him, could ecr linve. Aud suddenly lie covered his face with hln hnnds. "Bought!" he said brokenly in his agony. "Oh, my Ged, this has bought i rae!" He fe't his hands drawn nway, and her two palms laid upon his cheeks. He looked at her. Hew white she was! I "Help me, Jehn," she said "tendlly. "Don't don't make it harder." She reached out and touched the bell i button beslde the seat. In n mbcen i scions way he remembered thnt was the slcnal for Hawkins te brine the trav eling pawnshop te the end of Its circuit around the block In its oldtime trips, I tn Persln. Mr. n.niln .,n i-ffnrt In stnn I ncr Thcre wae temethinc of ultimate ' finality in her fnce and ryes thnt an- swered, before It was uttered, the ones-1 tlen that stumbled en his lips. "Claire! Claire!" he pleaded wildly. "Will iieUl3 chnnge jeu?" "There is no ether wn." she said. Hn stietehed out his nnns te draw i The car stepped. Aud then, as the deer was opened and she steed up, suddenly she leaned swiftly forward aud prcsed her lips te his and springing from the car, was gene. Jehn Bruce groped his way out of the , car. Acress the sidewalk the deer of Paul Venlza's house closed. Hawkins, standing by the car deer, clutched at his arm. And Huvvkins' hand wns trembling violently. Slowly his ejes met Hawkins'. He shook his head. The old lined face seemed te gray even I In the murkj light of n distant street ' lnmp. i "I'd rather see her dead," said the, old cab driver brokenly. i Jehn Bruce made im answer. i Then Hawkins, gulping his words, , gnei acaiM: I . - . "I where'll 1 drive you?" Jehn Bruce btarted blindly en past Hawkins down the strret. i "Nowhere," he said. CHAPTER XXII . Through the Night , ! A gaunt and iinggaru figure Maiuctt through the night; around him only shuttered windows, d.ukened houses, nnd deserted streets. The pavements rang hollow te the impact of his beet- . ClillL UL'lli UM11 11UIU U1U llLt. THE UNIVERSAL CAR teSfe .IIS 513 n Derft Wait-Buy New-Terms And remember the lowest first cost, the lowest upkeep and the highest resale value of any meter car ever built. Let the Ferd One-Ten livery costs. Records of savings made by hundreds of thousands of users in practically every line of business are actually astounding. Let us show you. Yeu de net obligate yourself in any way. TKST OIKARD AOK.NCY MI7-10 . (dnird Ave. Toplar 5374 Uace BI6 A1.K.Am:R ALLAN 10 lllildiind Ate.. hentnut Hill Clirnlmit II II 1BIU IIAMIAM 1101 Oil (IIMVANX KldEP Ave. .V llunnnt lit. Itnxliiireueli 0710 .I01IN IIVItlll.lt 9134 IliiKllitnn Vic. IIIIHt'rtun S05II V. M. nAUTI KTT 4310 Hrewn Mrert llnrlnr 181 MfktSBBS J. A. rtNINOIIAVI 1I6R-A7 buutb llreuil ht. Orcseii 4311 Hare CSU Knni'KT K rnri.Kitmi 71lll-','l Itinlnc S'i Ave. Kev C'Iiiim 1108.1V HAItnV h. I'KKNtll. Incorperuted 12U' Trunkturd Ave. Ktnilnctun 211H-1U K.K.I 7310 Jehn heels. Vhere the way lay enen he went. But always he walked: walked incessantly, without pause, hurrying nowhere. There was a raw, biting chill in the nlr, nud his hnnds. uugleved, lis they swung nt his sides, were blue with cold. But sweat In great beads steed out Ufeen his forehead. At times his lips moved and he spoke, aloud. It was a hearso sound. "Or htm!" he said. "Or him!" On ! Always en ! There was no rest. It was ceaseless. The gray came into the East. And then at Inst the iigure halted. There wus a large window with wire grating, and u light burned within. In the window was a plate mirror, and a timepiece. It was n jeweler's window. The man looked at the timepiece. It was 5 o'clock. lie looked nt the mir ror. It tefleeted the fnce of a jeung man grown old. The ejes burned deep in their sockets; the lines were hnrrt, without seilness.; uie skiii was tlglitly ilrawn across the cluekbencs, nud wus COler'CSS, -n,i no stared at tnc iace, stared for '"" witiieut recognition. And then ns II0 hml, ..? . . . .? ,n th, ,nlr" . rer filled with him in a distorted move- ! ment of the lips, he frwept his hand .aorejs hh mcs. ' "Jehn Bruce," he sad. Jt eemcii te arouse .nm from some Leuis VI Bedroom Suit $1 9Q flew-end l!ed. Large Dremer. CliltTerettc and full Vanity. -mm4J HUB FURNITURE CO. THREE STORES 4734 Frankford Ave. 22 and 24 W. Chelten Ave. 2205 Seuth St. iUfHsaU Truck cut your hauling Authorized Philadelphia Ferd Dealer IIK.VRY & (1UNKLE. InrnrntiratMl 4634-3S North Ilrend St. Wremtnc 01BO n. r. iieitman. Inrunieruf d 3JI North Ilrend Ht. Spruce 0U43 Uuce 2171 THE II01VLKV COMrANX 34 IU heutii Ht. Hprui 843U MtlKRIH JONT.S, InrorperaUil O'iOO IVoedblne Ave, A Orrrbroek 4U0 Writ 2049 DEWKEH r. KIRCHNEB 72ID Uoedlmid Avt. IVoedland 8J13 IvOI'.LLEOBKENWOOD CO. Res. . 80J3-39 Kerrnantevrn Are. (iermuntenn 105-'JS NertU 0003 where downtown. He. did aet anew where. He began te waia in an uptown direction. . . ... Something had been born In these hours.. Something cataclysmic. What was it? . , "Or him!" The words came again aloud without apparent volition. Whnt did that mean? It had some thing te de with Hawkins s with what uatt-Liiia tin.t cnitt. iitandin there by hn I ravelin nawnshen. what was It Hawkins had said? Yes; lie remem bered: "I'd rather see her desd." "Or hlml" . . ... With cold judicial precision new the hours unrolled themselves before him. "Or him!" He wns going te kill Crang. ti, iwmrc, nt mentfll Htrlfe. of torment through which he had just passed, were as tbe memory et seme men mun ""-" his soul had been put te torture. They came back vividly new, tnese neurs every minute of them a living eternity. His soul hnd shrunk back nghast at first, and culled it murder: but it was net murder, or, if It was, it wns impera tive. It wns the life of a foul viper or Claire's. It was the life of an unclean thing that mocked und desecrated oil decency, that Hung Us sordid challenge nt excrv Inw, both human nnd divine or the life of n pure, clean soul made the plaything of litis ueast, anu anw ged into a mlre of unutterable abomi nation te suffocate nnd strangle In Its noxious surroundings nnd die. And thnt soul was in jcppnrdy because nt this moment he, Jehn Bruce, had the power of movement in his limbs, the sense of sight, the nbllity te stretch out his hand nnd feel it touch thnt lnnin .,.t tin.riv mid. if lm would, te sneak ntnu.i nnit ilrsk-nnlp that eblect for what it wns a lamp-pest. She had bought him these things with her life. Should she die nnd he live? And hu remembered back through these hours since midnight, when his soul had still faltered before the tnklng of human life, hew it had sought seme ether wny, setnc alternative, any al ternative. A jull sentence for Crang. There wus enough, mere than enough new with the evidence of Crang's double life, te eenvfet the man for the robbery of that snfe. But Claim had aaswered that In the long nge: "I will marry him when he comes out." Oh, then, te get Crang nway again like this uftcr uftcr uftcr noen no, jestcrday ufternoen. It waa this morning. In u few hours, that they were te be married. Thcre was no time left In which te nttempt anything like that; but. even it there were, he knew new, thnt it but postponed thedny of reckoning. Claire would wait. Crang would conic back. He was going te kill Crang. If he dldn t (rang would kill mm. He knew that. tee. But his decision wns net actuated, or even swajed. by env consideration of self-preservation, lie had no thought of his future or his safety. That was nlrcadv settled. With his du'lMen was irrevocably coupled the forfeiting of his own life. Net his own life! It belonged te Claim. Claire Open Man., Fri. A Sat. Evening and de- Equipm-nt: Pnmmatit Tir and Dtmeuniaklt Rlmt. Yewr thlt of mlthtt (As tot' Jal gearing f 6 tie te 1 fmr tefd dtllMry mr lh ttandatd taf in f 7 114 te I for heavy AsuNna "rk Read i. cit Hn. Ouk ine 18BQ ' TIIOS. 0. M.ltTNI)rF. ti. aSSfe48 er,h "" " TIOCA 4170 VapU rtt WALTER I'lliri! " Diamond WO U,".ufk. 3013 HOI!TIMtlTKRN ACENr B3d & llaltlmert i Am IVoedland 4801-08 veft IMS "NlVEALMOTOItAUKNCV9 ITfiten 8J8I Wm, ,T 1S41-47. Market 8. LunadeHie 1077 AI.VIN ... SWKNSOV I'ranVferd "47B7-8S '";. .,, WAOER A KARPErJES Ortth A thettiiut l. nelment 3.J5 uv "!', ,, ..,.. 1.. : , ' w:i a 1 r ..,' had bought It. He wh only gltlag it net .ee impuc back that the abjramil price the had accomplice tl agreed te par should net be extertel what was te 1 from hi. Onra 1m hail anvtmnltshed great ItnDertai his purpose, he would give himself up te the police. He was going te kill Crang. That was what had been bem out of the travail of these hours of the night. But there were ether things te de first. He walked briskly new. The decision In itself no longer occupied bis thoughts. The decision was absolute ; it was final. It was these "ether things" that he must consider new. There was Lar Lar tnen. He could net tell Lnrraen what he, Jehn Bruce, was going te de, but he must wam Larmen te be en bis guard against any vast or present con neetlen with .Tnlm llrnmt mm In (n light. Fortunately, Larmen had come in isrw ieric anu riiiterri ai i-eiers. He mnst make Larmen understand that j.nrmnn and Jehn Bruce had never met, evert if he could net give Larmen any specific reason or explanation. Lar- min would probably refuse at first anu attribute it as an attempt te break) for some ulterior reason, the bend they, had signed together that night en tbe beach at Apia. Jehn Bruce smiled travel v. The bend would be broken in any case. Faustus was at the end et the play. A few months In, prison, the electric chair chair hew apt had been hie whistling of that aria in his youth I Youth! Yes, he was old new: he had been young thnt night en the beach at Apia. He took off his bat and let the sharp air sween his head. He was net think ing clearly. All this did net express what he meant. There was Lermen's safety. He must take care of that ; sec te it, first of all, that Larmen could The Master of Man ietli the man's tide of the ttery of a greqt tin. It te by Sir Hall Caine, Knight of the Britith Umpire, author of "The Dermtter," "The Manx man." "The "Weman Theu Gavctt Me," ete. Sir Hall hat few equals a a teller of (ales which grip the imagination and stir the emotion. Watch for hit newest ttery It Begins Saturday 'White Tracks THE WHITE COMPANY, 112 North Bread St., Philadelphia 802 French SU Wilmington, Del. Factory and General Offices, Cleveland 21 YEARS OF KNOWING HOW martneis, characteristics 61 Eight-Cylinder Cadillac Phaeton. Owners are enthusiastic ever smoothness even when the car is driven at high speeds. They take no less pleasure in its superb power and in the easy swiftness of its acceleration. An outstanding improve- future, intimacy between them, their business relations of. the past must never be subjected te the probe of the trial that was te come.' Jehn Bruce nodded his head sharply. Tea, .that was better! But there was still something else thnt bend. He knew tonight, even if prison walls and a death penalty were net about te nul lify that bend far mero effectively than either he of Larmen ever could, that the one thing he wanted new, while yet he wna a free agent, while yet it was net arbitrarily his choice, was te cancel that agreement which was Se typical of what his llfe tip te the present time had always steed for; nnd in Us can cellation, for what little time wns left, m hnvn it. tvnlfv. instead, a finer man heed.. The future, premenitlye, grim In Itn nrnmlxe. aenmed tn held UO be fore him as In a mirror whem no lines were softened, where only the blunt, brutal truth was reflected, the waste the j iJH tl O I r 6 THIS BEAUTIFUL OPERA GRAND 650 THIS wonderful instrument is the latest creation in the art of piano-making, and if ths result of constant effort en the part ftu manufacturer te cerfeet a grand piano se compact that it takes up -no mere room in your home than an upright. , Handsomely flnlihed uqnistte la diiign. Dtmtnstive la sit alone; In tens quality it Is untqutitd. We will deliver this instrument te year hove en -a mall deposit, balanee In convenient monthly psymtnts. Bb B.TODD " 1123 CHESTNUT Exclude Reprattntatit for f A Fsmeai Sohmer Nmnei ram" mmmLr-n-mMMWt-'mmm'9Bmm'mMMMM-mMr-WK "" " i ill i T .' i I mr ,. JLmmJmm ,m Fifteen owners alone have invested mere than $20,000,000 in White Trucks. 5-ten 3-ten 2-ten -ten $4,500 4,200 3,250 2,400 f. e. b. Factory r SUae-ar! e fas Wtrli Exceptional readability, mem eftheType 6! Cadillac combined with a daihing its lowered center of grav- are admired jty, achieved of the Type duced read clearance causes the Phaeton te cling te the read and handle with a sure ease which is a joy te its exhilarating gliding the experienced In the Phaeton, as in all med-j els of the Type 61, a delight ful surprise awaits these who had assumed that the maxi mum of readability and rid ing comfort had been previ-euslyattainedintheCadillac, NEEL-CADILLAC COMPANY 142 North Bread Street Phene, Spruce 0210 jswmtwilIt""' JSiBBfiiiSssSOsw I ij in sua Diner regret , knew enl Ci des re new. at tha .nd. I il "" could, te face death a changed 'nil.' Te be centianed tomorrow COMMITTEE OF 70 MEETS Will Hear Solicitor General Btek at Banquat Thlt Ivenlne Because et its possible effect en tht coming campaigns, the dinner of tie Committee of Seventy In the BelleTui Stratford tonight is awaited expectant- The principal speaker will be Selldter General James M. Beck, and among the ' ethers will be Mayer Moere and Mlks Marien Rellly, chairman of the Penn sylvanla League of Wemsn Voters. v iiii ii, w without re driver. A ' Jl, ' ' V .TJ "K . . .. 'maruRA . VIUWi-ff-KK-T V.'.. 'KUij Mfe' it-r Jt .?Ar 'a i.'tJ( l.''t,. M, J&.M
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