The 2 pictures show front and back showing any imperfections, and noted. These are 11" x 14"   I have over 500 of these ads which some are 100 years old. If you have any questions please don't hesitate to ask. Bulk offers are encouraged as I am pricing these to sell fast. Due to the age of these, there will be NO returns, so look at the pictures before purchase. The only imperfections I can see is slight wrinkling on some of the edges. Combined shipping is ok.


 

#12 side A

July 10, 1926

THE SATURDAY EVENING POST


THE CAR YOU CAN RECOMMEND TO YOUR BEST FRIEND


Every day Oldsmobile owners recommend their car to their friends and this is why:


They selected Oldsmobile for what it could do and how it did it.


They chose it for the quality of craftsmanship so evident in even minor details; for its beauty, for its smoothness, for its power; - for its nimbleness in traffic and its handling ease.


Then in the crucial test of trial by mile, they found it asked no favors and feared no road.


Their judgment stands confirmed!


OLDSMOBILE SIX


Product of GENERAL MOTORS

BODY BY FISHER


The car Illustrated is the De Luxe Coach. Priced $1040 at Lansing.

COACH $950 F. O. B. LANSING


#12 side B

July 10, 1926

    left side column

Watch This Column


If you want to be on our mailing list send in your name and address


LAURA LA PLANTE in "POKER FACES"


The fact that you can't see all that is best in pictures unless you see UNIVERSAL is accentuated by the GREATER MOVIE LIST which UNIVERSAL has created for 1926-27. The stories are chosen from the work of brilliant writers and the players from among the best the screen world affords.


Here is a partial list which

I commend warmly to your con- sideration. In succeeding advertisements, I will give you the others. If you will pre- serve this list, it will prove a guide to your best entertainment for months to come.


"Poker Faces" - starring


EDWARD EVERETT HORTON, one of the funniest men on the New York stage, and LAURA LA PLANTE. Adapted from the popular novel by Edgar Franklin. Directed by Harry Pollard.


"The Old Soak" - star- ring JEAN HERSHOLT with JUNE MARLOWE and GEORGE LEWIS. From the play by the well-known humorist, Don Marquis. Directed by Edward Sloman.


"The Marriage Clause" -


featuring FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN, BILLY DOVE and WARNER OLAND. From The Saturday Evening Post story "Technic," by Dana Burnet. A Lois Weber production.


"The Runaway Express"


-featuring JACK DAUGHERTY and BLANCHE MEHAFFEY. From the inter- nationally famous stories, "The Nerve of


Foley," by Frank H. Spearman.


"Her Big Night" - star-


ring LAURA LA PLANTE, assisted by EINAR HANSON, a newcomer in the world of stars. Picture adapted from Peggy Gaddis' magazine story, "Doubling for Lora." Directed by Melville Brown.

HOUSE PETERS in "Prisoners of the Storm" a tale of the snow country. Directed by Lynn Reynolds.

Please remember that I am always sincerely glad to receive your comments, criticisms and suggestions. Write me.


Carl Laemmle

President

(To be continued next week)

Send 10c each for autographed photographs of Reginald Denny, Hoot Gibson and Laura La Plante


UNIVERSAL PICTURES


730 Fifth Ave., New York City


    Main article

Discussion about the easy money in Florida real estate. Bulding a bridge at Mackerel Key out of wood and visions of buildings

Easy money is financial whisky drinking-corrupting.


Regulating Money's Morals


In the end, don't forget, easy money lives off hard money. It's plain enough that no dollar would be worth anything unless somebody had made a dollar's worth of something that a man could eat, wear, play with or otherwise consume. If there wasn't a corresponding dollar's worth of something that a man could eat, wear, play with or otherwise consume, your dollar would be only waste paper, or a souvenir. So if you get a dollar without having made something that can be eaten, worn, played with or otherwise consumed, you are riding on a pass. I can illustrate that for you:


Four and a half years ago Jim Weyburn bought a couple of hundred acres of sand and cabbage palms over on Mackerel Key. He was going to build a bridge across the shallow water-wooden thing, to be sure, but enough for temporary purposes-so the key could be reached from the mainland by automobile. He was going to level the land, build streets, sidewalks, a sewer system, houses-make a town over there. It looked pretty wild to me at the time; but Jim had some money and no end of enthusiasm. He went to work. It looked pretty wild to me at the time; but Jim had some money and no end of enthusiasm. He went to work.


Then that Detroit bunch came down here and bought a tract south of Jim's land.They were going to build a million dollar hotel, and streets, sidewalks, sewer system, and so forth. I knew they had more money than Jim, and maybe as much enthusiasm.

Besides, by that time there were signs of a boom. It didn't look so wild. I happened to know of thirty acres on the key that

could be bought reasonably, so I bought it. I never did anything to it, but Jim and the Detroiters tore up their part of the key and made it all over-manufactured it out of the raw so it was fit for human consumption. I sold my thirty acres last spring at a very satisfactory profit, all of which I grafted out of Jim and the Detroiters, who did the work. My easy money lived off their hard money.


My money is just as good, in the bank and in the market, as theirs is. Its moral constitution is different, but our crude currency system affords no means of expressing the difference. Many moralists deplore that. Now and then they try to fix up a law that will prevent it or curb it such, for example, as the laws regulating or forbidding speculation in wheat and cotton. But it is fearfully difficult to draw a line.


All the permanent improvements that have been put on Mackerel Key in the past e four years, making it suitable for human consumption I mean the hotel, the bath houses, the dwellings, the business buildings, the streets, sewers, and so forth must have cost, I reckon, at least $10,000,000. I know Jim Weyburn had only $100,000. I doubt that the Detroiters put in as much as $500,000 of their own money.