. The Saturday evening post. Cola Axle CompanyWestern Electric CompanyDelco Laborato-ries Dodge BrothersKingan & Carbonic CompanyCrane & CompanyIndian Refining Co. SEWELL Cushion Wheels are built in a strictly modern plantthat is equipped with every labor-saving device known to thewheel makers art. Much of the machinery has been designed byour own technical staff and each operation is the result of twelveyears of intensive study. The result of such thoroughly precise methods is absolute uni-formity of the Sewell product. Each wheel that passes finalinspection must m


. The Saturday evening post. Cola Axle CompanyWestern Electric CompanyDelco Laborato-ries Dodge BrothersKingan & Carbonic CompanyCrane & CompanyIndian Refining Co. SEWELL Cushion Wheels are built in a strictly modern plantthat is equipped with every labor-saving device known to thewheel makers art. Much of the machinery has been designed byour own technical staff and each operation is the result of twelveyears of intensive study. The result of such thoroughly precise methods is absolute uni-formity of the Sewell product. Each wheel that passes finalinspection must measure up to one unfaltering standard of qual-ity — each wheel must satisfy our own critical demands before it isconsidered worthy to bear the Sewell name plate. Such is the manufacturing policy that has produced the manythousands of Sewell Cushion Wheels which are in operation oneighty-five different makes of trucks —and serving one hundredand thirty-seven lines of industry. • The Sewell Cushion Wheel Company. THE SATURDAY EVENING POST 125 (Continued from Page 122)Wilbur twin, going accurately to the soulof his panic. Ill do it next time, said the girl. Illhurry. I wont stop in any o\w graveyard. Graveyard! uttered the other feel-ingly. I should say not! Never againwas he to think of such places with anyreal pleasure. All she wants, explained the girl—she wants to talk up in her nose like shewas giving a lecture. She loves to. Shellmake a vile scene. Now they were through an imposinggate of masonry, and the pony languidlydrew them along a wide driveway towardthe Whipple mansi6n, an experience whichneither of the twins had ever hoped tobrave; but only one of them was derivingany pleasure from the social Merle twin looked blandly over thewide expanse of lawn and flower beds andtenderly nursed shrubs, and then at thepile of red brick with its many windowsunder gay-striped awnings, and its sur-mounting white cupola, which he had oftenadmired from afar. He glo


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