Evening Star Newspaper, February 7, 1924, Page 4

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rg™ VIRGINIANS EXALT | MEMORY OF WILSON No Greater Tribute Ever Paid By O0ld Dominicn From | Governor Down. i TRINKLE PRAISES IDEAL: Services Held at Capitol and In| Cities Over State. Ty the Asso RICHMO, While Virgin Washington ve: ©ld Dominion h of uchievement and v tdeals for which he No greater tribute raid any man by Virginia than that siven to Woodrow Wilson. Tribute ame from the governor down to the lowest citize But the for the Fepruar ted body of a great being placed at rest iu | terday. cities of the rh his l'P\"umIl 1 anew the! died. ! has ever b Ii the last budy were being reas in tue Nation's Capital Services at Capitol. Within the state capitol, memorial services were held A consideration of the merely temporal authority enjoved and ex- ercised by the f. war President,” iov. Trinkle address, ould pl rasiiy, from a in the forgmost crors. ® . i o and Napoleon | fought quest—Wilson fought | for free The leaders of old war- red to ensl: men emuncipate them * “War's Chief Casualty.” | son_ha terred to as the | war's chief aid the mo ernor. “This is tru conti “but han the greater {han all w dream of perpetual pe by a fellowship among the to be known to the world tion ot ek We know today that world are better hecause Wood- died. We know d demoer 3 ¥ stronser b n lived and dicd. we the cloud the low ists tical abuse, the America official { Deopls as ot America and tod odrow Wi From Yesterday's 5:36 Fi.tion of The Star, WHOLE CITY SILENT A LAST HOMAGE Rush of Traffic and Work; i Everywhere Is Halted | | | Two Minutes. | 1 for Sitence two mi Complets tolling bLells in chur the city to a paus a final mark | of lom Woedrow Wilseii's | ton -rnoon. | for, the w stepped 1o plaie snmo-] over cross sutopiobite: -podge of cars stopped Automobiles | d_halted. Men d girls, in_do: ects, turned h where th med over the jnainsg of America’s war President. All Work Ceasex. 1 Tn ail institutions work ecased. Telephones wer 1. Motion pic- | ture theaters notificd patrons of the| time b on the screen and | ogram. In department | Stopped short in thel 2 by a gong. | At Luns wher- daf ) were In news) in their s the cil . while the heads lowered. ich were send- gton the details of | < funeral, paused for d the wires were The telegraph ing ont of Wi Wor a few ent. In the Police Court th impressive as the routine prisoners. t judges and spectators , rose and stood with heads lowered, while “the bells of a nearby church | pealed their solemn requiewm. Crowds colle in_front of| churches throughout the city. While Epiphany's slowly tolling bell sound- ight strokes—the vears this life by the deceased dent—a silent gathering walk made a dramatic man with head bhowed ood beside two women with folded who were prayving. Another n was crying and crving open- ith no attempt to conceal tears. | bells were the only breakers of the silence, and their notes served 10 make it, by a queer paradox, only the more intens tolling minut alted, and | pes former on the s setting. A i sixty-eight strokes, andered into at the key Life 1s O'er, shington lis X “Lead Kindly sus, Lover of My Soul, For All Thy Saints,” “Rock of Ages,” v ¥ God to Thee” and “Abide Prof. Torovs started, “Hi, downtown hen came From Yesterday’s 5:30 Edition of The Star. Lodge Is Absent From Service for Woodrow Wilson By the Associated Press. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, al- though designated by the Senate as a member of the committeo to attend Woodrow Wilson's funeral services, remained at his home throughout the day yesterday. His office announced that he was confined on the advice of his physician “because of a bad throat.” Upholstering Chair Caneing Furniture Repairing ‘Nuff Said! The Best Place and Lowest Prices, After All Clay A. Armstrong 1233 10th St. N.W. Franklin 7483 | native Wilson warred to i { ful of the i pre: ! knew Only Few Notice |TRIBUTE TO WILSON Mrs. Harding at Wilson Funeral Unnoticed except by a few, Mrs. Florence Kilng Harding, widow of President Harding, attended the funeral services of ex-President Wilson at the cathedral yesterday afternoon. Mrs and heavily veiled W nied by arding fam- though not ught it was MITTED FOR TWO DAYS TO VIEW SEPULCHER OF WILSON — ued from First Page.) de statn of Virginia that his body should lie so1l, while from Princeton should zo has cor, back of his early triumphs. May Memorial. Perhaps there will come from all of this discussion a movement to erect to his memory at some appropriate plac not also a tomb, as Monumen and the Lincoln Memorial mark in Washington the respect and admiration of the na- tion for greut men who are buried else- where, Ereet at i a question which the develonment of of nswer. Until a decizion is e the man who led the Ames through the war and who played zht fo. m tab! rk his resting t, saying that twenty- President of the United States, BUGLE CALLING SOFTLY IN DUSK TELLS WORLD WILSON IS LAID TO REST By the Associuted Press, A bugle. calling softly in the fading da v T told that Wilson had pa 1 to hix e honored st sang the dier requiem ti befe Hps the s loyal comn sang 1o lull unknown to leep in s g N And as t Lugle led out over the hills that look down on the eity, ricken woman turned ¥ from the entran f the stone érypt down in chapel, leaving ber dead to the merey of God. Grayson Stays to End. At the end there still stood beside the vault on unch friend of the dead President, a friend who had battled death for him to the hitter end: who had shared in the great vs of his triunsph. the bitter days of d ppointment even ax now he stood (o render the Just loyal s oL until the great slab of stone been swung back to close the did Dr. Grayson end the vigil he kept with Woodrow than lies i the western n great vault below Bethlehem Chapel Above, towerin from the looms’ the gray mass iof dral. he city its day of to the crowding cares lite, but with poignant mem- ories in 5 AS the the burial services drew on, thousunds took their pla along the way from house to chapel to stind lonz in the-chill air, unmind- flurries of snow and rain at about th The wide av nue over which th ad war Pre: dent would make his last journ was banked with people and kept el traffic until he had the cath that b the people Within the home, on the second floor, flowers were everywhere. They ered the walls and sent their soft fragrance down from every niche and corner. There are thres rooms nd a short hallway on this floor, the & rooms of the house. Wide s had Leen opened to make them one room. that all who should be present this intimate service in the home privacy the deud man loved might at least hear what was said In the study, w « great vacant chalr before - stood un touched s had sat there to pond warm glow, the casket had t o On the walls about clustered the old, trusty frionds of many s, books ranking' row n row floor to ceilin in the spaces where old picture cred by ties of m mory, down. At one side stcod the piano brought “from the quiet, schoiarly home at Princcton of thos 3 cars before greatness had Woodrow Wilson out and called him forth to battle and to death It was among these surroundings of a quiet, home-loving t the ous memory-laden things Lome, that old " friends were now gathering to pay him last honors, v a little before the service began, the casket was open, that @ few who nd loved him best might gaze a moment at tke still, pain-worn face into which death had brought at least something almost of the placid look of the vears long past. Not all of those who crowded the rcoms had this opportunity. It was re- erved only for’intimates, of what- ever station in life, who iingled in thit silent company. f The threg clergymen then took their placds ot the head of the bier, =ttt e head of the bier. { California Extra Fancy Evaporated Fruits Apricots, Ib............25¢ Peaches, peeled, Ib. . ....25¢ Peaches, unpeeled, 1b. ..25¢ Pears, 1b.. SR ety 20e Cherries, pitted, Ib. .. ...60c Magruder’s Best Groceries Conn. Ave. and K St. Established 1875 BURLINGTON HOTEL 380 Rooms Vermont Avenue at Thomas Circle M. 8980 Single Rooms with Bath per Day Single Rooms with Shower $1750 Week ’ Double Rooms with Bath $25 Week Two Persons Two Rooms and Bath, 2 Persons, $40 Week . Club Breakfast. Table d’Hote Dinners, §1.00 and $1.50 Home Lunchkeons, 75¢ Also a Ia Carfe, Small Bafl R’g'ol;-a. 50 Couples, Banquets, $200, $2.50, $3.00 Geo. A. Mills, Mgr. ‘ sterful part in the shuping of world | i f | had hiliside, | has turned back from | oF & hould have ! THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1924. there was weeplng umong the women. It had taken long to get the fu- neal train in motion and still longer for its slow progress up the hill to wind in through the cathedral ground | to the chapel entrance past other | thousands, Cross Lends Choir. _ Led by the cross, the choir moved into the aisle leuding to the altar. which was banked on either side with the flowers that filled every nook and | corner and flowed over into the guter corridor, lining both sides of | {he appronch to the chapel entranc By s betwe " Frits Kreisler, who 1101ds & supreme | woma the. honor wsacy Sy bi: niche iu the hearts of music lovers | the casket down fo bear it in to its or the beauty of his music, played to | Place at the rail. : i x As the o . Ny usual “stunding-room-only” uudi- | e Innar Geae ani i o e i e | ence yesterday afternoon at Pol choir moved slowly onward toward | Theater.. He prefaced an inspiring the altar in hushed 6. Then, | PrOETam with & memorial tribute (o | o s e h e wallied, Dr. Tay” | Waodrow Wilson. L am the i Mr. Kreisler was loath to come to Washington on a day of mourning. and it was only ufter a long-dixtar consultation with his manager that he finally decid pear as sched- uled before the hundreds of Washing. tonians who curas to hear beautiful played by a master. Wilson was o great man,” said and I felt honored that he my concerts when he was President. “We finally decided that| 7 the nobility of such music as we had srranged might add a tribute to Mr. Wilson's memory Mr. Kreisler played “Going Home," “New World Sym- -PAID BY KREISLER Violinist Plays Dvorak's “Going Home * as Preface to Regu- lar Program. zh the seriptural oir had filed on to its place the altar, The clergymen took their stations, standing before the ar; the two Presbyterian ministers in thoir black gowns, the bishop and | his colleague of the Episcopal Cathe- dral in white vestments. | Family Move to Left. + bgfore them the body bearers | E down their burden again and withdrew to join their comrades in | the standin, group at the back of the room. The black-gowned widow. the (wo daughters und the other! members of the family moved to their sion. aces on the loit while President Carl 1 & et oo 1 Coolidge and the honorary pallbear- for miny weasanistens accompantst (LG old Friends tumed to vacant | erpecially in the- first number, Cesar | SC818 to the r Frane “Somata in A Major,” for|Imgmbers uir piano and violin. Following L I L L e T R s t the close, ax he called the com- s s Nhich the can-f ooyt p those Who were seats to and al.|cd xank ir knees with bowed i =1 heads until, with raised hand, he | pronounced the solemn blessing that | ended the service. The organ sound again softly and t choir mo | slowly out into the alisle, ound the mb bulk of the ith its single cluster of colgr. chanting tones of the redessional hymt / Strife is U'er, the Baitl . “ollowing th men, down th right through the doorway, the chant- ing volces growing softer and softer tn the distance and fading at last to int whisper as the door was closed. rhat slula,"” e r-away wssages until | up from Dvorak's as the special memorial for dy stood Bishop Freeman began the! zoneta forms tween the alle vivacts . St ETOuD was of the shorter compositions, for which Krefsler is If one had possessed the doubt as to his virtuosit onati and concerto would have {Taid it to rest forever. Porpora’s gay littl Minuet,” Tartini's “Varia- Paderewski's beautiful “M from his “Songs of the Traveler” | a lilting Chovin “Mazurka” gave ) the artist scope for his individuality uf treatment and opportunity to dem- constrate his ability as an arranger s well as an interpreter. “Midnight Bells.” another of those Viennese melodies of wistful yearn- ing that Mr. Kreisler plays with per- hy, was 8o delightful that it. This Heuberger com- sition is one of Mr. Kreislers la nseriptions for violin _and Hubay’s Hungarian melody. “Heyre Kati,” the final number, is another. Althougt rogram, i his Palo gan. “The ever-popul th e may live and sing to thee, ne the last line, then the chords of the last men All Bat Fam As the organ took softly chanted not Wilson was led ¥ stven alinto chape! robin smilingly | right beiind her w appla bers mily 1o se thers i ci ed for vate entombin They | did not need to pass through the | 4 room again. a door close to | letting them escape ¥ Leave. room on the nt the mem- | = clear- i The mellow beat chime three of the grex solemn the stillness. As the dwindled and died, Dr. orin Washington Woodrow t in all greatness, | :ft President Coolidge rose out of the chapel to be whirled away at_once to the White Hous him the gathering slowl Wway out to the wait- ing the honor guard and who would 1ift the great slab he rend vault entrance alone in the of the out r ones comrad - this last moment. It was n the great stono had been p: side and the honor guard men stood ready to lower the tly into ands of the comrades Waiting 5t it to its secluded niche tern end, that the family for that last farewell. The stood at ‘the_head of the nding faitered # moment in the long strain she known. As Dr. Taylor said the last word of he psalm there was & murmured men.” and he gave place o his col- league from Princeton, Dr. B h, Mr. Wilson” brin those far-off, quiet- ty 5. With raised hands the min- while Mrs, Wilson took company to prayer, at the foot. the arnest plea that di- el altar. Soldler Sounds “Tapx.” At the last the Presbyterian min- isters whom the dead man had wor- shipped with in life joined 4 ink over him_the form of burial s ice: his church knows. Bishop Free- man conciunded the service, repeating ister bade tho pouring out I vine aid be given in the realization of the high vision of a world at peace the dead President had glimpsed. There was sobbing again as he be- songht God's compassion on the grief- bowed family . Reads Beloved Pasxage. The prayer over, Dr. Beach gave | = place to Bishop Freeman, whose deep voice sounded in the seriptural quota- | A Special Offer tlons dearest to the dead leader. They | A Beautiful Picture had bucn copled from the little book | of Baby you from falling, and present you Amen. Bear Casket 1o Hearse. ood soldierly* and ereet a mo- | 'MAGNESIA BEST FOR YOUR INDIGESTION of devotional exercizes it had been his wont to read at night, and stirred 85 again the bitter grief of the widow and daughters. “Now unto Him hat is able to keep | mm faultless before the presence of His 3 Sl | UNDERWODOD “To the only wise God. our Savior, | be glory and majesty, dominion and| power, “both now and evermore. | As the solemn words were spoken | the clock chimed the quarter hour, and the simple, home service of Wood- | row Wilson, plain American, lmd’ i been said as he wished it said. i i Into the room came cight men from || Warns A gainst Doping the honor guard, their sun-tanned,| youthful faces set in solemn recog- | nition of the dignity and honor of ||l ce that had been given them. | Stomach With Artificial | Digestents ide the black casket upon; er of orchids . o 10 ffer, either oec: s favorite flowors, the || (MR BT 00, TR St onrnn r dead husband often had || Sui™ Daigestion. Bave mow “discontimued n the glad other days. The ieable d'ets, patent foods and the ilor and marine comrades || use barmful drugs, - stomach tonies, | nd raised the fallen chief- | medicines and arcifcisl digestents, and | ar him out for his last jour- sent her oldicr, stoope tain to ney There are few houses along the | broad street 4n its two-mile tree-lined | length to the cathedral close. Police and soldiers and marines were strung along the way to keep back the ||| j crowding thousands who stood in | deep & on cither side all along | the way. The military guardians were without arms, but they and the police, as the cortege passed, silent but for the noise of its own motion, each rendered nis stiff salute to the dead. Behind them in the ranks of citizenry that had waited so long, standing five and ten deep at every | vantage point, heads were bared and iuxtead, following the advice o often | given in these columns. take & teaspoo; ful or two tablets of Bisurated Magnesi | in & little water after meals with the sult that thelr stomach no longer troubles them, they are able to oat as they please and _'they enjoy much better health. Thoe who use Bisurated Magnes'a never | | dread the approach of meal time because they know this wonderful anti-acid and | food corrective, which can be obtained | from any good' drug store, will instantly eutralize the stomach acldity, sweeten the stomacli, prevent food fermentation, and withont ‘the slightest rain or discom- rt. Try this plan 3ou ta'n Magnes! stomach use.— All Washington Is Talking of Delicious Sar-aJdee with marshmallows and hot chocolate; or it tempts deliciously from crisp bits of toast, sal- tines or butter-thins; or it furnishes just the rich flavors needed for salads, tartare sauce and Thou- sand Island dressing. TIts sweet, tangy creaminess gives it many inviting uses. After the dance, the theater, bridge — when tete-a-tete moments call for delicious serving, you can hear couples every- where exclaiming over Sar-a-Lee Sandwich Spred, the creamy de- light all Washington is suddenly enjoying! So good is its rich, vel- vety dressing, its blend- ing of pickles, peppers, olives, spices and ham, that home and formal occasions demand plenty. Perhaps it enriches snowy bread-stars .and is served THE SAR-A-LEE COMPANY Cleveland, Ohio 3 Buy Sar-a-Lee from your favorite grocery or d e licatessen today. jof a gray day was coming. swiftly, 5 | There were only a few remaining {iowed ih i, where the cabinet verses from Tennyson's “Crossing the Bar” with' its message of resignation and faith in God's zoodness. Then the casket sank slowly Into the sfone work and from outside, beyond the double walls and where the gray end the the bugle rang out in “Taps,” oldier farewell to a fallen comrade. about the chapel entrance as that iast, clear message was sounded, They 8tood bareheaded and the soldier and marine guards at salute until the last note died. Behind them in the chapel Mrs, Wil- son was sobbing as she turned from the vault with the members of the family to go back to the vacant still house on § street, where the great chair stood vacant beside the fire place and the books waited for the | friend they would see no more. She | took heart, a little, to greet the hand- | ful of close friends who had waited without to offer her comfort in her but it was & grief-bowed woman 'who went back down the tong hill into the eity. And at the vault still stood the end_and_ physiclan, who had been with Woodrow Wilson through the cars of greatness and world-wide cclaim, and the years of pain en- dured with stolc fortitude that fol- the friend who had pledged word to another woman in the White House years before, ere she ame to her death, that he would watch over his chief to the end. Not until the great stone had sunk ugain into its place did this friend turn away. his. pledge redeemed to the uttermost. SERVICES OF TRIBUTE HELD |N BALTIMORE Cannon Salutes Fired From Sunrise to Sunset and Troops Are Paraded. By the Associated Pross. BALTIMORI Wilson, Mount ydrow tured b, it the non Flace under more Federation of tended by eity, st officials. At cach Army post of the 3d Corps area troops were paraded, and Fresident Coolidge's proclamation of the death of the former Pregdent wag read. A salute of thirtcen %uns was fired at sunrise, a signal gun sounded every thirty minutes, and a 43-gun alute marked the setting of the sun. At Annapolis the state legislature mat in joint memorial session, at which speakers paid tribute to the fallen leader and an address deli Mr. Wilson while to the house Dy | home, Governor o " EVERYTHING COOKED Roasted Chickens 700 Pound 1% and 2 Pounds Each ROASTED CAPONS 80C pouns 4 to 6 Pounds Each _ Codfish Cakes, 7c; 4 “Large and Thic o1 PIES, 40 Apple, Chocolate, Lemon, Px h, Sweet Potato, Pincappl & ‘RA Sweet_Mixed Pickles, 25c Pint. Potato Salad, 20c Pound. Combi- nation Vegetable Salad, 25c emade C “LUNCHCOUNTER — — ~ i C: Butter served: Special D, memade Roll R Butter. 10k, THot Roust Fork Banawiches with Brown Gravs. Masted Potatoes, Cabbage Slaw, 20c. Homemade THOUSANDS WATCH CORTEGE PASSING Reverential Silence Marks Daportment Before Home and Along Route. From Yesterdny's 5:30 Edition of The Star. I Thousands of men. women and chil- dren £ very walk of life lined the sidewalk along the route of the fu- neral cortege of Woodrow Wilzon yesterday afternoon, and with bowed or bared heads paid reverent respect to the former nation’s chieftain as his body was borne to its final resting place on the verdant hill at Mount St. Alban. From six to ten deep, the quiet threng stretched from the raddened Wilson home « street out Massa- chusetts avenue to the gates of Mount St. Alban, and waited patiently to catch a fleeting glance of the funeral cortege as it pa on its journey to “the way of peace” A 1d, penetrating wind, driving flur- ries of snow before it, attended the ting of the great crowd. s before the runeral pro- 3 vas scheduled to start sev- eral hundred men women_and children were congregated in front of the Wilson house the crowd grew 3 there were several thousand DErsons packed from the curb on the north side of S street back to the building| lines 5 On a high knoll facing the Wilson an_ ideal point of vantage, Some had mp. muddy had provided them- b improvised scats made ind planks., where they nd look_ down on thel sket containing the body of th ar President as it left the 3 o'clock A_deathlik# silence was noticeaple in the vast throng that had gathcred | near the former President’s home. The talk was muffled. Automo that brought relatives and friends to the home for the brief funeral serv ices and motor eycles of policemen detailed in the vicinity coasted past the house with engincs cut off. Maj. Sullivan, superintendent of police, and Infpector Pratt, gave orders to the officers on duty around the home in soft tones. A mounted policeman 1 the house and the horse seemed to sense the signifi- cance of the peaceful quict and dropped his hoofs a lighter. " CAMPBELL'S SOUPS Fresh Stocks 5C Can 2 Cans to a Person __¥riday and Saturday " Home-Cooked Baked Beans =5 7'30‘:', Pound Cooked Ham 15¢ Pound, 55¢ Pound " "Home-Baked Smoked Ham 18¢ ¥, Pound. 70c Pound Whole "Hams, 65c Per Pound Pis, 10c cut. Rice or Bread Pudding, 5c. Corn M 2Z¢ Dos. order. _ - Wheat 22¢ Dos. Homemade Rolls Hot Every Eve. 4 P.M. 20c and 25 Dos. " " BROADWAY DELICATESSEN STORE 714 K ST. N.W. The “Way to a Man’s Heart” is Ever the Same! DAINTY little kitchen apron with a bow behind is just as attractive as an evening gown to many men! Cook On a New Cabinet Gas Range —one of the most important adjuncts toaw;al-appomted meal and a joy to cook with. Gas, work, time and food are saved, and cooking is simplified by a host of im- provements and conveniences you will find in the mod- have available for immediate use—at ern ranges we moderate prices! See them. ORIOLE GAS RANGES, with elevating and lower- ing broilers. GARLAND GAS RANGES, in beautiful full enamel and semi-enamel finishes. “RELIABLE” GAS RANGES, with sturdy angliron construction. LORAIN GAS RANGES, with heat control. TAPPAN GAS RANGES, with rounded corners and cast-iron oven bottoms. SCOTT GAS RANGES, with smooth top and de- . flected heat to the oven. Easy Terms _ WASHINGTON GAS LIGHT CO. SALES DEPARTMENT 419 TENTH STREET N.W. MAIN 8280 AN LI AN L AND LTI NN AN CIN = AN DI X SO N Strength in every silken strand Style No. 2553—“Onyx Pointex” medium weight silk with lisle top and sole.......$1.95 Style No. 385—“Onyx Pointex” sheer weightsilk with lisle top and sole......$1.95 At leading stores O 2y CRN Y 72 CAN Y #Z OGN Y 72N Y /2 CaN 72D T Y i) THE NEW VICTOR RECORDS Advertised by The VICTOR CO. on Page 11 of Today’s Star ON SALE HERE TOMORROW Music DROOP’S = 1300 G New Victor Records Released Weekiy Once Again We Score With a Popular Men’s Nainsook Union Suits. Sizes 36 to 46. larly morrow for .. Boys’ Pulbover Sweaters, with large shawl collar. Just what the boy needs for school and play time. Reduced to- morrow to . Sells regu- To- two suits at 69c. Boys’ Shirts, with collars attached. In plain and striped effects. So-called seconds, The famous “Beli” make. Two shirts for ... Men’s High-count Percale Shirts, new patterns and new colors. Fully guar- anteed, ‘a new shirt if you say so.” Tomorrow ... PANTS—Per Leg— - ] In dark patterns that men like. 8 Well made of good fabrics. A sensational price at $2.00 per pair. There are only 400 pairs in the lot, so don’t let your neighbor beat you to it! Fiber Silk Scarfs. In plain and striped effects. Values to $3.50. We are clos- ing them out morrow at Men’s Knitted Ties. .Four-in-hand styles. New spring patterns. Regular 50c value. On sale tomorrow, three for..ccocineinanns to- Ribbed Fast Boys’ Stockings. color and durable. Sizes 7 to 10):. A wonderful value for four pairs for.. Men’s Part-wool Hose. Some with clocks and plain heather combina- tions. - Sold up_to $125 per pair. Fri- day only; two pair: for .. . Men’s Umbrellas. Made of good ma- Men’s Combed Cotton Hal Hose. In black, cordovan and gray colors. On sale tomorrow, six pairs for ...... terial and strong'y reinforced. The best value in Washington | for. . 910 Seventh St. . “We Request the Return of Anything That Can Be Bought for Less Elscwhere

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