The evening world. Newspaper, October 17, 1908, Page 4

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‘To Know That wyleTs Cocoa Is the BEST tn the World means to buy a Can at THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1908. |The Two-Miles-a-Minute Auto, DROLESAG SALAD TNL IRE NST AT BURGLARS WO ON BULGARIA IS —— QAMILES-AAMINUTE AUTO HITS LIMIT BY GOV. HUGHES. will t mediately begin to 7 acrose the Turkish frontier in advantage before an begin a general mobilization. — Purkey secure an OF NATURAL LAN Roebling’s Machine Could Go “Faster if Centrifugal Force Wouldn’t Rip Tires. | IS BUILT FOR TOURI Builder Didn’t Want a Racing Car, but One for Every- | Day Use. | Tf yqu have $18,00—well, even $10,000— | in your clothes, you can nteed receipt for Heking up| stored away ZITENNE BLAN CHE. Pest wer, £70 LOOTED A FLAT pene teeny It Took Three Policemen Fif- teen Minutes to Subdue Armed Criminal. had ke looking knife aroused and the a wildeat with an ugly he carried. | £45: DUELL. get a gu | Beas. DON ROLALING, Owner tre NWDW itis alten {| space at the rate of a mile in thirty| SROWILD-AN-HOLR AUTO. . . Levy, who is a wealthy ta “stealthy | regres as | seconds, You can always be on time | —————____ SS ee rene Wide BERKS ils apart: | | t Washington A. Roebling, the young | gling t away, It was like a sprinter i C the im light of the strect lamp o millionaire sportsman of Trenton, has /on his mark L tu side he could see a shadowy form | just solved the probl With the as- Is Quiet When Swift. pawing over the thit ) the bureau, I French expert on he has ; shout, but recoiled saw \ public highways at the rate of 120 ie |truder wielded > an hour, anu if it comes to a| coe It 190, Impossible the re ‘That is substantially what M. Planche | investiga when asked if it was true the new Que? it automobile” about which the sporting | very 1 world is now agog could negotiate that | of a ‘The great engineers of the world,” | wit addel Mr. Roebling, who was standing | hay near, raincoated and begoggied, “have | ‘*! long since decided that it is impossible | | for any vehicle to travel more than 130 miles in an hour, At that speed the tires would burst and be torn to shreds ° {rom centrifugal force. No tire can be | ma {built that can stand that pace. Cen- trifugal force 1s one law we can't get preand,” If There Weren't Speed Laws. That being the case, Mr. Roebling and he are going to satisfy them- with spinning aiong at a moder- | t of 120 miles an hour. They are and 10) every afternoon just to out the machine, Were it not for speed laws, and other people, Mr. Roebling's space- | part killer would make a hit with those | lower ser having $10,000 in New York. He'll fix] g,The Jen e up for th speed of e in thirty sc meant the highes attained upon a we | nine teri bre vehicles | §! sion, ¥ an hour mean: Some years | oer ie: speed that |’ Other race-track | motor racing machine. Mr can do st on the pubic road for an hour at a time, or longer if necessary. imagine what that would mean to the case. Ordinar that? st in Kingsbridge the | busy m and be at the Brook- » or\the Battery before the i burned down to a stump, Yonkers could have his hustle his wife into th or, arrive att 4) Opera-House at riends in Philade & merry night could have s machine, to dinner ta wishing Pet of all have in Harler and be on an three #10,000— grab m: n imme famili kyard ast or wrap} a tle Caruso aths: ) to Yonkers and be back in ume to Join In The wife could telephone to the office the encore 1 hea that the gas man in Harlem was about | go ty turn off the and the husband | tamily of Mrs coun vault waiting mac fnd be at i before the villain get Lis pipe wrenehe aK 1 ws to preven ing with these space defytn, New jj garded as a ape i 1) potice won't «t per hour to vut Mr. # a" Pa : on Tr d 1 nished $18,000, nd M. Pian Weighs 2,750 Pounds. ae ebling-Pla ge the at2 ary 1 1 tair 1 7) pounds ty ne to keep the ground. Where do you try this Was usked of the two autuists Oh, we have a private road,” was | the reply Come along and see it} we Phey we hen ii factory, | and y Mr walked over id touched ‘“ tton or spring. The reports ¥ followed | Capt Were deafening, ‘The 5 at ; Fort Hamilton was lke @ gephiyr to what the nine @utolst started | right there in te Bang! Bing! | was & Jump int” he ed through the | \ noise, and one landed the ex- | Ke ‘ t+ bullet i toeblin n go actical mac ery strong piece of this rema power, rank case is in two pie: being Simms He Jlever devics the opportunity of knowing at a e amount of of] which is in and a six inch stroke. Thin: VETERAN CAPT. BYRNE | Entered by the Window. The bu tered by a ¥ New Yorker Among Petitioners Against Firm of E. H. Gay & Co., of Boston. i would look An attempt | but it was full view tor dey A picture le to tak P tehing the BOSTON, ©. ruptcy man twos man kept rig or touring car,” } Y fast as freak ded in brin, nave sucar Is made. in Germany 0 and long m Fy e say it is the str in the world. It Bowled Over by Nightstick. The Real Machine. the engine bed ving only nition is sch with y machine have a six inch bore; the Did you know | when ered t na ¢ ————_—— | LACK TOM CAT QVES NINTH LIFE Curtiss Family Made ¥§ Lively During the Closing Hours porate gee oe aeene TROOPS FIRE ON STRIKERS > 17.—There part of strik FERRY-BOAT HAND DROWNED. ‘. Oct was This Very Beautiful Piano $190---On Terms to Suit Purchaser the the ly nse black cat which jar midnight figure on ‘Thirty-sixth street from River to the Union J final ne This handsome J. C. CAMPBELL Piano costs no more than many pianos unworthy of the name, and less than many instruments that do not possess any- thing like its musical qualities, In all the years we have been selling it, there has never been a complaint, nor has there been a purchaser who has discovered that a better piano could have been bought for about the same money, Full, brilliant tone; responsive action; beautiful architecture, to make it har- monize with the most refined surroundings. A piano so good that it thoroughly puts out of countenance any other, at or near its price, with which it can be compared. On display and demonstration in the Piano Gallery. First Gallery, New Building, JOHN WANAMAKER | Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street, TURKEY'S ANSE Sultan Orders Mobilization of Army Corps, and Early PARIS, Oct. 1%.—The French Govern- san Elida LA aie ment has just received otfictal con- who had broken into the apartment of AMMAtIONS Of PFEUIONS: Feporln qut the | Louis Levy, at Ne Niche mobilization by Turkey of the Anato nue, at 4 o'clock this morning three po- lian army corps. iléemen felled him with thelr night This ts regarded tn official circles as |.cemen felled him w night: —— |sticks and t [One Hundre yen J station. The capture ¢ y after nd been fired, the entire RERLI frightful cording to Oct. 17. massacre: the © Match Bowl One of the firet Clash Expected. and Decoration and the it has been said: the furnishing arts.” one of many phases of the Wanamaker idea. What a week it has been! Thousands ' MASSACRES IN ARMENIA REPORTED IN BERLIN. | aenmnatanee nstantinople | spondent of the Berlin, a May cost one-tenth of a cent There have been in Armenia, ac corre But remember such PURITY ‘ageblatt. QUALITY f{ Ee ond FLAVOR ing Game as tn Cocoa VER and over again, since the opening of these Galleries, Furnishing “House Palatial,” on Wednesday morning, “Why, these exhibits are a liberal education in In evolving this new and complete kind of furnishing establish- ment we have never forgotten for a moment that when this new building was completed it was dedicated to the people, and we shall shortly begin the weekly pubscation,in the newspapers, of a series of valuable educational treatises on the furnishing arts and crafts, and there will be weekly demonstrations and lectures at the galleries. This is only of the most cultured and progressive people have been our guests since Wednesday morning, and it has been an artistic feast indeed. The quarter-million dollar “House Palatial,” with its wealth of artistic suggestion, probably always remain a pleasant memory to will those who have visited it. Early English Dining-Room tn the “House Palatial"’ THE GALLERY OF | INTERIOR DECORATION AND ASSEMBLING | The educational value of ou: exhibits of interior decorations with period furniture, and works of art, has been greatly enhanced by the knowledge, skill and ability of our staff of originators, connoisseurs and col- orists; for they have made the displays so adaptable and so practical in that they run the ut of possi- | bilities, all the way from the furnishings for the quaint | Jistle Colonial cottage up to suggestions of splendid and stately harmonies for a superb Renaissance palace, | When you vi do not hesitate to ask the advice of any of these gi keen tobelp you | untangle any problems decorative to aid you in| interpreting your own ideals for the beautifying of your home. An interview will not place you under the slightest obli Tt will prc ing to you for our ex- perts to explain the methods whereby the old masters used contrasting touches in their color-balancing which, | because of the revival of “period” furnishing, 18 again coming into vogue. ‘The gallery of Interior Decoration and “Assemblin, adjoins the House Palatial, and you will sce the great- est variety of porsibilitics in home-decoration, em- bled” and grouped and classified according to type. You will see hints for the Colonial ¢ tage, the Eliza- bethan Manor, The Georgien Town House, th: Italian Renaissance Mansion and so on, up to suggestions for a palace, lemen, as they Monday’s CONCERT In the Auditovium at 2 2P. M. Four Vocal Ariists, who probably have) few superiors off the Grand Opera stage, are engaged for next Monday’s Concert, at 2 o'clock, We have also specially engaged Mr. Hans Kronold, the well-known 'Cellist, and | Miss Ruth Anderson, Violin ste. | Other artists and programme follow: Mrs. VIOLA WATERHOUSE, Soprano | Miss LILLIA SNELLING, Contralto | Mr, PAUL DUFAULT, Tenor M;. ANDREAS SCHNEIDVER, Base Mr. ARTHUR DEPEW, Organist 1, Prelude, Act II, “Lohengrin” Mr. Depew ves Wagner JOHN WANAMAKER Broacway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street THE HOUSE PALATIAL As you walk through the Gallery ot inte:ior Decora- tion “Assembling” (Fifth Gallery) you approach the “House Palatial,” which is not a mere matter of a partitions, but building of solid masonry in the composite Georgian style built into the galleries, that, with its furnishings and decorations has few decorated is a | cost close on to a quarter-million dollars and is said to be altogether unique. In addition to the artistic impulse and inspiration such a house would offer, it is to serve the important purpose of enabling the house-owner and architect to study decorative harmonies and the right “assembling” of furnishings and works of art in the broadest possible way? ‘The rooms contain suggestions from Hampton Court, Haddon Hall, William Morris's Red House at Kelmscott, The Grand Trianon, The Palace at Versailles, and from notable Georgian and Colonial homes, such as The Greenough House and others in this country. The designers of-this House Palatial have gone farther than this, for they have been at pains to catch and hold the subile atmosphere that only the use of time-mellowed and softened colorings can give to a house where antique finishes have been used to develop the real period idea, ‘This study of the sentim-n¢ in color should prove as profitable as the more academic study of the periods, Fanning Jensen Quartette—""The Miller's Wooing” Song—"Murmuring Zephyrs’ Mrs. Waterhouse 4, Violin—Serenade Champetre, Op. 52...,Boisde/ra Miss Anderson eS 5, Song-Prologue, “Pagliace . Leoncavallo Mr. Schneider 6, Organ—Offertoire in Dis..usseresseeenees Salome Mr. Depew 7, Song—Malgre Moi., ARR OR ER +++ Pfeiffer Mr. Dufault 8 Violin—Gypsy Dance, No. 8. . Sarasate Miss Anderson 9. “The Pilgrim's Song"... Techaikowsky b. “The Pretty Creature Miss Snelling The Lost Chord",....... saeeene Sullivan Mr. Depew 11, Quartette—“O, the Sad Moments of Parting”.Costa Mr. Kronold’s numbers do not appear bere, but will be announced in Monday's papers. Old English your grocers and try it, more per cup than some, and less per cup than some others

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