The evening world. Newspaper, January 6, 1911, Page 3

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NOTED VIOLINIST’S MUSICAL ROMANCE ENDS ELOPEMENT Nikafai Sokoloff Secretly Wedded to Stepdaughter of Admiral Marix. WAS HIS ACCOMPANIST. | Volunteered Once in Crisis and | Succeeded so Well Russian | Fell in Love. | | | Nikola! Sokoloff, the Russian violinist, | Dupil of Ysaye and protege of wealthy | Fesidents of New York and Boston, has | signed a contract for life with his pri- vate accompanist, Miss Lydia Filkins, | @aughter of Grace Filkins, the actress, @nd step daughter of Rear-Admiral | Adolph Marix, U.S. N,, retired, In the Marriage Bureau of City Hail yesterdiy one of the Ci Fathe: whore me has not been ascertained, Made the agreement between the pair effectual, and they hurried to Hartfoi Conn., on a honeymoon. The first Admiral Marix and his wife knew of the elopememt was when news- Paper men inquired of them what they thought about it, To-day when an Eve- ning World reporter was ushered into the drawing room of the Marix apart- ment at No. % Central Park South and was announced by the maid a robusto bass voice called out “Out of the city. Their First Meeting. The story of the firat meeting of Miss Filkins and Sokoloff and of the romance that has culminated in thelr marriage was told to-day by friends of the pair. One wintry night five years ago Soko- loft appeared at a musicale in one of the fine residences In Washingson to find that his professional accompanist was stormbound near Baltimore. s Pilkine was one of the guests, and when Sokoloff learned that she was an accomplished planist he requested her to play his accompaniments, and she as- fonted. Being a perfect sight-reader, #he interpreted the piano settings of his fencerto so well that Sokoloff asked tha: he might meet her again. At that time Rear-Admiral Marix lived in Washington, and Mias Filkins told Sokoloff that when he was in the city again he might call upon her. That winter the violinist spent all his spare time in Washington, and was near Miss Filkins as often as she was able to see him, Recently he has been abroad, but & steady correspondence between the alr was kept up. Mhortly after Rear-Admiral Marix's retirement from the Navy last May he moved to this city and engaged the Fifty-ninth street apartment. During the summer Sokoloff dame back from abroad and shared a bachelor apart- ment with Willis Steele, the playwright, at No, 790 Park avenue. Steele, who know Mrs. Marix well, and is working on a play which will mark her return to the stage next fall, became interested in the attachment that had sprung up beween Mis# Filkins and his chum, and he used his Influence with Mrs, Marix and her husband in the Interest of get- ting thelr approval of a marriage, Pare..ts Obdur-'-, But both Rear-Admiral Marix and his wife held out, declaring that aa Sokoloff Was a at to start on a two years’ con- cert trip through Burope, they did not Want to see thelr only child leave them for so lon ed to satisfy both Sokoloff Ikins, but when they realized ur meant @ two years’ sepa- ration from his flancee they resolved to cretly when an opportunity pre- d itself. + Rear-Admiral Martx nor his pected that the pair would for they believed that their wife elope, daughter had resolved to wed Sokoloff on his return from abroad. But yesterday morning Miss Filkins downtown, ostensibly to do some shopping, taking with her @ suit case fille with necessary clothing. She met Sokoloff at un appointed place, and they hurried to City Hall and got & marriage Mcense, In the Marriage Hureau in the basement they found an Alderman, who quickly wed them, and, binding every one present to secrecy, they hastened to an uptown hotel, Sokoloff plays in concert at Hart- ford; Conn, to-morrow night. So that the Rear-Admiral and Mama Marix would not be frightened at their daugh- tor’s failure to return home, the bride- groom arranged for word to be sent to the Marix home of the elopement, Hut newspaper men who had learned of the taking out of the license reached the house first, only to be dismissed by both the Rear-Admiral and his wife, Mrs. Marix was Grace Sweetman be- fore she married John Robert Filkins, who was manager of a Boston theatre. He died twenty-eight years ago, when jis daughter was a year old, Mra, Fil- kins married Hear-Admiral Marix in Washington eighteen years ago. Sokoloff {8 four yeurs younger than his wife and was born in Russia. He came bere when fourteen, ———_—— COURT EULOGIZES WHITNEY. fe w w ons Temporarily Adjourned tn Memory, ‘Tribute to Justice In many of the twenty-six special ana trial terms the Supreme Court was temporarily adjourned to-day, while lawyers and Justices pald eulogistic tri- pute to the memory of Justice Edward Baldwin Whitney, who dled tn his sum- mer home in Cornwall, Conn., yester- day, In the part where Justice Ford pre- sided counsel and court commented freely om the dilapidated condition of the court house, charging that Justice Whitney's ¢ was due directly to the poor ventilation and inadequately equipped quarters—"'not as large as the stall my father's horse occupied,” de- elarea Justice Ford—in which the Jus- Mces bave thely working offices, THE EVENING WORLD, Women Here Will Be Shorn Of “Crowning Glory” it They Don’t Siop Wearing “Rats” Dr. Brownell Dilates Upon His Startiing Statement as to the Injuriousness of False Hair— Shop and Office Girls Suffer Most. Airtight Hats Make the Men Bald, Too, but That Isn’t Going to Help the Women When They Lose Nature’s Tresses. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. New York women arg growing bald. They have converted their craniums into sweatbore: making them airtight with “rats” and “puffs, and baldness is the inevitable penalty. At loast this is the Interesting diagnosis made by lectured before the Rainy Day Club this week on the care of the scalp. It remained for this fearless young man to track the ferocious “rat” to ite trap and cast its ignominy In Its teeth. Question by the stern physiologist: “pate” have teeth? Answer—Yes; very sharp teeth, I found Dr. Brownell in his office In the Ormonde, at No. 2030 Broadway, late yesterday afternoon, and, to tell the truth, he seemed rather appalled by the stir his remarks had created in the newspapers. I tried to convince him that no man may hope to lure the “rats” away from New York, as the Pied Piper did from Hamelin without paying the price of publicity. “Of course I aid talk about rats," the) —— young man admitted, “but those re-| marks were a very small part of my, ? leoture which deait with the care of the hair, the causes and cure of dan-| aruff, &c, The wearing of false hair by | IS VOVAGER’S HAIL — fe women has Increased greatly in the past two or three years, There is no ques- tion of that. And Davin Refuses to Be Yanked From Hudson Till Sure He'll Get It. Bound to Bring Baldni “Perhaps the people you and I know) fon't do it so much, but look at the) towering and overpowering coiffures of the girls in the shops. “The inevitable result is early baldness. They keep all air from the scalp, overheat it, turn it into & regular sweat-box. Our women to-day probably have @ lesser ten- dency to baldness than their moth. ers or grandmothers, because they ay outdoors more, and outdoor life is extremely beneficial to the hair, False hair does not have such evil effects on women who a leisure to go out @ great deal. Zt is the girls confined in shops and offices that are most exposed to baldness.” ‘But aren't men more exposed to baldness than women? Aren't there many more bald men?” rtainly,” Dr. Brownell admitted. “That's because of the air-tight hate men wear." ‘As a matter of fact,” I inquired, ‘isn't it true that the craziest hat woman wears is more sanitary than man's most conventional headgear ?”’ ‘What do you mean by the craziest hat?” parried the physician, and I ex- plained. “Tt is true that a woman's hat, no matter how eccentric, cannot injure the scalp if it merely alts up on top of the Capt. Wallace Ruger of the barge Martha Wood, lying at the ice pler at the foot of West Forty-sitth street, was about decks at dawn to-day, looking a: ter his mooring lines. The wind blew chill on his ears from across the tce- dotted Hudson, The captain was the only man on the boat. “Have you a bit of Hquor about you?" sald a voice in his ear, ‘The captain fairly jumped. Ten feet out in the river, sitting cross- legged on a none too roomy ice cake which was bobbing down stream with the tide, was a large, red-faced man with @ bushy mustache, dressed in over- alls and @ rough blue shirt. “How came you out on man?” roared Capt. Ruger. “How came that any of your bus- iness?”" said the stranger. "I was ask- ing you for a drink. If you have no the toe, head, as most women's hats do,” sald oiviiity or no drink I'll be finding Dr. Brownell, “It ts much less Likely gomebody further down stream who to produce baldness than the air-tight has," masculine @erby, unless the latter hi holes punched in {t to permit the cir- culation of alr. But, of course, an alr- tght structure of false hair has exactly the same effect as an air-tight hat." | As to Gray Hair. Has no Use for New York. “You must come in here,” said Capt, Ruger,, lifting a boathook from the deck “There's no man in New York—bad luck to it for a stingy and no good | toWh—can say ‘must’ to Michael Davin, “In your tal to the Rainy Datsies I wan: nev to set foot in the mise: you spoke of grayness as well as bald- able city again, ness,” I observed. Nevertii ‘apt. Ruger sank his “Gray hair, ts not regarded as a dis. hook deep In the edge of the Ice cake just and as dragg: was bobbing out of react it alongside. He seized Michae! Davin by the scruff of his neck, and, despite his protests and curses on ease, as baldness {s," Dr. Brownell an- swered. “Women should not try to dye their hair if it is turning prema- | jail New York and its people, dragged turely gray. Gray hair is beautiful | him aboard, and there ie no artificial hair col- | Davin's struggles subsided quickly oring that is not injurious, t is | Wen the captain told bim drink and better to have an abundant orop of | lc#kfast were in the cabin, Capt, oar wa growth of | Reser was for sending for @ police- dj than 0 sparse | man and an ambulance, once he bad & more youthful color, City fe | ytionael sitting at the table. has @ tendency to produce proma- {| “Jt sliall not I, man, I tell you,” turely gray hair. | shouted Michael Davin, pounding his “People sleep for fewer hours and, fist until the dishes rattled. "1 wil end the!r caergies day and night in| have none of New York City’s char a big city ike New York as they | Of lospltality or police protection, | It ha’ the opportuntty to do in smatier | {? RO ft town for a ful-grown man with Car Vn wt in his blood to Iive tn. not knowing what your you look like a man of ‘Tell me this.” communities,"" “Don’t you think women In New York have learned to care for thelr hair? 1 good se | \ | asked, Davia rose impressively and pointed “They care for it only in fits and | bis finger under his host's nose as he starts," the physician replied, ‘Some | SAtinued. wash the hair too often, others not | Wants Water Front Railed. frequently enough. {s about right, and Once in four weeks | "Why does not the elty of New York theh they should | put h rails along ita water front to avold the use of alicaline washe: keep good men and true lke myself “Borax and things like that? | with a bit too much tn yas from walking "Yer," sald Dr, Brownell, “it ts pet- | overboard? Why, T ask you, WHY? ter to rub a little oll into the scaip to! Kuger did not know the a Capt ! soften it and then wash It in a few moments with a plain soap than tt Is to use some shampoo which will take the natural o!l out for half a month. a eing a Wise man did not re. Michael Davin sank into his seat umed “Here 1 am with a bunch of the boys, And the more you rub the head the net-| visiting along Twelfth avenue, ter for it. Not many women realize | drink! ey well there for that it's the rub nd not the tonic | Whiskey, t ling you I that accompanies it that improves t lieve made 0 ood of man hatr, eating Hons and Kees, t comes Blind Faith in Druggist. Lma:k9 gota: ny on in port eighth “Women give too much faith to prep- ae be kno st | “TO INTIMIDATE HER.” Dr. E. Garney Brownell of Vanderbilt Hospital, who! LACKING TONGUES OF NYACKBISSPS BRNG FIELDS WO i] 'Broker’s Wife Threatens Poison to rotting Mare, and He Gets Warrant. | But Mrs. Field #ails to Return | Home, and He Blames Busybodies. To the busybodies and the gossins of the little town of Nyack-on-the-Hudson is given the credit for the break in the happiness of Mr. and Mrs. Armsted W. Field, whose bungslow at Grand Vie on the banks of tho river, has been the scene of much popular entertainment for about three years. Mrs. Field has left the pretty home following a series of warlike incidents, jand her young husband doesn't know where she is; two lawyers are expect- ing an actton for separation and the acandal-bearing tongues in Nyack a clacking more furlously than ever. ‘The most exciting incident in the ex- perlences of the Fields occurred last night when Constabl on Mrs. Field at the Hotel St. George in Nyack with a warrant obtained by her husband charging her with con- spiring to polson his record-breaking trotting mare, Katie Gray, There was & hysterical scene that ended by Mra. Fiqid's lawyer, ank Comesky of Nyack, getting in touch with Warren Sawyer, Mr. Fields's lawyer, and per- miading the husband to withhold the warrant. This followed soon upon Mr. Field's announcement in a Nyack news- paper that he would be responsible for no debts contracted by his wife. Came from Baltimore. Mr, Field ts thirty-two years old and he and his wife both came from Balti- more. He has a prosperous brokerage business in fruits at No, 192 West street and is wealthy. “T only had that warrant tssued to in- timidate her—to make her listen to rea- fon and come back to mo," he said to- day, “but It didn't succeed like I thought it wold. Yes, it does seem Ike a rig- orous measure to take, but T thought tt might make her see how ‘foolishly she has been acting. You seo, it's all be- cause of the gossip in a “Small town. Somebody told somebody else and some- body else told ebody else and they told me that Mrs. Field had said she would rather poison the mare Katie Gray than have me sell her, #0 I got out the warrant. “The mare 1s mine and I have a right to do as I lke with her. But our af- fairs have been the chief topic In Nyack for months, and every time Mrs, Field and I went out on the street some of our neighbors would come over and try to console us and advise us, until our troubles bean to look much arger to |us than they really were. “1 have a fine place up there and | horses and dogs that 1 1 but I am almost tempted to move away. In Maryland y er hear 80 Much go8- sip—people mind their own affairs, but up here it's different. And Mrs. Field fs the kind of a woman that it affects. she ts sick and nervous and under a | doctor’a care almost continually and she began to belleve all sorts of nonsense about me. It got so that she couldn't listen to me without flying into a pas- sion, This is the saddest thing that ever happened In my life, and for days I've hardly known whether I was on my feet or my head, but | hope she will return, and I belleve she will."* Scene In hote One of the incidents in the troubles of the Fields that gave the gossips mate- rlal was a scene in the Hotel St, George dining room last Sunday night Mr. Fleki went there to “make her Heten to reason,” as he says, but she re- fused to lsten to him at an nounced her dectsion In su ne of voice and a display of hys at he was glad to beat a ret After that outs arned to home | ‘ack W It Anes- she went to } more, r but fs young and pretty and Itimore soclety, Her ny and are sald to be y ed over the trouble, Mr, fn addition to him interest in blooded horses, is an enthusiastic yachtsman. He ts a member of the Tappan Zee and Nyack Ya Clubs, — Hin Chance to Say (From the Cleveland Leader.) “Here's a windfall! I was busted yesterday, and here comes a legacy of soo" nod! Now you can pay your debts, Debts? Say, this is the first ehanc er had to save up for a rain Do you think T haven't got any as of econ Many aches and ills not supposed to be caused by coffee, disappear when a change is made to well-made arations they know nothing about. | De Knowing the suit haw the Kick of a} They may doubt the minister, but tho | PUG ITN e Ae eee ee in most incredulous has @ blind faith ty gg ee ine er ieee ein thane the druggist. ‘They should know some- eee een een intake forsook. tne en: | thing about the tonics they use. SOR ION ae eae al “Worry, mental strain, In apt to prow Wav. 1 Lume Mee ele citys met | duce baldness and to make women pre- haying the common charity or consider- | maturely gray." Dr, Brownell added ation to put hand rails along the water | “When |e a person prematurely gray?” front, 1 walked into the river off the end I asked. I knew every one would be f'n" interested in placing this sartorial rabi+ con. “Before considered pre between thirty He Slept on Ice Raft. This ke fee came float tently and ture, After that five and. fort, ff hal } will with naturally begins to turn Tee aA GIDGE THR: Beane In conclusion, you may be unmarr man until Twa to know that Dr, Brow: your liandsome face looking out over to this deftnintion, 18 prematurely gray YO. aook.’ himseit, |" "Do you mean to tell me," asked thy . j captain tn om mm) at you Reciprocity. none the worse after getting on a cake (From the Boston Herald.) fof ice at midnight and x in your | ‘Twas in the gloaming, and the young) wet clothes out on unul man had just stolen a xlas. now” “Sir! exclaimed the fair mald, with!" the worse, me bold captain,'* an outward show of Indigatlon You) said Michael Davin, at there are ® heartless thief! is a thirst in my st Which is all too “That's right,” rejoined held | large for your mere half bottle of young man, “but you are to blame for) w Come with me to Twelfth Mt, avenue and know the gratitude of 4 Tow am I to blame?" she queried. ‘Fou stole my heart," be answered rescued man.” And they went, a ecmbaiciidalla. “| POSTUM | The health beverage which helps rebuild down nerve centres. the broken || “There’s a Reason” Postum Cereal Co., Mich. L Lid., MeNicoll called | FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1911. Ninety in. One Hundred Women | in Our Cities Are Bad Cooks, Says Culinary Class Teacher | |Modern Wife and Mother , | Not Equal of House- keeper of the Past, As serts Mrs. Mary E. Mi- nott. | | | |Nothing but Intelligence and Common Sense Are Necessary for Good Cooking—It’s an Exact | Science. | By Margnerite Mooers Marshall. “The definition of good cook! must contain these three adjectives —Appetising, Moalthful and Boo- nomical, And under this definition mot ten per cent. of the women who live in cities can qualify as cooks.” ys Mrs. Mary E. Minott, until recently at the head of the dietetic de- partment of the dassachusetts General Hospital, and now about to take charge of a very new and special cooking | school In this city, It will open to-night under the auspices of the Associated Clubs of Domestic Science, and will be in session every Friday evening this winter at Labor Temple, Fourteenth | street and Second avenue. It marks the first attempt of the clubs to put into practical operation here, on a large weale, their theories about pur: food, its purchase and preparation. Several | similar schools have been run with great success in Chicago, and it is planned to extend the work here if this first venture has @ sufMiciently favorable reception. All of which was vouchsafed yester- day by Mrs. Winnifred Harper Cooley, national secretary of the clubs, and then Mrs, Cooley presented me to Mrs. Minott, the tall, sensible looking woman, with keen, kindly gray eyes, who ts to do the actual teaching, “What do you think is the most com- mon fault of our cookery?" I asked her first. | Not Enough of It. at there's too little of answered promptly, “The typical city family, no mat- ter what its income, depends far too much on the delicatessen shop and the baker. “The modern wife and mother is Iiv- ing under different conditions from thom surrounding the all accomplishing housekeeper of the past. But at least the woman of to-day should give intel- lgent supervision to everything that goes on her table, and most of her menu should be prepared at home. “The tiniest apartment has ts kitch- enette, and an aloohol stove may be set up tn one room. There is no excuse but ignorance or laziness for the mod- ern woman's slavish dependence on out- side agencies for her family's food sup- ply." “But do you think everybody can cook? Aren't cooks born and not made?" I ventured to insert. “Nothing but intelligence and common sense are necessary for genuine good cooking, that which gives results at once appetizing, healthful and economi- | cal. Personally I never prepared a meal until after I was twenty-one, But 1 had no difficulty in learning, though I | wasn't even brought up a cgok, much i born one. Cooking Is a Science. “Cooking is simply a science and, lke every other sclence, it requires absolute exactness. One of the first things I) | have to teach my students is to follow. their recipes, You would think that the direction, ‘one Jevel cup of sugar,’ read sufficiently plain, Yet half the members of my classes, meeting it for the first time er heap or skimp the cup. Free quently one woman will repeat @ recipe | to another from memory, but woe to| unto the second woman when she tries | the dish! She {# almost certain not to have been given completely exact direc- tions, “Keeping ures 1s, of cours it" she | courate welghts and mean- the polnt where in- | telligence is necens But the good cook never fails to adapt herself to ctr cumstances—that's common sense. I ree Best We Offe Boys’ Can Rlucher Lace Shoe At Unusual Prices CULINARY “DONT’S" BY INSTRUCTOR OF COOKING SCHOOL, Mere are some of Mrs. Minott’s “Gon'te” for cooks: ‘ “DONT fry, except in deep fat, because that is the only sort not ebsorbed in the process, “DONT ever fry moat; over coals or in # pan. “DONT cook potatoes too long; they're the worst treated veget- ables on the calendar. “DOWT fail to use enough water in cooking all vegetables. “DOWT serve hot breads, if you oan avoid them, “DON'T use cold storage products. “DOWT serve pastry too fri quently, but don't feel that you must banish it from the table. “DON'T try to palm off unpalat- able messes on the ground that they're healthful; really good food is both appetising and di- gestibie.” broil tt member once teaching one of my classes to make oatmeal muffins, Of course, at the class, we had first to cook the ont mi I casually remarked that if they Were preparing the meal at home they might simply take the already-cooked oatmeal left over from breakte They looked utterly amazed, and exclaimed in startled tones, ‘Why, who ever would have thought of that!’ ” “Are you planning to ake up the eco- nomic side of cooking?" I asked. $15 a Week for Threc, “We shall certainly do something in that line. “E do not beliove that a family of three people can possibiy be fed as they should be on lews than 15 a week for the food mi "But there are certain wa: the wise cook can reduce the high cost of living, The tougher, cheaper cuts of meat only require proper cooking to be quite as nourishing and almost as pala- table as expensive steaks and chops. For that matter, most people eat more meat tha they need, Twice a day | certainly often enouugh to serve it, and frequently once is sufficient. Also rich deserts, while not harmful if served tn moderation, are not necessary to an eco- nomical and healthful men “Por the matntalnane uch @ diet, all _materiais must, of course, be fresh and pure,” coycluded Mrs. Minott, “Also they muat be prepared with the prope tools: the modern kitchen has no excuse for not being well eautpped, even tf it Is sometimes small in area, And the par f the food must be a p who—kn how.” Here are a nary, every-da ew of the many "menus Mra, M & Co. Monde ott ts To Introduce These Styles of | Boys * Children’s and | Misses’ Shoes r Them and Black double sole to heel Y.....+-$3e25—former price $5.00 ore re fe “ $5.25 Misses’ and Children's Black Russia Calf Shoe with waterproof sole; button and lace Size 8 to 10%, “ TL tO ve seeeee 0$5.85—regular price $2.75 saceveeseacaom * “ 3.50 j \ Fifth Ave. at 35th St. | ¢ G To-Morrow, Saturday, Jan. 7th ( } 2 ! Budson Terminal B'dg., Cut out this advert POOP IP SSSI IFTTSD FIGITSS HSS 9SSS: t Pay 8500 in ‘sett of Woman Ping Butta , ‘Miss Clara Lipman may lose the pee of an Baster bonnet as the result ef tite | decision by Jusitee Brady in the Appal- late Term of the Supreme Court to-day reversing a Municipal Court decision No Codttisty 1 Big ate Head Pad ND Stuffed Calla Meart 1 Tomator Fried Parmips Corn Bread, Graham Pudding Hand Sane, }which awarded her husband, Lowe Rated Head sour aes | Mann, the $909 which he pald Freéerten °. » Maur otherwise known as “Fred @e 7 bial. ne. | Gresne,” for building up the seenariogt © te ap entitled “To Love or Net To Lave. : ates = Miss Maurel appealed, claiming that Miss Lipman, who was to have the | “lead,” objected to her lines, catiatng Rolled Ma Mfacaron! mi delays and prohibiting her from ‘ {completing the play in the time eom | tractet for by Miss Lipman's husband, Au ae aoe eal ‘Mies Lipman was always “butting in! ‘fo In always bragging about his ane | M rel asserts ‘The Municipal Court returned to the poor fellow has no chil-/ the 8 which he had advanced t Maurel. $18, $20 & $22.50 Winter Coats $ 8” An event of very deep appeal to every woman who drives, to every woman who motors, to every woman who prizes the rich all-enveloping warmth and elegance of a handsome winter coat at a very great saving. Caraculs, Kerseys, English Tweeds Included are styles both striking and con- servative, appropriate and becoming to both youngandold. Ri inging from swagger mixtures of daring originality to coats of quiet, harmonious elegance, comprising beautiful caraculs, richly lined from top to toe, braided military styles like picture, and those of tailored “beauty unadorned.” Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 14-16 West Ith Street—New York 460 and 462 Fulton Sireet—Brooklya 645-651 Broad Street Newark, The authoritative standard of uniform perfection in all things to eat, VANILLA EXPLAINED You can make “Vanilla” in any number of ways: Mexican beans, Bourban beans, Tahiti bean: Tonka beam coumarin and vanillin. MOST so-called Vanilla is prepared from coumarin and vanillin, They are poisonous, This statement is undeniable. Puddings, cakes, ice-creams, candies are invariably favored with the arti+ ficial product. The law requires that the barrel or bottle shall be marked “imitation” but it doesn’t require that the puddings, cakes, ice-creams or candies shall be so marked, 4 As long as such things are legal the people who eat cannot tell what they cat. PREMIER doesn’t have to put any fine print on its label. It is made from Mexican beans only and has a right to be a little uppish about it, There are 925 other PREMIER foods just as uppish. One of them is Premier Breakfast Coffee FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & CO. EAPAAAAAEAAAAAOORAASEROPAEEAEEEEES SORenansesesogges, Money Cheeriully Refunded on all Unsatisfactory Purchases JOHN MINDER & SON HUDSON TERMINAL MARKET ' d Phone Fulton St, Entrance. 4842-4843 Cortlandt WE COOK YOUR ORDER REE OF CHARGE Can you imagine anything more tasty thana Smoked Ham Roasted Virginia Style 18c™ SPECIAL NOTICE isement and bring it with you and we will roast a ham for you (on Friday only) at 15¢ Ib,

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