The evening world. Newspaper, June 22, 1911, Page 3

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FRNHARDT SAILS -UFTER SHOWERING ASSESATDOGK Gives Fond Goodbyes Even Novelist Charges— Wives to the Reporters. Makes Spouse Real Chum TAKES $340,000 PROFIT. s Literature and the Arts She'll Be Back in 1915, but ©® Before That Will Write Her “Impressions.” Garah Bernhardt finished her Amer- Yaa tour by winning not only an en- @vrance record, but tacord “or speed. After four strenuow Performances in three days, she went Jast night to a dinner at the Marie An- Joinette, left the dinner at 4.80 o'clock ‘this morning, and at 9 o'clock, when Yeporters on La Lorraine, upon which #2 sailed for her home, sought an tn- terview, she astonished them by doing @ thing unprecedented in the world of ‘women. S\ghe actually dressed and made her learance in twelve counted minutes. A trim maid responded to the early sail. Could madame give a farewell tate to the press? The maid did not krow; madame was asleep. She would te aroused and asked. A moment later the maid returned. Madame would re journalists, 1t would be a all the latter’s faults she ins Meader. clusions he combats. But here are the two arguments: By Gertrude Atherton. feel sorry for the American man, Mrs. Atherton begins. “What chance has a business man (and the vast ma- Jority of husbands in the United States &re business men) to make of himself an accomplished and interesting mat He comes home at night with what writers call ‘brain fag;' he ts so tired that his one thought if he happens to lve out of town, is to indulge in a swim or @ game of tennis, then enjoy & good dinner and a iqng night's rest. In any case, his consolation for hte killing day is a bright, comfortable home, and cheerful faces at his tabi this might, Indeed. be said to embrace his highest tdeal 6f earthly happiness. REJECTS READING, THEATRES AND OPERA. “Rut he has no time to read; he re- jects the theatre and opera as another ee ALMOST GIRLISH AND » BRIGHT, IN TWELVE MINUTES, ivPhey sat them down to wait, those veterans of the sea news, who have Waited for wives and sweethearts ‘through costly hours when the meter on the taxicab mercilessly clicked off conic sections of the weekly pay roll. But they did not know their Sarah. In just twelve’ minutes che came smiling and Duoyant—as happy asa girl just start-|form of mental work; he rarely gets a ing for a holiday outing, and with nojchance at Europe, or, if he does, is more trace of a long night of enjoyment {Fought home by his womankind more that might have been expected from the tired than when he left, and if there hi president of a white ribbon fraternity. |ieries in his town ie ie nay tonite ee ‘There was something positively eitl- | pected that he will give Ms briet hell. h In the appearance of this woman, {days to their studv. Nor. for obvious ar beyond the age at which a recenfly |reasons, ddées he seek the society of haobled doctor thought chloroform in |{ntellectual and widely informed men. der. She wore a white shirtwaist, a “Me is « money-making machin velvet skirt and a heavy gilt girdle. A| Pure and elm; long opere cloak was picked up coquet- “tishly by the vagrant breese. Her hair was carefully done, and a bunch of fresh chrysanthemums was in its wav A veil of thin, gausy stuff caught her hair, while ¢he end drifted out on the wind. “When will I return to America?” she| pected of tim, repeated. “I do not know, but I shall “Why fs it," again aske Mrs. Ather- certainly come in 1915. You know that /to:, “that man #0 soon recovers from the blind attack of romance which landed him ir matrimony? Why 1s it that im six months he rarely rem She spoke with @ fairly good com-| bers the beauty and charm of his wife mand of English, and in the reference | (if she has any), noting only whether | to the canal the thoughtful surmised | she pos esses the supreme gift of mak- that there was a trace of a romance of | ing him comfortable? the long ago. It was de Lesseps who| MAN STARTED WRONG IN DEAL. first dug upon the isthmus. ING WITH WOMAN. “My tour was the grandest of my Sut italall the eanuitetthe o: Teer,” she went on. ‘I cannot make a 2 9 Cauly OF she. men. men in general had been wise speech, but when I return to Paris I am/| the Orientals they would e shut uD going to write my impressions of Amer-| their wives with their children and ica and send them to Monsieur Connor, | servants, and never a book or a glimpse who will give them to the journalists.’ | of Loe wrens Me tol gat 3 wee men's error in the beginning. Since he held TAKES $340,000 PROFITS FROM | tho reins in his own hands that is 26,000-MILE TOUR. responsible for the present state of That she spoke advisedly of her tour | affairs. He must, therefore, take the of 26,000 miles was attested by the fact | consequences, and to my mind he Is P 4 eavily than the woman— fepe te tok. Geaeipie sizng te Parts Although she ts paying heavily enough, as her share of the proceeds of her art—| "xray 4s tired lard woman is discome make that @ capital A, tented. Man wants to keep his head Then she sald goodby to every one | above water; woman wants a mate who in sight. She distributed kisses in pairs, | will develop with her intellectually and ‘one on each cheek, 80 that bewhiskered | (consciously) love her. The average shipnewsers might get theirs through |™4n has no imagination, The avorago a filter, so to speak. Everybody was| Woman is cursed with just enough to Kissed—twice kissed. Dr. Emanuel de make her dream of the impossible, and Marney-Barouche of No. 87 East Sev-| Not enough to reach the dignity of @ enty-seventh street, came in for an un- talent ia whe: opened.’ the Panama Canal is to be usyal share of the attentions. It was| Follows this frank outburst: his play, “Judith,” which won this “For you are dull, 0 busine: shewer of greeting at parting. Bern-| man of America; ne doubt of that. hardt has accepted the play, and will present it the coming season in bottt Paris and London. “Did I accept the play because it tn American?” she repeated. “I accepted| dred times s year, I marvel that it because it is A-r-r-rt, the American woman is as good a Thirty-six members of her company| gort as she is. X only wonder that sailed with her. On the ship were| ghe does not elope or take to Monsieur J. Jusserand, Ambassador for " r France to the United’ States, and Ma-| Greg, S.would sav rather climbs Game Jusserand. He is going away for three months’ vacation, He spoke en- thustastically of the Taft silver wedding and regretted that ne must miss the tri- enoia!l dinner of the Society of the Cin th. to sit next you I think upon site you at dinner and breakfast ‘al hun- up to ® hilltop end talk to myself till Z fell asleep than sit next an mere names are to him ekrit. I would rather li cle! When asked if the accidents in French lation would operate to deter the| cave with 2 seine. iat pape and lence and sport, he replie pens for the rest my , thas § ie ig to be married to one of them— “It is like war; people are killed, but | will haye war. People are killed flying, but they will continue to fly. — DR. J. M’C, HOLMES DEAD, Hee Reon crater ,of, Duteb Re- mae forme arch in Brooklyn. a f e clety of men of leisure with cen- POUGHEERFEID, N.Y» June Sm He es cultivated minds behind them. ., Rev. John McClellan Holmes, D. ,D.! International marriages are far hap: ¥ : weven years old, died sud-| per than most people imagine, not only y yesterday from heart disease. De, Holmes was a graduate of William: College, class of '55, and the New Bruns. because of the preliminaries? Just m tloned, put because in our hetera population there are many reversions wiek Theological Seminary in 1857, Het ancestral types, the secret. port was for forty years a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church, and had * charges in Brooklyn, Hudson and Al- yes, even if he provided me with many servants and almost as many automobile: INTERNATIONAL MARRIAGES HAPPY, SHE SAYS. word as to girls brought up in and given a season or two of of certain American girls’ in any circumstances, for the f man, And these girls are no mate for ‘American man as he ts to-day bany, retiring in 1897. | “At all events, the modern woman Two sons, one of whom is Rey, Dr.| must and will have many men to talk Samuel Van Vranken Holmes of Buf- | to, and t! an husband, indu ale, and two daughters survive, in man | gent nd insists upon his little harem | heart, of one. ‘The only remedy for this state of af- —_—>___ ENDED HIS LIFE BY GAS. | fairs, according to Mrs, Athert is to in @ tallor shop at No. 174 All street, | ness. With the vacuum of their minds committed suicide in the shop hortly | reasonably well filled up, there will be after 2 o'clock this morning by iuualing |less time for shallow introspection, fas through a tube. The man, with|Nnone for ennui, and you will also (no slept in the shop, and last | Mean consideration) be relieved of the when his companions went lentire support of your family bed, they left him sitting by an open window. Later they were awakened by a strong odor of gas and found the stranger sit- ting neaf the window with the tube in his mouth. Dr. Eberle, of Gouverneur ‘Hospital, him dead. ly Happy, Actress|He’s Too Tired From Work to Be Entertaining, Noted ances, Is Writer's Retort. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What ia the matter with the American husband? Gertrude Atherton, in the current issue of the Delineator, discourses brilliantly, if rather cruelly, on his fault an unapproached | ton also pays certain left-handed compliments to the American wife, but for we must “cherchez l'homme.’ Surely the American husband deserves at least one chance to speak in his own defense. Yesterday I selected as his representative Herman L. Besides being married, Mr. Meader is, like Mrs. Atherton, a nov- elist, his latest book being entitled “Cupid the Surgeon.” fellowmen more favorably than does the distinguished woman whose con- and Daughters Should Work, She Declares. and Conceals His Lote for From Chance Acquaint- foibles and failings. Mra. Ather- He views his By Herman LL. Meader. “The American man is neither dull nor stupid, particularly when he ie talk- ing to his wife. He makes of her more of a chum, more of a companton, than do the men of any other nation, with the possible exception of the middl class French. Nor 1s he jealous of her acquaintance or even friendship with other men. The American husband ten't t—or indeed his wife would have for complaint—but he's a mighty fo0d, reliable article. This was Mr. Meader's pronouncement when T showed him Mrs. Atherton’s re- marks, HAS REAL GENIUS AND APPRE- CIATION FOR THE ARTS. “E think the dulness of the Am- erican man deserves the first pro- test. Me is anything but dull, and I am not referring solely to hie business quickness. He has a real and genuili ppreciation of litera- ture and the arts. unly he doesn't talk about it all the time, the way the women do. Mrs. Atherton de- scribes him as such # bore at the dinner table. She intimates that his hyo ig barren of all interests cannot discuss them over oysters and champagne. The poet ry o ‘ours, really intimate and vital parte of his life. He can't pillory them in convérsation with a chance-met table companion. “Women can do that because they are ‘apt not to go into any one thing deeply, THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1911. [American Men Are Only Dull Money Grubbers, Making Wives Unhappy, Says Mrs. Atherton; OF MUSIC HAS HIT TAKE DOCTOR'S RIG They’re Bright and Cultured, Meader Thinks ‘GARDEN FESTIVAL A POPULAR CHORD | ~ |Inquirers Show Great Interest Soloist Who Is Enthusiastic | in Operatic Carnivs i Over Garden Musical Festival ar as pic fe }ORDER OF CONCERTS. ! Many Artists Eager to Take| Part in Educational | Movement. | An Immense stage will be erected tn the centre of the Madison Square Ga: | den arena for the orchestra and artis! |who will take part in the eight days musical carnival beginning Sunday, June %, which is planned to benefit jechool children, wage earners and jothers whose limited means prevented [them from enjoying the operas and high class concerts of the season just | closed. To make the acoustics of the Garden as near perfect as possible Conductor Modest Altachuler of the Russian Sym- phony Orcheatra will divide the Garden In halves, ‘Scenery “will be put up 9 West One Hundred and Bighty-third Pa street, decided thie morning that he Your Inspection wouldn't go to school. He threw hte “ books aver the fence Into a vacant lot The }and started out to explore the Bronx reaching to the roof and the stage will be covered, In case the Garden te filled the stage background may be removed, A special promenade 1s being built over the foxes for occupants of the box Jullus Hopp, manager, announced to- day the following order in which the neerts will be given: Sunday, June 2, Russian Night. Monday, June %, French Night. | Tuesday, June 27, Itallan Night. | Wednesday, June 2, Slavish (Dvorak’s ew World”) and Scandinavian Night, Thursday, June 2, German and Was: ner Night. Friday, June 90, Symphony Night (Tachatkowsky's “Pathetique"). Saturday, July 1, Popular Night. Sunday, July 2, International Night. BEGINNING OF A_ NATION-WIDE MOVEMENT. Many artists have expressed thelr wish to co-operate In making the fes- tival a big success, They view it as the beginning of a movement, nation wide, to provide music for the people at popular prices, and of popularizing muste in the schools. i “It is by undertakings of this char- actor that the public 1s educated to the beauties of music," said Mme. Hen- rietta Wakefield of the Metropollti Opera House, one of the soloists of the DIVORCED HUBBY HORSE KICKED "READVTOAID WIFE | MORE THAN THE but rather seize a smattering of all. In the same breath a woman ply the adjective ‘lovely’ to a Velasques por- trait, the Moonlight Senata, and a harle- quin icé cream. The average man hasn't attained that degree of culture. MEN LOVE READING AND THE ARTS AS MUCH AS WOMEN. “Let Mrs, Atherton go to our thi tres and operas {if she really believes our men are too exhausted by business cares to attepd them. Let her consult the files of our public Ubrariey if she thinks it is only the women who read, Or even let her go Into the Metropolitan Museum on Sundays and holidays, and see if one sex predominates to the exclusion of the other.” “And you think that the American man ! as cultured as his wife?” I asked, “Generally speaking, yes," declared Mr. Meader. “In fact, I bave noted that as much inter- Pp tions of the stock market and like to Giscuss them quite as well. We are nearly all of us frankly fond of our money. But that doesn't mean that we are fond of nothing “As for the American husband's not being @ companton for his wife, that 1s manifestly absurd. He makes her his confidant and chum whenever she ts in the least responsive to such a relation, His attitude {s different from that of the men of any other n: y, though the middle class n, accord- ing to my observ: , does seem to approach pretty closely to tne right ideal, He and His wife stand In a very relation and share all! business and family affairs. rhaps there are happy inter- national marriags but Z hav never been privileged to witness one. The American girl is brought up under such e different concep- tion of marriage from that obtain- ing on the other side, # conception of free and eq' partnership. As a luncheon and ball room acquaint- ance the European man outshines the American, But as a husband I believe our men are infinitely more Ukely to make a woman happy.” “Do you consider that the nd is lacking in #oman merican T ques- LOVERS AS ARGUMENT. “Well, fhe petals of the rose must fall some tine for both men and wom temporized Mf, Meader, "Mrs, At ton sets the time lmit at six months: much too low for most men, Think of all the middie aged cov you see tn which the man is so obviously and de lightfully in love with his gray haired sweetheart “T think that the duration of the ro: mance ends on the wife. There are wives whom nobody could be romantic about."’ “Is th at heart? American hu and a pasha it @ bit of it!” langhed mr. Mm “He is unsuspicions and confiding to @ fault, Within due limits he never dreams of object- ing to his wife's friendships with other men, And the American wom- an has a genius for just such frank, friendships, b Americas hu watching for a try, lke the husband "As for Mrs, Atherton's conclusion that the wives must learn to work in order*to help thelr husbands out, I ven- ture to suggest that they could help quity as truly by making fewer demands” carnival. “We artists and, I am sure, the impresarios to a far greater degree, realize the fact that in the United States musical education is often neg- l@ted. “In European countries we find the mus! education of the masses well advanced. Here only a few of our Writes Her a Sympathetic Let-|Jury Brings in a Verdict of ter—She Says She's Sorry $1,000 for Driver Who Sued people, meneratly the wealthy, know and o. we) e e peel lc of th She Lost Him for Injuries Reece ae wie Goat ue tee be high because there 1s not sufficient patronage to warrant the prices being reduced, I suppose. INDIVORCINGHO.2. LAW ALLOWED ——>—— Charging that her husband, Wiliam | How many Kickd a horge 1s entitled to before its owner may be compelled Jacob Hauser, a wealtliy fur Importer, “It this nival educates people who bit her in the nose, beat her, borrowed |! and opneeee kdoyd prec ecvereming have not been able to atteng the opera, question presented to Justice Delany ‘ . f music in the heart money fro er which he never re- | 4 sows the da of tus ey from her which he never re- | und a jury in the Supreme Court to-| o¢ the achool child and provides the mu- turned, and finally deserted her, Mrs. | day, George Ehret, the brewer, was! dicay relaxation so needed by wage: Bertie Hauser this afternoon asked | sued by #rank Koeltgen of No. 166 will have achleved a tre- earners, it mendous good. Justice Glegerich in the Sup for a decree of separation Max Stever, iting Hauser, sald his cli ectly willing that Mrs. Hauser should have a decree |! “Mr, Hauser will gladly pay her $10 weekly alimony} too,” added Lawyer e Court | West One Hundred and Seventh street, ja driver in b employ, beeausi while | M ne harnessing one of Ehigt’s ho 2 | BIVE wae Bioked and erersieiar. iat | the Garden will be followed vy open Bhret denied any Nability, saying the alr performances, Here again the pop- se was an old one. and was too) ulurization of mustc may be continued gentle to harm any one. Louis Steck: | in an excellent manner. ler, counsel for Koeltgen, proved that! “Once we have our people educated the ‘horse had Kicked other stablemen. | ¢,, realize what music means, 1 am sure From what I have been to understand, the concerts in Steuer. Lawyer Steckler cited cases in which | Sth “I wish this case tried, Your Honor,” | the owners of doxs were held responsi-| * Wave of musical fervor will sweep ble for damages where. persons hag | over this country such as no othet coun- broke in Mrs, Hauser. “It is Justice I) pean bitten’ bY. tho doge more than | try ever experienced. 1 think that every want, not any compromise. once, He sald the same law was ap-| artist, and those who have the pros- “I would prefer % a week allmony | plicable to horses, perity of muale at heart, showkd support after the case 1s tried to twice that| In the case of dogs the faw requires| enterprises of this kind.” ous be shown before any| Miss Elizabeth Karlowa, an Austrian amount now.” j that vicio The Hausers were married In Febru- |one can recover tor a dow’ bite. That | violinist, will apne ; A tie hodelooking i it must be shown that a dog has of the artists will ary, 190. Mrs, Hauser, a good-looking |} ten some one more than ance or has| night. The « }woman of middie age, declared Hauser | pitten thé p came to her an hour before the Wedding | claiming dagu ceremony, told her he had been robbed and borrowed $200 from her “Phree weeks later,” added Hauser, “he began beating n won other’ than the one be printed in the newspapers each day, Kes. From the number of i@iulrles recetved Justice Delany held that the lawere- Manager Hopp and the committee on lating to dog bites held good in the case arrangements are certaln that the en Mrs, |of kicking horses. He left i to the| terprise has struck a popular chord, dcall-|Jur¥. however, to determine whether | Mr. Hopp announced to-day that begin- i Ehret's horse was a viclous kicker. ‘Tho! ning thls morning tickets 1 lem me whe names |jury decided that Koeltgen was entitled at the office of the Wage KE It was in the presence of her daughter | tq. $1,000 damages Sheatea Zanaun, Mo. 116 Beaawne, by a former marriage, according to Mrs. | = - Hauser, that Hauser bit her in the nose. | He made my life miserable,” said e Mrs. Hauser, “by his continua! de-| mands for money.” Mrs, Hauser has letters from former husband, Harry Leventhal of Buffalo, whom she divorced, saying he was sorry she was tn trouble and wished he could he here to ald he n her suit against Hauser, She declared to-day she realized sh had made a mistake in divorcing Leventhal, a# he was “a splendid man,” | —_—_——_——— BOYS IN REAL HOLD-UP. Juveniles Caught After Robbery | her Three-Day Millinery Sale Commencing Thursday, we place on sale our exclusive high-priced imported and domestic millinery models |] atless than cost. All desirable creations are here. 12.50 7.50 9.95 5.95 We alsoshow a fine line of satin and silk hats | $25.00 Hats for. $20.00 Hats for $15.00 Hats for $12.00 Hats for of a Menenger Boy. ae rege He fur between-seasons’ wear. Re eda ies Thursday and Friday end of Seventy-second street last night GIRLS’ AND CHILDREN'S DRESSES wer than when two other boys, or he and one smaller, held hin dark spot. He fought them. j upon the youthful footpads knocked | him down, ktcked him and took @ dol-) ‘ar away from him, | As they ran he got upon his feet and) followed them, yelling fe Ip as he went, Detective Devery of Hleadquart- ers, heard the youngster’s ores and A large variety of styles in percales, zephy'rs and French Kinghams; low or high neck; piped or trimmed in pretty combinations or 79 embroidery. Sises 6 to 14, Values $1.25 and $1.50; to close. IC WOMEN’S PETTICOATS In skeleton and full cut; trimmed with inserts af torchon, edge and embroidery beading; wide taffeta ribbon run Others with deep flounce of sheer blind embroidery, bead- 1 89 took up the chase, In of a block | ing and ribbon run. Value $2.75. SPECIAL £¢ he had collared the two fugitives. They | gave thelr names as James Lynch, sey- | MEN'S BALBRIGGAN UNDERWEAR Saeed ONO eT toartay, || Made of fine Egyptian Yarn; shirts with short or long | fourteen years old, of No. 18 West Bix ves, and ribbed bottoms; drawers double seated, with 33c ty-fourth street. In the West Side|| French waist band. Value 50c. SPECIAL Court to-day Magistrate Hermann’ held Lynch for trial, The younger boy was sent te the Children’s Court, L. M. BLUMSTEIN, W. 125th Street, Between 7th & 8th Ave, : 3 \ |BOY, SCOLDED, LEFT HOME. mother is he his father over ht for ber stontly Steven was @ fa- to- escape the high school he okey" for a week. if it he scalded en din- 2% cents with ONLONG DAVE Polic¢eman Captures Boys in Harlem After Exploration of Bronx Wilds Now Ready for Charley Gasper, ten gears oll, of No. He Nutt, West One street, also Pretty soon he met Iittle C " . of No. 7 Wighty-third pol * guid Charley Casper and Master Nutt also seven Hundred and on his way “mon, C hurley shucked jolned the exploring expedition. They trotted along together and at Tremont and Webster avenues they came upon dD I. 8. Balcom's horse and buggy nitehed before the doctor's house. “Git in, Cholly,” said Charley Casper Nutt his books over the fence and ee, CAN be to room through any open air Must be seerto be appreciated. to Charley Nutt, and Master Nutt a i obeyed. ‘They unhitched the doctor's | srenetise heetensuhenybahy S prese to eves o writes Taille all about care of baby. THE TAYLOR NURSERY & Egat 23¢ Street horse, and although he is a high-spirited animal they drove him over a good part | of the Bronx and then turned down Lenox avenue, Charley Casper handling , the reins: | At One Hundred and Twenty-fitth | street Polleeman ‘Thompson — stoppéd | them, Master Casper said his name was Wilkins and that tt was his ‘paw's hoas,’ but Master Nutt broke down and| / confessed, But he wouldn't tell on| Charley Casper, and it was not until Mra. Nutt came to the atatton that the police learned Charl ‘uaper’s real name. Dr. Baleolm claimed his horae and th two Charleys will be arraigned to: row In the Children’s Court on a charge of juvenile delinquency. >——_- WILL OF MRS. EDDY ADMITTED TO PROBATE. But Appeal Taken at Once by Bay State Attorney - General on Ground of Domicile. BOSTON, June 22.-The will of Mrs, Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the Christian Setence Church, was admit. tel to probate in the Suffolk County Probate Court to-day, ‘*Attorney-Gen- eral James M, Swift of Massachusetts immediately took an apeal to the Su- preme Court on the question of dom- {etle. Odbol-izing theteeth is delightful Odol is a delightful and refreshing yet wonderfully effective cleanser and purifier for the teeth andl mouth. A few drops in water as dent? ifrice and mouth wash keep teeth and mouth surgically clean for hours. ——— Broker Overcome by Heat. “TM. Smith, u broker, aged tile. five, was overcome by the heat in His office at No. 65 Maiden lane shortly after noon to-day and removed to St. Gregory's Hospital. Smith lives at No. 165 Maple avenue, Brooklyn, At all Druggists. | i} | GUMGAN 35th to &COMPY Beth se. @ Watch for Our Daily Bed Specials © “= Brass Bed Quifit, 3 Pieces-—All Sizes, * Value $22.09 name!lBed (Brass Trimmed), Value $8.56, 5-98 A rew and attractive des 1) sigm, with coatinuous posts send strong ¢ fai nead and jcot panels, wi erass spirctes and orna- mentrl chilis. Finest white enamel nish; .cepuon- = y sfroms ¢ *ruction, $50 $3 to $4 Deposit |$10 j $7.50 to $10 Deposit 75¢ to $1.00 a Week $1.00 to $1.50 aweek WORTH Bs Double Stamps with Morning Porchenes 2A” Stamps aver’ Single Factory SALE Used Pianos Save your vy until you e seen these pianos. Inestim- able bargains in such well-known makes as mor ‘This mest walque package, Ailed with sorcially selected Chocolates. makes “CHOCOLATS LA VOGUE" STEINWAY COLL an unuoually appropriate th . Bon Voyage or Gift Box. \aaeen ee e MATHUSHEK WHEELOCK Only 50 Pianos Left. Prices from $50 Up Easy Monthly Payments, Wheel i “eg conh York. Stores, and orders taken (Ot all Bales Agencies for Prompt delivery aboard any oteamer. Price $1.50 delivered. |

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