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THE EVENING WORLD, JOHN DREW'S WIFE TELLS STORY OF BARRYMORE SUIT dant of the Actress Declares 4 Colt Is Too Fond of a Lively Life. QUARRELS BEGAN EARLY. Hustiand, in His Rooms at Yale Club, Refuses to See Any One. {au soon as Ethel Barrymore's messen- wer, bringing from Les Angeles the Dapere in her divorce suit against her Wusband, Russell G. Colt, arrives at the office of the actrese’s attorneys, Ditten- beter, Gerber & James, No. % Broad- ‘MP notice of the action will be served upon young Colt in hés roome at the ‘Yate Club. A member of the law finm 014 an Evening World reporter that it "as probable the papers would arrive temorrow. No time will be lost in Dushing the suit. Russell Colt is denying himself to everybody in his rooms at the Yale Glubd. His friends declare he has taken the publicity deeply to heart, and after @ visit to @ roof garden theatre and a upper in a Broadway restaurant Satur- @ay night he retired to his room, and refuses to leave it or to receive any one. At his office with the brokerage firm of H. L. Horton & Co., No. Broadway, to-day {t was stated that he would not return there for a week WER FRIENDS WONDER WHY THE SUIT WAS DELAYED. Ethel Barrymore's determination to sue ior divorce has been no secret to her friends nor to her managers since she left on the cross-continent tour that has ended in Los Angeles, where sie now he only surprise most of her friends express is that ehe delayed action so t heard directly from my niece for some weeks, I know 4, 19 true that she will bring sult,”” said ‘Mra. John Drew, wife of Miss Barry- more's actor-uncle, to an Evening World reporter to-day, ‘We knew it was com- ‘ng ibefore she left New York, and of course all our sympathies are with her. Mr, Drew ts just in from the West and Dag not seen Ethel since he left New York—a period covering several mont! No, 1 don know that he ever advised to sue for @ divorce, bit she has 411 his sympathy and love and can rely <n_him for anything.” The Drews are spending the summer ®< their home at Easthampton, Long island, and Mra. Drew spoke with the werorter over the long distance tele- Y@ane, ‘ ‘It {9 08 over with Ethel,” continued Mrs. Drew. “Her pride is terribly hurt. * reconcilfation t# out of the question tpter @ll that has happened, They dis- «ree over many things. In the first vince Mr, Colt 1s too fond of a lively fe to satisfy a woman of my niece's temperament. She thought he didn't realize his responsibilities as a father, *n@ of course this hurt her deeply, for *.@ js bound up in her child. The child * with her now and she told me thee vie would never leave him. el was very much in love with Mr. Colt, but soon after thelr marriag <) many differences sprang up that | wae not hard to predict that the mar- riage would be a failure. There never was any thought of his going out with her on this trip, May daughter, ‘Bee, iy with her and will remain with her until she returns, ACTRESS GREATLY WORRIED OVER NOTORIETY OF THE SUIT. Miss Barrymore, according to de- spatches from Los Angeles, !¥ 80 wrought up over the notoriety attending her ac- tlon she is to cut short her stay on the Coast and hurry to New York to her baby. She will close her season this week ‘stead of gving to Portland, Geattle and other cities, as she planned, Her business manager, Mr. Frank, eaid she would make no_ statement whataver until she reacned New York. “The story that Mr. Colt says his drinking may be to blame 1s folly," con- tinued the manager. “He's been too gay ail the way througa, That was the cause of the trouble."” He was careful to add that he made this statement not for the actress but on hie own respon- eibuaity. It {s altogether probable that the name of the eo-respondent, when it becomes public, will not attract undue attention, though it is hinted, at the same time, that evidence has been secured which if used would involve @ woman whose fname is widely known. ‘This, however, ? will not be used in case attorneys decide that the less conspicuous woman can be made to serve the purpose. ‘The young mother, 1¢ is sald, has ex- pressed a fixed determination not to be separated again from her child while the boy {s in his infancy. He will be two years old in November and in all prob- ability, if Miss Barrymore goes on an- other tour next season, she the little one and his nur with her. Bhe does not purpose to glve up the stage, but neither does she plan to be away from her son. oa RES GIRL RUINS DRESS AIDING INJURED CAR CONDUCTOR. James Melvor, conductor of a south- pound Fordham and Woodlawn avenue car, when standing on the running board, came in contact with an elevated rallroad pillar last evening. He was | picked up bleeding n the floor of! the car by a young f nd was removed | to the hospita 1 condition He may dle, havin severe lace erations of the vIn and probably ine ternal injurie The girl was dre; din white, and her clothing was sat «| with blood, which was flowing profus from th conductor's head, The car going at a moderate rate of s when the aceldent occurre’. ‘The girl's companion pulled the bellrope and brought the ear te a Hp, THe as) 400k a taxtvab and ree whirled BWAY. 8 meee will take | Brain Is Needed More Than Brawn AAR ARR ew Youngest Inspector De-| clares Intelligence and | Industry Essential to Success on City’s Force —Day of the “Pull” Has Passed. Book Education Likely to Be Overdone, as It De- stroys Intuition—Kind- ness Is Necessary, With Health and Strength. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. ‘This wil intro. duce you to Inspec- tor Edwera », Hughes, gentiaman. Just remember tne “gentleman” part, please, It is very important. In fact, the entire story hinges upon ¢t. Not only my atory, but the life story of Inspector Hughes, who when he be- came Chief of the Detective Bureau last Friday attained the additional honer of being the young- est offices ever appointed to that post. But, as I have already intimated, it ! not the new Inspector's youth, nor yet his ten years’ record in the Detective Department, which makes his appoint- ment remarkable, It is the fact that his rise from the ranks marks the passing of the uneducated “‘cop"—the man who held 11s job through “pull’—and dem- onstrates instead the tendency toward @ more efficient police service through the appointment of men of intelligence TSO A and education—men patterned after the TOR manner of one Inspector Edward 8, INSPEC EDWARD P. HUGHES. Hughes, gentleman. ee patti . ipihbsiincsenisitehitiinednines “The main thing that was required of @ policeman ten ye: ago was brawn," explained Inspector Hughes, ‘To-day brain is required as well. In fact, intelligence ts the main requisite of elther a good policeman or a good detective, By that, though, I do not mean to make too litle of physical strength. Of course there is a physt- cal examination every policeman has to pass before he becomes @ member MONGREL'S WILD CAREER ENDED ul POLICEMAN FINDS WIFE DEAD, BABY “Just think, though, out of 4,000 “The magic stone can add naught to mon examined at the rate of about my skill,” he protested, but Capt. fifty # day, about five out of the O'Connor, eager for his friend's ad- fifty will pass the physical exam- * vancement, urged him to it, until he ination. That me s we get about |Lenox Avenue oy Bias in Ex-| Mrs. Henninger Had Been Ill|permttted himseit to be persuaded. Re- 140 men out of every 1,000. Thi ie fore leaving the stone they came to of those 140 men only about two- citing Chase Af‘er Sup- and Husband Had Feared | the rescue of a young Irish Nationalist, thirds pass the mental examina- who, inspired by the Gaelic renaissance, mene posed Mad Dog She Would Try Suicide. had’ made devout pilgrimage to tha EDUCATION AS NEEDFUL FOR shrine, and then could find no dne to POLICE AS BRAWN. — | hold his feet while he leaned over back- ’ Mev ‘ ai ep wed the stone, O'Conno: “Have the mental examinations be-| With a crowd of over a bundzed small When Policeman Lewis Henninger, of halon Sein tin On tins oe come more difficult?” I asked. boys pursuing ft, thouch at a resyecta-| tho Atlantic avenue stat'on, entered his|*24, ’ “Well, . ., triot’s plight and held him manfully Well, their form has changed some- | ble distance, a little brow monyrel og | apartment on the ground floor of No. while be did his duty, what,” replied Inspector Hughes. “I/ran up crowded Lenox avenue anout 9/27 New Jersey avenue, Brooklyn, at 2 Then thay axplocedsthe Lakes. of 40 could not tell you exactly how, in de-| orciock this morning. It yelped as it| o'ciock this morning, after soins off px-| jarney, and creased the Irish Sea, and tall, without looking up the records! aut its chief aim seamed to te to| trol, he found his Kio dead with| wates to Lond etting there in time Besides, as you probably know, the}? Dut its c oun | , ag | ele AVE Vedat eon Lowe aneep inl open ine tannnerae parame Anae detectivs force 1s recruited from the} fnd shelter from tle howlin OF het arms Td Qn’ adJoining trom| (> 00s Che cOrenenen: parace | Atte partment, But one question, | Youthful tormentors at its | Charies, six years old, was sleeping found some one who a un t has been cut out of the] The dog tried for shelter in several) “py. ‘yy was called from Hradford derstand “Broadway” O'Connor flashed e examination 18 the ‘city tnfatores, but at each piace it was driven |gtreet Hoapltal and sranounced. Aye, | Mi# Badge and Fetbelman his nerve and formation.’ That required a teyough| forth in a medley o help | srennin ad, but did not auggest| (2% S% Places right up in front w knowledge of the streets and bulld-| shouted oaths and a rainstorm of mis-| the cause of death. An autopsy will ine | (2eY could see tho whole show. O'Con-| ings, you understand, Instead of re-| siles, until it went stark mad and bea | Perrormed to-day t0 determine this nor had a chance to watch London's quiring this knowledge, questions] snapping and frothing at the mouth. Derective Ryan, of the Miller aveane| suiation of traffic and came to the Which insure information of a more] ‘The men and women a statlan ‘Investigated “the deathe enue] conclusion tnat New York had beat the date character are asked,” proke for shelter, Ming all -|Tearned that Mra. Henninger, who yae| British enpital to tt ucation has come to count on| ways and yelling “Mad dog!” at the Warned tial NS Telliise®. ale was! DION'T FIND MUCH EXCITE. the force,” I remarked, and looked at} tops of their voices. At One Hundred itr ccna ai tab ye pala MENT EVEN IN PARIS. the man before me, He is an essen-]and Thirty-fourth street the dog s A Oe ined Witibalthi Mae hisbaha thar || ERE sedased. the Atel. toe tlally virile, clean-lived man, is In-Jat the heels of a team of horses at- | Cont Pe pemtoeay vindicate TU ae, (iat ae 4 spector Hugh I do not know just}tached to an ice-cream wagon, The Base cathalla’ ee fe, to-day that they found {t all how much credit he deserves for it,| horses kicked and lashed about until GEE Giemonaa: He daar at for} fetal glitter, and Felbelman_ sa either, in as much as he is not the}one of them landed his hoof squarely | hie siaem woluiied Ie sri Aad wD we eet tar from Broadway type to whom sensualities would ever | against the mongrel’s ribs. ee se the house Parra tea stree at Rare-any Appeal, Me 1s Si emACNS Ae) Om the Dione UaeweND One Mundved |" 7 preliminary examination disclosed had to pay four franca admis: firm and straight of line as the oak land Thirty-fourth and One Hundred and || A) TAChnininy var ion te med | othe Cate Abbey. and chair in which be site in: his. simple Thirty-ftth streets, Campenio of have come peacefully ts Indicated by the| show that Loew would be spacious office in Police Headquarters. |No, 499 Lenox avenue, had his brindle /ract that the boy asieep In her arms was | Dut on in one of his Li-cent moving He is not brilliant, I doubt If he ever |i) out for an airing. The bull heard | not awakened. | ture hous declared Fetbelman, Jumped at @ conclusion in his life; = the mongrel's and strained at | _— oo \t b in ihe wwim, we had to works his way logically, But when he ting jeqgn, until Campanto had to let] GOMPOSER DIES SINGING, | adulterated champagne, which we atdn’t decides a fact 1s a fact, I personally J+ g4 sphon it mnde sh for the | Griak Sub Aon, WIL Our: complimisats would be willing vo. Tisie my: daa ent | rrensied little dog. The two went at It! Jonn P, Jones's Voice Rings Clear| was ail, peliove an" on his decision. He AM ought all over the block, while ACaksaaiGont. O'Conner lathe laugh and he likes children, which ts ped. ue Deine ereietan eet | as Daughter Plays Hymns, {1 ogee rg Bee bedi about the best you can say of any-} oo ine collar of his brindle, which | CHICAGO, July 10.—Singing snatches| “It enjoys perfect freedom, everything body. Incidentally Inspector Hughes |) oo. sing from several wounds tn-| from his own composition, John P,|!s wide open, and torefore there ts no has a family consisting of @ “mighty | ara py the mongrel Jones, noted Welsh composer, and vo-| Possibility for graft, Ya, ya, they know | fine wi as personally assured P War tn ilwa thee ve children, one Mttle girl, Policeman Jacob Levy hurled him- | 1 died yesterday a age of} From Berlin they went to Belgium and me and wee scat Aaa @huk tava "| colt into the ring-side, and joined Cam- | elghty-elght ars. enteen-| pnnand ember oat i who is sae aidan: pate ‘ed main|panto in dancing about the fighting | year-old granddaughter of the com-|werp, running amack into the s« n'a What wou’ stiv logs. Levy finally managed to get his| poser sat at the plano. audience | strike, which delaycu the steamer for a Jalifications 1 good detective these | dost i ¢ th “8 1 N Bia gun close to the mongrel’s head and let| Was mate up of the four maiden) day. Sayer’ 2 queried fo. ‘The mongrel was killed instantly, | daughters of Mr, Jones, all teachers = a — INTELLIGENCE AND INDUSTRY |): nis teeth wore so firmly implanted | in Chicago Pu nools, have Police OMcers’ Trint Delayed, ARE THE ESSHNTIALS. n the brindie’s ti t the aaa eman | kept house for many year and! ane tr Po! Traction CIGRK ‘ad to use nls club y the eral other relatives and friends. As sere . fon District wre,” raped Tiapsetee Baynes reney Campanto's brindle was rie eh to. stru e ty | Daly of | non: Tats siowly, "Z should say there are two | “P At" 4 yavat. ves Ms and of ¢ er of the of a first class detective, They a: He | ite among | are intelligence and industry. ————— [pontion, He axed ai “ ow We were ing of the words. A it 1 sates neceanity for education on the (ORE SUBWAY DELAY. | i cany sear greater necess ‘ — the accompaniment police force of to-day. male | ae ‘ j I do not wish to belittle educa- gain f aged man tion, but Ido want to say . ove One afte he ran | guch a thing, for a detective par- dinie s Paar 8 own co! ticularly, as overeducation. Too |). n ed tions, Then came another favorite many theories and reading of books |")... of Estimate |to the air of “Eva,” named | bave @ tendency te dull a mai was put over twenty o Here ater one 4 daughters | dmtuition, He dons not wo ae ae | NNN Pe on tnitered and he aad in @ few | recty to » point ent made dos a an BOW | “Phen, too, of course, there are men! President McAneny ccc tn the detective department of abso- Because of ° rn ae lutely no education who are invaluable, | troller Prendergast onfe | WOMAN FLIES IN RED DEVIL. Men who know the water fronts and| this time the , jthe wharfs, for example, who, When a] omm Last 1 we erime Is committed In the slums, can | | SCIATICA or NEURITIS | ets Ne ee aut nein cee ny MINEOLA OVICKLY RELIEVED BY of the underworld without having Bi es mission suspected, A man of education oak Blanche 8 and breeding could not do that sort of Tien . work, no matter how good a dete iv \he happened to be. He would t ; : t cd . i. Sra) busy trying to ma eat eee i aie ah $9 follow. slugs: with ‘apy -allse of brains and ‘ wo a ere FREE FROM OPIATES OR “Occasionally an uneducated nd, over and t a | at one NARCOTICS | man can take up an educated man’ you > do at Hiss eu poliuarantesd to relieve | work, bur vor can never veverso ast one kindness f nebody every [MK Of pore case uf pe ite” Jay, you can make 0! 1 goad | ARI i . | at quisites of ra wood i \: le telligence and tndustr: als exact way land G, Middle a j \ HORE SAPO ee pinang sall vd et tie cilet De- | ate of th 4 few, the Nurito’ or avait. by mal veryday fe for everybody PrO- | teottye Bureau to talk $f Thad not pre-| Baldwin m and was follows ft nrtve ted. |vioual, explained that he ts Inspector Willlam Ba f Pittsburg, Va, as} |, MAGISTRAL CHEMICAL o ‘Of course,” smiled Inspector Hughes, Kdward s. Hughes, gentleman, Lee Hammond of Busia, By Detectives To-Day, Says Hughes MONDAY, JULY | ID2,S00 MILES, IN THIRTEEN ms Feibelman Back From Hike Through Europe. Livelier Places Near Broadway and Forty-third Street, Berlin’s All Right. but Police Captain John W Connor of the Fast Fifty-first street boon companion, Bert Cohan & Harris's staff, station and Fetbetman of rope, during which brief period they «x plored seven different countries, tra- versed 2,600 miles, braved the terrors of Parte by night, kissed the Blarney Stone, maw the coronation parade and mado up thelr minds that this was a good old town, after all. Both are Iinguiste of no mean onter, and acted as interpreters for one an- which O'Connor ts noted came bravely to the fore in Paris and Holland They had thelr principal lingutette troubles in London, where for the best part of the day they could not make themselves underatood. ‘They planned thetr trip way back in Maroh, when they, possessed themselves line across it to ‘They; sailed away on June 16 on board the Celtic, 1,89 o'clock of a morning. MADE A BEE LINE FOR THE BLARNEY STONE. ‘They jumped aboard a tender, dashed madly for an inn, snatched a fow winks of sleep, devoured a hand-out luncheon and were off for the Blarney Stone. Fel- belman, whose duty it 1s to furnish the Dress and public with the truth about the celebraged “George M's" doings, both on and off stage, couldn't see any rea- son why he should press his lips to the Hlatiros Mallding, New 10, FOUND PARIS VERY TAME | hie | returned to-day | after a thirteen-lay hike through Mu- | other. Capt. O'Connor relied on Fethel- | man “intotrely while they were in Ireland, but the philflogic #t.lles for of @ map of Burope, and drew a red | Indicate thetr route. | arriving at Queenstown at) Ai LOSESHISBRIDE AFTER HIS COAT Start for Denmark, to Meet Same Old Mishap. lost bride, @ man as Franklin Dubots, an oll prospector of Enid, Okla, t# due to-day at the Broadway Central Hotel. He wns overcome by heat as hia train reached Syracuse, and was taken to the St. Cloud Hotel there un- | til he recovered Dubote said be and his wife were on thetr way the petroleam | fields to spend part of thelr honoy- | moon tn New York. At a station near | Chicago an allghting passenger carried off Dubotw's coat Dubois got off when the train sta | bride, he was left b the coat, the man taken it by mistake, | recovered his bride too excited to telegraph cago, and couldn | th In search of his describing himself East from nd gave chase, and ed away with hie hind. He recovered plaining h bad) but he hasn't yet! Ho said he was| «i to Chie | find her when he got! hetr baggage was checked to the! | Broadway Central Hotel here, he satd, ami he expects to find her waiting for him. The are KOing = to | where his wife formerly liv | the missing bride hadn't appeared at | the hotel at an early hour to-day. A remarkable feature of the story ts that last h& man giving Ms name | ag Francis Dubois told a almilar story | in New York, except that he deserihed | himself as a prospector from Porcu- pine. Ho said he and his b came down by canoe to Calasoo and took a train for New York. It was at Tor- | onto that he got off to chase a man who was leaving with his ooat, containing a number of valuable mining leases. According to the reports published at | the time, he eventually found his bride | here and they were supposed to have aailed for Denmark on the Oscar IL. on June 8. PRIMEY nue SAVES POLICEMAN FROM FLAMES, ARRESTS SELF Auto Speeder Goes to Aid of Pur- suer When He is Set on Fire by Gasoline From Motor Cycle: Officials of the Union Hill, N. J., po- Mee force are asking each other to-day what the would have done last night had they been in the unpleasant predica- ment of Wilifam Murray, motor squad policeman, 0 spends his t! 6 chas- ing auto speeder Murray was pursuing E. D, Ebbetts, of Sixth street, East Orange, when his yelo practically blew up. ‘The Fa80 tank was in flames and tho | flying pollceman Was in a fair way to| be broiled when he saw 9 sandpile into | whtch steered and leaped, Ebbets saw his pursucs's plight and returned, threw a costly »moblle the burning bie and then asked Mu: i¢ he was hurt, Then he Insisted on ar resting himself and, taking Murray tn- to his went to the station No complaint,” sald Murray zood & sp Let It go at He's that!" bbetts went his way > Ming Workman NDON, July 10.—Sir ert, manager and al {Cawnpore Woollen Mills Company of Brith India, and Miss] daughter Dr Workman, the noted Mrs. Fanny Bullock mountain climber, of were married in w i". Alexander rector of the Workman, Hunter and the explorer, Workman, | Worcester York last Fight Is ANTIC (| of Elks, ning, will and Exalted R ‘ ‘The newest candidate ts icknor of Buffalo, witne LUNCHEON © GULDEN’S MUSTARD Makes Cold @ Fine Satad D At Delleatens | 10 CENTS, ONARCH FURNITURE co" wi eer anb 25 ye! . FURNITURE Rugs, Carpets, Bedding $3.00 Down on $50 5.00 Downon 75 7. 50 Down on 100 161 EASTI25'ST BET.3" & LEX AVES OPEN SATURBAY EVENINGS Bryan \ Word 1 ~ GEN. IES’ YACHT SEVEN COUNTRIES, AGANUINGHASING RUNS AWAY FROM FAST ASBURY BOAT Police bik, Cotta Connor and Bert me Dubois “Makes Fresh Lies Vite Sih Shows M., C. D. Borden That His Little Sov- erign Has Real Rival. Just Dy way of mhowing hia friend, the Print Cotton King, M. C. D. Bor- der. that Mr, Borden's ateam yaoht Lite tle Sovereign ta not the omy one that ean clireles about the overhaul and cut Sandy Hook racer, Asbury Park, Gen, Brayton Ives took his am piratically rakish little craft, the Vitesse, down to Atlantic Highlands and had some tun Sl ecteeerteameataemaianie'- Littie Sovereign and the Vitesse expect, that these brushes with the Asbury Part are really qualifying rounds of @ Big: race, Even as John I. Sullives am@ other great ring fighters of his dey: to tell aspiring opponents to “se Choynski first,” would-be challenges «f yachts with fast records are jeestagiy; told to “go beat the Asbury Park.” —_—————— BABY UNINJURED AFTER ‘ FALL OF THREE STORIES.’ ——ae If there are any huskier beties ts Brooklyn than thirteen monthe old! James Kelly of No. 18 Mighth etrest® they wil have to travel a mighty seem: uous route to prove it. Baby Jim tumbled out of the third story winiow of hia home early to-€sy' and landed tn @ sitting pocture o@ brick pile, Aside from « bruise om forehead, where he had grased a there wasn't a scratch on thermore, when his frantic gored out Into the backyard to find only a few remnants ling, he waved his chubby ‘and beamed across his big A surgeon who came from Hospital with an am munnte Investigation of Baby Jim’a but fatied to find solitary diemish * F et i | Hi By; J with the pride of the Sandy Hook fleet There was a large and distingutehed audience of friends and business ac- quaintances of both Gen. Ives and Mr Borden aboard. The &90 trip of the Al bury Park is known as “The Banker and Brokers’ Special,” because it gete | into New York in time for ite passen- mers to get to their offices before the wheels begin .o go around in Wall atreet. ‘Tho Vitesse was waiting for the Ae- | bury Pank at the southwest Spit. When the big boat approached the Ives yacht went down and made demonstrations of challenge. The skipper of the Asbury Park tooted that he didn't care. The Vitesse went in to the Atlantic High- lands pler and waited until the Asbury Park was out in deep channel and could turn loose her full speed. Then the Vitesse, nearly four miles behind, came ripping out from the pler, @ clear, sharp little white bone in her teeth and a boiling wake behind. There was not much of a race, At Hoffman Imland the Vitesss was abreast of the | Asbury Park and off Fort Wadsworth was far enough ahead to cross her bows and make a loop which headed her back toward Gravesend Bay. On the deck of the Asbury Park noisy en- Jasin prevailed. Vitesse boasts a apeed of thirty. addition to the bruise, He took child to the hospital merely as @ caution. The baby hed been sleeping window with his little brother, three years oid. Both had become \ terested in the manoeuvrves of o Geet of chicka next door, and in leaning emt too tar Baby Jim lost his Nothing had broken his fall save edge of the fence, which gave Bruise PARIS, duly and union building workers streak: Gay to enforce a demand that the work system be abolished and theln wages increased. 10.—Twenty-five tap niles an hour. famous musicians. that they were fault possible to build a would stay in tune; the world have been the Stroud, and they others failed. The superb tone, perfect case. leader of the Berlin Louis Diemer of the letters it on very © b recommending y terms Near 34th Street facturers of fi it is more convenient the Strou. A Great Day for Wigacz Piano At A Popular Price: ' This is the first piano ever built at a popular price which has “received the approval and recommendation of world- Their experience has been that low- priced pianos lacked musical quality— In fact it was for y one that had a full, sell at any such price as $250. But the whole skill and combined re- sources of the largest manufacturers in Great Musicians Endorse The Stroud Stroud is a full-size piano with action and beautiful It has been tested by such world- famous musicians as Moriz Rosenthal, the pianist and composer; Arthur Nikisch, Come and hear the Stroud y the largest music house in thi THE AEOLIAN CO AEOLIAN HALL, 362 Fifth Ave. Piano at our EAST SIDE ROOMS, 225 East 36th St., y in tone and scale. ears considered im- really good piano— pure tone; that that would last—to applied to building have succeeded where Philharmonic; and Paris Conservatory. ind see their You can buy ,and itis guaranteed New York Jnsteumeats in th lusical for you, come and b bet. 2d and Vacation Taken In the Summer were individually advertised ABOUT SIX TIMES THE 259 IN THE HERALD, ee ——_—= ld yesterday 1,560 Sunday W Resort hotels and boarding housgs,, a 4 by “ Ad A truly wonderful chance to vacation. DID YOU MISS I b ?