Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HUSBAND AND WIFE STARVE THREE DAYS ASHE SEEKS WORK Bride of Eight Months Finally Appeals to Police at West 100th Street. TOO PROUD TO BEG. Heard Neighbors Cooking and Left House Rather Than Smell the Food. Too proud to ask her next-room netgh- dors for some of the food he vould fmell them cooking on the other side vf the thin partition in the tenement at No. 14 West One Hundretth street, Mra, James Thompson went without a morsel of food from last Saturday morning until to-day when, weakened ‘nd desperate by her three days’ star- vation, she applied for help at the p?- Nee station, Just across the street. All during those three days of in- creasing torture James Thompson, the husband, a sturdy, able-bodied man of thirty, tramped the streets of New York looking for work. His pockets were empty and he too tasted no food for three day: © for some half- decayed bananas that a fruit peddler was atout to throw away. The story of the young couple's suf- ferings was told Lieut. Nugent by the wife, The Heutenant was at his desk when she staggered up to the rafl. She was poorly dressed. but respectable ap- pearing. “For God's sake, help me to get some food, We've had nothing to eat since lant Friday," implored the woman. A few questions brought out the story of the husband's vain search for em- ployment, and the Heutenant’s hand went to his pocket. All he could dig up was a dollar, but that was enough and half an hour later she and Thompson were in their atuffy little tenement room devouring @ large and substantial meal. MAN HAS GOOD CHANCE NOW OF GETTING WORK. ‘With renewed strength Thompson set out again on his search for work, this time with every prospect of succ the police had interested several aoc- quaintances tn the couple's plight. Mrs. Thompson told her story to an Evening World reporter simply and without reserve, “I was employed in a shirt shop at Hooste Falls, N. Y., and Thompson was @ teamster. About eight months ago we married. Everything was going well when Thompson got out of work and couldn't find another job. We had @ little money saved, and decided to come to New York, We got here a week ago and went to a little hotel at No. 30 “Nest One Hundred and Sixteenth street. My husband went out every day looking for work, He finally secured a promise from the street railway com- pany, but firat he was to take an exam- ination set for some day next week Money was running low, so we de- ded to find a cheap room, We moved here last Friday and spent our last cent for dinner that day. By night there wasn't a thing to eat in the room COULD SMELL FOOD IN NEXT TENEMENT. husband went out to look for Work next morning as usual and I stayed home. I didn’t mind going with- Gut food that day, though by evening I “My was pretty hungry, and when Ja came home just before dark any job, money or food we were prs much discouraged, We could sm them cooking supper in the next room and hear the meat sizzling in the pan, and {t was awful hard getting to sleep, Sunday was the worst day of the th There was nowhere for James to look for work and we spent most of the day together !n our room. We couldn't stand hearing them getting thelr meals next door and went out to the park and sat on a bench until we knew they were through. Neither of us felt lke asking the people in the house for anything to eat as we never been beggars. y Jemes went out again, He was pretty weak, but he swallowed | yno water and I made him eat a crust of stale bread I found in the hallway. I lay in ded all day, too weak to get up, and by night I didn't care whether ' had anything to eat or not. It was yesterday that James got hold of three otten bananas while out on Ninth ave- ue and that braced him up enough to keep going. ‘This morning James was too weak and sick to go out, and my pride gave way and I decided to ask help from the polles across the wa: I de SURETY COMPANY HELD FOR LONDONERS’ BONDS. Must Pay $5,000 Because of Failure of Mellen Divorce Wit- nesses to Appear. Judge Mulqueen in the Court of Gen- THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1911. At what age Nowhere in t fed to speak, as ject, than Mme gerous Age, French; of whict many In the last edition 1s shortly Europe elected to rup, In New Roc! to her age is so much discussed amon Mme. Michaelis, round, rosy and al charming a woman of thirty-five ever undertook to shoulder troubles years ahead of her, makes in Dangerous Age" a profound psycholost- cal and phystological study of woman between Scylla and Charybdls, more explicitly between forty and fifty. “The purport of your novel is to show that between the ages of forty and fifty woman ts most dangerous to herself,” I aaid when propounding the conun- drum of the beauty shops, “but at what age is she most dangerous—most at- tractive to man?” “That depends on the woman," Mme. {Mchaelis promptly replied. If she has merely physical beauty without either soul or character, then she is most | beautiful at twenty-two or twenty-three, she is loved it !s for something which will wane quickly, A girl who is very ugly, on the contrary, may have a beautiful character, a tender soul, a brililant mind, and by the time she Is moulded her face in Its own tmage.”” “Yes, but consider the girl who has the best start of all," I urged; “physical beauty and mental alertness. There are A woman of rily a physical auch happy combinations, talent i, 1s not necet ATTRACTIVE WITH AGE. “On such a happy woman," Karin Michaelis, who 1s, incidentally, living exposition of her theory beauty, charming at nty than at seventeen. he is an exception, Let take a more genera! case. s—I mean the girl from eighteen to twent,; then a time comes when she cannot say {t. It 1s not true. He no longer lover her, And it fs not her fault “The golden age of womanhood lies perhaps between thirty and forty Up to thirty we are apt to be attractive by accidext, But when the woman of thirty wishes to attract, believe me, she is the most attractive in the world. “The moment when she beco: years old flashes the danger signal of a woman's Ife. She sees the first sr hair, perhaps, or the first wrinkle, she asks herself, ‘What must I do not to get so fat? And from that she She studies what thirty yur ts beauty consctous. poses are graceful, what expressions silly, She has not the hardihood ¢ , but the ing } Iness, eighteen or twenty in fa she has not the awkwar emptiness either. Her eyes hav the poor woman who kisses he |bend and her childyen in exactly the }same way. I do not mean the bad woman, but the happy woman who co! BOOMING eral Sessions to-day decided that the “ 7 ’ National Surety Company, which furs 7,070 World Ads, Last nished bonds of $2,600 each for the ap-| Sunday. pearance of Alfred Curphey and Cupt. ‘Thomas W. Kirkbride of London when GAINING they were arrested on Tune 16 as fugi- | tive witnesses tp tne Mellen divorce/ $80 More Than Corres- cose in Pittaburg, would have to pay the amount they pledged, inasmuch as Curphey and Kirkbride are now fugi- tives from justice, At the time of the arrest of the two men they were arraigned before Judge Mulqueen, sitting as 4 Magistrate. onarged in Pennsyl+ jtructing justice and con- tempt of court in leaving Pittsburg, Two requisitions were Issued. Gov Dix refused to honor the one on which the defendants had been arrested and before the other, which Gov, Dix hon- ored, had arrived, the defendants dis- appeared. ‘Application made by D strict-Attor- ney Whitman that the National Surety the amount of the bonds was opposed by Frank 8. Garvan of ones Lamb & Company be compelled to pay The ponding Sunday Last LEADING | 1,326 More Thon Sindoy Nerald. EXCEEDING 2,447 More Than ALL 5 OTHER N. Y. } Newspapers COMBINED Sunday Ad. Results Every Monday. ond foams which Never were Woman and the Hour better met than when this author of the reigning Hterary sensation of | GREELEY* SMITH propiom of the direct relation of woman | | | “The | i} From that hour she deteriorates, and if | thirty-five or forty that soul will have | and a Venus is not necessarily a 8ucH A WOMAN GROWS MORE replied | a) of the gods keep on heaping thelr gifts, She will be more beautiful, more us | When the} three-—-she says f . law piness. And the happy woman must be to herself about her husband, He loves Dewutfu at any ase Tf ae han nope hig Aegie Sonar swe thoughts and meets life Stem bar, chee ee. nak? bravely: instead of cowering tetore’ it Gremes her hair coquettishiy. But she| th@ dangers of the ‘dangerous age’ will keeps on saying, ‘He loves me,’ without | °° ise Nien eorraare | ABa: weieet 1 t 3 itho' eking, a | aap JOKING) CUSEH AE: WIOUE BOI 8 attractive age for her husband and for ttle lines at the corners that deepen 2 CE a ee crniil ee Made Her Blind ichaelis paused, and, to my astonish- ment, r luminous face be ne suf- fused with a deep blush. BUFFALO, N. ¥., Aug. 1—Fifty “OPTIMISM IS THE FIRST LAW aaaens a are wodamnens is Asi ” from the Dr. Pratt Institute of New OF BEAUTY: York Clty and W. Augustus Pratt, “You will not mulaunderatand she party de endant, by Mrs. Mina @mith Jaeked, “it I say her mouth becomes ey ee, Be |more beautiful for every kiss? I mean for permanent injuries to her face al, if she ‘s happy in love, I do not mean leged to heve The Sunday ACloudburst of Sunday World But the Happy Woman Is Beautiful Whatever Her Years, Declares Writer of the Latest Literary Sensation ot Europe, Now Visiting Here. The Danger Signal, the Fear of Aging, Is Needed to Bring Her Powers of Attraction Into Full Play— ’ Optimism Is First Law of Beauty. BY NiXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. ts woman most attractive? he world is there a person better quall- one having authority, upon this sub- Karin Michaelis, author of “The Dan- Marcel Prevost translated into n 600,000 copies have been sold in Ger- six months, and of which an American to be published in New York. visit her sister, Baroness Joost Dahle helle, at precisely the time when the ttractiveness ng us. tinues to be attractive, the wife who flirts with her husband. The complexion of eighteen and twenty ts dazzling, unmatchable. With now and then a rare exception, the woman of thirty does not retain that skin which hag the color, the texture of rare porcelain. “Let me say something that is not about beauty, will you?” Mme, Ml- chaelis suddenly asked. “I am @ Dane. T am very patriotic, I wish to apeak | of the Copenhagen porcelain, wh world famous, Before I came to Amer- joa I heard that {t was not seen over here except in rare private collgctions and at public exhibits, But I find in New York @ whole shop devoted to the ale of our porcelain, and to me, Dane, this love you have for our rarest | Product in the very best evidence of | your extraordinary good taste and love| of the arts,” It was evident that the fair author in the china shop wished to lnger there. But I led her back to “the dan- serous age” with a question as to its psychological developments. “Tt is the fear of age, the thought that all is over, that she is no longer attracti that makes the anzisty, the hopeless- Bess of ‘the dangerous age,’” Madame Michacles added. “Op- timism is the first law of beauty, | and it applies to all ages. “When I was sixteen or elghteen J thought I had many worrles. twenty times a day. Now I could not weep. I iet the small worrles go. I realize that it is foolish to fret because Yau have a bad cook, or because your new gown doesn't fit. I make as much as possible of the ttle pleasures and ag little as possible of the ittle worrtes. And I think that is the secret of hap- all those LOSTHER SIGHT IN BEAUTY HUNT, AND ASKS $50,000 | Buffalo Woman in Suit De- that know her. | clares “Face Doctor” Here been caused by the de- lants through an operation to re- move blemishes, Decision was Pooley in the terdi reserved Supreme by Court he: for change of Justive venue declares that she patd Institute hundreds of Nars to remove @ few small blem- es The result, she sets forth, 1a that because of Iful, reckless and tmpe her face ts for all orted to such an ex- tent that she can no longer go into society, Furthermore, tt 1s asserted that her eyesight 1s completely lost. SUFFRAGIST RETURNS | TO RENEW CAMPAIGN. prominent Amer: | ompanied Mrs. abroad to a Miss M at At « x non Ke to whip 1 e ext oanwantion wil be held fn la Tho women of Hungary,” antd Mise Hay re eotting an yo to the work! and the v many and France are nv In land we expec ballot noxt your. Tho mi being mood of Parliament, If ponding the ac i Joes not yield t Wi bnBediaigly conse van wore Woman of 30 Is M ost Attractive in the World, Next Ten Years Are Golden, Says Mme. Michaelis Miss Harriett Quimby First Woman to Get Aviator’s License in U. S. WOMEN WHO BEAT CHAUFFEUR SAY HE IS ABDUCTOR: cesiipee Man Charged With Keeping Two Little Girls in Hotel is Held for Hearing. With a dlack and biue welt extending across his fnce, where Mre. Mary Sutherland struck him with a heavy trunk strap as he pulled up in front of the Hotel St. Regis last night, Max Aronson, a chatffeur, of No. 415 Fast Fifty-aixth street, was arraigned before Magistrate Murphy in Yorkville Court to-day’ to answer to the charge of ab- duction which the Children’s Soctety 1s making against him. Aronson, whose stand is in front of the hotel where he received hia drub- bing last night, and another chauffeur, whose name is not disclosed, 1s accuned of having abducted Mra. Sutherland's fifteen-year-old dhughter, Anna, and another girl, Mary Gannon, sixteen years old of No. 920 Steinway avenue, Long Island City. The two girls disappeared together on July 28, and when Anna Sutherland re- turned to her home at No, 22) Hast fty-seventh street yesterday, she told 1er mother that she and the Gannon dri had been living with Aronson and the other chauffeur at the Grand Cen- tral Hotel, a Raines’ Forty-second street and Third avenue. Anna told her mother that she and her chum had met the two chauffours for he first time on July 4, when the men nad flirted with them, hoy invited tho wirla for a ride and then made appoint- nents for other meetings. At their last meeting the chauffeurs persuaded them to go to the hotel, the girl told her mother. Mary Gannon told her mother a similar story and the two &! tricken and {indignant mothers met by appoint- ment, taking the girls with them, They waited for Aronson to return to his stand, and the business-like strap car ried by Mrs. Sutherland attracted the attention of Policeman Fitzpatrick, to whom the women told thelr story ‘As soon as Aronson had deposited Mis fare at the hotel, Mrs. Sutherland went him with her strap before the po- man could restrain her, She laid the ide on good and hard, and at the for Me raw ame time told Aronson what sh thought of him, ‘Then Fitzpatrick broke Aronson loose from the furious woman and hustled him off to the station- house, In court this morning Aronson, who ‘3 a maried man, with @ one month's vid baby, had nothing to say except to isk that the case be postponed until ay so that he may ol His jest was granted eld in $2,000 ball, ‘Th the other chau: ring. EE |DIDN’T DODGE SUBWAY OPENING, SAYS GAYNOR, Tied Up at City Hall W Hearings Set for Coincl- dent Date. ‘They gay I tried to evade t c “IT was lot of lest MARRIET. _QUINBY. SMALL LOVER VOWS TERRIBLE THINGS TO WIN MAIDEN He Says, but Court Puts Him Under Bonds. No. # Carmine street, perhaps this story would not be written. cheated Nurzio out of nearly two fect heart. Jennie, as she worked In a tallor shop with the dwarf, who Is only four feet, one inch tall, could not see in the diminutive fellow a fitting frame for the romantic word-picture of love that he datly painted. 0 when Nuzzio went to Jennte's mother and asked for her hand, he got no encouragement. The mother, her two daugiiters and Alfred 1 ta, her B01 n-law, told Maxistrate Breen, in the Tombs urt this afternoon that Joseph promised to blow up the house, threatened death by pistol and by knife and told the fam!ly that the Black Hand, to which he belonged, would ge them If they separated him from hit sweetheart, “I did not tell them Joe told the Magistrate, too much to harm her, without her.” "You'll have to give a bond of $500 that you can live with her, and keep entirely away from tamil said the Magistrate. » Nuzzio gave @ bond of $6 not to disturbe the peace while he cherished those things “I love Jennte 1 cannot live th mad 99 wld not re all the tt In view of | ady could T get nwa an hour when, et away. Thore pills re- ® I can devote to them, 1 from thi cotneldently, place and spade of earia wae 10 ba rewovedl” MY his love tn eolitary secluston, —_— CONGRESSMEN HEAR EXPERTS ON STEEL.| Inquiry Into Coal Sale of Tennessee Calls Appraisers to Stand, The Congresstonal committee inves- tixating the United States Steel Cor. poration etarted on its second week {n this alty to-day by continuing its probe into the absorp of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company by the Steel ‘Trust during the panic of 1907 C, P. Perin, who with W. M, Given and Walter Moore, who conatituted the board of engineers who estimated the value of the {ron ore and coal on the erty of the T. C. QL. bufore the Was t He Moor first witness put on followed by and Mr Penn Mr. Ve pany i ot tion by the St “The ‘Tenne pany," sald time the tr ind Iron Com+ ad at the per « ofa rep Birmingham CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the | Signature M ite absorpt Couldn’t Live Without Her, If Joseph Nuz#io had been as big as his love for pretty Jennie Spinoza of But nature of the helght that comes to men of action, and added the difference to his MISS QUIMBY WINS LOST BOYS SLEPT | FEATHERS ON: AVIATOR LICENSE CREATING RECORD First Woman fn hori to} Act as Air Pilot and Does Spectacular Stunt. LANDING — ELECTRIFIES. Young Californian Does Dizzy | Dips and Qualifies Before Officials of Aero Club. Miss Harriett Quimby of Callfornia was created the first American aviatress to-day when the officials of the Aero Club of Amerioa awarded her an air pilot's Hcense at the Hompstead Plains aerodrome, Bho is the second woman | in the work to get @ flying lcense, ‘The first was Mme. Dutrie of France. Miss Quimby won her license by performing perfectly a series of aerial manoeuvres in a Motsant monoplane | that proved her skill beyond peradven- ture. Indeed, this first suffragette of the air established a new world's rec ord for tanding, coming down within not only 164 feet of the designated alighting mark, but sweeping gently to earth within @even feet nine inches of the mark. In her effort to win her iivense yester- day Miss Quimby fatled only tn the lighting stunt. She promised her friends and admirers that she would score every necessary point to-day and there was a large and enthusiastic gath- ering out to witness her achievement at the very early hour of 5 A. M. G. Cam- bell Wood and Baron d'Orcy were on hand to represent the Aero Club, HAD TO POSTPONE THE START OWING TO FOG. But while there was scarcely a.sephyr stirring @ pasty fog hung thick as a woven web over the plain, It wi impossible to go up in such @ mush of | atmosphere and two hours wore along before conditions bettered, Miss Quimby had been up since dawn and her Molsant monoplane was in per- fect tune, She wore mauve bloomers, & mauve allk waist, goxgies and a peaked cap set upon her colls of brown hair, looking as fetching as it ts pos- sible to look in such strenuous raiment. It was not until almost 7 that the sun began to tear great rents in the fox and then devour the streamers of mist that wove lIistiessly in the light southerly breeze, Miss Quimby: out five perfect figure eights, looping and weaving with the smooth control of a swallow, Sho cut these aerial didoes at an altitude of 150 feet, and when ello knew she had scored 100 per cent. she volplaned for the mark beneath, which she had missed in her attempt yesterday. This time her aim was amazingly true, and even the Aero Club officials cheered when she alighted 7 feet 9 inches from the mark, Then came the trial for the altitude mark, 161 feet above the aerodome. She went up with a roar above the 00-foot rim of the aerodome in a wide circle | before alighting. “T guess I get my little Ioen cried out to Baron D'Orcy, before her | | monoplane had settled on the ground. “You certainly do,” replied the official, hurrying over to the monoplane to shake the first American aviatress by the hand. Within ho | the next week Misa Matilda mark and then swept round the outer | EASILY ALL NIGHT ON SEASHORE SAND Missed Boat From Rockaway, but Youngsters Let Parents Do the Worrying. Curted up on the sand at Rockaway Heach and sleeping peacefully while the Pollee of Newark, Brooklyn and the | beach were making every effort to find them, three little Newark boys were found at dawn to-day, and two families relieved of anxiety. Tho boys, Peray and Francis Michael, aged thirteen and eleven, and Frederick Elilott, aged twelve, all of the same block on Mul- berry street, Newark, went to Rocka- way yesterday on the boat to spend the day. They were in the care of @ Mins Leonard. They got separated from their chaperon, who was forced to twke the evening boat back to Newark without her charges. When the police found the boya on the beach to~lay they took them to the station and gave them a hearty break- fast. The jada were hungry, but none the worse for thalr experience, “We miased the boat and as we didn’t | have any money we thought we'd sleep on the beach and wait until some one found us. No, imleed, we weren't ooared a Dit,” explained Percy. Tho boys’ families were notified and atarted to the beach to take the boys home this afternoon Highway Hoard A ents, L—ihe new State hway Commiaaton to-day appointed . Gorton Reel of Kingaton as firat leputy in the department at a salary of $3000, He succeeds H. K. Bishop of Waraay. Superintendent of Highways Catlin appointed Howard Carpenter of Portohester as his private secretary at & ealary of $2,000, $15 White Lingerie Dresses. .7.95. $6 Empire Dr: with sailore3.95 $5.00 Women's Lawn Dresses 3.75 $3 Girls’ White Dresses, 6-14 1.85 The woman who has not yet acq now a Mohair Suit in panel or Pri 350 pairs Women 200 pairs Barefoot Sandals. Women's Underwear Fine ribbed Union Suits; low neck and fancy lace yoke, in tight kne umbrella pant: ; all sizes. Val. 590 Special 37¢ tailored hats will go at I former pric nd Miss Blanche Seott will thelr Licenses, and both are} Ndent they will equal the perform ance of the val, Ge Californian, HOTEL PORCH HI HIGHWAYMAN, | ATLANTIC CIT well dr thief the poreh of th fright last night when he grabbed a $700 diamond aundurst from the neck of Mrs, C. H. Searlett, a widew of baltimore He darted down the veran the railing w way to the Ia 6 Hotel Brighton | with a half hundred men tn pursult The man dodged in an out around | hedges and plants, keeping well In the shadows, and n d to give his: pur suers the slip. RATS aNb MICE! GOVERNMENT uses 1T | #OLB ALL AROUND THE Ww: ISe,, 28¢., 75. | (OUARANTERD) KILLS INSTANTLY Does Not Stain Rough « on Roaches KILLS INSTANTLY The Powder hills Quick Biter Liquid or Powder, V 7s on Fles POWDER On BOAL Kills Fleas, Lice on Dogs and Other Avia HAR 14th St. Up rolstery Co, 3 W. Lith St. . iS Heupholstered MATERNITY DRE SS omand R Bed Bug I GRAND RAPIDS gsi, SHE BEST MADE ps” EI or square neck, which two weeks ago would vost her $5, for only Specials in Seasonable Footwear 500 pairs of Women's Pumps and Tie Low Cuts, emall si Value $1.00. Our Clearance Price.... 49¢ BARRED INSERSEY FROM TODAY ON Women Wearing Them Liable to Arrest and Law will Be Enforced. TRENTON, N. J., Aug. 1.—Ami4 watl- ing the greater portion of the feminine Population of the State to-day te gaged busily in dismantling gorgeous hate and replacing ostrich plumes and gayly colored wings with ribbons That fe because any person in New ey who wears the plumage of bids updn her headgear from now on is liable ‘to arrest. At the last session of the Legisiatife © law was enacted making it © miede- meanor for women to wear the of certain birda upon their hate. That’ law takes effect to-day. Until yester day it was looked upon as @ huge joke. No person ever thought any attempt would be made to enforce it, but yeater= day the Audubon Solcety called . upen' the State authorities to do their duty and they sald they would. Under the law @ police officer has a right to make an arrest when he thinks @ person is wearing something m6 within atrictly legal lines. The prisoner forthwith is marched before a Magis- trate, headgear and all, and the Mag- {strate may impose « fine —»— Shot te Death by Wife, CLEVELAND, 0, Aug. 1—George Sandiro wap shot to death by nis wits last night when he tried to.enter, bam home against her protesta, Blo.ned boon living apart from Mrs. Sandiro for cope Bhe ordered bi im away and herds not go she scoured & nd opened fire on him. Wednesday, 1“, Bargain Day Disposal Sale of Women’s Apparel $16.50 RevereibleSatinCoate, 10.95 $5.00 Linen Motor Coate.....2+ $7.00 Tailored Linen Suite $4.00 English Repp Skirte. A Timely Offer of Bathing Snits have ey my pele Values $2 and $3, Special 1.29 2. $3.00 values. Special 75c Cambric Petticoats Trimmed with wide flounce; of sheer’ Jawn; four inserte of Val. ‘léoe, cluster of tucks; finished with hem- stitched hem ‘ Special 79c. Value $1.00... Sacrifice of Women’s H. ats To make room for our new Fall Stock all trimmed, untrimmed, lingerie and than halt their $6, $8 and $14 values, for. . L. M. BLUMSTEIN, West 125th St, Between7th & 8th Aves. ' 2.49, 3.49 and 4.95 MANUFACTURERS Fe FURNITURE OUR AUGUST SALE An_ Extraordinary Money-Savin; That Embraces $50,00: Event O Worth of \Fine Furniture, Carpets, R Etc. now ow now now. HOW. 812 Chiffoniers, now 486 Brass Beds, now.. #18 Brass Beds, now 815 Brass Beds, now.. #45 Buffets, now 41s Dressers, 24 Chiffoniers, 418 Chiffoniers, 40 Buffets, now #20 Buffets, n sts ! tension eae 4h 436 China Closets, now wet Chi fa Closets, now. At Reductions Ranging po 25 to 3. 3% #5 Leather Dining Chairs, now.. oe 83 Leather Dining Chaiza, pow... $2 Box Chairs, now. .... ‘¢ Parlor Suites, not Parlor Suites, now, «. Parlor Suites, now, ae $85.00 e Parlor Suites, now. 7. $24 Couches, now. #18 uches, now #15 Couches, now RUGS" 824 9x12 Axminster Rugs, now. hy 450 0x12 Wilton Rugs, now. #21 9x12 Prussels Rugs, o Carpets from See to $1.25 Veluce 75c to $2 ae SH OR CREDIT $1.00 A Weer OPENS AN ACCOUNT OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P. M, WLP AY PREIGHT, Produced under the most rigid sanitary = le pure, clean and safe. regulations, ng. SOT TTY oy rel ("a BORDEN'S GOUNTRY-BOTTLED