The evening world. Newspaper, November 8, 1911, Page 10

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——— — PAINTED BY ARTIST © PUANPROPOSED. = ! women—if the twelve yearn ago, to 190. Records for the last three years are on an upper oppose the Moor, n-of- fur. s tx passage will be question of was for Schutzber tablish business p eated by the The present inten- '# party Is to oppose, t ly. Ha Police Seek Him on Confession , M1. of One Member of Trio |two passep P to their fof he New Suffrage Bill Stops Dupli-! they we Several years’ records, etored tn the Annual Exhibition and Sale of The New Paintings |. basement of the Wert a4 West Fifty-four | stroyed by fire last even’ ‘The blaze was discover N Neglected colds lead to long standing * coughs, throat and lung troubles, pneti- |TWo PASSED PAPcR, OTHER AR-| Cate Voting—May Give monia and consumption, Take Father at 6 o'clock RAN F AKING. Mt | John's Metlicine today, before that cold | Arrested. Walle tne sien who Are vharved with Ballot to Women. Suolten, ates Vie whpteen, etore they, (C2 any worse, Father John’s Med r pasaing oct berger and Brea : ‘eine has had 50 years of success in the aon pasa ther eee | —— seid fe eh had aad Grated of eon coughs | An Occasion of Great Interest to Art Lovers : fal aotivit ‘, Nov. 7=A manhood suf 4 | troubles. ‘les!, a loonkeepe of . ea hrou the record . Th Fy . Shetes . s, : . iiacth, frees ant Avcase Ay won| (a ctrate vill "will be Introduced by the ames. were confined to tho basement, |g, Necause of its freedom from alcohol This exhibition is notable for its high standard and wide range oftreatment, today identined by Louis Levine, t at the next session of Par-, but smoke floated across an alley into | Of P gs, Father John's Med- and will be keenly enjoyed by a public which is evidencing an increasing apprecia- tion of painting. It is representative of the new century’s tendency not so much on the part of . | those artists who have “‘arrived’’ as of the younger school which is steadily forging ~4 || its way tothe front. The Wanamaker Picture Salons are to members of this school || what the galleries of private collectors and of the great municipal and national museums are to the better-known. Eighth Gallery, New Building. A Special Sale of the court prison, Fifteen prisoners were |icine is a safe medicine for children, there. Attendants convinced them there 4s well as older people, and thousands was no danger. of mothers are using it with great suc: ‘The records destroyed extended from | cess for their little nes. Get a bottle the opening of the court, more than | today Young messenger, ax the hand to Willan 1 check which w man he itaberg riven to the suffrage means one vote for very adult mate, with the exception of atens, the Insane and such persons oe are usually disqualifed by law. The police say they will prove that| Under the present aystem men main- ‘ales! was the paaation. thee Wort Kee f taining everal residences have the y he Is an ex-convict, that he server h erm ae" itocheoter, "Yom tome Mabt to vote in each place, and many jon for forgery. According to Com- aaeseeade Dougherty, the falcon ot] ‘There ts hope for woman euftrage too, Calest was tho hangout of Costabiie| Ninety members of Parliament visited and Rizzio and Micelll, ana other men| Premier Asquith last evening and pe’ Hiclty In bomb and kid-| tioned for adult suffrage which will Dougherty asserts that} franchise all adulta of both sed by the brush artist! Arthur Henderson, M. P., for Dur | | evidence again Wherein he is charged with Derger and Isidor Weiss of No, 22 Bast Beventy-eighth street, with passing forged checks axgrewating $9,000. The operations of the men, say the police, Will probably be shown to have reached the sum of $00,000 when all the returns : / Soda crackers are Paderewski Accepts have been received. seen the re mee and im Cate) poe ou ae ae more nutritive than LeatherCouches |The VICTROLA ‘operations the gang| ‘Th@ Premler said the government ‘s Would you hear the great “ry kind of a. store| Pledged to manhood suffrage and will master play his own dainty ast one more arrest | « At Lessened Prices moved een eather goods, buitr| miet ice manent any other flour food. Exhibition pieces of a famous manufacturer. The|of Chop Wao ng melody ~ eh Spee BD. Aeaghebod na, #iIK, clears and to-| WUt he added that the bill will be ‘ . u . T Mt Nt i C00, jor shot oon, an forth, - ‘eater ; Hatten ss RIN with: the acoo, tailor #hoD, shoes, and ao forth.| tn such @ form that the Mouse can ox Uneeda Biscuit are gr number are upholstered in dark green machine You May sof entire checks =— = _— _—— === buffed leather of best quality; many in genuine rich- colored Spanish leather. The higher priced are stuffed with hair. The lower priced with elastic felt; some with moss and hair. The workmanship of every one is first class. Prices, $35 Upward Seventh Gallery, New Building Women’s Reversible Tweed Coats The makers of the Victor- Victrola have accomplished the seeming impossible. They have persuaded the jworld-feted Pole that the one honor left for him to obtain was perpetuity for his glorious music, as offered through the Victrola. 4 He played. He listened to that passed muster before the best bank tellers of the country. When the men were arranged before te Herman, James’ B. Brande, 46 Broadway, appeared for ph M. Schultz, of No, $20 the other joner the perfect soda crackers. Therefore, Uneeda Biscuit. and y wer , Headquarters to await hearing Uriday afternoon at 2 o'clock. MOST EXTRAORDINARY VALUES SPECIFIC CHARGE BASED ON $9,200 CHECK. * The epecitic charge against the men Wee that they passed a forged check on the Hanover National Hank, dated May 21, 1909, signed by Eugene Meyer & Uo, and payable to "A. Zeller.” The check calied for $9,200. The police declined to-day to name (his man, but they sald he was rather well known in Broadway circles as the constant companion of a woman who had been in the chorus at the Metropolitan Opera House, Th a tin box at Police Headquarters, q be enjoyed. Suits, style and service are the very best possible 20.00 and 22.50 values style and service are the very best possible 27.50 and 30.00 values ys ’ jar coats, sizes here, but miss- Two Brooklyn Stores: Fulton St, at Flathesh Ave. Troadway at Fediord Av. SRESESESSSSEESSS! Foremost Clothiers Since 1845. 1845 centuny ‘aniversary Anniversary Specials To-day. O-DAY in the Smitk Gray & Co. stores there awaits you a + series of specially created values, made possible by the primal attainment of the achievement we now celebrate—-hun- dred per cent. productive efficiency. They are values that under any other conditions could not be; they bear convincing witness to the vital import of this event to you. Come now—see for your- self how great the savings really are; take advantage while the assortments are at their best and a full season’s service may Medium and _ Heavyweight |Suits, Overcoats that in tailoring, fabric, |Overcoats that in tailoring, fabric, 18.50 Suits, Medium and Heavyweight |Suits, Medium and Heavyweight Overcoats that in tailoring, fabric, |Overcoats that in tailoring, fabric, 22.50 15.5 in some 12.50 MOTOR CLOTHES FOR OWNERS AND CHAUFFEURS. Your Charge Account Is Solicited Smith Gray & Co.,, EVER OFFERED IN Women’s and Misses’ Ulsters Dark Gray, Black, Navy Rough and Ready Mixtures $20.00 $22.50 $28.00 22-24-26 THIRTY-FOURTH STREET, WEST Values— $28.00, $30.00, $38.00, style and service are the very best pos: 22.50 and 25.00 va’ style and service are the very best possible 32.50 and 35.00 values All clusive desig ular models, all sizes here, but not in all styles ‘ [S ) (C3) 1911 Medium and_ Heavyweight 27.50 suits you may choose from all the correct English models, 2s well as all the smart, distinctive Smith Gray & Co. designs, in complete assort- ments, for men, young men and boys. Included are the finer, more correct and exclusive velours, worsted cheviots, clear and mill finished worsteds, serges and tweeds, from the more famous English, Scotch, German, Belgium and American mills, in all the new grays, browns, blues, olives and dark mixture effects. medium and heavyweight overcoats you may choose from meltons, velours, worsted cheviots, vicunas, kerseys and tweeds; also from the finest heavy miiled and thick, warm, fluffy, warmth-without-weight fabrics. There are overcoats for every service, in every shade and color, from the dignified dressy silk-lined black and Oxford to the big Scotch or ba age plaid and club check and plain or fancy back motor or convertible col Raglans, etc., in all sizes, in models of every description, for men, young men and boys. Extra Special Values in Suits and Overcoats. 18.00, 20.00 and 22.50 Winter Suits 25.00, 30.00 and 32.50 Suits in broken and Overcoats, in broken sizes for sizes, in worsted*cheviots, in ex- men, young men and boys. 8; in English and reg- 16.50 Two New York Stores: AMMAR AAhMAMnMIMA Five cents spent for a package of Uneeda Biscuit is an invest- ment—an invest- ment in nourish- ment, in health, in good eating. Though the cost is but five cents, Uneeda Biscuit are too good, too nour- ishing, too crisp, to be bought merely as an economy. - Buy them because of their freshness— buy them because of their crispness— buy them because of their goodness— buy them because of their nourishment. Always 5 cents. Al- ways fresh and crisp in the moisture- proof package. Never sold in bulk. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY { at $ 12.75 About 130 Roney Tomorrow in Grays and Browns, Faced with Purple or Green Because a manufacturer had a certain quantity of material on his hands, he naturally came to the Wanamaker Store that we might help him dispose of it. It is such good material — gray tweed with purple and violct facing and brown tweed with green back—that we told him to make it all up at once. The coats are of the same quality and the same style we have been sell- ing in the upstairs store at $16.75. Tomorrow all the coats remaining at $16.75 will be brought down to the Subway together with one hundred fresh new coats—all priced at $12.75. All sizes from 32 to 42, and a very few of 44. These coats are not only called reversible, but they are reversible. You can wear the inside out or wear the right side out. Two coats in reality for one price. : Subway floor, Old Building. Mole Ecossaise-- Now Very Fashionable in Paris Gray Scotch moleskin—as soft as velvet—is one of the most exquisite furs. Somehow’the world seems to have once again discovered its beauty. From Paris we have a moleskin suit—a coat and skirt that is magnificent—$500. The long broad echarpes, or scarfs, and long rather slender muffs with puffings of gray satin, are another feature of our wide collection. Moleskin sets at $75, $100, $110, $125, $135 and upwards. SMALL FURS this year include large capes, long wide stoles and tremendous muffs, so that they are not so very small after all. Cross fox sets $125 upwards. Fashionable black lynx sets $50 up. Black fox sets $30 upwards. Pointed fox sets $50 upwards. Blue wolf sets $24 upwarde. Black wolf sets $24 upwards. Please remember that the: se low prices result from Wana- maker’s methods. We have no rent to pay for our fur store in the summer nor expenses of any other kind and we buy furs in quan- tity and thus can sell for a small rate of profit. You are invited to see the new and larger fur store. Second floor, Old Building Fashionable Silks Here for Less Beautiful silks found in a topsy-turvy silk market and purchased to the very great advantage of our customers. | Imported double - face satin, $3 yard—36 and 44 inches wide, in shot effects, and a regular $5.75 to$7.50 quality. Bordered voile ninon, $1.50 yard—A regular $3 quality in soft delicate colors for evening gowns. 44 inches wide. Bordered and printed chiffons, $1.50 yard—Regu- larly sold for $2.50 to$5 ayard. A variety of beautiful designs, 42 to 50 inches wide. Black and white mar- quisette, 60c yard—A qual- ity that we have never before sold under $1 yard. Imported fancy chiffons and marquisettes, 85c yard —These are 42 and45-inch widths and usual $1.50 to $4 quality. Black peau de cygne, 85c yard—A quality not sold any- where under $1.35 yard. 40 inches wide. A heavy silk of beautiful lustre. Rotunda, Main floor, Old Building |the reproductions of his efforts on the wonderful Victrola. He was pérsuaded. And now the Victrola has \ added the magic name of Pader- ewski to the amazing list of leaders in the world of harmony, whose supremest skill this in- strument brings within the reach of every lover of music The Victrola is made in several models costing from $15 to $200. By the Wana- maker Plan, this cost is divided into weekly pay- ments of 50c to $2.50, with- ont interest or extras. We even deliver the instrument free to the home or to the nearest railroad station. Is there any good reason why you should not be en- joying a Victrola—NOW? First Gallery, New Building | One who thinks of New York as a city of steam- heated ypartments will open his or her eyes at this showing of fireplace furnishings. Artistic de- |] signs that almost make one regret the advent of modern heating appli- ances. Andirons in hun- dreds of styles. Fenders, fire sets, spark screens, bellows. Again the lar- gest collection in the city. Subway floor, New Bldg. Hemstitched Huck Towels, 25c Extra heavy German grass- bleached huckaback towels, size 20x39 inches, with hem- stitched ends. Linen Pillow Cases, $1.40 Pair Irish linen, hand-embroidered and hemstitched; four patterns, Only 200 pairs at this price. Linen Damask, 50c Yard Extra heavy unbleached Irish table damask, 64 inches wide, in four good patterns. Linen Napkins, $1.50 Dozen Bleached Irish satin damask napkins, 20 inches square, in five good patterns. Subway floor, Old Building. Aviation Caps So called! But those of you who are too timid for air sports, wear them for skating, steamer and motoring caps. Crocheted from Shetland or eiderdown wool, Round style, $1.25. New Shape, $1.50, Third floor, Old Building JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewhrt & Co., Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street

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