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PARADE TO-NIGHT OF WILSON MEN ton Square to Precede Dem- onstration To-Night, MARCH UP BROADWAY. William B. Homblower Will Lead the Way for the Dis- tinguished Democrats, At 7 o'clock to-night the last gun af the campaign for the election of Woodrow Wilson for President of the fee Governor of New York will bo fired, when a monster parade, which will undoubtedly eclipse even the plans made for last Saturda: demonstra- ‘on, will form at the Washington Arch, on lower Fifth avenue, Thi final demonstration will be under auspices of the Woodrow Wilson Col- lege Men's League, and from the num- wer of applications for positions in the Une received at the headquarters in to-night will be tho most interesting and apectacular of all of those that have occurred in the present cam- Mret of ell there will be o band eoncert in which 612 band instruments will play at the same time After the eoncert the parade proper will form and thousands of men, led by the Hon. William B. Hornblower, Presfdent of the Woodrow Wilson College Men’ League, escorted by John L. DeSaulles and Joseph R. Truesdale, will march up Fifth avenuo to Long Acre Squaro, where an old-fashioned rally will be held in front of the Hotel Cadillac, the headquarters of the Wilson and Mar- shall Theatrical League. ‘The head of the fi reach the squai ‘Those in the fron Wittem H. Edwards, 20 speakers of the laague and 4,0 men) organization. NOTABLE SOUTHERNERS TO TAKE PART IN PARADE. Tn the parade will be dozens of bands, fifteen floats, the seven MeEntagar brothers, who n x Iris. Amerioans, each of w ore than | ay) EXPERT ‘ALTER. of the season's choice the very height of al misses from 14 to 44 Among the fabric: black, navy and the prevailing seven EOS CANPAIN from atreet, 1 feet in height, foreign born American oltisens, Will vote the Democratic ticket, @ di- vision of notable Southerners, divisions of military organisations other spectacular features, inctudiag an elephant contributed by the Wileoa and trical League, faverly place inclusive, extending on the fo Sixth 5 150 Massed Bands at Washing-|‘cac'%" Stanieor Revond, and om, the which pointe they will fall im line after the head of the main marching body as it passes. Flags will be distributed to the mrachers from trucks placed at thousands of who Byrne, Col. W. ©. Fiske and daceauley, ni Committee, Thie Will Stop Your Cough in a Hurry ‘Thia recipe, mak tof ett cough arrap th yells bay read jor most obstinate ‘top eveb whooping cough quickly. Miz one pint of granulated su; pint of warm water and stir for @ wey, ©. R. airman Flots and Exhibits “atew omar Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22nd Street. with NOVEMBER 4, A ar A QO NEILL- hopping Center AMS | The pianos for this Co-operative sale were personally selected al the factory by Mr. C. Alfred Wagner, President The Lyrachord Co., and « arrival are being ested and inspected by Mr. Nahan Franko, for years Conductor and Concertmeister Metropolitan Opera mpee. these various points of assembly, and there will ‘be a continuous display of colored fire and rockets all along the line of mareh. FLOATS TO TAKE A SHOT AT BULL MOOSE. In the procession will be twenty fan- tastic and unique floats, a dozen of which will represent the political car. toons of C. R. Macaule; been built under the Robinson of Coney Island with the nutes, Put #44 ounces of Pinex (fifty cents’ worth) in a pint bottle; then add/| the Suger Tt hi j taste ai The offect of pine on the membr: hen you begin to pay you begin to o your piano and in event c The advantage of buyinga first class, thoroughly} dependable piano at 1 dollar and 25 cents a weelé nnot be told too often. In this case, you are} the Hotel Imperiol the demonstration | De Thomas Graybill, paign E. duroys, broadcloths, wale diagonals, serges and mixtures, in ck 3 shadas- ‘One represents the “ another italism,'? ity” and the “Common Peopl represented as United States and for Willlar Sulsor | 4,%10de® hammer, moose with two Standard Ol cans tied to his tail. Among those who have bi active in aiding in the form for this greatest of spo taneous Democratic demonstrations are B. Riggs, McR. Lindhetm, = . Robinson, George V. Bon! $ SA esto * Pr RAISING for! moron light and right. You'd like to have some kind of pastry for dinner tomorrow, | wouldn’t you? # Then send to your grocer for Presto Flour. Recipes in and on every package. | |ATIONS | FREE“ Gth Ave. CORNER 18th st. Special All Day To-Morrow—New York’s Greatest 5,000 Stunning Coats Regularly $14.95 to $29.75 3,500 Handsome Suits Former /y $25.00 to $42.50 re from our regular stock at THE SUITS i2ncve'ss: Included are over fifty ilored mode! for women and sare velvets, core voter bret It_bea Downing, Col. pt. L, Robert V Pidgeon, Charles White, ; is mixed at the mill with cream | of tartar, soda and salt in just the correct pro- portions, ' Saves time and elim- inates guesswork. Makes things ‘Bags is wellknown. Pinex is the most valu- t| Able concentrated compound of Norwe- gian white pine extract, and {s rich in guaiacol, and all the natural healing pine elements. Other preparations will not work in this formula. This Pinex and & has attained great popularity out the United States and Canada. It has often. been imitated, though never uccessfully, ~\ A guatanty of absolute satisfaction or money promptly refunded goes with this recipe, Your druggist has Pinex or Parade Com-| will get it for you. If not, send to The . | Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. GET ACQUAINTED § WITH OUR WAY aaa” | : Presto Flour ‘Largeat Popular Price Garment House in New Yo}, ———_—___umes | Payments (it matters not how few you r& THE COATS seis, “2 Coat hinchilles, two-tones, bro: albelines, plaid backs ard serg: ous fashionable solld shades, two-tone stri All sizes for women and misses, 14 to 44, Syrup recipe! throu eb #] the second step toward ownershija; the second of death all unpaid pay- ments are immediately Copyright, 1912, by Stone & MeCarrick, Ine. given twice the time in which to pay 248 dollars! and 75 cents that you ordinarily are given tof pay 350 dollars—a big double advantage. cancelled HEN you pay your very first five dollars, youbegin right then and there to own one of these beau- anos. hen you pay your first week’s payment of one dollar and twenty-five cents, you have taken /week another step; the third week still another step, and so on, and so on, until the first thing you know you will be the proud owner of a fine three hundred and fifty dollar piano, for which you will have paid but two hundred and forty- eight dollars and seventy-five cents, without ( |having missed it. | But now suppose ‘that while you are still | making your payments you should die. Ordinarily \it would be necessary for your family to keep up he remaining payments, or else lose the piano. But not so in this case. These pianos are sold through our co-operative plan. The plan amutually helpful one. It is based on the prin- ciple of ‘‘you help me and I'll help you."’ So if |you should die before you have alin tat your have made) the remaining payments will be cancelled ‘‘forth- with’’ (meaning immediately), and the piano turned over to your family free of any encum- brance whatsoever. | You thus save the piano for your family. Your family is relieved of all further obligations. The helpful co-operative hand reaches out and cancels the remainder of your indebtedness, and the piano becomes the property of your family without their having tomake any other payments. Ww The value of these pianos A column as an investment By investing in one of these pianos, you are acquiring a valuable property. ou are investing in something which will be worth something when you have paid for it. You are building up an asset, which, aside from the entertainment and pleasure you get out of it, will be worth something to you in dollars | and cents, twelve, fifteen or twenty years from now. h, Copyright, 1912, by @tone &-McCarrtck, las. giving the whole : § e 2. proposition in brief paragraphs First. You get a piano which is worth and sells at three hundred: and fifty dollars, for two hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy-five saving you at the outset one hundred and one dollars and twenty-five cents. 8 Second. When you finish paying for your piano, if bought in the usual ways you still owe from twenty-five to thirty-five dollars interest. thie! co-operative plan, when you have paid your two hundred and forty-eight doflars’ and seventy-five cents, you have finished paying. There are no further pay= ments to be made, either on account of interest or for any other reason. . Third. Instead of paying twenty to twenty-five dollars as a first payment’ and ten, twelve or fifteen dollars a month, as you will in a regular way, during this co-operative sale you pay but five dollars to join in this associate movement and’ \ ) Crossed off Remember you are buying three hen but one dollar and twenty-five cents a week. t : ' Forty or fifty years ago (plenty of call P44 act : Fourth, You get the strongest guarantee ever put on a piano; a joint oa pe Wa now living will remember Ugh), hundred and fifty dollars’ worth of antee signed by the manufacturers—Kohler & Campbell—and ourselves, cou settled your bill at a st drew a big cross a Marthe pane value at a cost of only two you protection for five years that is as safe as @ government bond. hat your face of ¥ me account to ho hat your undred and forty-eight dollars ‘i Filth, You gst the pevvines of returning your piano at the end of a thirty: account had led. ave rise fi * ays’ trial and getting yo a * to the expression ‘ phrsing of «and seventy-five cents. Taking Sixth, Within one year from the day you get your piano, through this co-, A eee tnat the regular run of wear and tear into et 4 U operative plan, you may exchange it for any reason whatsoever, without. eo: aid in full: account, one of these pianos will much as a penny’s loss, We mention n “Crossed » : ° Seventh, — Al: payments remaining unpaid are voluntarily cancelled in event’ oft” aptly paener be wort h more after you have it of your death— thus leaving the piano free of encumbrance to your family. y Hehe! ratecm= fully paid for than you now have Lighth, You get through this co-operative plan an opportunity to earn cash, dividends for each and every week's time the life of the co-operative agreement of one hundred and i y-five weeks is shortened. Through this privilege it is pos- sible for you to earn cash dividends amounting in all to leentyhine catlare and’ tweniy-five cents, : Ninth. You are given opportunity to secure others to co-operate in this plan.» This still further reduces the cost of your instrument. ; Zenth, Under this plan, two tunings, a piano stool to match the piano, a* late style scari and delivery within one hundred and fifty miles of New York are. included without adding any further expense to the two hundred and forty-eight, dollars and seventy-five cents. QNEILL-ADAMSCQ__ Sixth Avenue, 20th, 2ist and 22nd Streets plete hig payments “t (0 pay for one, and at that time, rere VOU Will have had nearly four ee ar use of it. And, in the same way, the longer you own it, the less it will have cost you per month for its use. Figure it any way you wish, it is hard to see how pianos of the exceptional value of these will have cost you over a dollar a month tor their use, it matters not how long you own one, whether it is ten years, fifteen years, or even twenty years. g All of the features of thi boo Offering pla: wit on playerspianos are two piano dollar and twer the ter is on th Sunday Worid Wants Wark Wonde