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WALKERS GREETED BY COLLEGE YELLS e Brav Thirteen eels On To Trenton, After Making Speeches to Students. SEND NOT Suflrageties Wildly Welcomed by Student Bodies of Rutgers TO WILSON. and Princeton. TRENTON, Nod, Mel. 1. Kecor hy a platoon of met them at tl ie arm " sutfra~ arcived efore guard studenia Mned the marchers Lawer them. « eheored ncete riiet streets and they pasned The ariny will vivouw and will be entert All wer = teneinl wide the as euTragottes after the excep: condition lay on who was of yestorda weeisted the “Votes f fe tii Ant Ant Suffragatios!” carried a er and had faut went | Sia8 Boom Sis Boom 2a oo! STUDENTS ACT AS AN ESCORT OF HONOR. demanded 9p and others | eech=ma ke | ny Jones and drove but eventuaiy returned [t. ; wagon it] avout town, Meveral hundred Princeton students ed as a guard of honer to * es, escorting the votes for women he: nd of determined suf: | ‘agiets left Princeton on the third leg of their march to Washington to-day. Shortly before # o'clock the "Gener led her “army” down the front steps of the 4 As the hikers wtarted across the lawn they were eurrounded by a riotously good-natured crowd of stu- dents, When the suffragiste and their escorts reached the road a dozen husky undergraduates I!fted “Gen.” Jones onto @ borse block and demanded a speech. ‘The General laughingly complicd. “Tramping thirty miles over New @ereey roads in the winter time is @mough to test the staying powers of even @ trained athlete,” she said. * while our feet may be sore, they net cold, and there isn't one who is Met determined to stick it out to Wash- {ngton.” ‘Then she hopped down and, marshal- Ying her forces, fe the sign to start. The students formed a solid phalanx around the suffragists and @ccompanied them to the town limits, whence they headed for Lawrence- wile. AGK FOR AUDIENCE WITH WIL. SON, IN WASHINGTON. Formal request for an audience in P| {Washington was made of President- ‘elect Wilson, in Princeton by the "Suf- fragette Army.” The women called at his home as they left for Tren- ton, their next stopping place, and de- fivered to him a letter written >y “Gen.” Rosalie Jones, commander of the “Army.” Mra, John Boldt was the earer of the missive which follow: “My dear Mr, Wileon: A small band of votesfor-women pilgrims from the Gtat of New York, New Jersey, ‘Venneyivania, Delawai Maryland, Virginia and Ohio earnestly request of you an audience for not more than two minutes in Washington, as soog after your arrival as possible. They desire 10 present a message to you. | “Thanking you in advance for your courtesy, “I am very aincerely, ‘ROGALIE GARDINER JONE Mra, Boldt was escorted to Gov, Wil- | son's residence by a delegation of | Inceton etudents, headed by GeoiKe , the ariny's bugler, Wendt wa Teveille and the students gave the Princeton yell for Wilson, There was no response until Mrs. Boldt rang the doorbell. A maid ap- peared to say the Governor had gone to New York, ‘Mrs, Boldt left the letter, Jotter. Mi Frank Baird found her muscles so cramped, after yesterday's twenty- seven-mile hike, that she was unable to walk to-day and rode in the offical @cout car with Mrs. Olive Schultze. ‘The others declared thi Ives re- freshed by a night's revt. | —>——-- BUFFALO WOMAN NAMED IN MRS. S. SCHENCK’S SUIT. Gatd to Be the Wife of a Millionaire Real Estate Owner of That City. ‘Mrs, Abbie Lelonde Morgan of Buffalo, ald to de the wife of William Morgan, & millionaire ownor of real estate and of | the Morgan block on Main street in that elty, wee named as co-respondent in a @uk for an absolute divorce fled to-day by Mra, Eva L. Schenck against fer husband, Samuel Schenck. Mr, Schenck was served with a sum and come riaint at his roo in the Breslin Hot The complaint alleges that Schenoic tuet Mra, Morgan on Jan. 1, 1919, Jan, 8 and Jan, 10 at the Sherman Apartments, | Broadway and Seventy-third street. The Nchencks were married tn Los Angeles | Ver. % MOS. ‘Te complaint was filed | y Lawyer Thomas , Mckenna of No. ') Broadway. | > Don't Fergat Thase Red Cress 0-8 Cougs Lieu Svemywhes, bc, pes bose hért | “7 ieee blossoming of flowers. outskirts of the town, | Permanent satisfaction with life may be achieved. {mal, but uninspiring odors of washday, the chaos of spring and autumn clean- ing, to the frequent Jangles about butcher and baker and cook, all the little un- {nspiring things that together make a thing big and inspiring the ideal of mar- riage. Price of a sincere, genuine affection, to take what the man she loves can give her and put things she thinks eho with some o: 4 man consents te chain the impulses, responsible bachelorhood and keep them chained, altar they have bullt for him in thelr hearts, to their homes er the home {s maintained on $1,000 a week. how HAPPY WIFE SAVING MONEY ON! To Spend Money Faster Than it’s Made RWALFOR$50000' What Is the Ideal Age to Marry? “on What M taty Is Marriage Possible? ee “No Intelligent Young Woman in New York Can Help Longing for| All the Pretty Things| She Sees,’’ Writes “‘J.S.’’| Love Doesn’t Care Wheth- er the Home Is Main- tained on $15 or $1,000 a Week. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. O succeed in marriage it is n be willing to forego smal They sco! But happiness in marriage is as muoh the result of persistent effort 8 success im any other form of human association. The capacity for taking pains is as much the genius of home making as any Other work of art. Young creatures who stand before @ Priest or a justice of the peace with the idea thar they have their fect on the magic carpet which is to waft to them Perpetual bliss or that joy Glias of the Slave of the iting and will appear to do her bidding whenever the bride rubs the clumsy gold band which is the accepted symbol of wifshood are doomed to inevitable disappointment. LOVE DOESN'T LIKE TO BE AN- is just an NOYED BY HOME DETAILS. Love is not naturally a domestic an- He does not take kindly to clean to Love is a jealous goad and re- quires daily incense «nd tribute. “an humble end « contrite heart” is his accepted sacrifice. When a woman is willing to pay the | aside all longing for the might have hat e she did not love, and when fugitive ndulgences of in the selfish Love consents to occupy the ome their tutelary deity of nd he does not care wheth: 3 or on Several Evening World renders tell be happy on a small Income. LESS THAN $14 A WEEK. Dear Madam: Let “F, M. R.."" who wants to know how she van manage on $1t per week, take (hree or four rooms in Brooklyn for $1.00 week, furnish th cont +h i ! she has or ca® ratse the money, und | eet only necessary furniture, eutting | out the luxuries, If she bax no chil. | dren she can save money for the | bank on less than $4 a week, for I | ain doing it my I hava two young children, | She must get Broceries and butter suMeclent for the week at one time, not in small lots, When getting steak insiss on the cut | from the round above the middle. There is no fat or there. Don's buy chops or steak with much bone The vone weighs and you must p Cor that, Have beet soup often, with tomatoes in it, ae {t ‘5 more nounshment, Always get a larke piece of meat when botltng, ay it is a saving tn the end. Make a pot of | beans by soaking @ quart in cold | water over night. In the morning | put in clean water. Boil one hour; | } | the change Water (hot); when soft off part of water, put beans in | pan with one pound salt pork; imix two tablespoonfuls molasses into the | beans, pepper and place im slow oven five hours till brown, Have beans soft and moist when done, { Thin will last two meals. Get un | Dieached muslin for sheets and | bleach them yourself by ‘yaking tn | chloride of brine and water, Don't ! buy stockings at 15 cents a pair, get | three paiva for 2 cents, Pat new | feet in them as they wear out, | rim your own hats. 1 do | Make all your clothes if pose! save that way, 1 do all i | laundry work except (he col them. ant, four a weak, olght vente | Mare 4 siewWs and cieap dishes | | GIRLS THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY jecessary that young men and women | 1 selfish comforts and luxuries and lay them on the altar of their mutual love. They must feed the sacred flame with sacrifice. It ts perfectly true that we get nothing for nothing in this life, yet persons who accept this axiom in their every day affairs seem to expect that love, the most precious commodity on earth—the sacred fire Prometheus stole from heaven—is to be had for the asking, like a flower seed cata- logue or a sample at a demonstra- tor's booth. Any age and any salary are ideal for marriage when a man and a woman are willing to pay the price of love—mutual sacrifice, sym- pathy and forgiveness—TEN YEARS A SUCCESSFUL WIFE. It would be difficult to improve upon this recipe for married peace. Yet there are persons who believe that the only real happiness {s as spontaneous as the song of birds or rn the humble mechanism by which Your husband kes. Never pay over 16 cents @ pound for meat. Stew and *oup meat Is much cheaper. Always take the bones for soup, and always , 60 Into dry goods stores where they sive stamps. T started with a few pleces of furniture on $10 a week— all my husband earned. I get nearly three hooks of stamps every year. Get curtains, chairs, &c., ittle by little. My husband gets more than $10 now, and we put aside the % a week for a rainy day and get along on a ten-dollar bill handed me every week by my husband, He has his fare and spending money. We let the corner saloon and its patrons look out for themselves, I do not agree with “I, M. R.” that girls Should not marry men because their pay is small. ‘lways consider the man first. Look him over, study him during courtship. If he prover to be sincere, kindly, honorable, marry him and let the rest go by luck and your own efforta, A REALLY HAPPY WIFE. GO TO THE COUNTRY AND RAIS! YOUR OWN PROVENDER. Dear Madam: Some young wife asks for a solution to her $i per week problem, I say, go to the coun- By all means, go to the coun- Make the effort, even at a very great sacrifice, to obtain a month's rent in advance for a $14 per month house outside New York, and you will surely be the gatner In the end, ‘There are many very comfortable houses that can be had for that price, as I happen to know, and In nearly all cases there is a plot of ground suMctent for a small garden, which, if well planned, will yield provisions to supply your table bountifully. ‘Then It is often possible to keep poul- try. So the husband who insists upon eggs every morning for break- fast may be accommodated. To be there t# the commutation to be ed, and it cannot be large for r week salary, but there are places in Jersey where the rates are fairly low and the ferry can be used, and a possible walking nee from it to your office, Where there are children the doctor's bills are almost certain be fewer, Then, too, there 18 real rest in returning to a country home at night, espe- cially jn the hot summer months, There is not the uncontrollable temptation to spend money on Coney Island and yarlous other resorts, and the vacation can be taken to advan- tage right at home. F, D. WILL LONG FOR THE PRETTY THINGS THEY SEE. Dear Mada There was the game distinction between the very rich and the very poor in ancient Manhattan to-day, the belug that Greek was rnore refined and more ‘True, the rich and the ore the sume type of clothing, 2 A shir luxury beautiful, je a shirt, that you can buy for 50 cents, or f¢ Ave they both the same? and Japanese jadies do not the style of their dress aw often as they change thelr minds, which wee shion in New York, ne tt if @ common occurrence for @ single dregs to cost $1,089 or more ong the Ovientol 4, There never yet Was @ clyiized nation where tae women did not invent @ way of spending te money nen could earn it; of the ny lady antes waa me foundatie y ribbons and jewel which they appreciated quite a6 much ad _brapably used wit 1 and te ae woman vot “eaay. Uf envy is jusufe | OTM SHOULD MAKE VOTES FORWOMEN Women Have Always Invented Ways ACRIFICES GW THE ALTAR OF LOVE” 14, 1913. ACTOR'S WIFE SUES i ' able now it was equally Justinavie NUN DIES IN FLAMES AS COMPANIONS ESCAPE; ANOTHER BADLY INJURED. Superior of Convent Faints as She Reaches Fire Escape; Priests Baffled in Rescue. in the days of Socrat Tf it young woman In New York can help longing for all the pretty things she wees, then what good In an education to the falr sex, them to have a soul above buttons? Would it not be better to teach the wives of poor men that it is foolish to cry after th ‘uries aust favored few or they would cease to be luxuries, than to help keep al the bee of envy that ts buxging so many of their bonnets? cecenenentliiens TITLED FOREIGNER HERE, BRINGS ALL HIS NAMES AND ALINE OF REPARTEE. Lord Athlumney, f be true tha no intelligent if it does not teach unoon, and that lux- necessarily be for the J. 8. Intrepid Under Fire of the Ship News Hussars, Un- masks a Battery of His Own. Armed to the teeth with thiddle nam: titles, war medals and hauteur ther feached this port y, aboard th United Frait Co.'s Mner Santa Marta, James Herbert Gustavus Meredyth Som- | ot cos were no, erville. ferbert y'kno Atilumney, 1: tain ville Boer j to |WOMAN IS "RUN, DOWN BY WAGON, BUT CHILD Guard, the King's Own, right-o! Under the bombardment of the firing | september, euad of the Ship News ‘Hussars Somer-| in a large park on the outekirts of the collected as when he was winning med- als, cluape and other trophies of dis- { } tinction In the Indian rebetiion and the | lbut the carnage in the Waldorf a few days preparing to reti time that Sitthertng arian Home Rute iii. | Oh, that isn't all—James also to Lord | and Cap. Cold Stream | BSomervi' the remainéd as poctectly calm and { wor, He suffered no caqualtte ranks of the/ Hussare ws | ‘Why," queried the wag of the squad, | “do you gcail ‘em the Oold Nala Guard? “Why,” sirapnelled his lordship. | alwa: rub ft in-—-—-haw, haw, ‘The wip newaers retreated in very bad onler, James Ienbert i tarrving att at deah to rexis old House r his nobl f vot Lords aa IN ARMS IS UNHURT. ‘Shawl Drawn About Her Face Pre- {vents Her Seeing Danger and A such where Mona 41 Bedford street, We path lcorrying @ nter u al She Is Seriously Hurt. draw, about face in nianner as to prevent her seeing she was go.0® ‘Teresa p, twenty-two years , of No, to walk dirccti @ wagon when she war three-year-old child across tion of Carmine and Bleeck- wi hor a ase of er streets to-day The young woman npled by) the horao and two wheels passed over | [her body, infant Guatave Be raking corp Supr from actor, 1 jin a | eruscment, held bl iit ane but she suceveded in saving | fro She was res} Vincent's Hospital suffer- } but not fatal injuries, of No. driver ano, of th ay wagon, Georg _ tae} revove wirich Goodwin, the recent wife of Nat Goodwin, tne ITSTS trance ($3400) for gowan have been purchased from July to August 19, 1912 The dr Mewes go \ne were where the concern he: Edna Ge ne Mre ' oft OTTAW. . Ont, Feb. 14.—Sinter St. Simon, Sister Superior, connected with the Oblat Fathers’ Scholastic: tawa Last, to-day destroyed early perished in ot- & fire which three-story building adjoining the Institution, There were twelve sisters #eeping on the top floor of the structure, but eleven of them found their way to safety by the fire ane. The Sixter Supertor was in a private room, but was aroused and followed the others to the fire escape. ‘There she cried: foll back, “Im fainting," and Efforts to reach her were futile owing to the ra id spread of the flames, which “* back a party of priests who !the walls with reacuo Iadders. One of led the nuns had a leg and arm broken by falling from a fire In the t were all city. escape, and thy nfully bruised, ™ building there were from France, soventy-sevon fathers and brothers but 'the fire did not reach it, The aisters the Sister 8u- | perlor having come to Ottawa only luat The building was situated —_—_—o. SIGHTS CRIPPLED STEAMER, own Point Rudderienss 1,500 Miles Baet of Sew ‘The Frenoh liner Chicago, arriving Jant nl 7 the British ate; 1 | ourly known to be in distress, ight from Havre, reports sighting Feb, mer Crown Point, from ey cee for Norfolk, which was previ- The Yrown Point is a freighter and carries lowt hi lin with her the Crown Point, rudd | east of New Mace of the Chicago fell which had + Was about 1,609 miles The Chicago sent lifeboats to the help: | | lens steamer and Capt of Capt. but the offer was declined, M Dunatan offered to} and his crew, Heavy weas |, and @ hurricane prevented the Chicago from takir ng the Cro} » Point in tow, | Le | PARIS POLICE CHIEF OUT. | PARIS, Prefect 6 to-day renignatic iy the Gover nw | = Feb, 16—Touls Lepine £ Police of Paris since 1894 wie The report of his| on and its eptance was, confirmed entered ment police aervice Sm 1877. jetore | n FOR THEFT OF LOVE QUIT CAREER FOR HIM. Husband Dodges Alimony by Spending Six Months in Ludlow Street Jail. Papers character haveing Mise Florence Snythe actress, with allenating $60,000 worth of the affections of Theodore Loerts, actor, were served to-day by lawyers representing Mra, Lacy C. Rob erts, Mra, Roberts recently won @ sep. aration decrer m ler husband with $0 @ week alimony, Rather than ree spond to the Court's directions Roberts took up an enforced rest of six monthe in Ludlow Street Jatl Miss Smythe, who Ives in a luxurious tr [apartment at No. 189 East ‘Dhirtteth street, as played leading character roles for a number of years, Roberts, hia wife charges, arranging her con- tracts ao that Mba: Smythe was cast in the fame production with him, She gained wide repute in “Nathan Hale,” “The County Ch tn irman" and other come panies in Which ehe supported Romerte. Mra, Roberts charges Miss Smythe contrived by flatteries to win the affec- ‘on and love of the actor. Back of the wutt i+ the pathetic atory of how Mra. Roberta abandoned @ pros- pective career on the @tage to become Roberta's wife. Mor twenty years, from the time Roberts rome from obscurity to fa foremost place on the stage, Mra. Rob- erta submerged hor own identity to glor- ity that of her huvband. Although a britfant actress, rhe quit the stage en- tirely, when Roberta requested her to ‘lo 90, She contented herealf with trav- elling with him during most of these twenty years and writing criticiems and special articles, a pursuit which won her ho little attention in Mterary cireles, ‘The tribulations of the Robertses be- gan in March, 1910, when Mre, Roberts confirmed her suspicions that a rival, younger by many years, had supplanted her in the actor's affections, Mra. Rob- erts heroically swadlowed the bitter dose ‘and sought to win back her husband's But she found no responsive love. chord to her advances to her busband. He bade her go, obtain a divorce, any: thing—but to leave him alone. He ad- mitted his great interest in the welfare of Mise Smythe, harehiy and oruelly over his own signature, and then left her, she allewes. Her chances of @ career gone with the rush of years, her opportuntty for suo- cose in any business venture diminished and her purse extremely flattened, Mrs, Roberts found herself in the position of the woman who had sacrificed all to make her husband great, only to be de- nerted and cast axide for a prettier face, She appealed to the courts and was giv- en @ judgment of 0 a woek against hor husband. But Roberts was allowed to rest in Ludlow street jail for six monthe, after which he will, be @b- nolved of all responsibility to further support the wife of hie youth. In deaperation and in need, Mrs. Rob- erta engaged Lawyer John W. Bratneby of No, 111 Broadway to draw the com- plunt, which was filed in the County Clerk'n oMce two-day. a JURY ASKED TO DECIDE ON VALUE OF LIPTON’S TEA. Pounds of It Destroyed on Premises Leased From Sugar Trust Lawyer Parsons. It wae really most embarrassing to Sir Thomas Lipton and distressing, in- deed, to have to burden His Lordship, ty e Brady, and the excellent jurors such @ trivial matter, with Hla Lordship’s pardon, there really was no way! out of ft but to go to court, Tous apologized W. M. Taylor for pressing @ sult against John B. Parsons, the old sugar trust lawyer, to recover iL for damages sustained by Fir mane teas. The distinguished yachtsman was not lin court, Nelther was ‘his equally noted autagoniat, had agents at tho par muep Justice dy called “Lipton vs. rsong.” The sult grew out of a lease on @ building at No. 49 Franklin atroet whieh Mr, Parsons had provided for t Fingll#h tea merchant when the latter's house burned down, Then ther: deluge from # tank on the prem nunds of Sir Thomas's destroyed, An effort to One Ten Cent Box of EX-LAX the Famous Chocolate Laxative will regulate your bowels and relieve you of the miseries of Constipation If your stomach isn’t just right, if you have a bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, feel. distressed after cating and have frequent headaches, these are warnings of serious trouble. up your stomach, aid digestion, promote bodily vigor and strengthen the nervous system. Don't neglect them. Ex-Lax will tone You will be surprised to see how quickly your energy ambition and appetite will come back to you 1c and 25c a Box, at All Drug Stores. “HELLO GIRL” BRIDE | Asks Court to Make Hubby lot w Ing houres | of pa ne bh plun doing with: two willow DEMANDS HER JEWELS, ALSO HER MILLINERY Mrs. Theodore Roberts, Dis-, Campbell, Lodging House carded by Husband, Seeks King, Produce ‘Em. ° 2 . ! Redress of Mis Smythe, | What f@ John J. Campbell, owne! untain hotels and Bowery lodg- als divers bonbonnieres, a few diamond rings, a necklace or two and | other property strictly feminine? His '$50 A MONTH INSURES | telephone girl bride, who has parted from him and is suing him for a weparation, wante to know, The for- mer hello girl, who once told Husband John that it would Jo (meantne ! herself) Urst, Jo last mi Jo all the time, or no Jo et all.” haa brought ault for the or $3,672 in Meu of them recovery of these articles ain ella parted at No. 40 Rive mpbell has been Itv- ing at « hotel and his bride of a few months has urned to her mother. About Nov, 17 last, she says, she asked her husband to surrender ty her the Jewels and property, He declined to 40 #0, her aMdavit declares. The diamond necklace, she saya, worth $2,000 ani is « string of |e! stones. ‘Then there are diamo pins, watch chaing, a curio © pinet, a curio chalr, a bronze figure of a farmer, two bronze busts, gold chalra and oth pleces of furniture, which belongs to her. and went to Bur Patrolman i act iT 7 ened House. day in the hallway at No, 367 yeaterday. flowing from a jet which turned on full. to Harlem ‘Tfowpital in tion. the gas burning the wind blew it out. SoS ueStAn Every Winter Coat Slaughtered In Gigantic Cleanup of the Season's Smartest Models extraordinary values in Winter Coats fared ie, Now York or clewhern, hese oheuld karcst The most EVERY Woman. Clearing All $20 to $30 Coats olalms The couple were married in April, 1911, for an extended trip. charged in her wopur hat her husband Aupped her and humiliated her during the trip. sini GAS OVERCOMES FIRE GUARD a Uncon- Michael IHenry, twenty-four years old, of ire Patrol No. 6 and Uving at No. 1 Fast One Hundred and Third street, wan found overcome by «an early to- ritth avenue, where he had been on watoli all night. ‘There was @ fire in the house A teaant of the house found Henry on the floor of the main hall, with gas had been Dr, Latbeens took Henry serious condi. It Is believed the fireman had lof to warm the hall ani PRISON COMFORTS FOR DANNEMORA “LIFER” So Says Mrs. Hill in bore to Obtain $22,000 of Stephani’s Trust Ped ‘The statement that a life prisoner, convicted of murder, is allowed certain comforta not provided by the Sta the Dannoemora State Prison tn Clinton County, New York, and that $0 9 month las been expended for this pur- pore for years past on Alphonse J. Ste phani, #s part of a complaint fled tm the Supreme Court to-day in a suit to cot strue the will of Stephant’s mother, who died leaving @ trust fund for the benen: of the convict, who was her only child ‘The complaint recites that young 8) want, who !s single, was convicted © murder In the sccond degree on~ApT 10, 1891, and that he was sentenced t» life imprisonment at Sing Sing Prison On Jan, & 290, he wan removed to Dannemora, His mother had die@ o April %, 1902, the previous year. After the will had been probated th: Equitable Trust Company was appoin: led as a committee to take care of the estate of the convict son of the dead woman, Young Stephani’s share in the ¢ was fo well looked after, the complaint states, that after the &@ a month for “comforts not provided by the State” had been taken penses of managti pald out there now remain @ surplus of $22,000 above the amount of the trust fund created for th mother, It the case into court. cash, says that the for the convict's benefit belongs to her. ‘The language of the complaint ta re- mara to the confi Stephant {9 in part: “In the exercise of the discretionsr: power conferred upon them by tl eroyea by monthly to the comenittee of the estat: of Alphonse Stephani to be applied b» aid committee to the procurement fc him of such comforts as hi to have in prison." 10 Chinchillas, Mixtures and Kerseys Soeencty sebiered son foe ia Proesitiet Mixtures, Kerseys, Boucles, rel Dagpal, Chet Skirts and Evening F nacnay Wining yt of the Wint 1 Musical Instrument Bargains That World Ads. Don't He to Show May Quickly Be Found Tow Werld “Wented” fashionable models ter season, and never till Hosa at BEDELL'S, offered at so remarkably a low figure as $! Clearing All $15 and $18 Coats... Cheviots, Tweeds and Missed We wish we could picture these Coats to you exactly they you see their manifold attractions, as you | will see them if you come here to-morrow in person, Picts ' and individual in style, every one of them, and made up | excellent Tweeds, Cheviots and Mixtures; choice of the lotet' 5. We) IN SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES 14-16 West 14th Strea 4046s Fala Adventure 18 With all my wealth 1 found hoine- life seemed very dull, in.'eed; When | came home at night I'd simply sit around and ri “You need some music,” -xid a friend! to ime the other day, “Go get some instruments,” said he, “and then learn how to play.” And so tt was that to The World a “Wanted” ad. I sent, | sought & BARGAIN in some kind of musical instrument; ‘he answers came so thick and fast and were of such a kind That music of all sorts at Dollar Bill’s house you can find, onvict by hie is this surplus of 623,00 which ts growing still larger that dringy Mrs. Maude HIB of Frankfort-on-the-Main, the only aleter of the deceased Mrs, Stephani, and to whom the dead woman left $20,000 in surplus moneys growing out of the trust fund orested will the trustees have paid the sum of is allowe: a 2