The evening world. Newspaper, April 10, 1914, Page 16

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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1914. ae have no hosistancy in saying that a Q |barbarous, It took my breath away! WasHINGTon, _-Beonomies ‘ |when I saw this development of high | secctea ty Four, Atsetant Postmaster: BS an New SRR: : ‘General Blakeslee % the first year . , that these society peo- ‘ “ he to was the most awful 1/0 his administration have netted the Hi ’ © 1 Y be rd in my life and I felt like, Government a saving of $1,000,0 jpod ' my hands to my ears. If It, The replacing of the ol z ip rome s |were not for the fact 1 was with! mail locks with new and lmht “pi fi ” G t | friends | would have done so. bitiectd sald to have resulted An a saving of are no such places as these In Lon- | $206,000; $695,000 was saved by using inatore a Grea don—at least, society has never heard canvas instead of leather pouches; [| ape ened of them, if the performances of reduction | in. office employees netted | 000, and the manufacture and pur- hose who danced weren't viclous oige of cartelling machines, $100,000. And the Music! It Made Him tey shouta have been.” | Mn Archer adi te arom) — —_" Musical Spectacle iN hi Gross amount of business done during 1912--$425,000 BY CHARLES DARNTON. | “OK Puiting Hands jie atwonty reary "oat" were / WHY SPRING COLDS | Gross amount of business done during 1913--$500,000 to His Ears. [stilt tacking ta that form of Iitera- Gross amount of business done during Januar ORE or less in the words of the song complimentary to the gallant ager. ¥ ee a ie Tair woe sities bs Daatg putas oe ree —- mnaeenetTe tas Serine eee cae a February and March, 1914—$172,740 TLE give three cheers and one cheer more for the Hippodrome's un- Saugeraiieied production of “Pinafore.” Nothing like it has ever been seen on tee. tb0| Tf Neglected They Lead to assorted. “Twenty yea ‘The tango, as it is indulged in by drama in London was such Now York society, and the waste of| plays were printed only In paperback! Serious, Perhaps Fatal, i I have incorporated my business for $1,000,000 and offer for sale to “fand or sea. satin ‘ y ncor RaAiity We fave never minted On the @tnge:e Ship 00 huge and bo lcamre tn toe ecninincs tat nent ia lancn q ecabdard Chak they Will be Bem Results | the Public, in small lots, 7%, Preferred Stock at $10 per share. The be feal as the one that lay at anchor in the Hippodrome’s tank last night. It an address by William Archer before | ved and handed down, | I least one m buys the better I like it. I am not anxious to sell this Ls @tretehed from one side of the vast stage to the other and rose to such the Authors’ Club in its { “You, Americans, too, , Fy * + Asis ata cataed aatonatoness rea in this aywcraping tees erane ego Pomme 1) auc Unie, Yau te the Gomme | It ou qet cold ot thie time of yer | SOCK In amounts, as my intentions are to get thousands and and try to “let it wear off,” it frequently thousands of peoplé connected with my establishment, especially those who have helped me build up this tremendous business and every other boring man and woman throughout the country to share some of my profits, who at the same time will help me build a fort that the Undertakers’ Association, better known as the Trust, will never be able to break into. To prove to you that I am entitled to your confidence and that you purchase at least one share of this 7% Preferred Stock of mine, I will show you by the following table how my establishment grew. I started in the undertaking business without a dollar, following the old estab- lished rule of a few funerals a year at a tremendous profit, but I shortly woke up to the fact that I was overcharging my friends for funeral supplies. See the increase in the following years after breaking away from the old custom of overcharging for funeral supplies: when it became alive with action and color, particularly in the final) Mr. Archer, one of England's most | here one season and then you never | develops into a stubborn lun; jG0ene, the rigging swarming with cheering sallormen, flage flying, the red- |distingulahed critics of the drama, in| heir of him again. There is Kugene | which may is. ture become ‘hroats bund playing, hundreds of voices raised in a ringing chorus, and known best to literary Amorica| wrote ‘Paid in Full.’ Has he anything | 8thma, bronchitis or consumption. It “P the decks adorned with so many of Sir Joseph Porter's sisters, his coubins through his translations of Ibsen. | on the boards this year?” is important to remember that Father ‘Baad bis aunts that there was no accounting for them as a family party,| The speaker began by saying that; Several auditors informed Mr, Eagles mtag ths ledind hindi aad “Pinafore” assumed the proportions of « really great musical spectace, | |New Yorkers do things so quickly the | Archer, that Water was stlll, among wilek ive sirens? fg Shocomyrton If Gilbert and Sullivan had lived to eee this splendid production they |Visltor from across tho water has| Which he delved into that class of ‘emable each organ to resume its normal (Would have realized that America has done more for them than England BO time for anything, Then he told of | plays represented by “Seven Keys to functions. Father John's Medicine is F do, acenically at least, if for no other reason than that New York's ficania tones partons” iii mat | bt to Hi aid toe toate Tl a patest sodas, contains no in- Mippodrome alone could make such an achievement possible, Patriotism | “The «lite of New York was there, certain New York types, but were not iurious drugs, but is e pure food medi- i it is @ fact, and a curious one, that artistically we have plucked a I am told,” anid Mr. Archer, “but I |ikely to live in stage literature, | ; large and gorgeous feather from England's cup. That this feat has — = accomplished is due first of all to the genius of Arthur Voegtlin, though he in turn owes a great deal to that exceedingly able stage director, William J, Wilson. Incidentally, the great chorus, which proved to be the finest feature of the musical aide of the production, speaks—or rether ainge—well for the training of Maauel cine for those who are weak and run- down. es Daring 1805 I conducted 46 funerals. During 1903 1 cond Klein, Altogether, the work dose in | During 1800 1 conducted #3 funerals, During 1006 I conducted AOR funceate this thoroughly unique undertaking pasted seer} eaneeees 108 ieeceie, OT I conducted G36 fanerals. makea the Hippodrome'’s “Pinafore” | Penag 1800 t ccstenee §=its fee, uO I Conducted 127% fesreae 8 gigantic success. 1. 6th Ave., Cor. 2ist St, Pn sstee Dering inot T congected B07 funcrale: 9 I conducted 1004 funerale, For once the term nautical could bd bd S Nighi pete 00 is 4 i funerals: During ina H Sonducted ihe eee, honestly be applied to atage pro- | + ise sc During 1018 I conducted 4820 funcrals, During the months of January, February and March of 1914 I conducted 1,642 funerals. One great advantage the laboring man and woman will have by connect- ing themselves with my establishment and purchasing some of the 7% Preferred Stock. The stocks can be returned to the Company for funeral expenses. One often takes out insurance to receiye a decent burial. An uhworthy child or some outsider is the beneficiary. Your insurance is collected and you ate laid away like a paunee Now, when I tell you this, I am talking from daily experience and not from hearsay. If you purchase ten shares of the 7% Preferred Stock from me you will receive your 7% as long as you live, and at the time of your death will be entitled to a $100 funeral, which is positively equal to any furnished by CON psied titres for $200. oe | ‘ou’re not blind—you can see my proposition you must confess that ] it stands investigation. On January 1, 1918, I was inquisitive as to the amount of business 3 was doing and I engaged the Audit Co., of 165 Broadway, New Y at an — as ene LA ig an a) alpen Ao oe books, issue a report, which is on file in my office and open for inapection to Prospective Stock Buyers. . It shows a gross amount of business for 1912 of $425,000 with a nes profit from operations of $72,331.14. During the year 1918 my bosiaeng increased to a half million dollars and during the first three months | this year, January, February and March, I conducted 1,542 funerals at a on spat of $172,740, which is on an average of $690,960 for the year of 1914. You really can see why you should invest some of your good hard- earned money in this proposition of mine. The stocks are ready and awaiting your call at the Home Office and Factory, 255 Bergenline Avenue, Union Hill, where you will have to deal with me ly, SHOE CO duction, for there was the ship in its natural element, in other words, ris- ing straight out of the water, A touch of realism was given at the very beginning, when Little Butter- cup and the other bumboat women reached the aide of the ship in their flat-bottomed skiff. And it was while ahe was being rowed alongside | deny! (Shur logy: vide won) toed Which Will Make History Tomorrow: Liga area fall Ali creer We bought the FRAZIN & OPPENHEIM STORES to demonstrate sae ao a ait oot up to @ and operate the largest cut price shoe stores in New York, as well as in 57 ping alg cities ee pomp ae ed With our enormous power, one of our value-giving dem- onstrations you shouldn't miss. — : Albert Hert a0 Dick Deadeye. concert pitch and at the same time All Famous Makes herself a good sailor. Another novelty developed a moment later the “Nightingale’s Song” caused everybody to look up. Perched Such as Burt & Packard, Slater & Morril, W.L. Ge MEN, many for p ftily on the yards was Vernon Dalhart as Ralph Rackstraw. He swung halfway to the deck to give us “Maiden Fair to See,” and before there f&nything solid beneath his feet he had established himself as the Rackstraw we have heard in years. To sing that “Nightingalc's Bong” he sang it, without a net, commanded admiration not only for his voice for his adaptability. ‘A third surprise was furnished when Albert Hart, the Dick Deadeye, thrown overboard and compelled to awim or sink, He qwam like an water-dog and made so much of his opportunities generally that his performance suffered very Ilttle by comparison with De Wolf rare old Deadeye. Mr. Hart had a hard man to follow, yet he off with fying colors and the championship belt as a tank performer. Harrison Brockbank managed the part of Sir Joseph with considerable i, and Miss Ruby Cutter Savage was a very pretty Josephine, who sang ‘way across the tank without the slightest dificulty. William Hin- ‘s figure was against him as Captain Corcoran. But it wasn't girth that left a great deal to be desired. While Mr. Hinshaw got along well with “The Merry Maiden and the Tar,” he brought down nothing gloom by his failure to make anything at all of that really beautiful song that George MacFarlane sang #0 well at the Casino revival. Waido Marshall, though hardly big enough in voice to do justice to Is an Englishman,” made a favorable impression as the Boatswain, ‘was eaid last night that Eugene Cowles is to return to this role to-day, Fay Templeton, 1 am told, will not appear as Buttercup at any time There never was such a variety o' good shoes shown anywhere at cut prices. Over10,000 pairs of shoes and oxfords in allthegoodleathers,tan | Easter and black, button and 1.95 & 2.45 lace style, and every shape for all classes of the engagement. as this stock will not be handled by brokers or money sharks, and erste Tar pertorimanes a6 it snate in very. geod. dee-ctu fact toc | Monit men, froma pretty | positively cannot be purchased in large blocks. to miss, The chorus alone is worth going miles to hear. It brings $1.05 pumpordress shoe a big. savin, m eveey Pair, | Splendidly several numbers from other Sullivan operettas that have added to the score. But it is as a spectacle that this production sets Rew high-water mark for “Pinafore.” with narrow toe, to| made te high ac $8. the heavy police! women’sColonial shoes for hard/ p ps, Straight 4 usage, all at cut Pumps & Oxfords prices. Among the The handsomest styles in lot is the famous|all nice leathers com- BURT “Korrect|pine tion’: with fancy Shape” Shoe—all 1.45, 1.95 displayed for easy WILLIAM NECKER Worldwide Knownand Largest Undertaker in the World | HomeOffice&Factory: Bergenline Av.&MainSt.,UnionHill Private Branch Telephone Exchange, 120-121 Union | | NOTE—OUR FLORIST DEPARTMENT MAKES FUNERAL DESIGNS FROM $1.00 UP. ORDERS CAN BE LEFT AT ANY OF THE BRANCHES ioor™ $1.95 —BRANCHES— picking, at & 2 45 e , e NEW YORK CITY, ay BROOKLAN, MT. 7 “Misses’ and wa Ty, 410 Berat 194 Gator Are a‘ od Naud Murmy il. | 1004 De Kab Av rel, 771 Bush. | ih 1.45 1 95 sses’ and a Haat Chee fia tied der ay Nas | 29 td . gees 800" Rogers 1 000. atbuah : luahing Children’s Shoes and 2.45 EGE Hee hight bus Look at } The best ever at cut prices; and, mind you, Misses nd ct $1.49 —_ li t otto of deal to we ea eect lof chews ve Button and Lace Shoes, Qga Mr, WILLIAM NECKEE? Town of Union, N. J. sell to be satisfactory or money refunded. xy, Boys" Caliscin But-| unseen Cattand Patent gary 69e Lok Dear Sir:—With absolutely no obligations on my part, please give me more information on your 7% Preferred Stock, | 1. ‘Tal, 610 Orange | 512 Silk Gloves through the eyes of your own experience, Compare all other silk gloves by the “KAYSER” standard wear, of fit, of style and the result will prove why more “KAYSER” Silk Gloves are sold than all other silk gloves in the world. Look for “KAYSER” in the hem, You will find it in the genuine. ticket with i i padgcnies Cree Bee oy pele that , Short “KAYSER” Silk Gloves 50c to $1.25 *Long “KAYSER” Silk Gloves 75c to $2.00 AT ALL STORES ton and Lace Shoes| hoes, rice cat; an sizes ftisa'er” {°E4I*TY QSClAtso Special Sales Other Boys’ Shoes in Misses’ & Children’s pili White Buckskin But- Tan or Black Calf and| ton Shoes. . “ Patent Leather, all the best makes, all/ @ cemen $1 Boudetr ' colors 79c, 98c, 1.39, 1.95 Bae Basse 59¢ Read Anna Katharine Green’s Great New Mystery Story q DARK HOLLOW ~ In Sunday World Mlustrated Magazine f 6th Ave.,Cor. 2ist St, New York Our Branch Store, 105-107 Market Street, Newark

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