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— ANDRE BUSTANOBY, NOTED CATERER, IS DEAD AFTER LONG ILLNESS His Name Among Best Known New York Restaurant Keepers for Years. Andre Bustanoby, one of the best known New York restaurant ied at 9.15 o'clock this morning in his apartment at the Wellsmore, Broadway and Seventy - seventh Street, after a lingering illness of more than ten weeks, which began with pleurisy, ran i ) pleuro-pnew nionia, and devel: lings and on the brain An operation on the the lungs was performed three weeks ago and was successful, He was operated upon lust night to relieve the conditions on the brain in the last hope of saving his life, but the relief abscesses of os” gy Borel circles, was present When Mrs, Kubn Mr. Bustanoby was born at Paw) conanged, Sho was attended by Dr. Bronce, in 1 Hee to New] carne of the Public Health Service, York twenty-one years ago and €1-| wig wax at the reception, but did not tered “upon a remarkably successful} ray, She died at 8.80 o'clock last restaurant career, He was first at the | night, Cafe Martin in University Place and ——_— _—_ later at Delmonico's. He had three brothers, Pierre, Louis and Jacques, With the two last named he estab lished the Cafe des Beaux Arts tn * Forty-fourth Street and later the Chateaux des Boaux Arts at Hunt- ington, L. L. Several years ago, with his brother Jacques, he retired from the Beaux Arts and opened a restaurant tn Thirty-ninth Street and later bought the Louis Martin restaurant at Broadway and Sixtieth Street. Tho brothers had since conducted both places. He was twice married; his second wife wan a sister of his first By the first wife he t p sons, “Thumbs up for H-O" NEW YORK 29 W.. 42nd St. Kl teS men, | yped abscesses on the ’ who were called from their school tn New Hampshire vesterday and wore at his bedside, with ls wife to-day. He had a sor and a daughter by his second wife. With a charming personality, marked taste an’? sympathy in the wervice of his ns, and remark- able business a » he made his establishm ‘rs in modern restaurant development and attracted to himself a large circle of friends among prominent people of the city i MRS, GARRISON'S GUEST STRICKEN AT RECEPTION Mrs, Joseph E. Kuhn Has Stroke of | | Apoplexy While in Receiving “E. B. S., a Happy Wife Who Proposed to Her Husband,” Wins Eve- ning World’s Prize for Best Answer to the Question--Scored on Courage, Sense and Fair Play. | Line and Dies Suddenly. | WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—Standing! |next to Mrs. Garrison, wife of the | Secretary of War, in the reeeiving Hin he latter's usual Wednesday n ree Mrs, Joseph KE. American Military At tt Berlin, was stricken with | | apople ay and died the Garrison ‘home three hours ater, it was learned ito-day. } A large part of official Washington, pecially from the Army and Navy wife of t tion will celebrate its thirte sary Lincoln's Birthday wii vaudeville entertainment and ball in Harlem Casino, One Hundred and Twe ty-seventh Street and Second Avenue. Two vaudeville performances will be given in the day time for the Sick and Death Benefit Fund. In the evening} there will be a big ball, with Patrick | McNabb, President of the association, | and a committee in charge Nat 1 Pre en 4 ‘and Br ewill be THE ONLY The AEOLIAN COMPANY Announces for Lincoln’s Birthday Saturday, February 12th A Special One-Day SALE of PIANOS & PIANOLAS Detailed Announcements in the Evening Journal and World F lay. Goods on Exhibition AEOLIAN HALL .| published, but her letter appears be- {she herself proposed to her hus- Marguerite Mooers Marshall. To-day I take great pleasure tn announcing the winner of the award offered by The Evening World at the beginning of this discussion for the best answer to the question, “Should Women Propose?” The prize of $10 goes to the woman who signed her- self “E. B.S. a js Happy Wifo miermanwes Who Proposed to Her Husband.” In accordance with the promise I made to you, her real name and address cannot be low. It was exceedingly dificult to se- lect one out of scores of clever and amusing letters defending or con- demning the woman-made proposal. For their adroit arguments I must give honorable mention to the fol-! lowing writers: “Janet,” 1916,"") “Bachelor,” “Marjory M. ed | “Polly” and “J. BE. B.” But “F. B.| 8." wins on three points—courage, | common sense and a sense of fair} play. She is brave enough to admit that band—in other words, to bolster uo her theory with the strongest pos- ible fact. She shows her common sense in recommending the procet- ure by which, undoubtedly, the every-day girl may make the strong- est appeal to the every-day man— the procedure which a famous French woman summed up in a fa- mous phrase, “feed the brute.” You could never guess how many letters I have received commending “E. B. 8.'s" sturdy stand in this important matter! Many a man has regis- tered a pious assent to her injunc- tion: “Show your beaux that you can work and keep house, cook and, sew; then maybe ‘he’ will ask you} first.” Finally, “E. B. 8." is eml- nently just in making the point that no girl should exercise her right of choice unless sho {s willing to be # fifty-fifty partner {n the matrimo- nial firm, unless she is ready to give tolerance and trust, good cheer an4| material comfort, unless she prefers | the verb “work” to the verb “cling.” T also promised you an exast poll of all the anawers to the question of leap » Should Women Propose?" The have it, T received nearly 200 letters, and by a clear majority | of ten votes readers of The Evening ‘World bave decided that a woman has | an undoubted right to choose her husband, I congratulate my corre- spondents on their perspicacity. And bachelors beware! LETTER THAT SHOWS SENSE, COURAGE AND FAIR PLAY, Here's the prize letter “Dear Madam: | do not see THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1916. WOMEN SHOULD PROPOSE! BACHELORS Beware !! that there is any crime com- mitted or anything to be ashamed of if a woman proposes. For | |}, proposed to my husband, he being @ woman hater. But | don't ad- a girl that has never been taught to do housework, and one that doesn't love children, to Propose marriage to any man, be he rich or poor, because she will not live ha; club and wal y, ‘I won't have an children, they are too much bothe or, ‘L should worry about cooking; |P0° if my husband can’t afford a cook |, and a maid, why, let him suffer.’ That 1s the very girl who will marry poor and have the children she soon learns to love, and cook the things | she dreamed she never would have | to cook, There is more than one! case where a lazy girl doesn't want] to work and finds that after she has} w married she has to do 4t. "Many an idle girl thinks In her younger days she will get a rich man, | What rich man would want a girl it} he came to call and heard her teil her mother to get up and give her a gl of water? girls; learn to keep a home, help your! mother do her work, so she may have | @ few nours’ rest, to the man you lov not to the man | y you think has money, | won't do any or his money good if you have to sit y d even when going wo Father would say, ‘Don't front and talk, come in th That is what your home is, } for.’ £ unink every mother should treat her daughter thus. Don't say to them that you can’t bring a fellow | home, because they will only run away and see him elsewhere. HE WAS STUPID, SO SHE PRO POSED. “So finally | met the one ! really loved. He was not very fond of women, but | gave him an vitation to come and see me, hich he did. After a year of steady company | asked him if he would ask me to marry him so we could have a home of our own and live together as | wished, | but he wouldn't do it, So | got mad and asked him to marry me, saying | loved him (this was a surprise to him) and would try to make him a good wits, and be a loving mother to his children, He was rather stupid at first, but | nd we went to the of married life ildren, a home of our own a re very happy. “Is a home anything to a man? It all depends what kind of a home it |is, Don't, for goodness’ sake, ask your | husband the minute he enters the house, after working all day, what he has been doing, {and whom he sw ure in coming home | all he tells you not to bothe things pleasant for him when he spoiled and him. Make ar al BROOKLYN 11 Flatbush Ave. t his mind on something dif- en, if wants you to about his work, he y “Never say, ‘You can't go there un- |leas I go too, because a man doesn't | woman under h t all the | him a chanc and he will come he und | has the best } wife in the | ‘Don't propane, unless you have a good disposition, because that word ineans a whole lot, Many a time Ihave smiled through my tears, just to please my husband and children. |Don't run to your husbanc all wit! jyour household troubles; k ‘ourself and you will r. is no use for a girl to propose if! can't trust her eoming husband, | in a man is worth | Don't th r he muel | she because weight Now whi has viking to a wom | bus gone to the suppose he dinner MN him first. Ifa we he will mone: |Don't wait and wait and poor man and your papa says you can work and cook and sew; then maybe supper and make some nice bi cuits. Let, hi them. Don't be afraid to let him see you in an apron, for all men Wake up, you foolish | {Wer for that is the one great thing t The Ayes Have It---So, Bachelors, Beware! Dp Res think of Sunday, for he will and tell you where he was an bout 1 nan asks, a thousand to one answer, f man tells you he hasn't way. Live and save ting, Marry and live y or no money. n, if you want to you go,’ go with e might have him by Show your beaux that ap year. “ae keep hou: ill ask you first. Ask him seo you ma ve a cook when they are hungry. que older the man 4s than the girl 1 think all men should be older. husband is eight years older n “Girls, make your mother teach ou how to keep house. If she cesn’t know, ask some one el: ving girl, B. »y Wife Who Proposed t Husband.” Sale at Three Brooklyn Stores Fulton Cor. At Subway Station 1329-31 Broadway Near Gates Ave. All Winter Coats Must Go!!! $12.00 Corduroy Coats $15.00 Plain Mixture Coats $10.00 Fancy Mixture Coats $15.00 Fur Trimmed Coats $12.00 Full Lined Coats Priced Form $22.50 Broadcloth Coats $25.00 Wool Velour Coats $25.00 Corduroy Coats $20.00 Mixture Coats $22.50 Velour Plaid Coats $25.00 Broadtail Coats Priced Formerly to $25.00 Alterations Free <———— Sale at Three your mind, do your work | y.9 sp] etting ‘something for | V* ‘come | F& nd | smelly feet. hat is, if you dont ask | Leave it'to a man to tell. to marry, make him marry you | together, grow old happily, Learn to save, 18 who have more money than arry a ‘No, or ur little baak rina cottage, to pay all the] 0 vhan BROAD STREET HOSPITAL. | | Men Went K triet ‘The following have been elected Gov- lernors for the Broad Street Hospital for one year: Edward L. Wemple, Charles #. Danforth, ©. H. Alien, Gar uss, Dr. John F. Erdmann, A Dominick, Adolph Lewisohn, Dr. George |Gray Ward, Alton B. Parker, James | Kitts, Theodore 1 “Latking, ‘Dr, Wiliam Tod Helmuth, George C, Luebbers, Dr. Wolter Gray Crump, Henry J, Dorgeloh, Henry 6. fmolon, Dr. W. 1H. Dieften- bach, G, ‘ahl, Dr. Charles Genner- lich and 8 A. MeClelland. A. Dr. Let Yet 400 Men Take a Day Of. | ‘The National Sugar refinery at Front land Pigeon Streets, Hunters Point, is | working to-day with only six hundred of its regular force of 1,000 men. Four hundred men failed to report for work this morning. ‘The officers of the refin- lery say there is no strike; that no de- mands were made on them. The men Fi not to know Why, 0 ge remained away, but they remained away out of strikers. in’ Brook- patrol force in the “dl CANT BEAT TI” “WHEN FEET HURT “TIZ” for sore, tired, puffed- up, aching, calloused feet. or corns. | | No Strike, “Sure! 1 use ‘TIZ’ every time for any foot trouble.” You ci a . burning, blistered, “TIZ" and onl takes the pain and soreness out of corns, jeallouses and bunions, put your feet in a ’ just feel the happiness | . “How good your poor, old fhey want to dance for UTZ" instantly de out all the poisonous exudations whieh | puff up your feet and cause sore, in- flamed, aching, sweaty, Get 5-cent box of drug store or department store, stant foot relief. Laugh at foot sufferers who plain, because your feet are never going to bother or make An Old Family Friend DrBulls COUGH SYRUP While a generation has come and gone, this rellable old remedy has continued to be the friend of all the family, Many a hale qnd hearty old grand{ather or you after all ygur waiting, but just| know before you attempt to pro- grandmother still turns to Dr. Bull’s a pose-—then let her go. Don't get Cough Syrup when cold or cough threat. about nxaelt Was taught all things| on your knees: just eit and talk Gasmentllt aavac Gala thoes, Many ¢ lot ie puother used Yo! business, | I tather and mother look to the remedy let me | bills from ber poeket-} "1 th ave sald the most im- book, so If could man. Ve | wan BL eee about girls’ oaseatin, they remember as children to ward off 1O¢ course all are not alike, but most | ff Hess trom their own little on tlmen love a cheerful wife, a loving Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup is simply a Ll mother 1 th t ¢ remedy made from the prescription my |they co which an old family doctor found most reliable in bis regular practice, It is sold in bottles by your druggist, ee Price FREE TEST Write A.C, Binion sven Balter a: Bridge Street 4810-12 Fifth Ave. Bet. 48th-49th Sts, L nn sg | erly to $15.00 | NOW No Exchanges Brooklyn Stores, The New L. R. Corset “J feel,” she says, with an admiring look in the glass, if I had on a new suit, a new hat, new boots, and new gloves. “As a matter of fact, I simply have on a new L. R. Corset. But it has changed my outlook on life. “It has improved my figure so much that I’m carrying nyse with an air that makes my whole costume look different—smart.” : Most women know the general feeling of dowdiness and lack of confidence that an old corset gives and the corresponding feeling of trimness and poise that a new corset manages to impart. Especially if the new corset is an L, R. The popularity of inexpensive L. R. corsets is such that only constant re-ordering keeps our stocks of the following favorites complete. The Bride’s corset, in charming white brocade, $8.50, An L. R. corset, white brocaded in pink; for average figures, $6. The L. R. Riviera corset, boned to give straight lines in back, $6. The Singer's L. R. corset, with elastic gores, which make deep breathing easy, $5. The 1916 Corset, nipped in just enough at the waist- line, $5. The L. R. Comfort corset, light in weight, with me- dium low bust, $4. The L. R. Dancing corset, light and graceful, $3.50. The L. R. Housekeeper’s Comfort, extra serviceable, $3.00. Other L. R. Corsets from $1 to $12.50. Special occa- sion corsets, all of them. Made exclusively for The Wanamaker Store Broadway at Ninth, New York MEN, Friday The Store Will Be Closed Saturday A few hundred fancy overcoats at $16.50; good enough to buy for use next winter, when clothing will cost more. These coats are our $25 to $30 grades. 480 tweed caps, $1.15; foreign and American checks and mixtures; sizes 658 to 74; $1.50 and $2 grades. NEW WANAMAKER-SPECIAL SHOES, $4. NEW SHIRTS AND SHIRTINGS. NEW NECKWEAR AND SOCKS. GOLF SUITS. RIDINGSUITS. Burlington Arcade floor, New Bldg. This Choice in the Men’s Lower-Price Store OVERCOATS SUITS $10.50 $10.75 $14.50 $12.50 (Just as good as $14.50 when, not many weeks (A collection ago, they were rated as of smart, $15 to $25 overcoats. durable suits.) Broadway, corner Eighth. 252 Derbies, 242 Soft Hats, 180 Tweed Hats—$1.65 each. These are $3 grades; some of the derbies and soft hats are $3.50 grades. Broadway, corner Eighth. John Wanamaker Broadway at Ninth, New York THE NEW YORK WORLD SETS THE PACE! The World Sells 100,000 Copies More in New York City Each Weekday Than Any Other Morning Newspaper,