The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1916, Page 9

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oo... __ S IS HERE FOR ACCEPTANCE Prominent Republicans Meet 4 Presidential Candidate at His § Campaign Headquarters. _ SPEECI OF 8,000 WORDS "Meeting ai Carnegie Hall Wil] Where be met a weathering of prom fnent Republicans Me was bronzed By the un ond seemed in Ane con. Gitlon for his epoch to-might, accept foe the nomination. Me burried into & Private room and denied himself fo all callers for two hours, Me on-| fo return to Herdgehampton ednesday to prepare for his West @rm speaking tour, which beging on Aus, 5. Chairman Willeox received the fol- bowing = mossaxe wident William Howard Tatt, dated Point a} Plo, Quebec “Latter reecivod Will be impowsibi ent at octal LYDIA LOPOKOVA of pretty Httle M , the Kussian dancing with the Mallet Metropolitan last sea on, insy be surprived to learn that | before the company left Amertea for Burope she became the bride of Ran. dolph Boroeehi, seeretary to Sere Diaghileff, director of the organiaa- tion, Those who claim t» have known for some time that the little dancer was | not heart free say that the eivil cere- mony was performed while the com- ade for to-night by the Campaign) pany was in the Middlo West, and Committee, and Chairman Willcox is| that the religious ceremony was #ol- particularly anxi to have it under-|emniged here while the engagement stood that tho meeting Is a public! at the Metropolitan was being flied, from Am very worry it me to Drew notification Mr. de of 4 Hughes, ebeause 1 anticipate a great @eeasion and « great speech in au- gury of victory.” Elaborate preparations have been one, Miss Lopokova was admired by ‘There are a lot of strangers in town | Americans for her versatility almo: who may be very glad to hear this) as much as for her dan she for they expect to be present. They |learsed English in this country and » Notification Com- | took a tin the production of “Just fare members of the Notification Com- | Were which, was produced by mittee, appointed by the National arrinon Grey Fiske. She later re- Convention, and the Chairman of that | turned to dancing, and was a great “ er wide, and notify Mr, Hughes that he| fe @ candidate. These things, how- MISSING GIRL SOUGHT ever, would never be gucased from the difficuliy the members of the No- BY HER GRANDMOTHER getting hold of tickets. Boveral of the members of this com-]Anna Crotty, Fourteen, Vanished mittee believe that the notification After Attending Church a function is their party, and they are Committee has taken over the man-| Fourteen-year-old Anna Crotty went agement of the affair. They are nono |to 8 o'clock mass & week ago yesterd.y £00 well pleased either at having been |morning. Since she left the chureb told by the Campaign Committee to ‘none of her friends or family have seen certain hotel, on a certain date, to Ket) Nine years ago the girl's mother died thelr tickets. land the care of two Laby boys and of The situation in which these men, a and her older sister, May, fell on who are ali prominent in their own (the'g her, As Anna grew up she The convention, consisting wholly of | tall for her age and a little 4 ~|stout. She has large blue eyes and very OR AAG oie? notl- |Gurk skin, Her dark hair ia eut- short, Fr. Hughes. They have never seon ah iter ‘Brown’ style. She wore ir. Hughes in many cases, and a lot | 10 7 er knees, a plain white middy Hall or the Hotel Astor is, The best white button moos and stockings. | | so one explained yesterday, |blue serge coat, with white buttons, ie er rinted notification Yet asa (bore a Btern Brothers’ label. Bhe had delegate to the convention they could ® Wor Seer who had just recov- ered from an attack of pneumonia, ts ‘Astor, ‘Those who blew into iil again at his home at No. 258 West town yesterday, after they had found | Twenty-ffth 8 because of worry the Astor and the proper room, - Jearned from a bellboy that there was ee oe nobody home. juarters in the Guar-| FIFTY FEET OF SNOW IN JULY. any Building on Fifth Avenue tt ——— was explained to-day that all that About a Crater a necessary Was for a member of American Desert. ANTA FE, N. M., July 31,—Snow ‘the Astor headquarters at 7 o'clock f - to-pight, and then, on making him. ¢ - bel eet ho will be given a ticket | Sante the Fourth of July is @ Ma badge and will be taken up to|fact which ts likely to cause @ good Carne many people to revise thelr Ideas of the Car yp returned from| "Great American Desert" of which #0 committee, Senator Harding, will pre- | favorite, tification Committee are having in very much put out that the Campaign Week Ago, Feport at such and such a room in & or heard from her. States, find themselves is peculiar. | aid ‘© of the housework je iit skirt, Of then don't know where Carnegie poet et lin w @ white cane hat, with a blue ribbon. t @ ticket at @ certain time at the jotel over Anna's @ “nobody home.” committee to apear in person at Atty f cep within eighteen miles of Hall, probaby in a taxicab, rman Willcox Jdgehampton early yesterday after-| much is heard In the Last, mm and went to sleep. Visitors at Santa Fe take and to the Phe ¥,000-word speech of acceptance! top of the Lake and Penitenty Peaks that Mr. Hughes 1s to deliver to-night CG or tho eater overlooking the take was sent into town ahcad of Mr, Will-! from ‘the basin which sloped off genth fox and was in the hands of the print |Po""yn outer edge of the er goon after. a line off abruptly in walls w! Three Governors, fourteen United | from twenty to fifty ish Btates Senators and at least 100) ‘There Js no doubt from the measure. Gitifressmen dre to ve present to. | mente of these snow precipicds that the " a! iy midwinter must have been pli te besides any number of other anowtel ih DY eee in places snd that nol les. Col, Roosevelt is to have /the peaks were clothed im A solid mass ‘@ box and Mr. Hughes's family und of snow from bottom to summit, | The: friends will two boxes./are still masses of w seatiered all George W. Perkins 1s to have a box |round the lake which are still four or ‘and go 18 Miss Alice Carpenter, the | five feet thick. gotte. 4 7 , 4 for the Gov, Whitman's party |) [0 now probably woud lie in the ill occupy. & box. basin from year's end to year's end, Governors who have Despite the hot July sun, the air ts 90 warm rains that, come accepted Ko The is to preside, Col, eak. lon Chronicle.) the purpose of Jardin (From & Benator T Lotteries. for raising dow! Chesapeake Bay to Hampton Behe was driven immediately to . He wi the Vhite Hous containing calcium chlorid, which for more than twenty years hae been giving wide on in Buch cases, (i “Johnny, “there's iv fice boy. ae eee neta ene “senor [MABBED AT CHURCH CASEMENT HOPE | BAGGAGE SMAs: rather thought of giving the place to ould be ecconded py | rather AROUEN, Ot. RV ir, for no medl> Twin brother, sir!’ echoed the of- ‘Yes; the one T saw at the football TUE EVENING WORLD DOOR, SINGER IS FOR LIFE DEPENDS DASE FOU ARENS McCann Said to Have Secured | | Express Money Order Blanks by Daring Plan | Expression of Public Sentiment May Save Him, His American Counsel Says, [BRANCHES CLOSED UP, GOT FINE TREATMENT, | Posing 1s Inspector, Young But It Is No Place for an Be an Open One—Tatt } Man Took Over Papers— American Just Now, Won't Be There Two of Checks Cashed, He Says, ' A - to New | How @ baritone om | Convinced that ate + home| thot we Church sane, and that the prompt ” candi under @ borrowed n f American seatiment will save him “ to bie camp eal office, cloned up ve from ution, Michael Francis Deadquariers ot the Howl A of the American Key Doyie, who “ jon peberned on 4 took p blanks was re f all their vunted by th London, where be appeared as « wel for the emned uae conspirator, | desterday afior Detectives Healy | gayy new hope to those who are en> ond Kirk bad arrested the Corser, jeted in the effort to save bie lite William KB MeCann, twontpraeves | Mr. Doyle, @ Philodelphia lawyer, years old, of No. 34 Heckman VIMC® | way retained by Mrs George Menry a with forgery Newman, Casement's alater, why an, who says he 18 @| peag thie Country shortly before was arrested os he was aving the ehureh | Last Tuesday afternoon a man who hore what purported to be a letter her brother landed in Ireland on bis disastrous e@xpetiticn, According ww Mr. Doyle's statement he te firet pow. chara i 6 4 “Ww. pent La Nefore leaving London,” Mr, Doyle Oe ae ae Teak sald, picking his words with evie a dent ¢ 5 wrote to Foreign Beore- ab . lor th Ta a eerie ioney |LY Grey @ atatement of the defense py ch toaeatian ‘sain he would have made had the Govern- | ment permitted him to call witnesses. Mr. Hoggs” informed each of the [in view of these facte I think Jt un- eres ee ae Paap sie ey | Hikely thag the execution will bo ears hi pein A a aa aan Hi § ried out. It Is, however, a mont delle odie extremely viet but there] te situation, Public sentiment In aoe rea) ne banker todo] America, Hf promptly and properly ox- | pressed to England, will, I am au except surrender his remaining st ek Save “di fy of money order bi o the shestor at Agencies.” ‘The banking | “Who were the witnesses the Brit. areata complied, and twenty-one |!" Government would not permit ou blanks found thelr way into “Mr,|'0 call?” the roporter asked. Bown possession. Mr. Doyie would not name them, but said; “They were in Germany, and the British Government would not pormit me to go over to get them. No reason was given. It meant all the difference between a defense and no defense. “If Great Britain really knew that American sentiment 18 as strong as it really ts, it woult as a matter of fact be public policy to spare his fife, “There is absolutely no truth in the report that Casement lg mentally un- balanced,” he declared, “It is too ridiculous to deny. [ found him strong, in good health and firm in spirit. You may say for me that he is imbued with the highest possible patriotic motives and ideals, He ts One of the agents visited was Joba Re of No. 60 East Houston Street, “Mr, Boggs” later telephoned to Mr, Re to ask whether be had left his let- ter of introduction there. He had not. But Mr. Re, becoming susple- fous, telephoned the American Ex- press Company. Ho learned that his agency was not discontinued, and that the company employs neither “Mr, Boggs” nor an inspector of agencies, But Brooks Brothers, clothiers, at No. 346 Madison Avenue, did not know this in time, for they accepted one of the money orders which “Mr. Boggs” made out for $50, offercd in , | ready and willing to die for his coun- part payment for morvhandioe. Ae ey eee position of ireland cas other was cashed for the same| thereby become known. amount by an inn at Sheepshead} “The English Government wan Bay. courteous and friendly to me at all Detectives Healy and Kink went| timer,,t with yw wall empiealte over the express company’s records until they found banuwriting resem- bling that on the orders, It was said to be that of McCann, who was em- ployed for six years by the company Brixton Jail, He makes no complaint, ves no favors and asks none. “They are very optimistic over there,” Mr. Doyle remarked in speak- ing of the war, “They are bucking down to work in England now.” . ye paused, and after a moment's and once wrote up a claim for & ©.) oncction, added: “But it's no place W. Bogss. A photograph of him, | joe a rican.” which the company had kept in ac- cordance with its custom of photo- graphing employees, was identified at Brooks Brothers, and by some of the bankers, the police say, Healy and Kirk say McCann made complete confession, and that he showed them where othera of the order blanks were, three tn his hat, one in an envelope and thirteen 4 his hoi ing, the tectives say, from $20 to $50, bad been filled in on these blanks. —_—_—_——_ COURT FAVORS DIVORCE FOR MRS. ROBINSON Trip to Europe and Hotel Visits With Woman Not Plaintiff Figure in Report. pteeelepeingepeiptcaderd A trip to Europe and frequent visits to a hotel figure in the referse's report, FOUND IN STREET SHOT. whlots | ipreme Court Justice Clark has approved, recommending an interlocu- tory decree of divorce in favor of Mre. Andrea Paton Robinson against Arthur Robinson, sportsman, form ted with Frederick Heath De Stock Exchange broker. Witnesses testified before Referee Mar- tin I. Stover that a “Mrs, Kobinaon, Who reatsiered with the defendant at Vanderbilt, March 6, and for days thereafter, not the Inju Man As Patrolman Mitchell was standing at Fifteenth Street and Avenue C just before last midnight he heard three shots plock to the south. There he found John Zerer, thirty-four, of No, 642 Beventeenth St: lying on the side walk with » bullet wound in his back With the wssistance of three bystanders the patrolman bundled Zerer into a massing auto and hustled him, with the hree men, to Bellevue. wi Plaintiff. Whe hotel register. and food Eheckarwere important ae <¥idence, by Catherine ‘urpl in charge of ie ene Te Stas octetntae welts Zevon, bus | fourth flocr of the, hotel, recogniaes the wounded man later turned to one of | uvinson as the man who was w them and sald: "Ed, they got me that time, and got | passing One Hie Arthur, Reblason’, tock me good.” His condition 1s serious. according to Cornelius van de Btedt, an ofielal of the Holland-America LAn Mhitinan,. Gov. | oot the peak level, more than 12,000 The defendant. denied the charge ipvitations are Beroghan ot "Rhode | feet above fie Seas that the snow cor-}AUTO BOWLED OVER; 2 HURT] there was no recommendation of all- R, Livingston Echaries ft. Miller of |nices are melting very slowly, mony. Pree abe Gov. eer Thrown Forty Feet in Collision, ~ to be opened at 7.80! ENGLAND'S FIRST LOTTERY. but Other Car Speeds On, BULLET HITS COL. APPLETON. Th id and the reserved seats are to be held anemnaenen A touring car running at an estimated ‘until 7.50 for those who have tickets, | tustituted 1600 for the Mata=|ppeed of sixty miles an hour, struck an-| Stray B Mat aftor which time the reserved secre tena other touring © the Merrick Road Will be thrown open to the pub near Baldwin late Saturd#y night, tore| Col. Daniel Appleton, formerly com- off both left wheels of the second car, |mander of the Seventh Regiment, yester- Roosevelt is not te iD money for the State have never caught | threw it forty feet and caused it to turn Jay felt @ slight stinging pain In the sage : on in England. But for definite ends |over twice 4 head as he was crossing One Hundred in Washington | OPP oh character, such as rank Hammil and Fram Ietz of] and siateenth Street at St. Nicholas si ty #1.—President | building canals or founding a Brittah | Brooklyn, who were in the wrecked car, WASHINGTON, July 5 building cammction hus been” readily | were soverely Injured, Dietz being un-| Avenue in his automobile, He stopped Wilgon returned to Washington early | granted.” Our first recorded lottery ix {conscious for more than half un hour and took off his straw hat, this morning on the naval yacht that of When the prises were) | The Mliding car sped on without) 4 gmait bullet, apparently from a 22- following a week-end cruise | piecrs, of plat 40,000 of pying. sos: ee calibre rife dropped from hat, in flower follow |10 shillings eac the rim of Which he found @ small hole, bullet was fired from BY RAILROAD OF n ees | Hulls and by the time of Queen Anne (From the Chiongo Herald.) the Slate stepped In and- suppresses The traffic was at its height and 1 tery a public e the usual piles of pussen- “Health Is the First Wealth ' ea" in 1K th the “usual piles of “passen- t BAS anction Was lV rticular Ie re The rich man suffering from asthmatic] sanction away given ta a Banioulke 1, Lmreat London terminus, in the weal OLD ROMAN NOTICE BOARD, or pulmonary trouble knows this even | S50. ting all sale of tickets for home| whtic the owners mournfully looked on page ery ce oeenisan the poor man thus affilcted: | or foreign lotteries was forbidden, ile, ine owners i Mistnra Basinn Panic in Gaime rar obtain rellet by La caer ed, and, approaching. ond @f ther most Bamer_may de able to OdtBin tparation | OFFIC Vigorous — bagk finashing porters, Daye of Ancient Rome, ipung: Bokmen's Alterative, ® pre shouted jn stern tones pen eet ee en what do you mean by throw- trunks about like that?* assengers pinched them sure that they were not d. The picture poster te not so modern as many folk suppo: in ancient Rome board was termed an “alburn," Was firet used for State proclamatior Subsequently, however, the name w applied to any tablet on which # public phhouncement was inscribed, ond the for it was used hy Roman to make ing, but they returned to earth wh the’ oMeial adde ‘anit you w dents in the making bi ie platform?" a provinions of Nature are not ma mated when, you were attending your | Homan actors in particular made the out jnatanc mothe: eral nat e - it Of public nM bi nd But ie ic iproduced desired Fe gmorbers tungral inst Wedne ( wAMoUs cans ne publiclty the “album” hud vents Alterative has furnished h—er—m- said Johnny. (From the Columbia State.) only did they have their names Mak in the y Th 76° and fetch him! Thinking. inscribed in gigantic letters in the pubs “Thats right,” sald the manager; Liberty, He places, but they anticipated the larwe article soon “and don't you' come back til you've Fool's modern itfustrated boarding ‘poster by appear'in this pope 's. For eale by ALL | found him! ‘ Night employing artists—-and particularly one. Ank doctor geman Drug Store Johnny is still looking for his twin Ww Calades—to portray them in thelr fa¥ drug ly be ob. 2 Philadelphia.—Aadvt, | brother, powcr a yas 4 bhull | vorive parts. erry wey 7 MOMDAY, JULY 41, 1016. oe MONS THE BORDER NOTTOLOS Attorney } ‘War General Deckles Provisions of Con stitution Apply QUOTES HIGH COURTS | enportoct State of War’ Rul ings Permit Liberal Inter | pretation of Law | ALMANY july 8 ruardemen from thig Stat tong Federal service on the M buwder are eniitied to ¥ theoming elections, Attorney ( ol Bapurt bh Woodbury ao bois 6n opinion he has rendered to Ke ry of Btale Francis Mo Huw The Attorney Ger 1 holds that the the Mexican Are BUCH as to bring Into cn the provision of the ¢ tin requiring (he taking « dier vote “in time of war” provision of the Constitution been the subject of exhaustive « ination by the Attorney Gene: many days, i reads | “Provided that in time of war no elector in the actual military service of the State or of the United states, in the army Vy thereof, shall be pHVed of hin vote by r of his ence from such election district.” The opinion proceeds upon the fun. | jamental principle that the right of the elector to exerciay his privilege of votlng is one Meghest rights of citizenship, t this right must jens insurmountable obstacios are found to stand in the way. Attorney General Woodbury | Points out, therefore, that any pro- | visions of the Constitution or of the statutes, which would interfere with such rights, must be most liberally construed in the citizens’ favor. Attorney General Woodbury says that if such intrepretation is to be placed upon this language of the Con- stitution under existing conditions as will deprive our citizen soldiers of their right of franchise while at the front, it will inevitably operate to penalize them for their patriotism. The Attorney General recognises the fact there does not exist an actual state of war, but reaches the con- clusion that the existence of such is not essential to the bringing into operation of this constitutional pro- | vision, adopted for the purpose ot | taking the vote of citizen soldiers at the front. ——e—. MRS, RONALDS DIES IN HER LONDON HOME: a8 American Woman Prominent Society in London and Paris for Half 2 Century. LONDON, July 81.—The death is} announced of Mrs, Mary Frances | Ronalds bn July 28, at her London | residence, No, 7 Cadogan Place, Mra. Ronalds was the widow of Pierre Lorillard Ronalds, long fam- ous us @ whip here and known as the “Father of American Coaching.” Be- fore her marriage, in 1850, she was Miss Mary Frances Carter of Boston, and was noted for beauty and sing: ing. She first became prominent in rope in the days of the Second pire in France, She was the acknowl- edged leader of the American colony in Paris, and was the best known of | the clique called “the Tuileries Ad feans.” After the Franco-Prussian war Mrs, Ronalds went to live in| London, where her home in Cadogun Place became famous a a gathering place for artists and musicians, | For nearly two decades she was tho | recognized leader of American society | at the British capital, and was a close | of the late Queen Victoria, | Edward, and of Queen A'ex- | . Mary Frances Ronalds was -he | mother of Pierre 1d HARMFUL MEDICINES cannot be sold ‘by any drugist in America to-day except under penalty of the law. This is what the Pure Food and Drugs Law has accomplished for the people. Such standard prepa- rations, however, as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, which for thirty years has stood the test of time and complies with all conditions of this law, will continue to be sold by every reputable druggist in the land.—Advt, D ovmerty AT, hewernt € 00. Hiinots, Ohio, Carolina, Ge Necessary to a Proper Understanding of the Sale The August Furniture Sale at Wana- | maker's is a fixed event. It isno hur- ried affair, It is prepared with a thoroughness befitting the world’s greatest sale of furniture, : Up and down the land our furniture experts go, into factories and ware- rooms, learning local conditions, exam- ining woods and workmanship, noting designs, enquiring as to prices, seeking the few really great opportunities that | the market offers. : There are many “opportunities.” Since we originated these half-yearly sales, other stores all over the country have followed suit, and there have sprung into a perniciously active being many factories which turn out “furni- ture’’ specially for sale purposes; cheap, trashy, unserviceable stuff that has the appearance of honest merchandise. hese “opportunities” do not fool us. But they fool a great many good people, unversed in furniture, “To an astrologer who fell Plump to the boliom of a well ‘Poor blockhead,’ cried a passer-by, Jot see your feet and read the sky? ‘or oe: This man the type may well be made Of those who al chimeras Stare When they should mind the things thal ave,” —La Fontaine's Faoles. There are many chimerical offerings of furniture. They appear very inviting to those who cannot tall good from bad from a cu examination. ‘To become isterested in suc! offerings is to invest in disappointment. A knowledge of this is essential to a proper appreciation of the goodness of furniture and the realness of the economies in the August Sale of Furniture (Original). A Paradox It is a bit of a paradox; but the very in- crease in price has helped us put our prices down, One of the best-known firms making fine furniture decided a while ago to cut down the number of its designs, and to concentrate on turning out a larger quantity in fewer de- signs. This permits of more economical pro- duction. Stocks on hand of the designs dis- continued-—as fred as gold~-had to be closed out. We got these stocks on hand; got them to sell at half their regular retail prices. Three other manufacturers decided to do the same thing. And, like the firm first re- ferred to, they gave Wanamaker’s first choice as being the store best able to handle large lots of good furniture and distribute them quickly into homes, The Men who built this furniture are the type of men who have made the New World the Modern World. They are its power and its force. | The furniture they made is good furni- ture. It is sound as the forest monarchs | from which it sprang. | A litue of the soul of the Old World is in the yenius of Chippendale, of Heppel- | white, of Sheraton, of the brothers Adam, | the great master_cabinet-makers of the 18th ! century, and of Morris, the artist-craftsman of the 19th century, It is furniture fit to live with; furniture that fills the home with an atmosphere of re- finement, that impresses the observing child, | that urges one along the better ways of life. And Now to the Very Important Business of Getting the) — RIGHT FURNITURE for the Home While Prices are Low | The August SALE of FURNITURE Swings Full Open Tomorrow More than a Million Dollars’ Worth, World’s Record for Volume and Variety Savings | Average a Little Over 28 Per Cent. Some groups at half price Some groups at a third off Some groups at a quarter off Some groups at a tenth off The adeance showing has been viewed by more than 10,000 homemakers, among tham people * from New York, New Jersey, Pennsyleania, Connecticul, Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode Island, Indiana, lowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Virginia, Alabama, North Carolina, South pia, Florida, Missouri, Colorado, Washington, California; and from England, Wales, Novia Scolia, Germany, Australia, Turkey; the names of whom are registered in the Guest Book in the House Palatial on the Fifth Gallery of the New Building. ea | The Various Grou } in the Sale (Keep ) $552,000 worth of our stocks, for $414,000. m, dining-room, living-room, library, boudoir and novelty furniture; the very select of the furniture ~ ia America, and some from urope. Marans een ead catinaanier tae ry, den and si “room e pardoned, for chairs with cane, leather and seats, and upholstered pieces; in desi; after the period of Charles II., finished in the rich, medium dark color |] ° of the Jacobean peor. $25,000 worth of solid mahogany bed- room furniture, for $18,750. hla able see tae rey tor es, ly eo) or. the anamaker Brores; in the scroll Colonial design, substantial, enduring. ; it h of bedroom furniture, or y . Moderate-priced goods of quality, made in one of America’s old and thor- oughly reliable factories; pare suites, be ghee, chairs, rockers; in mahogany, walnut and enameled woods. $10,280 wo;th of bedroom and dining- room furniture, for rit Made from upland satin gum-wood of fine texture, finely finished in imitation mahogany; moderate-priced pieces fully guaranteed. $35,000 of solid mal y bed- room furniture, for $26,250. In the post Colonial style; the best fur- niture of its kind in America; not to be con- fused with the great quantity of inferior | goods ‘of similar style in the market; three | styles of bedsteads-—al! four posters, some with pineapple tops; bureaus, chiffoniers, toilet tables and bedroom pieces; built specially and solely for the Wananaker ‘Lores. $16,530 worth of bedroom, din- ag and novelty furniture, for in; $1 ; : Choice designs, highest quality finish; 4 from one of America’s makers of really high- grade furniture. $13,814 worth of dining-room furniture, for 210,480, | 4 ‘ompletely matched suites, medium ; grades, oak, in Jacobean design; the best low- priced suites we have seen. $26,101 worth of ppbaletered furniture for living-room and library, for $19,389. From four of our regular, reliable makers, with whom we have done business for years; sofas, davenports, arm chairs, rockers, easy chairs; in leathers, tapestries and velours; many sizes and designs. Directory of the Sale Fourth Gallery--Oak living-room furniture, ehairs, rockers and tables, Fifth Gallery--Parlor, living-room, library turnig ture, mission furniture, fancy furniture, and en- trance to House Palatial. Sixth Gaitery— ‘Dining-room furniture, summer fur- niture, tables, beds and davenports. Seventh Gallery—Bedroom furniture and couches, Eighth Gallery—Brass and Iron bedsteads and couches,

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