The evening world. Newspaper, December 30, 1916, Page 3

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s 5 4 % ‘pony. ) ‘Aldermanic Welfare Commit- "tee Is Expected to Pass the Haubert Ordinance. ‘PUTS END TO CHEATING. Thousands of Small Con- sumers Now Suffer Under the Measure Process. By Sophie Irene Loeb. “Coal is mined by weight, sold @holesale by weight, but when it Comes to the consumer it is eold by measure.” These | wore the words of Commissioner Hartigan yester- day when he peared before the Commi ttee on General Welfare of the Board of Aldermen, when 3 a bs the ordinance pro- + Mora menue viding that coal @hould be sold by weight was up for bearing. “This is the only city in the world,” continued Commissioner Hartigan, “In which tt is permitted to sell coal ‘by baskets and bags instead of by weight, “It affects the small consumer more than any other class, unscru- in basement cellars 2 of the measure proc: @es and give short weight. “The great ‘.ardship, therefore, comes to the rest consumers. Many hundred complaints have been received in the Bureau of Weights a: Measures. But there are thou- sands of people who suffer under this condition and who cannot tak time or trouble to report the dealer who takes advantage.” Commissioner Hartigan urged that the measure be drawn to conform with the State law, and to be applied to coal Alderman William P. Kenneally raised an objection to including coke fm the ordinance. Hoe explained that it was a very easy matter to wet coke, thee it obsorbed water like a sponge, and being so wated-weighted, It would Prove a disadvantage to eell it to tho consumer by weight. His attention was drawn to this part of the ordinance by various small bakers, who complained that they would have to pay more for the coke on account of this absorption | of water. Alderman Haubert, who introduced | the measure, concurred in this sugges- tion of eliminating coke, as did Com- | missioner Hartigan, The ordinance | will likely, therefore, be amended and put before the Board of Aldermen -next week. The other provisions of this ordinance were printed in these columne yesterday I appeared on behalf of the House wives’ Protective Association in the consideration of the statute. Many letters have come to us from house- wives, complaining of short welghts in purchasing small quantities of coal, And as the price of the coal ig so high, the housewife has been practically at the mercy of the dealer, who sells in small quantities by measuro only. By this ordinance'every consumer will) have the right to have the coal weighed, not only by the dealer from whom it ts purchased, but by the public scales as well, which will be on hand at short distances from th dealers; so that a check can always be maintained on possible fraud. Commissioner Hartigan and the Housewives’ Protective Association will put forth every effort to effect this legislation peedily as possible, Dias WAASHINGTON, Dec, 30, — Major Gen. Funston, commanding the Ameri- tan forces on the Mexican border, ad- vised the War Department to-day’ that he had been unable to substantiate rumors that a Felix Diaz filibustering ty had crossed into Mexico from the ited State REMEMBER | Today when ordering your | food supplies to | PURE FOODS The World's Best / the “Sunbeam” label | BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion, Onepacka; provesit, 25cat all druggists., t ( lers in the assoc! FIGHT SHORT:WEIGHT COAL, AND VICTORY SEEMS Si DEFECTIVE GIRLS’ PLIGHT 1S LAID 0 PUBLIC NEGLECT Training School Head Tells Scientists Early Care Will Save Them. At the morning session of the So- cial and Economic Section of tha American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science at Columbia University to-day Prof. H. H. God- dard of the Vineland Training School for Girls analyzed the history of fifty-six girls of the instifution, 96 Per cent. of whom were on probation from reform school sentences. All of these girls, Prof. Goddard said, might have been made useful members of society if they had been cared for earlier in life. Their pres- ent plight was due altogether, he sald, to public ignorance and neglect of much as they. In summing up tho present state of the girls four of the whole number had been committed as hopeless to institutions for the feeble minded; three had the mental development of children of nine or ten; twleve had become mothers and twenty-one chil- dren had been born to them; thir- teen were becoming normal mem- bers of society and eight were mor- ally tn: eo. Bird T. Baldwin of Swarthmore College and Johns Hopkins Univer- sity read a similar study of 1,000 de- fective children, boys and girls, black and white. It showed that 43 per cent. of the white girls and 47 per cent. of the negro girls were retarded four years or more in mental develop- ment and per cent. of the white boys and 43 per cent. of the negro boys were similarly behind. Many of the scientists visited the station for experimental evolution at Cold Spring Harbor this afternoon as guests of the Carnegie Institute. There was a slight flurry at the morning session caused by the sup- pression of a paper on the “Psychol- ogy of the German People” by Prof. D. R. Radosavijevich of New York University, a Russian, The official explanation of the dropping of the paper from the programme was that there was not sufficient time for it to be read, Some of the professor's friends asserted the managers of the | meeting were afraid of arousing re- sentment among German sympathiz- lon. DR, CLAUDE L, WHEELER, NOTED WRITER, DEAD Editor of the N. Y. Medical Journal Succumbs After Brief Illness— Was Legion of Honor Member, Dr. Claude L, Wheeler, editor of the New York Medical Journal, and a brilliant writer on medical topics, died at his home, No. 418 East Six- teenth Street, Brooklyn, to-day after an illness of a week with bronchial pneumonia, Dr. Wheeler was born in Montreal, Canada, March 5, 1864, He was grad- uated in arts from Laval University and received his medical degree from McGill University. He_ practised medicine in Burlington, Vt, before coming to this city twenty-six years ago. He was for many years on staff of the Manhatan Eye and E Hospital, and became the editor of the Medical Journal in 1909. Dr. Wheeler was at one time con- nected with American Medicine as an editor, He ts survived by a wife and daughter, and a sister, Miss Annie Wheeler of Montreal. He was a momber of the Players, was presi- dent of the Fendoph Club and was| a Royal Arch Mason and a memb of the Legion of Honor, The funeral will be at his home to- morrow ‘J at 3 eo Crnsy imnelt, Dee, 30.—A Coroner's Jury to-day retudned a verdict that Rexinal! Smith, head of a London publish house and editor of the Cornhill Maga- zine, whose death was report Thursday, committed sulcide while tem orarily insane, having thrown himself m a Window while his nurse was of the room. ing mn SOLDIER AND WRITER WHO DIED SUDDENLY IN NEW YORK HOME OdO0o09 oe f SaH HOLA as, OC$0000060608 HOWARD CARROLL NOTED NEW YORKER DES SUDDENLY Soldier, Writer, Financier and Contractor—Had a Dis- tinguished Career: Gen, Howard Carroll, journalist, au- thor, soldier, financier and contractor, died at 8 eight o'clock this morning at his home, No. 4 East Sixty-fourth Street, after o short illness, Death | was due to hardening of the arteries. | The doctors said that the malady had | been coming on for some time, but | not until yesterday afternoon was he| compelled to retire to bed, With him at the end was his fam-| ily, comprising his widow, Alderman Lauren Carroll and Arthur Carroll, | his sons, and Miss Caramal Carroll, | his only daughter. Gen. Carroll was born in Albany in 1854 and was in his sixty-third year at the time of his death. He was | educated in the public schools of his| native city and New York and in Hanover and Berlin, Germany, For three years ho studied fortifications jand drilled with the cadets of the Polytechnic School at Hanover. He returned to America and became a reporter and afterwards a correspon- jdent of the New York Times, He was the paper's Washington correspondent !n 1877 and reported the yellow fever epidemic in tho South. He distinguished himself by his advocacy of Gov. Packard of Lou- isiana and Gov. Chamberlain of South Carolina, He refused the po- jsitlon of private secretary to Presl- dent Arthur, He was defeated for Congress by Gen, Henry W. Slocum, and was a delegate to three Repub- lican National Conventions. | He was Brigadier General and Chief jof Artillery on the staff of Gov. Mor- ton in this State from 1895 to 1898, In the Spanish-American War hej was Inspector General of the New York troops, His father was Gen. Howard Carroll, who was killed in leading his brigade at Antietam, After tho Spanish war Gen, Carroll went into business, He was principal jowner in and Pre: ‘lent of the Sicil-| }ian Asphalt ving Company, also President of the Boston Asphalt Com- pany, Ho Interested himgelf also in the Starin Transportation Company and had a long fight with the Rapid Transit Compa... over the purchase of the Staten Island Ferry franchise, John H, Starin was his father-in- law. Gen. Carroll was prominent tn Re- | publican politics in city and State up \to a few years ago, He was a mem: ber of the New York Athletic, Lotus, | | Ardsley, Army and Navy, New York | Yacht and Riding and Driving clubs, Announcement of the funeral will| be made later, (I ae WRECKAGE OF MARYLAND? | Catter Finds Stan Where Ship Was Reporte: Dev. 3 a wireless + Acushnet | that she had passed through wreckage feovering the sea for about five miles well cast of Nantucket Lightship in the | vicinit where wireless calls for help were [sent out Christmas night from thed steamer Marland | wreckage could not he identified as part of the Marland Acush ‘h ws for the stea: er for | MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION Cut out this coupon, fill out and mail to the Housewives’ Protective Association, Evening World, Post Office Box 1354. Name ....cescocvecsocees Address ...seeeeee 1916 | | I desire to enroll my name as a member of The Evening Worl 'e Housewives’ Protective Association. Inclose 2-cont stamp and membership token will be mailed. + PPLE 35-96 5-8 999G9. THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1916, |New Year’s Resolutions For Young Men or Women Who Want to Succeed |Dean Johnson, of New York University, Sug- “Build an Ideal; Be Ambitious; Be Enthusi- astic; Think; vate Poise; Don’t Be an “A Man in Business Just Be a Great Busine Man’’—“Personal_ Ef- ficiency Demands a Not Seek to Be Like Somebody Else.” Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What should be the New Year's res lutions for the young man or woman who wants to succeed? For thousands of him—and her —in New York I took that question to Joseph French Johnson, the man of whom Frank E. Vanderlip, Pre: dent of the Ni tional City Bank, sald the other day: His inspira- tion and sound in- struction have jer: Deen in large 1 RRB measure responsi- ble for my own success,” Prot. Johnson ts dean of New York Unt- versity and President of Alexander Hamilton Institute, which gives scientific training in business to boys and girls all over the country, and which has just been holding its sev- enth annual convention at the Hotel Biltmore, Moreover, Dean Jobnson has just written an exceedingly lum!- nous and comprehensive little volume called jusiness and the Man.” So I couldn't think of any one better fitted to tell ambitious young persons what leaves they should turn over on Jan. 1, 1917. And here are his suggestions: I resolve, first of all, to set my im- agination to building an ideal. I resolve to be ambitious. I resolve to be enthusiastic. 1 resolve to think, I resolve to make habit my ally. I resolve to cultivate poise. I resolve to be myself and not a weak imitation of somebody else. THE VALUE OF IMAGINATION IN BUSINESS. “The reason why so many young workers never get anywhere is be- cause they do not see clearly the place where they want to go,” Dean Johnson explained. “They have no ideals, no vision, ‘and without the vision people perisheth.’ Bust- ness men as a rule do not realize their indebtedness to imagination, That faculty is commonly thought of, not as a work-horse, but as @ fthoroughbred, to be driven by the poet, artist, the .vory-writer, And yet no man of feeble imagination ever. h d real success in busi.. 9s, “It + imagination that, with the ald of {ts tuithful hod-carrler, mem- ory, build. a plan, a vision, an {deal for the young worker. Imagination must be bridled and gulded by judg- ment . »mmon sense, All busi- ness progress is the result of Inven- tion, and imagination is the mother of invent “After acquiring a definite fdea in life, the next thing to do is to put it to work, Many men seem quite satls- fled if only they have a job which yields them what they consider a de- cent Hvelihood, After school days are over, they strive for no further mental development, but are content to devote what leisure they have nd to social plea- musements of Vari- grumble now salary 1s not expenses in sures, sports ous kinds, ney may and then because raised, for the crease as tim 8 but they give no thought to mprovement or to plans for bettering their I They | bear a very close rese © to ani mals of the fleld; they have a defin number of wants and are fairly content | jp when those wants are gratified." “Tam so glad you included enthu- sas among your able resolit tions, told Dean Johnson at this point, "EB Ave 8 loft, and so many nake me rather ashar “Don't lose estly. “I nev ful business man who ¢ business next to his wi Enthusiastic joy and business seem to be feel and eh, ide in tial to cess. Enthusiasm. 1 gladly, un restrainedly, naturally putting ‘your whole self into the performance of any act. There can be 5 ne artificial about enthusiasm, A who is en thusiastic about his business loves it and can hardly be dra it MAN MU 1 away from ST LOVE HIS BUSINESS TO SUCCEED. “A man who is in business just to make a living or to make money, and not because he lov it, cannot be a great busine man. If a business man’s ideal merely the accumulation of a fortune, is he not merel ng the pot of gold at th of the rainbow?” There Was a momentary pause, and gests Seven Pledges— Make Habit an Ally; Culti- to Make Money Cannot Man Be Himself and JOSEPH FRENCH JOHNSON! Photo by Pach Bros. @ glint of humor crept into Dean Johason's cool gray eyes. Ae smiled dry, quigatcal smile, 4. Do you remember," he queried, “the story of the maid who answere: the ‘general housework’ advertise: ment? She was asked whi y she wished. She replic hat de pends, mum; $6 if L have to think, $3 af 1 gon’ 1,400 BRONX RENT “STRIKERS MAY BE PUT OUT OF HOMES Twenty-six Families, Leaders in Movement, Already Ordered to Leave. ‘The large body of tenants in Bronx apartment houses who have gone on strike in refusing to pay the advance rents thelr landlords have imposed will soon find themselves homeless and on the streot, bag and baggage, if the landlords carry out the threat they made to-day. Sidney V. Odell, a process server in the office of Marshal Greenblatt, to- day served twenty-six tenants in the apartment houses owned by Gruen- stein & Mayer and William Korn with “landioni's notices’ requiring them to move themselves and all their belongings out of their present homes not later than next Tuesday, Jan, 2. ‘These tenants, who have been con- sidered as leaders in tho strike against increased rents, have no alternative but to obey the notices, They are notified to leave on the ground that they are undesirable tenants and even will not save ther Those of the twenty-six who fail to move by noon of Tuesday will be served with dispossess notices and will be evicted not later than Jan, 8, according to the announcement of the landlords to-day. ‘This is the first reply the landlords have made to the strike of their t ants. In all about sixty apartment | houses aro involved and these house | an average of twenty-four families each, a total of 1,440 families | 9, Hut L should want to be paid more for work so monotonous and du that had to do tt without thinking!" | 4 exclaimed. | That isn't the usual feeling,” he answered. “Thinking is work aud the | average man dechines to think unless | the situauion compels him to. If a Man desires Lo Increase Lis elliciency, however, ho must at all times be will: jug to think and plan, ‘the General Who enters a battle without having carefully thought out a plan of cam- paign iy pretty certain to meet de feat. A man Who builds a factory out having first carefully con- sidered the costs, the supply of labor 1 bis marketing proble ceed only by @ lucky a . kf. | fictency requires a mind alert, always | on the lokout for better ways of do- ing even small thin, “Habit may be a man's enemy or his friend. if a man desires to be what is called a ‘topnotcher’ in ef- ficiency be must make habit his ever faithful ally. Bad habita are the product of indolence. Most people do not like to think, and they do things offhand in what seems to them the| easiest way. Hence most of us go| j about handicapped by several ba habits, losing time and wasting erg: POISE “HE GREAT ADJUSTER OF Ti HUMAN MA° INE, | “Poise ts an exceedingly important | trait. 1t means perfection of balance, | the harmonious adjustment of all the | faculties. When & man lacks poise [he may get excited and blunder through hasty judgment, or he may lose his tomper and for hours nervously unfit in consequence, or in the presence of important customers |he may be embarrassed, all his facul- tiles momentarily going on strike, or |he may foolishly seek to conceal a mistake and save himself from blunder, or he may show his pique and disappointment {f another hap- | pens to credit for his good work. | “The man of perfect poise does | not worry about non nt | His concern is the work he has to do, Everyth genonauens “And, finally, no man lacks Mu- mility because he b he 1s des- tined to do things worth while tn this world, But if he wants his faith in imself to be vindicated by events he must be content to be himself and to d op to the utmost those facul- ties in which he sp ly excels, If he seeks to make himself ike so body else, lke some man whon happens to know and admir whose position in the world gards with envy, he will f. the most his own wers and will b rater, There will never be a second Napoleon or a second} nes J. Hill, — Personal efficiency demands that a man be himself and not seek to be like somebody joeeremeiaiiinecmeneas SMALL OMITTED $6,000 IN JEWELS FROM FIRE LIST Murder Trial Witness Says De-| fendant Told Him Gems Were in the Ruins. A seco} s OSSIPER, N. H., Dec. 30.--Although | carried to miaute details in other pects, the inventory of household prepared by Frederick L, all, Jon trial for the murder of his wife Mrs. Flore A, Small, and nf burning his homo to conceal evidence Jof the crime, did not mention a re- volver found in ruins or jewelry at $6,000 wa vis Edwin und insuranc vad previously when lefendant viewed t of his home the next morning “There is $8,000 worth of there. [shall not want, Anybody w finds it Dr Mas rank in I Me the ruins body of by he sald, m principa Conner an have John L. Bacon of Southbor told of an electrical device 1 by Small to illuminate it that p Ferren, hots of ar lock unk A proprietor at Small's visit to thought small saw fe in the collar 1 tracks on the which he had untainview, told He Ww mall beach in his A CHO eects ae ICE PIE! Apropos of the holiday turkey, Mrs. Benjamin Thaw has just paid $40,000 for o single carving, | the it | fourth Street, | fornia | married Miss Daisy Baker, known on How many of these in addition to the twenty-six are to be put out of their homes depends upon their will- ingness to meet the new rent rate. On Tuesday next, the first legal day for the collection of the January, 1917, rent, the landlords or agents of these apartments will 1 emand for ho fail with dis- to leave to pay posses their homes. ‘Tho landlords sald to-day that they were determined to obtain the ad- vanced rents if they had to turn every present tenant out of thelr houses, The rents now askod are from $19 a and forced | month for three rooms to $35 or $40 for six or seven rooms, This ts an advance from $1 to $2 per month for each apartment. WHITNEY SUGGESTS CITY OWNERSHIP OF ALL TRACTION LES Gradual Absorption Hinted at in Correspondence With Head o B. R. T. ‘The suggestion of muntetpal owner- ship and operation of all street ratl- roads !n the near future appears in @ statement issued to-day by Public Service Commissioner Travis H. Whitney relative to some correspon- dence which has passed between him and Col. T, T. Williams, President of the Brooklyn Rapid Transtt, This correspondence related to Com- missioner Whitney's insistence that central Brooklyn has not recetved the transit cilities it deserves under the dual system and that lower Ful- ton Street should be relieved of the reconstructed threo track elovated, ner Whitney intimates ity will, In time, begin the of all’ the street railway 4, ‘Transit experts are of the opinion that the rience of tho city with private operation of municl- pai lines has not been satisfactory Commissioner — Whitney's remarks along this line follows “The people of Brooklyn realize that this Fulton Str should t matter is not no ttled merely because Col, Williams has written a letter “For th sons set forth in part of the se orts on these mat- ters the of the way for the gradual at m by the city of the is basically the joment of this whole nade existing rail most Impo! situation, t should be thoroughly appre- elated that the changes that will be made in Brooklyn transportation by | the new dual system operation will) bring in their train other changes that cannot t this time. Various change pings will be necessary in the existing lines,”* JOHN MOLLER, 78, 70 WED WOMAN HALE HIS AGE atives of John Moller, seventy- | eight years old, who Inherited wealth from his father, Veter Moller, sugar refiner, wer. 4 eatly surprised to learn he had procured a marriage license to wed Miss Mary Train, thirty-nine, who they said was un known to them, “This publicity has upset our plana,” said Miss Train when seen in her modest flat at No, 80 West Ninety- for ep our marrlage ‘ Mr, Molder was marri¢ aid at the bureau ly meant to we real ret address as No, 44 Bast Se lives there former whi Street. He John jr champion, ) with Metropolitan golf 19 travelling In Cull in September, 1910, his son, jr the stage as Daisy Dumont Miss Train has lived at her present address about two years and ls known to shopkeopers in the neighborhood 4s a woman of independent means ton—Like an Egg, a { Copyright, 19: But the ink used in writing New Yea | Year blots are made of. The percen New Year irresolutions are just a of the New Year as water is to a Irresolution can't be enjoyed unless fet busted up worse than the Serbia: hang-nall, A New Yorker decides to turn o \aint any. Who ever saw a leaf in N their payment of the increased rent, Pensuff's, and finally goes to—pleces. Just as Necessary to the Complete Enjoyment of the New Year as Water Is toa Fish’s Complex- Be Enjoyed Unle. By Arthur (‘Bugs’) Baer. by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). The ink you use in writing is the same stuff you makes the blots with. shattered, stretched or otherwise contorted is about in Irresolution Can’t It Is Broken. r resotutions isn’t the liquid that New tage of ulcohol isn’t large cnough. # necessary to the complete enjoyment fish's complexion. Like an egg. @n it 1s broken first. And most of them nm army, An irresolution that can't be much fun as,@ ver a new leaf at a time when there ew York in January? Nobody. After caroming all over Central Park gas- ing for a new leaf he decides that the old one will do, caterpillar teeth marks and all. Or if he does g new leaf he turns it over twice. Then it Is on the same side that he started on, But most of the time he decides to make his irresolutions on Jan. the Two. This gives him 360 days to practice in. The most stylish way of starting the New Year right Is to end the old year wrong. The gent who feels that he is about to suffer from a pledge puts on his spare cbifar, gets. his money changed into nickels so that it sounds like more and ankles forth into the wide, wide world. He tosses up a coin to see whether he will go to Wrecker’s, Bustanybody’s or Ex« He acts like a married man on @ |furlough. After ho gets the window weights off of his eyelids in the morning he calls the roll of the killed, wound |very sick by a huge majority. Fro: evening before, his voice has change | walrus requesting a plece of fish. in quivering like an Hawaiian dancer. He isn't sure whether to swear off or | at. After several attempts to forge his own name he decides to tickle the hind leg of the mule that kicked him the night before and another pledge is only a scrap of paper. from breaking a resolution is to pre- vent yourself from making any. In about a week any pledge starts to curl up on the edges and look like the wreck of the Progressive Party. A New Year resolution is about as permanent as a moonbeam and just as unbreakable as the last will and testament of a millionaire who mar- ries a chicken just before they tack the silver handles onto him. A ‘resolution is unmade much easier than it is made. If you feel a convenient to maintain. The best way to prevent yourself ed and missing. He finds that he is m the clear, bell-like soprano of the ed to the dull, hoari He frisks his pockets for coin and discovers that the waiters beat him | to It. Grabbing the nearest pledge he tries to sign his name, but his hand pledge coming on, make one that it is If you like cigars, resolve never to climb the Alps. If you aro fond of an occasional bighball very occasionally swear oft swimming in the Dardanelles, If th je wife objects to you spending seven or eight nights out of each week at the club, promise her faithfully that you will never wear more than one hat at a time, tunted from the ears up. By using your head for something hat rack, you can make a million resolutions, keep them, and havi has bee! besides an enjoyable career also. ‘There are enough tough nights al ‘em more arduous with a flock of resolutions. resolution, make ‘em for some one els: Among the more prominent resolu- tions is one by the Kaiser and the King of England resolving not to cheat each other at pinochle during January, You can swear off by promising not to drink anything that you can't ft. — Resolve not to smoke any cigars bought by your wife. Justice Hughes has resolved never to accept the Presidency again until ho hag heard from California and Minnesota, A resolution that would be en- joyed by all would be to resolve never to resolve again, | It wouldn't be very inconventent to swear off wearing straw hats on the third Tuesday after the second Mon- | day in February. A very tough resolution to keep would be to swear off paying rent. Swearing off refusing to wait over- time for your wife on corners would bo a difficult assignment to keep be- so, firstly, there are too many corners, and, secondly, your wife would break your resolution, Wouldn't be a bad {dea to resolve never to fire the cook without getting her consent first. When the wife objects to your friends playing poker all night In the parlor, promise her to never draw more than four cards when trying for a straight flush. If you could swear off making omelettes without using any eggs you could save @ lot of money. The best way to keep @ resolution is to swear off doing something that you wouldn't do anyway, If the Republican party could get a promise from Teddy Roosevelt to refrain from helping them by making speeches, they might have a chance next election. at the If resolutions are positively neces- sary, why not make some that you have broken before? Busting a reso lution that Is used to it saves a lot of trouble and expense Free trial of Resinol for sick skins ‘and Resinol Soap for tw at of itching, burning drug for t 7r, Resinel, Baltiaiore, Don't act as if your growth lee ne, long the Atlantic coast without making If you have to make @ we Musical Headquarters HARPS $75 to $1,800 PIANOS $150 to $700 VIOL $5 to $500 VICTROLAS $15 to $350 VICTOR RECORDS 60c to $7.00 MANDOLINS #5 to $150 GUITARS 5 to 8175 BANJOS $5 to $90 Tindale Music Cabinets $12 to $85 Hawaiian Musical Instruments Music and Methods Largest stock in elty; demonstrated by talonted players, BESIDES ABOVE, INCLUDES ) OUR srock ACCORDIONS, BAND INSTRU- | 8, BUGL CLARINBTS, | 1 BTS, 'CBL. MONICAS, BOXE. STANDS, } ROLLS XYLOPHON AND MUSICAT. vELTIFS. AT PRICES TO SUIT ALL PURSES, Telephone Murray Hil 4144, Chas.H.Ditson & Co. 8-10-12 East 34th Street (AN tost oF found artic! Vertised in The World. wil Usted at The World formas tion Bureau, Pulltzer Building Arcade, ‘World's

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