The evening world. Newspaper, May 16, 1921, Page 15

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educated in England, 60 that the en- tire family spoke perfect En ish. An- other Occidental touch was | 8 seven antomobfies of European and Ameti- |can manufacture. | * .e — . If the procession of vehicles that roll up to the doors of five New York hotels in the course of a year could be made one continuous stream, ft would reach from the Grand Central Station to San-Francisco, and thence north of Seattle, The number of vehicles met by uniformed attendants ts 781,000 and 834,200 cabs are called tn BURGLAR WOUNDS STUDENT M. 1 T. Man Grapples With Im- truder and Is Shot Twice. wear to dinner, to breakfast and to| Yunch, and was vastly appreciative when he was assured that some flow- ers would be on the table when his bride entered the suite. After all| the details had been noted, and some ¢f them written down, he made his reservation and took the next train back to Philadelphia. “And there is one man,” said Mr. Hubbell, "who will make a good hus- band. He looks before he leaps. . ee GEORGE WHITE TELLS ONE. The Hotel Open Season for} June Brides Is Almost Here | { and the Managers Are Pre-| | paring for the Annual Visita-| tion — “Gen. Coxey” Is Planning Another Advance \ on ‘Washington, Only This | Time It Will Be by Motor “New York ts still swinging,” CAMBRIDGE, Miss. May 16.—John j S .| @aid George White, Democratic |p. King of Washington, D. C., @ student j Car, Aeroplane and Subma-| $igocu°Ghainwrarwno nas come 6 of Tech- wounded early to-day rglar, He sald he was rine, | to the Waldorf from Marietta, 0., on business. Mr, White smiled and explained: ow His wounds, in the shoulder and thigh, are not considered eecious, His assail- bob eee Garrett Barry, twenty-nine, Court yesterday until to-morrow, EP MISS JENNINGS MARRIES. mit investigation of his record. Here In First Wedding tn 014 Bems| arrested on complad singtom Charch Since War. = | awindie involving the \Uckets for a fictitious bene! OLD BENNINGTON, Vt, May 16.| Prevention Bureau in i —Wor the first time since the war, the oldest church here was opened| for a wedding yesterday when Miss| iizabeth T. Jennings, daughter o. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Jennings of Old Bennington and New York, was | married to Karl Hamlen Martin of Bennington. The Rev. Vincent Ravi- Booth, pastor of the church, officiated. The bride was attended by Mrs. ‘Edward Stevens of New York, a pureh Mary C. Murtha, twenty-five, ing from lacerations of the arm caused, the police my, by in the hands of her brother, Station arrested the man on a of felonious asset. ‘The honeymooners’ paradise—New York! | In @ fortnight June will be here,| and with June, brides and, incident- ally, bridegrooms. It is well known) that every newly married couple living within striking distance of this| city comes here for a week at least. | ‘The hotels count on the June rush} with the same certainty as the holi-| day crowds or the Easter throng of visitors. | Already the larger hotels have re-| ceived letters py the score, beginning: “We will be married in June and) plan to come to New York.” ‘The, prospective husbands plan carefully. They ask the hotel men for rates, in-| marching. He admits it himself. He formation about the department! is at the Hotel McAlpin in the in- stores; they want to know if Coney| terest of his pot scheme, the national linittative and referendum, after a| Island will be open, where the aquar. trio'to Washington. He declares that | jum is, if they can easily visit a rela~|tne new Administration is just like| tuve on Long Island and if the hotels| the old, except in name, and that he will send a list of the best shows in, |s going back to Pittstown, O., to plan} town a new invasion of Washington. | y “Wo won't march this time,” he as-| Roy Hubbell, manager of the Com- | gertod, “but will go by motorcars, air-| modore, has received a letter asking: | planes and submarines. We'll have ‘ls New York's main street of as| to wake ‘em up d | great interest as I have heard?” And| wives another which asked if “a wedding, Mrs, ©. B. Keeler, who Is at the couple would be able to purchase a Hote] Astor, tells of an interesting bottle of champagne.” visit which’ she made during her | One bridegroom-to-be, moreover, is three years’ trip in the Far East. — | taking no chances. Ho came to the| “In Rangoon, Burma,” she declares, Commodore from Philadelphia (Phila-|“I was entertained at the palace of deiphia papers please copy), asked | Lem Chung Sung, one of the wealth- for the manager, and then requested |‘est men of that district, who owns “Toward the end of the last campaign reporters pined me down to definite predictions regarding | the States. After a few days they | saw that I didn’t claim New York; they asked me if I conceded tt “‘No,' I caustiously told then, | "| New York is swinging to Cox.’ was ‘swinging,’ until finally a re- porter said: “The State has been | swinging so hard in your head quarters here that we're won | ing where it will land if it ever | | breaks loose.’ When it finally did land, the reporter tried to get me to admit that New York had stopped #winging. But I've never done it. I've left it swinging,” he concluded with 4 grin. Gen. Coxey has finally stopped Mr. Hubbell to show him a suite. He}many ships which go out from looke dit over carefully, and then| Shanghai. His home was five stories said: higb and stood on ground that has a “I'm not much of a traveller. I've view on all sides, overlooking. thic never been t: these big hotels, and 1. Himalayas, for more than twenty want to make sure of myself. I'm miles. I understand that because coming here in June, and I want to know how to act, so that my brand- new wife will be impressed. Will you ‘ake me down to the entrance and show me everything I'll have to do.” He then received complete instruc- tions, from dismissing the taxi at the door, registering and giving his luggage to the bellhop, to getting his key and sending the bellhop away of the isolated situation it took the workmen five years to construct it “In the main entrance was a mar- vellous altar to Buddna, which cost at least $50,000, and throughout the grounds were forms of Chinese war- riors, covered with growing flowers. The dining room was eighty feet jong and the dishes from which we ate were of gold, silver and rare porcelins with a smile. He found out what to ————===BROOKLYN accel" | OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & C FULTON STREET—BROOKLYN Special Purchase and Sale 500 Charming Hand-Made Blouses Extraordinary Value 2.95 An unusually appealing collection of French Voile and Batiste Blouses, hand embroidered and hand drawn. Chic square and V-neck models. “Mr. Sung’s daughters have Eng- “And if you want fine, crisp toast,” said “Qoé Fata “Try GRANDMOTHER’S BREAD tomorrow for breakfast.” T takes a good piece of bread to make good toast. A slice that d is full of air holes will break up and crumble.—GRAND- MOTHER’S BREAD—tested to be perfect—is always firm and even textured and makes the best kind of toast. Sweet and clean and so nutritious, too—it’s a good breakfast with coffee, tea or milk. That's GRANDMOTHER'S BREAD.—Every loaf is made by my expert bakers, of the finest tested wheat; each ingredient is the best I can get. GRANDMOTHER’S BREAD is baked in the big white tiled A & P bakery, wrapped in waxed paper and delivered regularly to the A & P stores in and around New York. 250,000 housewives buy it. I know THE LARGEST RETAIL GROCERS 4654 STORES IN THE U Grandmothers Bread THE GREAT ATLANTIC & & Lowest prices are only one good reason for shopping in A & P stores. If the quality of the food products that are sold in the stores was not equal to the best the price would be no inducement, GRANDMOTHER'S BREAD is one example of the high quality product found only in A & P Stores, PACIFIC TEA CO. IN THE WORLD oO A, forty-eight, of the same address, trolman Weldig of the West 162d Street _ THE EVENTNG WORLD, MONDAY, MAY Ye, Hl Hsh governesses and his eons were awakened by « noise in the adjoining| tor, and Mra, Leonard Outhwaite of jom of his brother, Gilbe ing, 81 Old Bennington, a _ sister-in-law. Harvard student, with whom he roomed|jrarold H. Burtch of New York wi in Drayton Hall, and encountered the the best intruder, ‘They grappled and King was —— ‘ot twice HELD IN CONNKOTION WITH SALE OF BENEFIT TICKETS. No. 1gth Avenue, Brooklyn, was held on a | vagrancy charge in the Flatbush Police 4104 to per- He was int of victims of a ase of it of the Fire lyn, Woman Siashed With Razor. of No, 641 Went 144th Street, was taken to Columbus Hospital this morning suffer- ide and ‘@ razor Philip, Mm charge Teel Without Plates To-Wic iT ‘ * onic 4 y Y, ) Tamorrow ; . § 1 Seve Decayed Teeth, Tighten YY Ad hk: gia Test Trect Diseased Gums & right = ‘ (] bY 1 BILIOUSNESS—SICK HEADACHE, { bE cin tor on BR Tablet, (a vecetedis ’ Serlont) to. tone ena t 4 the organs of digestion i ? ation, Improves ite, Rell 1 £ natin Hemennee OeraslY Skin trouble needs imme- | 1 1 a diate attention. Buys g jar of Resinoi Ointment to- P R LOO, - day and use it regularly. i 3 OMIOKS t ‘A fow days of such peruist- i va ie ent treatment usually Ph ed alia | analtent takings aumeee tas (octeates Ay. ene: Sth Shc away the inflammation and Cae teed ree ‘gare 1 toreneas, and helps the ekin ranean ttt | vem — Cowperthwait & Sons en 4 3rd Avenue & 121st Street Park Row & Chatham Sq. || 2212-2224 Third Avenue 193-205 Park Row A | Her Pride Start out now with the home your friends will admire. the prettiest, happiest spot on earth! It’s easy to give yourself all the furniture you want by opening a charge account at Cowperthwait's. ‘Then have all the fun of living with your new things and using them while paying for them in small amounts each week or month, We have helped many thousands of brides to have a home they can be proud of in our 114 years of business, [isfrilias 4 Suite, Reduced from $237.50 Payable $2.25 Weekly This pretty suite in Walnut Furnish it tastefully, make it Harlem Store Open Monday Evenings Both Stores Open Saturday Evenings $178 Only for This 4-Piece or Mahogany. Dresser and Toilet ‘Table with large mirrors; roomy Chifforobes full size bed. As a 3-Pe. Suite with- out Toilet Table... . $136 Great variety of Bedroom Suites in all woods and fin- hes and at a wide range of prices. No Bride Is Happy Without a Mahogany Martha Wash- ington Sewing ‘Table, A 10-Pc. Walnut Queen Anne Suite for $340 Regular Price $450, Payable $4 Weekly You entertain in your dining room—wouldn’t you be proud of it dressed up with this suite? Buffet with mirror back; Server, China Closet, Table extends to 6 feet; 5 chairs and Arm Chair, upholstered in genuiue leather. Many Designs to Suit Your Taste. where she has “a place for everything with everything in its place.” Special Price $26.50 All Sorts of Useful Wedding Gifte Many Prices to Suit Your Purse, Rugs and Carpets All in Perfect Condition now $2.25 $4.75 The Perfect Wedding Gift A Reliable Phonograph Pay $1 a Week Handsome $85 30460, $6.00' Now Start Housekeeping Kugs, Do Lure Cre Sects (naily $1750, Now GOT With Alumtagm ringhone Crex Kugn, 54% ‘ eriiuually bidae. Now PLO.90 | This 9-piece Aluminum Sel irmiy une Felt Kag B all the pieces you use every wtroleds Usually $107 vow $11.50 day. Value $12.90. $7 95 fitted Axminster Hugs, 7.629, Now.. ts eeerecces e vow $37.50 compartm for § books Usually $45.00. Axminster Rugs, 832100. $57,50|Warm Weather Refrigerators er Mame, 928 Sw $60.75 | Heavy oak con- 18x12 struction, 48 ins records. ; japeeeaas $69.00 high—-2 shelves. tor. our sd Uesaly $225) New 91-65 | coecial price, oustomera, Linoleam, & ¥ 4. $1 35 All 10-in, Columbia Deine 91:8? ater ; 26 75 Kog Border, 36 In, @ yd. 85 le Records Except Symphony Usaally $1.06. Now # Selections Reduced to 85c Large Rugs Shown on Many others in Swinging Racks white. Cowperthwait’s Liberal Credit Terms Zhe weekly on worth TBe weekly oo 1.50 weekly on 82.50 weekly on $12.50 weekly on Other Amounts in Proportion. Pay by the month f you wish No Extra Charkes of Any Kind, 10% Off for Cash Cowperthwait & Sons “Oldest Furniture House in America” 3rd Ave. and 121st St. 221 4 Third Avenue Downtown Store: 193-205 Park Row Between City Hall ‘‘Sub" Station and Chatham Sq. “'L" Station = i resume its patural healthy OUR \25TH BT. AND 34TH BT resume i OFFices WILL BE OPEN ON BUN DAYS UNTIL | P.M. AND ON TUERDAYS. THURSDAYS UNTIL 7 Hours 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Daily At al! drogeiste, Resinol SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERE i 2 eee

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