Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, October 09, 1914, Page 7, Image 7

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    EVENING LEDGER PHIEADEEPHIA', FRIDAY, DCTOBEB ft, T013,
ME LED A DOUBLE
LIFE, RICH BROTHER
. OF BRIDE ASSERTS
John H. Hanan Declares
Misleading Letters Opened
Doors of Social Elect to
De Majo Durazzo.
NEW YORK, Oct. 9. Duke Arturo de
IftJo Durazzo, the Italian nohlcmnn,
tvhoso wife, formerly Miss Elizabeth
Frances llannn, Is seekltiK annulment of
the marrlase In this city last February,
led a "double life," according to John
U. Hanan, the rich shoe manufacturer
nnct brother of the Duchess.
"It Is more than I can believe," said
Mr Hannn jesteiday at his home, I0D7
Fifth avenue. "It sounds like Action.
But every Incident Is bitterly true.
"To me the biggest surpilso of all Is
that this man should have been able to
lead a double life In Europe and In New
Tork for several jears. When he courted
my sister he swore to me that his life
had been rlean.
"He brought letters from prominent
persons In Europe, who vouched for him.
He nas Introduced to me by nn Italian
nobleman whose name I shall withhold.
Then came the courtship of my sister,
who, mind you, was not really In love
with the Duke.
"This unprincipled man simply won
her by his perseverance. She refused him
three times. The fourth time he wopt,
fell on his knees, threatened to destroy
himself, and, noman-llko, she took him."
The Duke, found ycsteiday at 12 East
44th street, said the Hanan family's
atatcment did not tell evcr thine.
"For Instance," he said, "the Hanan
family offered me $23 a week for life.
But what Is 123 to mo! What I wanted
was a wire.
After the arrest of the Duke for par
ticipation In a street fight nl Monte Carlo
last May, while ho and the Duchess wore
on their wcililltiK trip, his brother-in-law
visited him In his 'cell. ' Mr. Hanan.
who was traveling with the bridal pair,
meanwhile had heard from the police
that three ears before the Duko had
been a cashier of a, hotel In Paris, had
disappeared with JCOO In money and some
Jewels and had been sentenced to three
years Ir prison.
'What did ou ever do this for?" Hanan
asked his ducal brother-in-law. "Why
did you He to mo before vou won mv
enormous buildings and monuments. Nev
ertheless, the ensemble Is pleailnff, for
there are plenty of gardens, which lend a
countrified air and a pretty lingo of green
to the city with Us gigantic stone build
ings. In temperament the Bordclals are
very like the southerners, more particu
larly the people of Marseilles. They are
a pocket edition of Tartarln de Tarascon,
Alphonse Daudct's braggart hero of
southern France. I.Ike their brothers of
Marseilles they must always bo In the
move, and, above nil, must be continually
boasting of their prowess,
Hlilorlrjilly speaking, Bordeaux Is n
very ancient town, the origin of which Is
unknown, It made Its nppearanre sudden
ly under the Romans, about 200 A. D ,
and was then already a large town. The
Romans completely demolished It and re
constructed It In Its actual proportions
about 400 A. P. Bordeaux wnfl several
tlmei undr English domination, and
traces of Its occupation are still to bo
found In a kind of colony which lies quite
close to the clt. This colony, which pro
duces an 'excellent wine, which 'Is well
known. Is still called "Ia Colonle
Anglnlse."
Bordeaux surrendered to England for
the last tlmo In 18H, when I,ouls XVIII
wart proclaimed King there. Onco before,
during the Frnnco-Oerman war of 1870-71,
the French Government was transretreu
to Bordeauv. where It remained until tho
derinlte signature of peace. With Its
enormous dimensions, Bordeaux certainly
seemrj specially ntted to cope with the
enormous activltv and busTlo which the
transfer of the French Government from
Parts will bring with It
MAGNATE'S $6700
DIAMOND WORN BY
MISS BILLIE ALLEN
John A. Hogland Declares
if That Means Engage
ment They're Not Ready
to Announce It.
PORTER CHARLTON
LOSES FAVOR WITH
PRISON GUARDS
Youth Accused of Murder
ing Middle-aged Wife
Punished for Trying to
Smuggle Letters to Rela
tives in America.
sister's hand'
How could you expect me to spoil
my future prospects?" was the Duke's
reply, according to Mr. Hanan.
Thus the wedding Journey was broken
up. Previously, Mr. Hanan says, tho
Duke bad treated his wife cruelly on the
yacht nnd she was glad to got rid of
him. She came to -New York with her
hi other. Mr. Hanan retained private de
tectives, who made some amazing dis
coveries about the life of the Duke.
First It is said, It was learned that
while Dmnnzo belonged to n noble fam
ily. It mis .1 "moth-eaten" one, which,
back In tho thirteenth century, had
amounted to something. The Duke's
father. It was reported to Mr. Hanan,
was an lmeterato gambler and died at a
gambling table.
MAN WHO LEARNED TRADE
IN PRISON NOW WEALTHY
Shoe Cobbler Becomes Manufacturer
Ten Years After Kelease.
A man who learned tho shoemaklng
trade In the shoe shop of the Jcfferson
vllle, o.. penitential y, Is today one of
the greatest manufacturers In the Middle
"West He owns two newspapers In Co
lumbus, O
His family lived on the bank of the
canal In Zancsvllle, O. Tho father was
a snoemaKer, wnen he worked nt It
Whon he died tho little home waa broken
up. Tho boy. then 12, was sent to rela
tives In tho Hoopole district, near Snen
cervllle, Intl.
The moat linportnnt resident of tho
neighborhood, n man ot 40. with a little
propei tv. and feared by his neighbors,
determined to marry one of the boy's
cousins. She refused him.
"That nlcht." said the man whn 110,1
to be Jailer at Spencorvllle. "a crowd of
men broko Into tho home. One man
seized this little girl. Bhe was only 11
years old. The boy fired a shot nt him."
No one was hurt, but he m i,i
and taken to Jail.
une iay he tore a rung out of tho
....i,, w..fk uimn in ins ueii, wnen me
Jailer came with his noon meal the boy
I felled him. opened the doors with hla
i keys and ran. He was caught before hn
had run a mile.
Then he war fndintp,! nnt nn .i, Ai
Elnal offense, but for attempting to break
Jail. The court sentenced him to three
J ears In Jeffeisonville.
ni. u , . ....
,,lrlr "" "iiu iniicea in me snoe shop.
This UnS In thO lldVS When llimnLli,,,
j by machinery was llrst ventured upon.
I Hn helned mako slinn w tii fl-.
r crude machine, and invpntnl imnmv.
menta for which, by the wny, ho has
eor had any recognltlon-and dimly
saw the possibilities of shoemaklng by
machine.
When ha was released by exnlratlon nr
l sentence, he tramped his way back to
ward homo. The State's $5 bill went to
ouy mm n cobbler's outfit, with which he
paid his way by mending shoes in
fanners' houses.
He reached Columbus. O., footsore
and coveied with dust. Ho cobbled the
shoes of a saloonkeeper for the privileges
I of the freo lunch. Then ha found work
at his trade.
Ten jears later ha was a wealthy man.
The prison shoe shop had taught him
how to make good. He owned one of the
largest shoe manufactories In the West.
His rivals found it hard work to keep
up with him. because ho continually In
vented improvements to tht shoemaklng
machinery he rented from the trust.
COMO, Italy, Oct. 9. Porter Chailton.
the young American wifo slaer, who
has been awaiting tilal hem for more
than u year, has got himself Into hot
water with the prison authorities, nnd has
been the cause of tho arrest of tho two
special guards assigned to watch over
him. They arc chnrged with tampering
with tht machinery of Justice
Charlton, who at llrst was somewhat
ot a pet with the prlsan authorities, has
boon deprived ot many privileges. For
merly he ws permitted to associate with
the more refined prisoners and was al
lowed to exercise freely nearly tho whole
day long in a prison yard, where ho
cultivated a garden plot.
Now he has only a half hour of ox
erclso and Is in solitary confinement.
The luxury of outside food hna also
been denied him. Formeily a Mrs. Ser-
ldlo, wlfo of nn Italian army captain
nn American woman whoso son by a first
marriage was a school chum of Charlton
sent tho young American a tray of deli
cacies frlm her own table every day. He
must now content himself with cabbage
soup and tho rest of the prison fare.
Charlton's offense, It Is said, is that
of having induced his guards to smuggle
letters to his father and to his lawyer,
Mr. Palmlero, of Now York. Tho guards
were suspected and watched and two of
Charlton's letters were seized. In them
he made- bitter comments on the prison
management.
Tho letters Indicated that his nerve
was giving way under tho strain of
awaiting trial. He was to be tried last
month, but tho war has so unsettled
affairs In Italy that his earliest chanco
of going before a Jury will come next
February.
Charlton Is convinced that the story he
will toll the Jury of tho peculiarities of
the mlddle-nged woman whom ho mnr
rlcd when he was M jears old, will con
vince the Jury that she had driven him
almost Insane. To tell his story direct
to the Jury hehas applied himself assidu
ously to tho study of Italian.
NEW VORK, Oct. 9.-U a 12-karat dia
mond ring, worth $6700, worn on the third
finger of a young woman's left hand
means anything, then it seems certain
that Miss Ulllle Allen, the dancer, nnd
John A. Hoaglnnd, tho baking powder
millionaire, nro going to be married soon.
"Hut the ring has never been officially
known ns nn "engngement ring," pro
tested Mr. Hoagland w hen he was seen
last night at hlj country homo In Inarch
month. "Miss Allen Is wearing It, Is she not?"
"Ves-s."
"And you gave It to her, did you not?"
"Yes-s-s."
"And a jear ago you gave her a $10,000
automobile, didn't you?"
"And you have given her n number of
other presents, haven't you?"
"Well a few others."
"And you have paid constant court to
her for more than a year, oh?"
"Perhnns. Hut you don't need em-
phnlzo the constant."
"Then you and Miss Allen are en
gaged?" "If wo are," returned Mr. Hoaglnnd, a
bit peeved, "we're not ready to announce
it yet."
"When are you going to be marrled7"
"Good night."
Whereupon Mr. Hoagland disappeared
behind his own fiont door. On a table
which stood on the veranda, however,
there were two hats visible hats which
had been bought nt a millinery, rather
than nt a clothing store.
Mr. Hongand first became attentive,
frlendt ty, when Mlsa Dillle was play
ing In "The Spring Maid." Flowers came
ilrst, dinners and parties next, nnd final
ly the nutomoblle.
AVIth these, friends say. there was a
giral deal of collateral pleading. Mr.
Hoagland wanted tho popular dancer to
do two things:
Take life lxmds In linking powder and
glvo up the stage.
She couldn't do both, so bIio did neither.
Then Mr. Hongland unnde overtures to
her fimllv. This helped some appar
ently. Last week the ffl'OO ring nppeaied.
Then last Tuesday Miss Allen left tho
Jnrdln de Dnnso, where she has been
appearing for months, letting It be known
that she was done with the stage for
ever. Where she was yesterday is a mys
tery. Ono Informant said she was In
Hot Springs; nnothor snid thnt she was
having dinner In Uirchmont.
Mr. Hoagland Is noted as an nrt con
nolseur, nnd for his sumptuous bachelor
apartments. Ho was married In 1!Ot to
M'ss Grace L, Weir, a choir singer. They
were divorced in 1910.
WAR DEPRIVES PRINCESS
OF CIVIL LIST PENSION
Augusta of Cambridge, Aged 93,
Loses English Annuity.
Princess Augusta, of Cambridge, was
rtiarrled In June, 1843. to the then Heredl
tary Grand Duke of Mecklcnburg-Strcllts
In the private chapel of Buckingham Pal
ace, In London. Sir Robert Peel proposed
a life grant of 3000 a year for her, which
was duly awarded.
The payment of the annuity by the
treasury has now been suspended In
consequenco of the proclamation prohibit
ing the payment of money lo any person
living In an alien country. Tho (Irani
Duchess Is now In her 93d year, and the
last quarterly payment was made on
July 6.
HALDANE VISITS WOUNDED
Former War Minister Interested In
Xong-rnnge Field Guns.
LONDON, Oct. 9.-Lord Haldane has
been visiting the wounded soldiers In the
London hospitals nnd listening to their
stories.
He oeemed chiefly Interested In the per
formances of a new long-range field gun
which ho Introduced Into the oorvlco
when he was Secretary of War. The ac
counts which he received of It seemed to
give him much satisfaction.
WILMINGTON READY
FOR CELEBRATION
OF "HOME WEEK"
City in Gala Attire and 1 0,
000 Visitors a Day Ex
pected by the Railroad and
Transportation Companies.
MOTHERS' PENSIONS LESSEN
CRIME, EXPERT DECLARES
Praises Legislation in Report of In
vestigation. CHICAGO, Oct. 9. Mothers' pension
legislation checks Juvenile delinquency
nnd operate to prevent crime, Prof.
Robert II. Gault, of Northwestern Uni
versity, editor of the JournnI of Criminal
Law and Crlmlnnlnrv. lodflv renorted to
the Municipal Crime Commission for
which he has conducted nn Investigation
for several months.
1 "Juvenile delinquency Is cheeked or n
tlrelv disappears where the family Is en
abled to support Itself without Its being
necessary for the mother to be away from
her children at work all day," reported
Professor Gaunt. "Mother lovn and
mother cgre are the best cure for Juvenile
delinquency nnd therefore a powerful pre
ventive of crime"
Professor Gnull based his conclusions
on a studv ot two groups of 100 families
each. One group had come under the
benefits of the mothers' pension act nnd
the other obtained sporadic relief from
the county poor agent
A tabulation of data In the families
benefiting from the mothers' pensions
showed that 97 per cent of the families
are getting along deeentlv on the pen
sions, that 3 per cent, are better off than
the were during the father's lifetime,
and that In 74 per cent the probation
olDcers have noticed Improvements. In 11
of the ICW famlll'S, there was delinquency
wnfn tha pensions were granted. There
is delinquency In eight families now, hut
the Investigation showed that In a major
ity of Instances this was due to the return
to the home of dependent children when
tho pensions were granted.
The other group of 100 families, se
lected from a similar neighborhood, with
tho afme economic status nnd with the
same number of children In each family,
but dependent upon the county agent for
Irregular relief, showed a much higher
percentage of delinquents, and home
conditions were generally lower, Profes
sor Gault reported
BOMBARDMENT OF BELFORT
TOOK WAR NEAR TO SWISS
Government Maintains Neutrality,
but Press Shows Sympathies.
A St Gall correspondent of the Vienna
Relohpost writes that the Swiss Govern
ment is using every means In Its power
to observe the strictest neutrality, offi
cially and through the press.
Ilut this neutrality on the part of the
papers Is manifested only In the German
parts of Switzerland The French press
Is openly for the French cause. in
Geneva the authorities have seized a
French pamphlet fiercely attacking the
German Kmperor.
The Swiss are being forcibly reminded
of their proximity to the seat of war
by the fact that In the regions to the
ensl the thunder of the siege guns at
Helfort could be distinctly heard at a
distance of 150 kilometers.
ALL INDIANA OBSERVES
FIRE PREVENTION DAY
Precaution b Being Taken in Accord
anee With Governor's Proclamation,
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct 9.-A1I Indiana,
In accordance with a proclamation Issued
by Governor Ralston, Is observing today
as Fire Prevention Day Different meth
od of observation nre being followed
throughout the State but they all take
up means of preventing fires.
In monv of the schools of the city patri
otic exercises will he held. The fire chief
and several prominent rltlrens are sched
uled to address the children on precau
tlnns that should he taken against fires.
The State fire marshal's office took a
prominent part In arranging the exer
cises throughout the city and different
towns In the state.
Two vears ngo, at the suggestion ot
the Indianapolis Trade Association, In
die nn citizens ilrst observed Fire Pre
vention Dav. Mnnv other States wer
flillck to take up the plan.
Governor Ralslon. In his proclamation,
urged the citizens to Inspect their fur
nnces and flues todav. This he said,
would be tho means of preventing many
blnes
Iowa Busy Cleaning Its Flues
DKS MOINBS, Oft. ! Today Is Fir
Prevention Dav In Iowa hv proclamation
of Governor George W Clarke All citi
zens are Inspec-ting their premises and
cleirlng away rubbish tn prevent Area
when stoves nnd furnares are started
with the coming of cold weather.
NEW GERMAN SIEGE GUNS
KAISER'S MILITARY SECRET
HISTORY OF BORDEAUX
CLOUDED WITH MYSTERY
Romans Demolished and Rebuilt
Town About 400 A. D.
Bordeaux, to which the French Gov
ernment has been transferred, is, with
earl 300.000 inhabitants, the first city
of France. It lies on tho Itlver Garonne
and has a famous commercial port. It Is
about 350 miles from Paris and is served
by two railway companies, the Midi and
the Orleans
It Is a beautiful city, very large, al
jnoat too large for the small number of
Inhabitants it contains. Jt has room for
twice or even three limes n mnu
Pie without in the least Inconveniencing
the population. Hordeaux is the countr?
f the good old wines of France. Tho
grateful warmth of the old brands of
Bordeaux may be said to dwell In tha
blood of the Inhabitants, who seem ever
striving to nil with nro und movement
their immense city without, however,
completely succeeding
Bordeaux greatly resembles Versailles,
and one might gay that the same spirit
presided over its construction. Its build
ers planned it on a large scale, and, as
In the case of Versailles, tn mithlH Tlo
This is the impression given to the vis
itor to Bordeaux when he- sees its pc-
ei, ju immense squares, lu
Effective Use at Liege Surprised
Army as Well as Foes.
BERLIN', Oct. 7.-A member of the
German Parliament, who for nearly ten
years has been connected with tho Armv
Budget Committee of tho Relchstng, tells
some Interesting things of the history of
the now-famous 42-centimetre siege guns
which served the Germans so effectively
at Uege and Nnmur.
"The surprise that Germany pos
sessed such mortars," he snys, in nn ar
ticle published by the Xeuo Zuercher
Zoltung, "was as great In Germany as
It was In other countries. After comple
tion of secret tests with these guns some
time ngo, and the decision of the Gov
ernment to order a number of them. It
was a problem as to how to keep the
matter a secret.
"Over 40 olllcers took part In the dis
cussions at which the military budget
wns prepared for submittal to the Bud
get Committee of tho Reichstag. When
a new clause was reached with only the
heading "Arms," the chief ot the De
partment of Arms requested that for
the time being this subject could not be
discussed At the conclusion of the con
ference he told me In strict confidence
that the title 'Arms' Involved new siege
mortnrs. The General Staff requested ur
gently that not a word be said of the
matter In the committee, not even the
olllcers present had any knowledge of It
"Six wenks ago I vlsted the ammunition
factory as a member of the armament
commission and ascertained that any
number of projectiles and cases for these
mortars could bo produced within a very
short time. In roply to my question
whether these mortars did not wear out
rapidly, a director of the company said
'There are not enough fortresses in ex
istence in the whole world to wear out
a slnglo mortnr.' As a matter of fact
our array possesses snoo mortars of an
earlier date, which are still usable."
The official North German Gazette
also discusses these new mortars with
special reference to their projectiles. It
sajs. "ff a weapon of the German army
has a claim to popularity it is the 43
centimetre mortnrs which in spite of thetr
huge dimensions rime managed to re
main concealed In fact, the nick-name
"Drummer" which has been given to
thi-se mortars shows how far this popu
larity has progressed One cannot be
astonished that a shot which hurls with
accuracy a weight or eight hundred
weight over a space of a German mile
to Its goal causes an atmospheric pres
sure wmen for miles around hurls eiery
thlng Into the air. Reports have shown
that the projectile, after it has left the
mortar, causes a great noise only by cut
ting through the air."
USING OUR COAL AT RATE
TO EXHAUST IT IN 250 YEARS
Dr. li. C. Jones Gives Interesting
Facts About Origin of Deposits.
Coal has given to the world several
hundred thousand compounds, most of
which nre or great value. For coal con
tains carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen,
sulphur, phosphorus nnd the halogens
It sometimes even contains gold and
radium.
Among the materials mentioned ht- nr
Louis Cleveland Jones, In an address be
foie the Franklin Institute ns obtained
from coal are acid bases, alkaloids, gums,
varnishes, solvents, sugars, saccharine,
stuffs as bitter ns sacch.tilne Is sweet,
disinfectants, dyestuffs of biilllant hues,
stimulating nnd sleep-producing drugs)
healing medicines and violent poisons, vile
odors and pleasing perfumes.
. uiu, ui-L-muiiiK 10 uocior Jones, was
formed by the vast forests of giant trees
than luxuriated upon the earth when It's
ntmosphern wns full of steam and con
tained from 2 to 5 per cent, or carbonic
acid gas, against the 0 0.1 or 1 per cent, it
contains now.
The total coal deposits of the world
nro iiuoui ro.wu Diiuon tons, it took In
formation about 11.000 billion inn, e
carbon from the nlr, leaving us only
about 700 billion tons, or but 6 per cent,
of tho original total. "In other words."
said Dr. Jones, "no more coal could havo
been deposited because the raw material
wns practically used up."
If a time shall arrive when tho mi
nutest amount more of carbon dioxide
will bo absorbed from tho air by the
iicvuiuiHismuii ui granite, ror instance
not enough will be left to sustain plant
lire, and the earth will becomo a dead
world.
There nro about 7400 billion tons of
mlnable coal In the world. If tho pres
ent Increasing rate of consumption keeps
up, this will be exhausted In 250 yencs.
But long beforo that time its prlco will
have becomo prohibitive.
Kach different kind of coal peat, lig
nite, semi-bltumlnous, bituminous, gas
coal, smokeless coal, semi-anthracite,
nnthraclte. graphite, diamond represents
only "a different step In nature's slow
process of converting tho vegetation of
tho carboniferous eia into the fuels so
necessary to our modern civilisation."
The earth's crust is a vast retort nnd
In Its work of carbonizing vegetation It
saves us the by products in the form of
asphalt, bitumen, petroleum nnd natural
gas.
WILMINGTON'. Del., Oct. 9. With the
exception of the route for the parade
every arrangements has been completed
for Old Home Week, and the biggest
celebration In the history of Wilmington
Is expected to move without a hitch of
any kind. Ten thousand visitors a day
Is tho estimate ot those In charge, and
tho railroads and transportation com
panies havo provided additional traveling
facilities.
Mayor Howell and the committee ex
pect to entertain a number of guests,
Including tho imayors of cities who havo
been Invited, tho edltois of newspapers
In Philadelphia and from the peninsula
nnd other nearby towns. Flvo hundred
private Invitations have "been sent out,
nnd those who accept will be the special
guests of the city.
Wilmington Is handsomely decorated
and the thousands of additional lights
which have been placed In position on
Market street will bo turned on on Sat
urday night for the purpose of giving
tho people nn opportunity to see the ef
fect of the Illumination. After that time
they will be lighted every night until the
celebration Is over. Every building on
Market street carries bunting and the
decorations extend to streets adjacent as
well as the main thoroughfare. Market
street has been made to resemble a huge
court of honor.
In order that tho public may be ablo
to see the river carnival on the last night
of the celebatlon. most of the manufac
turing plants and transportation com
panies along the river have promised to
open their yards to visitors.
CHINESE GROW NARCISSUS
Exports Last Year to United States
Amounted to S70,658.
Tho Chinese nie growers of narcissus.
For several years one Arm at Amoy has
been tho principal shipper. Iast year ex
ports to the United States amounted to
t70,85S. Onco each year during July one
of the large Pacific mall steamers calls at
Amoy for a big shipment of narcissus
bulbs to the United States direct. Several
months ago It was anticipated that the
narcissus harvest this year would be a
record ono. but climatic and other adverse
conditions have done much to damage
the bulbs and reduce the quantity, and
prices have greatly advanced. It is also
said that tho local bujors refuse to meet
tho high prices demanded by the growers,
which has caused dispute and may result
in shipments being held up.
The matter ot quality also causes dis
putes. In J912 regular bulbs were worth
$9 10 (Mexican) n thousand. (Mexican
silver dollars In Far East has fluctuating
value, nnd on July 1. 1014, was worth
about .4W United States currency ) The
price Increased to JU CO (Mexican) In 191X
and this year bulbs are quoted at $14.45
(Mexican) a thousand These prices
do not Include tho high transportation
charges from the Interior to Amoy,
uFTEL DENNIS
ATLANTIC CITT N.J.
IN AUTUMN
rrovldei a charm of comfort and tan
mld charactertitla enuronmtnt that
haa eatab lihed It as an Ideal aeathor
born Directly on tha ocean front.
Capacity 600,
Walter J. nuzny.
Bailey Banks
BlDDLE (3D.
Sterling
Silver
"KITCHENER'S NIGHT UGHTS"
UWDON, Oct . The mounting of
searchlights In various parts of London
proceeds steadily, Kitchener s night
lishts" is what the street corner humor
ists call them.
October Weddings
The Importance of this
Collection of complete
Services-Dinner, Tea,
Dessert and Flat Table
Silver-is recognized
through the world for
correctness of design
and workmanship.
Chestnut Street
Store Opens 8:30 A. M.
WANAMAKEITS
Store Closes 5:30 P. M.
in ii.niHjiiHiMPiwjh.i n in w ""-.'
fflnmnififiis;:;-::"A 7 " ..iumfrtiUlM
j-mJi innnjll P-'V
P.
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The Grand Organ Plays Tomorrow at 9, 11 and 5:15
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WANAMAKER
A sfoapmeniit off fire bellows some handsomely
came nn from Eosrland as these stems were
now
(Subway Floor, Central)
We were lucky to get the bulbs from
Here tor fall planting:.
(Subway Floor, Central)
Extra-sized fflannej nightgowns, $1 and $1.50, show
consideration.
(Third Floor, Central)
saccitnies are fa earned onnn
two tables; being samples, they go for a dollar.
(Third Floor, Central)
New dog furnishings, just from England, incligde
dog coat with tiny silk handkerchief in a side pocket.
(Subicay Floor, Central)
a
g new
The Glove section prides its
Reynier gloves from France at the old prices.
(Main Floor, Central)
The new spangled Lierre laces, just from thQ other
side, and high style for evening wear, are $2.75 to $5,75
a yard.
(Main Floor, Grand Court)
There's ideal! foot comfort in the camel's hair slippers
all hand turned; the men's are $11.25; the women's, $U, '
(Shoe Section, Main Floor, Market)
The new Wanamaker,oft hat, the Alpenstock.
seems to hit the young man's fancy.
(Main Floor, Market)
Piuisfaless hangers, for hanging pictures and sq on
save hammer hunting and unseemly remarks' ff cents
a package.
(Subway Gallery, Juniper)
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