Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 01, 1916, Night Extra, Page 3, Image 3

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    'IIEHE WE R! HERE WE Rf
.flmnnfl ,r nr.mm1
TO THE TIN SEPTEMBER
Letter That Ends Month Opens
Season for Toothsome Bivalve.
Corpulent Specimens
Promised
NO INCREASE IN PRICES
Here we R.
Mr. 0. T. Ster nnd his entire family de
ettted today to pay us his annual visit, In
keeping with his usual custbm, on Septem
ber 1.
He heard about the threatened railroad
atrlko and the mutterlngs of those con
eerned, but decided that he would not let
It Interfere with his desire to gladden the
'palates of his friends, who have been wait
ing pAtlently during the hot, dry days of
nummer.
And so after sunrise, when the oyster
boats glided swiftly from their moorings In
Maurice nlver, all Jib veteran oysters and
the little oystereltcs, too, threw aside the
. ''.,
blankets of tholr beds, washed their faces.
and greeted the dredges of the fishermen
happily. Thus the oyster Is n martyr.
He went to Ill's doom with a smile on, his
face. He wilt be king of the food situation
for some time to come nnd make the cow,
the sheep and the pig, whose wares Ii.ivo
been commanding big prices, take a back
seat.
No one ever maligns an oyster, because It
would bo unwarranted, yet many charges
are made against the clam,
The very contour of tho oyster shows him
to be a suporlpr bivalve. 'This Is proved by
the fact that pearls aro often found under
his unassuming shell.
But the clam is different. His shell Is
curving and somewhat "symmetrical, but
when ho Is opened -why well, ho Isn't to
compare with the oyster, who can look you
In tho eye .without flinching. Tho clam Is
pessimistic and deceiving. Hence. the popu
larity of the oyster. Even tho fish like blip,
Today many called to bid him adieu when
he left his rocky bcd.
Despite the fact that thousands of per
rons aro waiting anxiously to extend tho
glad hand to all members of the oyster
family, the railroads have placed an" em
bargo on them.
But thin Is not worrying the oyster In the
slightest. After he and his followers were
barreled (not In the Usual way) they were
tsviMrtfG mvm$ii-vmi&mvpm&, Friday, sEPTEkim it ioie.
placed aboard a string 'of swift sailing
schooners and Sailed to Philadelphia.
Therefore, the first official oyster of the
1916-1917 season wilt not pobo for exter
mination until Monday, as the Journey here
will be rather, slow. Although1, the oys
ter has been taking It easy all winter, he
has been keeping tabs on the times. He
will blossom forth In many new styles. He
wont always be stewed, or fried, or roasted.
Ho la gqlng to "butt Into" a lot of new
dishes if the chefs are any criterion. He
win be there with rufllea and rosettes, and.
you will find him bobbing up In feasts and
festivals In forms that, you never dreamed
of.
Ah, yes, the oyster has been misunder
stood. Dealers who have been making an
Investigation say there will be a good sup.
ply : furthermore, that they will be of
good quality and mostly corpulent. It la
expected that several million will bo mob.
Hired along Maurice niver by midnight.
"Some dealers hoped to gather enough to
2? B.v.crrarts
m ,, I(W I Wfoc Tooi
: vCr o iH
ship by train from Bivalve, N J., tonight
before the railroad embargo goes Into ef
fect, but there Is little .chance of success on
account of the time required In getting them
,rom the stream,
Matthew J. Byan, a dealer, of Front and
Dock streets, said today the tint of the new
Reason oysters would reach here on Mon
day. He predicted that prices would be
about normal. ,
"I really think," he-said "that oysters are
scheduled for a very successful season. It
It possible that housekeepers wjll turn to
them more than ever-before on account of
the high price, of beef and other foods. The
fact that th oyster has been Indorsed as a
healthy artlclo. of- food by medical authori
ties leads, me to believe that this will alsov
help in making the oyster popular with the
publlo generally." .
It waa noticed tha,t In soma of the popu.
lar-prlced restaurants that the price of stewa
apd frles -was Increased slightly, but the
dealers eaythla was necessary on account.
of the Increased cost of other accessories
concerned In the cooking of the oyster."
r
CANDY
"
Spe
ecials for' Friday
and Saturday
Me Che. Cowed Fit Bars tSe lb,
M ChoeeUta Chip) s lb.
,Wr ChocoUto CsrotUU S9e lb.
35 ChUto Covered Peanut Bultr
DlUtt
itt'Drun Fill) tie lb,
4 Ch. MaHhiasUow Itf ...... S9 lb.
0 butar-Coatti Caramel Ull e lb.
Kiddie Kandiet
Slick Candr Me lb.
belt S'Ur Jtk Me W.
THREE MORE CHILDREN
DIE MOM RAVAGES OF
INFANTILE PARALYSIS
Heavy Fines Levied on Quaran
tine Breakers Promote Co
operation of Parents With
Health Bureau
SERUil TESTS UNDER WAY
Paralysis Statistics
Reported Since Midnight
Number of denths today, . . . . . 8
Number of now cases todny. . , 2
Total number of deaths to date 160
Total number of cases to date. 509
Three children, all living In tho northern
part of the city, succumbed today to In
fantile paralysis, This brings the total of
deaths here up to the present time to 160,
Those -who died today arel
ANNA dAlSSn, ono year old, 779 North
Twenty-seventh street.
ETHED rtEA. nine months old, 28S1
North Swanson street.
DONALD FltEED, seven years old, 4428
North Huber street.
The heavy fines levied by the health au
thorities on th09e who Ignored tho law
and brought children suffering from the
disease out of tho city has had good effect
upon the people generally.
Everywhere how there Is a marked spirit
of T;o-operatloil nnd parents havo been made
td realize that the precaution taken by the
Health Bureau Is for the protection of the
children and resldonts of tho entlro city,
Only two new cases were reported to
day. They nre:
QEOROE! V. TOMLINSON, i years old, 4
Bern road. Fox Chase.
CHARLES DEKISSO, 1 year old, of 108
Stanton street.
Theso make a total of 509 cases up to
tho present time. '
Tho serum for Immunity from Infan
tile paralysis Is vvorklng well In two cases
at the Philadelphia Hospital for Contagious
Diseases, according to Dr. Theodore Lo
Boutllller, who administered It.
It Is arresting tho disease, he said. Doo
tor Le Boutllller went Into western Penn
sylvania yesterday to administer tho serum
to a daughter of a physician, Tho case
had been consldorctt almost hopeless, but
the scrum seems to havo worked wonders.
Now It Is almost certain the child will re
cover. Another child who received the serum
died within 12 hours,. This has been tho
only case, however, where tho treatment
failed of good response. In all these cases'
It was administered "Wednesday: several
other patients wero treated with It yes
terday. Dr. A. A. Cairns, chief medical Inspector,
Is wroth at Now Jersey health officials and
said their certificates don't seem to be
worth tho paper thcy'ro written on. He
mado this comment after the prosecution
and fining of two parents who brought sick
children hero from seashoro resorts. The
fathers wero fined $100.
Dr. Milton II. Foster, of the United States
Health Service. Is In tho city to confer
with Doctor Krusen about tho Infantile
paralysis situation. He will probably open
offices hero and stay bb long as tho disease
Is serious. Doctor Cairns Isn't at nil hope
ful that tho epidemic Will spend ltsolt be
fore the end of this month. Ho expects to
see the disease brought-home by returning
vacationists In much the same manner as
they bring typhoid home every yenr.
The Camden City Council mado an ap
propriation of JB000 to meet emergency ex
penses caused by the fight against lnfant:io
parnlysls. Raymond S. Crowley, 14 months
old, son of Mrs. Minnie W. Crowley, n
widow of 140 South Thirty-fourth street,
Camden, and Harold Qrlgg, Jr., S years
old. of Blrdwood tract. Haddontleld. N. J
died of Infantile paralysis. Both children
wero taken 111 on Wednesday,
The four Instances of children brought
Into the State whilo suffering from Infan
tile paralysis are , being Investigated by
Doctor Calms.
Eight more children will go today from
the Hospital for Contagious Diseases to the
country branch of the Children's Hospital
at Wynnefleld, where there are already 32
convalescents.
For the first; time since the beginning of
tho Infantile paralysis outbreak Lower Mer
lon township Is suffering an Invasion of
the disease, with one case at Bryn Mawr,
reported Wednesday night, and a second
case at Ardmore, reported yesterday morn
ing. The Ardmore case Is Alice, the 14-months-old
daughter of Tony Rossi, of Lancaster
avenue, near Holland avenue. The father
is a shoemaker.
SKINNY SOMEBODY HIT BY TACK
Just for That the Police Have Begun a
Crusade Against .the Blow-Pipe
Polios of the Sixty-fifth street and Wood
land avenue station began a little vice
crusade of their own today,' Th? vice Is the
blow-pipe being used by the small boys In
the district. Mothers have complained
about It
The blow-pipe is a small and seemingly
Inoffensive weapon that make's Its apprar
ance, of course, at "blow-pipe time," which
comes annually between "roller-skate time"
and "top-and-marble time."
This season the blow-pipe had become a
menace. Usually only small wads of paper
or pieces of putty are blown through It,
but now,' the police say, the boys have come
to use extraneous rnatter, so t speak. The
present crusade was decided upon when
this happened yesterday;
Skinny Somebody or other was walking
by a doorway near Fifty-fifth street, and
Chester avenue. He heard a sputtering puff
in the doorway and as he turned a piece 'of
putty from a blow-pipe hit him In the head.
It stuck there. Skinny pulled It down.
Ouch! A tack in it) A tack I
Civil "War Veteran Dead
Samuel McLaughlin, 78 years old. who
died ata South Jersey, seashore resort on
Tuesday night,' will be burled today In
Evergreen Cemetery, Camden, He waa
well known to all the old residents of
South Camden and for more than 60
years earned a comfortable livelihood as a
trapper- He was a Civil War veteran.
REEDBIRD SEASON IS OPEN
a i. . i.t .iz.n
i vpfriMFfTmr Vtnh& rHH t-i. 'i rd At !i wifmtiaiiWiu It'll ..J 'ffl meMwr ' f lM -I
HORRORS! 'WHAT IS I1T
SETS PA0LI A-SHlBRfljG
WITH FER0TJ0US LOOKS
Beast Terrorizing Community
Not Like Anything Classified
by Linnaeus, Agassiz or
Colonel Roosevelt x
IT'S AWFUL! READ AND SEE
raffammam
September, which restores tho R to tho calendar nnd tho oyster to tho
menu, brings with it tho open season for reedbirds. Daylight today
waa saluted by local gunners deployed along the marshy regions of
extreme South Philadelphia and in adjacent haunts of the "reedy."
This sportsman was snapped in the Rancocas marshland.
QUEST OF REED BIRDS
BEGUN AT DAYBREAK
Crack of Shotguns Resounds
Over Marshes as Season Opens.
Many Bags Filled
The crack of shotguns resounded over the
marshes early today. Mr. Rccdblrd knew
that tho enemy wns after him ; also that It
was September 1.
There wero no end of "rcedica" In tho
neighborhood of Ksslngton, Crum Lynne
and Marcus Hook. They sailed along two
by two and occasionally formed platoons
when they saw ominous-looking gun barrels
pointed skyward. Lots of them no doubt
had to dodgo many bullets on their way
from other neighborhoods, and Instinct told
them Hint tho gun was their worst enemy.
Trolley cars bound In a southerly direc
tion were crowded with hunters at sunrise.
Many of them went for the pure sport of
tho shooting; others had an eye to business
and expect to get fat prices for thin birds
from the local cafes and hotels. '
In Jersey, especially along Rancocas
Creole, two Bcore of hunters were on the
marshes at dawn. The birds flew rather
low, nnd most of the sharpshooters gathered
a good bag In short order.
Somo of tho veteran hunters say, how
ever, that the birds will not be at their best
for a week or two. About September 1G
thero will be a general onslaught on the
reedles from all directions. Only tho expert
dodgers will live to warn their descendants
against tho opening of the season next year.
ONE DEAD, TWO ILL, FROM 'DOPE'
Overdoso Kill3 Man Who Lived Above
"Tho Arsenal"; Quarrel Vith Sweet
heart Leads to Suicide Theory
One death from drugs nnd two cases of
men who nearly died from overuse came
to the attention of the police since mid
night. Tony Vova, 132D Vine street, dled-ln the
Hnhnemnnn Hospital after being taken
from his room above The Arsonal, a res
taurant at Tenth and Winter streets, known
as the "hang-out" of Tenderloin drug fiends.
He Is thought to have taken heroin with
suicidal intent. A letter from' his Bwcet
heart Bhowed the pair had n.uarr,eled.
William II. Saunders, i years old, 542
North Twelfth streetIs In a serious condi
tion In the Hahnemann Hospital. His
cousin, with whom .he lives, told the police
Saunders .did not use drugs, and thinks
some one drugged him. Saunders Is a
waiter and gets through work at -midnight.
When he didn't come home this morning,
the cousin went out to look for him and
found him unconscious on a step at
Eleventh street and Ridge avenue.
Magistrate Collins sent Raymond James,
25 years old, 918 North Ninth Btreet, to the
House of Correction at Colllna'a request.
Jle waa arrested early this morning In a
vacant house at 910 Winter street, almost
unconscious from-drugs. A man with him
escaped.
Bumper Apple. Crop Assured
HARRISDUnO, Sept. 1. Apple crops
larger than normal yields are expected In
Elk, Forest, Mercer, Potter, Susquehanna
and Tioga Counties.
GALVANIZED COPPER
AND ZINC SHEETS
L. DBerger Co., 59 N. 2d St.
IStll. liarktt ll Ktiltvnt. Itatn Ufl
READING ELKS AWARD
PRIZES TO PARADERS
Successful Competitors in Street
Pageant That Made "Con
vention Memorable
READING, Ta., Sept. 1. Prizes amount
ing to $1000 wero nwarded today by the
Rending Lodge of Elks to the competitors
In the big parndo of yesterday.
Tho awards woro mado by tho 12 Judges,
stationed at different points along the lino of
march, and nro ns follows:
Fifty dollars to lodge having largest
number of uniformed members, Lebanon.
Fifty dollars to tho lodgo (from Penn
sylvania) coming- greatest distance, Mc
Koosport. Fifty dollars to lodge making beat appear
ance, Easton; honorable mention, Hazletorf.
Fifty dollars to lodgo having largest
band, South Bethlehem, with C. M.
Schwab's Bethlehem Steel Band, of 100.
Thlrty-Ilve dollars (first)' to lodge having
best band, Fottsvllle; (second) 16. to Ash
land; honorable mention to Lebanon, but
It could not bo considered, as It already had
been given a prize, ,
For the. flvo most handsomely decorated
floats: (First) $100, Mahanoy City, glrla
on swings; (second) $75, Reading, T. C.
Auman's car, entitled, "Peace" ; (third)
$50, Harlsburg, "A Little Dutch Garden":
(fourth) 25, Ashland. "A Box of Sweets";
(fifth), $10, Reading Ladles'Auxlllary.
For the flvo most handsomely appear
ing floats In lino of parade occupied by
ladles only, except driver: (First) $100,
Mahanoy City: (second) $75, purple float
with twenty Reading ladles; (third) $50,
peace float, Reading; (fourth) $25, Harris
burg Dutch Garden '. (fifth) $10, "Box of
Sweets," Ashland.
FLAMES RAGE IN COAL MINE
Inspector Helps Owners Fight Blaze
Threatening Long Vein
POTTSVILLE. Pa.. Sept. 1 A fire Is
raging in the fifth level of the Oak Hill
Colliery, at Duncott, near here. Mine In
spector 51. J. Brennan, of this city, Is aid
ing the colliery ofllclals in the plans to ex
tinguish It.
This vein Is also mined by the Pine
Hill Colliery, about two miles west, which
will also be endangered should the flames
gain sway, (
Birdscyc Views of Paoli's
Zoological Phenomenon
"pAOLI "folks" upset by nocturnal
- visits of n queer-looking animal,
Ono resident says beast looks like
white Shetland pony with face like
a low-browed Filipino. This resi
dent describes beast ns having three
legs and no tail.
Another resident says animal has
n face like Teddy Roosevelt' nnd
wears huge tortoise-shell spectacles.
Still another frightened Paolite
says the beast has face like on
Egyptian mummy nnd the body of n
donkey. He adds animal laughs
like maniac.
Others run so fast after first
glimpse that they are unable to offer
descriptions of alleged monstrosity.
Out In Paoll today most everybody is
asking with bated breath and fearsome
glances over the left shoulder, "Have you
seen It?"
Of course, a fow. Including some com
muters and the candy drummer who
dropped orf In Paoll this morning to visit
his trade, didn't know whnt It was all about,
so they Inquired; "Seen what?" Paoll folks
wero only too glad to tell them all about
"It," so that they could como In on tho
shudders, shivers nnd shakes which havo
been traversing tho vertobrao of Paoll folks
slnco lost Wednesday night
So far as It Ib known, John J. Harrlgan
was tho first of the townspeople to "seo It."
Mr. Harrlgan's reputation for veracity has
never been questioned. He Is a church
member In good standing, and ho has never
been given to "scolng things." So when
John J. Harrlgan described tho "critter" ho
"met up w;th" last Wednesday night nt
10:30 o'clock, while returning from tho nn
nual fair of tho Paoll Volunteer Flro De
partment, something like a thrill of horror
ran through superstitious ones tn the vil
lage. A NEIGH AND A BRAY
Mr. Harrlgan had Just reached tho stone
galo posts of a driveway leading to the
estates of H. W. Blddlo and Mrs. J. H.
Dlngee when a noise, which Mr. Harrlgan
termed "a cross between the neigh of n
horso and the bray of a donkey," smote the
quletudo of the stilly night.
"I looked nround," Bald Mr. Harrlgan,
"and saw standing under a street lamp on
Central avenue tho queerest looking
'critter' I havo laid eyes on. At firBt
glance the beast looked like a little white
Shetland pony. But when I looked again
I saw that the beast had a face like an
apo or a low-browed Filipino. The anlmul
seemed to he grinning at me fiendishly, nnd
30-32-34 S. SECOND ST.
We Furnish
Everything for
House and Person
On Credit
Cash Prices
$1.00
Weekly Payments
' " - - u" iVStSgbJm'cnwOlr
J
10
Reduction
on Fall nnd Winter
Hultlnm. Orercoats
and Ilreant Sultt.
JONES
TROUSERS
a Specialty
111 WALNUT ST.
The House that Heppe Built
FOUNDED IH ISO! ADOPTED ONB-PRIOD BYSTEllJN lit!
C, J. Heppe & Son U17.U19 Chestnut Street 6th and Thompson Streets
Aeolian Player-Pianos, $395
88-note self-tracking players, with patented solo and
expression devices, in beautiful colonial mahogany cases,
made, designed and manufactured under the same super
vision as the great Pianola. Guaranteed to be the equal
of any $600 player sold elsewhere. Sold on terms as low
as $2,50 weekly. Demonstrations gladly given. Call or
write; fpr catalogs.
jJor sale only at
''" ' C- J. HBBPft SON
UPTOWN ' , DOWNTOWN
TH AIO THOMPSON STS. 11H-J CHESTNUT ST.
Tht lafge'it iuate roll Hofa I PkUaMpklaT-1f,9tO rsfU
FINAL CLEAN UP
UNION SUITS
REGARDLESS OF FORMER PRICES
Were
$1.50, $2.00, $2.50
85
All good arm told
subject to our guar
antee and can be
returned if not satisfactory.
our Clothing Department we- have remaining IS Suits latest
Final clean-up. Exactly 4 price, Too few to display in our
show -window. Please ask to lee them.
OPKN SATimpAY AS TJStTAt,
In
models
4
Only One
Store
4E jtZx .
sl ks -eze
iSZ
1018 Chestnut Street
., -.. . M .-.. ... M . i - -... .. . . - . ,,,., , , . . .
- H sUH etsM sK H
M
(S1
1
Mi
r beheld to hiy.i ror that It had only
three legs and wbv lnus A tali,
k "Say, I could feel my hair lift up and tip
Track m? hat. In frhosi stories, t have read
about folks being rroien with terror and
that's Just the way I feU I felt that I was
going to pass In my checks when the beast
gave another snort and ambled toward me
on Its three legs,
"I oame out of my trance and legged
It down Centrnt avenue toward home. I
was never called n. good runner, but I must,
have broken .several records In that race
for safety.
"I could hear the beast snorting and
galloping behind me, The critter gave up
the chase about ten yards from my home,
but I didn't let up runnlh' until I had put
tho front door between mo and the beast"
Tho next villager to be shocked by sight
of tho beast wns Ben Potter. Ben was
sauntering along Central avenue about 11
o'clock last night. When he was startled by
what he described as unearthly laughter.
"It sounded, like a mantao hooting ovr
the demise of his mother-in-law," said Ben,
"I turned around and saw a sight that frote
my blood. I should say that the nnlmal
was a cross between a goat and an Egyptian
mummy, although it had no horns, The
'critter' waa equipped with a perfect set
of teeth like Teddy Roosevelt,- nnd, so help
me, cross my heart, tho beast wore big
tortolse-rlmmed spectacles. I took no
chances on tho speedway, I scrambled up
Into n nearby fruit tree an fast I knew
how. The beast encircled tho tree several
times, nnd then gave tho thing up as a
bad Job and went away. 1 remained up
In the tree for a half hour, and then went
home."
Herbert Drown, a farmer living at Ber
wyn, two miles from 1'aoll, was driving
through Central avenue, Paott, at 1 a. m.
yesterday,
COMMUNITY TKimORIZED
"On Central avende near .'the Dlngee es
tate." said Drown, "a queer-looking nnlmal
enmo Into the roadway and trottod along
side my horse. I should say that the beast
had the face of a ram and the ' body of
a Shetland pony. I didn't like tho com
pany of the arlmal, bo I whipped up my
nag and got away from it."
Arthur nnd Lewis N'ey got a glimpse of
tho animal last night, and they lost no
time' In departing from tho locality.
The "animal" was the sole subject for
discussion last night In the courtroom of
Squire Michael Harrlgan. A number of
residents wero gathered .there as witnesses
In the caso of Frederick 13. Hastings, a
paper manufacturer of Devon, who was
arraigned on the accusation of falling to
blow his horn on July 2. lefore calling
this case, Squire Harrlgan announced that
a "strange nnlmal" waa terrorizing the
community, and he nsked the citizens as
sembled to keep a lookout for tho beast.
Paoli's last animal scare occurred 20
years ago this month, when a bear escaped
from Martin Urothers' one-ring circus.
New Story Begins Tomorrow
"The Wln'gsi of' the Morning," a master
pleco of fiction, by Louis Tracy, begins In
tomorrow's Eveniot Ledueii. It Is the most
thrilling story which the Evening- Lpann
has ever offered Its readers, and has been
proclaimed by scientists correct In every
detail and not without the scope of human
possibility.
i.ii .in i ,iu iin,ri iWwTr urn Tii,rinnM,,if -'ttaMJfaifoiijj
president AKRfi mmm
os Mm way to sm mim
Speaks le) Cfofs rfflT
Sk"retthjMJrt
WAslMKOlfOt, !S?pt,' sU-ths m
groundsVwefa deserted ye tot a row
sightseers heH the Preslrteftt arrive iw
morning to renew his' ffeht tor elffct-h'Wi'
day legislation. He. was wHrtrw niont th
sidewalk from the 8enl ff)c bufMft
whistling, whnn h nwrkMM'if mail Cm.
his wlfd mention Colorado. The PrCsfwH
stopped, tipped his straw hfrt, and, swallli,
imnlcA tn lhm '
"Did I understand you to ey yeto ?1
rrom coiornaor" net asKea.
"Ves," the man replied, VI am jr. ,
Fleming, ot Boulder, CoU and thh It JMl
Klemlmr." . yM
Then' ns the President refilled. "1 ais
always Interested it peopl 'front Coori$tt,"'
Mr. and Mrs. Fleming1 somewhat confooWly
asked In concert! "Why, you're the PreBU
dent, aren't you?"
Tho President admitted the soft Im
peachment. '
"Well, I'm rt port of distant relative of
Mrs. Wilson," Mrs. Fleming said,
The President -then told them a story
about Mrs. Wilson. He said he had Just
received from some Indians out West A
beautiful pleco of bedd work upon tirhlch
tradition said Pocohontaa was working ot
tho time of her death. At the conclusion
of the story Fleming said t
"Well, Mr. President, are you going to be
able to stop this strike?'
Just then the secret service operatives
reported the Senate lenders were ready for
him and he left his new friends "with h .
smile, but 'with their question unanswered.
DIRECT I-ROM
San Francisco
A New
"Hawaiian Orchestra
NOW I'LAYItta AT
The Garden on the Roof
S0O feet above the atratt
Hotel Adelphia
Coiy Comfortable. Convenient
DANSANT
Open from .VoonMIII i A. U.
Week-end Sale
Of Slightly Used
Pianos
Many fine upright pianos offered for Friday sand
Saturday 'at especially low prices. ). j. iix
These instruments just received from our factory,
where they have been put in first-class condition.
Also a few shopworn Cunning
ham pianos, which have never been,
off the floors of our warerooms.
Very much' under-priced,
MfffTfTJ nil hi iiMiniiiiiT
SQUARES
WAR
NOW
$300 Vose
$85
HiBHBhHL
$300 Walker
$95
MAHOGANY CASK
tRJ
SCHOMACKER .
EIIONV
STEINWAY
' ItOBEWOOn ,
UPRIGHTS
$275 DYER & HUGHES
MAJIOQANT
$275 W. R. KING
ROSEWOOD
$300 MERRILL PIANO CO,
$300 SMITH PIANO CO,
MAIIOOANV
$325 GERMAIN PIANO CO.
MAIIOCJANY
$300 SWICK & SON
MAUOOANY
$300 JACOB BROS.
MAHOGANY
$325 MARCELLUS
MAHOGANY
$50,
$65 J
$75
$80
$85
$95
$105
$110
$115
$13.0
i
$350
Mathushek
$125
MAHOGANY CASK
$500 Steinway
$150
SPECIAL-
LESTER PUYEK-MANO
$270
ANCELUS PLAYER-MAN0
$300
STUYVESAMf MAHW.A
$350
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11th & chestnut sra
Factory SOth St. and PrlI4 A; ;
Pleasa send ma complete list of sliiWly
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and shopworn J'jjanoa. "'i, ' ' r
jCtln& ),4A4ke,y.r?.3
In Time of HEAT
Prepare for COLD!
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR IT
$&. Sl ISth 10 S, Broad
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13 uiaut Hbraih omw
N. ?AGT0M. SSU & MNSttM 8X8. S
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