Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Pittsburgh Press from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 61

Location:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
61
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PHOTOPLAYS THE PISES' TO PLAYS PAGES ONE TO FOUR PITTSBURG. SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 8, 1917. PAGES ONE TO FOUR LITTLE LILLIAN Nw south hills high school to open tomorrow pecoaQs" TinniOTw MAINE FISHER' CAN TALK AGAIN! if 'l- Those who come to The Household will find special bargains in every department. No matter what you want, there is a SPECIAL bargain here. PAY THE EASY WAY.

PLIUM With tvtry Go-Cart or Carriago a beautiful gold baby ring frit. 1 sse Vista Phono graph mm sZ- IE I feci i i i 50e WjC ft SOCTII HILLS HIGH SCHOOL, COURT ELIiVATION. Sample Riti Carriages A fl Down. Sellors Kitchen Cabinet This store Is exclusive selling agent for this popular well-known kitchen cao-tnet. Every Sellers la on exhibition at this atore.

Come and Inspect this ltn. the best value In the city. Prices rang Catlaps! bla Bo. Carls, Onlr 95 left of this 010 Extension fered at this extremely low price to open uew accounts Table, ot' 59.35 irvm 49c My ir Down Up S3. 95 BaaBEr Special Rocker One-half completed, the new South Hills High school, Ruth.

Kureka and Harwood sts. and Secane whicli ultimately will accommodate 1,200 pupils, will be opened tomorrow upon the close of the Easter vacation. Not more than 2o0 pupils, first-year boys and girls taken from the overcrowded South. Riverside and Fifth Ave. High schools, will start classes in the new school.

In September the building will be occupied by 44 additional pupils. Principal H. TZ. Winner, transferred from the Woolslair group of schools, will take charge. The new school will relieve congestion on the south side of the river.

The South High at present Is accommodating more than three times the number of pupils for which it was intended. Classes are held in corridors. AVitli the opening of the new school Pittsburg will have six four-year high schools. A seventh high school, the Samuel P. Langley, is to be built in Sheraden.

The South Hills and Westinghouse, with the new Langley High, aro being" erected by the board of education under direction of Supt. of Buildings C. L. Wooldridge. The South Hills High occupies prop erty costing and the half completed cost It is more completely fireproof than pny school building yet pat up here.

The only wood in the building are the floors and furniture. The building is entered at grade on three separate floors. The building is constructed of brick with white stone trimming. It was designed by Architects Alden and Harlow and the general contract was executed by Golden Crick. The first wing to be opened tomorrow contains 10 class rooms, biology, physics and chemistry laboratories, sewing room and model apartment, clay modeling, crafts and free hand drawing rooms; a complete commercial department and a stenography room; manual rooms, a music room.

a. gymnasium, lockers, showers and dressing rooms. Also there are two rooms for the principal's staff, a room for the men and one for the women instructors, a book supply room and physician's room. The building will be heated from its own plant, consisting of two 250. horse power water tube boilers.

The heating and ventilating system will furnish direct steam radiation throughout the building. It is designed to change the air completely in all rooms every eight minutes. Odd Diners, $1.39 During This Sale mmmmmm $5.95 I Srn-nrB We Offer This 1 I MM 50c Down 25c Weekly Ice Saver for $7.85 $1.00 DOWN Odd ora chair only J-PIECE BED DUOFOLD SUITE Siaka one, room do the work of two with this $1.39 985 Solid Oak (la 71-Boffet Sal Prlc.Q I Ua 10 stylish Parlor Suite. Easily opens to a full alse Jill. Ml.

PAT THE EAST bed fThTs S12 1 e- yKjt ither. We SS'L' This S12 i I Hoc ker," i a Oak and Spanish Mult-fkin leather. We 1 rim 1 1 ilifM Iisr CttXCfW 4 This attractive little lady Is the two year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O.

M. Ficher, North Har-rlsburg, Pa. L.ast winter she had an attack of measles, together with a very severe cold. Just at that time rruggist S. J.

Wilhelm presented Mr. Fisher with a jar of the Southern "outside" treatment Vick's VapoRub Salve, which was just. then being introduced in Harrlsburg, and requested that he give this preparation a thorough trial. Mr. Fisher writes "I must say that our baby had such a cold on her chest and in her throat that she could hardly talk, and we could not get her to take anything internally.

After we used Vick's VapoRub Salve on her breast and throat at night before going to bed she was entirely relieved." No family should be without this preparation. It is externally applied, and so can be used freely It is absorbed through and penetrates the skin, and, in addition, is inhaled as a vapor. It has a hundred uses for the many minor ailments for which every mother is the doctor. Three sizes. -5c, 30c or $1.00.

YOUR SICK CHILD IS CONSTIPATED! LOOK AT TONGUE i have only 10O of MOZART SOLOISTS ANNOUNCED. For the performance of "The Cross of Fire." the work to be eiven by thnco an nme curlv and take ad vantage of this exceptionally big bargain. the Mozart club under, the direction of James 1'. McCollum on Thursday cs DOWN Genuine Mahogany Three-Piece evening, April 13. at Carnegie Music Choice ot sample Brass 7 QC Beds.

01.00 $19.05 IS Braaaela hall, the soloists are Mane Staple- Parlor Suit worth 35 sale price $12.75 Sample i Roc Sale Price ton Murray, soprano and llliam 1. ai Simmons and Isaac Kay Myers, barl- loiij -1 $39.75 be given by the students of Reeae R. Reese, at tha studio, in the Nixon theater building next Saturday evening at In which the following will appear: Misses Sara Buchanan. Cathrlne Murrav, Lucetta Parker. Edna Carroll, Virginia Krelg.

Elizabeth Reese Lloyd, Agnes McKee. Grace Lindsay. Eva AUenbaugh and Mssrs. Eugene Baur. Calin Bowl and Robert Lindsay, together with Miss Marion John, reader.

Mlsa Florence Fisher will be the accompanist. NEW COLUMBIA RECORD. Apropos of springtime. Columbia has issued a spring song without words Nevin's lovely composition, "Oh That We Two Were Maying" played by the Taylor Trio. As one listens to the blended tonal beauties evoked by the famed Trio, it would seem that the balmy, gentle breath of EM i Mrs.

Murray, to whom Is assigned the role of "Mary," is a former Pitts burg singer who has been meeting with much success in the east. William Simmons, who will essay the role of "Norman." has few equals in the concert field. The part of "Angus," while shorter than either of the others, is not of minor importance, but calls for ability of a "Sa 1 1 $2 Down $29.50 T1 high order in order that it-be prop-i crly interpreted. Mr. I.

Kay Myers, well liked in Pittsburg concert clr-I cles. will have this role. The performance of Bruch'a "The (Cross of Fire" at this time seems es-J pecially appropriate, as it is essen If Cross, Feverish or Bilious Give "California Syrup of Figs." May itself had swept the strings of 'cello and violin, so carresslngly eweet are the notes above the silvery chords of the piano. There Is a wlstfulness woven through the lovely themes that suggests nature's longing for May's sunshine in the midst of April's This Steel Bed. Irea Sprir This 60 Colonial Bedroom' Snlte In Oak.

8a 1 price only $3.75 i as S1.00 Table Range 2.00 DOWN Xo stooping to broiler or oven. -Guaranteed baker and saver. DOWN LIBRARY TABLE All finishes 1 40x3. SOc Dowat 25c Weekly. and 50-Ib.

sanl-tary Mattress Speelally priced (till 7C Gas Ranee: guaranteed 5,2,76 -rH: $18.95 teed SO Dresser tC Cf Sale Prlee I0.3U showers. The Taylor Trio has never recorded more sublime harmony. 3Room APOLLO CLUB'S LAST CONCERT. Friday evening. April 27, is the date selected for te Apollo club's closing concert for this season at trarnegie Music hall, under the direction or Rinehart Mayer.

The chorus will have the assistance of Miss Grace Outfit, ElMwfctre $175 Onr Price Oily Kerns. Miss Karns. who Is well known in Pittsb.urg, has been deserv edly successful in her concert career. 5 tially military and will not tan to touch a patriotic chord. RKC1TAL BY On Tuesday evening- a student's recital will be given at the Pittsburg: Musical Institute.

Fifth and Tennyson at The program consists of piano and vocal numbers. Wedding Day at TroMhaugen Orlee Miss Harriet Stein. Prelude, sharp minor Kachmanlnoft Miss Margaret Kiskadden. Spring's Awakeninz Sanderson Mis Clara McClellan. Tendre Aveu Schuett Miss Jeannette Bear.

Etude, flat Liszt Miss Mildred Morrow. Songs Serenade Venetlenne, Sacred Fire Bernberg The Morning Wind, from the "Sun Dial" Branscombe Miss Klizabeth Martin. De3 Abends Orillen Schumann Mrs. Florence Orayhill Foust Mazurka Jliera Cracovienne Fantastique Paderewskl Miss Florence Wally. Colonial Song Grainger Miss Edith Septer.

Nocturne. minor Chopin Sarabamie. from English Suit in minor Bach Liebeswaizer. A flat Moszkowski Miss Mildred Weaver. Sons The Bitterness nt Love Dunn Bird of the Wilderness Ilorsman Miss Helen Acheson.

Im Balladen Ton. Aphorism, Aphorism. minor Karg-Elert Humoresque Rachmaninoff Xo matter what ails your a gentle, thorough laxative should always be the first treatment given. If your little one is out-of-sorts, half-sick, isn't resting, eating and acting naturally look. Mother! see if tongue Is coated.

This is a sure sign that' -it's little stomach, liver and bowels areclogged with waste. When cross, irritable, feverish, ach sour, diarrhoea, sore throat, full cold, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the constipated poison, undigested food and sour bile gently nioves "out of its little bowels without- griping, and you have a playful child again. Mothers can rest easy after giving this, harmless "fruit laxative." because it never fails to cleanse the little one's liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach and they dearly love' Its pleasant taste. Full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups printed on each bottl-. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.

Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs;" then see that it is made by the "California Fig Syrup Company." $7 I Meethly ElSht-pieee Dialac Room Suite; Solid Oak BaSet. six AAA aeat aimers and aix-feot Eztesaisa Tablet SX4W Dews I fj dnrlna: this sale at aaly THE HOUSEHOLD, 908-910 PENN companled at the piano by Elmer Zol-ler, of New York. and is now one of the leading concert and oratorio singers in America. She has toured with the New Tork Symphony orchestra. YOUNG PIANIST "COMING.

Miss Llna Esther Palmer, concert pianist, who will make her first appearance before a Pittsburg audience next Tuesday evening, in the William Penn hotel ballroom, has won the reputation of being technically and Interpretlvely one of the most brilliant of the younger pianists now before the public. Musical interest is centered in her debut in Pittsburg, for she had the recent distinction of being chosen as soloist with the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra during the Caruso tour week, alternating with the distinguished tenor In the cities in which he does not sing with the orchestra. Miss Palmer will be assisted next Tuesday evening by May Marshall Cobb, soprano, who come from New York for the occasion. Miss Palmer will contribute a group of Chopin numbers, as well as the magic fire scene by Wagner-Brassin, "Dance of the Elves," by Sapelllnkoff, and Concert Transcription from "Carmen" by 'Bizet-Moszkowski. May Marshall Cobb will be heard in two groups of songs by Grieg, Campbell-Tipton, Lehmann.

Campra and Fourdraln, ac- an ILLINOIS CAVALRY HAS MACHINE GUN OUTFIT. tomobiles to take the guns from place to place. Since the return home the guns have been made over to fire army ammunition. As a result the Illinois cavalry finds itself in the unique position of being nearly as well equipped as similar bodies in Europe and far better than any other military organization in the United States. THE SPRING TERM at the Pittsburgh Musical Institut begins April 16.

Full particulars upon request by mail or 'phone Schen-ley lOOO. 4259 FIFTH AVENUE caprice Arensicy I Oracovienne Brzeninskl Miss Henrietta Meyer. Nocturne. sharp Chopin 'Prelude. minor Rachmaninoff Miss Mel ha.

Martin. STEALS WHEN WIFE IS -ILL; IS GIVEN PAROLE. had been contracted for by foreign governments. The state department declined to ask one of the allied governments to permit some of the guns to go to the Illinois troopers. After the regiment had arrived on the border one of the firearms companies found it had five guns not spoken for, and shipped them to Brownsville.

Patriotic citizens in Chicago paid for them. Then it was discovered the standard army ammunition would not fit the guns and the purchasers also laid in a supply of shells for them. Then the government Was asked to supply mules to pack the guns. None was forthcoming, and the officers of the regiment purchased au Chicago. April 7.

The First Illinois cavalry is better equipped, so far as machine guns go. than any other cavalry rejflment, regular or militia, in the United States. ISO' declare inspecting officers of the regular army. When the regiment was sent -to -the border last-year it didn't have a single machine gun. The government didn't have any to supply it, and factories couldn't furnish them because their entire output VALUES BODY OF HIS WIFE AT ONE DOLLAR.

Milwaukee, April replevin action in which he asks possession of the body of his wife, Helen, which he values at SI. was begun in Civil William Pchattschreider, an under-j to go to Herman Schattschneider. taker. Wagner alleges the under- Because of the proximity of the two taker unlawfully obtained possession undertaking establishments and the of the body, without his consent or relations of the undertakers, it is knowledge, and refused to give it up. said, the girl made a mistake and When airs.

Wagner died. Wagner went to the father Instead of the says he instructed his sister-in-law son. Wilmington, April 7. Admitting the theft of an overcoat, William E. Carpenter explained to General Sessions court that he pawned it to get money to get home.

In another part of the state, where his wife was ill and five young children were in distress. Court decided it was a case to extend parole, which will be done as soon as somebody will bond Carpenter. court by Mathew Wagner, against 103 CANDLES ON CAKE; SHE MADE IT HERSELF. 4V in GOUNOD CHORAL, CONCERT. A concrt of unusual merit will be given by the Gounod Choral society next Tuesday evening, in the Beech-view Methodist Episcopal church.

The choral under the leadership of I. Kay Myers, has been making wonderful progress when considering the society is less than a year old. Tho work to "be presented will be "The Seven Last Words of Christ," by Du Hois. Tho soloists will be Carolin-i Kobbins, soprano; Ella Hersman. contralto: Lemuel Wingard and Elmer Ablet, tenors; Ashley II.

Brockett and I. Kay Myers, baritone. Esther Prugh Wright will appear as soloist and accompanist. MALE CHORUS CONCERT. The second concert of the eleventh season of the Male Chorus will be given Friday evening, April 20, in Carnegie Music hall, under the direction of James Stephen Martin, its conductor.

Mr. Martin has under preparation a program of rare excellence, which should appeal to the most exacting, as well as the general public. Miss Marie Morrisey, soprano, has been engaged as -soloist for the occasion. The chorus is better equipped than ever before, having its active list entirely filled, the balance of parts enabling the undertaking ot many interesting and pleasing numbers. The regular free organ recital will be given in the Northsirie Carnegie Music hall at 4 o'clock this afternoon by Caspar P.

Koch, city organist. "The guest soloists will be Clarence H. Hamilton, tenor, and May Murphy, contralto. The following program, appropriate to the easter season. Minneapolis.

April 7. Mrs. Gertrude Ingenhutt had a birthday party this week and baked her own birthday cake. It had to be a big cake, allowing room for sticking candles. Mrs.

Ingenhutt was on March 20. and thought it a perfectly ordinary thing that she should bake her own birthday cake. She never thinks of being old, she says, "unless someone tells me about it." viit lie gien: Variations on an Easter Hymn Batiste Tenor Solo. Hosanna Oranler FREE TO ASTHMA SUFEERERS A. "ew Homr Corp That Anyone Can Vie Without I)i -comfort or I.oas of Time.

We have a New Method that cures Asthna, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether onr case is of long-standing or recent development, whether it is present as occasional or thronic Asthma, you should send for a free trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled with asthma, our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want- to st-nd it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, "patent have failed. Wo to show everyone at our own expense, that this new method is designed to entl all diiiicult breathing, all wheezing, and all those tern'Me paroxysms at once and for all time.

This free tffer is toi important to neglect a r-ingle day. Write now and then bfsjin the method at once. Send no money. Siniplv mail coupon below. lo It Today.

Resurrection Morn Johnston Spring Song Macfarlane Soprano Soli a I am a Harp Woodman (b Indian Love Song de Koven (c Cradle Song Kreisler Etude ile Concert Bonnet Iuet. Home to our Mountains Verdi Eusttr March Andrews KAPTEn OKU AN RECITAL. Mr. Heinroth's free organ recital this afternoon at 4 o'clock in arnegie Music hall proi-latms the plad lidinsts of the Ittsurrectloti pml the joyous prinptime. Particularly fine is Uvorak' "Nature" overture ami niary other bright and tiieery r.u:r.ber..

Iiyrir.jr the continuance of the war Mr. H-inroili will play our Notional Anthem. "America" anil "The Mar F.atin-r." at each recital. Overture. "In Nature" ntnnn Itvorak Metiitatifn Spring Souk Mendelssohn s.naia, Pontiticale -Icutio- Xiola Lcmmens T.

Ali-sro Adagio. HI. Man-he I v. Kanfare. Hes-urrection Morn F.

Johnston "In S-prinKtime" r.alph Kinder Yoioes of Christian Sinding a. "In Paradisuni" b. "Aliehula" Theodore Dubois fHKK AST1IM OI I'O. FRONT IKK ASTHMA Ko.im NiHgara. ami Hudson Buffalo.

N. Y. Send free trial of your method to Honey-Fruit Gum is Sold by Leading Dealers Everywhere RBUaB STUDIO RECITAI 1 The fifth of a series of souk recitals wlU.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Pittsburgh Press Archive

Pages Available:
1,950,450
Years Available:
1884-1992