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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 5

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

the sun, Baltimore; Thursday morninq; November 27, 1919. 5 NURSERY GAINS HEADWAY 50 YEARS AS DRUG MAN Memory Of Soldiers Goes Back; On Thanksgiving Day l.t us remember those less fortunate than ourselves. William Lightner, of Middlefown Methodist Episcopal Church. Burial was in the church cemetery. Miss Hampsher is survived by two sisters, Mrs.

John Parrish and Miss Ajice Hampsher, and two brothers. Emory and William Hampsher, of Freeland. WEDDING RUSH CONTINUES IN SUBURBS AND COUNTY Medical Association Meets At Rosewood Training School. ELECTRIC LIGHTS EXTENDED To Thanksgiving Day In France Ragged And Weary Sons Of Maryland, Just Out Trenches, Made Most Of Festival One Year Ago. Thirteenth were given permission to go out and get turkeys if they could find them, but there were no turkeys in that forsaken place.

The colonel and all of his men sat down and ate their corned willie, glad there were no shells to drop in upon their meal. A few of the men did take some shots More Than lOO Marriage Licenses Are Issued. It was late" yesterday afternoon when the Thanksgiving rush for marriage li-census ended in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas. All day the line of husbands-to-be had pushed their way to the front of. the office ot the Marriage License Bureau and taxed the endurance of Clerk O'Neill and his There were more than 100 licenses issued yesterday, according to Clerk O'Neill.

All this week a record-breaking rush for licenses has kept up. On Monday there were 70 licenses issued as compared with 89 for the corresponding Monday a year ago. On Tuesday there were 105 issued as against 43 of last year. On the day before Thanksgiving of last year only S3 licenses were sought. NAME "BAYER" GENUINE mond, of St.

John's Immanuel Church, Dance At'Towion High School. A dance will be held tonight in the Towson High School under the auspices of the Alumni Association. Lawrence E. Ensor and Miss Leona W. Ellis have charge of the arrangements.

Kfflhler Stirn. Miss Bertha C. -Stirn. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Frederick Stirn, of Woou-lawn, and George P. Kahler were married last night at the home of the bride's parents. A reception followed. Barnes Lindemon. Miss Mary Elizabeth Lindemon, of Cockeysville, daughter of the late Jefferson D.

Lindemon, and George Edward Barnes, of Baltimore, were married last evening in St. Joseph's Church, Texas. The Rev. Maurice J. Cahill performed the ceremony in the presence of the immediate relatives and a few friends.

The bride wore a navy blue traveling suit with hat and gloves to match and carried Bride roses. Miss Edith, M. Lindemon, sister of the bride, was bridesmaid and wore a dark suit and carried chrysanthemums. Mr. and Mrs.

Barnes left for Philadelphia to be given a reception by her sister, Mrs. Sarah Nichol. Later they will visit Atlantic City and will reside at Cockeysville. Speed Connolly. Miss Helen J.

daughter of Mrs. Josephine McK. Connolly. 309 Presstman street, and Frederick R. Speed, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Fletcher B. Speed, of Catonsville, were married yesterday, morning at the home of the bride's mother. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Victor Connolly, of Brooklyn, N.

brother of the bride, in the presence of the immediate families. Miss Mildred Connoly, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and Robert Speed, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. The ceremony was followed by a reception. Later Mr. and Mrs.

Speed left on a wedding trip. They will live in Detroit, Mich. During the war Mr. Speed served overseas in the Aviation Corps with the rank of captain, and was wounded while flying over the German lines. Fnneral Of Mrs.

sSlien Keongh. The funeral of Mrs. Ellen Keough, widow of Patrick Keough, of Texas, who died Monday, was held yesterday morning. Requiem mass was celebrated at St. Joseph's Catholic Church by the Rev.

Maurice J. Cahill. Burial was in the church cemetery. The pallbearers were Thomas and Edward Doyle. John Quinn, Daniel Feeney, James Lindsey and J.

Fitzpatrick. Miss Emma C. Hnmpsher Bnried. The funeral of Miss Emma C. Hamp-sher, 58 years old, of Freeland, who died Sunday, was held yesterday morning.

Services were conducted by the Rev. Several 9100 Pledges In Campaign For Gibbons Guild. The Gibbons Guild and Day Nursery campaign for $50,000 received the best returns yesterday since the opening of the drive. The exact amount of subscriptions received could not be estimated when headquarters, at tJlJV Fidelity Building, closed last several $100 contributions were brought in by team workers. The team workers were encouraged with yesterday's response.

Mrs. Henry M. Walker, chairman of the drive, has called a meeting for tomorrow night at the guild house so all the members of the campaign committee and the members of the board can make a general report on their work. Xegro Hotel Proprietors Presented. The grand jury yesterday presented Dallas Washington and Charles Anderson, both colored, proprietors of the Goldfield Hotel, Lexington and Colvin streets, on the charge of maintaining a gaming table.

The two negroes were released when arrested recently and taken before Justice Johannsen, in Central Police Court. The case was later sent to the grand jury. ON ASPIRIN in each "Bayer" package. proper directions for Colds, Headnche, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia. Lumbago, Rheumatism.

Neuritis, Joint Pains and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost but a few cents. Imggists also sell larger "Bayer" packages. Aspirin is the trademark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticsieidester of Salicyl'cacid. Advertisement.

at half a dozen ducks who tantalizingly appeared swimming in the river, but word was sent out reluctantly by "Dad" Sweezey that such shooting was against orders. All shooting, ended November 11. 11J1S. Several members of the regiment managed to grab some eggs. Sergeant Irvin F.

Nassauer made a motorcycle, trip to Bar-le-Duc, 42 miles away, to those eggs. He was filled with anxiety for the safety of his cargo as he bumped his way back to Verdun over the shell-torn roads of France. Are the men of the Three Thirteenth thankful today? They'll say they are far from the memory of corn willie, their tattered regimentals and the cooties. The One Hundred and Seventeenth Trench Mortar Battery was in Arlon, Belgiam, a year ago today, surrounded by a wash tub full of eggnog and the greatest layout of pie and cake the Old World had ever seen. In fact, lite of the Old World saw it eve then, for the batterymen stayed with it all day and by night there was none left.

Officers Dine In Style. The officers, led by Gapt. J. Wood all Greene, then a first lieutenant, had a sumptuous feed in a real dining room, with a fireplace, napkins, dinner plates, silver and everything. A whole Belgian family, superintended by the stout mother of the flock, did the cooking.

After dinner another Belgian family entertained the officers at a party. The prettiest girls of the city came, and toward evening they rolled back the rugs and had a dance, with two battery boys plaving the piano and violin. The One Hundred and Tenth Field Artillery celebrated Thanksgiving Day in the Blue and. Gray Division area, and the Fifty-eighth Coast Artillery, having left the line on November 21, -celebrated en route to the Bordeaux. "Those were the good old days," you may hear them say when they gather around the table today.

But not one of them will fail to admit that right now thev would rather be here than there. Lines Run From Cockeysville To Sparks And Glencoe- Rush For Marriage Licenses. The November meeting of the Baltimore County Medical Association was held yesterday afternoon at Rosewood Training School, Qwings Mills, upon invitation of the superintendent, Dr. Frank W. Keating.

Addresses were delivered by A. C. Gillis and ICapt. E. H.

Hayjvard and a luncheon followed. Elf-ctric LisJit Lines Extended. Electric lights have been extended -ui ut.ijmr mi or more innes to Sparks and Glencoe, and it was don through special contributions of the peo pie along the route. Rush For Marriage Licenses. The rush for marriage licenses continued yesterday in the office of Clerk of the Court Cole, Towson, and at the close of the day 10 had been issued, making G7 since November 1.

For the whole of November last year only 64 licenses had been issued. Retnrns From Hospital. Patrick Kane, a retired railroad employe of Cockeysville, has returned from Johns Hopkins Hospital, where he was under treatment. Suffers From Old Tnjury. Patrolman William G.

Stevens, of the Catonsville police force, is confined to his home on Melrose avenue suffering from an affection of his leg, which was broken about 15 years ago when a hall collapsed at Ellicott City. Supper For St. Blary's Gnlld. A supper was held last night at Highland Hall for the benefit of St. Mary's Guild.

The supper was followed by a dance. Thanksgiving At Sweetair. Thanksgiving services were held last evening at Fairview Methodist Episcopal Church, Sweetair. An address was delivered by the Rev; Dr. W.

S.MIam- are Play ers This Take tablets only as told "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" to be genuine must be marked with the "Bayer Cross," just likeyour check" must have your signature. Always look for the "Eayer Cross." Then you are getting genuine Aspirin prescribed, by. physicians for over eighteen years. 4 In the "Bayer" package are safe and at to -j i r1 $439 Up With Comp Player Othe $600 Selling jiJt ji John F. Zimmerman Honored By Colleagues On Anniversary.

RECALLS "THE YOUNGER DAYS" And Traces His Career From The Time "Patent Medicines' Were Sew, To The Present. Once there was a day when there were almost no "patent- medicines." That sounds strange, but it is true. Then a druggist bought his drugs "on the hoof' to be crudely metaphorical, which is to say thathe bought the original roots and leaves from the 'wholesale druggist and concocted his own potions. John F. Zimmerman, 1802 Ashland avenue, remembers those days and yesterday they came back to him with new clearness, because it was the fiftieth anniversary of his start in the wholesale drug business, and because his associates the firm of Muth Brothers Co.

paid tribute to his years of faithful service. He went home last night? to the little house in East Baltimore where he has lived for the last 45 years, carrying a big envelope full of bills (which he had not yet opened) and a pill box full of gold pieces (wlpch he also bad not yet opened) The bills were presented by his fellow-employes and the gold pieces by the firm. Mr. Zimmerman is G-" years old today, so the anniversary of his real start in business and the anniversary of his real start in life go almost hand, in hand. When Mr.

Zimmerman became a wholesale drug clerk the Muth firm was then known as Thompson Block, doing business in a six-story warehouse on Hanover street. Later it became the Thompson-Lilley Company. Then Lilley drew out and Thompson built a wholesale drug house of his own on Redwood street (then berman street), near Charles. Later the firm became Thompson. Mulh and when the Mutha went, into business themselves, on Fayette street, they t6ok Mr.

Zimmerman wjth them. ReouIIs The "Yonnger Days." In "the young days" (Mr. Zimmerman doesn't speak of the past as "the old there were no telephones in the drug business or any other business. There were even no private systems of telephones within buildings or offices. Back of the German street place was the firm of Dickey who used to complain every week or so of the shout- ins that used to go on in the drug house, There was a man named Lauer on the third floor, who had charge of all the stock up there, and whenever a clerk wanted some raw drug material fixed up for delivery he would roar up the elevator shaft "Oh, Lauer!" That cry drummed so steadily, into the ears of Dickey Bros, and their staff that they claimed they couldn't even read the Sunpaper in the mornings in peace and quiet.

Lack of ready communication, too, had a queer effect on methods of ordering. Of course, there were comparatively few drug stores in those days, but the proprietors of those few had to come down town when they wanted a new supplv of aconite leaves or belladona roots They always arranged these trips so that they could attend to their banking, their mail and their drug-buying at the same time, visiting first the bank, then the Postoflice and finally, the wholesale drug house. Delivering orders was a problem, though the city was probably less than a third as big as it is now. But if a wagon driver was given a package to carrv out as far as Preston street he growled about it for a week. That was going "wav out in the woods" in those times.

To go to Preston street then was like going toKoiana A'arK now, ait. Zimmerman says. They Were Drag Stores Then. Those were the days when a drug store was a drug store. No druggist thought of selling candy or tobacco and a soda fountain was a thing that nobody had heard of.

A full day's work started at 7.30 in the morning and ended at ti o'clock at night unless there was more work to do. Then it might end later. Of the old druggists who were in business in Mr. Zimmerman's early days only one is left that he knows. That is J.

F. Hancock, an 85-year-old pharmacist, now engaged in marketing a pat-morUinal nrennration. He still goes to see Mr. Zimmerman, and they' call each other "boy," as tney dirt ou years ago. But most of the others are dead.

"AVere people healthier the days before patent medicine?" repeated Mr. Zimmerman. "Well, I won't say they were healthier, but buying their medicine in leaves and roots, as they did, we might say they lived a little closer to nature. So they may have been happier." MAYOR VISITS HAGERSTOWN Will ITnveil Two Memorial Tablets Here Today. Mayor Broening went off yesterday on a trip to Hagerstown with a party of local members of the Dramatic Order of the Knights of attended a reception and banquet in the Western Maryland city last night.

The party motored1 to Hagerstown and returned to Baltimore shortly after midnight. The Mayor has mapped out for himself a busy Thanksgiving Day. He is scheduled to take part in the unveiling this morning of two memorial tablets to soldiers, sailors, marines and nurses who lost their lives in the war. One will be unveiled at the Chapel of the Advent, Charles and Ostend streets, and the other at Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, Baltimore and Pulaski streets. The Mayor expects to spend a portion of the day at the City Hall, catching up with his mail and other routine work.

FOLLOWS WIFE IN DEATH John T. Chenworth Believed To Have Died Ot Grief. Believed to have succumber to grief over the death of his wife, John T. Chenworth, 83 years old, died yesterday morning at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Isaac German, Old Frederick road, near Catonsville.

His wife, Mrs. Mary E. Chenworth, died last Saturday, and was buried last Monday. She was 90 years old." Mr. Chenworth apparently was in good health until, the death of his wife, and it is thought that his mourning brought about his collapse.

His funeral will be held from the home of Mrs. German at 11.30 o'clock tomorrow morning. Burial will be" in Waugh Cemetery, Liberty foad. TURKEY MARKET SLUMPS Best Stock Sells At SO Cents, With No Great Demand. There is no reason why everyone should not ha-e turkey today for there was a large oversupply of the birds in the markets yesterday, and they were selling for as low as 50 cents a pound tor prime Dirds a drop ot cents under the price allowed by the Fair Price Commissioner.

There was none of the rush of last year, w'hen prices soared. in the last few hours before Thanksgiving. In fact everyone seemed to have purchased his bird early. No change in the fair price was quoted yesterday and turkeys could have been sold at 55 cents. Prices other articles such as celery, cranberries, pumpkin, chickens, ducks and rabbits shoyed a slight decrease, but not to the same extent as turkeys.

Asred Man Struck By Anto. Ferdinand Trenkamp, 78 years old, 206 North Wolfe street, is unconscious as a result of being hit Tuesday by an automobile of the Rosen Candy Company, driven by George K. Schenidegen, 1222 East Eager street. Trenkamp was attempting to cross Eden street, between Fayette street and Fairmount avenue, when he stepped in front of the today a year ago I wuz about 3,000 miles away from turkey an' mince pie an An' so on. Today on the tip of the tongue of every doughboy who was in France or in the back of his head is a recollection of where he was and what he was doing Thanksgiving Day, 1CUS.

The war' had been -over a little more than two weeks then. There was no "frost on the pumpkin," but there was still the mud of the rgonne on the doughboy's duds, and the wrack and strain of battle still harrowed his soul. But he smelled Thanksgiving Day a'-comiug and his nose didn't deceive him. for it came to France, to Belgium and even into Luxemburg and the German borderlands where the Army of Occupation was waiting to jump over across to the Rhine. It came alike to Maryland's One and Fifteenth Infantry, in-the Blue Gray Division, and to the Three Hundred and Thirteenth Infantry of the Seventy-ninth Division.

In Belgium the One Hundred and Seventeenth Trench Mortar Battery celebrated it. (feting At Verdnn. The Three Hundred and Thirteenth had fought up to the last momeht of the war. and Thankssiving Day found it nursing its hurts back amid the ruins of Verdun. But the One Hundred and Fifteenth had come out of the line at the end of October, so it had had nearly a month to pull itself together.

Its Thanksgiving celebration in France was, therefore, the more pretentious. But it had little or nothing on the One Hundred and Seventeenth Trench Mortar Battery. The One Hundred and Fifteenth was in Fresnes, France, and in some small nearby towns, all in the Bourbonne-les-Bains area. Three days before Thanksgiving Day Chaplain F. C.

Reynolds opened negotiations with a French peasant for an ox. The deal Avas completed the day before the celebration, and the Frenchman, in fulfillment of his part of the contract, executed the ox and turned it over to the regiment, horns, hoofs, tail, skin and all. All night long before 'the big feed some of the men stayed up building a bed of coals. Thanksgiving Day dawned rainy nasty, in which respect it was exactly like the dawn of jx large proportion of the other days in France. At noon each company mess had a big dinner, with all the cooks trying to dress up the beans, salmon and corned-willie to make it look like turkey.

At the headquarters mess, where Col. Milton A. Reckord and his staff officers sat down to banner, tuere was a turkey. Where it came from only its Creator and Lieut. Harry Hagan know.

Lieut. Hagan was the mess officer. French See First Football. In the afternoon the First Battalion played the Second Battalion at football in the little town of Senaide and the Second Battalion won, 0 to0. It was the first football" game the French folks there had ever seen and they thought the war had started all over again.

And after the game came the barbecue. By this time the big French ox was roasted nicely and about 1,500 men lined up for coffee and ox sandwiches, which they ate and drank sitting in the muddy gutters and on the wet stone porches of their billets. At night there was a regimental dance in Fresnes. Colonel Reckord commandeered a fleet of automobiles and in Bourbonne his scouts gathered up about a dozen nurses, Red Cross girls and Young Men's Christian Association girls, and brought them over. They cleared the floor of the little old cafe on the main corner and there they danced on the sticky floor all smeared with beer and wine stains.

That was the One Hundred and Fifteenth's Thanksgiving Day one year ago. Ont Of Trenches Five Days. The men of the Three Hundred and Thirteenth, dressed in their ragged regimentals, spent Thanksgiving Day in Verdun thankful that the war was over and that the delousing machines had ar rived. Thev needed the ministrations of those delousing machines. They will tell the world They had left the trenches only five days before.

Their uniforms were torn in many places rents in breeches and in blouses. Those Marylanders could not have been seen unblushingly with any of the Verdun mademoiselles, even if there had been any mademoiselles in that historic town. There were no civilian residents for miles around nobody there, save the men of the Three Hundred and Thirteenth and their buddies in the Seventy-ninth Division. 1 There were blisters on the feet of the Sweezeyites. They had finished some strenuous hikes.

They had not received an issue of clothing since October 15 and they had done some tall fighting in that interval. The men of the Three Hundred and BOAT CLUB TO REBUILD Arnndels Will Speedily Replace Home Destroyed By Fire. Despite the severe losses sustained when their clubhouse at Ferry Bar was destroyed by fire recently, the Arundel Boat Club is going ahead with plans to rebuild a clubhouse larger and better than the other. A meeting of the members of the club was held last night at the Baltimore Athletic Club, 1422 North Charles street, at which initial plans were formulated and committees appointed for the reorganization and rebuilding of the club. Nearly 250 members were present, and addresses were made by the president, H.

A. Gillespie, and Major George R. Parker, recently returned from overseas, a former member of the club. Chairmen of the various committees selected last night were as follows Finance, H. B.

Shaffer site, plans and building, Joseph R. Manuel equipment, W. H. Oehrl; furnishings, S. B.

Manly; canoe replacement and arrangements, Lloyd Miller. llances will be held by members of the club every Tuesday, making their temporary club hall at Lehmann Hall. MRS. HERR THANKFUL "Thanksgiving Day means much to our little family this year," said Mrs. Clare Herr, 1005 S.

Paca Baltimore. "My husband, mother and myself have all regained our health thanks to Tanlac. "Due to nervous indigestion, my food seemed to turn to gas as soon as it reached my stomach, causing terrific pains, usually ending with a headache. I couldn't sleep peacefully and always felt done but. Mother was so nervous the slightest noise startled and irritated her.

My husband also took Tanlac for his nerves. We all got wnderf ul benefits. My appetite improved, my food digests right and my blood pressure has been relieved. Both my husband and mother report that their nerves are back to normal and say they never felt better. Many of our neighbors praise Tanlac, too.

It is truly a wonderful medicine." Tanlac is now being specially introduced here by the Tanlac Man at Read's Drug Chemical Howard and Lexington to crowds 'daily. Advertise mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm See Page 8 1 of This -THE 4T wJUALny ohop, Collar Hug Clotlies Baltimore and Liberty Streets lu a II I I wondenu HeiDioess You seldom have to think twice when your doctor orders cod-liver oil. Instinctively you ask your druggist for it For any child or adult, Scott's is the tonic-nutria ent of wonderful helpfulness. Scott's Emulsion promotes growth and sustains strength. Scott Bo-vtie.

Bloom field, N. J. 19-ib A tllSCOVEKY THAT BENEFITS PANICSD Two discoveries have added greatly to human welfare. In 1 835 Newton originated the vacuum process for condensing milk with cane sugar to a semi-liquid form. In 1 S83 Horlick at dis covered how to reduce milk to a dry po'xder form with extract of malted grains, rcithout cane sugar.

This product HGRLIOEC named KCalied (Name since copied 17, others.) Its nutritive value-digestibility and ease of by simply stirring in water) and the fact that it keeps in any climate, has proved of much value to mankind ss an ideal food-drink from infancy old age. far HORUCK'S Avoid BTOiCals yvAi.n aise i eetn i SURE Dr. Wernet's Powder Kep tliem firm. Prevents cere gmu, White. Flavored.

Antiseptic. If your dental plate is loose and drops, get instant relief, use Dr, Wernet's Powder for false teeth. You can eat, laugh, talk with ease. Guaranteed by Wernet Dental Mfg. i io tseeicman w.

Y. 25c, 50c, 1.00 At Drug and Department Stores. Refers all others. This is the original powder wearing Shiny Gothes SI pgp will remove shine by raising a new nap. Also takes out Grease and Oil Spots.

Buy from your dealer! 25c. Utility Products Co. 1 726 Ly tton Bldg. Chicago We Will Steam oar Plush orFur Coat equal to kr OSTRICH FEATHERS remodeled into the firlest effects; dyed, cleaned ar-i curled. HATS REBLOCKED AND DYED Latest Styles.

Furs and Marabous Remodeled. THE VOGUE 9 New uLo N. Howard Second Floor. Onfc-of-Town Trade Prompt Attention. FIGHT DISEASE GERMS WITH ASEPTINOL OINTMENT Pimples, Boils, Eczema, Humors.

Eruptions are Dangerous and In- fectious. 1 Whether you suffer fronfcJttn aggravated case of eczema or a slight breaking out of rash or pimples, inwuediate attention is necessary to prevent further infection, OINTMENT cool, healing, soothing gives quick relief and permanent cure if used consistently. In 25e, 50c and $1.00 jars. Send a card, for FKEE samples, to Aseptinol Mfg. Baltimore.

Md. m. mm i mm- $3 A SPLENDID PLAYER-PIANO From Baltimore's Great Exclusive Piano and Player House FOR ONLY. $439 THIS new and beautiful Player-Piano is an 88-note instrument, guaranteed for 10 years, which -assures you of absolute satisfaction and protection. The instrument is designed along plain lilies, yet is so artistic that it is certain to satisfy the most scrutinizing buyer.

It contains a five-point motor, bell metal plate, fine sounding board, tre latest improvements and devices, copper bass strings, ivory keys and ebony sharps, hinges finished in brass, loud and soft pedal expression devices in fact, is a model Player-Piano and an instrument that compares most favorably with PlaVer-Pianos sold elsewhere for a great deal more. The moment this Player-Piano arrives, 1 1 i. i I Take a Long Time To Pay ttxe Balance To Approved Credit $10 DOWN HERE is a suggestion worthy the serious consideration of every home and music lover. You may come to Knabe Warerooms, the most distinguished, highest class and largest exclusive piano and player, store in the city, and select one of these fine Players. For a small down payment of $io to approved credit and a long time to pay the balance, you may have the instrument delivered to your home.

your iiume oecoincs ungnt uiiu cneery with music. Every day and evening take on a new and happier aspect for you and yours. All piano music is at your command. Dances, light and grand opera selections, patriotic and, popular songs and the great classics are available to you. Surely this is a home suggestion you should adopt this is the Piayer-Piano that should be in your home! 88-Note -Brand New Large Size and Guaranteed For 10 "Years tey coming to Knabe Warerooms, and buying one of these Player-Pianos, you secure the best value that the markets of the entire world afford.

We believe you cannot secure such value in a Player-Piano elsewhere than at Knabe Warerooms, Inc. Other stores sell instruments some at higher, a few at lower prices. But this Player-Piano at $439 will compare, we believe, with other instruments sold up to $600. INPORTANT NOTICE! The number of Player -Pianos at $439 is very limited. To make sure of securing one for immediate delivery, a prompt selection is advised, "5JfT Ill AtMA4M rl Rsvrt waitivvma, inc.

mil Open Nights Until Nine Open Nights Uhtil Nine HUlJ.H.4mittiamff;PrrS Park Avenue and Fayette Street ment..

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