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New-York Tribune from New York, New York • 58

Publication:
New-York Tribunei
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
58
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6 Staff of Life Causes Strife But Bakers. Cheer! for Help Is Here: Your Female Cohorts Know No Fear. you are taking hold of a grocer to a jnrl is using scant of leisure she from Tier work a district nurse to help tho bakers by urging and of aellcatesnen shops to cell only union bread, "we might well fall in line right away." Not all the people who handle bread feel that as some of the canvassers have but Mrs. Carrie V. Allfn.

of the movement 10 organize for a shop-to-shop and house-tohoufe canvass, says women can "conquer bread trust If they will And et t2jem are working hard enough to 4o Not only wives, to whom the struggle comes home, but wives of other workers- the members of tho Woman's Auxiliary of Typographical Union Ha. 20. for bMtat all snatching whai hours they cr- ''ota their children and their work to tramp about and tell people as well they can what this ftrike means to the bakers aad the sanitary condition of means to the health of the city. School teachers end professional women, maialy those of socialistic trend, are joininr in. "TVe have r.o mean? of knowing how rstny women are doing this work." said Mrs Allen, at the headquarters of the No.

239 East Mth street. "We hsve seat out hundreds of letters to women them to help, and have appealed to in meetings, and a good many just go to work in their own neighborhoods. unfi. not having much time, don't come here to report. Others do.

Twenty or thirty come here every day to get literature, before starting on their rounds." Two came in just then. One was tall thin, with a look in her which would have, made a candidate for a rest cure if fate had placed her In a diffsrent station of society. The other was a little dot of a German woman, with determined Mack eyes and two union buttons pinned on her lawn waist, which was badly fafled. but very neatly laundered. "It iss a hard life a baker's wife hass," chirped, with unquenched cheerfulness.

"Not much money, and a cross man. I don't blame my man for being cross. He works co long, it Iss co hot vere he vorks, yen he comes home dere iss no frenfth in him. If I say to him somedings about de home he says: 'Don't trouble I haf trouble enough vere I vork." My fi IHI TUT see re fader shoost vunce a veek He goes to york at free, before dey haf left school; in de mornings he isa asleep. York and a little dot iss a taker's life, to he struck." Ttaan the two women took a bundle of rr.e appeals they present to shopkeepers and made ready for their rounds.

"Four grocerymen promised me yesterday dtjr vould sell only union breadt," said tbe little German woman. "I talk to all nicely. I say: -Vould you please be co kind to help the bakers? Dey work so iong hours; help dem to get a nine-hour day snd a little -more Vun man gets mad and says yen he vas young he vorked for a veek. But I say to him it costs more to lif now. and baker's children vant a little schooling.

And by and by he comes aroundt mit me. ''Yen ye go to houses to tell ladies vere dey csa get union breadt some are cross of the World Disappointing as the comet has been. It has at opened up a new field of entertainment which may continue to bear fruit after the celestial wanderer has vanflahed into space. Whiie the comet was in bridge breakfasts, beginning at znifinlght, or a little before, and ending: with flayllght, came into vogue, and the breakfftat at dawn quite atoned for any disappointment in regard to the brilliancy Of visitor or the length of its tail. For these early morning feasts the cook books were cart-fully to collect menus that would prove tempting and aatlsfyir.K to the appetites duo by that.tim.-.

and one of their charms was that they an opportunity for serving diphe? like iraffleft and cornbread. tiiat would not be appropriate at any other time of the Je-wejry. as worn by the smart set, is as carefully attuned to morninp. afternoon aad as the frocks it is worn with, the trinkf-T box of any member of that act will include amonp its treasures this aaaaon collars of semi -precious Sar each division of the day. to be worn Both white and pink coral and silver or gold beads are chosen for morning wear, and the tinted topaz, aqua marine, amethypt rose beryl are used for afternoon.

Occasionally turquoise, too, is chosen, of a very delicate shade. The setting are peculiarly delicate and fine, and usually of yellow, dull gold. The gorgeous flog Of or other precious (Bias for eveninjr wear are in platinum, and old French designs are carried out in parts. After the dog collars the latest chic aSair is plaque, usually of dtaonnfls la a plsntinum mounting of and design, very open and doJicate in detail, and swung from clraJos of rare workmanship, suggesting of Florentine goldsmiths. These in tlr.te/J set with semi-transparent or opaque etone? sre worn with linen dresses.

How fortunate It Is that there is always MM woman In a neighborhood who Is mo.n In her when a funeral is on hand. in. though she may not be an Intimate friend, and practically takes of proceedings. Back and forth from her will trail to the house of aSlctlon, spending hours at the telephone giving to inquiring acquajntaiuos sending such orders as are PTI FT I TVT Dover street (J 1 Mayfair, LONDON. AMERICAN LADIES I ROBES.

Visiting London are invited to view our I MANTEAUX. Original Creations, each produced aim- FOURRURES. ulranatwtly at London and Paris Salons. CORSETS. BLOUSES.

DISTINCTIVE AND EXCLUSIVE LINGERIE. Toilettes tor All TROUSSEAUX. STATE AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS. MODES. LONDON PARIS.

GRAF TON FUR Ltd. Best Selection of Choice Furs in Smartest Stylet. 164. NEW BOND STREET, LONDON. io JWenEIN and shut door on top of us.

But say: 'Sure vill help. 1 the little woman. who had done a washin? and cooked two meals that day. trotted out on her captured a -scab' the other day and had him here for a couple of hours," Mrs. Allen remarked.

He made me feel as if I never wanted to eat bread again. He was the worst Port of degenerate, unspeakably fllthy. and he Is kneading bread in one of the largest shops in the city for people to cat. That is the sort of men some of the bosses are willing to employ in their fight apalnst decent living: conditions for bakers. "Only the union can secure and enforce these conditions for bakere; only the union can make New York what It is not a city of sanitary bakeshops.

Of course, things are improved since the year of the first bakers' when out of 6,300 bakers only twelve were married, because bakers worked eighteen hours out of the twenty-four, and haye no home but the hakeshop, and frequently no beds but the kneading benches. They were so sick, so sodden, from their life that it Is marvellous it was possible to organize them. are improved, but twelve hours a day and seven days a week are the rule in non-union bakeshops. Overtime Is frequently required, and the men work, naked and perspiring, in a temperature of from 80 to mo work sometimes twenty hours at a stretch. As to sanitary ccndltions, much of the bread sold in New York is made in cellars.

I know of one shop where about fifty men are employed; It is in a cellar: above it is a place where wagons are kept, and above that is a stable. The horses are brought down an inclined plane to the floor where the wagons are. and stand there while being harnessed. There are cracks in the floor, and the stable moisture drips through and falls In the bread troughs, and is kneaded in with the bread. And no one need think that because bread is sold In a clean, big place It Is made in a clean place.

That's no guarantee. "The only guarantee of clean bread is the union label. Every shop must permit representatives of the union to visit it at any time, and these representatives go for the purpose of seeing that the conditions are sanitary. And In union shops no sick bakers are employed. The union takes care of its sick." Mrs.

Allen has a committee of women working- with Alice Cassldy. Mrs. M. Michaels, Miss Pauline Newman, Mrs. Mary Oppenhelmer.

Miss Helen Cas6ell, Miss Kate Dabronyl, Miss Caroline Van Name and others. These are directing the work of the canvassers. Each canvasser, when a grocer promises to handle union bread, asks him for some of his business cards. Then the legend. "Union bread sold here," Is stamped on the cards, and one Is handed to every housewife In the neighborhood, wrapped in the appeal headed.

"Are you eating unclean bread T' "I'm sorry to say that we get no help from the Board of Health." said Mrs. Allen. "When we told officials in that department that in a certain bakery in this city the are sleeping in the flour room, we were told that unless we could supply proof no action could be taken. Isn't it time for the women of this cltv to act?" If the family automobile is put at her disposal for the many errands that become suddenly imperative, she proudly has It run through the main thoroughfare, so that all who know her may see that she is in ommand. so to speak.

Her interest undoubtedly takes much of the care and responsibility from the minds of the mourners, and her constant flitting ln.and out is a welcome distraction to the minds of the mourners, for she brings snatches of news in a cheery way, and as the loss is not a personal one. she has not the aspect of grief that one of the family would have, even though similarly occupied. And so, in the dreary hours between the coming of death and the final rites, she actually becomes a comfort and wins her way ofttimes to a lasting friendship, where prior to trouble and less she was- but casually known. A woman whose house part.es are always successful owns up to keeping a notebook i which she inscribe? the chief characteristic of each person she man, woman and child. She has special departments in which she lists them, and when making her plans she has but to turn to a certain page to find thereon the persons who have the name tastes and are likely to prove congenial.

Sometimes, she confesses, just to give herself moments of interest in watchinp the byplay, sne has borrowed a guest from another page. These experiments are Fometimes more amusing to the hostesa than they are to the ill-assorted guest. If he is a man he gets on fairly well, for his bnnk account prevails over other and the points in which he differs from the remainder of the company are treated as amusing eccentricities. But to the woman out of her element little mercy is shown. The debutante of the season will have no difficulty in getting together the coveted six boxes of wed'lfng cake, which means that the pevemh will be her own, for the of brides-to-be is long, and wedding receptions are In plenty, accordingly.

The ruperftition holds that be opened. Each one must be tied to its prederv-fifors in order of date, and each must be legitimately given to owner as an invited no cards transferable, so tn speak charm never fails, it is XEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1010. DIANAS HARD HIT Board of Education Puts GirW Rifle Club in Mourning. If tears were not so unmanly.

Miss Helen Russell Crandall and the other four members of the Girls 1 Rifle Club at the Curtis Public School, in Staten Island, would sit down and cry. For of all the many girls who are hard hit in the eolar plexus of their ambition by the recent decision of the Board of Education cutting down the girls' athletic stunts and forbidding among other things contests between boys and this quintet feels it worst. To know and to have proved that cne can beat the boys "all hollow" at shooting, and then to be forbidden to do well, perhaps those Staten Island girls aren't angry: Just before the last Easter vacation the girls and boys of the Curtis Public School had a rifle contest, with five In each team. The girls had had less practice than the boys, for their club was formed more recently. For a long time the boys had been practising In the target room at the school on Mondays, Tuesdays, "Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, after lessons, and had pained such proficiency that they won several medals against boys in other schools for marksmanship.

Then the principal, Harry F. Towle, who considers that a girl has Just as much need of a steady eye and a steady hand as a boy has. arranged to have a medal offered without limitations of sex. The boys of the school 'came up to the scratch" nobly by offering to let the girls have the target room on Fridays, after lessons, for practice, and the boys' coach volunteered to teach the budding Dianas how to shoot; and the subtargot gun bought for the boys being placed at the disposal of the girls, they went to work in good earneet. "The sub-target gun is a wonderful invention." Miss Crandall, captain of the girls' team, explained to a Tribune reporter.

"It enables the person behind it to aim at any distance desired, without danger of injuring any living creaturo crossing the range, because it has no ammunition. And yet It's just as good practice. The real target is placed two hundred yards from the rlfle- Mrs. Carrie W. Allen, general in chief of the women's movement, addressing a meeting at strike Headquarters.

No, 239 East 84th street. i man, and the sighting Is done as in ordij nary gunning, but, instead of the real tari get being hit, the tally comes down In the sub-target, which is a miniature edition of the. real target, to which it Is adjusted by its own little telescopic sight, so that its record reads the result of the not two hundred yards away, but right at the end I of the rifle." With the boys shooting four afternoons In the week and the girls only one, the latter, naturally, got less practice, and yet in the contest before Easter the girls won out. 1 There were five In the girls' team and five In the boys', and the final score showed 235 to 231 in the girls' favor. At the end of the first contest, the girls being ahead, the boys asked for another test.

The girls gayly granted it, and won another victory, with the above tally. Some the girls have had outelde practice. Captain Crandall does enthusiastic gunning with her boy cousins in Vermont In the summer time. And In her team she has one member who has Just broken a world record, although she was not competing with any one; Miss Helen Fancher has succeeded in making bullseye hits to the count of fifty without once, and in straight successoln. at two hundred yards.

Miss Esther Bates is a close second, with a record of forty-nine. Ana now, with this record behind them and the world before them, full of boys whom thty might defeat, comes this ruling of the Board of Education, crushing all their BmaJi wonder they think It hard. DANCERS IN STOCKINGED FEET. ttH. of the Manh.tt.n Trade School Terrace G.rden^^tjrhursday night.

They Vance fcr Flatfoot Physical Exercises Are Flay at City's New Trade School for Girls. Will the Manhattan Trade School for Glr's. now that it has been taken over by the Board of Education, do as much for the physical development of Its pupils it has been doing in the past? That is what a good many friends of the school were wondering as they watched the dancing of the girls at the May Festival given at Terrace Garden last Thursday evening by the Graduate Association and pupils of the school. Only the initiated knew it, but the graceful evolutions performed by the nymphs in welcoming Juno to earth in the Greek fantasy at the festival, and the rainbow dance and al) "the rest of it just what the girls are taught to do at the school for flatfoot and other weaknesses of the feet. When a girl enters the school Miss Mary Porter Beegle, the physical director, immediately has her examined from head to foot for evidences of physical unsoundness.

and takes an impression of her feet to see if there is anything the matter with the arches. "Every girl who ever came to this school has lelt her footprints here literally." said Miss Beegle to a Tribune reporter. "I take the impression on paper with solution of iron and tannic acid. About half the girls examined have some weakness of the feet. Here If a pretty bad case of flatfoot," and she brought out a card on which the whole bottom of the foot showed, without any arch at all.

of the girls have a more or less decided lateral curvature of the spine, which comes, of course, from carrying bnbies around when they are too small for the weight. If there is anything the trouble we find it out, for the examination is no cursory one. The girl is undressed, her spine tested by the doctor's fingers, her heart listened to, her teeth, eyes and throat looked into, and every test of her oundness made. STRIKING BAKERS AND THEIR WIVES IN CONFERENCE. "If her eyes need treatment we send her to an oculist; we don't just send her to an optician for glasses.

If her teeth need repairs she is sent to a dentist. The bad cases of foot weakness, spinal irregularities. we send to Teachers College twice a week, where they have special gymnastic exercises. If they can't spare the carfare it is provided out of a special fund we have. "Then there are gymnastics here, and If the girls with foot weakness are wearing i the wrong sort of shoes, as they generally are, we see that they get the right sort.

i Then they dance for dance in their stocking feet. They love to do this. except when occasionally they pick up a tack or a pin. which isn't pleasant." Not only is the Impression of every girl's feet taken, but her medical history Is written down on a huge card. If there is sickness or If there have been deaths in her family, these things are recorded.

"So," said Miss Beegle, "If a girl has three brothers dead with tuberculosis, for Instance, we can gently direct that girl into some trade that can't hurt weak lungs, and avoid tho mistake of allowing to choose one that would keep her at a machine all day." Naturally, everybody interested in this department of the school is watting to Bee what will happen now. Maxwell is known to believe in a more thorough medical oversight of the. children In the public echoola than they have ever had yet. the Board of Health has this matter in charge. Some of the Manhattan Trade School people say thla is wrong 1 that the Board of Education ought to look after the children medically as well as mentally.

"It doesn't mean much," said one of the instructors, "when a Boarl of Health doctor passes down a line of children taking a hasty look at their tongues. Anyhow, feel that our girls need more. For they come here for only one year, from here they go out to work in factories, most of them, and it is very important that their bodies should be built up." It Is possible, though, that If the city does not see its way clear to keeping up the physical department the board, which has always looked after the Manhattan Trade School, will do it, for the city only leased the building and equipment for two years, and the board will still retain some interest. Shower baths will soon be a part of the equipment. That was what the girls danced for the other night.

Their dancing brought $400, which completes the $2,100 needed to 'put In nine shower baths and nine double dressing rooms, which wili permit batches of eighteen girls to go In at once, nine bathing while the other nine are getting ready. The question of physical ovprsight is not the only detail to be settled before the city assumes charge of the Manhattan Trade School next fall. For instance, what diplomas will be required of the teachers? Must they know all about the three "Rs" and Latin and geometry in order to teach girls how to make hats and run power machines? "The best teacher of a trade," said Miss Helen R. Hlidreth. "is a person who has worked at that trade.

And people who work at trades can't get the same degree of academic education. In some of the manual training schools, however, men teachers are admitted without passing the examination required for public school teachers. Some such arrangement may be made here." D. A. R.

OFFICERS INSTALLED. The Knickerbocker Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution Installed the following officers at its last meeting or the season, held on Friday, tit the Waldorf Astoria: Mrs. William H. Stewart, resent; Mrs. Frederick Hasbrouck.

honorary regent; Mrs. Simon Baruch and Mrs. L. Curtis Brackett, vice-regents; Mrs. John Gelbaugh.

treasurer; Mrs. Samuel Hard, recording secretary; Miss Grace Osborne, corresponding secretary; Miss Helen M. Fisher, registrar; Mrs. Frank Crowell, historian, and Mrs. J.

M. Duncan, Mrs. J. Sparks Kress, Mrs. harles F.

Terhune and Mrs. X. Taylor Phillips and Miss Edith M. Clover, members of the executive board. The state regent, Mih.

Joseph S. Wood, was representated by Mrs. William Cummlr.g Story, honorary Hate. regent. PLANT WATERING SCHEME.

i Iri houaoholrt plants are often in a It desired to leave the house temporarily without neglecting the plants. An arrangement can be rigged up so that ihe necessary watf-r will be supplied to the soil automatically. Takt bowl of water, ralfle it well ahove the plant tM uatf-rcd by means of box or a pile of books. Twist tstrancis of common darning wool to form a long thread, and soak tnem In the water. If one hung the bowl and other end left in the water, a drip, ilrlp will besir, and continue until the bowl Is Dundee Advertiser.

AFTER THE FLIES Municipal League Joins Crusade Against the Pest. The "Woman's Municipal League has Joined In the crusade against the fly and has mailed to all its who during 'the summer will be scattered over the entire continent, and will, therefore, have many oppportunlties for carrying light to I those who sit in the special bulj letin of thp fly fighting committee of the American Civic Association. The folder contains some unpleasant but useful Information, which Is not as familiar as It might be. in spite of the publicity that has been given to this subject. "The fly you see walking over the food you are about to eat is covered with filth and germs," says the folder, and continues: "If there Is any dirt in your house or I about your premises, or those of your neighbors', he has just come from it.

It is I his home. Watch him as he stands on the lump of sugar industriously wiping his feet. He is wiping oft the disease germs, bing them on the sugar that you are going to eat, leaving the poison for you to swallow. He w-ipes his feet on the food that you eat, on the faces and on the lips of i your sleeping: children. This does more to spread typhoid fever and cholera infantum and other Intestinal diseases than any other cause- Not only does the fly scatter the seeds of disease from his bedy over your food but before your fruit and vegetables are placed before you they have been subjected to his filthy habits, either in the kitchen or in the stores where he flies from the horse dirt in the middle of the street to the tubercular sputum on the sidewalk, and then back to the foodstuffs displayed for Bale." The best way to get rid nf flies, of course.

to prevent their breeding, but as the housekeeper cannot control her neighbors she usually has to resort to other methods. Fortunately for her. the fly has a thirsf only equalled by his hunger and kindly to the various potions prepared for him by careful housekeepers when they cannot keep him at bay with screens and cleanliness. The latest. and cheapt-st drink for him, says the bulletin.

Is made by dissolving a solution of formalin or formaldehyde water and ailing a spoonful of this liquid to a quarter of a pint of water. Flies may be stupefied by burning pyrethrum powder, ar'rev which they may be swept up and burned. Still another waapea is the somewhat unexpected one of odors. This is the only pleasant bit of reading in the bulletin. While a fly loves the odor of filth and can smell It rnik-s away, he do-3n't like sweet ouors, and the fragrance of flowers, geraniums, mignonette, lavender or any perfr.me will drive him away PIAZZA DECORATIONS Nature Lays Them at the Gates of the Country Chatelaine.

Piazza decorations are of serious moment to the woman who has not a flower garden in full bloom at her doorstep. If she has to buy her supply It means a large hole in her purse every few days. A few flowers, too. look badly, and between seasons there 13 not much that will make a showing unless the owner of the veranda realizes the value of shrubbery or branches foliage that she can collect on her rambles and arrange artistically. With the wicker and mission furniture usually chosen for thla i outdoor living room branches look Just as well as bloom, and against cedar shingles a copper vase with copper beech twigs of length is most attractive.

Growing plants and baskets filled with ferns and trailing vines are no trouble to take care of and do not like flowers, and there are fascinattng earthenware boxes in which to grow foliage plants or ferns. Geraniums trimmed into branching bushes will grow luxuriantly under as on a porch, and soon resemble balls of pink, white or scarlet petals, so closely do the blossoms cover leaves. Other charming piazza plants are and with some of these and geraniums wonderful effects "can be maintained. For the vases the wildanMM by the wayside can be a source of supply. Acacia i both yellow and white, wild cherry, pj or white horse chestnut, and later wild laurel azalea, rhododendron and that most beautiful plant, the butterfly weed.

In tones from maize to burnt orange, will keep up any color scheme until goldenrod and asters come to usher In the autumn leaves In I short, the woman with a country place may make her oiazza the most attractive part of her. house by the means of decoration that nature lays nt her gates TEACHERS COLLEGE EXHIBITS. Teachers College is going to keep open house thl. week. The new building of the School of Household Art.

win be en for 0W fr Bto 10 SSocS Tuesday from 10 -to 12. 2to 5 and Bto 10. Mann 2l 5'5 The IIo ce M.ti an scho will be open to TameT ame tlme ftnd th be exhibits of students' work. The P-n nounces a demonstration of laundry apparatus in the laundry laboratory on Tueio yy and ln afternoon of the same at 3 there bea demonstrator, ln carvin in Room loZ v7 th yal Co en tOn London lOan Teachers College. on exhibition in the nt 'he VACATION Rompers and Fill the Bill for Little Folks.

If the little people of the family are to enjoy the summer outing moroujchly aac cet aa much benefit from It as they Tatfi their mothers Rive up itM of keeping them continually on dress The to enjoy the freedom fresh air of the country or is preciousv and ought not to be. limited. Tboee who have country that thay can flee to for week ends or longrer perioaa during: the year can afford to carry their city to the country, if tkeji choose ItO be SO foolish, but to the' majority, who go to modest suburban tm part of the year or to nearby watering the vacation are very priscioua and should be made the most of. Simple of the little people makes n.s easier for both mothtr and chtid. The romper fashion solves problem for boys and airle er six.

Put on before fcreafcfast, with aaadala and a big. comfortable straw hat, they tax the bill exactly. They are cocl. there are no petticoats under them, they seem to keep clean much longer thaa arasaal or wash sutta. It mm launder an important consideration If one la away from they do sot fade.

The pretty summer things may keot for the one ceremonious meal of tSa day or for Sunday afternoon, but for rest of the time the rompers are sufficient. The sandals are all the protection nuaisfl for the feet, unless rubbers should be required early ln the day. for Cae lew linen longer on tbe grass than it doe 3 en the city's flags. A nice warm reefer should be provided for the cool of the evening, and the straw hat must be comfortable and Harht, else it will be cast aside, for now tbe experts say that too much sunburn is bad. It makes the skin coarse and causes the hair to grow profusely upon it.

which is bad when little miss blooms into yoosaj womanhood and desires to have a aooi complexion; for the boy it doe 3 not as much matter. If this independent plan is adopted by one mother in a summer colony she win be surprised to see how many other mothers will follow her good example, and what comfort they will all reap from the ment. At times It quite pays to be a pioneer, for lots of people would be quite sensible if they just had a little ment In the right direction. LATEST JAPANESE EFFECT. The'wlstarla tree is the latest Japaneasjaa effect sought Ly expensive gardeners train one into any kind of shape takes three years of patient pruning, but tbe result is well worth waiting so foreign and artistic and unusual.

The is f.n: allowed to grow to a height of four feet. and then all tendrils are nippel at tlie top and those at the sides made to trnin out over stakes. These are kept pruned as they grow into branches. When stronj enough they are permitted to bloom, and clusters of pale violet flowers soon hang ia profusion from the spreading, rainlatura trees. PROMINENT PEOPLE PRAISE LONDD3I PLUMES April 1310.

Tlie London Feather West 3Ki su. York City. Gentlemen: Replying: to your Ins an expression as to what I thlr.it of London Plumes as compared with others. I will stat? that the best ttMMM or opinion is nempllflrd in the fact EMI I always buy London Plumes. They are without a doubt the richest sat, mos: beautiful plumes I ever DON'T BUY ODDS AND ENDS IN PLUMES AT SPECIAL SALES.

Although you cannot buy Trade London Plumes at speciai sales, you csa always get them direct from us at 3 money than job lots and and offered at as sensational bargains tn stores that try their level best is our Inctend nf job i mil ana 1 which nroumulate retail, we them to the la turn them to wht "'it at You Is not have to buy flimsy, scrawnypicked over odds and emls save in plumfs. Buy London tae best fearhers. which to the and nave per cent. LARGEST II OF OSTRICH PLIMES IX THE Won i FROM to Mall Filled. Jmidoiu 2t 84TII ST.

I Waldorf- Astoria. I Mt 6th near to iM Sr. I Tunnel Station. All I 27T GRAND STRKK CHICAOO Monroe, near LONDON HOYSE Golden l.ane. 5 When in BERLIN Be Sure to Crunfeld's Linen Store; 20.

21. Lelpzigor Strest OWN iMILLS: LAXDESHUT. SILESW j. Mme. COM AN METHOD THE ONLY FACIAL RESTORATION WJfig that Xl GIVES ENTIRE TION.

removtn? WRINKf.ES ISHES. cuttlnjs In America. Canada and Endorsements, offlcUl t3 riMt guaranteed York. I'rartlcal In The Hew York Bookinj Ssiioa United Tel 3407 uramercy. 104 HKNRY s.

t- Mrt W. EM. ROOS2VEI.T. UOODWIM. Treae mim.

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