Newspaper Page Text
?LITTLE FAIRIES OF THE GRASS HELP TRIBUNE FRESH AIR FUND Write a Play and Produce It in Their Summer Home at Washington, Conn., for the "Left Behind" Children. The ?ay to be happy"* Philosophers set un a ai**nrost I -nark the route long ago. It read: To Arrive at Happiness. ' Strive to Make Others Happy. ! ? . But lots of people don't believe, th lophora. They say the way to b hspry is to buy amusements and lux scifhout end for one's self. A you V: ?svv. however, that's the roa ?a-hich ?cads to a place called Dmap most of the world goini its choice of routes to thi; delectable ?and of happiness, one littl, i groi.p ?-'' children saw the right sigi : and to?-'*, the right road. Thev calle? . thesssehres "The Little Eniries of th? Grass" When they are at home thev live ir Sett York. Just at present, however : they ire enjoying happiness at Wash ? or.n. There are nine of them ? come from the great citv -?new that when they left | there were thousands of children who weren't going to spend the 1 summer in Washington, Conn., or any ; ciher place where happiness could be ? they said: "Since we call our fairies, let's be fairies good ?he kind you read of in books. . that make people rich and r,. having ail said it at the same they a',1 shouted together. "Mo , i." and set to work. the queen of the band was al riting a play?fair , |es can do such things; to the rest the ' job of acting it and getting their come and see them act it. as assigned to ' was called "The Wav To ? because the fairies make the audience hm,r\ ? e was there for another the actors aimed ? ike some of those "left he happv by r ?' the audience?" re to pay admis lion to see the performance. Thev did. too If you care to see how much, look in the contributors' column below, for all the proceeds of ? to The Tribune Freeh Air Ip it in finding the "Way to ?me of the little stay at-hon * youngsters of the tenements. There wer.> nine of the fairies, and their work will just about make pos? sible happy country outings for nine of their little fellows. Those who took part in the play were Janev Woodruff. Helen Wersobe. Nancy Prindle. Esther Anderson, Carolyn Peach. Mildred (?lin. Irma Wersebe. Margaret Woodruff and Muriel Wandling. To day two parties of "Fresh Airs" will be sent off to happiness. One goes to the North Shore Holida, House, at Huntington, Long Island; the other to Kim Cottage, at Fairficld. Conn. On Thursday there will also he two parties one to Happy Land and one to St. Helen's Home. On Friday there will be four parties -one to Rutlnnd. Vt.; one to Richfield Springs. N. Y.; one to BastOB, Penn., and one to St. Helen's Home. CO.NTKll'l Ili'SS TO TH.* TRI1UNK Ullsll All? n Ml .'?. n icio?;, is,,l .|S2.| . ! ?M EqUlDOJ BOU .. Muirli.'s \ T ? lall ? V.. :\, - at lh.? (?rnas" . ?.(XI - name. n no . rj l.?nrl"ii. ??Iirltrr Inland llelsiits. Unis UUi . :':<:*, Mrs H s K ?rland . m "" - " i., ?h ? ,f ?menla. N -i in U In m. '.|,i .?.il. *? 1? "" Mm N ;>. .',,.?, Knulh . . l. ail Km,.!" ........ IS.es .:, ,?"' . 1" ?'. .. U< k. ?''"in " I "" ?: ineiii'.rjr of 1'irol . .-. SI Mr-, T T Wsll.r . ,VM Kat*. V 11 I . K la ?111, M . j ?'?> . u Da-la . .? Boms smiili. jr. S.fl m-- i. w em... . S.JJ . . s.ss M I H Kraut. . I M .M?ntela!-" . I N i i m ...... '? os - M Unwell . .' "" T II Taj ? . ?'? 9? rame In the paper" 6 ??? Mr. A \\ Putl :n .....! "" I - . "0 W ii, m.-r I'oakllA? ?? ? I '?. rrai.k'll Knl? ? ?'? Il1-1 c T -' ??' . I?*' I l. Wall . . I. A Man irlliainn . . , * Rol -rt Mulf'.rl ?... fin Krom a friend" . ?'? t?> A V. [?Il ?? . ?*? ? rielan . II ? WIUoo . Jl II Thompson. Frank 1.?! I . r-. t.anie . ' K. A W '* . _?_ ? publish name". '-' SS l M La B ? . p . (I Bailey. I . S Ka.lu . ? ? In?. ? "" . . *o Total* AmewA H. IMS.? Contributions, preferably by check or money order, should be sent to The Tribune Free!. Air Fund, The Tribune. New York. BAR HARBOR FETE ATTRACTS SOCIETY Dancing, Tableaus and Fashion Exhibitions Given. -?r, Aug. 24. The fashion ?nming Club to-night Ambulance I had many diverting attract one. were Miss ? ? \ hi bi? ll were ? neluding I ? Watl ! ? ? I-nth, Endicott, Lvelj rhart an?.l '?' ? ? .?fter noon i The , in which ' Helene In g hite and blue. Th? ? ere Mr. and ' ? rneur Mor? ir, and Mrs PI d Mrs. !.. , Mr. and Mrs. att, Mr. and Mra. ; ? ' Mrs. Newel] Tilton, Mi hn R. Rog? i s, Mrs. A J. Brooks Mis. James Potter, Mrs. John i, Mrs. Harry Thor Mi-. W. H. Han.-,.i:, Mrs. I A. B. Hanks, Mrs. *V. H '. De K. Davis. Mrs. Warner ; oJseph T. Bowen. . lied by the fete William Lawrence Creen manager. re, daughter of Wetmore, arrived at New? port ? morning to ipen i .. with " rpont Morgan. Trio gave ?, recital at . A. Howard Hinkle ' Tomato Ketchup Free from Benzoate of Soda will give the touch that EAT ALL PEACHES YOU CAN What You Can't Eat Can. Advice of Housewives' League. all the peaches you can, and what you cannot eat can," is the ad? vice of the Housewives' League, which is conducting a campaign to save th" ' peach crop. Despite the large crop,: prices are high, because the public is i not buying. The league advises housewives to i purchase in large quantities. It will teach all who apply at its headquar- I ters how to preserve the peach. LENOX ANNOUNCES COMING WEDDING C. A. Doolittle. Jr., Will Marry, Miss Shotter, of Georgia. [Hr Tclc?r?f,h ?" Tli- TrH.un? 1 Lenox, Mass., Aug. 21. Miss Elinor Buchanan Shotter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer P. Shotter, of Savannah, Ca., and Charles Andrews Doolittle, jr., of New York, son of Mr. and Mrs. | Charles A. Doolittle. of I'tica, N. Y, will be married in Trinity Episcopal < hurch, on Saturday, September 25. The Rev. Dr. William H. Vibbcrt is a guest of Mrs. Charles Carroll Jackson in Stockbridge. Miss Helen Rand gave a luncheon in Pittsiield this afternoon. Among the social features of Septem? ber will be the annual ball in aid of Miss Etheldred F. Folsom's Mountain View- Sanatorium in the Lenox Club, September 25; a dance given by Mrs. Carl A. de Gersdorff, September 3. and a dance by Miss Margaret French at Chesterdoow, September 4. Antonio Scotti left Curtis Hotel this morning for Manchester, Vt. Alexander S. Webb and Miss M. Civilise Alexandre came to Spring Lawn to-night from New York. Mrs. S. Cobb Coleman gave a tea at her home in Pittstield this afternoon. Mrs. Alexander Sedgwick has returned to Stockbridge from Plattsburg, N. Y., where she visited her husband at the military instruction camp. Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Pease, of Hempstcad, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hollister Peai e. Dr." Constantin T. Dumba, Austro Hungarian Ambassador, returned to the Poplars to-night from New York. SCHURZ LEGACY TO HARVARD (ieneral's Daughter Left Residue to , Brother and Sister. Three institutions receive bequests in the will of Miss Agatha Schurz, daughter of Carl Schurz, who died July M .n Warren County. N. Y. To the public library of Bolton Landing, N. Y., Miss Schurz left 100 volumes from her library; to the Children's Charitable Union, of BS9 East Fourth Street - and to ?he Stillman Inlirmaiy of Harvard Uni? versity $1,000. Marie Jussen, of Mil? waukee. ' and Wilhelmine Schiffer, of Chicago, cousins, receive $10,000 each and Margaret Brady, a servan;, $500. Other bequests aggregate $7.500. The i.-idue goes in equal shares to Carl . Schurz and .Marianne Schurz. SjH?RLICR'S ??*7*^ THE ORIGINAL ?ft. MALTED MILK )?^S__/ THE FOOD-DRINK FOR ALL AGES \\W^^^ TAKE A PACKAGE HOME *H_* jHA4.uot-H.aC0- mm, an en, ?\a*,?t ^T_?____->J W:HO???MTITllT? lt-?'JW?T Af?OOD? ?J? America's Clubwomen. Are Its Truest Citi zens," Says the Spanish Woman Who Is Establishing' a Permanent Exposition in Spain for American Nations. Miss Paulina de Ciano, Delegate to AmericanWomen, Proposes a Memorial to Columbus to Cement International Friend? ships. By Janet Priest. THAT the women's clubs of th 1'nited States most truly rep resent the progress and menta attainments of the nation is the opin ion of a Spanish woman, Miss Paulini de Ciano (pronounced Thee-ahn-yo) who is now on this side of the Atlantic "In fact, that is why I am here,' said Miss Ciano, a few days ago. jus1 before leaving for Cuba to visit hei brother Carlos, a playwright and jour naliat connected with the "Diario de Ir Marina," Havana. "It is fitting that 1 place my mission before the women, as Columbus placed his fate in the hand., of Queen Isabella. The court coulH lind no money for the voyager's hare? brained project, but the Castillian gavt her jewels and bade Columbus god? speed. So I come to the women of America. "What is my plan? Oh, it is not mine! I am a small part of a great plan. I am the representative of the Palosfilo Club of Palos de Mogue-, Spain, whose hope it is to erect at Palos, the port from which Columbus sailed, a building for each of the na? tions of the Columbian continent. "Over each building will fly its na? tion's flag. Each will he a miniature exposition of arts and industrial work, a bureau of information, a representa? tive of the New World in the Old. It is hoped that trade will be stimulate?* and friendship cemented. Palaces and historic treasures heretofore unknown to visitors will be open to them, and reductions in prices are promised tour ? ' The world which Columbus found will have a home in the nation that caused its discovery. Palos will be neutral ground. Who knows??per? haps international difficulties may b settled there in a friendly spirit for all time to come. "Already the city of Palos has do nateil the land, along the 'Street of the West Indie.;,' which leads from Palo to the monastery of La R?bida. It '. hoped that each country will build its own pavilion on the site allotted to it, To insure a harmonious effect Spanis architects will make the plans, the df sign of each building being submitte to its nation for approval. Perhap Sorolla will decorate the building o the United States. "In Brazil, Fcuador, Argentina am all the other countries of the Westen world the idea will be presente? through the Spanish ministers, but I asked permission to come to the I'nite States myself to tell the women abou it. We have no such momen's clubs a you have. It is true. Spanish womer band themselves together in the nam? of charity and religion. The youn? girls whc. have attended the same con? vent oftijn form groups of their owr for hene-Jolent work. That is all very beautifulj but I cannot but admir? your pu'liic spirited women who studv the conftflions that lie back of the need lor chari'y." On October 12, last year, the anniver? sary of Columbus's discovery of Amer? ica, the Palosfilo Club inaugurated thi:; project. In October, fittingly enough, Miss Ciano will return from Cuba to "tell the women about it." It is prob? able that she will have some one else talk for her. "I talk English so very badly," she says. On the contrary, she talks it very well, though her accent is a little difficult for ears not attuned tj Spanish articulation. "Columbus and His Times," the book which Miss Ciano will exhibit this fal'. consists largely of facsimiles of docu? ments connected with Columbus and his ancestors. These have been kep: among the archives of the city of Se? ville, and in the collection of th" Dnehesee of Alva, a descendant of Co lumbus. The book has a prologue writ tin by the Princess of Bavaria, the Infanta Paz de Bourbon, aunt of King Alfonso. It contains autographs of the King and Queen of Spain, and of Pope Bene'dict XV. It has been trans? lated into English by the Rev. Father O'Connor, of Washington, D. C. "Columbus was a Spaniard," Miss Ciano said, "as the documents plainly The Green Corn Season !s Waning By Jeannette Young Norton (^*" REEN corn season is always v y Comed by its many lovers. Th people fortunate enough to c kitchen gardens wherein diminut corn fields find a space, if they h: followed the oldtime rule of plant one row every ten days up to the Fou of July, may enjoy this toothsome da ty up to the time when fro.-it nips I stalks. For early use the Country Gent man, Squantum and some other go early varieties are planted, but the mi crop is usually the old reliable Stowel Evergreen, which remains tender up the last eating. . Boiled corn on the cob is the way is most generally served, but there a so many other ways of serving it th not to try them is to lose many ro treats. A selection of one of any of t following recipes, if not already know will immediately become one of t housewife's most valuable aids to t! VOgl table menu. ' Corn Soup. Split the grains of one dozen ears ripe, full corn, and. with the back of silver knife scrape them down. Thro the cobs into water, with a stalk of ce cry cut small and a thinly sliced onio boil ten or fifteen minutes, strain ar use a quart of the water, add to it pint of rich milk, a pint of cream, sal pepper, half small cup of sugar and th com, cooking it fifteen minutes an thickening slightly with a tablcspoo each of butte- and flour rubbed to cream. Corn Puree. Split the grains of one dozen ears o corn and scrape them down, add tablespoonful of sugar, salt, peppei small lump of butter, a cup of milk an a cup of cream; boil in double boile for fifteen minutes, then rub through ; puree sieve, and if too thick thin alight ly with a little hot cream. Succotash. Prepare a dozen ears of corn b; splitting the grains and scraping them then add a lump of butter, pepper, salt two tablespoonfuls of sugar, a cup ol cream and a half cup of milk; stew ir double boiler fifteen minutes. Hav< ready a quart of freshly boiled Limi beans, drain them and add to the corn Fry two slices of pickled pork that ha? been diced a crisp brown and add them with the fat to the succotash. This is a famous New England recipe. Corn au Gratin. Split and scrape a dozen ears and add a half cupful of dry-, fine bread crumbs, two tablespoonfuls of grated cheese, two beaten eggs, small cupful of cream, pepper, salt, tablespoon? ful of sugar; ftjl buttered ramekins with the mixture, dusting the top of each with a little grated cheese and bake. Corn Fritters. One-half pint grated corn, half cup? ful of rich milk, half cupful of sifted flour, teaspoonful of baking powder, a tablespoonful of melted butter, pepper, salt, teaspoonful of sugar, two beaten Mix the ingredients smoothly and fry in deep, hot fat. Drain, serve in a napkin with a little sliced lemon. Corn Pudding. Split and scrape one dozen ears of corn, add two beaten ej?gs, salt, pep per. tablespoonful of sugar, a small cupful of cream and a gill of melted butter; pour into buttered baking dish, dust the top with a tablespoonful of fine crumbs mixed with a pinch of pep? per and salt. Bake in a moderate oven about a half hour till a delicate brown. (ireen Corn Croquette*. Take one quart of the grated green corn, one cupful of sifted flour, one cupful of sweet milk, a lump of butter the size of an egg, pepper and salt. Put all in a saucepan and stir hard, adding a tea?poonful of sugar. Remove from the lire and let if cool, then aild three-quarters of a cupful of dry bread crumbs and mould into croquettes. Dip them in egg and roll them in crumbs, then fry in hot lard. Drain, garnish I with parsley and lemon and serve. I show. In his letters to Queen Isabella and others he wrote in Latin and Span i ish never in Italian. But in all ages a prophet has been without, honor in i his own country, and so Columbus went ' to Genoa and returned from there. thinking, without doubt, to receive more serious consideration. "Columbus was born in Pontevedra, in Galicia. Destiny evidently had him in mind when his two grandfathers joined partnership in the lish busin?.?'.. We have the document of the agree? ment between Domingo dc Colon and i Benjamin Fonterosa, together with ; some very amusing bills in which the local bishop was repeatedly dunned be? cause he did not pay for his fish. Fon terosa was the father of Columbus's j mother, and as he was a Jew, those | who claim that the discoverer had Jew '. Ish blood are right. I have promisee' 'my government that no'portion ofthes. j books shall leave my hands for any | purpose until they have been exhibited to the American public." It is with reluctance that Miss Ciano r.peaks of herself, and yet she is well worth speaking of. When a child of ?fifteen she was decorated with the Mi! ' itary Red Cross by Queen Cristina, the. I mother of Alfonso, for bravery in as i sisting the wounded in the Cuban War. in which two of her brothers, both young lieutenants, were killed. Only I five women in all Spain have this deco ; ration. Her mother was the Marqui.-?. de Buena Vista Alegri, and her grand? father, who was nf a scientific turn of j I mind, made one in the expeditions of, Jorge Juan. As many persons have said of Ellen Terry, "Never before have I seen act? ing," they may say on meeting Paulina de Ciano, "Never before have I graceful hands." Severely simple in drfss and manner, her hands betray the well-born Spanish woman. It is agrace Beach Youngsters Simple gins \ hams serve \ most admirably \ forthevacatwn \ pinafores. I LA ! Paulina de Ciano, who hopes that the city from which Columbus sailed for America may be an international centre like The Hague. unstudied, unconscious, coming from a long line of nohly bred ancestors. A photograph of Miss <"elia Marti? nez, niece of Dr. Julia Martinez, of Havana, in the costume in which she posted for the artist Vedder, wasshowr Miss Ciano. "Ah, yes, she knows how to wear the mant?n. That comes with breeding. Calv? ami the dancers do not attempt it. The mant?n, you see, i not fastened anywhere. It is con stantly being redraped and rewound in the hands of the wearer, and that re? quires a great ?leal of skill. I'm afraid in this modern styles of dress, I'm for? getting how to wear the mant?n." But Paulina de Ciano is not forgetting to br womanly and public spirited. She is not forgetting to do her share of the world's work. I SCHOOL AND COMMUNITY -B Why Should New York Not Follow Baltimore's Lead in the Encouragement of Community Music? By Henrietta Rodman. ; f/*"rT*? not what we know but whi ! we love that makes us what ?a are," sai?! Mrs. Henrietta Bak< Low, formerly supervisor I ?music in the Raltimore public school: "The only scholars are those wh love learning. To the extent that ou educational system tries to force fact upon children it is a failure. "The only wise teachers are thos i who are delving deep into the chil nature, discovering natural interest and building on them. Musi?* Comes Eirsl. "Natural interests are the points' s which the world rouses the emotion? 1 and the greatest of these is music No, I don't mean music as it is beini . taught in most schools to-day. Tha I is technical, conventional, like thi teaching of mathematics. "I have the utmost respect for th? teachers of rauaic who begin to toarr children to read music at seven, bu? I believe they're wrong. I believe thai they have failed to establish an emo? tional basis for their teaching. Child? ren who are taught in this way arc more likely to sing because they feel like singing. "We're beginning to doubt the no*. visability of trying to teach children i to read stories until they begin to , want to read them. "Singing is a glorious means of self 1 expression if one wants to sing, and I everybody does want to, but we're not all conscious of our desire. So, first, I should try to get this sub-conscious , desire into consciousness. "I would bring music real music, ; the best and lots ot it into the lives j of the children. The auto-playing organs and pianos and the phono ! graphs make it possible for every group of people to hear music before they ? have the slightest ability to produce it. Home and School. "In some homes children are sur? rounded by an atmosphere of apprecia j tion of music. But in many homes, unfortunately, this atmosphere is i either lacking or is stutTy with rag 1 time. "Very much can be done to develop the love of good music in the home, but what we cannot have there at I once we can produce immediately in the schools. "With one teacher who loves music 1 -?as David Copperfield loved Dora <lo ? I you remember? 'I ste Dors, drsnl Dora, was saturated with Dora'??wttl ' one teacher in a school who is satu rated with it music can be made t great force for individual development as it has been hitherto only in th< lives of the very few, and for social development as we have scarcely. dreamed that it might be. ".No, I'm wrong. Love of music, even with remarkable technical ability, ia not enough to make a great teacher ol music. She must have intense social feeling as well, for th?1 supreme func? tion of music is as a social force. "Ol course, you know Dryden's poem in which muMC moves Alexander the Great to love and pride and hate. And no doubt you remember the C,r*ek story at the lame schoolmaster whose songs roused the Spartans to a paasion of patriotism. "This is the power of music which we have forgotten or ignored its power to rouse emotion, to inspire devotion for an ideal. Oniy the churches have kept their faith in it, and they, too, have itss??rdited and conventionalized their use of it. Community Song*. "Now s few cities are beginning to use community music to develop that feeling of group relationship, of social solidarity, which is the civic spirit Songs are being introduced at publia meetings and at hand concerts. Large and small communities sre having 'rings.' "Last spring these 'sinks' were held in ten different places in Baltimore County. They began as soon as the country roads were passable and as the evenings grew long. "The people drove in from the farms to the district schoolhouse. Sometimes there were talks and motion pictures a? well as singing, sometimes only 1 "We found some remarkable voices I among the country folk, and one boy at '. is*, will he given a scholarship : in the conservatory of music at Balti ? more. "On April 2<*? we held the largest , of these sings* in Baltimore. The hall seated fifteen hundred persons; every i inch of standing room was taken and i there were crowds out on the sidewalk. Harold Randolph, the director of the Peabody Conservatory, played the or? gan, and Franz Bornschein and his or ehestrs accompanied 'he singing. Solo? ists sang the verses and the audience of two thousand sang the choruses. Why Not in New York? "Why should not New York in some such way, through its schools and com mnnity cintres, uso music to develop I civic spirit ?" Open Until 5. Broadway at Ninth Advance Sale of Furs Extending until Wednesday, September 15th That Is Really Remarkable Because of Conditions Keeping Furs in This Country The war will keep in this country 25 mil? lion dollars of American furs that ordinarily would sell abroad. This in itself brings down prices. In addition, we take off these low prices one-fourth more for this sale, taking it out of our own and furriers' profits. This is why the sale is remarkable. It of? fers, for instance, dyed muskrat coats at $65, that are better than we had in our last August Sale at $75. Persian lamb coats at $73, which are as good as we had at $110. Mole coats at $100, which last year sold for $150. Small furs show similar lessening in cost. kl n !BP! L For the Fashions, Read the Paris Cable This cable confirms what the American fur market predicts, that the fox family will be much in demand?cross fox, white fox, red fox, natural blue fox, and dyed blue fox; that skunk will be especially good. Beaver has come int?> its own and will be popular this winter, especially in coats. Fur coats will be round, loose and shorter, around forty inches, with some of them reaching close to the waist. Some wonderful mole coats are in the sale, and some really extraor? dinary values in dyed muskrat. Persian lamb and caracul coats. The wide funnel collars, of which the Paris cable speaks, are what we call Chin-Chin collars, seen in many of the coats. In small furs, muffs will be smaller and round?barrel, tube, oval. Some have animal trimmings, some fancy trimmings; many are plain. Furs bought in this Sale will be stored Free in our Vaults, if desired? until November 1, if 25 per cent, of the purchase money is paid down Prices give very little indication of fur qualities, hut we mention a 'ew here to give an idea of the range and extent of the sale. Each piece is a fourth less than it will he later in the season. Paris Cable PARIS. August ?nth John Wanainaker, New York: Furriers show mtieh Breit? schwanz (Bain lamb), ?*aracul, skunk, tit? h. gray fox with trim of ermine, white fox, Long coats have **odeta nil round, short looae coats with very h gh. artde funnel i o Urs. Muffs round, tube and oval shapes. John Wanamaker, Paris. Small FURS ? muffs of skunk. . . .$12 to ?50; barrel shaped. $15 to I26.S0. Skunk scarfs .$5 t?> MO Natural lyoi sets.$13 and l2# Black lynx muffs.$17 to #39 Black lynx scarfs.$17 to $40 Black skunk muffs, $11.65; scarfs, $7.35 and $14 Red lux muffs.$13.25 t * Fed ?OI scarfs, double tur.$'7.2' to $ 10 Cross fox sets.$66. $80. 1130 fox scarfs.526 I? - White fox scarfs.52" I White tox muffs.,.$33 to $40 Dved Hue fox scarfs.#26 *.,, ft**. Beaver muffs.Slut? - ? . a\^m^m^4m\m^4m\\\\j4m\m\9?.75 to Fur COATS Dyed muskrat coats, plain.$?? to $127 muskrat coats, trimmed.173 t.i .-"127 Beaver coats .$127 ;.. $i-7 Persian lamb ?.oats.$7 3 and $300 Mole coats.$l??<? to #2<M Karakul coats.$5 I to #240 .. HiUllllllHIllK. Silver Foxes in the Original Skins .Because <>f the rarit?. and costliness ?>i \ilver fox. and the trickerv m :n.iking them up, we show theve ".ihrer fuxe '. we will make them to order at two da\s The sets ranne from $'7 5 to #1800. and these Dlicei will be recognised b\ t!io>e who know as being verv low. Every fur, of course, is fresh from the furrier, and Wanamaker-guaranteed lur Salmis. Second tloor, Uld Building.