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THE SUN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1918. T 1V"T T1 X T T ' X T r"r T ' A -X AT -NT T T TvT T T-v "V jf A r-i-T T-, "V r Tk T T TT TT X T T A T fT- T" . ' O A Ti T? TTF I II Mh I II r K x I Jhc H A ll I H AI k I x) Z N H w Y I I I I XI I 1 VK A lh K I . AA hx r.T - - " - -a " JS. -v. JkJ. T -a. ' jl I T JL 'V. J J JL. V i.i XV X J X -. X J J JL JL. JL J- "S. J -a. J. Jk Jk s- ' - 6 : 30 YEARS' REIGN ENDS INDEBACLE King-Emperor Sacrificed Ger man Blood and Treasure for Fhanlom Goal. BORN. SWOBD ,IN HAND Survey of Yilhdm'fi Career and Ambitions That Goat Him His Throne. nr J. i. c. CLAititc. t.' , ' STnn MAN'AAD HIS TIME. There parses from his throno under the ban of the htrm'ari race a mun who has carried the helmet' crown of CJerrnan ksJierhood since 1888: In these thirty yean he showed In marked degree every ruse and every, quality that is hateful to .mankind under the camouflage of a hunt (or fame and a passldn for popularity. As a Honentollern he was born to vanity, personal display and the lust for power, and whatever he did pf seem ing good in speech or act, he nursed tinder all the mad llohenzoUedii' dream of peraonaWg-Kraridlzement to be sought relentlessly when the, moment Came at the cost of millions of German lives, the carnage of German flesh, the blood, the' wounds, tne ravished homes, tho vast waited "treasure of Germany. It Is outside the. possibilities that lie wavered a" hair of lost a smile over the" millions of 'lives, the tears, the plun der, the 'destruction, ho brought about In the. world outside Germany. That woflhl'be too much to ask. Having .duped, starved, decimated, impoverished, dishonored his own people he now sur veys" tho ruin pf tho bloody Hohen ollern dream'. Trained -for Varies Sacrifice. Germany had been trained for the useless sacrifice as a people to obey and a nation to endure his costliest trhlmi, and by supporting him and tho aristocrats and militarists at their wild est the Germans brought on themseh'es the curse of the world. Truly If God permitted a Kaiser to be. He could have chosen no other vessel to make visi ble the Inherent vlleness of the model. In judging him and his place In his tory this excess of types must bo re membered Frederic the Elector, whom Germans call the Great ; was just as exceralve, just as strenuous in forcing death and sacrifice' upon his people, but times lfave changed. A new gos pel denying the light of any one to In flict disaster on the1 people has reached the. Intelligent, and Germany pays for hei. master butcher. ih the heyday of Germany's peace Wllhelrr: fashioned a kaiser that he asked Germans and the world to ad mire, but ever he worked at the Hohen xollem dream war, war for slaughter, af for conquest, war for a high place the highest In history among the killers of men. What will remain of it alt can be put under an old wife's thimble. That he came to the throne with a cry to the army, nourished the military ideal, apparently lapsed into good na ture and fostered trade, patted the arts, worshipped science1 and made himself Into a pulpit thumping preacher must be told of him, but the face of the hard Jawed war lord, j the shrleker for un questioning divinely demanded obedience was never wholly absent and later the thought behind it became an obsession. Warrior Ilchlnd It All. Behind all thoughts of a glorious, peaceful, materially progressing Ger many he always saw the Mailed War rior riding forth, himself the Warrior, the Leader, the KaUer, the Victor at any cost. When Germany smiled at his dis torted sermons it little dreamed of the terrors and disasters that they vor ttndcd. So he at last found his chance to test It all. And from that hour In 1914 when he hurled his bolt he was at need of heaping lies upon delusions to keep Germany under his hand. One Is not here rehearsing his bloody campaigns. In one against Russia a home revolt flung the Cxar from the throne. The man for whom Ilusslan blood had been shed was a prisoner tn an hour, and the armies of Hussln melted away before tho anarchistic madness tjiat followed on the reaction against autocracy. It was a warning against all such rulers as the Ciar or the Kaiser, ond eo remains. If Nicholas ex hibited an easy neaknenff, the stupendous power for 111 of a Cxar, Wllhelm II., under tho disguise of his theatric dash, false glitter and occasional bon homie, made clear tho persisting, reck less cruelty and disregard of human rights' and lives, German as well as then, that underlie all pretensions to power of a poisonous race like the Ho henzollerns. Herein lies the broad les son of his reign. Never wag trenmendous sweep to con quest more rudely stopped than Ger many' first rush was at the Marne. Ah, he would settle that. His eldest son, the Crown Prince, who had for a year been crying out for blood; waa -among the flung back, but Wllhelm sent him to the eastern front, where again the boy, tak ing the command from wiser heads, led the Germans to disaster. The High General Staff shook Itself like a soused mastiff, and actually warned the Kaiser off the conduct of tho war. For appear ances he Htlll commanded in name, but his capacity for blunder was Inherent. Von 'Hlndenburg's reversal of the Ilus slan Invasion of East Prussia marked out for Germany the true leader for the war. Against this Wllhelm long strug gled In vain. Was his "star'' bo dim? Could It be done safely to him and his throne? At any rate he was forced to make tho change, and put tho victor over Itennenkampf in the supreme sad dle. Falsetto Addresses to Troops. y Thenceforth began the hideous tragi comedy of the following years of the war with a really supernumerary mil itary Kaiser, sickening under the strain and the wrath of his humiliation and trying to put a face of satisfaction on it. What febrile hopping from front to front; what falsetto addresnes to the troops, what showering of Iron Crosses followed. What applause he had for a .victory anywhere! more crosses! A now decoration went with a flourish to Von Hlndenburg every month. In the mwdust ring there Is mich a figure one with nil the swngger of com mand, the bustle of the superservlceable running from point to point to help, to direct Impotently amid roars of laughter. In the circus he is called MonBleur AI phonm; In Germany, at war, it had be come the Kaiser. The Serbian overthrow gave him grand occasion. The collapm of Russia another: the advance on Italy , smother, but the Much, 191S, offerflve on the western front with its horrible -slaughter of Germans by the hundred thousand kept him after the first day, when ho telegraphed blasphemy to the Kaiserin, calling on Germans for sacrl Octa d proclaiming his old lie that ho f . ,The Kaiser and the Kaiserin Are Photographed While Taking a Drive ) aaaraariiMaT s'iaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa PwiBBBBPMnRBBW3MaBro .HH ff MmL-.-fc OBPSB 'AW AMQBBWPJ9wfeXBBBBBBVrVHlffi1aBrl)S MKsBaflElVBBBBBBBB?aBHBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBBBBB7BPaBBBBM aBBBBrVBtfBBBBBBBBal BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBtfiBKllssI 1 11 sBsrsaaauijjjusBBssissssasBjuj l - - had not brought on tho war, and that It wai all the fault lof tho Allies that it was not ended. Ageing, grizzling, worn, his olden mal adies accentuated, he became a pttlablt figure n one stamped on the face with the wrath of God. Thj death of the old Austrian Emperor, Frartcls Joseph, of bitter heartbreak, was a shock to Wll helm. which the ;iew young Emperor Charles failed to mitigate. Soon, Indeed, he came to be an added plague to I'ots dam. Uncannj the wholo picture of the Kaiser in theee days of fate. Kins; "by Grace of God." Hohenzollern he was nt the start in bone and fibre, high strung, haughty, domineering: king and soldier "by the grace of God." With his reigning years came the breadth and depth of Gor man culture, the honiellne of German social life infiltrating his harder na ture with their appeal to progress and an Innate geniality. It is In this penetration of what lay out side the palace, the chancellery and the drill ground ; h!o quick grasp of It In Ito extent and variety, that the really Interesting phase of his character re sides. In his recessions from it, his return to tho Hohenzollern autocracy to which hewus born, tho dramatic, yea, the tragic Import of his career will be found. In studying those lines of primal, mediaeval types, of 'imposed modern civilisation ond their reaction upon each other aa seen In his acts, his life, pne must remember that the battle they fought within him hive ranged over a life campaign of nearly sixty years, time for many changes and reversals. That a mysticism, an nggresslvo re ligiosity rather than a simple religion grew upon him in the last twenty, years of lit? rnuet also be considered In accounting for the sum total of his per sonality. Prince, King, Emperor he felt ' .. ,,'k..., Ilelgned tn Peace for 2(1 Years. With tho inherited and acquired traits of his character thero had always been a conscious or unconscious flam boyancy growing out of hlB hablta of ex altation, but which tendod nt length to become pure theatricality. Frpm few monarchical outfits, any more than from few republican executives, can this the atricality be wholly absent. In William, however. It grew apace. Just as the wpnwDjjvhjO paints her face. Is apt to overdo it, turning -a dash of color at length Into a mass of pigment, so Will iam In this spectpcular spending of him self lost' focus. And but for the under lying intensity would have mado at last a continuous exhibition r.ot to be asso ciated with a serious monarchy. It this first examining glance at the man and ruler there la one surprise that with all the predilection for war and conquest that he brought to the throne, with all the military color he himself at all times. In the long survey i ,nage" reln one sees that hU highest conception of Jv" a . g"a "v.. f. ?iCen,UT,y that klnirshlo was that of the sunrema I Dea5c- th from hls drllling and pa- 1 soldier raaing, as ne came to the throne no one I , , . .1 could havo given him a decade of twace. He was bor . one might say. sword Th great war machine was there ever L"-.Mand 1 l,V0):h0id.,nild been one of r.ady to his hand; the Junkers, the drill, The old. tradition of the Na- mllltnrv -m,irt n.. im. v.,... tho Crown Prince Frederick the Unser Fritz of the French campaign he drank In a heady, warlike Intoxicant that ever after stirred Ml blood, Through all his after activities tho army was next his heart the great war machine, a machine fashioned and hardened by generations of drill masters, tactician, strategists, ever kept at top notch of effectiveness, tho car of Juggernaut be fore whose wheels all interfering ob stacles should be made to disappear, for whoso smooth running not only must all German male tug at Its ropes, but of that he "took all knowledge to his prov ince," and became the Admirable Crlch ton of Kaisers. The outward driving and conquering soldier that he haj dreamed himself becatno A man to vrlou tht hf ieemtd to be Nut one. but all mankind's epitome. ing out of Bismarck than with his com Ing to. tho throne. In other words the end of the Illamarcklan Influence Is a hltrh llcht with which the eofsodps of hi succession and his family quarrel His utterances became more apocalyptic; his energy, his authority were made concrete lnt more canals, more ocean steamships, moro railroads, moro In stitutions of learning, and so on and so on. He wis the Great Accelerator. His days wero full. Ho learned an endless array of things by a process of quack absorption, On a new topio na read a little, sent for Its 'beet exponents and talked It over) if It was physically de monstrable It was demonstrated for him. It was this period that most endeared him to Germany at large, nlthough pre cisely tho period wherein he made less stir abroad. It had Its apogee In the opening of the Kaiser Wllhelm ship canal, better known as tho Kiel Canal. Knlser and Nation Aligned. The Kalsor of the third epoch Is a somewhat different man, and It is a different Germany that ho ruled. That both Kaiser and country marcnea sldo by sido is undeniable It Is expresred In his new pretension of 1896 'The Gorman Empire becomes a world empire." Ixmg before that date had Nletzscho written his call to Ger many tel oast off Its leading strings of the old civilization, to arise and bo self ish, to sweep tlw weak from off its path. to olxllsh tho Ten Oominandmonta as only fit for I: he deficient, to havo the Will to l'owor, to take tho suportnnn for tnodol. Also eprach Zarathustra. For years this doctrine of the 'brilliant lunatic had been stirring, infecting, If you wifth, the minds of droamlnc schol ars, and about this tlmo Ithey wero to spread out. Kind bo vocal in tho mouths of tho talkers who spoko to tho masses. Ho was followed toy others. Among the most influential was Helnrich von Treltschke, who again made most im pression when ho ihad ceased to live In 1896. Hero was a forclblo thinker without illusions as to what should or should not stand in the Viiaiyi of a sov ereign people on the trek, and the group of his lectures In a volume "Polltlk" set clearly down that expand Germany must .or dlo: that colonies must be had from England ; hence conflict with England was unavoidable. Treltschko was as flame to tho common mind, and the Emperor was not slow to fall In with the new mental state Hence forth one was to hear mystic allusions to rlgtfts and the needs of ono nation holding what nndther doslred. Bern hardl'was another whose "Next War" eet afloat many guesses by the vulgar as to what nation could stand In Ger many's way, and made little of the task that would call forth Germany's efforts. Jllsohlef was afoot. To William II. this brought n charrne. And In tha couria of one revolving; moon Was chemist, statesman, fiddler and buffoon. piquant as they are for tho "secret" court chroniclers tho fellows who blab secrets do not compare. which all roads, all railways, must be the 1 oiled for the sculptor, he wroto plays The Nrcond l'linsc of Ilia Mfe.. From 1S90 to 1616 would be the second nh&fln nf lit l!f. It mnrV.il Mn Ant Ho painted for the painters, he mod- essays at home politics, his myriad nctlv Dabbled In All (he Arts. servants before they wero nnythlnc rk What phantom of glory, be It that of Alexander, Hannibal. Cirsar, IJonaparte, of Moltke or the Rod Prince, did not flit continually before his uyes, luring him ever on! He loved to be photographed. for dramatists, he taught music to mU' slclans, he preached for tho divines. The military obsession was obsessed by the handmaids of peace. It would not be fair to say that thl was wholly un conFClous. When later on he began to Itles, his conflict with the agrarians or land Owners, his fruitless war upon tho Socialists, Caprlvi's .commercial treaties, his Interest In tho navy, "his turn to yachting, his activities In the world of work and home progress. He had orig inated nothing, he stimulated everything. take measure of himself in rare days of It wa, ,marck who began the hunt for leisure, there Is evidence that ho was i-i. , . .t,. . r" f ,?"d 'l.'.8 "??" T," had made "for commlaroutreach and v.t i.tir,D. .- .. ' Manufacturing outspread; the the magnificent war machine, full of new wonders, full of surprises for poleonlc defeatsand overrunning of Ger i many on which Haron Stein and Har- denberg had laid the foundation of militant Prussia over a hundred years ago liad given way to the newer glory of .the swift, decisive war on France in l4"0. In his twelfth year, then, when in the triumphal -eturn to Ilerlln of his grandfather, William I., who hod gone forth King of Prussia and had come home Emperor, he rode his little pony beside his plctufesque soldier father, followed with a rush the throwing of r.ls gauntlet Into tho arena ; but the restraining factors were too many and too strong, Mont fortunate of young monarch, he not only found his empire made and sotldlflod and holding a great workmanlike army, but all around him a nation at work as no nation before ever had been. The labors of Germany's Industrial Hercules so engrossed him. the art of the Germanic Minerva po pleased him. outspread ; the educa tlonal system, tha scientific research or ganizations, the steel Industry, the tex- Url I . . friend and foe. Would he never be "e lnuus?'.. ocean sieamsmp lines, called on ; nay, would ho never have i lne cauu DUlun". me railroad extcn the chatico to direct It ugalnst any- l'ion- lh art movement, all had had ex body? ! Istcnce beforo his day. His optimism, When William, two years In the sad dle, dismissed Otto von Bismarck, tha empire bulldor, the world was filled with mktglvlngs. With that great Inflnenco removed, with tho Incandescent Wlllium practically "his own Chancellor," us BlMnarck said in his soured humiliation, what indiscretions might he not com mit? Caprlvl, more tactful than brill iant, saw that nothing happened, yet held his place. Bismarck, who had malignantly falsified despatches as he so cynically confessed. In order to make t-ure that Irritation would lo set up in the mind of hl.t master, old King William, and that Na poleon III. would be driven to declare war in fateful 1S70, could never for give France for her miraculous re covery from tho conquest The repub lic's easy payment of the four milliards of territorial ransom exueted In the treaty of peace made lrlm bitterer still. "Next tlmo" mark the certainty with which the old matter butcher spoke "next time," said Bismarck, "we shall bleed the French calf white." He could not dream that It would bo forty-four years after Sedan before any attempt to carry- out the blood lotting would begin, and that then it would so fall to roach the vitals of France, although tho contest was straining every tissue of her frame and taking awful toll of her sons. The first stage of Emperor William II 's life ends moro logically with the cast- nis nctio-s more peremptory. He was "Responsible to God alone." Two Catholic German missionaries were killed by tho Ignorant Chinese of Hhan- tung, and after some preliminary flour ishes n. naval expedition was snt to China, where under his direct orders Klao-chow was seized by way of pay ment for the murders. China, as usual, loo weak or too spiritless .to more than register Its objection, submitted. In this he tind leaped over the head of his Chancellor, Unit he galnod his point. Germany applauded and largo funds wero found for the building of harlKir world, forts and a whole now German town at Tslng-tno. Soon a lense was procured from Chirm, followed by rail road concessions In Shantung." German trsdem swarmed over China, nnd Pckln gave car to so llb-val a spender as Will iam. Here are 'brief snips from his number less speeches showing his growing ob session and his deep rooted self-conceit. As I look upon mrlf a an instrument of the Lord. I am indifferent o the point of Tirw oi mo present qsj. The King holds his power by the trace of Ood. to whom alone Is he responsible. lit chooses his own path and only decides his actions from this point of view. There Is only one master in this country: I nm he, and I will not tolerate another. There Is only one law my law the law which I myself lay down. The soldier must not have a will of bis own they must all have only one will, and that will mine. The forelrner has Usmed the eonseaaances of offendlnr the German Emperor. ii is tne toiairr ana tne army, not psrua mentsxy maloritles and votes, thst have welded the Oermkn Kmplrs together. My eon. flrtence rests upon the army. We are now in a noaltlnn tn ris the visor of our helmet and to look with the fearless errs of a courageous Oerman at any one who may block the path wa hsvs mapped out for ourselves. "Imperial power," ho said In on of his addresses, "moans sea power, and s;a power and Imperial power are) de pendent on each other. Our future lies on tha water. The trident should bo In our hand. We stand under tho star of commerce. Wo demand our place. In tha sun." And he wrangled and fought with his reluctant Reichstag until at last they fell In with him and gave him the monay. in uov Aamirai von Tirpiu was made Minister of Marine, and the new navy came into being with unexampled speed for Germany, putting England, tha old shipbuilder, fo enormous strain to keep ahead of her on her old two power basis. Germany vu adTonclns; commercially with great vigor. Nothing, It was felt, could be aeoompilahed In tha expanding foreign, field without a great and strong fleet When In tho heat of tho Boxer massacres tit despatched Princs Henry to China with a naval and military forca ho adjured Mm In a pompous address to show Germany'a 'mailed fist" to China and charged the German soldiers to tako no prisoners, the first naked avowal of barbarism with which ho was to wage war thereafter. England took alarm at the naval programme that Oermany had laid down. It was, she felt, a challenge to her. German enterprise had long flooded England with German articles. England, which had decreed that all aucjh should be artampod or labellled "Mode In Germany" In orde to let the unsuspecting purchaser know that he waa buying on Inferior article, had soon been horrified to find that the label ling brought afcout on tttorovement in the German output eo that excellent quality accompanied relatively low prices, and the German (Trip on the English market waa all the tighter. (Jo the English trading classes had their grlevancea as well as the Government Klao-chow in 1897 had startled her ex porters, and the ourpush la Mesopotamia with tho Bagdad or Euphrates Volley Hallroad In 190J wa a move that aroused Russia aa well aa England. The German finger was In every pie. The Morocco difficulty of 1905 was rjkMliElfBl 54th St.Neuj York IS A GOOD LOOKING SHOE COCOA CALF 12.00 BLACK CALF 1L00 ONE admires a Glove that looks pretty on the hand, especially when it is cut properly and fits snugly. This dainty Shoe with its Louis XVI. heel and perforated toe cap fits "just like a Glore" and the price for this excellent quality mer chandise is most attractive. ItlfllIIIltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll,,lliailllllltllllltlllUI The Liberty National Bank of Newark Report of condition at close of business, November I, 1918 -J-viif -lt-iVS' A RESOURCES Loans ar.d Discounts, 568,605,406.54 U. S. Bonds to Secure Circulation 800,000.00 U.S. Bonds and Certificates of Indebtedness 1,381,480.18 Other Bonds. Securities, etc 6,1 08,550.98 Due from Banks 1,868,108.80 Cash, Exchanges and Due from Federal Reserve Bank 29,784,688.83 Customers Liability Account of Acceptances 3,36530.53 $111,913.71516 LIABILITIES Capital Stack Surplus Fund ,,,, undivided fronts . . . Reserve for Taxes, etc Circulation Deposits Unearned Discount Domestic and Foreign Acceptances $3,CO0.CO0.O0 3,000,000.01 I,I32.79?.4I 437,492.43 800.000.00 99,952.319.63 225,623.86 3.365.480.53 Jl 1 1.913,715.86 JAHJM I.. AHTlM'.T Tress, International NlcLtt Co. riiAKK ii. nmnKLL l'lrst Vice rrt., N. V. Telephons Co. JOMl'.I'lI A, nowit Vire 1'retMent EDMUND C. CONVERSE Now York OTIH 11. OIJTLKI1 Chmn. Am. Itrako shoe Fdrn Co. GCOIltii: DnUIII.KDAT President InaersolMland Co. 1IUBKKLL II. DUNHAM President H.reulu Towder Oo. uksuy i, ruu.i:n' Vice Pres. Fairbanks, Moris & Oo. D I RECTORS HAitVKV n. mnsos' President THOMAS A. (IXi:.I'Ii: Chslrsrsn T. A. tillleiple Co. 1I.KXAMIER M. HALL 2Nl New York CHAIII.KS 1). II1M.C3 Dnlclit & Hllles mtvAitn n. loomis TreiUent Lehlsb Valley It. It. Co. n. W. MAXWELL Ylca Pres. Atlas Portlsnd Cement Co, EIWAni) 8. MOORE Vlee Pres. Am. Drake Shoe A Fr. Co. DA.NIKt. K. I'OMEROY Vice I'reilitent Hankers Trust Co. htrvvAitri niosfiint President Hankers Trust Co. DANlr.L 15. liKIl) Vice PrelnYnt CHARLKS W. II1KCKH VUe PreslJent CHARLES II. SAniN President Cuarsntjr Trust Co. ERNF.ST RTAL'FFEN, Js. Vlee President CHARLES II. STOUT New York CHAIII.KS II. 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HKtl Iteirulir Prim SW TOILET TAIIl.i: lirgular Price SIS ein.Tti Pay for This Suit HJj Weekly ti u i uii.tm Heit. Price E210.0 I 169.49 Cali or Credit. Sale of 100-Piccc Dinner Stls 13.74 -17.85-24.67 ami up to S7.M 50-Piece Dinner Sets 7.95 and up to $35 Over 100 Ueautlful Patterns to select from. Sale of White Enamel Beds Iteg. Price f is Pieces) rice 8.VI0. Open an Account I'h ItUKst'ar.t'ts I IikjIluiiw, Uni ns. I rUilllv r:iii rlt'ji. Ponlnr.. iii.lu, oinfurlanlii Hr , or lurliuje ihera in ur out tit at thd stle price. American U alnut M illium and Mary Dinine Room Suit (Four lHKK,"dl3l,,,l?r,,erS?.7,l ' r..,.,.r ' LfiS!" ""'J'1 hid kit ui i i - . pav i nit tins iii.MMi itooM m i i eVVv) a r.i:u I; I mm Sale of Room Size Rugs To Our Customers Yini may mlit lmtoer ou nant to jau- acrnunl at llin ilc prlre wlnthir Jliurait'nuni U open ir If vjiii h-ii '-rKi, I It Cmli or Creilll. H e accept payments and issue official Liberty Loan Receipts on account oj Fourth Liberty Loan Coupon BooIs. 14.34 H Hoary rontlnumw ivniru, best baked wlilte enamel. OPKX s.TlltI).V KtKMMi t NTH ,X0 (VCI.t)CK AT .VI.I, TIIItKK .VTOItU. Genuine Vtclrolas and Grafonolas AxmlnMrr.N el tHiiJllniseN Htifrv. In 1 liml ami Oriental itMlKns, a t t moiMy w iuk SSs frlcii., Liberal Credit Terms On $35 Purclisie .50 a Week On $75 " $1.00 On $100 " $1.50 " On $200 " $3.00 " On $250 " J3.50 On $300 " $i50 " On $500 " $7J0 " larrer nmounl in prenorllon. in; liivt: rittitiNt; stamivs, s. i. ifitsra x rtrKiiKY iiui.ii. I fl IJIaa saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaS .saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaatsaaaaaaaW saaaaaV-maaaabsaaasasaraaal salataaaaaaaaw WEST AVntESrsrcSISz i .r. t, Ave.. JltJtJ OO BLOCK OA VF L n tTcommeQdlng us to your friends please tell them that UK 1IAVK n! Newarl. 49-51 Market St. OpPOKltO Court Hsuss. 'BLOCK ... ..t,. u..u,vur.nmas please tell them that UK HAVE oiv , ' T . , w gv, ! F.om $20 to $380 NO INTHnEST ADDF.n Grafonola $100 Mahogany or Walnut Pay for It i9 on De. Uttry and the halanct $1.50 Wetkly. You may Inrludo US w ortiI of itrc OHII8 at the regular rAn nrlrM with thl. machine without In- tS creasing these terms, fjfli .Mk your own aelec tlon from our complete libraries of I, MO vie tor and Columbia ltecorda. No aumpa rtth talk ing machine goods, J U A V I mssmm. .. " . . . .WSAfaf' r mm