Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 06, 1910, NEWS SECTION, Page 2, Image 2

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    'X
nr. omaha srsuw mv:-. xovtcmuek 1910.
I ml
Small Women's
andJWs SHIRTS
A Notable Display and Sale
A aklrt. Walbt and Coat are the popular outer gar-rneTitor-Winter
RrThia special array ot sklrta
U moat timely a positive "boon'' to mull women
antTrnissea who have Blze difficulties elsewhere.
Special Showing at S6.50
inn (admittedly t!
rint, panel front
Kewit novelties In eci ges mid 1'anamns ( admittedly the
I..Mt kirt in.iterial.i). Hox pleated front. panel front!",
pIhIti Inn effect, strappings at
without P 'rated and kilted flounce;
ui f Mark. navv. blown and tana; slzef
:: lenctli and ii to 2i wait measurement, at..
BKIKT8 Of FEBB
I rem it SctKC V
as above
BX.B CHETIOT 'hi f fon Panamas I
oiles and Mannish Mixtures In size I
7.80, S8.75, 918.60, $13.50 I
mm sra-MC
1518 1520 FARNAM STREET
COLONEL ACCEPTS ONLY $3$
Receives Only Expeuies for Lecture
Given at Des Moines.
Our Liberal Credit Terms
Kakes it Easy to Buy that Diamond or Watch
You've wanted ho long. The down-payment la small and the deferred pay
ments emy to meet. We. Impose no embarrassing conditions and give your
transactions no publicity. Your buying; on credit doexn't impose an ad
vance In prices cash or credit, the price Is the same here.
TWO BARGAINS
LADT8
DIAMOND B.IMO.
This lady's htvau
tlful l I a m o n d
ring, mounted In
-K. solid gold.
if fany
r fancy
ettlng.
ior
$3S
83.60 Sown $1.00 Per Week.
'r
, V 1 - .
, lii i' i1a"i llT i
I 85.60
oiitri
DUMOaO R1NO.
this ring has a
eautifully cut
diamond. mounted
n a heavy 14-K.
olld gold set-
in g.
(rent
alue
or
$55
Down 81.80 Per Week.
TBI OLD BEX.XABI.E
FRITZ SANDWAlL Jt ELRY CO.,
THIRD FI.OOB HITOI BLOCK.
DR. BENDER TALKS ABOUT HEART
tlaffalo Mimin ays Time hnjld
Cone Mkn laatrartor Mar lr
to Owi One aad Rentals ia
Profession.
(From a Staff Corifpndent.)
MOINK3. Nov. 6. (Special Tele
gram.) Iesplte the fact that the State
TeachenT association offered to pay Colonel
i Roosevelt $J.0UO for his address hern, he
1 accepted only $3S, which covered his actual
expenses. There had been some criticism
of the officers and they gave out this
! statement today.
I In the closing cession Pr, Ida Bender of
Buffalo declared that it Is high time that
Cupid should be aivrn a chance at the
school ma'ams without threatening their
positions.
"Teacheis should have more social privi
leges," said Vv. Bender. "They should be
allowed the rights of a human being to
feel, to live and to love.
"A teacher, no matter how gifted in mind
and Important in service, dares not to
know she has a heart. he hue to give up
her affections or her profession. Think It
out In your own personal equation."
Officer were elected this afternoon, aa
follows: President, Fred Mahannah, Mason
City; first vice president. A, C. Fuller,
Washington; second vice president. Miss
Minnie Ifabeock, Humboldt; third vice pres
ident, G. YV. Weber, Columbue Junction;
member of the executive committee, A. E.
Bennett, Fayette; members of educational
council, XV. H. Mitchell, Clinton, and F. O.
Norton, Lies Moines.
rninpllsh In this WIlon, would produce,
I sm told, a strange anomaly. The I'nlted
Ststcs aupicme court lias held that public
policy will not permit a tallnad company
to make contrai ls with shippers of freight
that the railroad company shall not be re
sponsible for Its own negligence In trans
porting that freight. Von ssy that the rail
road cannot be forbidden to contract with
Its employe, that It shall not be respon
sible for maiming or killing them by negli
gence. "I protest that there is not public policy
which makes fi eight more Important than
human lives and I criticised your decision
because you say that the constitution will
not permit protection of the lives of rail
way employes to the same extent to which
without a statute, freight is in tho United
State protected now. My criticism Is not
as some of your supporters endeavor to
have the people believe, a criticism of the
judiciary In general. It ia simply and solely
a criticism of you for having given an ex
traordinary and unprecedented construction
to the fifth amendment of the constitution
of the United States, so aa to prevent its
purpose end by so doing to nullify and
destroy an essential part of a most Import
ant federal statute."
of measuring men by brain power or by
qualitiea of the heart, they measure them
by their capacity for liquor and by their
willingness to accept dictation from liquor
dealers. Being themselves devoid of shame,
Uiey have no respect for publio sentiment.
They will support any candidate, however
conscienceless, if they can control hi in.
and ir they are to dominate the politics
if tills state, we may expect them to do
here aa they did recently in Illinois when
they renominated Browne, the Illinois
legislator who was under Indictment for
bribery In the Uoiimer case.
"The world moves forward. The people
are rising In morals as well as In Intelli
gence. Nebraska cannot afford to turn
back. The liquor business ia the basest
of all businesses. It is in league with every
vice aft dtlie patron of every crime. In
tills state It la violating the law against
treating and the law against tbe holding
of saloons by brewers. It requires con
stant prosecution to prevent the sale of
liquor to. minors and to drunkards. The
liquor business Is more and more shunning
the light; It la retreating int othe dark
places. We cannot afford to enthrone It
In Nebraska. I beg the business men of
Omaha to pause before they join the cru
sade against publio morals which the liquor
Interests have Inaugurated. It cannot be
profitable in the end, and even if a profit
were assured, no pecuniary reward can
compensate for the surrender of Ideals
and self-respect. 'What shall it profit a
man if he gain the whole world and lose
his own soul?'
"For the reasons above given and for
others which I have given before, 1 refuse t
to Vote for Mr. Pahlman and hope that he
will be defeated b a majority so large as!
to warn the liquor Interests to retire from
politics and permit the people ot the state!
to art upon the liquor question as upon
other questions without further interfer-:
ence. The lawless should nt be permitted 1
to make the laws or to elect those to wliom j
the enforcement of tiie law is to be en- i
trusted."
sobbed convulsively when the verdict was
announced, but did not apeak.
Mr. Strelght, one of the est known
newspaper men In the state, was ahot In
the forehead with a pistol and killed about
midnight, June 18. His wife admitted the
killing, but asserted Streight, a a result
of domestic trouble, had attempted to cut
her with a razor. The state claimed
Straight was asleep when shot.
COLONEL fallows IP HARMON
(Continued from
First Page.)
and made
I'OUTI K FOR ( flLLEGB 8TI DEXT
Toung Man at Eldora, la., Willed
Thirty Thoasand.
ELDORA, Ia., Nov. 5. (Special.) Frau
ds W. Cowles, a poor and homeless youth
from New York, who hai developed natural
talents while attending Kllsworth, collego
at Iowa Falls, la., will come Into posses
sion of a fortune of 130,000 left him by
Mrs. Dora Bolander, a former Iowa Falls
woman. In the district court today Judge
Wright ordered a verdict for Cowles orl
the contest made by Mrs. Bolander's rela
tives to break her will.
Mrs. Bolander waa a childless widow rJid
when she removed from Acktey to Iowa
Falls in MOD he applied to Ellsworth col
lege for a student who would be worthy
ot help and a home and who could be use
ful about the house. Cowles, who nad
come from New York and who was working
his way through college, waa recommended
to her. Two months before her death aha
made a will giving to Cowles the bulk of
her estate. The only other beqnests were
two of U.000 to two nieces, who contested
tho will.
Cowles is still attending college, where
he expects to complete his education.
such man who had confessed
restitution to the state.
Colonel Roosevelt left for Cleveland as
soon aa he had coooluded.
I Support for Beveridge.
KKNrAL.VlLO,E, Ind., Nov. 6. Ex-Pres
Ident Roosevelt took a hand in Indiana
politics as he rode across the swte today.
When he arrived at Elkhart he found a
crowd waiting for him at the station and
made a short speech from his car.
He urged the people, as he did In hla
speeches in the state last month, to sup
port Senator Beveiidge in his fight for re
election. "The whole country is watching In
diana," said Colonel Roosevelt.
"Senator Beverldge," he declared, "stood
for the beet things in progressive republi
can politics and his defeat would be a re
pudiation by tbe people of an honest pub
lic servant."
James It. Qnrfield got on the train at
Elkhart. Walter F. Brown of Toledo,
.chairman of the republican state cenir&l
committee, and A. t Garford of Elyrla
met Colonel Kooaevelt In Chicago.
AUTOS CHEAPER THAN HORSES
Some Interesting- ( alcalatlena Drawn
from Recent Testa and
Experiences.
There was a recent alz days' test of the
comparative economy of automobile and
horse-power In New York, with conclusions
in favor of the former. But a six-duv test,
even though expert and official. Is not so
satisfactory aa a six-year teat by those
who make a sane use of the new transpor
tation agent. A Boaton doctor who has
used the automobile for the laxt eight
yeara and now has two In service has kept
a careful reckoning and can show in figures
by a considerable margin that It Is not
only more economical than horses for a
like amount of service, but even when
taking into account the much wider range
of practice that it permits. Yet he is care
ful to atate that no automobile has ever
been made that Is "fool proof."
Another Boston man, ordering a moderate-priced
machine, aet off a couple of
months ago for a two weeks' vacation with
hla wife and two other women. Tho dis
tance covered during that time was WW
miles, the trip taking In all parts of the
atate and parts of Rhode Island. Of course
no horse could have stood that number of
miles in that time In New England, and
steam roads and trolleys would not have
taken them to all the places that they
wished to visit. Yet the maintenance of
the machine, including gasoline, oil, re
pairs and storage charges, was under tM.
The same distance traveled by rail would
have cost the quartet, at 2 cents a mile.
Instances of this kind are by no
means uncommon In every communitv.
The proper way to estimate the value of
the automobile Is not as a potential time
killer and distance annlhllntor, but by Its
rational use in our social economy. Boston
Transcript.
ROOSKVELT REPLIES TO BALDWIN
1UVAL UA.Jb H)R CONGRESS
(Continued Irotu First I'sge.)
candidate for state office since the forma
tion of the republican party.
"We bellw his majority will be so heavy
that there can be no reasonable doubt of
the election of the whole democratic state
ticket. We claim that the legislature will
be safely democraio on Joint ballot.
"The election of fourteen democratic con
gressmen seems well assured with more
than a fighting chance In three other districts."
The republican committee will Issue a !
statement late today which will say that I
Hie republican state ticket will be elected
by a suhntaiitlal majority snd that the
legislature will he republican. The claim
will lsu be made that the republican con
gressional delegation from the Buke' e
tate will be Increased.
Aasallaut of Policeman Convicted.
WKBSTEIt CITY, Ia., Nov. 6. (Hpeclal
Telegram.) A Jury this morning found
John Butler guilty of assault with intent to
commit great bodily injury on the person
of Policeman Young, the penalty for which
Is a year in the penitentiary. Butler stab
bed Young while the latter was attempting
to anext him. At a former trial he was
convicted of a more neiious offense and
sentenced to five years. He served a month,
when the supreme court reversed the case.
The Weather
For Nebi aska- Fair and warmer,
r or Iowa Fair.
Temperature at Omaha yesterday
Hour.
Colonel Considers the Judge's Acts,
Wot Hla Words.
NEW YORK, Nov. 5. Another letter, the
third written by Theodore Roosevelt in
reply to similar communications from
Judge Simeon K. Baldwin, democratic can
didate for governor of Connecticut, In tbe
recent controversy concerning Judge Bald
win's attitude toward labor, was given out
here tonight. It Is dated November 3 and
says in part:
"In your answer to my letter you en
tirely miss the point of the criticisms. I
am not Interested In your opinion aa a law
writer, I am interested In your opinion aa
a Judge. My criticism of you as a reaction
ary waa based, not upon what you may
have said as a law writer, but upon what
you did as a Judge.
"Your long citations from decisions in
courts of Connecticut are entirely irrele
vant and beside the point. 1 know, as
every layman knows, that it Is not a func
tion of a Judge to make new laws. When
thre Is no statute enacted fcv the law
making bodlea of the people the courts are
no doubt bound to follow precedent. The
question between us does not Involve any
such principle. In the Iioxie case you had
before you a definite statute enacted by
the congress of the United States declaring
the responsibility of railroads to their em
ployes for negligence. Section five ot that
act provides 'that any contract, rule, regu
lation or device whatsoever, the purpose
or intent of which shall be to enable any
common carrier to exempt Itself from any
liability created by this act shall to that
extent be void."
New Learal Hlxhta.
"In that act congress declared that rail
way employes should have certain new
legal rights of compensation for Injuries
2 p. in 41 i occasioned by the negligence of the railroad
J P' J J i Itself. In placing th e clause which I have
op! m. !!!!!!'.!!!!!!.'! 4H ! fIUOtl in the act congress was no doubt
ECHOES OF THE ANTE-ROOM
Ladles of tbe Maccabeea to Have Mas
querade Dance Satarday
Evening;.
Ladies of Maccabees Will give a mas
querade dance .Saturday evening at Frater
nity hall Nineteenth and Harney streets.
Alpha Grove No. 2, Woodmen Circle, will
give a dance Wednesday evening at
Bariht hall, Nineteenth and Farnatn
streets. Kefreshmenta will be served.
I. O. O. V.
Omaha lodge No. 2 will have work In the
first degree next Friday nieht.
Beacon lodge No. tti will put on the first
degree Tuenday evening.
Ktate lodge No. 10 will have work In the
Initiatory degree Monday uight.
lannebrog lodge No. 216 will have seven
candldatea for the first degree next Friday
night.
Ruth Rebekah lodge No. 1 will have a
regular social meeting next Saturday even
ing. At the regular meeting of Hesperian en
campment No. 2 on last Thursday evening
about twenty-five members from Twin
City encampment. Council Bluffs, were
present. Five candidates were given the
patriarclilal degree, after which an ovstcr
supper was served In the banquet room.
The Key to the Situation Bee Want Ads.
vertlsing in The Bee will do for your
business.
o a. in
a. in
7 a. m
8 a. m
9 a. in
10 a. m
11 a. m
Urn...
1 p. m
Deg.
... SO
... i
... 21
... 2S
...
... :tl
... S4
40
p. in , 4,1
1 p. m 41
WOMAN CONVICTED OF MURDER
aire. Mlanie stretafct of Waco, Tea.,
Koaad Calltr of Killing;
Haaband.
WACO. Tex., Nov. 6. Mrs. Minnie Le
Mtreight. charged with the murder of her
husband, T. E. Strelght. at Mctiregor, Tex.,
June IS last, waa found guilty of murder
in the first degree here today. Her pun
ishment was fixed at life Impiisonmetil.
The defendant, who as lying on the cot.
which she had occupied for veveral weeks.
iuial Record.
iFMCi-: H.' T 1 1 E W F. A T 1 1 BR BUR EAT",
OMAHA, Nov. . Official record of tem
perature and precipitation compared with
Ihe cnrrexpunding period of the lawt three
veaia: 1H10. IS, lis. 1907.
Highest today 4H ,'7 "7
I j today '-"S 0 :W
I Mean temperature M M 4K il
Precipitation w .V .w .')
Tetnpei ature and precipitation departure
from the normal at Omaha since March 1
and compaied with the last two years:
Normal temperature
Deficiency for the day
Total excess since March 1 TCi
Normul piecipitatlon 0.'. inch
I el'icie!icv fur Ihe dsv (15 inch
Total rainfall Mi-.ce Jlardi 1 13.7 Inches
Deficiency lnc March 1 13. 7k inches
1 leticlriicv for cor. period, I'M".... 1.48 inches
Deficiency for our. pciiod. !'...... J. 63 Inches
To Keep the Hair
Light and Fluffy
is
Direct From The Orient
A most comprehensive collection. Every Rug
in our stock is carefully selected by our foreign
buyer one by one and is marked at its respective merit.
We are specialists and devote our attention to
makes, colors and antiquity, giving you the ben
efit of our knowledge and judgment.
This collection comprises lnanv nntiques ns woll as modern
lings, such as KERMANSHAHS, GIIORAVANS, CANDA
HARS, AFGHANS, MUSKABDS, in room size.
KAZAKS, DAGHESTANS, SHIRVANS, B0KHARAS, ANA
TOLIANS, MOSUL, K ELI MS and many others, ranging in
price from $500 to $5.00.
Now on wile in our ORIENTAL RUG DEPARTMENT, Fifth
Floor. Every rug is a work of art, and an appropriate
Wedding of Christmas Gift.
Miller, Stewart & Beaton Co.
4fI3.15.17 South Sixteenth Street
O
UF
Moving
Day 'j
Draw
ing
Near
I NEW ItKTAIL STORE WIMj BK 1313-15 HARNEY HTKEET
NEXT TO NEW C1TV NATIONAL. KAXK 1U'ILIX.
THE WOODMAN builders will soon take possession of our present
quarters. To reduce our stock as far as possible before moving
great reductions have been made on all lines of our stock.
Great Removal Sale
1855
Bubby Oak
coal heater,
med,
onlv
Stub? Oak No. 13, same na
above, C7 75
only .... i I.l
Kadiant fcome Oak lllnli
ent grade, absolutely guar
anteed, hard or soft ccsl.
rerru'iir $17 93
$21.00, now
Splendor Cook Stove No.
8, with duplex grate, regu
lar moo. til so
reduced to ut
Radiant Home Kanre
Complete with high closet
six holes and largo oven,
regular $41.00, 2fi 10
reduced to e.SV
Oae Stove Two burners
low japanned, with sawed
humers. regu- JC
lr $3 00, cut to ...v'
Oil Heaters Smokeless snd
odorless, neatly trimmed,
regular $4.50. 7 1Q
reduced to
H0USEFURNISH-ING3
STOVES
- No. 11, soft
c nr ! Double Boasters With
wire meat rest, several
on sale JQf
Monday
Double Roasters Seamless
oval shape and Qfie
Belt-basting . . . v
Cream Whip Sanitary, au
tomatic, the best yet, reg
ular 4 5c, on 99c
aale, at "v
3So Potato Bloer Hound,
with niHlleiihle Iron 1S
frame, cut to
riour Sifter Something
new, works with fC
: :iu "'v
Feather Dusters Ilou
hold site, lino soft 00
ouality, sale price ...'u'
Parlor Brooms (iood qual
ity, regular fi0 25l
article, Monday
Wash Boards Ail bress.
largo
value,
size,
at
4 jc
29c
HARDWARE and
CUTLERY
Borers'
and forks
triple plat Knives
rancy nami!.
worth $7.00 per l 9jl
set, nale price
Milton Roarora ft S"fln' se-
lat sliver plated knives and
ana forks iJer aei, regu
lar $i.60. S3 15
sale price
Coat Baager Correct form,
all wood. Of
on sale Atondsv OI
Trousers Hanger Nickel
plated, regular -Tic, Jp
on Hal. Monday V
Full Regular Sle Mall
Boxes Klactc japanned, our
35o quality,
sale price "
Oood Lanterns nought to
he sold for 75c, Cftp
sale price nvx.
Heavy one-piece Furnace
Scoops Worth 760 , CC.
Hale price wv
Bound MetalilV Ash Sifters
Hegular oOc 35p
stork, sale price
Fireless Cookers
We aril the cnly Aluminum Lined
Corkers in Omaha. Hco theae be
fore you buy.
DIAMONDS
A Kew of Our THf.ui) Ringo.
No. l.UiT Tiffany Kin?, IVi 1-3:!, perfect, fine color. .$300
No. 117S Tiffany King, 1 V L 1 5 CI, good color $290
No. V.VS.I Tiffany King, Ps, fair color $290
Xo. l.r! Tiffany King, 1;, perfect fine color .$240
No. 12SS Tiffany Uinir, V. less 1-3:!, fair color $175
No. 13Kb" Tiffany King, 1 carat, fair color $175
No. 13fH Tiffany King, vK less 1-61, good color $110
So. 13.')0 Tiffany King, :ti 1-1(5 $80
.No. littany King, :. less 1-3J, very fine blue $85
No. 13!l Titfany King, ;!s 1-32, fine l.hie . . .
No. 1373 Tiffany King, V, perfect fine color
No. 1371) Tiffany King, ' t, good color $2 4
tuners irom ..UU up to $I,UUU.
$55
$32
Oar Guarantee We agree to re
purchase any f the aboe desciilmd
ring at any time within one veal
casti V I lie-1, -i, t t.s -f amount paid, '
from late cf purchase and pay In
Mill allow full prue pid in fi-
cliauitu any mix.
J
influenced by the well known fact that in
ICniilaini an employer'a liability act enacted
many years ago was made a dead letter by
emploers Insisting that their employes
should sign contracts agreeing to waive
the benefits of the statute and go without
the legal rights which the statute pro
posed to give them.
"In the case decided by you which I
have criticised you declared that this
claune was unconstitutional as being in
violation of the fifth amendment ot the
constitution of the I'nlted Slates, as tend
ing to deprive the parties to such contract
of liberty and property without due process
of law.' You say nmclflcally as to railway
emplo) es:
" 'It denies them one and all that liberty
j of contract which the constitution of the
j I'nlted States secures to every per. on
j within its Jurisdiction.'
"Your declaration apeak for itself; in
substance it amounts to kiating that the
j employes' right to give up their llhu un
der the law Is a thing tu be protected unit
j not their right to receive those benefit. 4,
j that the light to contract to cet killed U
j 'property- of which workers cannot be de
prived, that the right to get killed cornea
I under the head of 'life, liberty nd prup
jerty,' which the fifth amendment to the
j constitution sas cannot be taken away
I without due proceFs of law. t'ongrenn
1 aimed at giving the railway emploje a aub-
stance, l'ou construed the act as giving j
I him a shadow by solemnly declaring that
hy giving him the suhHtance Is 10 tnke
! away his property In he shadow.
iUerlatna Prrvrraloa of Constlf alloa.
"I criticised your decision because it ia
' to me an Incredible perversion of the con
stitution of the I'nllcd Rates I criticised
it because It ia not only reactionary but
revolutionary. 1 criticised It because I am
against soctalivm, and this decision and ev-
ery decision like it makes fur socialism or
something worse. Every strained construc
tion of the constitution which declares that
the nation la powerleas to remedy Indus
trial conditions which cry for law gives
aid to thoatf enemies of our American s s
teni iif gov ei anient w ho wish to furnisti
in Its place some new, vague and foolish
substitute
"Tiie leai ii wliKU jiui attempted to at-
(From the Chicago Inter Ocean)
The proper-care of the hair doea not
require a woman to scour her scalp with
soap and drench her hair with water until
a shampoo. Including drying the hair,
takes the better part of the day. In fact,
authorities aay that the less soap and
water used on the hair the better, as the
alkali and moisture tend to make the
hair coarse, dull and brittle.
If you want to keep the scalp clean
and the hair light and fluffy, try dry
shampooing. Put In a quart Jar, or any j
oilier handy container, four ounces of 1
powdered orris root and four ounces of
therox. Stir and shake until thoroughly
mixed. A beautiful cleansing powder with
a delicate perfume will be the result.
RnrinVl. s tahlAHnoonf ul of this mix- I
ture on the head and then brush It well
. v. , , ,.U tli. Y I TMm hHn.i All! h
natural color or the hair, makes it sort
and glossy, and if continued regularly,
tends to make the hair long and abun
dant, for It is a natural hair grower.
(Adv.)
MILTON ROGERS
aAej T m i" p ervxre rvfn a X!V aaUs) saaasj . ... 3 CI.
& SONS COMPANY
14th and Farnam Sts.
1
o o
o o
jkiismssk4ji
Full Dress Shirts
laundered by us do not
bulge, the bosom lays per
fectly flat, the winie aa a
new shirt. There is nothing
that detracts from your ap
pearance as a bulging, poor
ly ironed dress r-hirt.
AVould like to chow yoi
the way we iron them.
Returned in Banitury
covers.
Call Douglas 1812.
Phone Douglas 1812.
Wagons Kvery where.
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Oriental Rugs
OF QUALIY
The ESSENTIALS determining' the value of an Oriental Rug are:
First Quality of color.
Second Quality of materials used.
Third Purity of original designs.
Fourth Fineness and firmness of knots.
The rugs shown in our new Art Galleries from the personally
selected stock of Nahigian Brothers, possess these essentials.
Your Inspection Is Invited
The Collection Is Complete
consisting of all sizes from the little mats at $5.00 to the room
size rugs at $2,000.00.
Come whether you intend purchasing or not.
H. P. Whitmore
Art Dealers and Importers. 1517 Dodge Street.
OOOOOOOO
1910
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