Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 20, 1908, WANT ADS, Page 8, Image 40

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THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: DECEMBER 20, 190A
8
Kearney
Military Academy
I
combines a home school, for
hoys, with a semi-military disci
pline. A training, such as he
wii receive, crentes habits of
obedience, promptness, punctu
ality, iicntuess and a sense of
responsibility. It is a school
where they build
manly hoys
This la accomplished by thorough in
struction and healthful training of
both body and mind. Our discipline
and training tend to build character.
At the same time, the course of in
struction la thorough and complete.
Knter for Winter Term January SOtli.
Boys entering at this time receive
personal and special attention. Write
me for our book about The Kearney
Military Academy, which will give you
an Idea of the school, through the pic
tures of the school and school life and
a complete account of the school and
what it offers.
1IAKKY N. Kl'HKKLL. Head Master,
Kearney, Seb.
and Is the choicest to be had.
20 OFF
On Traveling Bags, Ladles' Handbags,
Ladies' Neckwear Folders, Muttlc Rolls
Attorneys' Document Rolls, Tullet Sjets
Picnic Sets, Writing Sets, Shaving Sets
Automobile Lunch Sets for parlies 01
two, four and six; Folding Drinking
Cups, Flasks, BUI Books, Pocket Books,
Collar and Cuff Cases, Man's Hat Cases.
Cigar Cases, Money Belts and Military
Brushes. 20 discount will be allowed
on all the above mentioned goods untl
Jan. 1, 109. The line comprises many
Imported articles, as well aa domestic.
Oood floods at very low prices.
oral iTsniKBS.
OMAHA TRUNK FACTORY
ktHiXi at in old ritica
1209 FARNAM STREET
, -,-
BAILEY . MACH
DENTISTS
Bast equipped Dental oLtlca In th mlddla was.
Hlfbeat grada Dentistry at Reasonable Prion,
Porcelain tllUasa. Just Ilk Ua toott.
tUlRO FLOOB PAXTON BLOCB
Oonwr lfltb and Farnam Streets.
CENTER OF OUR CONTINENT
Lonjacre Square, Which Everyone
Visits Some Time.
GREATEST SIGHTS IN OLD GOTHAM
Little) Patch of Manhattan Where
There Are Scores of Theaters,
CI aba, Fimou Restaarants,
Bla Hotels and Crowds.
NEW YORK, Dec. 19.-Tn a little book
called "A Summer In Now York," written
six or seven years ago, the author has n
young lady from the west write home of
an adventure wnn nor city cousin, mus:
"Will took me to a pluco called Long
Acre square. it is a part or uroaaway
which looks as If It had been struck by en
earthquake, a landslide and a billiard all
at once. We climbed a pllo of rocks so
high that the automobiles which tried to
run us down hud. to give It up, and then
Cousin Will began, like the man who ex
plained the views In the panorama:
'Here you see what the span of a
few brief moons Is destined to be to the
knowu world what the Flaoe de la Con
corde, Pa rig, now Is to Europe Its centor.
Aye, the center of gayety, of art, of litera
ture, drama; occidental civilisation in all
Us moods. In the near future here we
shall find transportation unequalled,
views unsurpassed, climate glorious, so
ciety various, fresh eggs and milk in
abundance, theaters, hotels, policy shops,
cab stands, wrextras! In red and yellow,
fresh every hour. Here stately caravan
saries to house an army, tomples of Thes
pls to seat a city full, repositories of
painters' Inspirations, of sculptors' dreams,
mill wall the c-llfflikR aides f the broaden.
ing lane we love as Broadway.' "
The author should bo In fact he Is
proud to see with what a prophetic un
derstanding he wrote of Long Acre so few
years ago wlu n It was the most hope
lessly torn up clutter of a place In . New
Strk and lined, for the must part, with
. . I. Ln I. . , M . I . . . .. If n..t .twin nnW
tainly a few years before it was the
dreariest place at nignt to do louna on
tho Island of Manhattan. .
Prophesy Came True.
The whimsically worded forecast of the
Acre lias more than come true. Thrre are
more theaters, lintels, restaurants and
' .lubs In the neighborhood than even were
seen by tho author's prophetic eye, and
if the old Acre Is not yet the center of
the world, by the gcrerul consent of the
I world It certainly Is to America, Including
- ": ":"
The Midwest Life
There appeared a -few days ago In the
i'More or Irss Personal" column of the
State ' tournal a short srtkio, the first
sentence of which read: "It Is the proper
th.ng In Lincoln now to ask for Lincoln-
made flour." Of course It Is. Why not?
If It Is the proper thing in Lincoln to buy
Lincoln-made flour, and In Omaha to buy
Omaha-made flour, why la It not the proper
thing for all Kebraskana to buy life In
surance In a Nebraska company? Hera Is
a business which above all others can b;
successfully developed In this state. The
Midwest Life offers rife Insurance to the
men end wouien of Nebraska at as low a
premium rate ns any other old-line com
pany, east or west. Why send premiums
to eastern companies, some of which now
have assets wMc'.i amount to more than
the assessed valuation if ti e w'rnjo srste
of Nebraska? If It la necesssry for them
to get bigger, let the poople of the stale
J . where they are organised do the swelling
ef their assets. The premiums paid to The
Hldwest Life remain right here la Ne-
brass, llama Of floe. 1W7 O BL; Omaha
Aetaucy, rvKMU iU) Board of Trad Building,
Canada and Mexico and most of South
America, what the Place de la Concorda
Is to Europe, the center of a continent.
Ixng Acre square Is not very long; It
Is more than an acre and It Is not square,
yet that is Its name, beloved, by its habi
tues, and no laws of the state or ordi
nances' of aldermen can change it. The
space to which the nanus applies Is that
Irregular widening of Broadway as that
thoroughfare make its slow crossing pf
Seventh avenue, where the two combine
at Fortjr-third street, to their separation
at Forty-seventh street, only four blocks
In length, and at no point much wld?r
than many broad village streets.
But Long Acre district, as distinguished
from the square. Is more extensive, begin
nlng at Broadway and Thirty-eighth street
and cpreadlng for about half a mile to
Fifth avenue on the east and Blight h ave
nue on the west. Within that compact
little patch of Manhattan there are, to be
exact, twenty-one first-class theaters, about
the same number of clubs, among them
some of the finest snd most exclusive In
the city; America's most famous restau
rants, including Delmonlco's, Sherry's,
Shanlcy's, Rector's, Churchill's, Harvey's
and the restaurants of the Hotel Astor
and Knickerbocker.
Hotels by (he Doies,
There are not less than a dosen hotels.
such as the Algonquin, Iroquois, Seymour,
Royalton, Woodstock, any of which twenty
years ago would be observed for Its great
slse and elegance. There are literally hun
dreda of apartment houses of every grade
of excellence; there are artist studios where
artlats paint and studios where people of
no visible moans of support seem to exist
In comfort and even luxury, and there are
furnished room houses where people some
times go hungry. It Is even said that there
are gambling establishments and resorts of
other kinds whereof nearly all who know
the Acre are familiar except the police
But one mentions such sorts for the value
of contrast; the characteristic of the Acre
Is gayety, light, laughter, good dressing,
feeding, drinking and good fellowship, snd
If people will crawl Into its corners and
starve there they fall to diminish the gen
eral tone of the Acre, which Is exceedingly
lively not deadly at all.
Before consideration Is given to tho ao-
tivltlus of the Acre which have In so short
a time made It the beet known spot In
America, the moat written about, tho
Mecca not only of the strsnger In New
York, but of all New York as well, a bit
of a stroll about the district will help to
an understanding of the mighty forces.
social, professional and business, which
converge In the Acre ltse-lf. Take, first.
tliu two short blocks running east from
the center of the Acre, Forty-fourth street.
fome Features of the Sqaare.
At the corner of the Acre Is the Criterion
theater and a few Bteps toward Fifth ave
nue one conies to two little French restau
rants as unlike anything on the Acre It
self as may be, yet of the Acre, too. And
then some little hotels, such as the Hotel
Royal, home of notably prosperous show
girls, and of some who have been, as, for
Instance, Mrs. Harry Thaw.
A little further Is that surprising Walters'
club, In size and appointment equal to
many of the old and arlatocratio clubs. AI
most opposite Is the fine club house of the
Alpha Delta Phi society, and a few steps
further the Lambs, oldest of American
players' clubs and sn offspring of a still
older Lambs of London. Opposite that Is
the Hudson theater and just beyond the
Hotel Gerard, built when that Mock was
almost out in the country and surprised to
find itself now in such lively company
Then, on the same side of the street, is
fU-lasco's Btuyvcsant theater, where Re
lasco's fellow San Franciscan, David War
field, has made fame snd fortune. Beyond
that, but sim west of Sixth avenue, la tho
street entnnce c. Burns', W.th Its small
paned windows, its cosy lace curtained win
dow seats, looking like some old English
Inn of the quietest and sedatest class. Oh,
Burns!
Opposite you see an empty brown-stone
residence, and as an empty building in the
Acre district Is a novelty, you inquire
'BiiliBf si
fli Mendelssohn, Rich-
mond, Huntington,
and The Bennett Co.
D e now on display,
rianos, nu to ue
Chickering (SL Sons, Everett, Ivors (Si
Pond, Packard, Starr, Kurtzmann,
Henry (Si S. G. Lindeemann, Koh-
lor (EL Campbell, Harvard, Sterling,
i
in
M.2
We have made special preparations for the large number
of visitors to the CORN SHOW, whose intention
it might be to select their Pianos for Christmas delivery.
New Pianos
lSO op
Second-Hand Pianos
Upriolist S7S up
square stiu up
SBE1
i
ORGANS
New $50 up
Second-Hand $5 up
Cabinet Players
!?& -op
Interior Player Plonos
New $500 up
Second-Dand $323 up
Tire Latest Designs ol 65 and 88 Note Player Pianos
3ldl On Esiy' IPaiyinm2in!
Pianos Selected Now May be Held for Christmas Delivery, if Desired.
U
EENNE1
Free This Week-- .'ITHrJiLT"-
COMPANY
Largest Distributers of High-Grade
Pianos In the West.
Lsslaasaw
tftst.ji
the reason and learn that It Is being con
verted Into an extension of the Army and
Navy club, whose main building la on
Forty-third street.
Around the Hippodrome.
Crossing Sixth avenue, one comes to
tho block of Forty-fourth street which.
until a few years ago, was a block almost
entirely of stables, beginning with the
big stables of the Sixth avenue horse car
Hne, where the great Hippodrome now
stands and that Is a part of the Acre dis
trict now, as is ths rest of the wonderful
block, formerly stables, which one strolls
along to reach Fifth avenue.
On the north side of tho street, opposite
the side entrance of the Hippodrome, Is
Henri's, the most Parisian little restaurant
In town, beloved of ladlos lunching alnno.
Then, on the same side, follow tho big
hotels Alonquln, Iroquois, Seymour; the
New York Yacht club with Its granite
front, In reproduction of an ancient war
ship; tho City club, large, sedate, but said
to contain one of the best cellars In town,
one may be very fussy about municipal
reform and also about the age and charac
ter of one's wines at the same time; and
the (Harvard club, severe almost in Its
simplicity of architecture, yet they do say
that when the score of the recent foot
ball game was posted there but this is
not the reason for our stroll. Further
east on the same side la the Berkeley
theater of various art attempts and oth
ers, not all srt snd, strangely located, a
very fashionable girls' school.
On the other side of that wonderful
block, chief feeder of the Acre, the south
side, is the Hotel itoyaltcn, with its quite
amazing variety of private dining rooms,
the sombrely vast library and club of the
Bar association, the Yale club, the Rac
quet club extension and the home if the
General Society of Mechanics and Trados
ircn, founded In 1TO, but newly housed;
and at the corner of the avenue, Shorry's.
Across the avenue as ono reaches the
eastward of the Acre district Is Dulntonl
co's and the Day and Night bank, and, of
course, the Acre of all places in the world
would be the first to need a bank which
n ver closi-s Its doors.
Where the Illwhborn Lssch.
Returning to the Acre by Forty-third
street one pnssts the Century club tho
denns of all the learned professional lunch
well there the Racquet und the Army
and Navy clubs, the Rryalton sguln, the
Bur association and the Hippodrome, and
of these all but the Century extend
through the block to Forty-fourth street.
Fli.nlly the Hotel Woodstock, on the eds
of tho Acre, and then a stroll across yau
don't stroll, but hop. skip snd Jump to
escape the gasolene pi. rs and a start on
n other short trip along Theater Row
that Is west on Forty-Second street for
one blr.ck only, but In that one block you
pass Hammorsleln's. Bclusco's, ths Lyric,
the News Amsterdam, the Liberty, Hack
tit's and the American, seven theaters In
one block, with Harvey's restaurant to.
take the hungriest of the 15 ft) thester
goers who turn out from playhouses In
thnt one block every night.
On the southernly spur of the Acre, along
Broadwav Itself, ars other theaters, the
Broadway, Metropolitan, Empire, Casino,
Knickerbocker, and Just off the main street
Maxine Elliott's new playhouse; and, by
the way. there Is to be an Annie Russell
pluyhouFe In West Forty-fourth street, Just
off the Acre.
In the Acre llself are the New York,
the Criterion, the Astor and a little way t0
the east the Lyceum theater. They may
not all hsve been mentioned here, but In
eluding the Annie Russell, there soon will
be .fnty-tvo treatrs nightly pouring
their crowds ln:o the .cre.
Crater of the taor World.
Wl st this riear.s as to the daytime In the
Acre only those who have closely observed
Iho r'. rritrir im nuliie; tie Acre Is the
busiuess centir of ths theatrical word
In America. Referring now to those who
have to do with ths business of the
theater, "the front of the house." their
number Is surprising, and they may all
be seen n the Acre during some pert of
ths day, at lunch time particularly.
A business so varied, employing ao many
millions of capital, so many thousands
of people, with Its companies scattered
throughout the whole of the United States
and much of Europe, has to be elaborately
organised In Us administrative end. Owners
and managers of theaters, owners and
managers of companies, producers, stage
managers, costumers, employment agencies,
play brokers, authors, composers, scene
painters, musj all be in close touch, for
there are many and sudden shifts to be
provided for. A failure at some point
requh-es the changing of several routes,
the organisation of a new company, the
shifting of players, the rehearsal of a
play sooner than planned or even tne
hurrying up of some book or score, the
production of new costumes, new scenery;
and the army of business men, of writers,
artists and others concerned must meet,
they do almost dally to learn of new
or changed intentions.
By common consent these moetings,
many ot tnem are i soma nun "
commonly In some restaurant in the Acre.
This Is the business end or It, me
practical work by practical men whose
fforts bring the many tnoussnas or plea
sure seekers to the Acre and make us
more characteristic life.
When the Acre Lights Up.
That pleasant life begins when the Acre
takes on its first brilliance, wnen iw
fronts and roofs of a score of theaters
blase with electrlo lights, when dosens of
hotels and restaurants are little less bright
with attractive illuminations, when the
highway of the Acre Is alive with hundreds
of brilliantly lighted cabs, automobiles,
street cars running hither and thither like
countless distracted glowworms.
Then the Acre takes on Its show aspect.
the restaurants, fill wltn gay crowas 01
diners as the streets begin to fill with
hundreds of players hurrying from their
earlier dinners to prepare for their nightly
entertainment of those thousands of more
deliberate diners. But the hurrying busi
ness of tha, day, tho eager preparation of
the early evening are all as nothing In
d Importance, in a Long Acre
way, to the scenes after the theaters are
closed and the players and audiences rush
into the Acre for Its night gayety.
Then begins a confusing scurrying of
cabs and automobiles, a quick filling of
the popular restaurants, cafes, rath
skellers, college Inns, chop houses and the
famous lobster palaces of the district. The
recently reopened old Normandle hotel at
Thirty-eighth street marks the southern-
,nt nf he after sutioer places. And a
word about that Is tit interest.
People not so old but that they can still
go about alone at night remember wnen
the Normandle was a show place of
hotel. It was far o'..t''pTeii by the esrly
Fifth avenue bis; hotel bui'dlngs, but still
held Its ovr. In Brosdwsy. Competition
cams closer vlir. Iho opening of the Astor
and the Knickerbocker and the Normandls
closed and all ii furnishings were sold
One at Low Prices.
But some out-of-town men saw an open
ingand ouf-of town men have seen about
all the good New York hotel openings
and refurnished the old place, did It all
over anew snd reopened It aa a tl snd II. BO
room hotel, and confidently asserted their
belief thst It would pay as such Just as
soon as the new Ides became known In six
months or so. The first night of the re
opening 180 of Its 190 rooms were taken.
Then Its basement rathskeller was opened
with prices proportioned to the room prices,
and one more successful supiier place for
tha Acre district was established in one
night.
The Albany, a courle of blocks furthe
north, opened a dosen years or so ago s
a strictly bschelor hntl, but took off it
restriction un-ler new management, and
has a college Inn basement which aoeom
modates a younger set of Joyoui tenipviu
niwnl who have not tha pi lee demanded
In ths Acre itself.
In ths newe.t Acre supper resort, the
grill room, the white room and ths various
other rooms of the Hotel Knickerbocker,
tha professional Ufa of ths Acre is most
represented Just now after the theaters
close. There, rather than at any of the
other places, you are likely to see supping
Miss Barrlmore, Miss Taliaferro, Miss
Loftus,' Miss Scheff and a score more
women stars, when In town, generally
patronise the grill room. In the white
room Oscar Hammersteln usually takes
upper dinner. It really is, though midnight
at a corner of the white room, all alone.
Playrlghts Are Social.
The playwrights seem to be social and
not Jealous, for you may see so many of
them gathered that tables are Joined to
accommodate the number. Paul Arm
strong, James Forbes, Henry Blossom,
George Broadhurst and George Ade may
be seen In one group and the artists fore
gather, too. for Will Fisher it s "Fisher
girls" now, hot Gibson girls Archie Gunn,
Eddie Unit, who designs and paints
Bcenery; Will Barnes, who designs the stun-
lng costumes of the stage, and Hy Mayor,
who draws funny things In English, French
and German, hobnob at ono table. Victor
Herbert, who really Is Irish, In spite of his
slight German accent, comes Into a grill
room, a wnue room or any oiner kiiiu
of a supper place like a breeze, wafts about
from table to table until he has said
Howdy" to half the people in the place
before ordering a modest repast Impar
tially composed of French, American, Gor
man and Irish dishes. If Georgo Cohan and
Sam Harris are not there for supper ihey
surely are for lunch, for they belong to
a "Knlck" lunch club, and every member
must stand for the price of the lunch and
a tip for the waiter, whether he is present
or not.
Other managers drop in with frlendB
George Tyler, who looks ever so much
more as If he had Just come ashore from
a private yncht than coming from counting
the house at half a dosen theaters; Frederic
Thompson, so absurdly young looking that
strangers have to be reassured that It Is the
genuine Frederic; "the" Shuberts, suave,
bandyboxy looking, and now and then
Mayer Livingston, little known by the pub
11s, but who Is said to be the financial
manager of the theater syndicate.
Homes for the Aetors.
Few actors, the reader observes, per
haps? No, the stars and leading men have
their own clubs, the Players and the
Lambs, and the latter claims most of
those who sup in the Aero district. The
others, tho lesser men players, do not sup
at such places as have been considered, for
obvious reasons, or an obvious reason
the price.
The lesser women of the profession sup
numerously In the high-priced places of the
Acre, generally In the company of non
professional men. They sup well, too, and
their presence lends liveliness to many of
the places.
Leaving the "Knklt" and going north 1n
the Acre, Shamley's and Rector's are next
In line. The managers of these two famous
places will assert, with some heat per
haps, that there Is a distinction between
the class of patrons of their respective
places. There may be; ,to the casual ob
server those who sup there are much alike.
In Shanley's perhaps there are more New
Yorkers, strangers being mors likely to
favor Rector's, but those strangers sr.
people of about the same class apparently
In their native Pittsburg, Boston, miia-
delphia or wherever aa the natives in the
other shop.
In Rector's there Is a division of classes,
so old patrons assert, which Is physically
marked by a certain aisle. North of thst
the ushers seat those they slse up as of a
certain financial or soclsl standing, south
of the 11ns those of another class finsnclally
or socially. It would, of course, be unfair
to tell which, according to the ushers, are
the goats and which the sheep. Perhsps
it Isn't so at all, but the belief that It la
cannot be disturbed In the minds of those
who hold it.
Look for Good rood.
At the many supper rooms of ths Astor
ths patrons are not so much of the class
who frequent the Acre at that hour because
It is the Acre. Thsy ars more, rather
neopU who are In search of good food,
drink, musle and agreeable surroundings
and take It where, they find it. In the Acre
or elsewhere.
Not that the Astor is without Acreage
characteristics,, so to speak. Attractive
show girls may be seen there in quiet
company and wholly on their good be
havior. Also David Belasco, David War
field and others of the "Belasco crowd"
seem to find satisfactory nourishment In
the victuals of the Astor and may be seen
there now snd then with some of the
Belasco women stars or leading women.
Yet further north. In the heart of the
Acre, is Churchill's, a restaurant of a
class more popular, or at least more fre
quently seen. In New York fifteen years
ago than now. Society may be a lltUo less
conventional there than elsewhere; but It
Is none the less fashionable In part at
least, for If you haunt the Acre much you
discover that the ssme Individuals seen
earlier In the night at other Acre recorts
are supping again at Churchill's later In
the night.
Patrons circulate about more freely,
they drink to each other with something
more moist than eyes, from table to table.
The late men patronise the place freely;
men who have been working late find a
welcome relaxation there, and even some
of the women of exalted place In the pro
fession may go to Churchill's with a friend
later, that is, after pssstng the shank of
the evening, from midnight to, say, 1 or 2
o'clock In other restaurants.
Late at Night.
And at about that hour, that is. some
time after mldnighjr. another class of res
taurants In the Acre aro crowded with
patrons: restaurants where some kind of
meal may be had for 10 cents, and where
tho patrons are glad to have the price.
They have seen better days most of them.
st lesst brighter days, and no doubt many
have dined where a M supper was as com
mon as a 10-cent supper Is where fortune
sends them to sup now.
Tho edges of the district retain their
faithful patrons; over on Sixth avenue In
Jnck's and Bums', tables are crowded
with men and women who assert that
only there can they get the kind of sup
per they like. None of the newer fancy
dishes of the Acre, Itself, for them.
And still you note, as you did when as a
very yourg man you first supped st
Jack's or Burns-, that the waiters all Iook
like pugilists in good training! as they
should. In Jack's there Is a peculiar rule:
A -woman may not leave her table anu
visit at another table. You may say that
this Is unconstitutional, and threaten to
write to Mr. Roosevelt about It, but that
mtkes no difference. A woman Just can't
visit, among the tables, no matter how so
cially tncllnrd she may be, no matter how
much she may desire to cross to another
table than her own and ask Bessie where
she got her new hat, or what her route
will be when they go on tour. A rule is a
rule, and, as has been remarked, tho
waiters nil look well trained.
When the Lights Go Oat.
The glaring theater lights are out, the
big signs of colored nleetrlc globes which
Implore you when you drink water to
drink Somebody's, or if beer or whisky
are yet on your mind lm sure to consider
the merits of Ro-ond-to's. 1 he Acre Is
rot so bright with light, the milk wa;ons
begin to crawl slowly up Broadway, the
street cars run with sn appreciable Inter
val between, the Ittest of the evening
extras have been called In and the earliest
of the morning papers are out, but- thcri
Is not much change in the amount ,of
human activity In the Acre.
The astonishing number of cabs It takes
to convey the woman residents of tho
district still makes the Acre dangerous
crossing, the crowds are thinned somo In
some of the supper rooms, but tho en
thusiasm Is Just as thick as ever-a little
more so, perhaps. The Acre never sleeps ;
even as tho latest of the supper parties
break' up the day also beaks and calU
upon thousands to begin the activities of
the next day. Just as other thousands are
closing the activities of the do buXoro.
Veils that I'lease t?e Ciroeer.
"Those veils the women Mks are wear
ing, all nailed down tight under lieii
chins are a great boon for us all right,
all right." said an East Knd grocer.
"Women, you know, lire the greatest pel-.nil-
on earth ti coine In and sample
tlilnirH They'll take a taste of this and
a tasto of that while you're wrapping up
?,netl,ing for them, and the first tiling
vnu know they've eaten up about a nickel a
worth of stuff. We can t say anything
to a woman, particularly those that ar
good customers. Now we don't have to.
I haven't seen a woman taste anything in
the store for a month or so. Those veils
are put on so tight that the only way
they can samplo anything would he to
take It through a straw."-Ch veland JMain
lealer.
mm
TRIMMED CHRISTMAS
TREES FREE
From now until Christmas
we will give with every sale
of $10.00 or over, in our
Men's and Boys' Clothing
Department, a nanoaome
Trimmed Christmas Tree ab
solutely free of charge.
See duplicate of the trim
med tree that we give away
free in our Men's Clothing
window.
Here is a chance to get a
beautiful trimmed Christmas
Tree for the little ones free of
charge.
16UI 6 tkOHAft 6TUtt.IV OTIAIU.