Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 18, 1913, Image 27

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IIEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA. C,A„ SUNDAY, MAY 18, 191.1. LONDON PAR! iarquis de Castellllan'e BERLIN c. ROME J. E. D’Aqyim VI. Bryce SUNDAY AMERICAN’S SPECIAL CABLE BETTERS RECEIVED EROM ALL THE GREAT CAPITALS OF EUROPE MftTCHMAKERS OF Princess Victoria Louise and the Duke of Cumberland To Be Married This Week. PRESENTS WORTH MILLIONS Hotels Crowded With Noble Rep resentatives and Secret Serv ice Agents From All Over. Special Cable to The American. BERLIN, May 17.:—With every prominent hotel of Berlin crowded with diplomats, royalty, nobles and ordinary visitors, and the city and vicinity overflowing with secret agents and secret police of about every country of Europe, and still more to come, everything is in readi ness to-day for the wedding next week of Princess Victoria Louise, only daughter of the Kaiser, to Prince Ernst August, son of the Duke of Cumberland. So crowded have conditions become that the Kaiser was compelled to make reservations at hotels for some of his most distinguished royal guests. The first and second floors of the Hotel Adlon have been reserved for his three sisters and Prince and Prin cess Henry of Prussia, who, by the way, celebrate on the day of the wed ding their’own silver anniversary. A large part of the suite of King George and Queen Mary of Great Britain w ill also be quartered at the Hotel A^llon. Secret Service Agents. Mysterious strangers with Russian accent's drop off every train. They are Russian secret police, here to pro tect the Czar and Czarina. German secret agents scrutinize all arrivals for possible anarchists, nihilists or in ternational thieves, for probably never before has there been so great a gathering of royalty, peers and the Just plain wealthy. Wedding gifts valued at miUjpns qf dollars “have been arriving for some time past, and these gifts are protect ed as only are the members of the royal housidlrtl On every side there is a hustle and bustle evidencing very plainly the close approach of some signal event. Many different languages are heard upon the streets, and the least of these is not English. Many Americans are here and with lavish use of money have rented hotel suites the equal in luxury of those, reserved for the royal guests. The marriage of the Princess Louise and Prince Ernst will he a case of reconciliation of the Capulets and Montagus, uniting once more the house of Hohenzollern and the Bruns- wick-Lineburg branch of the house of Guelph. After many days of labor the prin cess' trousseau is at last in readiness. This bridal garment Is most gorgeous. No detail has been overlooked. It is said here that for patriotic reasons the trousseau was made in this city, but it has been learned that the de sign and much of the lace came from Paris. Gala Opera Wednesday, On Thursday next the celebration of the wedding to last three days will commence with a gala opera evening. On the following day a ban quet of state will take place, and on the dav after that the ceremony will be performed. The civil ceremony will take place in the new marble palace at Potsdam, but the religious ceremony will be performed in this Cit ”f shall choose my bridesmaids.” said the girl whom Berliners have delighted to call Prinzesschen, "little princess," and her royal and imperial father, who bows to nobdy else on earth, bowed his assent. Attendants upon the princess will be four of the most beautiful prin cesses of Europe. They are Princess Mary, daughter of King George and Queen Mary of Great Britain: the Grand Duchess Olga, oldest daughter of Czar Nicholas of Russia; Princess Yolanda of Italy, and the Princess Elizabeth, daughter of King Charles of Roumania. I These princesses are of distinct types of loveliness. Princess Mary, who is second cousin of the bride-to- be, is fair Hairdd, with the ruddy, healthy complexion of which so many English girls boast. Princess Mary was ifi years old last month. Grand Duchess Olga will be 18 years old next November; she, too, is a second cousin of Princess Victoria. Louise. The Grand Duchess is a pronounced brunette with somber hair and eyes. Princess Elizabeth, of Roumania, who is nearly 20. is of the brilliantly clear Caucasian type and is almost as lovely as her mother, the famous Princess Marie. Princess Yolanda, of Italy, is the youngest of the quin tette, only 12. She inherits the beauty of her mother, Queen Elena, that Princess who brought to the house of Savoy the revivifying blood of Montenegro. What Will They Wear? “What will they wear at the wed ding?" half the maidens in Europe are asking each other. Alas, it is impossible to gratify tiieir natural curiosity. A description of the brides maids' gowns could not be dragged with hot pincers from the artists in dress who are creating them. It is known, however, that the bride’s gown Is of white satan point applique of conventional cut. with a train four yards long. The cost of the gown and the train and the lace, which has been especially hand-mad-, will not exceed $1,000. The Prin cess' veil, on which many giris in the Silesian lace school worked for many weeks, cost $600. Indeed, the bride's trousseau is of rich but sim ple elegance; those of the daughters of German captains of 'ntliisiry and of German millionaires have cost ten times as much. Brilliant London Season to Open By End of Week Recovery of Duchess of Connaught Relieves Anxiety of Fash ionable Society. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, May 17.—-The London season will be in full stride by the end of the coming ween. The gloom cast by the illness of the Duchess of Connaught over the beginning of the season has so far lightened that the Duke of Connaught and Princess “Pat” have been able to appear at the opera this week, and thus have relieved, to a certain extent, the gen eral anxiety. A whole nation of shop keepers has been in mortal fear of a fatal termination of the Duchess’ illness which calamity would effec- ively kill the social season. Lady Deerhurst, nee Bonyinge. has altered the date for the dance she is to give for her debutante daughter. Miss Helena Coventry, from June 6 to May 29. The whole Anglo-Amer ican colony will he present at this ball. Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, who is taking the cure at Bad Nauheim will not arrive here until late in the sea son, about the beginning of July. Miss' Shonts will visit the sister of the Duchess of Manchester, nee Zimmerman, in Ireland this Summer. Princess Hatzfelt, nee Huntington, is back after a long absence from London Adopts American Dances v# v v • v v • •!* *1* • *1* v#*i* LadyDianaMannersTakesUpFad Lady Diana Manners, who is leading fashionable London’s Tango craze. One picture shows her beautiful profile, and the other is a view of the titled beauty as she appeared at a recent fancy dress ball. London. She will entertain largely at the hotels. Mrs. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, who was presented at the last court by Mrs. Irwin Laughlin. has been tremend ously feted during her visit to Lon don. Mrs. Burton Oliver has left Our- zon Street for Paris and will not re turn to London until the end of June. Louise Drew. John Drew’s daugh ter. is staying at the St. James Ho tel this week. Baroness Vaughan Andre, Mrs. Chauncey Depew’< sister, is in the throes of moving from the Ritz Ho tel- to her fine new mansion, 143 Piccadilly, which she bought last year. Charles Dillingham. theatrical manager, has arrived on his honey moon tri]> and leaves London shortly for the Continent. William F. McCombs, chairman of the. National Democratic Committee spent a couple of days in town and left for Paris. Charles Harris, managing director of the Ritz-Carlton Company, sailed on the Olympic. clergyman drowned in THAMES WHILE BOATING 6peclal Cable to The American. LONDON. May 17.—The Rev. Pat rick Watson, of St. Matthew's Clergy House, Westminster, who was to have taken his M. A. degree at Oxford, was crowned in a boating accident on the Thames at Oxford recently. Mr. Wat son, the two Misses Watson and two undergraduates were. on the rivet when their boat came into collision with a steamer and was upset. The undergraduates managed to hold up the two ladie« until they could be rescued by ropes thrown to, them from the steamer, but the body of Mr. Watson could not be found. Mr. Watson, who took his B. A. de gree at Merton Vollege in 1311, was ordained la L year, when in - * becany> a curate of St. Matthew's, Westmin ster. Little Coat Charms London's Smart Set Made of Futurist Silk It Carries Beholders Back* to Grand mother’s Days. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, May 17.—The “little coat” has become an indispensable part of the .smart women’s toilette and, as there is no limit just now in regard to color, it can he adorned with touches of what is now called futurist shades. A particularly original gown is be ing made for Mrs. Guy Laking, whose husband is the King’s armorer. The skirt is of black satin souple, slit upon the left where it is caught in soft folds and supplemented with a pretty little corsage of fresh pink chiffon, veiled with a cloud of black chiffon and adorned with little sets of pin tucks. Sandwiched between these two filmy veilings are threaded ribbons in pale wild rose pink and sunset blue, which are knotted here an^ there with rosebuds, or spring for get-me-nots, or both, slipped through the knots. The crowning feature of the toil ette is, however, the “little coat.” This is brocaded black eharmeuse, embossed with quaint old world gold, a design which, carries one back to the days of her grandmother. The coat is supp’emented with a wide Medici collar of gold lace and little bright levers of futurist silk In many colors. A fold' of futurist silk holds a belt of filmy gold lace. BANQUET TO PAGE. LONDON, May 17.—The. Pilgrims Club of Great Britain will give a l»an- cyueVjn honor of yf&Jtor If,. Pag of tho n<* v* American A .nbai/sdefer at the Savoy Hotel on June 6. Society ‘“Trots” and “Cavorts” at Every Fashionable Occa sion—Teachers Hired. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, May IT.—With tho beautiful and popular Lady Diana Manners as the leader of the new ragtime dance cult, London society has gone wild over the turkey trot and the tango. The more conser vative members of the artiStocrac.v are aghast at the hold the whirlwind American dances have taken on the younger set. The tearooms still confine them selves to tea, not dancing, but the ballrooms of the nobility are given over almost exclusively to the con tagious imported steps. Since Lady Diana Manners has taken them up, the younger social lights have followed her to a debu tante, and hostesses have shrugged their shoulders and surrendered to the inevitable. With the new dances has come, too, a relaxation of the formalities. London chaperones are less given to surveillance than they used to b* j and boys and girls may dance to gether through a whole evening with out any . comment being made, some thing which is new to England. Men who are often shy about darn ing with girls whose steps they do not know have no fear now, be cause there is sp much Informal dancing with girls, so many oppor tunities, of practicing together. Little parties are often made up and a teacher specially engaged. BOYS FROM THIBET COME TO ENGLAND FOR TRAINING Special Cable to The American. LONDON. May 17.—About a dozen young students from the mysterious land of Thibet—the first of their nation to adventure into the white man'? world, arrived in London recently. The boys, who are in charge of Mr. Gould, of the Indian Civil Service, are aged from 10 to 13. They are the chil dren of high officials. With them are two or three grownups, one a Sikkim police officer. Their costume is a long-sleeved gown gathered in at the waist and Chinese boots. The boys will be placed in suitable English schools and educated before returning home to their own land. FUTURIST STYLE ADOPTED BY BUENOS AYRES PAPER Special Cable to The American. BUENOS AYRES, May 17.—A Bue nos Ayres daily, which has adopted the futurist style, thus reports a lo- <al street disturbance: “In I be. a Street, between Obligado md Cahiklo, Faustino Sanchez and ot.iiers. .'Free fight; heavy blows. He who drub them fled. He who received them, Ifaustino. Hospital.” Titled Beauty Leads Tango Cult MAETERLINCK SAYS IN IS BETWEEN SHEEP AND FROGS Humans Defenseless Until They Know How to Use Fists, Says Composer. By CHARLES HENRY MELTZER. Special Cable to The American. PARIS, M&yM7.—Maurice Maeter linck, who loves boxing as much as he does philosophy, published an other eulogy of the noble art of self defense some davs ago in a Paris newspaper. Compared with insects and some animals, he thinks man is defenseless till he knows how to use his fists. “In rightly arranged natural hier archy.” says Maeterlinck, “we should be entitled only to a modest place ion with the punching bag. The author of “I’elleas” and the “Marie Magdaleine,” for which his charming wife is now rehearsing, still spends hours each week in commun ion with the punching bag. Calm has come in the near east, but in the farther east, between Broussa and Beluchistan, events are happening. They are being watched with curious eyes in Paris, for al though agreements between England and Turkey, Turkey and Germany, and Germany and England with re gard to Asia Minor and the Persian gulf, which are now pending or con cluded, may not immediately affect French interests, they may greatly strengthen or diminish the prestige of France abroad. France Excluded. France thus far seems to have been virtually excluded from nego tiations as to reforms in Asia Minor and arrangements for building a railroad or roads from Bagdad to Bussoras and Koweit. With her Rus sian ally. France is slowly waking up as to the sad fact that her in fluence in Syria and Turkey proper is being snatched from her by Ger many and England. Hence, tardy, tears. Though less sensational than the recent frontier incidents at Nancy and Luneville, proceedings at the Franco-German conference at Berne are much distressed. French patriots and French deputies who have been trying to promote friendly inter course between France and Germany are regarded with suspicion here as they were opponents of the three years' army service bill which M. Bar- thou, the French premier and most Frenchmen know must be made a law if France is to remain a first class power. Despite Jaures and his socialist fr 4 iends, the bill is almost certain to be passed and then, but not till then, France will breathe freely. Continue rain this week forced Parisians to go about in rubbers and water proofs. Nevertheless. the city has been thronged with visitors, including ‘many Americans and even more Engli^i. Another Russian Season. The chief theatrical event of the week has been the opening of an other Russian season at the new theater Des Champs Elysees, which for some time to come will be de voted to muscovite ballet and Mus covite opera. The vogue of the marvelous Rus sian dancers seems, however, nearly over. More interest will be felt in the three operas, the “Boris Godou- now" and "Khovantchina” of Mous- sorgsky, and the “Pskovitaine” of Rimsky Korsakoff. The last named work may be heard next season at the Metropolitan. Titta Ruffo, who shortly is to ap pear in the Paris opera house as Meflstophele protests against state ments current in America that he has a personal contract for next season with Andreas Dippel. He asserts he has been engaged for a series of per formances by the Chicago opera com pany. Apart from the production of a amusing three act comedy by Ed mond Fleg entitled “Le Trouble Fete” and a one act drama called “La Glorie Ambulanoiere,” by Tristan Bernard, at the Comedie Des Champs Elysees, the only theatrical novelty of the week has been a melodrama called “Mon Ami Lassassil” at the Am- bigu. TUCKS GIVE HOUSEWIFERY SCHOOL TO FRENCH PEOPLE Special Cable to The American. PARIS, May 17—Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tuck again have testified to American generosity by handing over a hospital and school of housewifery to the prefect of the Seine. Mr. and Mrs. Tuck, who with their niece, Mrs. Elsie French Vanderbilt, reside near Malmaison, already had given many Napoleonic relics to the museum at the old home of Empress Josephine. Ex-Senator Nelson VV. Aldrich, of Rhode Island, has returned to Paris and expects to sail on board the Mauretania. Among other recent arrivals are: Mrs. A. C. Birch, E. A. Cudahy and party, Dr. S. H. Howe, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Brideman and Addison O. Ar mour. of Chicago; L. H Van Wyck, Miss V. Perle and R. W. Pease, of San Francisco. IMPORTANT DISCOVERIES IN ITALIAN EXCAVATIONS Special Cable to The American. ROME. May 17.—Important dis coveries have been made at the ex cavation of the ancient Etruscan City, Veil, near Rome. A portion of the amphitheater when unearthed wa found to be filled with a mass of rubbish wherein a ( number of domes tic utensils of the latest Etruscan pe riod. Tombs with hut shaped urns were also found. The King and Queen of Italy vis ited the scene. PRINCE’S HORSE FALLS DEAD. BERLIN. May 17.—A horse ridden by Prince Joachim, the Kaiser’s son, fell dead in Straussburg Street yes terday. The prince leaped to the ground, escaping injury. Miss Rosalie Howell Registered at Rome Atlanta Girl Stopping in Italian Capital—Capel-Ruspoli Engage ment Called Off. Special Cable to The American. ROME May 17.—Miss Elsie Capel, of a well known English family, leaves soon for New York, where she will be the guest of Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt during the early part of the season. It is reported Miss Capel was engaged to Prince Ruspoli, but that the engagement was broken a few weeks ago for Reasons unknown to the public. Professor ».nd Mrs. Jesse Carter. >f the American art academy, have be gun a series of receptions and gar den parties at the Villa Aurelia, where they have just moved. Gen. and Mrs. Berdan, the for mer once American minister to Greece, for the last two. or three years residents of Rome, have given up their apartments to the regret of many friends. They will spend some time in Switzerland and then will return to America.• Miss Rosalie Howell, of Atlanta, is at the Boston. John Brown Gerrish has left for Paris and London. Forty, Age-Limit of Her Women Guests Mrs. La Bouchoc, of Detroit. Adopts Rule That Startles French Capital. Special Cable to The American. PARIS, May 17—Mrs. A. E. La Bouchoc, wealthy daughter of Mrs. Whitney Hoff, of Detroit, caused a flutter recently by limiting the age of the women whom she Invites to her social gatherings to about forty. Girls and young widows only are welcome to her receptions, which are highly popular with her male guests. On the contrary, an article on Chi cago grandmothers, by that erudite academician. Emile Eaguet. has caus ed mirth here. Faguet says al though the word grandmother usual ly is synonymous with old women. In Chicago women are sometimes grandmothers at thirty-two. “They complain.” he writes, “.they are respected to excess, they are fon dled, caressed and adored and all this to the tune of ‘grandmother how are you? Are you well?’’’ Wilhelmina Pits Her Wits Against Kaiser Germany Wants Antwerp or Rotter dam as an Outlet—Brings Pressure on Holland. Special Cable to The American. BERLIN. May 17.—It has been wondered why Queen Wilhelmina, of the Netherlands, and her consort, Prince Henry, have been remaining for six weeks near Frankfort-on-the- Maln in a sanatorium. The reason is that, both have decided to remain there in order to attend to important political negotiations. The Gorman Emperor has for many years wished to turn either Rotter dam or Antwerp into a German har bor in order to give Germany an other ‘outlet to the North Sf*a. But. as the Belgians failed to catch the hint regarding Antwerp, has turned towards the Dutch people and, there fore, instructed German diplomatists in The Hague to let the Queen and Consort understand they would be very welcome in Germany. Of course, the Queen is not likely to allow, if she can help it, any Ger man preponderance in the principal Dutch port, but it is believed Ger many can bring pressure to bear on little Holland, especially as the Prince Consort is a German and en tirely In the hands of the Berlin Court. Australian Women Sold Into Harems Colonial Secretary Warns Natives Against Marriages With Pathans or Afghans. Special Cable to The American. SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, May 17.— At the request of Mr. Harcourt, the Colonial Secretary, the Common wealth Government has Issued a warning to Australian women against the common practice of marrying Afghans and Pathans (natives of th- Northwestern Frontier regions of In dia) who visit Australia for purposes of trade or camel-driving. Such marriages, it is pointed oiU. are contracted by the husbands mere ly as a “business transaction,” and. as a rule; result in misery for the wives. The Afghans and Pathans deceive the women with lies about the “magnificence and comforts” of t-helr homes, their status in their own country, and the future llf«> of their wives there. In this way women are induced to marry them and accom pany them back to India and across the northwestern frontier, where they are promptly sold to the high est bidders. The women are thereafter doomed to a life of close imprisonment? un der the barbarous conditions, and, their attractions waning. become simply household slaves. They llv • and die In a harem, without hope of communication with their relatives All Idea of Morganatic Marriage Scorned and None Ever Proposed, MISS ALEXANDER Mother of New York Heiress Said to Incline Toward a British Alliance. BY MARQUIS DE CASTELLANE. Special Cable to The American. PARIS, May 17.—The approaching marriage of Miss Nancy Leishman, daughter of Ambassador John G. A. Leishman, makes a live question of the old subject of morganatic mar riages. Let me settle It once and for all. A morganatic marriage is a real one both from the standpoint of church and State. The difference between it and the usual marriage is that the contracting party of in ferior rank renounces for self and offspring all rights to honors, titles and emoluments which might other wise accrue from the union. For instance, the late King Leo pold contracted a morganatic mar riage with Caroline Lacroix, other wise the Baroness Vaughan. Their two children could never claim heir ship to the throne, nor to the king’s property. All this talk about a morganatic marriage between the second daugh ter of Ambassador and Mrs. Leish man and Duke Karl of Croy arises from a misconception of the facts. The Duke of <’roy never proposed a morganatic marriage to Miss Leish man. While her fiance is a‘“sover eign duke,” ranking with reigning dynasties, he never even Intimated that the daughter of a Pittsburg mil lionaire was not his equal. And, if he had she would not have accepted him. There is no case on record where an American girl has contract ed a morganatic marriage. Proposition Rarely Made. It is so well known in Europe that American girls would not enter into unions implying inferiority that rarely has such a proposition been made. And the few exceptional cases met with prompt refusals. For in stance, when Miss Maud Fay, of Cal ifornia, was approached by the fam ily of a Bavarian prince concerning a morganatic marriage she replied: “No, it will be either a marriage of perfect equality or none at all.” When Miss Anita Stewart of Phil adelphia. was married to a Braganza Bourbon, the question was not even raised. Since the deplorable fatality which deprived Isadora Duncan of Cali fornia, of her two beautiful children through the running away of her motor car, a widespread demand has arisen for some device which would enable persons occupying the interior of a car to stop the engine, in case of danger, no matter whether the chauffeur remained in his seat or not. Automobile Invention. On the day following the accident referred to, a description of an in vention of tills kind appe;<red in a Paris newspaper, hut there are cer tain inconvenient circumstances at tached tq the use of t.hif* device, which do not render it quite suit able. M. Auco, one of the City Council lors. suggests that constructors should devote their attention to the invention of some device operating on the clutch in such a manner that an accidental starting of the engine would be impossible. GERMAN IMPERIAL FAMILY MOVING UPON HAMBURG Special - Cable to The American. HAMBURG. May 17.—The German imperial family is filling Hamburg earlier than usual this year. The place is now in full spring beauty. There is a large gathering daily at the Elizabeth Spring. The German Crown Prince and Princess are expected May 29. Queen Wilhelmina of the Nether lands and Prince Henry have just re turned to Amsterdam but soon will make another visit. The hotels and villas are filling. Among the latest arrivals are Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Gilchrist, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. French. C. C. Puffer, J. Saunderson and Dr. William Cooper and family. By W. ORTON TEWSON. Special Cable to The* American. LONDON, May 17.—Even gener ous Americans are falling under the spell of the English fashion of “make all you can" and now the Marchio ness of Dufferln is offering for rent North House, her fine place at Put ney. Lady Dufferln is willing to accept a fancy price for the use of this beau tiful place for the season, and in addi tion to the splendid art treasures, this suburban mansion is rich in social traditions. Lady Dufferln would only consider a weekly rental of one hun dred guineas, which would make North House only a rich man’s prize. Miss Alexander is watched close ly by matchmakers. She is regard ed with much friendliness and is vot ed by rigid critics to be of good style, which counts even more than good looks, a quality which appeals to dowagers perhaps more than to spoil ed young sprigs of nobility. After a long and tedious battle against unfavorable odds, Countess Pappenheim and her daughter, Count ess Pauline, have “arrived” in London society and this season their names illuminate many of the smartest lists. By patience and perseverance this Philadelphian has succeeded, with out the friendship of the Drexels and other Pennsylvania families, and few Americans now have more faith ful friends here than the Pappen- heims. A rumor connects the Countess Pauline with a middle aged soldier of excellent family who can give the young woman an established position, but the mother hop^p for even a more brilliant match. An Invitation to Visitors While in Atlanta you should certainly call and inspect our Art Department as well as our model jewelry store. in these two stores you will find the displays well worth a half-hour of your time. Our col- leetion of Marble and Bronze Statuary will prove interesting. Then there are the Hall Clocks, Miniatures. Cabinets, Pottery, Tapestries. Paintings on Ivory and Porcelain, Ivory Carvings, Brie-n-Brae, and the F*;ie China, illustrating the various styles and^ periods of Ceramic Art and Deco, j .ration. Souvenirs and Gift Goods. You will doubtless want a num- iier of remembrances and souve nirs before leaving Atlanta. We are headquarters for gift goods and souvenirs in Hold, Sterling Silver, etc. If your pres ent comes from our store, your friends will tie doubly pleased, for they will know you wanted them to have the beef. A handsomely illustrated cata logue and diamond booklet will lie given complimentary to anyone who will call or write for them. We shall lie glad to huve you, eome at any time. MAIER & BERKELE, Inc., Jewelers, Art Importers Established 1887 31-33 Whitehall St. “SILENT BANQUET” ENJOYED BY DEAF CLUB OF ENGLAND LONDON, May 17.—An Interesting banquet is that held annually by the members of the National Deaf Club, which this year took place at the Connaught Rooms in Great Queen Street. This gay festivity is known as the “Silent Banquet,” but never theless the company manages to put in u good time. Forty-five Inches is the limit in size of Wardrobe Trunks which the railroads will accept without a charge for excess. Our shop is well prepared to Cut the Big Ones Down to-the right size in a most satisfactory manner. Phone M. 488 and the wagon will call. LIEBERMAN’S “The House of Guaranteed Baggage.” 92 Whitehall.