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ANGELUS Crfi) Universal \ HAVE you ever paused to consider the fact that you are ? * . . - - . heir to all the ages of musical genius? That the works of the world's greatest composers are your rightful heritage ? Are you satisfied that you show due appreciation? | The ANGELUS offers the medium for gratitude and appreciation to those countless thousands who love music and to the many who are them- J selves but indifferent performers. The ANGELUS is their benefactor. ft The ANGELUS gives you the technique of a virtuoso and provides you m with the means to instill your individuality into the music.to give it your own interpretation. You can play any composition as you think it should ^ be played.as you want it played, for the ANGELUS is absolutely obedient to your will and responsive to your mood. r»>\i jEl ¥ i This perfect accord between the player-pianist and instrument is possible with the ANGELUS because of its patented devices and exclusive features. THE PHRASING LEVER gives com- plete mastery over tempo in all its varying degrees. With no other player device is it possible to obtain the same beautiful, ar¬ tistic tempo effects. THE GRADUATING MELODANT emphasizes the melody whether it lie in the bass or treble, while the accompaniment is properly subordinated. Both Uie melody and the accompaniment can be modulated at your will. ' N W * a THE DIAPHRAGM PNEUMATICS duplicate the pliant, resilient touch of the human fingers. THE ARTISTYLE MUSIC ROLL has one, and one only, expression line, but nevertheless it indicates accents and all changes of tempo and volume, thus pro¬ viding a simple but complete guide to an interpretation in accordance with the com¬ poser's ideas. Jt Knabe-Angelus Emerson-Angelus Angelus Piano Grand and Upright Grand and Upright Upright Angelus Piano and Courley-Angelus in Canada THE WILCOX & WHITE COMPANY, Player-Piano Industry MERIDEN, CONN. $300 hromYourCiiyLot .COMPARISON IN GROWTH TOMATO PLANTS Each the same number of days from seed, but started at different intervals of the MOON'S INFLUENCE. My FREE book SCIENCE & AGRI¬ CULTURE tell* the eecret of successful tomato growing. A Complete Living from a City Garden. For fifteen years on iny own farm I have studied the Moon's Influence over Plant Growth; during all these \ears I have ex crimen ted on growing tomatoes ..Hy, and today I have the earliest tomato in c ltivation. More than 50,000 Cit gardens Hill be planted this spring under my instructions. A splendid profit from >o-iroack yard garden. $1,000 per acre and better from pleasant agreea'Te garden work in any locality if you will follow my instructions. A frte copy ol this interesting book is yours for the asking. Write for it today. FRANK H. GREGORY. Gretory Far* 60 "Fsirscres." Bay City. Mich. Plant the Quality grape CATAWBA-CONCORD The urnfte for everybody everywhere. A cross between the Catawba and the Concord.so scientifically made that it unites all their merits with none of their defects. Equal in quality to the finest hot-house grapes and as easily grown as the Concord. For ten years it has proved its superiority. Has received awards wherever shown. Write at out e f r large descriptive catalog of Kaspl«erries, Il!a« klienies.iirai-es.Straw¬ berries, Currants, ti«M/sel*-rr»es, C.arden Roots, Hardy Perennial Plants, Shrubs, Vines. Roses, etc. It tells how t«> plant and grow th-in.free to everybody J.T. LOVETT. Box 185. UttleSiher.N.J. SEND ME 10 CENTS If you will iwnd me the addresses of two of your flower- loving friends. I will Bend you my bargain collection of Sjttnirer Street Peas, Giant Orrhitht, flowering type. JVas- turtiums, dwarf chameleon mixed. ICoyal Shmr Pontics, l(.4.«fiTJ, fineft mixed: also SO seeds of the INT MARGUERITE CARNATION hich blooms in 4 months from sowing; also Pre*. "Flower Culture" and my descriptive lar.' catalog containing 4X pages. Write today, en¬ closing 111 cents. MISS C. H. LIPPINCOTT, \onerr Seeilmmman. Il*pt.57» Ml'DHOS, WW. Trained Canaries! /ir 'jJ Tiic most wonder- ful singers you ever heard. TRAINED IX GERMANY to imitate the flute, vio¬ lin and beautiful bell tones in a way that is truly amazing. These canaries are known as " Golden Op¬ era Singers." Every note they sing is pure melody and their tril¬ ling is inorc perfect than that of our most won¬ derful sopranos. One of our customers writes: "Our little Gold¬ en Opera Singer has given us ten times more pleasure than, our talking machine, lie is just wonderful I" Golden Opera Singers never fail to please. You can have one right in your home for two weeks' free trial without any obligation to keep it unless you are perfectly satisfied. Send at once for our FREE BOOK that tells how these birds are trained, what they can do. how we ship them all over the world, and how easy it is to care for them. Write to-day. CUGLEY & MULLEN CO. 1219 Market St. Philadelphia (The largest pet shop in the world.) Buy Farm Land at $10 an acre up adjacent to the I f Southern Railway and uat. h ii| J quickly double in value. Plenty 1 of rain.no drouths.no blizzards. Winters mild, summers enjoyable. Rapidly growing citiei demand 1 more farm produce. Bcrf, pork, poultry, sheep and dairUng 1 pay handsomely. Big profit in trm k,alfalfa,com,cotton, nuts and apples, (ire.it Industrial openings in all partsof the South. Subscription to "Southern Field" and state booklets, I K lib N. V. RICHARDS. L ud I. Aft, So. Ry.. Rooa 7, WithagtM. D. C ORNAMENTAL FENCE 25 Design*.All Steel Handsome, cost less than wood, more durable. Don't buy a fence until you get our Free Catalogue and Special Prices. We can save you money. Kokomo Fence Machine Co. 435 North St., Kokomo, Ind CHEAPER THAN EVER! Every Kind of Woven Wire Fence, also Wrought Iron Picket Fences. Gates. Ftc. Write for tree Catalog. KitlrrprU* foundry k Vrure Co., 1138 E. 24th St . Indianapolis, Ind. PENALIZED FOR MARRYING "l^UCH is heard of the taxation of bach- elors; but little is ever said of the com¬ munities wherein matrimony is deemed a punishable offense. Perhaps the most ex¬ traordinary ideas with reference to this sub¬ ject may be said to be held at Oxford Uni¬ versity in England. There, for instance, a fellow of All Souls College forfeits his fellow¬ ship, if when studying the classics, he should take unto himself a wife. In such event he must not only pay a penalty, but must also present his college with a memorial in the shape of a silver cup, with the further con¬ dition that on this cup shall be inscril>ed in Latin, "He backslid into matrimony." There is an aristocratic club in London, the Bachelors' of Piccadilly, whereof the members who so far forget their loyalty to the club as to marry are actually expelled and ostracized. The only saving feature of such expulsion is that, by the payment of a fine of one hundred dollars, the offending one may retain an honorary memlx'rship; but, so far as active membership is concerned, he is strictly out of it for the rest of his life. There is a similar organization in German, the Junggesellen Club. Whenever there comes to the officials of this club any intima¬ tion that a member contemplates matri¬ mony, he is immediately summoned for trial in the club court, with the president as judge. The culprit is allowed to plead in extenua¬ tion of his offense, and upon his skill in pre¬ senting such plea depends the amount of his fine, which ranges from one hundred to one thousand dollars. The humorous feature of the fine consists in the application made. The money is devoted to a dinner, whereat all members appear in mourning attire. At the conclusion of the repast the president solemnly reads the sentence of expulsion, and the delinquent is led from the room amid the groans and lamentations of his erstwhile club fellows. IRELAND'S BIG CAVERN A FRENCHMAN made the first com- plete exploration of one of the largest caverns in the world, that at Mitehelstown, Ireland. The explorer was Martel, who is also famous for his discoveries in the caverns of France. The Mitehelstown cavern is formed in limestone, and is remarkable for the number and extent of its connected pas¬ sages, which, when plotted on a chart, re¬ semble the streets of a city. The length of the cave is about a mile and a quarter, and it contains some animal inhabitants, includ¬ ing a species of spider, which are peculiar to it and have their entire existence within its recesses. TO A POET ."PO learn poetry "for recreation" is doubt- less a means of cultivating a knowledge of literature; but schoolboys sometimes re¬ gard the authors of poems learned as task¬ masters and personal enemies. This view is amusingly expressed in a letter found among the papers of the venerable German poet Geibel. It was written to him by some schoolboys of Lubeck, and signed, "Karl Beckmann, II. Klasse." After stating that two boys had l>een flogged l>ecause they could not learn Herr Geibel's "Hope of Spring," the letter reads: "We suppose that you did not think of such things when you wrote the poem. The Herr Lehrer says it is a very beauti¬ ful poem; but there are so many beau¬ tiful poems, and we are obliged to learn them. Therefore we beg ami entreat you, esteemed Herr Geibel, make no more beauti- ful poems. And to make it worse we have to learn the biography of every poei, what year he was born in, and what year he died in. We write to you becau ;e you are the only poet still living, and we wish you a very long life." USED TO THE CLIMATE ¦^T/HEN William Jennings Bryan returned ** to New York after his trip through South America, where he went to study the economics of the country, he was asked about every question in the reporter's reper¬ tory concerning his view of tilings political, to all of which the Colonel replied, without answering the question. Then they asked him about Dr. Cook; what he thought of the spectacular manner in which he had discovered the pole. "Well," said Mr. Bryan, "everywhere I went they said I)r. Cook had been in South America; and then they told me that Dr. Cook was a Democrat, and asked me if I thought he had discovered the North Pole. I told them I thought it more probable that a Democrat had discovered the North Pole than that a Republican had." Asked what his particular reason for this opinion was, he replied: "Well, simply l>ecause the Democrats have been out in the cold such a long time." % * Wi REALLY DELIGHTFUL <ft}« Jlainto tt(inf (Sobered CaniTg .oaU6 Gfyetanttg (6um Look for the Bird Cards in the packet*. You can secure a beautiful Bird Album FREE. Half a million folks of all kinds- including grown-ups, children, teach¬ ers, etc., are collecting our wonderful Bird Studies.faithful reproduc¬ tions of American birds in full colors, with description of the birds' plum¬ age, habits, and how to know them on sight. You will find one beauti¬ ful bird picture in each packet of Chiclets. Send us any fifty of these pictures with ten cents in stamps and we will send you.free.our splendid Bird Album. The refinement of chewing gum for peo¬ ple of refinement. It's the peppermint . the true mint. For Sab it all tie Better Sort .( Store* Sc. the Ounce end in 5c., 10c. end 25c. Packets SEN-SEN CHICLET COMPANY Metropolitan Tower Wew York Yotur Midnight Lunch If you are going to have guests in the evening, prepare k your coffee, tea or cocoa in advance and serve it pip¬ ing hot from a Thermos Carafe withoutloasoftime. A beautiful orna¬ ment for sideboanl or serving table Most convenient (or keeping v- ice water or otlier drink ^ allies in the day time or for " (lie sleeping room at night. Keeps liquids ice cold Kfi hours and boiling hot 30 to 45 hours. Hfiffll Over 100 leading hotels and clubs have installed Thermos Carafes in all of their sleeping rooms. Among them are Knickerbocker, New York; Vanderbilt. New York ; La Salle. Chicago; I'ontha rtrain. Detroit, and Marlborough- Blenheim, Atlantic City. Thermos Carafe $5 At all firat claaa dealera Be sure " Thermos" is stamped on bottom of each article you buy. If yourdealer will not sell you genuine Thermos, we will supply you direct, express charges prepaid. Write for Thermos book describing and illus¬ trating all Thermos specialties. AMERICAN THERMOS BOTTI.E CO. Thermos Building. New York City SMALL FRUITS I grow St raw berry, Rasplierry, Hlark- berry and other small Fruit Plant*, Grape Vines, Shrubbery, Privet, etc. My FRKK Catalogue tells the truth about them, and the price* quoted are fair for rood stock, true to name. Write me today, w. F. ALLKV, 80 Market Street, faaiubory, Md.
1

Evening star (Washington, D.C.).(Washington, DC) 1912-03-03 [p 15]. · 2017. 12. 26. · "l^UCHis heard of the taxation of bach-elors; butlittle is eversaid ofthecom¬ munities wherein

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  • ANGELUSCrfi)

    Universal

    \ HAVE you ever paused to consider the fact that you are?*.

    .- - .heir to all the ages of musical genius? That the works

    of the world's greatest composers are your rightful heritage ?Are you satisfied that you show due appreciation? |The ANGELUS offers the medium for gratitude and appreciation to

    those countless thousands who love music and to the many who are them- Jselves but indifferent performers. The ANGELUS is their benefactor. ftThe ANGELUS gives you the technique of a virtuoso and provides you

    m with the means to instill your individuality into the music.to give it yourown interpretation. You can play any composition as you think it should

    ^ be played.as you want it played, for the ANGELUS is absolutelyobedient to your will and responsive to your mood.r»>\i

    jEl¥

    i

    This perfect accord between the player-pianist and instrument is possiblewith theANGELUS because of its patented devices and exclusive features.THE PHRASING LEVER gives com-plete mastery over tempo in all its varyingdegrees. With no other player device is itpossible to obtain the same beautiful, ar¬tistic tempo effects.

    THE GRADUATING MELODANTemphasizes the melody whether it lie in thebass or treble, while the accompaniment isproperly subordinated. Both Uie melodyand the accompaniment can be modulatedat your will.

    ' NW*a

    THE DIAPHRAGM PNEUMATICSduplicate the pliant, resilient touch of thehuman fingers.

    THE ARTISTYLE MUSIC ROLLhas one, and one only, expression line, butnevertheless it indicates accents and allchanges of tempo and volume, thus pro¬viding a simple but complete guide to aninterpretation in accordance with the com¬poser's ideas.

    Jt

    Knabe-Angelus Emerson-Angelus Angelus PianoGrand and Upright Grand and Upright Upright

    Angelus Piano and Courley-Angelus in Canada

    THE WILCOX & WHITE COMPANY, Player-Piano Industry MERIDEN, CONN.

    $300 hromYourCiiyLot.COMPARISONIN GROWTH

    TOMATOPLANTS

    Each the same number ofdays from seed, but startedat different intervals of theMOON'S INFLUENCE.

    My FREE bookSCIENCE & AGRI¬CULTURE tell* theeecret of successfultomato growing.A Complete Living from a City Garden.

    For fifteen years on iny own farm I have studiedthe Moon's Influence over Plant Growth;during all these \ears I have ex crimented on growingtomatoes ..Hy, and today I have the earliest tomato inc ltivation. More than 50,000 Cit gardens Hill be plantedthis spring under my instructions. A splendid profit from>o-iroack yard garden. $1,000 per acre and better frompleasant agreea'Te garden work in any locality if you willfollow my instructions. A frte copy ol this interesting

    book is yours for the asking.Write for it today.

    FRANK H. GREGORY.Gretory Far* 60 "Fsirscres." Bay City. Mich.

    Plant the Quality grapeCATAWBA-CONCORDThe urnfte for everybody everywhere. A cross betweenthe Catawba and the Concord.so scientifically made that

    it unites all their merits with none oftheir defects. Equal in quality to thefinest hot-house grapes and as easilygrown as the Concord. For ten yearsit has proved its superiority. Hasreceived awards wherever shown.Write at out e f r large descriptive catalogof Kaspl«erries, Il!a« klienies.iirai-es.Straw¬berries, Currants, ti«M/sel*-rr»es, C.ardenRoots, Hardy Perennial Plants, Shrubs,Vines. Roses, etc. It tells how t«> plantand grow th-in.free to everybodyJ.T. LOVETT. Box 185. UttleSiher.N.J.

    SEND ME 10 CENTSIf you will iwnd me the addresses of two of your flower-loving friends. I will Bend you my bargain collection ofSjttnirer Street Peas, Giant Orrhitht, flowering type. JVas-turtiums, dwarf chameleon mixed. ICoyal Shmr Pontics,

    l(.4.«fiTJ, fineft mixed: also SO seeds of theINT MARGUERITE CARNATIONhich blooms in 4 months from sowing; also

    Pre*. "Flower Culture" and my descriptive lar.'catalog containing 4X pages. Write today, en¬closing 111 cents. MISS C. H. LIPPINCOTT,

    \onerr Seeilmmman. Il*pt.57» Ml'DHOS, WW.

    Trained Canaries!/ir 'jJ Tiic most wonder-

    ful singers you everheard. TRAINEDIX GERMANY toimitate the flute, vio¬lin and beautiful belltones in a way that istruly amazing.

    These canaries areknown as " Golden Op¬era Singers." Everynote they sing is puremelody and their tril¬ling is inorc perfect thanthat of our most won¬derful sopranos.

    One of our customers writes: "Our little Gold¬en Opera Singer has given us ten times morepleasure than, our talking machine, lie is justwonderful I"Golden Opera Singers never fail to please. You

    can have one right in your home for two weeks' freetrial without any obligation to keep it unless youare perfectly satisfied.Send at once for our FREE BOOK that tells

    how these birds are trained, what they can do.how we ship them all over the world, and howeasy it is to care for them. Write to-day.

    CUGLEY & MULLEN CO.1219 Market St. Philadelphia

    (The largest pet shop in the world.)

    Buy Farm Landat $10 an acre up adjacent to the I

    f Southern Railway and uat. h ii|J quickly double in value. Plenty 1of rain.no drouths.no blizzards.Winters mild, summers enjoyable.Rapidly growing citiei demand 1

    more farm produce. Bcrf, pork, poultry, sheep and dairUng 1pay handsomely. Big profit in trm k,alfalfa,com,cotton, nutsand apples, (ire.it Industrial openings in all partsofthe South.Subscription to "Southern Field" and state booklets, I K libN. V. RICHARDS. L ud I. Aft, So. Ry.. Rooa 7, WithagtM. D. C

    ORNAMENTAL FENCE25 Design*.All Steel

    Handsome, cost less than wood,more durable. Don't buy a fenceuntil you get our Free Catalogueand Special Prices.We can save you money.

    Kokomo Fence Machine Co.435 North St., Kokomo, Ind

    CHEAPER THAN EVER!Every Kind of Woven Wire Fence,also Wrought Iron Picket Fences.Gates. Ftc. Write for tree Catalog.

    KitlrrprU* foundry k Vrure Co.,1138 E. 24th St . Indianapolis, Ind.

    PENALIZED FOR MARRYING

    "l^UCH is heard of the taxation of bach-elors; but little is ever said of the com¬munities wherein matrimony is deemed apunishable offense. Perhaps the most ex¬traordinary ideas with reference to this sub¬ject may be said to be held at Oxford Uni¬versity in England. There, for instance, afellow of All Souls College forfeits his fellow¬ship, if when studying the classics, he shouldtake unto himself a wife. In such event hemust not only pay a penalty, but must alsopresent his college with a memorial in theshape of a silver cup, with the further con¬dition that on this cup shall be inscril>ed inLatin, "He backslid into matrimony."There is an aristocratic club in London,

    the Bachelors' of Piccadilly, whereof themembers who so far forget their loyalty tothe club as to marry are actually expelledand ostracized. The only saving feature ofsuch expulsion is that, by the payment of afine of one hundred dollars, the offending onemay retain an honorary memlx'rship; but,so far as active membership is concerned, heis strictly out of it for the rest of his life.There is a similar organization in German,

    the Junggesellen Club. Whenever therecomes to the officials of this club any intima¬tion that a member contemplates matri¬mony, he is immediately summoned for trialin the club court, with the president as judge.The culprit is allowed to plead in extenua¬tion of his offense, and upon his skill in pre¬senting such plea depends the amount of hisfine, which ranges from one hundred to onethousand dollars. The humorous feature ofthe fine consists in the application made.The money is devoted to a dinner, whereatall members appear in mourning attire. Atthe conclusion of the repast the presidentsolemnly reads the sentence of expulsion, andthe delinquent is led from the room amid thegroans and lamentations of his erstwhileclub fellows.

    IRELAND'S BIG CAVERNA FRENCHMAN made the first com-

    plete exploration of one of the largestcaverns in the world, that at Mitehelstown,Ireland. The explorer was Martel, who isalso famous for his discoveries in the cavernsof France. The Mitehelstown cavern isformed in limestone, and is remarkable forthe number and extent of its connected pas¬sages, which, when plotted on a chart, re¬semble the streets of a city. The length ofthe cave is about a mile and a quarter, andit contains some animal inhabitants, includ¬ing a species of spider, which are peculiar toit and have their entire existence within itsrecesses.

    TO A POET."PO learn poetry "for recreation" is doubt-

    less a means of cultivating a knowledgeof literature; but schoolboys sometimes re¬gard the authors of poems learned as task¬masters and personal enemies. This view isamusingly expressed in a letter found amongthe papers of the venerable German poetGeibel. It was written to him by someschoolboys of Lubeck, and signed, "KarlBeckmann, II. Klasse."

    After stating that two boys had l>eenflogged l>ecause they could not learn HerrGeibel's "Hope of Spring," the letter reads:"We suppose that you did not think

    of such things when you wrote the poem.The Herr Lehrer says it is a very beauti¬ful poem; but there are so many beau¬tiful poems, and we are obliged to learnthem. Therefore we beg ami entreat you,esteemed Herr Geibel, make no more beauti-ful poems. And to make it worse we have tolearn the biography of every poei, what yearhe was born in, and what year he died in.We write to you becau ;e you are the only poetstill living, and we wish you a very long life."

    USED TO THE CLIMATE

    ¦^T/HEN William Jennings Bryan returned** to New York after his trip throughSouth America, where he went to study theeconomics of the country, he was askedabout every question in the reporter's reper¬tory concerning his view of tilings political,to all of which the Colonel replied, withoutanswering the question.Then they asked him about Dr. Cook;

    what he thought of the spectacular mannerin which he had discovered the pole.

    "Well," said Mr. Bryan, "everywhere Iwent they said I)r. Cook had been in SouthAmerica; and then they told me that Dr.Cook was a Democrat, and asked me if Ithought he had discovered the North Pole.I told them I thought it more probable thata Democrat had discovered the North Polethan that a Republican had."Asked what his particular reason for this

    opinion was, he replied:"Well, simply l>ecause the Democrats

    have been out in the cold such a long time."

    %*

    Wi

    REALLY DELIGHTFUL