Passengers in the side concourse of the Pennsylvania Station, Manhattan, noticed, last Saturday afternoon, a great limousine drawn up not far from a taxicab stand. It was a car hardly designed to lounge unnoticed through the streets of the metropolis, for one side of the shining tonneau was tastefully draped in ar large British Union Jack, the other in a large U. S. flag. In it sat three high hats—Sir Harry Gloster Armstrong, British Consul; Walter L. Clark, President of the Grand Central Art Galleries; Irving T. Bush, Art patron. They were waiting...
To continue reading:
or
Log-In