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mS HN ~ FOR LICENSE Judge shies: Vote Verdict for Miss uate, Who Sued for Permis- sion to Become Teacher, SPECIAL TERM COURT MUST CONFIRM VERDICT Latest Reason Given for Refus- ing Licenses Is that State Su- perintendent Has Not Ap- proved Normal College. trial of the dty as dust suits against the elevated ratlway for damage to} Property was the scene of gathering to-day, of a bevy of highly Intelleotual young women, graduates from (hed mal College, who had come to give thelr moral support to Miss Mabel V. Price. Class of 198. who had sued Dr H. Maxwell and the Board of amin- ers on her own behalf and in Lehulf of 140 other graduates to compel him ty let them teach school As the result of Justice 1 hour and a half cogitation Nor- e decided in favor of Miss Price, directing a ver- (fe. ict in her favor ‘That is only alt the battle, however. She must go before a / Tuatice in Special Term and ask for the confirmation of the verdict and a writ of mandamus directing Dr. Maxwell to fasue a license to her. Mies Price and nine other girl “grads” fers on hand, supported by Dr. Alrick H. Mann, chairman of the Executive 5 ” Committee of the Normal Coilege; Dr 7 Hunter, President of the college, and af & couple of women professors. Lewis L, Delafield was the loxal shampion of the girls, while Dr. Max well, who came all alone, had Assistant 4 Corporation Counsel Stephen O'Brica ee to plead his hard case. » Miss Price Seeks Mandamu y Miss Price first asked Justice Green baum for a mandamus te compel Dr Maaweil to tssue a license to hor te teach. But Aas c atl Gounell Charles L. Guy, who beart wan with the girls, but whose duty as & public official was to oppose then pe ” @ild the whole question hinged on ity whether tha State Superintendent of r Behools had “approved” the Normal College course, as Chairman Mann and Miss Price declared, or had not Thereupon Justice Greenbaum ordered the case to a jury trial, There is no jury-box way part, on. the same level with und only in the elevated and the jury to-day «at an Miss Price and her 0, refused the d Heens she had not ‘passed the academic. ex- amination, although she stood so high fn the examination Intended strictly for candidates for teache censes. Why licenses “The excuse for ON uae Are Denied, denying licenses to these young women has changed every time ft has been in cot sald 3 Delafield. ‘The latest season given is é that the State Superintendent has not jj avvtoved the Normal College, Well. if Unat be so and is a reason that will stand, It annlles as well to ov thousand other women now su fully teaching in the public seh and they may be deprived of classes and employment at any mo- ment.’ ‘The attorney for the girls then read @ letter from State Supt, Charles A Skinner, to Dr. Hunter, tn 1%, then President of the Normal College, ap- Proving the vourse ay’ sufficient for the Dreparation of teachers. Dr. Draper, who succeeded Dr ner as the head of the St Uonal system in 1991, certine had searched and could find no record oft any eters of approval from Dr. Skinner @ppiying to any Inatitution, but pudlished by Dr, Skint Soe and 8G gave a list of elu institutions wpproved as fin achools for teushers, and inolu name of the New York City N. College. Mise Fisle Tobias, of the was called aa tue first witness. ‘Tobias is a petiie beauty, with wa red-brown hale and big dark eyes, with ich she might have transfixed the bie, florid Dr. Maxwel! ® identified the course of study she one eres had pursued for five and the examination paper sub- mitted to the class oC 19a Alla @ ‘Mr, O'Brien read correspondence to whow that the State Department re- quired that the girls were exempt from the academic examination only on con- dition that they had already passed in matics, eoxraphy, Maglish gram- far, physiolorv and physics, and that fae eg had not passed in all these Mr Deianeta tread from the laws and amendments to show that this did not apply to city carididates, and [t all got down to a question of law again, as the 8 of 1993, Miss ion of Law, Stat Intendent’s letter ‘to Dr. Hun 3 eat one of unqualified approval, Mi mn wald the school law gave rtment almost absolute authority. an Jurisdiction, RECITAL AT WALDORF. Misses Duthie tain with Ballads Mins Lena Duthie and Miss Sarah Frances Clark are to give a recital with ‘ballads and readings to-night in the Myrtle Reom at the Waldorf-As- tora. The programme wili include perhaps the Court had nu sroups of old English, Scotch, Irish and 1 gongs, and readings from Pad Glareane Buena, ony pan oon hala haa a McLean, yg. i oovor Pin ig Mn- Ts IMPORTANT TO WANT ADVERTISERS, tungarian b> Loy nor Taylor apd Jerome. iar K, m, Pair or A. White and George Austin Mor- Owing to the large Increase in ciroula- tion and “Want” advertising, The Word | £5) Price, Normal College Grad-| ‘The little courtroom set apart for the | IGHT (MONROE AGHINST LOVES ME MADLY, LIGHT CONTRACTS) AE CALLS ME ce liu Comeilebnae fs Says the Con- cessions Obtained from the Trust Are Too Small to Be Called as Such, NO CHANCE NOW FOR CONTEST IN COURTS. The Difference in Prices Here and Those of Other Places All Over the Country Is Exces- sive, He Declares, Robert Grier Monroe, former Commis. sioner of Water Supply, Gas and Blec- tricity. commenting upon the contracts vigned by Commissioner Oakley and the | | attitude of Comptrolier Grout, to-day said: | I have read the Comptroller's state- | ment saying (that he knew nothing About the lighting contracts recently | signed by Commissioner Oakley, but at the same time individually expresses {his approval of them, In my opinion the concessions secured by the Comp- 90 slight to be really ¢ ions, and the signing of ntracts wag a surrender. I t the city hae receded from @ Very strong position In not insisting 92 & contest in the courts upon claims of the lighting companies, and particue | larly the claims of the Edison Company. Even under the new proposed contracts | | the difference between New York prices Jand the prices charged elsewhere in all parts of the country Is excessive." Ou the question of any money the city and the fact of its better light in the future Mr, Monroe did not care to talk, saying he had already indorsed the 6 be contract for Welsbacn | | lanps et $2470 a year. 1am on record many times,” sald he, | “on that particular part of the con- tract, L approve of it. It means better light for the chy and does away with the old open flame burner that has given no light practically, and has been used for lie poat forty years" Mr. Monroe's comment upon the ting of contracts for Nights it $46 and for other lights at various | prices refused by the clty under Mayor roller wer sidered ¢ he new | ulso feel | {s eletric Low. These contracts were held up for | a year under Mayor Low and for ten months under Mayor McClellan. The eis agre Pay the compantes ® por cent, of thelr claim for electric lect and 8 per cent. for gas light- ing. | after Mr. Oakley signed the contracts 4 supplemental agreement was entered into whereby the price of electric lights was reduced to $110 for lamps where the whres were underground and $180 where arm's lengt ‘om the o sth from the girl graduates: 1 ing wires wero overhead Mr, Delafield recited the facts. Mise) Mr. Grout then had the companies Price did not take the academic, but) “he Gru ae ee a did take the pedagogic examination and| *MY@. the Interest charges on ° Ae amount withheld from the companies passed the examination with a very for teantsethree months high percentage. She needed an aver- qinekebions made th sietri age of only # per cent. and liad 80.75|Jighting waton Me MM per cent, but Chairman Burns had) jive ure material 0 @gned_ a’ report recommending wiat| insufficient in view of the fact that the inpanions be Jelty loses the right court. VANDERBILT HEIR EXPLAINS ACCOUNT John Howard Morse, Executor He Cant’ Pay Or. Keeney’s. $2,597 Judgment. Counsel for Dr, Burtus M. Keeney, of New London, Conn., excepted to the sudit of the accounts of John Howard as executor of the estate of his her, Sophia Vanderbilt Morse, daughter of Mrs, Phebe Cross and «granddaughter of Commodore Vander- bilt, before Surrogate Thomas to-day. Dr, Keeney held a judgment for $2,007.25 against Mrs, Morse when she ied In Webruary, 1908, and it is eald to be yet unsatisfied It developed in the testimony of Mr. Morse and Herbert L. Gibbs, hfs attor- ney, a8 executor, that while Mra, Morse | enjoyed the Income on $221,000 left to ner use for life by her mother, she spent It all, about $13,000 a year, and lett only about $2,963 when she died, the $221,000 being distributed | un: Phoebe Cross’s will to Mra Morse's |children, John Howard Morse, Ethel- inla Horton and Grace G. Morse. Join Harwood Morse testified that his expenses as executor of his mothers will were $230, aad the lawyer's fee was $600. The funeral expenses were not Pet but the whole estate was eaten | Te developed that though Mrs. Morse | died In Boston the will w probited in New York, because her trast ives and the werned income tn ihe United States Trust Company. Mr, | Morve wald his one-third of the regiduary estate of his grandmother Cross wae $7).008 Decision was reserved. — DOLL BAZAAR AT WALDORF. of Actresses Will for ity. A doll bazaar in ald of the New York recently opened at No, 141 West Sixty- first street, will be held in the east room at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel next Fri day afternoon and evening. Nearly one hundred of the dolls were made by prominent actresses, who in several in- stances represented themselves in char- acters in which they have A avchoge ng the donators a Ry’ Soheff, Fa; yw Viola Maggie itichel ert Iiling- fon-Hrohma ‘Truax, Florence Bindley, hiatle MacDonald, Grace re, oe De van Bios fie of Mother's Estate, Tells Why | Home for Destitute Crippled Children, | D4 —MRS. STELLE, Widow Whom Fascinating Young Baritone Threatened with $50,000 Breach of Prom- ise Suit Tells of Her Romance, “HE CAN HAVE MY NAME, BUT | WON'T MARRY HIM.” Denies Being Sixty, but Admits Forty-two — Says Lover Is Thirty—He Is to Be “One of the Family.” “Tam very anxious to see you, bee cnuse I want to tell you with tears in my eyes that what I have done was not for revenge, but for affection—for love. Because I want you--because you are a aecessity for my life, and I need you or else I cannot live, and the only satisfaction I took was na in Mad- ison Square Park for many houre look- ing at your apartments.” Smiling reminiscently aa she yond the| letter from her youthful lover, Ed R. Accetta, Mra Fann'e Surdam Stelle, heroine of the remarkable “June January" love afar. told to an Even ing World reporter to-day for the first time her own story of her romance with the young Italian baritone. “Tam not golng to marry Mr, Accetta,"’ sald Mrs. Stelle, “and plea make that plain, And do, for goodness’ | eake, deny the statement that I am aixty-two years old. You can take a wood look at me yurself before you deny It, too!’ Jewelry Galore. Indeed, it Stelle, who, as Fannie Surdam, was.in her girlhood the ae knowledged belle and beauty of Chi- CARO, [8 BIxty-twWo years old, she has discovered an elixir puth that has kept her face free from the wrinkles and ravages of age Gexned ih a pink embroidered Jap: anese kimono, which fell back from 4 an elaborately beruffied white taffet pettloout, trimmed {n appliques of biack lace. and with @ white lace walst, worn as a blouse through which the neck exposed. Mra, Stelle wore, besides, a white feather boa her shoulders. At her immense diamond atar, aden with Jewels, an fingers “Tam forty-two years old and Mr. her | Adcetta thirty, He has told the story about being twenty-five for pro- fessional re: bat 1 informed him that If he did not tel! the truth 1 would never see him agatn. Mr. Accetta {s madly infatuated with me. He Insists that he will marry me, and I have refused him repentedty, “This new scnsation the nawspaners nave been playing up about him asi Ing the name of Scelle har nothing to do! with a marriage, 1 will never him or any man. Why, the year aftor | my husband died I had eleven offers of marriage. There they all are” and Mrs Selle waved a bejewelled hand toward the plano. which was covered 1th photographs of aspiring lovers. One of the Family, “I finaly granted Mr, Accetta the rig’ to assume my name because I intend that he shall be as one of the family. have had lots of lovers, but never one so devoted as he. Why, he is determined to marry me, and It fs all for myself— not for my money. “Once when I told him he was in no position to marry with his family to look after he seemed to fall into a revery, and the next week I learned | that he had seng isle protesting mother and sister back to Ite!y. Then he in- jeisted that I marry him. In Mra. Stelie’s apartments at the |Crolsic are numerous photoraphs of i, young baritone and herself, | You know I was attracted to Mr. Accetta through his singing. I asked | sing at a musicale I He fell madly in love with | | him to come and was giving. HAPPY CHILDHOOD, Right Food Makes Happy Children ‘Suse They Are Healthy, Sometimes ‘milk does not agree jwith children or adults. The same thing Is true of other articles of food, What agrees with one sometimes does! not agreo with others, But food can be so prepared that it! will agree with the weakest stomach. | As an fllustration—any one, no mat- ter how weak the stomach, can eat, relish and digest a nice hot cup of Postum Coffee with a spoonful or two of Grape-Nuts poured in, and such a carry one a number of hours, for l- most every particle of {t will be di-| gested and taken up by the system and Le made use of. A lady writes from the land of the |magnolia and the mocking bird, ‘way down in Alabama, and says: “I was led to drink Postum because coffee gave me sour stomach and made me nervous. Again, Postun was recom-| mended by two well-known physi-' clans for my children, and I feel clally grateful for the benefit derived. “Milk does not agree with either one-half years, | give Postum, with plenty of sweet cream, it agrees with her splendidly, regulating her bowels perfectly, although she is of a consti- ed habit. ‘For the youngest, aged two and one-half years, I use one-half Postum and one-half skimmed milk. I bave not given any medicine alnce, the chil- dren began using Postum, and they enjoy every drop of tt. “A neighbor of mine is giving Pos- tum to her baby, lately weaned, with ». |Splendid results. The little fellow is thriving famously.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich, Postum agrees perfectly with chil- ay and oreo adults with the hot, Invigorating beverage in place | ot . TAterally thousands of Americans have been helped out of diseases oe Neen, and 2 combination contains nourishment to| child, so to the eldest, aged four and) | RICH WIDOW STELLE AND TENOR SHE “ADOP1S,” BUT WILL NOT WED. alligators, There te nothing in your! ergineers report on this phase of the ae | rules about pigs, and this porker of! caso, Alderman McCall, chairman ot) EMPIRE STATE IN CRASH, mine stays on the car until I reach my| the Finance Committce, objected to the) onemapamnily Jock Commissioner being ¢l TLE FP ‘ oa daar? Dock Commissioner being ¢lin LITTLE FALLS, N. ¥., Deo, bathe Mr, McCall is the Alderman from the| empire § Express ‘narrowly ees . This no hos-pen,” growled the | district of Dock Commissioner Featier- caped a ser reck two miles me. and I way greatly Interested in sorrow he brovght methrough suing me, | SUard as he turned away. #oM, consideration of his feelings it was|of (this place to-day, ‘The om him. T bought him an. evening suit, and we have resumed the r | “Well, what are you doing bere, decided to let the Dock Cominissioner | crashed Into the wreck of @ ff diamond cuff buttons and fixed him up exiated previous | fe an the terme of ibe tat ik 4 had kent fo he, could sing in draning-rooms. city. He shail fithen?” asked ce may with the pig. | the repaving and tepals of the street... ‘Tain, but its epeed ha a Then I gave him money, Wherever { go and shall be well provi \ . ; ; , ia Com ardly more than Afteen miles an went I took him with me, and his tay go te Kurope. a grazed to stny| Ne want to sicep again, and plgsy, held) | tre rena vatne plot at a East | And none of the cars left the ti apartments were alwaye as nice as my here In New York My Chicago hom@)in the hollew of his arm, ite head on e for $3.60 @ year. The Ameri The engine was wrecked. All the pases own is closed for the winter, I have every: Ice Compan) vieldad to the company | ¢neers escaped injury. The track was | A fascinating Fellow thing Tam attached to here-my st] his other arm, went to sleep also ant io m received & lease for 240 ked for hours i | Mr. Accetta 1s & fascinating man— CAIMASME Accetta and my mald, WhO) A. xinety.thind street the man got Je new pler at Thirtleth street Fe Panis JO; ULE Wi ec Mabie Fine Marry ime Nevert” Pe putlod the ro;e to which piggy was” All tne rallroad attorneys present de- not. He can have my name, bu If Mr. Accrita aid that 1 wil! tied and retarted for the door. Piggy gaared cxerytning was sat tact not, mew sy Sade ; marry hice it Ie oaly “be suse he th aie got obsiinace, It liked riding on the | aed gyinebsdy-must-have-been-done ld ho order signed by Judge Mitegeraid his infatuation wi in me. hy, ald ar EX) Pay Ss Neha one At Domi . in Part lls Special Term. of the Su-| offered bin a. thousand doliare if ho) Sevated cars, It fete right a: home Pi ht coe gf Compureller "ateut 26° he preme Co grants to Accetta (he Would never mention matrimony again ome on here, you,” said the man. The actea) settling of. these two} ght to asaume the name of Accetta: | £11 1 gave him a HMO bill to go back to “You've cost me $18 and you're going jg],i%, PINClIrAl settling of, these two Stelle after Dec. 2. Haly and forget me, but, he refused to be done nice and brown to-morrow. dumping orivileges for the excavation Mr. Accecia is full of sentiQy % | both Elo Is very strange. When I offer, Come on™ Sr 116 baw stalin axa lik tonne covet | and when he told me he wished \y f lim money he will refuse tt, though ji ’ = toon under | nyt I suggesied him call mitt isk me for It whenever he wonte it Where'd you get him?” asked = oe | Bor ———————— gar Surdam Accetia; bu don't sec why the papers should. passenger, wanted pore than that. Oh, he make 'be: inch Gut"t one aitore Lam me to the point of ma 1 not an old woman. If only My. Accetta’s shuld see how lovel whenever infatuation had nat driven him to brit ne comes near me natier how | that breach of promise wult there wat! many people are around he comes up nave been no talk and kisses my hand ret that he loves ine so medly— is an ideal lover, but I will not he Not that there Is too much he calle me ‘Ice’ Veal An) him. ma difference in our ages, but simply be- A charming man—f. cause | do not want fo marry any| complished and well edu ave him with me and will look man." li Accetta all the’ his wants, bit marry him—never "Th forgiven Mr Double White Potatoes. Big. sound, white, mealy Potatoes, that are giving such splendid sat {sfaction; selected by our expert shippers from the tinest crops In the country; a basket......- 8c Onions. Very best red medium sized Con- necticut Onions; spectal price continued; basket. I 7c Apples. Choicest Greenings and Baldwins; the best varieties for cook- ing and eating; a basket... 15c a Butler's Coffees Unsurpassed in flavor and aroma, ine Rg oot Rene grades of these Coffees imported; 21D, ..008 6.4. 25c Best Maracalbo—Heavy bodied Baking Powder. Blue Ribbon, guaranteed pure cream of tartar—standard of excel- | lence and purity: 1+ * 10c ean aot 4] oh “1b, can 18¢, Coffee with etic: cup 20c toos—Rasie brand; the finest. to- qualities; 21D... ssscee Tome srown: pand, leked 88 28C Test Sant os—Fancy hand pa 4 ade, aromatic and 00d; Sensetnee—' ew orand; selecter grade, £004; c lity, leh, rip fratts ool WDeseesereresevens packed in large cal 25c ba | h Peas—P dort —Eesle brand: © wae emi Pemeon, tender, early June bees 15c Colca wie capil flavor Peat ow one and Render sary” June peas: EM LOG value; a Can... Fancy Prunes, h Mushroome—Firat choix; very From the celebrated La Palmera sett finde iapored °° 15¢ | private Estate in Santa Clara County, IM veench Mishroome—Paris grade: '20c | We control the entire output of ‘len quality Imported, can the fanciest grade of fruit grown | ines—Ciement & Cle.'s daint! ty im- Jon this estate under the name of orted in pure olive lor “IMPERIAL” brand, The largest, freshest, meatiest and most deliciously flavored prune Hog marketed; ae 23 to the \b., worth 25¢, a Ib; Our price, AID, sseseeree 15c Yoncarneau brand; plum tender, in pure olive 1 Ber for « iden spears bs 296 ¢ Soupe—Bo handy to shave in tee all the choice kinds: 8 cans for 25c per len’ an ep) orcestershire Sauce— Wearean” table relish; pint vail, §0C York State: 18¢,, half a Marrow Beans- tender llc - 12¢ State, ender detictow and can | oO treth and ted Sir John Power's Celebrated Three Swaliow _iieh Whiskey. ted direct from John's Lane "Fistiiery; our bot. “$1, 00 thing; a bottle, gztre larse hg t ality: ame quart Beane— Fane tender: full avo! | | | we Americans can't love as the over t@ a coruer of the station plat. Our Low Priced Extra § in pure foods, standard groceries, wines and liquors continue in full swing, as shown by the offerings EDNESDAY of this week. We quote extra low prices on Potatoes, Hams, Flour; Le mons, Oranges and Apples; Teas and Coffees, &c, The margin of profit on everything we sell is shaved down to the smallest fraction above actual cost. tities, at lower prices, than any other retail grocer in America, our immense business and save a lot of money by trading with us. Trading Stamps With Every Purchase of 10 Cents or More, Except C. 0, D.’s. peloted below for MONDAY, TU 8S. & H. Green 135 Grocery Stores. RENCH BRANDY. xk Godet Freres’ Celebrated 3-Star No Rule Against Shoats Rid- ing on the Trains, and Only! Dogs Are Barred, Yearly f Avenue Rules of the elevated raliroad say “no dogs allowed.” but they say noth- Ing about which fs why a pass enger with @ pig rode triumphantly trom Eighteenth atreet to Ninety-third street with one. He was only @ little shoat, pink and clean looking, and if the map who had emugeled him Into a Sixth avenue “L" car under his coat hadn't let his hand fall heavily on the piglet wh.le he was asleep few of the passen, in the car would have been aware of the porcine | the terms offe {Commission fi avenue for tra it might reach At the last todignant at fusing to give for $500 « year. the company and the amou per cent. eac’ years. Lum PAK PIG. CENTRAL ACCEPTS. ROME ~ PASSENGER THE CITY'S TERMS FOR Blc iG STI ‘Guard Ohjeted but but There Is| nano Agrees to to Pay $1,880! pone canola ter Two sant North River, Ira A. Place. York Central Railroad, agreed to-day to sion Mr. Place was re or Use of Twelfth) Qpening Ceremony in to Reach Pier 66| tion of the Jubilee of Immaculate Conception, counsel for the New ROME, Dec, ~The Pope to-day 4 Consistory for the canonization: Messed Gerardo Malella and Alessandro Saull, one of the eblef § ‘tons of the celebration of the fthilee of the proclamation of fogma of the Immaculate The weather was springlike, adding @ te general feeling of gend-will, Pope Phas, vested his fall robes, seated himself on the throne tely after entering the hail Hie. re. ted in a sonorous volee red by the Sinking Fund for the use of Twelfth oks of that company that Pier 66 North River, meeting of the Commis- In the face and the idea of the city re- the street to the Central Mr. Grout Inaisted that should pay 41,680 yearly, int should be increased 5 hn five years for thirty pray » expound The company's contention waa that,| him to say " memeer: se as it was going to give up a pler to! new saints College "Unk, aqeek, unk, queek, queek:” sald! ine Pennsylvania Railroad for dump- | to ive their . which each of the plesy ing purposes for five years, tt should nats read in Latin Here, you," sald the guart, “You| be treated liberally. Mr. Grout and ng the prel from the Unlted can't keep that thing on the car it] th Mayor insisted the company was States were Most Rev Robert Seton, of : trying to take the chy by the throat, |Jereoy City, NJ. Titular ArehI ain't allowed To-day the company was willing to Sf Mellonotis, Right Rev. Char "You don't tell me said the man! accept the city’s terms of 91,59 a year, M'Doaell, Bishop of Brookiyn, N. | {Right Rev. ‘Thomas B. Cusaek, Al with the pig. “Your rules say ‘no dogs! but objected to the form of contract jary Rishop of New York; Right " Nowed,' but n't in regard to repaving the street nue H. Col Bishoo of , wipe wey con't may enyrans Mr. Grout suggested that the New Y. and Right Rev. J. B. fi About pigs of lone or elephants or pat “Won him in a raffie” Piggy pulled and squealed and the man dropped the rope to give it @ kick. |The pie dashed out of the door and 881 Calls form, The man chased It, fell on it. gathered (t into Bis arm and walked off. What the guard sald—well, the vig! | didn't care. 128 more BUREAU, York Central engineers and the F For Male Help were made through the SUNDAY) WORLD WANT DIRECTORY. NEW YOR Risnop of Manchester, N. Hf. than a year ago. hp BEST PAPOVMERT ESDAY and We Lemons. Bright, juicy Messinas, just im- ported, fancy quality, new crop; a dozen ,, 10c Malt Extract. Famous revitalizing tonic for women and children; dozen, $1.15; a bottle....,, 10c The finest frus Our Famous Pride of St. Louls Brand. One trial will convince you that Best it excels all other fours in baking qualities. Thi5 superfor four placed within the reach of all below cost of milling at present price of wheat. 7-ib, bag 444 Ib, bag 25c. 13e. Butler's Ui Buy at the Condensed Milk. ESSIE BRAND, Richest and purest of milk from famous herds in the Genesee valley; very rich in cream; noth. tng better; specially adapted for inants; ‘can, Soclal Teas. Golden Cris; Wines and Liquors. MONOGRAM WHISKEY. | 10 Years Old. High-class, well-matured rye whiskey, bectiee oN seal Special tor This Week, 1 Bottle Imperial Whiskey. 4 Bottle J. B. Choice Sherry. 1 Bottle J, B, Choice Port, tans Deegan anh omietten 4 Choice Claret, aera FerRire ge [oom aveae..., SEAS ““ $1.00 P All our customers are profit sharers in been Sugar cured small Hams, lean, savory and tender, weight 5 to 7 Ibs., just right for ou weather; extra oe cut price continued for next three days; a Cranberries. Ss At half the usual retail prices. Butler's Golden Tips— Ceylon ported; a Ib,, 4 favorite varieties; a Ib, Butier’s Best No. | Toas —are pure & br yak ih Ib, Butler's No, Teas—3 Velotant Money on Every Purchase, Dainty Biscuits. Butter Thins.. Red Grahams. Vienna Crimps.. Hingussie Scotch Whiskey Sole importers of this fine old mel. ag rg low blend. Inttoduetor Gallon, $3; 4 sane $1.90; y Tasks Soc, ge; bythe bot, ZOC price, per bottle, "” 85c Mammoth Dollar’s Worth ecials ‘e buy in larger quan- CHOICE GROCERIES Picnic Hams. The new Florida crop; ripe, soundand juicy; three sizes; medium, a dozen.. Large size, 25¢. m Cape Cod and New “19 Aunt Nanna’s Pancake Flour, Self-raising mixture of finest rice and corn flour; make fins that melt and cakes I light as the sea foam; 21D, CATION, .seeeseceee Wash-Day Specials, Batler’s meenth 3 “nine bd squares il Sree de Mh ats aath: a Pie Tea ' 50c 50c 35c ‘ald. * 25¢ Nearest and Save ‘axid Teas— 2 Butler's Borax Soap oa +) 3 packages for | 28¢ alb, 10c nourtehing bas ia ae Bice oy % 1k iret prise at 8 Loule Exposition: our ow ; mn tling: & bot ~~ Trymore; meat, qual calle ran: ays bole