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MOTHER'S LOVE TO TAKE PLACE OF FATHER'S CRUELTY Bruised and Beaten Little Ida Greenberg Soon to Have a Happy Home. |DESERTED WIFE’S TALE. | Overheard Mistress Reading | Evening World’s Story of Beating of Her Child. ‘When fittle Ida Greenberg is brought into the Court of Special Sessions to- morrow afternoon to show the ‘hree black-gowned judges the bruises all over her body, and the broken nose made by her father, her mother, whom she hasn't seen since she was three years old—she 4s only #ix now—will be there to try and make up to her for the | petting of which Rer little life haw been | sadly in want, Jacob Greenberg, her father, was tak- en to Essex Market Court a week ago on a summans obtained by Agent Hy- land of the Chifdrens’ Soctety, on the) complaint of women living in the ten: ment house at No. 992 Kast Bighth street. They could no longer endure the chfld's cries of pain, they sald. He may face a charge of bigamy when the Judges have settled with him for beat-/ ing the child. If he does it will be on his own admission that he remarried with-| out going to the trouble of securing a| 14 something about | legal divorce. He @ “rabbinical” divorce, when taxed with ‘hie second marriage, but Ida's mother, Itka, never received any. When Gerenberg Bertha Greenberg told House that she was his wife. chastise his own children, and | was arraigned, generally Magistrate | especial target of his criticism. Green- | berg insisted that he had @ right to|to mind, we have read that women 11 that) America are unwilling and {rr ‘neither the Children's Soctety nor any | mothers, court of law could interfere with that | right. ‘wan little thing whom he had beaten and held him in $1,000 bail for trial. WEPT IN ARMS OF MOTHER, WHOM SHE RECOGNIZED. At the tlme The Evening World pub- lished the story in deta!l, and the next day Itka Greenberg, the child's mother, went to the District-Attorney’s Office and was directed to the Children's So- otety She asked to see Ida. The ttle « was brought fn, and although she had not seen her mother in three years she recognized her. The child threw herself into her mother's arms, the way they both talked and and ried made the staff blink, Then the mother told this story: She and Jacob were married in the town of Pilsk, Grodno Province, Russia, nine years ago. Jacob came on to America a month later, and tn six months sent for his wife. ‘They went to live in Moore street, Brooklyn. Three children were born to them, Philip, eight; Ida and Samuel, aged four. Three years ago Jacob suggested to her that as the tailoring trade was very dull and offered no prospects of. advancement {t would be best for her to go back to Russia. Meanwhile, he would be working his fingers off here and aiming at an establishment of his own. Then he would send for her and they would live in prosperity and hap- Piness ever after. Itka returned to Russia with the two little boys, leaving Ida with her father, so that he might not be lone- eome. never heard from hier husband, She endured her abandonment until two years ago, when, leaving the children With a sister, she came back here to find her husband and her child, All her efforts failed, her money ran out and she was compelled to go into do- mestic service at Camden, N. J. There, one day last week, she heard her mis- tress reading aloud the story of cob's brutality, and realized that was her husband and her child Agent Hyland began a new gation, Jacob stuck to that the woman court In his defense was his had married her in Canada a ng his wife the rabbinical d tt who had appeared in wife He ‘woman, to save him, dented that was married t m. She said that she had gone to live with him and had borne him two children In about a mon time Ida will have her two little brothers for playmates. Just about a wee > Mrs. Greenberg sister $100 which she wont into domestic vice with instr: ns to start for Am fea with the children at once, oo HEARD PHONE AND DIDN’T WAIT TO BE ARRESTED, Sidewalk Sleeper Got Up to See Who Wagon Call Was Intended For, sent to b saved since sie On the blo! dredth street police entry of the wagon being ci and reutrning without & prisoner Davies, however, gave a vert nation of why the vehicle did © passenger. Bome one telephoned to house last night that a man was making a bed im front of the fashion houso at Broadway and Ningty-ffth street, The patrol wagon was sent to convey the man to a city hotel, But when it arrived no slecper was there. While Sergt. Davies and the patrolmen attracted by the wa were pondering what had become of the drunk, a negro ggered from the west side of Broad- way into the group. *Lookin’ foh some one?’ he asked “Yes,” replied the sergeant. “Do you want to take a rid “No, boss; but mebbe Ah can splain is affair, You sees, Ah was sleepin’ on de pavement an’ Ah heahs some one telephone foh de wagon, so Ali gets up an’ waits to see who's goin’ to bé taken But mebbe dey sends foh de wagon to take me, But Ah don’ want tt.” And he staggered down the street be- fore the policemen recovered from their r of the West One Hun- ay n station tom 1 expla t have the station Intoxteated the sidewalk e apartment From the day she set sal} she| vest! | his assertion | ser- | Magistrate House looked at the | living monument to the self-sac- | Miss Mlovence Kern of No. #1 West rifle, the invincible devotion of | (ne and Forty-tifth astree American motherhood, the mother. [| who suffering from serious hood we have been told is unwil. | mental for several weeks, re ling and irresponsible. turned to hhome shortly after mid: night, and while her father and the po THE DEVOTED WIFE TYPIFIED ioe of Harlem were searching for IN MRS, MORSE. fshe escaped from her about The fight which Mrs, Clemence Morse | OCl°k: cial in a nialittass Bay is making to free her husband, Charles | ou! | Pa TK RA WAKE ENTE OATH W. Morse, the banker, from the fifteen |“ est’ One Hundred an years’ sentence he is now serving at} °! fea Atlanta, illustrates Just as remarkably LEE aot oer Pan ; nerican woman's] sone had slipped aetna head 1 devotion Alpety Has hae Dues ; Jafternoon and was running up Amster Poly vey faker Jdam avenue when the nurse overtook \ her. Last night she slipped out again woman in middle lfe, who speaks of | phe ane. Alle the convicted banker with old fashioned | Without a, 8° nd z ih ne BUpRO Was I imagine that Mrs, Morse, before| teaching solo! in Fg pe events called for the development of| health broke down. She was the vi the fighting qualities of life, was just| tim of a kind o} ieee Hl a roft, pretty, att n who] 8 fin ay fellow took a keen delight cury her | were consi | husband's millions and who| H beeame gradiiall probably dtd man ib thtexa ten tell oa priv he ate rinere ee 8 for day Sno ts twenty-elgh oid a ficial foreigner with the ornamental!” \:.\;cer D in nor any membe litlas of the American wife. Kern family would eay where the en Morse’s trial and conviction| tightly clad young woman was durir came. Mrs, Morse sold her Jewels, gave | her at from home, nor would the up everything she had to her husband's state the mstances of her return creditors, Morse was vent to Atlanta} ee aT and since then his wife has been prac- | per Hold aa Witecilarve! tleally a camt between the South-| Jacob Neuman, the plumber who shot ern city and the New York office which| #4 i! is wite Wena and shot hin she established to carry on the cam.| self in the head at their home, No paign for his release. It was Mrg,| 2ast 7 ir on Ata, wa Morse who induced a handful of New| hel fon the Cina wy korday by Cur York financiers to pledge themselves for | oner , Wintanvotton! after” tury Nad $25,000 aplece that Morae's phenomenal) nimself in the right temple, but the bail might be raised. It was Mrs.| wound was not mortal and was dis- |Rich Women Abandon | THE EVENING WORLD, Bare As MONDAY, JUN wenn Harry Thaw’s Mother and C. W. Morse’s Wite Retute Stabs of Foreign Fault-Finders By Striking Devotion and Self-Sacrifice coigleniahe Two American Women Who Are Giving Up) AlltoWork for Loved | Ones Typical of Their Sisters Maligned by Visitors. Palace Homes and! Social Opportunities | to Fight ito Obtain Liberty of Loved Ones. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. The sun never sets on the critics of the American | woman, Hvery week brings its cargo of foreign fault-finders —re- turning to give A waiting. public the benefit of the pre- digested — impres- sions of America they brought over with them. Every day some) traveller, whose distinction has in-| creased directly as the square of his distance from home, voices in our news- | papers his disapproval of our manners, morals and institutions. And quite | the American woman Is the | Novelist Watson's Pessimistic Views. %. B. MARRIOTT WATSON, English Author. atetk iinen an. Wereah pobalbly. o4! The American woman ts claimed by her admirers as being indepen- dent, but she {s more than that—she and un- rel dictatorial are deliberately turning | ponsible | | i | sympathetic wives, on natufal laws have Perhaps in America we still take the |] Accumulated of recent years See G i t would seem that while the child-like pleasure of a very young ra American man unnaturally devotes in hearing ourt es talked about, and all his days to money making, the it Is likely that we would rather hear |] American woman as unnaturally de- ourselves abused than not to be @is-|] votes her days to pleasure, Where- he hundreds|} @% the savage woman acted as a cussed at all. Knowing of the hundreds )) vat or purden to her lord, the |of thousands of tender and efMicient|} american man works like a beast mothers, of capable and devoted wives |] of burden beside his triumphing in America, we have not taken the|| lady. . Unless American clviliation alters, {t would seem to be doomed. critics of American women very sert- ously. But suppose for once we do? Let us ask our European critics to consider two women, one an Arerican mother, the other an American wife, Mrs. William Thaw, who still keeps up the fight for the release of her son n Asylum, and Mra. Charles W. who nas conducted a national campaign for the beration of her husband from the Federal prison at Atlanta, TYPICAL MOTHER |S MRS. THAW, FIGHTING FOR HER SON. Mrs, William Thaw, a typical Amer!- can mother, has devoted every mo- ment of her life since her son's incar- ceration, and a very large portion of the Thaw fortune, to obtaining the gut the United States to ask President| Taft to pardon her hushand, It I8 Mrs. Morse who in the modest apartment she has occu- pied since her Fifth avenue home ‘was sold still carries on the fight, though the President has refused to pardon. It 18 Mrs. Morse who carries hope “nd, confidence to the im- prisoned bauker, and if Morse is released before serving the full sentence the victory will belong to Mrs. Mors OPINIONS DIFFER AS TO MEN, BUT NOT ABOUT WOMEN. Any number and vartety of opinions are possible as to the sanity of Harry freedom of the man who killed Stan- Thaw. Any number and vartety of be- ford White. At one time Mrs, Thaw possible as regards tho cul- fs said to have placed a mortgage on of C. W. Morne her beautiful home outside of Pittsburg | mily one view Ss possible of the to raise funds to carry on the legal of Mary Gopl haw, Amert- | battle which she has taken t y Bioemarss oN lan ey every court, She gave up her home rf And both of these women, her friends, her absolute position "| saitying the, devotion, and the Pittsburg society, the cagppantonship cf! power that belong to the female her other more fortunate children, took a cottage near the Matteawan As lum where she could be near Harry} Thaw. She wrote and issued a pamph- | | creature, when she thinks and feele mere in- a at the same time, let in her aon’s defense. simply splendid individuats AAR A rn i nnn nn Ellinor Glyn’s Slap at American Women. BLINOR GLYN, lish sensationalist, “Three Weeks" The lives of women are terribly en great wealth brings bility and many soct rich American woman has nothing to do except to amuse herself. She has charm, is splendidly generous, but she has nerves, She ts restless and unsatisfied. She generally cares little for the cares of motherhood and she avolds all worrtes of house- keeping. A New York doctor recently told me that there has not been a birth in Fifth avenue for two yea It is a ttle diMcult to mance in the life of the wealthy of New York. * * ¢ Tie American man of affairs would be a magnificent mate for the highly bred English woman. She would understand such a man as the American woman does not, and she would give him a wealth of sym- pathy and sagacious help which would appear to be quite foreign to nature of the typical American WICOUS Dogs Canadian-Eng- perpetrator of America’s rich npty. With us reat respons!- duties. The FIVE VICIOUS DOGS | RUN WILD THROUGH NEWTOWN DISTRICT: ts aiias ak, | Only One Adult, Bitten To-Day in Queens Borough. an Ever since Justice Dowling committed | Lie OE womarntooa ‘ a Thaw to Matteawan Asylum, following ont widely known exampies| Within four hours to-day five cases of his acqulttal of murder on the groun P wifely devotion in the logs were reported in the of insanity, Mrs. Thaw’s life h en | current history of the world, they fur- Wn section of Queens Roro: fa long, desperate battle for her son's | nish emarkable fe ' : freedom It is a bat h she has| crities of the Amert B were Ms victlinmesne: At lo: very often—a ba je Ww some —<—_—— Ave: shllare Persons took upon as without hop | MISSING GIRL RETURNS ales Hat Br 10k, aged twenty-two, But, abandoning everything wh life of No, 1%) Home street, Corona, was held for the narrow, proud, elderly} WHILE POLICE SEEK HER.|watking atong sou a haae nee society leader she was, she lives outst = home, when a ar « and white the gates of Matteawan and still keeps im of Mental Breakdown, Miss]dog sprang at her. Screaming for help, up the fight. ‘The Thaw trial is a dead and al- most forgotten issue, but Mri William Thaw continues to be a Kern, Lightly Clad, Escaped Nurse and Fled at Night. Moree who ¢irculated ¢hrough- gharged from Bellevue yesterday. tried to f t the brute off with her but before Lieut, Burns, of Newtown station, arrived, she had been bitten four times in the right le; ‘Three of the wounds are serious. Burn stunned the dog with a blow of his nightstick, then tied up tts jaws and took it to the to Board of Health stables be examined for signs of rabtes Miss Brook was sent home after a local physiclan had Charles Kis dl fourteen, wa: ng in the road near his father house at No, 139 N eet, Corona, ven a cream ed buldox nipped vin the nade off Wesley eight, and his er Mle ten at No, 4G Ma ne fox ter which aude scan victous. flesh of the tittle boy's ex was bad! n. The police took harge of the terrier Five-year-old Max Watzel was at- | tacked by an Irish wetter in front of his father’s cottage at No, 5 Highland Ce ne uped victim venue, na was bitten twic The setter es | The last aged ten, was John Roddin, at No. 282 Bhn t, Ridgewood, A strange mongrel sunk its teeth in the oelf of hie might | This animal also got away, | ——— | Hriton Preaches for Jowett. | The Rev. Thomas Phillips, M. A, of the Central Baptist Church at Blooma- bury, 1m the heart of London, preached Jat the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian |Chureh yesterday tn place of Dr. J, H. | Jowett, M, A. the pastor, who ts in London at the coronation festivities, aoeeemamoe New Zeppelin Balloon Files, FRIEDRICHSHAFEN, — Germany, June 26.—The new Zeppelin dirigible balloon Schwaben I. made her maiden flight today, board, who lives str ont ae teen tiem ht ae eam ’ Count Zeppelin was on| Caustle Criticism by French Editor. Alexander Ular, Foreign Baitor of Le Petit Journal. You have seen a cat play with a mouse, casole it, caress it softly with her paw, worry it through every stage of hope and despair, and finally break its backbone with her teeth. That is what the Amert- can woman does with a man, only breaks his heart instead of his BECOME A CITIZEN, | mon Man Who Wants a Job on the Force. In Commissioner Waldo's mati this morning was one letter bearing an Eng- lish stamp and an Irish postmark. The letter was from a chap wenn wrote @ good hand and signed himself “P. Finn, t was dated at Ardkeenagh, County Roscommon, In brief, Mr. Finn wrote to inquire what qualifications were required to got a place on the New York police force. | He said that he had an honorable dis- | charge and a high recommendation trom the Royal Irish Constabulary, if that would do any good Mr. Waldo replied, Finn that a man had to be a@ citizen of these United States before he could hope to wear a New York policeman'a uni form. “But,” he added, “there are good Irishmen in the de informing Mr. P. lots of rtment—Sulll- vans, Murphys, O'Briens, Sheridans and Caseys. Come over here and stay long enough to became a voter, and then you'll have as good a chance as any man alive." As a rule Irishmen make good cops,’ minissio cluded his letter Mr. Finn : BALLOON PLUNGES INTO NORTH SEA; TWO LIVES LOST Big Aircraft, One of Four in Flight From Paris, Wrecked During a Storm. BRE) Germany, June %6,-One of the four MN which ascended Paris Saturday fell Into the North gaa ons wear the Island of Juist of the EB ‘risian group, yesterday. A violen storm prevailed at the tlme and the | werial craft was carried rapidly out t |eea. Two persons were aboard her. ‘The other three balloons made land- ings on the East Frisian coast. A rescue boat was sent out as possible to the ald of the distr balloon, but later returned having rv covered only an empty ballast bax marker "RG. B.—1. The Aero Club belle that the ba! loon which was lost was the Andremede. piloted by Georges Blondel, who accompanied by a passenger, Wreckage picked up by fishermen answers the do scription of the fittings of the Andre mede, The balloon wes in the race for the Deutech, ete te emcee te a ntl HR. FINN AND THEN YOU MAY BEA‘ 2 So Waldo Advises a Roscom- 26, 1911,° a OFFICIALS MEET FORFINAL ACTION Directors of Interborough and B.R.T. Hold Conferences on City’ Proposals. Interborough Will Take a Chance on Suit by Stockholders. Three groups of men who have the subway aituation In thelr hands met toa final understanding with reference to the plan for the new subways, These three bodies were the Executive Com mittees of the Boards of Directors of the Rrookiyn Rapid Transit Company and the Interborough Company and the ctty subway conferrees. comprising the Transit Committees of the Estimate and the Public Service Com. mission. The attitude of the conferrees was In defined as offering no other alter. native to the compantes ¢ or decline the city's propo: titude of the Interborough ome expressed Indirectly, was that the ¢ pany would accept the terms condit ally, but the directors sald among themselves at least that a lawsuit tn stituted by one or more of Its stock hilders might Intervene and prevent the signing of a contract with the ety. There are 4,00 stockholders in the Ine terborough, and It was pointed ont that the officials of the Interborough could not control all of them. It was argued, that even ff suite were instituted by dissatisfied stockholders who were loath provision surrendering the eatin stated that the proposed contract with the B. R. T. was more desirable than | the plan suggested for the Intervorougit For instance, while the B. R. T. is to butld subways and extend and third- track elevated roads it 1s required to end only $22,000,000 as against an ex- penditure of $149,000,000 by the Interbor- ough and the city’s own expenditure of $110,000,000, The B, R. T., Interborough officials said, also receives a guaranteed income of from $3,000,000 to $3,500,000 on receipts as from June 30 next. No guar- antee whatever is afforded the Inter- borough. Despite these discrepancies, it was practically decided to accept the city's plan ao far as the Interborough goes, contingent on any action to be taken by | dissatisfied stockholders, | ‘The elty conferrs took the matter of |the South Brooklyn projected subways and elevated roads under consideration, put made no change In their plan, It was reiterated that the competing com- pantes could accept or decline as they pleased, ‘The cit alternative re- |maine—the city will bulld the Triborough | route if the compantes do not fall into line. The B. Alrectorate session at A Wall street \iate hour this afternoon ‘At the conclusion of the meeting tt was announced that no definite action had been taken, but that something might result to-morrow when the com mittee reports to the full Board of Di- rectors of the I. Kt. T. It was announced at the offices of the Interborough that while subway mat- ters had been discusaed no Jnion would be reached before to-morrow or | early Wednes!ay, were in until a — PHILIP J. BRITT MARRIES Westminster Cathedral, London, England—Bride a New Yorker, held at the re whom the bride ot Lady Garvagh eon visiting. Mr. Britt Is a well known lawyer and Vice-President of the Manhattan Club 8 been News of } lage was known but to most pe of his friendx the a einent comes as a surprise om New York, June %.—The a of the Austro-Amer- ew York, has been A wom cholera ship dur TRIESTE steamship Ovean tean Lt s nia sailed from New ork on »ped at Naples on June for Trieste nd w 2% walling hence White Trose CEYLON TEA ON THE SUBWAYS LIKELY TO ACCEPT THEM. | on Probably | | or prepared to meet to-day and come! Hoard of | subway from second street south | to ‘Flatbush Atlantic avenues, Brooklyn, the courts would hold in the end that public convente nanded the carrying o the t and that the stockholders would thorefore lone In such a sult One of the Interborough directors EVELYN ST. CLAIR TURNURE. | Ceremony Takes Place To-Diiy in| LONDON, June %.—Philip J. Britt of New York and Mise Evelyn St. Ch Turnure, eldest daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs, John St. Clair Turnure, also of New York, were married at Westminster Roman Catholly Cathedral to-day. The Right Rev. Joseph Butt, auxifary minister of the ‘athedral, | assisted by the Rev. Perey W. O'Con nor of the College of the Cathedral haplaina, ofictated. A reception MISS HOFFMAN'S ONT REMEMBER DANCE TOO GIDDY | KILLING MAN WHO: FOR THE POLICE) RAN OVER HIS iain t Bongione Says He Saw Dead Child, Then Knew Noth: » ing More. So It Is Reported That Her Manager Has Been Invited to Court. Morria Gest, manager for Gertrude] Guiseppe Rongione, who ts on trial bes fe Hoffman, and Manager Case of the | fore Judge Foster in Part V. of General » Winter Garden, dented to-day that they | Sessions for the murder of Willem 4 1 been asked to go to the West Site|Kruginan, a driver, whose brewery | ‘ourt And explain Miss Hoffman's|truck ran over and killed Bongione’e ©) dance, now being given at the theatre, | three-year-old boy on April 3 took the #! In apite of these dentate information |#tand in his own defence to-day. —, a was given to-day that both haa been) The defendant's plea is emotional Gm. summoned for a hearing tocmorrow | Sanity. In answer to the questions 6f Abraham Levy, his attorney, Bongione te testified that ho recalled nothing of the events following the moment he came | downstairs from his home, No. #8 Bast © afternoon at 2 0% | Kernochan Casual readers of the Ives of Mark | Anthony and Cleopatra are aware that lock before Magiatr the woman did not at all times jead a|Forty-eighth street, and saw the? Perfectly proper life. ‘The Hoffman | rushed body of his little boy tn a neigh= dance deals with an alleged feature of | Pr arm and learned that the ~~ hat Feyptan routers life. Tt ie con. | Was dead. tended that while the dance might have} Bongione ts an inoffensive looking § “gone” on the banks of the Nile, It ts{™MAn, and his demeanor on the stand too giddy for a quict and ataid’ town|@tlrred several women in, the could’ litke New York room to audible weeping. So the authorities, accomting to toe | “All T remember,” he sald, day's {nformation, {asued commands to |! my boy d a nel the manager of the dancer, and the| My boy wasn pretty child and I I manager of the theatre to come around | him very dearly, But Tdenow It was at | | accident | and teil irt what is taking plac - at the Winter Gare 1 would not kill any one. T never” ehdy heen rt anything im my life, I Would get he dance, 4 the front row ou have a pistol? i a home-lovin, », I did not. T have been tota © : eae since that I got one, but Ido not know © | Ma w 1 got it, 1 do not remember PARADED PARK CLAD | xeeing the driver=the man who wt killed, I remember notiing more ttt /%, ONLY IN UNDERSHIRT. I came to myself in the police station "& with bi 1 running down my face. " a My heart was torn to atoms when = A man clad in only a hort undershirt | 1 kaw my boy's body and 1 struck my | “6 | was found tn Prospect Park, Brooklyn, | fore that is all T remember, But’! hetw i) Fifteenth street and Ninth ave- | 1 swear by the Lord I do not remember | nue early this morning by Poltlceman | shooting this man a Thomas O'¢ ne Hie was wandering The tr Probably conclude to- i about on the & enjoying the shower | morrow males At the Prospect Park station he sald pits a a he was Thom » thirty-three, of « Guard Badly Hart. ¥ No. 45 Lexington avenue, Brookiyn. He} John F. Moran, thirty-seven years. & didn’t know what had become of old, of No. 27 West Sixty-seventh « clothes, Ile was taken to the 5 street, a guard on a inth avenue “L" via | County Hospitat vation ward train, was Injured ly this morning ** | x: <7 a gate of a car accidentally ©tt Mr, and Mrs. 1. Glubel to Go Abroad as a train wae leaviag Wecum and vs. Isaa imbel and, Fred- teenth street station One Reva | ertck A. Giimbel will salt for Murope on thrown to the tracks and recelves iia broken right shoulder and contusions ~ the Olymple on Wednesday to spend the lo the body. He was taken to’ ®t») suminer, ud Vincent's Hospital. » Royal cenit Cigars Their quality, convenience, : size’ and price, satisfy all smokers. A Box of 10 for 15 Cents ° Get them—INSIST if you must—but get them | | Acker, Merrall & Gondit | Company EGGS - sstea setected Fresh Dozen... c.see. BUTTER -Finest Creamery—!b Grape Juice ety i ae oeHlcty pure Juice and Sugar; ||| Coffee—Ptantation—A Full Strength Java “Blend—Ib. | Tea Romona-Ceyton—Equally delicious served hot or eed—Ib.. .35 Kippered Herring—Atasty breakfast dish—(Heat and serve). 18 Salad Dressing—A., M. & C.—The Best—4 02, bot.,.10; 1002.25 | A.M. &¢ All the natural fruit flavor Bgodtbae: | | Jams — "AIL varieties . | GagesorF, gg Plums- Noreca | | Tomatoes A., M. & C.—Fancy Whole F ra tra Large | nitary Cans | Corn Finest Maine | Peas-—Choice Early June—' ! « BZth st, & Oth Ave. | 13D Went 42d st, St. & Amsterdam Ave. | RROOKTS S48 Giees: fais Vulon st! 4 | TWO NEW BRANCHES OPENED: oth Bt. & Broadway. 1420 St) Nicholas Avi reine BREAKFAST Sa The Last Word on Coffee T COFFEE 35e. FIREWORKS BUY THE BEST AND AVOID ACCIDENTS. iSafety Assured. — Assorted Selections from $1.00 Up. CATALOGUE UPON APPLICATION. MOVED TO 14 Park Place, Kalil Building TELEPHONES BARCLAY 17050-7051.