The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1911, Page 3

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GIRLS BURGLAR - WAS LONG LOST STEPFATHER 'Breaks Her Rule of Never Giving an Interview by De- nem claring to Nixola Greeley-Smith That She Never Loses Sight of the Fact That They Are “Going Home.'’ Wolfson Returns After Two Years, Breaks Into Home and Goes to a Cell. “I Do Not Wish My Life to Be Spoken of as Sacrificial -_ | in Any Sense,” She Adds; “I Am Always Stim- DISGUISED BY BEARD. ulated by the Splendid Courage of My Son.” Mary Miller Didn’t Know Him and He Fled to Roof at Her Screams. By NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. I" {fe just a little more than five years since jw York awoke to the | greatest sensation within the memory of our generation—the killing by! Harry Thaw on the Madison Square roof garden of the architect, Cries of “Police!” and “Thieves!” and Stanford White. the blow ag of ce whistles disturbed The recollection of the two famous murder trials/ the sleep of thors In the neighborhood qhich followed fs being dimmed by the accumulation of | of No. 460 East One Hundred and For- + ty-seventh street early this morning. lesser tragedies, even in the miuds of persons who | Patrolmen McGinnes and Malloy found watched and recorded those notable proceedings day | that the cries came from fourti by day. Year-ol! Mary Miller, who was stand- Judges, jurymen, lawyers are occupied with other, ing at a front window of her home on matters. Evelyn Thaw, the central figure of the winine A eae ean ea hk ew greatest criminal drama of modern times, has lapsed ®aid a burglar had been there and thi into the tinsel life from which her marriage into 4 $1 bill had been stolen from @ cup- ‘qe the Thaw family had lifted her. Even Madison foard in the dining-room. NIXOLA Square Garden, scene of the killing and of the sordid oihney Matrolmen, reinforced by two GREELEY* SMITH ove affatr which tncited it, 1s threatened with de- neighboring posts, searched the pase. struction. High on her tower, Diana, Goddess of Chastity, stil! pirouettes | ment, but found no one, but on the over the Tenderloin. But even that gilded incongruity shall pass away! when the moving finger of change touches her on the shoulder and tells | her roughly to “move on.” quite as though she were one of the vagrants, root they found a man calmly smoking a cob pipe. He said he was @ tenant tn the Wut ding and liad come to the roof for alr. None of the tenants knew |!" the park below. | him and the girl identified him, the! And yet, in all these mutations, one thing has remained unchanged | say, as the man who had entered and, quite appropriately, it 1s the one thing which life and art combine to| home and taken the $1 bill. | tell us is forever immutable—a mother's love for her son. This ts the; Paints Heche Wntre ino pesceae story of Mary Copley Thaw, mother of Harry Thaw, as she told it to me} he Was Robert Wolfson, thirty- |yesterday—simply, more or less reluctantly, with the matter-of-fact direct-| three years old, and again declared that | ness of a woman to whom devotion {s a common-place, and sacrifice al Whee as touna ” °” fe Foot of | casual incident of life. | ‘A charge of robbery was made against | YOU Know, perhaps, that upon the| times as tate as that and £30 seome a| Wolfson by the girl, who sald she nad | UTY'S verdict of acquittal “on the ground | ae virtuous and Spartan-ke." | never seen him. before. | of insanity” which sent Harry Thaw to i ut you are a Spartan," I reminded fave you nything to say for|the Matteawan Asylum, his mother | er. | Mra. Thaw smiled. yourvelf"" asked Capt, Post, who uo-|gave up her home, the proximity of her | ; | eed tha gin] watched the prisoner | o:he: shildren arr@ her’ position as the iden Yas a litte gtet 1 uted to bled sie shig i cg, leader of Pittsburg society to live neat! paid, “and the stole acne \ man, “tm ies Pais ae fstercie Ne |her youngest boy. For years Mra Lona remember trying to hold my finger tn 1 drew back, and stot | has occupted # house at Fishkill-on-the- | 4 candie flame once that { might be ack, and stood gazing | yudson—within a drive of twenty MIN-| inured to physical pain and become a : i + Ul i ‘And since then 1 vi Hele my stepfather, ut 1 haven't | woman of nearly seventy years of 846, |gou! in a candle flames” T'aalde two years, lives out her life. . dn't : But that flame cannot he met with | Peco gallan's Wear a beard then, Ut Bes leVES SHE AND HARRY WILL stolctam,” Mra Thaw. repiled, "The | Wilts: ‘ld the police that for the SOON BE GOING HOME. Kel He Christian cour | Past two years he had been tn the “Tt took the house furntshe ' nate humor, a perception of the army and last night he went to his| plained to m aughter that Is underneath all tears, | home to sleep, and not wanting to diss my own possessions there an possible. | *re perhaps the best equipment for turb the children, had broken the front f don't want to have a feeling of per-] Meeting adversity. I think It waa that | to create any inanimate ties| Perception which made the greatness of Widow and climbed into his apartment, ’ p manence, y Thackeray, se centenary Later he went to the roof, Then (he that would make me lose sight for a} hac centenary we are charge against him was changed from yoment of the fact that sooner o Se tee este acne reouee robery fo unlawtur entry, ASCOrdIng WH ace waive. home and. T bide. the there In no other writer of fltion ke to the police a $1 bill was found on him. tine," she added brightly. le foes ‘ ee ee Fenty The Miller girl s that during her \When Mrs. Thaw says “we she means | tah esha father's ‘absence her mother aad {ire Tien aad hersel? Yoo soon|JUST BACK FROM HER WORK worked and supported the family, She jearn this {n talking to her. But t IN PENNSYLVANIA. @Wakened and saw tie man in (he first thing you observe about this re- mehow the Hghter subject of 1it- m, and when she screamed he ran! markahle woinan is her calm serenity, ture seemed much more appropriate her benign optimism. n the solemn matters we had been! a he was dressed in a travelling gown | discuasing over tea in the aulte at the of dail hiack sik and an embrotdered | Hotel Plaza, where I saw Mrs, Thaw ei aaut shirtwatst and underneath the OR her way back from Pennsylvania to Pee EN erty on cose meh Banat Fishidi and to the stately old lady | herae | with ite draped lace vells, was a soft | white ruching which ught out the} - Across the tea table, Mrs. Thaw, with vividness of a still rosy complexton and Heh black bonnet eset slightly back on r ‘i | her silvery 1 had the air of regal |pair of blue, smiling eyes. Not at all " |the right picture, ts ft, of the woman| Serenity which sculptors and portrait ’ Painters gave to Queen Victoria, but whom we have all imagined was shut oft by vast wealth from the woes of the world till her son’s misfortune made her | one with the poorest mother in In “Lam not a weeping willow—I not care for the weeping willow type} of woman," Mrs, Thaw sald, as though | he felt the necessity of offering me | gm "connacted consult. me on questions tome explanation of her hopefulness. | oe eee g and. thie. taker up PREFERS BEING ABUSED TO BE-j great doal of my time. Each month T ING GUSHED OVER. make the trip to Pittsburg to attend the eT think I would rather be abused! monthly meeting of the Woman's Board |than gushed over, though I assure you of the Homoepathic Hospital, of which | which the Queen's photographs failed utterly to show. And my question, which led her back to Iife at Mattea- wan, seemed rather ruthless, My correspondence is very heavy,” Mrs. Thaw afd hesitatingly. “All the charitable associations with which I QUT OF WINDOW O'Meara Falls Four Stories, but Isn’t Hurt Much—Sorry He Didn’t See Finish. aig ae tnot hankering for either abuse I am president. ‘Then I visit the Homes | Fxolted in his steep over a priae fight or compliment, During my son's trisia | for iy . which T founded seven- eon years ego he dreamed he was witnessing, Dennis, many things were written about me) ‘ ' O'Meara, twenty-three years old, an that gave me great pain, but [have | Mrs, Thaw seemed so reluctant to Meara, ei fart hn was | @acuss her charitable work that I did express driver of No. Ninth avenue, endeavored to forget them, There ™ ee Ie bed and pitehed trom q| ona woman who, apeating Of my ap-/D0t Prete Mar Jursher, But Sram other raised up ped a ched from a sources I learned more of the philan- Sanaa Oni the: tand, sald he philan- fourth-story window at 280 o'clook this; Bearance on the witness atani thropies that, outside of her chief task something about my being compelled thropics that 3 r | morning. to drag the family skeleton from ita! Of consolation, make up her life, His mother heard him ery out as he| coset, The Thaw family has no sins) SOME OF THE OTHER CHARITIES FOR WHICH SHE WORKS, the Ohto fell and her screams attracted Polloe-| 4, hide and no skeletons to exhibit,” man McGowan, who found Dennis blinks | 5:4 gaded proudly. “It seemed to me! Across River from these | Ing In the areaway, Donnis did not @P- \jnon that all those writers had been| Homes for Hpileptics, and near Pitte- pear to be badly hurt, but Dr. Allen) so on uy Itke a pack of wolves. There | burg, is the splendidly organized central was called from Flower Hospital, He way so little that was moderate or plant for work for foreigners, The land | found Dennis al) right except for &) -oniperate written about us, It Wax on which stands the training school, the | bruise or two, and Deants went back | dines groundless abuse or hysterical] pretty Bohemian Church and, parsonage, | to hia room on the fourth floor to coms | Oo ent, were obtained throug Mrs. Thaw's glete his nap. ; ; “You are temperate in your writing,’ | quick foresight and financial offer at a| “and yet even you wrote of me the | insttt ition she visited last month, | pitting at the gates of| Incidentally I heard of a typieal tn-| ance of Mra, Thaw's activities, A missionary's sor tng homes at Woos Was @ peacherino, and a big gink from ey Was being walloped all around other da wet Jey when I tried to ani see the knockout punch."* closer | Matteawan “Perhaps,” are not as sorry ropes he added smilingly, “you ‘ae you ought to be, in o1 oO, | f the boara- | for the chit: | ra for {t was your expression which led| dren of foreign missionaries, which Mra, | John Wieland, twenty-one years of me to break the rule I have maintained | Thaw established fifteen years apo, re= age, fell out of a sixth floor window at for years of never giving an interview. | quired an o} n on his throat beyond No. 148 East One Hundred and Twenty-!| My gecretary brought the article to me.) the skill of local phystetan > aspist eighth street to-day. He was removed ghe xald it was unfair that the world| him Mrs. Thaw sent out five letters In an ambulance 10 Harlem Hospital by | should have the Impression that I ‘sat) one matl—one to the matron, with direc- Dr. Baker, who said that he was auf- ET SPR SPORE eET TY Ol ty opti le Ae area ALY fering from general contumiona end q| Waiting’ and little more. “It people Auly | (toni ond mean ransportation ; ong possible fracture of the skull, How, "new how hard you work {ey | to. the hoepite for a private room and Wieland came to fall out could not be| Would not say such things I wish Ij a nurse; one to the specialist saying learned | could tell them,’ she exclatmed. sehen the patient would arrive’ one to — 2 | “And ao she wrote you a little ace it / un old retainer (who holds lity position of my busy Ife at Fishkill and you! pecuuse he was labanive ane IREADERS came to seo me. Except for the ec-| ploy) to meet and take the boy to the REA ERS essary relinguishment of my sovlal moat anit anette in tert leg p OF The Mfe,” Mre, Thaw added, “my days at| r, to br the boy to her| Fishkill are as full and busy as they! home to recuperate wien he was «ts were in Pittsburg. SPENDS MUCH TIME EVERY DAY WITH HER CORRESPONDENCE, | "At 8.90 o'clock ev: charged from the hospital | HELEN KELLER’S TRIBUTE TO THE KINDNESS OF MRS, THAW. WORLD | Going out of town for the | summer may have The World sent to them, and address y morning t am Pr this ter, written | changed as often as desired, |] at my desi dictating to my secretary, | Helen the bind, deat and dur Morning World, 12c per week and from then until 12.20 we are oo- nius, mutual friend, best tells Ms e | cupled with my correspondence which, | the sto RAnt GAT waTuarantla Evening World, 6o per week I}! vocause of my interest in @ number of| she waits endures with splendid | Sunday World, 5¢ per Sunday |} | pnianthropte institutions, 1s necessarily | coura Paadluanat witen Send your remittance to the Cashier extensive. Perhaps you had better say| 1 ker nature NEW YORK WO) {J | 1 begin my work at 9 o'clock," My; , Mass, Oct, 19, 1910, For miigy asuie ive Vaan bee oon THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, BTR PT tate, “shed a6 D b3 helped pay for my tuition, and to make mf life and my teacher's life comfortable while we were doing our work. I am sure that she has been generous to my seacher end me be- cause she believes that we can learn something and pus» our knowledge on to others, and shat is why it Is @ pleasure to reculvw assistance from her. When Mr Thaw rendered possible the eaveation and tha researches of an astronomer, he did not, we may be sure, consider that he was g! money to an individual, We know that the thought in his mind must have been like this: “I am concerned with proflt muling industry, man i# concerned with sc nd has no time to spare in getting money, therefore we combine ou. work elther for him nor for 1 dan advances ment.” It ts this spirit which has informed that part of Mrs, Thaw's ald which I can acknowledge in public. The greater part—the immense kindness— 1s what an elderly woman bestows upon a younger woman, and is too intimate to be acknowledged except to her. The measurable, tangible aid like a Uttle room in a splendid fice, ‘The edifice is the public serv of Mr. and Mrs. Thaw, of wh! they have been devoted adinin tors, Tam the custodian of my room, and hope that 1 am @ my duty as they have done theirs I was present at the dedication of the Eye and Ear Infirmary which te Mrs, ‘Thaw founded and equipped She made me feel then, and I still feel, that We ure co-workers—agents intrusted to use powers which are not ours, but which we are 1 leged to turn to good, Faithfully yours, HELPN KELLER STIMULATED IN HER WORK BY } pe THE COURAGE OF HER SON. “I do not wish my life to poke of as sacrificial tn an Thaw said “Z am busy now, as I havo al- ways beeu. Of course I have given up society which to me at leas: seeme one of the ingrodionts happiness, But Iam always wtim- ulated by the splendid courage and patience of my son. I am per- petually astoulshed at the good nature with which he meets his misfortunes. “He gave many Instances White Plains, particular ings with Mr, Jerome, assures me is not #0 bh him, Perhaps you recall ply when he Was asked known in Pittsburg ax‘ Phaw. “| never } he said, ‘but it ¥ you referred to as ‘Crazy Jer these things don't prove Mrs. Thaw repeated her 6 quick retort with obvions joy in It. The: can be no doubt that sie iv juet fond and proud of He ‘Thaw is though he weve Presid of the United 8: And been Harry on'® Jeasier now that the superintendent, , ."" she replied, “but we will | have to watt and seo. You are aware | that in the beginning I was permitted | to visit my son once a day, but that, jowing to Dr. Lamb, my visits are now ted to twice a week, Hurry is not | permitted to sea any one except bie |family, his lawyers and the clergy. There are three ministers at Fishkill who are kind enough to go and sce nim, and now and ira from other Dr. Lamb, had resigned rical friends ts of the country jpay him visits. Harry has rather more » for reading 1 as they have him in « ward with nine 1 men, who do not talk #0 much as the | younger prisoners. ‘The change was | made because they got the idea that he Was responsible for the recent inves sation, He is perfectly well in health He has always t I except as a very little child, And his courage ‘s | an inspiration.” | SAYS THAT SOONER OR LATER HER SON MUST BE FREED, “Is he hopeful of ultimate release?” | { asked, | Mrs, " Mire, Thaw ‘Sooner or later he must a. He is the only case on record of an acquitted man being imprisoned—for Matteawan is noth- ing but # prison. hope the change of superintendents will mitigate his lot. We can only JULY 22, 1911, Story of Five Years’ Steadfast Devotion to Harry Thaw | Now Is Told by His Wondertully Optimistic Mother CAUGHTINCHASE | BABY'S LIFES 4 | | | ie 1 have been at Fish- In all the t ian I mad t two requests of Dr. Lamb, Both were refused. One was) that Harry tted to sit up until |9 ofclock, When Dr. was {mpossible I reminded him that} ten other men in the asylum were pe J mitted this privilese. hose men work,’ he answered, | shortly I asked that my son ve mitted to have a chalr in his Harry has nothing at all but an tron ot. ‘He doesn't need a Dr Lamb a ed, ‘He doesn’ iG indress in hig cell." Mrs. ‘Thaw's eves had clouded at the makes her, in in n Mother.” MRS, THAW'S COMMENT ON DR. LAMB. T sugee i to M Ti. t he ea'e let ab MatioanAn might ve made walked ‘and he called yn Alvan SAYS SHE READS PAPERS EVERY R DAY N EWs ture of the next effort to obtain Mr, Thaw's release?" T asked. can't say that, the ‘and—Zvelyn Thaw?’ I asked, slowly. “What of her?” “Don't ask me to speak of her either,” sald Mrs. Thaw. “After her testimony at White Plains Marry | Said that she was dead to him. she is dead to me—to all of us." many | pa tale memories, thin wisp of beauty, prattling het It is in the hands lawyers and of Harry him- The name of Evelyn Thaw evoked! I saw her again, a) respon: witness stand ~ ALONG BROADWAY! | He Had to Talk, but He | | Picked Wrong Place. | An automobtie was pressed into service | to-day by Pollceman Olive of the East | One Hundred and Twenty-Atth atreet atation Ina chase along Broadway after John P) “gentleman of leteur Tho pursuit, which began at Riverside Drive and One Hundred and ‘Twenty- third atreet and ended at Broadway and One Hundred and Twenty-otghth etreat and resulted from the fact that Pin- over felt #0 lonesome sitting on @ | bench along the Drive that he almply | had to talk to someone and picked out the wrong girls to talk to. He was tn bad trom the atart and be- fore he waa finally led away to the cooler back of the Harlem Police Court, he had narrowly enoaped one good alned pummelling with the fate of Harry B. ‘Thompson, who lives at the Hotel Bras lin, and @ manhandiing from the crowd | which gathered when he was run down, Mra. Laura Cogeswell, @ well known clubwoman who lives at No, 6) Weet One Hundred and Twenty-seventh atreet, had watched the fellow's antics from the very atart and she abandoned her over: shopping expedition to tell Magistrate Kernochan all about it. Pinover !s thirty-one years olf and lives at No. 1%4 Madison avenue, The airla he picked out to talk to were sis- ters, Katharine and Margaret Keon. Both are maida for families living in the apartment houres fronting on the Drive and they met to talk over some family matters, Pinover sat on a bench near One Hundred and Twenty-necond street; nearby aat Mra, Coxgnwell, and on ai other bench waa Thompson. Ags the girls walked along Pinover hatted them, tut they paid no attention. Ho got up and began walking rings around them until Thompron rted for him. ‘Then Policeman Olive came along on his wheel and Thompson told him the story. The policeman made for Pinover, who had started running back through One Hundred and Twenty-second street. Olive jumped from hia wheel and fol- lowed. At Rroadway Pinover had ained on his pursuers and seemed tn a to escape. But the automobile came along just then and Olive and Thompson jumped tn. At One Hun- dred and ‘Twenty-nighth street the chauffour had caught up with the fleet Pinover. Olive and ‘Thompaon jumped out almost on top of thetr man. A ciawd quickly gathered and there were threats till Olive swung hia club. “I waa so lonesome T just had to talk to somebody,” walled Pinover when he stood before Magistrate Kernochan. “Ten dollars,” wis’ Kernochan's only And Pinover, being shy the invited to occupy a cell. ——>— wi r) ten, with the calm insouciance with which WIFE HEARS SHOT AS & parrot swears. With the ruth ‘nature, she had and passed on. saness of @ shallow, wrought destruction | HUSBAND KILLS SELF. While despondent, Bartholomew Van 5 De Sands, thirty-seven years old, who A decadent gentue died because of eS | Kept @ restaurant at 1280 Myrtle | avenue, Brooklyn, and lived in tho A man had killed because of her, 4 And the aged mother before me had| Tear, committed sutcide | by | shooting veo compelled to drink the bitter cup himeelf over the right eye with @ re- Crotiealetaiy eee es do vB volver at 8 o'clock this morning. feted Tt BBG Barrow Decaune 86) “His wite, Mary, who nlept in an ad- Looking at Mrs, Thaw—strong and| Joining room, was awakened by the brave and hopeful under accumulated | Shot and ca Pollsenan Mayer, of ‘fel wondered that no artiet has | the Hamburg aven' atation sly ver painted the true Madonna—not| Dr Lowell arrived from German the young, plump, pretty creature, @gas- Hospital Van De Sands was pead. ing with the at the infant she is nourishing, » old, seamed mother of men, fecds the mind and the spirit, takes not the cooing baby, whe sympathy and love passing women, the love of all eee BRADY WILL CONTEST MAY BE SETTLED OUT OF COURT. Brother of White Plains Man Who Cut Of Wife Doesn’t Want Story Public, Bpectal to The Evening Wort.) WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., July sof a loving antinal Se wary gar! but | GAVE HIS LIFE FOR who | DEFENDING HIS WIFE. but the sinful man to her heart and gives him | understanding and the other Peter Paulsen, twenty-seven years old, of No. 61 Greenwich street, stabbed on July 11 by men who had ingulted his died last night at St. Vincent's Hospital, n and his wife, Johanna, were walk to got relief from the intense heat, and between Washington | and Greenwich streets, on Barrow, number of men gathered around « beer keg made insulting remarks to the wom- an, Her husband resented the remarks and a fight followed. Mrs, Paulsen ran for @ patrolman, and when she returned found her husband stretched on the 22.—| ground with stab wounds tn his abdo- Tamb sald this ne contest over the will of the late! men. No arrests have been made, Agthur Ll. Brady of Goldens Bridg > simil legacy out of his bi« fortune, | Will begin here Monday before Bus | eal ee preine Court Justice Moradhaueer, It! popmoHEdTHR, No Y., July f= a expected that a settiemenc will be y : Andrew Hillingsley, fAfty-three years nied af he ¢ o arranged after the case comes Into) oi oe No, 146 North Water atreet, East Tae executor of the eatate, Hdward| Portchester, bought ten grains of Brads, nother of the dead man, seema| strychnine late yesterday, telling the Pays vo mettle rather then have the | GTu@ atore clerk he had a sick dog he . ' Anthar Lrady's. treat, wanted to kil, Then he went to his! n f hia wife made pubile, home and swallowed the poison in a. ne Ree eee a wit bee | little water, Ho then told hia wife | patie nia” wife. 32,600." ‘The rec) XMME Ne had done and she sent for two | of h # $100,00 D satate he lore 1 they arrived he fought them oft | r the infant son, ring the struxgle died. ay, with Edward br Hirady died about a year go, He was n ald, but he attemp: one 4 nh younger than ond would to Make the Liver) Do its Duty ~ Nine times in tem when the lives te right the CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently but firmly come pel « lary liver to do ite duty. Cure Cone stipation, | Indige tion, Sick Headache, and Distress after Eating, Si Pill, Small Dose, Small Price Genuine auaber Signaivra y when she about the survive Are T Plan The World Printed 1,42 lay—-More Than SIX Id and exactly FIVE OTHER New ¢ and the Place o-Morrow, Through the More Than 1,400 Summer Re sort Advertisements to Be Printed in The Sunday World, to Your Vacation as Many as Were Published in ALL Why Visit the Wrong Place When the Right One Is $0 Easy to Find? RIVERSIDE MASHER 'FLUNG UNDER CAR, SAVED BY FENDER L' \ Said He Was So Lonesome| Motohtin Unable to Stop Trolley, Picks Up Two- Year-Old Unhurt. Motorman Michael Whittier had tho scare of his Mfe todiay when two-year- old Ifa Carretie disappeared under the front platform of his car on East One Hundred and Gixteenth street. He had seen the girl a6 whe ran from in front of No, 421 Rast One Hundred and Sixteenth street, where her father, Dominick, sat on the stoop, and kept going until she landed between the tracks. Whittier jammed down his brake as hard as he could, yelled, and rang hie bell. But the car hit the girl and down she went. Carella had seen his ohild getting in the way of the oar, and ran to save he: Motorman Whittier vaulted over thi dashboard, hie face white and his eyes etaring, and peered beneath where he expected to eee the mangled body of hie care victim. Instead, he found that the apron im front of the forward wheels had picked up the girl, carried her a few feet and then dropped her to one side, out of harm's reach. ‘The girl's father, who had been mak- ing the street re-echo with hysterical clamor, whooped with joy, and slap- ped on the back the grinning motorman, who had the child in his arms. The ambulance surgeon from the Harlem Hoepitat found that ehe was suffering only from alight contusions. Plctics dhe casio A MISS DAISY OLIVER NOW SISTER DOLORES. Following the example of her elder sister who, ton years ago became an Ureuline nun, Mies Daisy Anastasia Ont A an attorney of No. 220 Broadway, yee- terday took the final vowa of that order at Littletown, N. Y¥., and became Sister Dolores. She was formerly a teacher tn the public school at White Plat: road and Two Hundred and Twenty- second street, and will devote her life to teaching in schools conducted by the Ureuline nuns. Her sister Julla, who is now Sister Jerome, ts a teacher in St Joseph's parochial school, at Alexander avenue and One Hundred and Thirty- eighth street, the Bronx. Sister Dolores and Sister Jerome are sisters of Francia V. 8. Oliver jr., fo merly the head of the city’s License Assemblyman James Oliver is Bureau. an uncle. thie Ihtte Campbell's Boupe © hom fasclewty 18 Ball candle pose a thousand families “got together” And bought their food at wholesale. And had it prepared by an ex- pert chef. They would not have the advantage you have in buying Soups We make these perfec soups for millions of con- sumers. Our experts are the foremost in the world, Our facilities are unequal- ed anywhere. Critical judges declare that our soups cannot be excelled for purity, wholesomeness and flavor, And if you think otherwise, the gro» cer refunds your money. 21 kinds 10c a can Just add hot water, bring to a boil, and serve. Josmrn CAMPBELL ComPant Camden NJ Look for the ted-and-white label 1 “Summer Resort” Ads Last TIMES the 208 in the Sunday York Newspapers COMBINED,

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