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a ierisibem — — SPECTRE ERED 9 RD RI gait pd THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAROH 25, 1919. ~ GEN. SEN. PERJUM STARTS PARADE, A BIT OF CAMOUFLAGE JUST FOR TO-DAY’S _ PARADE | AND OH, GEE! DIDN'T THAT BAND | Euan aE RO ag eal PLAY FOR THE. KID WARRIORS! ee ended And There Were Haigs and Fochs and Diazes| Gat , % i ws ee and Haywards and O’Ryans, Too, All There | ‘ to See That the Big,Parade Began Right. General John. J.| Pershing who | Greenwich Village fave the signal that 4 the | of their'own for t parade, spent the nigh at the lof D but b home of Mr. and Mrs nas Moore, | « No, 32 West 10th Stre ‘The distinguished soidier is 6 year fe for booklet of new recipes specially prepared by cooking experts. of the world’s greatest warriors lives |{n t Square, t w among them the people of that part a ie ever Ca or PINh Agee of Greenwich Village belleve Mr. and! iinigs, Diazes, | i is | Mra. Tom Moore to be the General's | O'Ryans, Ther old. tim An unconscious of the fact that ove | had t ang |store. waehine Not only that, but the Villagers} ivan” and refer to John J. Perjum (official; bis) others wer own pronunciation) as “Tom Moore's | Douga) Sire bey,” or “the Moore kid," or “Young fel aged Piddet Brick”; the Gencral being a sorrel) "yoy Gia ne ‘top. | Xow werd look ‘Any flow who can remember a | ‘Tey had the single year when he was Buffalo Pill, | i" Mone ‘ ‘William J. Scanion, Bob Ingersoll, Buck Pwing and (in Holy Week) 4 Great Pulpit Oretor will understand | the caso of John J. Perjum, who| ¢ wiuited the Jefferson Theatre a short time since and was Charlie Chaptin | NEW delicacy for luncheon, a novelty for the evening muncheon, and a joyful surprise for children to take to school are thin bread and butter sandwiches spread with Grapelade. This new Welch discovery is | made from full ripe grapes. It is cooked.down with pure sugar to a smooth thick con- serve, It isn't grape butter. It isn’t grape jam. It is better, more delicious, more dainty. » Sixth Twelftn them, of course. d to vant ‘erjum and hie | niral, for example, | ry of the Mercer | to speak to). | Try it on the home folks, and then } fer @ week after. n % y | tenga in on the sane al Moore delight your friends with this new aoe ait te. minke a one ut and: ; | “National Spread” for bread, muffins, I General si athe easy | ™ hands.’ And just then General Perjum his Jipsgrown-ups might have n the | night. Heaven was not emptied of its stars, the glories of night had not Gizecived into the glorics of day, the face of the East was not yot barred |'motion, though they ne with, elementai scarlet, when tho Gen- | seen the bugle 1 erel was up and partly dressed. “Ma,” ' he eaid, “is it to-day now?” = Mra. Moore induced the C. 0. to join the Moores at breakfast, which he did reluctantly. . Admiral Thomas Garrett Moore, General Perjum's prother—Garry's Christmas present bot cakes, toast, biscuit. ) Of your grocer in two sizes. 15-07 | Glass Jar, 35c.; 25-02, Enamel-lined Tin, 50. The Welch Grape Juice Co, Westfield, N. Y. CAMOUFLAGED SHAFT HOUSE at 59th St 0, teerung Werle staff Protege started | ——— enue from . headed straight for | Vom Bekardt Here on Way to Hol-| York yesterday on his way to Hol- al NKER LDERMEN GRANT Arch at Madison Square Jnnd. land, ‘hav been recently recalled pund for 110th Street , former Ge 4 > | Ask the fountain man dmonds. students at, Come! for a Grapelade Sundae Heinrich von 4 by the present German Governme es ¥ was a ficet of the finest bat¥eships first band in line was playing | man Am « | fod by hie fam PLEA FOR EXTRA FARES 10 of “e nik 4, han 1b and her son, that ever sailed the Bathtub Ocoan sly’ ceived th 8 trip under gui ven te 2 and he promptly became a gob—was t it swell!" exclaimed Admiral | in’ whic ston i} ih ™ A from the tL ‘ " in cave! an S000 40 ganna oti id jonn J. Pe enuid nae wi ., Another me sm I 4 eh 'Weoward, id ed Arhue IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED m and goes to school ‘G said John J. Pe it would side with arty shannes Muejiow.| Democrats in Board Charge “Raw ive GF Walworth Avenue, Harte: Mr. and Mrs. Moore, like other a sigh of great contentment, ) | BA, aia cooled Politics” and Threaten an Ap- peal to Courts. —A WORLD “WANT” AD. WILL GO AND FIND IT A court t was thre day over the passage by of Aldermen in Yonkers lution permitting the Yor road to charge an extra {are to t subway in New York and to Mount _ The Reserve ==." You Profit By | ||. Telephone Equipment of Peace jj = epee Our Bigness ! that Served New York feemttns eT Ou. gize enables us to-— ) resolution last night was 6 to 4, one Republican voting against It. | in W ar atiacrainority Tebder, cheraed it was |“ Furnish cash markets for all live-stock offered; ; i put th cue ave bee Operate at minimum costs; . |& member o h ad e 4 ly F fe ‘AR, the great annihilator of the plans of NATIONS, also destroys the ES oe Wat “dae en ae rd of Alderme publicans and th pert who was pa pnsists of sev by Years ago the Telephone Engineer looked ahead and laid the broad A} OOF WAR RISK INSURANCE| fii Eliminate waste; plans for meeting the normal increase in the demands on New York City’s telephone | | system. It was necessary that he plan far in advance. For it takes-time to provide additions to a telephone system as large and complex prey pela pal an re as that of New York City. It requires a year, for instance, to erect a central office loose OPS) una cob isu eee ON, March Get the surplus live-stock products from the Cables Glass He Has} [ae West to the millions of consumers in the East. Allotment From Emer- | There i is No Menace in Size: — As long as we are in keen competition with the | other packers; an al- | var fund | AO As long as there are hundreds of firms in bureau | . :. ) WASHIN building —a year to manufacture the complete equipment for a new central office etal string and nearty another year to install it. | And ee the Telephone Engineer back in those days of Peace, with his finger on the | pulse of the City's social and business activity, made it his business to look ahead — * often twenty years ahead — and lay his plans to meet the increased needs of the fature long before they arose. New York City’s telephone system was weil prepared for every emergency of Peace. But then came the day when the first low rumble of war sent the demand for tele- phone service shooting skyward. It leaped in bounds of tens and hundreds of thou- the United States Government; sands almost overnight. It reached eventually the enormous average of three and may be called in speelu! session, one quarter million calls a day ! | > As long as our bigness is used to your advantage sae , : | PARADES IN DUBLIN BARRED. | § 4 —as it is now—and as it must be in the future New York City’s telephone system was not designed and built for War, but by virtue We went a apregicr | | if we are todoa profitable business. The per- of the engineering foresight that years ago visualized the increased future needs of | mee de Va peace, there was a reserve of equipment underneath the City’s streets and in the I; Party, a » Ireland, in a procla the business; ail ne | | As long as we handle only about 12 per cent of aa the meat supply of the country and only about |W more than $i 2 need 22 per cent of the meat that is inspected by pay the bure expenses until the e of May, when Congress ran Met manence of a business depends on the good- will of those it serves. No large business can prosper that is not recognized as giving in And it was only by bringing this reserve equipment into action, and by constructing Jor comty on the date de exchange for its earnings an equivalent meas- quickly the limited amount of new equipment that war restrictions allowed, that Sete eo eee eee ure of helpful service. the essential telephone needs of the City were met. i ermitted without a sp can nme Swift & Company, U. S. A. y ian i : * if n re lan : s lesale Distributing Markets in Greater New York } DAY the Telephone Engineer's problem lies in the immediate future and it is | the and the their pargateen WheGentral ‘Office, 32 Tenth Avenue a big one. To meet it his plans for the next two years provide for six new fia. C. j. Bdwards, District Manager central office buildings—additions to eleven existin, f itd —seven- 1 ‘ | ig d xisting centr a1 office buildings, seven ' 4 WESTCHESTER NOTES. ek teen new central office switchboards and additions to thirty-six existing central office ‘a t switchboards | ( veling Gaurd of a2 Republican | oiler It's a big construction program, but it’s just a part of the general plan for restoring f |arcunt Warrant tele toitiitee tia teacree é . New York City's telephone service to its high peace-time standards of quality, | Degen won are visite | pom ® | Mr. Mrs, William Marshall of : |wast ‘Third Street, Mount Vernon, have | returned from @ visit: at Stamford, | faa ongagement of Miss Edith A, of Mr, and rs. W. B d, Scarsdale, to Aus-| NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY if Of" Reach “Avenues | Mr P March farms off Court ie rs tt n this morning, Judge Young pre- ' ga 7 sis A The Misses Josephine Gniffen and h > ~ { 4 b « a 1 np yo bs ie aia tia fd area’ ‘ ieee .