The evening world. Newspaper, May 4, 1920, Page 3

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TO REPLACE 0 Street Cleaning Head Puts Blame for City’s Dirt on Antiquated Methods. -, : * . MONEY AND TIME LOST Anil Ashes and Garbage Con- tinue to Pile Up—Politics at Bottom ‘of It? . ‘What ts the Street Cleaning De- partment doing to solve the problem in disposing of the city’s waste— waste that aggrégates a total of ap- proximately 20,000 cubic yards of ashes and rubbish and from 3,000 to 4000 cubic yards of garbage, every twenty-four hours? “When The Evening World started eut to run down the colored ‘gentie- man‘in the woodpile, this is among * the things it found: \< ( back of organization every- where; ‘carts collecting ashes and rubbish on Ay upper west carting it all the way t Hunt's Point, miles further than expert engineers say is necessary, or even to Long Island City dumps, still furth@r away, Dumps such as that at the North River and 47th Street, 77th Street, 9th Street and at the foot of East 46th Street, totally inade- quate to meet even normal de- _imands and hopelessly swamped when a crisis come Dumps so small that three carts Yat a time congest them. .™® Dumps so old and pidated Uthat at least one city official ree * fused to trust himself on one of them, although daily heavily ‘loaded carts. are driven up the ‘Inclines. Other dumps aged and flim: | yet upon which loaded automobile Vtrucks daily are piloted to be un- {foaded, at a risk each time to lif ‘yend property. ;Ut found equipment antiquated, ‘ge-drawn.carts when there should be motorized trucks, uncovered wag Showing need of repairs, carts \itiered in thé open streets for lack of ‘ stabling space, motors left out ex- to. the weather for weeks at a e for Yack of proper garages, losing value’ with each passing rain, > > GINEERING FACILITIES COM- Ms PLETELY LACKING. Jt found dumps that lack the most mentary modern engineering fa- Nties for unloading (he carts into thereby running up huge rental charges for the city to > .pay because lack of these facilities keeps the scows tied up at the dumps two and even three days at a timé, a steady charge on the taxpayer, in- stead of permitting them to be load- ed hy gravity and on théir way within’ an hour or two. J. &. binton of the Ash Removat Company, Inc., No. 347 Madison Ave- nue, gn expert in his line, was asked what wag needed primarily to enable tHe street eleuning department to meet the growing demands of the ‘ity. “He said: “First, an engineer~a trained man from the army by preference. Such at man would cost 5,000 a year, but is there any one in New York who knows the situation, who does not believe “that such «| man would be worth that to the city? “Take the question of proper dumps alone. I am not ‘criticising atiy.one now in office when I say that there is not a properly. constructed dump in the City of New York. There tw one that I happen to be very fa-, miliar with, It is at the foot of 47th Street and the Hudson River. “Three carts choke it, yet a Very simple engineering device would make that, dump capable of handling all the ashes and refuse the city wants to take there.” ‘ ‘Mr. Linton then described a bin at- tachment supported in the various ways an engineer knows and capable of containing two or evén three scow loads of rubb He would fasten this bin on river side of the covered dump ‘he advocates, and empty the city's carts and trucks into Phat, using gates at the bottom of the bin to.release the contents Into the waiting scows when the latter wero ready. “You'd save the city $40,000 a year a. dump in scow rental alone,” he as- merted, “The city pays in hire $14 per scow, per day, plus other charges, fea? brings the total cost, per scow rad - of rubbish moved. from tie! treets to the final dumping places elose to $800, = “If you ¢ut down the length of ime it takes to load a scow at the sity dump you increase the carrying pacity of each scow, which grould mean a tremendous saving fo New ork." "NO FACILI TIES FOR PRIVATE CARTMEN, ‘ ‘The aumps themselves, poor as they bre, are not the only source of waste nd complaint in the handling of tho pity’a refuse. ‘The private cartmen, under the law they play a very portant part in the handling of w York's ashes and @ther sera material, are being tramendously han- Rieapped by the lack of prope* fac'li- jes for gshes and refuse disposal, The Prade Waste Law provides that the Btreet Cleaning Department has the Fight to refuse to move ashes or re- use except garbage, from ny but ng operated for profit. This law ‘ommissioner MacStay brands.as un. ‘afr in its working, but !t enforces the bgistence of the private cartman, who 8 certain rights under it and under er city ordinances, to the use og he city dumps, | F At present, agaih gccording to the [commissioner himself, the city 1s wpplying scows at the foot of Jack- mM Street for these private cart men, t—and it's a big but, say the ‘cart REFUSE DISPOSAL EQUIPMENT bridge. th =~ WP TOOMTE BOOLETE PLAN men to “ride” tho @ Rast Ri \~ sequently the majority of them are ‘being forced to make the jong haul to the land dumps in Long Island City id that vicinity, This means an in- cfease in their plant to handle the longer haul, with ® corresponding in- crease in their charges to the hotel man and business man generally. There are numerous swampy and marshy spots in Manhattan and the Bronx the‘ filling up of which with hes-would help solve the problem, besides valuable land. avail- ablo where it is most needed. Com- missioner MacStay was asked re- garding thie feature of the situation, lied : ‘We have been doing that in the past wherever we could get permis- sion, and I want to say that if the owner of any land in Manhattan or the Bronx whose land needs filling of that sort will communicate with the departments we shall be glad to co- operate with h JAMAICA BAY NOT AVAILABLE AS A DUMP. Referring to a questioh as to whether it would not be cheaper to move city refuse by bottom-dumping scows to the Jamaica Bay fill than to haul it by truck to the Hunt's Roint land dump, the Commissioner declared that there was no compari- son in the cost of the two operations —the land 4 being the cheaper by far. He gaid that in order to handle ashes and refuse in the Jamaica Bay fll untoading machinery would have to be installed, tracks laid and men smployed at heavy ator, cost. This, e pointed out, has been read: at Hunt's Point, “sattcdgeend Asked if it was not possi®e to util." ize. the city’s street car system: in assisting in the rempval of ashes and other refuse at night, Mr. MacStay said that this idea had been tried out several yoears ago but had fafled to work. “The old question of ‘whete are you going to take the stuff? comes up. It has been suggested that the tracks of the New York Central along River- side Drive be utilized in this way as well, but there again, you have the same difficulty, Where are you going to dump the refuse and how are you going to load the cars?” The lack of a proper incinerator for the city garbage was pointed out to the Commissioner, and he was asked why the plant established by Major Woodbury under the Williamsburg Bridge, and which for a time was used in lighting the bridge, burning city rubbish, was discontinued. INCINERATORS MIGHT HELP, COMMISSIONER ADMITS, “It did not work,” he answered. “The flow of rubbish was not steady eigueh forcing the department to buy coal to keep the plant going so as to light the @ other incinerator whié the city built during the rule of Col. Waring as Commissioner, at the ‘foot of West 47th street, was burned dur-| ing Commissioner Featherston’s: time and never has been restored.” The Commissioner did not deny that such incinerators might be made to pay the city if properly handled. He was equally ‘confident that o rbage reduction plant such as the ity established on Staten Island under the direetion of Charles R. Van Etten, formerly in charge of the Bar- ren Island plant, would, if backed by at least one similar plant properly located, prove of enormous advantage in handling the problem of the city 4,000 cuble yards of dally garbage, “The chief difficulty ‘with thé Staten Island plant was that it was not big enough for the work it had to do; scows loaded with garbage were hung up for days and the garbage | 5; soured and became objectionable. Naturally, the Staten Islanders pro- tested.” ‘The main obstacle in the road of installing such plants, he went on to admit, lay in the fact that the city would’ not give long time contracts to the firms willing to construct such re- ducing pants. ‘ “Politica?” agked the reporter, “Well, the bigger the city the more politics there always is,” admitted the Commissioner, MACSTAY WANTS NEW DEAL, MORE EQUIPMENT, MORE MEN. MacStay admitted as well the dis- organization of his department, its need for modern equipment, its short- age of ctrage space and consequent depreciation in the equipment left ou in the rain. He admitted the condi- tion of the dumps, and the consequent falling down of the very vital ser- vice which the city expects of the d partment, “What's the answer?” he was asked. “A new deal,” he said. “We are short of men outside id short of of- fice help; we are short of equipment, and what we have ts antiquated. We need more men to handle the job’ ‘We need more machinery, more cart more modern equipment ‘all the way throveh, more garages, more stables. “I dpn’t say that garbage redu tion fants such as other cities use effectively could be made effective here, for our problem is w different oné, but it, could be vastly simplified if we were given tools of 1920 design to do this 1920 job." HOLDEN-STENGLE WEDDING, Nephew of Daughter of Sec Service Body, Miss M, Alice Btengle, daughter of Charles 1. Stengle, secretary of the Municipal Clyil Service Commission, was married yesterday to Major Nelson Miles Holden, M. D., by Deputy City Clerk Michael J. Cruise in the Munici- pal Building. Mr, arld Mrs. Holden will live at No. 63 Hflsey Street, Brooklyn. Dr. Holden ts @ practising physician Brooklyn, a nephew of Major Gen. nm A. Miles, retired, and vice presi- dent of the Brooklyn Medical Society. preceeded atl Steel Industry Chief Iq Dead. LANCASTER, Pa, May 4.—John 0. B. Dellet, forty-seven} Secretary of tne Pennsylvania Steel and Iren Corpora- | en—the department is not always le to have the scows on hand, nor lg-it always conventent for the cart . ton, died here to-day of apoplexy. Dei- let hogan hig career’ with the a tion as an office BLUEBEARD LEADS. SEARCH FOR BODY oF LAN VI Guides Log Angeles Officials to the Grave of Nina Lee Deloney. LOS ANGBLES, Calif, May Guided personally by’ Walter Androw Watson, alias James R, Huirt, al- leged bigamist and wife: murderer, Los ‘Angeles County officers to-day renewed the sedfch fh on isolated and desolate portion.of San Diego County for tho grave of Nina Lee Deloney, one_of five “wives Watson is said to havé confessed he killed. The start was made from El Centro, Calif., to which pomt Watson was taken from here late last night. Be- fore boarding the train Watson is- @ued through his attorney a long statement in which he reviewed the acts set forth in his alleged confes- sion ‘to the District Attorney and concluded with the query: “Is It reasonable to think my acts are the work of a sane man who was in a position to control himself or to understand, the risk of exposure hi ran?” | a‘ He described himself as ordinarily s‘tender hearted and easily moved to tears at the sight of sadness or di tress and ever ready to help relieve such condition,” and.working as best he could “to make the world better.” He said he had lived with threo wives at the same time in’Ban Fran- cisco and risked detection by escort+ ing tham to restaurants and theatres and had done practically the same thing in other cities. “I wonder,” he éontinued, “if the public cannot see the iqgical position of my case and instead off clamoring for revenge give my actions and men- tal condition just consideration? “My every act shows I am to be having developed into this strange and uncontsollable condition, for lam anything else but m} natural self.” In making the statement public, the attorney described it as his client's “unaided verbatim statement, writ- ten in long hand by himse}f.” WEAVER ROBBED NIGHT OF DEATH Pocketbook. Found Half-Mile From Auto Crash—Victim Had Been Drinking. * Basing nis theory in part upon the finding of George H. Weaver's pocket- wok yesterday in Bronxville, half a mile thom the scene of Weaver's death 1n his automobile, Coroner Engle de- clared to-day that the late Vice Pres!- dent of ‘the Remington Typéwriter |Company had been attacked and |rabbed. Wateh, chain and pocketbook were missing and somebody had begun to “strip” the car. ‘Weaver met his death early Sunday morning in White Plains Road when his automobile crashed into a tele- graph pole. | ‘The body has bee to his boyhood home in Roine,. N. ¥, Miss Helen Meier, twenty-two. of Bronxville, Weaver's companion Sa urday evening, says the; lwanoy Golf Club and later several roadhouses, At 1 o'clock, sire says, Weaver drove her home aud at about 1.30 headed for Manhattan. He had been drinking. Pes ain Sy Court Decides Girl While Seek! k. ‘The custody of Margaret Waibun, a seventeen-months-old child, which has been in dispute since last Palin Sunday, was to-day awarded to her mother, Leona Matbur, twenty years 81d, of No. 1326 Webster avenue, the Bronx, by Justice Mitchell, of the Bronx\Supreme Court. Mrs. Maibun, who became a widow in Left February last, left the child with her mother-in-law, Mrs, Josephine Maibun, of No. 908-Stebbins avenue, the Bronx, while she sought employment. When she went to get'the child the elder wo- man refused to part with it Hunt Wild Bears Near Poughkeepsie. POUGHKEEPSIB, N. Y., May 4.— Hunters are,now searching for two wild bears which invaded the village of Chelsea, near here, and caused a panic while the people were returning from church service. COST OF CLOTHING | UP 177 PER CENT. IN Living Expenses Advanced Cent, From Last November to March, 1920. Lf{ving costs in the United States, March ‘1, last, had increased 7 per cent. since Nov. 1, 1919, a report yesterday by the Natlonaf, Indus- trial Conference Board shows. Sinde July, 1914, the H. C. L. has leaped 95 per cent., the board re- porta, and within the last twelve’ months the increase was 21 per cent. Between July, 1914 and March, 1920, food gained in price 100 per cent.; clothing, 177 per cent.i she!- ter, 49 per cent.; fuel, heat, and light, 49 per cent.; and miscel laneous costs, 83 per cent ‘The information upon which these estimates were based was obtained from a survey of a large number of retail dealers in foo@stuffs and clothing and of brokers in touch with real estate conditions, vs Per pitied more than to be blamed for |. |Selling “Bread ' oi RGR Relief.9 t Jewish i | ‘The above photograph shows Miss Doroth of the Hotel Vanderbilt to aid the ca mps Sufferers. 0 Aid Fund War Sufferers i gn for $7,500,000, New York City’s quota for Wedding of Fannie Hurst, Secret for Five Years,. _ Is Successful ‘‘ Trial’’ _o & Author and Husband, in Love, | Live Apart and Dine by. | Appointment. ! Her secret trial marriage five years) ago to Jacques 8, Danielson, “con, | fessed” to-day by Fannie Hurst, au thor, om the eve of the fifth anniver- | sary, caused much comment among} friends of the couple, who have never lived together, parted thirty minutes after the wedding and have since maintained s¢éparate homes. The highest paid short story writer in America, however, says that the mar- |’ riage, which was entered into at) Lakewood, N. J., on May 5, 1915, on’ the understanding that it was to bo a twelve months’ trial, has stood the test, but ‘that sho and the pianist] will continue to live apart, maintain separate studios, keeping thelr own | sets of. friends and living their lives). just as they please, though they are| . very much in fove. f Miss Hurst says that she and her| MRS. 6) faugsoand will probably dine together | to-morrow night iA honor of the fifth! anniversary, but that he will have tu elephone her for the appointment. She came to New York from St. Louis and is now thirty-one years old, and sold her first story in 1913 after having had scores rejected. The story of her marriage to the Russian pianist and composer, who !s now forty-flve and was a few years ago a professor at the College of the City of New York, was told by Miss Hurst at her apartment at No, 12 West 69th Street. bs JACQUES S.DANIELSON FANNIE HURST.) pudding lies In the cating, and—well, ling. “Qne evening Inst week, I attended theatre with a friend, and fat, quite ‘by chance, next to my hu a party of his friends. And we were introduced to one another! “On these premi dust is still on the butterfly wings of ¢ adventure. The dow iv on the rose CAPTAIN CHARGES “Five years ago," vegan Missi} BROKER WON WIFE Hurst, “I found my youthful determl- | nation that marriage wa not for me) Tells in Suit for $25,000 Damages suddenly undermined ...... (the dots ; Ree ' ‘are Miss Hurst's) but my determina-| Of Gifts, Promises and tion that marriage should never les- Auto Rides. * sen my capacity for creative work or} ‘The woes of a naval officer, who, is pull me down into, a sedentary state! compelled to be away from home tor of fat-mindedness waa not under- | jong periods, are told in ‘a complaint in fan alienation suit for $20,000 damages yrought in the Supreme Court yester: i by mined, “Being firmly of the opinion that! ), nine out of ten alliances | saw about me were merely sordid endurance tests, overgrown with a‘ fungus of familiarity and contempt, convinced that too often the most’ sacred re- | lationship wears off like a pfece of | Waldo Vietor, Capt. mann an ance broker, Capt, Wo aston lived with his wife and ~year- e No, 216 high sheen satin damask, and in|2?4 five-year-old daughter @ a eow months becomes a breakfast | Manhattan Avenue. Whi was cloth, stale with soft bollpa egg ion duty, he charges, V! or ua stains, 1 made certain resolutidns con- | yarioug means! to win Mrs. Wojlas cerning what my marriage should not | |ton's affections, Among these were . be “We decided to live separately,| “gifts, promises, wines, provisions, | maintaining our individual studio-|automobile rides, a trip to apartin and meeting as per Placid by a igh powered motor car {clination and not duty ‘ 4 land other devices'’e “We cided that seve reakfasts | FO en ee ee . Vietor, the Captain attempted to “deprive z a week opposite one another mig In his absenc prove irksome, Our avers two, | “Wo decided that the him of is slate tl Ntediluvian' the comfort, sdciety, and assistance custom of a woman casting a t je is a gee renner: |hame that had becomo as mucha, Mis wife, and to alienate and of her personality as the color of “destroy her affection for him.” As eyes had neither rhyme or rea- gy result, he said, the affections of his 1 was born Fannie Hurst and: y w Namen Ellon tal’ ana die Fannie Hurst cided that the the child should yed Mrs, Wollaston, who was Miss Lola Sutton until she married the plaintift Ww event of | 4 offspring take the} paternal name until reaching the ag of discretion, when the final decision “We decided that, since nature so often springs a trap as her means to invelgle tWo people into matrimony, ¢ mnnounced to-day that Dr. uel will speak Thurs tated George: Earl we would try our marr age Or & year day afternoon at the home of Mrs, Phlitp and at the end of that perlod Ashion Tolling, No, 28 E:dst 78th Street quietly apart, should the venture on tne Memortal Day celebration in ove itself a Hability Instead of an France and the iplan to baautity th rounds where American suldiers ary et, But, of course, the proof of the Furled 3, in our case at least, after a five-year acid tert, the) ging Betty and @ pup in 1912, is 26 years old. Capt. Wollas- would lie with him. ton ts peveral years older, ' “My husband telephones mo for a ——_—_—__ dinner appointment exactly the sume! pe peautify American canta as scores Of other fricnds, I have the | Patel same regard tor Bis pine | The American Committee for Devas- | oft | in | ine. cabs are jand ten -, |CITY OFFICIALS’ C | WILL BE ‘TIN LIZZIES’ | Whalen Sounds the Knell of Limou- enough for the 1 sines and Their Waiting Chauffeurs. als, have contracted for “City officials will use them a taxi- If an official has to go jon city bughesas to some, remote place |one of the Fords will take him there We are going. to cut out tho waiting and the waste of the used, ve him, | time of $2,000-a-year chauffeurs. “M \ } | | | Jame 139, phy day Wollaston | insur- | | MORDORF Whalen snid the ee ILL AT HI pal Se: a. Re te Superini emt. had been submitted to Superintendent Ettinger. Dr, Mordorf has been acoused af hug- who 1s thirteen years old, at Public School No, 139. Ho ip at his home in Platbuah, under to: to nervousness cn aggravated by the present af- jan’s care. Mrs, Mordort that his tendenty ~~ TONERS TENE ARS voters of this town it Ix high time for oity oMcials to quit riding around In limousines with obse quious chatiffeurs ‘The answer is: Tin: Lizaies for city twenty-Nve Ford cars of the taxi type,” Mr. Wha- }ien said to-day. ‘They will be kept in the olty garage under the Brooklyn end of the Brooklyn Bridge, and when in service they will be stationed at the jeity taxl stand at the Munleipal Bulld- or xjty employees who need to ars Will have to do thely own driving.” Mr. esent fleet of limousines would tbe S HOME. | Papers in Case of Accused Princt- nolda, District Superin- we are announcing instead of annul-| tendegt of Schools in the Flatbush Dis | trict, said to-day the Statements of Betty Woolsey, her parents, and Dr. Oliver C. ha and | Mordorf, Principal of Public School No. Schoo! i P, Cais ONTHE GROUND OF GRUDE COLLUSION Most Flagrant Case, Declares White Plains Jurist in. De- ciding Mahlstead Action. (pectal to The Dreixing World.) WHITE PLAINS, May 4.—supreme Court Justice Tompkins declined to~ day to grant an interlocutory decree of divorce in the suit brought by Mrs. Heleno Mahlstedt against John F. Mahistedt because he found it to be the “cléarest and erudést of all col- lusive divorce cases” that was ever brought to hie attention. . Justice Tompkins also dismiased ‘the .com- plaint, Tho couple are sid to be proml- nent in New Rochelle, but for some unknown reAson the suit was brought in Rockland County. Justice Tomp- kins in his decision said: “Upon stipulation of the parties a referee was appointed. The refereo's Teport and findings now come before the court upon a motion made by the plaintiff for confirmation and ah in- terlocutory judgment of divorce in fa- vor of the plaintiff. No evidence was offered on behalf of the defendant. “[ have carefully read the testl- mony given before the refereo, and am convinced that this ts a flagrant case of collusion between the parties. There were four Witnesses on the part of the plaintiff, two of whom were de- tectives, neither of whom knew the defendant. Wie Wits! N PARENTS FOR CHL Declaré Antitoxin Could Hat * Saved Daughter of Chris-’ tian Scientists. " Dr. Richard N, Connolly, logist of. the City Moapital in was the first witness to-day in trial of Mr. and Mra. Andrew qbarged with manslaughter im- the death of their daughter Dorothy tha diphtheria, It is ‘alleged the neglected to provide medical attend, ance for the girl, They are for the Christian Science Church It is said Christian Science treated the gift. Dr, Connolly testified to-day that was practically impossible to treat’ GipbtheriA without the use of anti« toxin, “Prior to its introduction tm 1804", ho said, “diphtheria was looked upon Ag one of the most terrifying diseases © of childhood, but since the introduc~' tion of anti-taxin We have no fear ef teen Dr. Arthur R. Casile, Assistant Pas thologist at the City Hospital, tosti- » fled he made a microscopic examin- ation of the organs of the girl and found that parts of thom were de- stroyed. is my opinion thatyprior to F. fatal disease the orgam of tho c were normal because they bore ng scars of previous diseases, \* said’ Dr. Casile, He testified that the child * died of diphtheria. Benjamin Wein- Me J ekg + “It is obvious from the testimony given by these witnesses that it was planned and agreed in advante that they should all meet at the St. George Hotel.in Nyack aa they did meet, for the purpose of enabling the plaintit to get a divorce. cases before me during the pdst thir- teen years, but this is the clearest and the crudest of all” the J. Albert -Mahletedt Lumber and Coal Company of New Rochelle, one of the largest corporations of its kind in Westchester County. He is a ‘brother of J. Albert Mahlstedt, who Grover Whalen, Commissioner of] was at one time City Mreasurer of (Plant ond Structures, figures that, if] New Roohelle. Mrs. Mahistedt was rattle-trap jitney buses are good) Miss Helene Ro; of Pelham Manor. The Mahistedts have long been prominént socially.arid in a business way in Westchester. The defendant in the action iq a member of the New Rochelle Yacht Club and the New York Athletic Club. * ft hi ‘brothers married a’ daught Daniel Sully, the “Cotton King, other daughter of the latter having been the wife of Douglas Fairbanks, —— r $50,000,000 Farm Loans Held U WASHINGTON, May 4.--Farm ‘loans aggregating more than $50,000,000 have been, held up by the lUtigation over tie valedity of the Farm Loan act, ls de- vel to-day the conference of farm loan officials: here. T have had several other divorce |* Joho F. Mahistedt is connected with | Americanization bers ‘counsel for the Uefense, then * = > “What Is the use of all this teati> mony?. We will admit the child di of diphtheria, but we don’t say thal this. testimony is admissible pnder this indictment." ’ elie In Americantaat pus Now York State poste of ‘the American Legion will undertake @ big- campaign among the’ foreign born, starting Muy 16 and ¢ob- tinving for’ wo weeks, The Lexiah members wil) meet the foreign born at lana Park, and ideals of plained. Cone lard, Bt ee axise s . We were both fasci- natingly delicious.” Mace by SHARPLES, PHILADELPAIA CAN Peanut Brittle aim! Yum! Doesn't your nose just get * all crinkly with pleasure as you catch whiff Of these ' freahly roasted wetting of brown sugar? Molasses Peppermint Drops—Disks of pure Southern molasses artfully tinctured . with the sence of peppermint. The sort of Roody that you Just it At All Candy % MILI Lower Price” , pute and glimpse the Some treat! MILLER’; Youll telltheworlditis- Munch a piece of Auerbach Chocolate Marsh- mallow and when the taste of the smooth va- nilla chocolate mingles with the fluffy lily-white centre of creamy marshmallow, you'll say it’s good, and you'll tell the world it is, AUERBACH CHOCOLATE MARSHMALLOW ®. AUERBACH & sons, Lith Ave. 46th te 47th St, New Verk Dealers: If your jobber supply you write us for same of Auerbach jobber, ~ of the most delectable Mill Chocolate that bas made Mil- ler justly » Counters cannot Wve ey® pn |

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