The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1922, Page 16

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Rae cue nasene oo wet “You'll give me bad luck, handing me tht.” Apparently the complaint was & ® thdy walking along with a little pet I counted 37 empty confection boxes tf you witness « Ktrious aseldent, the euthreak of what threatens to bi amb, White and woolly and clean. t{and three camphor balls floating in the the CITY! EDITOR of The Bvening Wertd, awards ised 6 blue ribbon around Its neck and in Bronx Park a n — or rs yest onde ag ire oth og es BRONX. OUT.OF TOWN. Anne Elizabeth McCulloch, No. 400 Bast | were empty:—Henry Iisher, EXPLAINING THE MOB XOU saw ii # ; i i | ms amiling.—Stella BE. Wilison, eee, Acmis- ‘ommpicinaviiiv, THERE'S A FLOCK OF THEM IN o npoe at lt eli ee + Se Reet wm nee ‘HE EVENING WORLD; TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1929, ‘ “A FORD A DAY.” Special Additional Prize en for Contributions to This Page. OPEN TO READERS. Beginning Wednesday, Sept, 20, WEEKLY PRIZES. Regular CAPITAL PRIZES fer the Best Stories of the Week te Be Distributed Among Ti wn en Ke ee | wavsrran. | EVENING WORLD PAGE OF BRIGHT, UNUSUAL HAPPENINGS | “inn yBROOKEIN, TWO-DOLLAR BILL. M REPORTED BY EVENING WORLD READERS Duty called me late to-day to the neighborhood of Thames and whart whence the Coney Island A group of small. boys were giay- seller hand} ing banker and broker for sigar cow o to ba ly w. Greenwich Streets, Manhattan. The shades of night were falling. | make this news feature evem mre entertaining and interesting Special Prizes are awarded Daily and feckly. Sitting against the corner of a building I little barefoot boy. Sap Dales fe Sule tee every Toten pa teteds Gh prints ono in oditien Send them to “What Did You See?” Editor, Evening ra &@ building I saw a little bare! ppons om tho atepe of the: High ‘at {t doubtfully, SeNoet’ of Commmeroe, om Weer S50 ‘Tears were streaming down his face. 1 asked him why he was crying, Werld, Post Office Bex 186, City Hill Station. WRITE ABOUT HAPPENINGS IN YOUR QWN NEIGHBORHOOD. and between sobs be sald: “I was playing—and Jimmy shoved me in ope Street, as I passed the Dulléteg. Just then along came a conacien- the water-—and I got my shoes and stockin’s wet—and when I go pn YOUR STORY, IF POSSIBLE, IN NOT MORE THAN 125 WORDS, STATE WHERE THE THING WRITTEN ABOUT home I'll get slammed—'cause my Ma told me if I didn’t keep outa ¥ K PLACE. WRITE YOUR OWN NAME AND ADDRESS CAREFULLY AND IN FULL. CHECKS ARE MAILED DAILY. For the hest stories each day: FIRST PRIZE, $25; SECOND PRiZE, $10; THIRD PRIZE, $5.. TEN PRIZES of $2 each for ten next best stories. "| Hous young polloeman, who stopped ymon one, for the ticket woller, with-| {jov's Youne palcenam, one eee 7G, Hemtie tore them wp, remarking: that euch pastime twas a roorwiting: grownd: for gamblers, thieves and burplare in later Wfe.—J. H. Barnett, No, 188 Weat d6th Street. puddles she'd take the hide off me! Boo! hoo!” “But,” said I, “you haven't got any shoes.” “The h——1 ain't got no shoes,” he protested, “what's them?” * * * And I saw them, Ob, the sorriest looking Mttle shoes, lying on a grating over the boiler room of a big building, ‘The heat was noticeable. “I'm waitin’ for ’em to dry,” said the young man. There didn’t appear to be anything I could do, so I patted him on the cheek and left him.—HPllen F. Donoho, No. 92 Dean Street, Brooklyn, WEST 44TH STREET. On Broadway, near 58th Street, T saw KEEP OUR CITY CLEAN! 1G fire, er knew of any other BIG news story, telephone Beckman 4008 and sel news, GE SURE OF YOUR FACTS, kitten, The lady THE WRONG BABY. YANKEE LAKE INGENUITY, USES HS HEAD. Two baby carriages were standing in] The average cottage at Yankee Lake,| Sonny, who has just put on his first froat of an apartment house on Woney-| N.Y. la not very large and few hays iong trousers, used to preas them every with arages. vever, ‘ : well Avenue sleeping babies tn] ris aay which combined Its nace [aay to keep the crease sharp, Then i them, ‘The mothers ef these babies.| 125 and porch. ‘The porch was a rust {noticed he no longer pressed his trous- both of whom ltved In the apartment} supported by two posts. Under (t wisfers, although they were Went Sith st. saw tho following sign: to-@ny in fromt of a butcher shop. at Intervale GET YOUR COAL FROM WARREN HARDING! 3 Avenue and Freemar Street: “To-day To-day on West 75th Street I saw a huge pile of coal! om the |°y! Free! A bottle of port wine ur sidewalk. Beside it, with @ train of five toy coal cars, stood # Boy of as nicely cherry with every purchase. Cor: early!”—A. M. K., Bronx. i aboot five, his bands and face as smooty as if he bad been driving: house, were not on speaking terms, as| parked the automobile, and in the ma- | creased as . Ho refused to tell how 2 com cart alt day, “Coal for sale!” he was shouting “Conl for |‘S!OHT 48 WELL RO DEAD AS BEY wvory one in the bullting knew. A boy| ‘ine, using It temporarily as a porch, [se ayl it, but sald: “Find out. : : OUT OF STYLE” = were three young women.—Helen 7 did not knock es usual at bis sale!” Here's where you get your coal I asked the diminutive Or 14th Street to-day 1 saw @ wearer]! Dine: who also Hives tn the same] soran, Englewood, N. J. Lineal Som into hie: boos: A ake Goal dealer his name and’ he said, “Warren.” “Warren what?” sald 1. [of the latest styfo in okirte fo m plight. | hulaing. saw Ne coariagsn and with piled on a chair an efmy blanket, a a Her long was unmanageable e| oh sterred the babies, “Warren Harding,” was the astonishing answer. “Are you any Tels | rain, and as she walked along the hem| watched, amused, and waited to. sec tion to the President of the United States?” [ inquired. “Ayyuli,” |of it was wiping up her path on the what would happen. One of the women|day 1 saw a film which brought back |{Tousers, and that {s how 1 learned how said Warren, “Din his namesake.” Ho promised mo all the coal 1 |MUddy sidewalk.--Mrs. J. Sauertelg, MO. ea ie out and rolled her carriage dewn|to ine famllfar scenes of my childhood |¢ Keeps them creas Florence shall need—Mrs. Hugiy Brnst. No: 239 West 724 Street: es 2 habapimgilic ghee as tho: street. I followed! At 180th Stree'[days. It was of Cape of Good Hope,|C-, Stump, No. 219 Westfield Avenue, ‘ 3 HNO Bh : snr * sho met her sister, who discovered th: | South Africa. I saw Lion's Head, Table | "lzabeth, N. J. POOR MOTEL baby, belonged to the other woman. Im | Mountain (with {ts white table cloth Bi crsngieniees 9 Pr 3 ions vedfitely they ee it back of clouds), Devil's Peak and the Twelve THE ACCOMMODATING BABBIT. unusdaf noise in the street LT went/the qpartment house. The other car-| Apostles; the Promenade Pier with the iu bit from bushes ta the window and saw a sight that|riage was still there and they wer | statue of Van Riebeck at the toot offes t mes walling mions a road meas @ heurtnehe for same! mother: 2 Adderley Street, Cape Town, was under] Lafuycite, N.J., aod stopped in the mid- ‘Two: young men were 1g twp. girls construction when we left there aine} dk of the road some fifteen feet from homes and one of the girls wes unable years ago, and now I saw it completed | me, Seeing I had no gun but a camera to walk. Ler feet were dragging on Now they are friends again || saw Table Bay and the beach where he pored accommodatingly while | took the sidewalk.—I. M. Morton, No. 608}—May Van Pelt, No, 863 Hornadas|we lived for @ number of years;| his picture. Then 1 advanced to within Bagle Avenue, Bronx. Place, Bronx. Groate Schuur, the home of the late} four feet of him and again took a anap- : ‘ecil Rhodes, and the Rhodes Memorial, | shot, after which he scampered into the WHEN A FELLER NEEDS A THE CONVENIENT PILE. buflt among a thousand pines on the rae ry pai "“Smapiasen Margaret One day at Rockaway Beavh I heard a man say, “Here comes |™ountainstde. It was almost as good] Kracmer, . 208 Paterson Turnpike. asa trip back.—Miss N, Kerkhof, No | Nortn Bergen, N. J. 42 State Stryet, Hackensack, N. J THE VISITURS, PHOSPHORESCENT. A man dressed tn mourning knelt at} At Rockaway Beach last night mp fa new grave near the Biliott Street en- salt trance to Mount Olivet Cemetery yesters | °W° College chums and I saw day as I was leaving the cemetery after | Jllyfieh on the edge of the tide, glowing visiting my mother's grave. He was}as they were moved by the waves or smoothing the soi} and removing stones} touci i Jellyfiet And pebbles Beside him stood a girl] owereg bY our hands. | The of aiz holding a beautiful bunch of ly strong green lighty asters, The child pointed to the ground] Which was Interesting ft connection asked: “Daddy, ts that where] With the recent talk about cold light— mame and elster are?’ I saw the man| Edward Clausen jr., No. 731 Putnam swallow hard. Both man end child caw | Avenue, Brooklyn. me with their eyes but mot with thelr intnds, I am sure.—Mre. J. G. Scott, No. THE HAPPY JANITRESS. 219 Skillman Street, Brooklyn, To-day 1 saw our janitress made . happy by 4 letter from home. It began. BROTHER POPE DELIVERS, when she hung out a “For Rent" sign, To-day at the hole: where we were | Two Irish girls came to look at the bury Park I saw on | apartme Much to our janitress’s the menu, “Weakfleh a ia Pope.” | surprise and Joy she learned they came Everybody emiled, thinking we wers | from her oid home town and that they to be served with @ mow eauce, | had lived on the same strect anc knew . THIS TRIPS WORTH WHILE. Thon we heard one of the guests | her relatives. She wrote home; now she WORTH TRYING, ANYWAY, On the fifty-fourth"floor of the Weol-] telling a Mr. Pope that the fish he [has received a letter from Ler family, To-day I saw a boy om MeLean . | worth Building I came across on the} had caught was doltcious.—Anna T. |learned that she has a cousin in New BACK TO SOUTH AFRICA! box, and on top of the bo two heavy In a Hackensack pfeture theatre to-]Welghts. Under them all lay Sonny'e FRIEND. A boy fell from a’ second story win {lidow of a house: in Madison. Strevt near High Tide,’ T looked and saw a very tall, stout woman walking toward the water with @ pillow im her hand. She wore a bathing sutt that reached almost to her ankjes. Arriving at a pile under the bourdwalk, she placed the pillow on Avenue, near Jerome, trying to ride register the signatures of persons who] <forrtesy, No. 601 Tenth Street, York who is a dentist, has ¢alled on it and them sat on the pillow. She remsined in that postition until a houses dieagrtng) I watched him |had visited it and found they came not] #rookiyn. him, hag received the offer to mske her , when she awhile, @ did not aucceed and |Joniy (rom South Africa, Germany, Hong- a net of false teeth for nothing ind has tie water rose sufficiently to: wet ber, Eat nes, Sone Her another boy, to whom tha bicycle |ong. China, Valestine, Denmark and| THE OLD JOB HAS MISSED VOU.| learned that two of her eves are pillow and returned to her home. Wassing a guard’ she sahil, “the belonged, demanded his dike.. Hy | Havana but also—and not the least of| y saw a clear blue sky and the aun| coming to New York. She, is indeed a water was high to-day; I had a fine twth."—Margaret McCauley, No. did not soem to think much of the .|them elther—from New York City.—| shining down upon hills and valleys| happy woman.—Mrs. ©, Ww. Brehn, No, atunt.—Edwin R. Waldron, No. 105 ..' Mra, D. B. Bracker, No. 21 Bayview] that were pleasing to the eyes. 1 anw| 120 First Place, Brooklyn. 439 Hast 135th Street, Bronx. Lee Avenue, Yonkers. Averiue, Jersey City, N. J. cattle grazing peacefully on the hill» and here and there a horse or (wo I|HORSE KNEW WHAT IT MEANT. NO WONDER PEOPLE STARED. aw tempting brooks and cool woods} Early this morning I heard a mille I was waiting near the entrance to a New York store to meet a jand bye yom Lhd Jersey ee wagon in the atreet and looking out 1 people in increasing numbers soon] saw the driver come out of a house, friend. A smartly dressed young woman stopped near me, appar |, skyscrapera of Manhattan. —Look- ca..:d to the horse, “Giddap!” But ently for the same purpose. People who passed stared at her fect, ing backward In my mind's eye I saw] the horse didn't move, He. called again, some with a puzzled expression, others smiling. Presently her friend | {Wo Dleasant weeks now gone, andfand still the horse didn’t move. “Do fe looked ahead and saw fifty weeks of|you want me to come over there after arrived and rushed up to her exclaiming, “Your garters are mighty | rush and rumble to’ come. I was on a| you?" called the driver with a threat good looking, Peggy, but why park them on your ankles?” She had ‘West Shore Railroad train returning|in his voice. The horse picked up his slipped them down and forgotten to remove them—Mra, William | 0.77% yarstion at Xoungnviio. W-| oars, jooked at the driver ang sou [ YOU CANNOT BLAME BUREE‘ON, To-day I received a picture postcard from i friend in Roscoe, N. Y., deplet- ing @ Poene, supposedly in Roscoe from the printing on the card, which was when suddenly it Began spat. | exactly @uplteated—save for the print- ingeon a@ card I had recetved a few onats: tering rain and the man, eviden ought same, for he at days before from a friend in Valley removed ‘iret ont, | Stream, L. I. Roscoe and Valley Stream SPAPTERING. Thia morning, om 724 Street, just tweat of Broadway, I saw a well- dressed man wearing spats. I was thinking it was wnusual weather for | : thew the athor and gue fare more than 150 mifes apart.— No. J ‘. Brooklyn. c 1a 1s AQaINsw THE LA With tare las peinee pores dope. Lares tan, he tae at], ByFe. Mo. 89 Unton Street, Montclair, N. J. Street, Brooklyn. Bainbridge Street, Brooklyn: Sok ates of bacon Seeet Gimyereie: meena) 2 bee nue, Bronx. WE DIDV'T RECEIVE ONE. SCHOOLHOY COP ON Jon. A WILD NIGHT IN PATCHOGUE. & gil of fue in the Bours YOWVE N@ IDEA HOW SOOTHING as I saw on Pler D, Jersey City, twenty-} At Springfield and Fairmount Ave-, I had occasion to he in Patchogue recently and was caught in a They work wnusmally quict IT 1s. DAD AND HIS BASEBALL ‘MKAM./one watermelons consignog to news-|nues, Newark, I saw one of the Juni storm. I determined to plough my way home somehow, although it time, and whew I mvestigated I net te: hird Ab I saw to-day in the Grand Qentra in New York, Eaci_melon| Police of the Cleveland Junior High : s ia found: both Iemocling before Ph gh a engaged Inf Station a, father, a mother ang nine Meats a #! eed fa ie oR B | Schoo! tn operation yesterday, ‘Thelr| was nearing the mystic hour when graveyards yawn, and seated in Wetie had, thetr ‘push all boys, was to ® round, galvanised tron’ tub! purpose is to see that schoolboys op-| my trusty flivver I set out upon @ and lonesome road wih onl; ctaaped and. tere posed a) me Wie onside fn end. to: an eee et haby were dreamed: al pucked with excelslor. The gross weight | erve rules at street crossings and to] ek edie pa ehesdeapd Ma rete 2 gel eit abalpien pod marry em—rs. Bierman, Wo, Netinnt me € fo cuit a child: butfewch was a# neat as a pin. dest | of each Ff ag _| “arrest” or “summon” those who do . It was West 228th Street, va ad af Ae ha peacoat Ret pens boy told me he wan thirteen years old Pree ae igen ar es cio ne he not. | Two boys started to “hitch’’ on an} The trees gave the highway an eerle appearance. Suddenly, just as & UNDRESS REHEARSAL. fret carthare painless wig dh peta ce eatin goons pared express charges averaged $3.50 each.| War nauinped with badgenand a Sash of lightning Slluminated the roadway ahead of me, I saw.e tall ‘There ts @ radiator close to my bed! and when I awoke om Sunday | fast 180th Street, Bronm on @ vacation to Pennsylvania. Tt war] T@eY Were shipped from Fort Worth, | grabbed them and made them give their} ghostly figure a few feet in front of the machine and at the same Tex. by A J. Carter of the Star- The ci a wonderful sight to see them Itned uy : pam he customary school sentence woun t®.. on the bench and fully 200 peopl. | Tclesram, and on each tub was paated| tor each offence js an order to write a| ‘ime @ walling nolse broke upon my ear. 1 am not, by any means, @ stopped to look at them.—Mra. J. G. Hee 2 ee powspapers | sentence many times, varying with the} believer in ghosts, but let me tell you I felt cold chills, The gure Ee See Aries. Reser, No. 75 SkiBman Avenue, Jersey City. | aie ar Dien Avene moved toward me—and I nearly collapsed. * * * It proved to be a g Newark, N. J. woman, caught tn the storm a mile or two from home. Hers had ~ been the ghostly “walling.” She was terrified by the lightning. 1 drove AN EFFICTENT SIGN. & window flower box that I noticed TRE CHARMED ROOSTERS. hold the dail and not to look at the|tnst spring outsile a ground floor win-| Some saore of young Leghorn roost- A SUBWAY PICNIC. camera, The camera was an empty|tow of an apartment house at Jerome | ers standing in a circle gazing faediy A young man and two comely young her home and, having had enough of night travelling tn Patchogue, biscuit box.—Mrs, J. A, Daly, No. 2085]Aven@e and 18tst Street bore a eard-|%t something in thelr midst in one women sitting on newspapers on} Was glad to accept her invitation to remain until morning.—Mary ‘Tiebout Avenue, Bronx, bourd sign, reading: “Danger—Polson |‘he poultry runs on a farm near here| the uptown platform at the Manhattan| Costello, No, 2665 East 18th Street, Brooklyn. —— Ivy.” pat no heed to me as 1 approached. | street subway station to-day as I watted . DIFFERENT IN THE BRONX. To-day [ noticed the flower box|leshorns usually are timorous and I for a train. Between them, also resting Threo whippet tanke passed ma min, ‘The sign had. been removed and}saught a reason. ‘This I found in thelon newspapers, was a luncheon, include tle evening at Broad-vay and 179th [beautiful asters and dghlias boomed in| object of thetr attention. It was aling a thermos bottle. They were as Streck. They made a terrife note tho box. As I passed the comer T|striped snake, which appeared to have | thoroughly enjoying their picnte. lunch and attracted the attention of alt |heurd one qhil@ say to another: “Don't |charmed the fowls. I sought a stonefas if they had been beside a woodland within sight. The tanks carried mg | touch ‘em: one'# poison ivy.” ‘Then thefand when I returned the snake was|stream—and as oblivious of other per- mind back to Mlanders whera wo. [purpose of the warning sign becam}goue and the roosters seemed relieved. | sons on the platform.—G. C. Gorman, saw 60 many whippete rumbling BH. D,. 2ttt Anthony Avemue,|—E, B. Edwards, Stony Wylde Farm,}Box No. 5, Highwood, N. J. along over the muddy roads that wa Cueknwish cena, pore a habe ed nil hag BUSY LITTLE BEES. re . itevenson, No, 0! = , rome. ; = a T was in an old apple orchard at Cos Speen Crees Sine: ns gant 3 ; | }Cob belonging to a well-known news- GAMBLING IX BEEF. ; ee ah paper man to-day. T saw an aged tree As L was watking on Crosby Street, near Howard Street, @ cat that had. either jumped or had beon thrown from an upper window, land~ © _ r os which bore a fair sized crop of apples. “COME TO BEAUTIFUL BEAUFORT- RUDDER. ee ve ee aeemeaee sem sient} Ge the Mott AvennG mer ey ee ae { remarked about it to the owner, who VILLE.” At, the Nelodrome last ntsht a fellow Ihlanded.omite fovt, of cowree, but all | ‘0 Cny, eahng oes ; 4 | told me that the tree was @ great sur-| A group of tittle boys whom I saw|sttting next to me y: maelf hoarse it of the} {4 ls appeared to Reve been |world’ gambliy oe. oe Till prise to him. “I started to cut it down * i for Danny Lee. When Lee Wao given Broken ae it rolled on itp Buck and | wagering from 50 conta to a dollar they last year," he said, “but my wife per- busily at work on Beaufort Street, mewed. Tho foline’s wails grew Pcould get their money back from one Bh suaded me to let it stand. I put bee| Queensboro Hill, a suburb of Flushing, fainter gnd farther apart. Then, |of the soulem that return your penny ‘ 4 ‘ : hives under it and I believe that Its} reminded mo strongly of come of the dure ond Senmwam hiend postin’ cuts | 0 Wee, Fists ui ence nance in_0 Cae ANSE bearing again is due to the bees carry-| modern adult builders. ‘The boys were RM gsr food pti ‘itm tte remain- | few minutes.—II. Michael soms on it.""—Erwin Edwards, Green- }constructing @ house from a packing box ing cight lives stato a halleay.—Bd- | Croston Avenue, Bronx. wich, Conn, and In roofing It had placed the shingles THEY ALL Do IT, ward Lester, No, 79 Columbia Strvet, ; . on upside down. When I called their On my way to work in Maspeth Yesterday’s Special Prizes CHARITY MADE DIFFICULT, attention to the mistake, the leader of} this morning J saw a young woman WUT WHAD O68 HOTRER OATT fot aly si Last January I sent two parcels to ‘a lad of seven years,| in front of P, 8. No. 78 pacing up I was walking, Li hoy Street near PREPARE IOI LOLS, my needy relatives tn Russia. They | replied: "1 and iets saben a rhea pout reowriey orden ene: Om @ Staten Island ferry boat this First Prize, $25 contained shoes, rubbers some} to sell the house. would break, I aske: could ae~ by @ piercing scream. I sew a little boy cow of dizcurded ELIZA BEY 0 > x = warm underclothes, come of them being} Highland Avenue, i sist her, and between her sobe she hid Thee toast marrounded by paper | morning T saw sixty pieces oi ELIZABETH GORDON GROSS, No. 72 Lawrence Street, Flush- e \s Ha Agi vig Season touareg add od’ broten glass, his face dripping red, | Newing gum on « floor space of etx. by ing, L. I. . worn. To-day I received a letter say y the decision he rushed for the dressing Wrap Pett rooms like mad. Then another, man told me the fellow who yelled s0 was Danny's brother.—Mac Jacobs, No, 9806 Liberty Avenue, Ozone Park, L. I, H we wi D ‘. i—his firet day there—and that ight feet.—J. M., ‘est New tng that the things had come, but they THE 6QUASH TREE. echoot- . and believing him badly burt I rushed |® vd regis fhe: Ae tMaking of goimg bach te ‘o him with the erowd which gathered| Srighton, 8. 1. Prize, $10 were refused delivery of them at thé! In our garden to-day I took a look at ah eee: ny pA RL by ilar pee iyi T. A. BROWNE, No. 49 Hamilton Street, Stapleton, S. I. fee es to: Base 06/186. 000,000 our oherry tree, mnleh ve Watch cach | tee ane theeohis ho sovd, of baby Thir. Prize. $5 mother reinted the rest of { However, Treeetved a pleasurable shock, | growing up cnd leaving ner.—Awna MES. R. F. WATKINS, No. 79 Washington Avenue. home without the parcels and the roed| for, hanging gra from a branch.| McDonald, No. ee Ashiand Ave-~ E this time seemed so rough and bare.|/ | saw three yellow things. Could our} 40, Kichmond Hill, N.Y, Ten Prizes o $2.Each and our bare toeg showed more boldly| dreams have come true? Was our be- eae J. C LONG, No. 49 Bast 49th Street, this Ume than in all the seven years loved tree bearing fruit? It was, but MOTHER AND SON. JOSEPH HIRSCH, No, 52 Bast 1alst Street. we have gone without shoes. So please, | not what I at Grst thought. Our next) F102. my kitchen to-day I suw my G. H. FORBES, No, 22 Sighth Avenue. child, send us the amount of the tariff,| door neighbor has a garden of vegeta-| 1’ Leienbor approaching thelr ew ROSE ADLERSTFIN a: which {s about §25 in American} bles and @ vine had twined Itself} 0Cl.. “on which ber husband und son, MN, No. 71 Orchard Stree! money."—Mrs. F. Rosoff, No, 721] around our cherry tree, From it hung - hivty, were work- HELEN T, BYRNE, 73 Broo! Brot the latter a man of thir MRS. J. PULVER, cag 3 ye thalg- honed Boulevard, Bayonne, N. J. three lovely squashes.—Mrs. Harry J. eT coche ran ease his mother E a Union ue, Bronx. y MARY LOUISE SCHMAUK, No 275 Mariberough Road, instany. A men ran for a doctor— another man knelt to wipe the litte} 4 MOPION FICTURT: REMARK- chup's face, when suddenly he sat up ABLE At the Liberty Theatre in Stapleton I saw a screened picture of two of our baa | Siniey. 4) carriage. t depicted the toaugural pa- cath Celia tdew © wip che ; rade of 180%, Moifinfey hie hat . siom 10 Cents.” 7 Venu ing. APPLE THIEVES ee, HS 51 W. Fillmore Avenue, CO | it ecco Lighted up with happiness and TH seven years WIL oe ve. ing lis tools, he took her called “scalps” hi A boy of amused some of LIAM H. MILLOR, Ne. 196 &h Street, Brooklyn. Roa bane seuten ter henna por, PAGE »_] in fia arma ana hised her ender, fats "eeme along. Totten) wenasiow saetion MISS L. MARTIN, No. 182 Lexington Avenue, Brooklyn. When arraigned before the Justice the| tm front of a Fifth Avenue shop near| father Bie oone e ouse Fesee ‘avon, te when wae spy ie HARRY LARSEN, Topographical Bureau, Municipal Building, boys were fined $2 each. Thelr mother, | 37th Street to-day I saw a woman show | M008 Ui Oo i, Gate cee ‘gang set upon them, he tn @ loud votes for a can Long Island Cit . J however, refused to pay the ne. ‘This Joy at meeting two friends from her old] and talking an) Inuahing, stead ey each grabbed “ of} sera 4 pi LE! Sees aaa perplexed the Judge and he was un-[home town. She was so surprised and | linked. | t tholiX Oe 0 tit | stead they each gri decided sbout how to proceed with the} delighted that we ali shared in it ae Seah cassmaned wate o Read to-day’s stories, Piok the enes you think best. cave when my friend offered to Scinged: oven’ thin seem lke mother, unaahamed Bete more of the torial (Green Sheet) edition and in editions to-morrow. lecture and praised my friend for his}“And don't you just love anybody fron Sothee gk te cea s Eaton’ Weare Pe oe . reverosity.—John V. Riley, No. 202 New| Cinctnnati?"—Mary K. Hannon, No. 407 bin, akin Street, New Brunswick, N. J, Brevoort Street, Richmond 1 YX FOUR WEEKS.--SPECIAL PRIZE---BEGINNING TO-MORROW : - - a ties ' -

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