Upload
ngotram
View
215
Download
2
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
25,000 GET IN SNAPSHOTS THE LINE OF OF THE SUFFRAGE PARADE, PARKTo left, Mm. Leonard Thomas, the standard bearer of the Inter-national
to right, Mm. Herbert Carpenter, who headed the New York State Malcolm Duncan, bucking the wind at the Flatiron Building corner.Woman Suffrage Alliance; in centre, the pupil of the Florence Woman Association. Below, Mrs. C. C. Bauer and Mrs. They ure one of the International Alliance banners.
LINE FOR MARCH Fleming NoyeR School of Dancing, carrying a large American flag;
OFSUFFRAGISTS TILFORDI Oil , II, if lOlll h'l' Ml I
rearhina Fifty-nint- h street srlth the headin parade, nin- started to rush down
io Washington goners .utnm?or hnir the marcheni lime left
An i. h aid "TM streetstanked ith litem, i m told, I'm
gown in nee arhat's happening."Later the mid thai thousands
Women hail been compelled to droplajfurr h rrllni "They nnd to hometo "Ml. their hualiantfa' ilinnrr nml toinn"!' their babies," she Mid,
i Ipfnr at VBJMMiMi- - William Colt, who marched with I
me i MiiKrsnniil rnion ,r...i shann ju tired wait. in' for ,i chanee tonit I tin I he tiiouKiii of i.iklnjt a
Mouse iiermanentl) si WashingtonSiUll I','
l thought we could neve, start," sheKiel. "Fifteen Mute that were to
mart h Willi u had tn leave to catchtheir trains.
it was .i gay and brilliant Mens atWashington Square when the parade '
tartcd ti forai, albeit s somowhal '"on- -film ,1 one ltrt on the ground almostwere l.noo New Jersey Women, gay andfull of hope iiK thntic-- they hadn't Justbeen defeated at the polls
Inspector Schmlttbarsjer ami Capt.Pfculkner, witii a number of patrolmen,were there to keep order, but the), hadan easy time. The only . OfffUOtOfl ''antefrom the fad that (Irand Marshal Ktheltftcbbitu b aids didn't ihow up until Justbefore starling time. The twenty-eigh- tcountries which belong to the Interna-tional Alliance were represented by 311Women, marching twelve abreast, but un-
til their badge" arrived some of themdidn't know whether they were i.ermsn.French, African or Swedish.
"Will some one please tell me whetherI'm an Kngllaliwoinan or a Belgian? It'sone of tlie two. but 1 can't think which."tagged Miss Jtosalle Jones.
Parade Movee en Time,All the same, every thing was straight-tie- d
out and On the stroke of 3 o'clockthe parade set out, l.lcut. William C,Kgan nml eight mounted patrolmenlauding the way. Most of the hOrOeO,Laleut. Bgatl said. Wei Miiflfraitettes,Imviug marched In previous par, ides forthe cause. They acted as If they
it and pianced to themusic of the Seventh Regiment band,which came directly after. On eachaide Of Mrs. Thomas, with her banner.Were two women carrying the colors ofthe Kniplre Stale campaign committee,yellow, blu and white, interwoven in
large banner with the shield of N'ewTork State on the front, lira, MalcolmDuncan and Mm. Charles Hauer wereon the right, Mrs. Jewett Minturn andMrs. J, A. F. Clark on the left. Mrs.Clark announced proudly thai her grand-father. John Blgelow, "cine out forWoman suffrage fifty rears ago,"
After Mrs. Thomas marched Mrs Cut.all alone, and behind her the nuard ofhonoi. Miss Uose Young, Miss tlraceCUtklns, Mis. Marie Jonhey Howe andMrs V H. Fane Then came the 33i,With thel bannen held bravaly againstthe unkind Wind
"King Albert of Belgium favor- - otesfor women.' Australian women havethe hallo!,' "Queensland women vote.""Kioit i ia was the tirst in the world topas-- a nw foi najmnn suffrago, In ISfl"ituestrelcbtecher Komlte fur PWgUMIggsmrorht, ' wtie some of the iuscrip-ttO-
on toe banners In all the tansusget of the earth they proclaimed theadvance women have made In the vari-ous countries In gaining the vote, andscattered thiougti the division wer,sinners (taking : "Women vote in Aus-Mil-
why not in New Vol a"" and"Women vote a twelve Western States,shy not Hi New York?"
i)ne of t!e prettiest features of theWhole line, and one of the few spectac-ular ones, was the "living Hag" repre-sent, ig the twelve enfranchised StatesMrs. Winston Churchill, Mrs. i:rrettColby and ten other women, chosen fortheir height and beauty, marched in arow, each with an arm resting on theandulder of the next, (in their headswere golden helmets, and BWlnglllg fromtheir should-- s were long while capeslined with the stars and stripes, chcarried a white plastron with the nameof the State sji' represented. Beforethem walked Mlsa Florence FlemingJloyes, dressed to represent Liberty, andjurying i miniature torch jus: Ilk thatof the lady on Bedlow'a Island. Afterthem came another huge banner asking:"Women vote .n these States, why not
la New York
nr. abas Walks lloee,Ttui nothing, after all, in the National
wopian Huffrage Association, of whichthe "living "ig" was n part, broughtoo many sigtis of approval from thonlookers as did Dr. Anna Sh.nv, t .e
presiden' of theassociation, walking "11 alone In herOHege cap and gown
After the "national" cams the XewTork State Woman Suffrage Aasoi
led by Mis. (tsrbert Carpenter Inthe niosi ehlc of fashion ibb whitefrowns, and no one. isolng her MarchingWith her head gallantly upright, S'OUldhitve guessed that site - tia grandmother of two young guffmgettes, :i
number of grandmothers marched yssterday, hj the way.
Mrs Harriot Si, u, on Ulairh and MrsH. O. Havemeyer, both grandmothers,walked ai the head of the Women's Po.lltlcal t'nlon division, and .Mrs MarthaWentworth Huffrau, also a grandmother,vrulkcd with the board of (he WomanHuffrage part) A few grandmotherstfOtgnad to ride, among them Mr Holier:Ingersoll and Mrs Henry I'hlpps, whowere In an automobile but meal of themfollowed tlie example of Dr. AnnaHoward Shaw, who is a great nun' ifnot h grandmother, ami walked
lie. hittv fioes oil FttWti
Pr Shaw not only wulkod all the wa.,-t-
Fifty ninth street, bul reviewed thephi i of the procession that came after.'iKiugh she was due to speak ,,
o'clock at tlie Academy of Music InBrooklyn The Hotel Plata manogemant
tllOUghl ir loo hail that the Suffrage leaderla standing, and en' out a
leather covered chair for her use. hutshe disdained i: By her side stood Mi s.lcni V'lllard, a grandmother, who had
marched all the wa)Ill- Shaw, standing on 'he edge of the,
crowd near tin- big stone fountain ere ledhere by tlie late .1 I'lerpoi.i Morgan,
kepi waving a green palm a: the march- -
ing hosts of women, and calling outgreetings to them.
"It is hard to hold the banners, bulIt's harder lo get the vote. ' she called,when the wind took one of ihe banners
ight out or Miss uharlotts lllgbee'shands
"''old '" she repealed, after some onewho asked her If she liadn t hotterleave and go home before atie got pneu-monia "Wlio could gel cold on a dayilk.- - Hilar'
"Don't iliiin ', Portia" she cried outfn Poftta Willi--- , who as one of Ihe mar-shals walked near the group of duncing
iris, yioranco Fleming Noytw'i pupllawho carried a big Hag.
By and by she consented to sit down,but when a group of colored girls Inthe Twenty-firs- t Assembly districtnaMhajd past she rose.
"Dh! must get up for tlie coloredgirls." shs cried II was OSS I B o'clockwhen she Hnallt left Mrs I', hi hiftone soon after aching the plana
wtthi'ut waiting foi ihe tableau whloh
took place there at r, The symbolicfigures who rode on the big float nearthe load of the parade Victory (Mrs.Philip Bolteau), Equality, Justice andvat ions other-- , grouped themselves atthe foot Of Hie fountain while twentybands which had marched played "Thestar spangled Banner."
Illu llati Ma pclier.The Woman SutTi mo party furnish, d
most of the numerical strength of theparade. Assembly uisinci after Assem-bly district they came, plainly dressed,carrying few large banners, but fasclnating the imagination by sheer num-bers. The occupational groups were alsolarge. I'hief among these was themunicipal employes, i,-- by KatharineBsment Davis, Commissioner of Cprreclion, Largest of ail was the teachers'section, j.ooo strong, Led by Misstlrace atlas Rlithrlne l
lllnke and other oflh ers jif the teachers'branch of the fdtnplrs state Committee,they walked along, very quietly dressedranged in close ranks. "We educateyour children, why may We not Vote'.'"their banner demanded, a,ni mors thanone ntUorullne onlooker a knowledgedWith II nod the justice of tlC plea.
Many a round of applause followedthe women of the Bqual Franchise
up the line, lust because theylooked so well and inarched ho adnurably A large number of them were inwhite with the blue Insignia f the so-
ciety from shoulder, ami they made oneof tlie prettiest sltowa in the lino. Mrs.John Blair carried the banner, and Mr-- .Howard Mansfield, tin president, walkedbehind her Other women In this divi-sion were Mrs Archer Huntington, Mrs,Hgerton I.. Wlnthrop, Mrs. Victor d
and M.-- .- Clara D. 8pence,The New Jersey women we;e anothM
impreaslve section Hot that thoymarched better than the others, but the.rpluck appealed to the crowd. Bwrywhite in their Rne their biinners ss,keoptindsnt, "Delayedi but not defoatedi"was the louden of tln-- Cuiiouglyi theylel'i 1: for the New York women to re-
mind u nosikei i by bannen thai"President Wilson approves woman suf-frage "
Mrs a I' Felekerti head ef the NewJ,rs. state Association, and Mr-- . MlnaV i, Winkle, head of Ihe Women's Pol.tlcal I'nlOll OVr there, led their re-
spective divisions,
Iteil Undue on le.Uasl of all after the labor a?omsn,
after the goclallsts who would piosistin weaiing the rid badges after thlast of th utuitlonal groups, came iiiepatient men. sho had stood ihtverlniIn the cold at Thirteenth street, wait-ing for heir turn to fall in, from 3o'clock until l:tO There were about1,000 men in line, led by .lames LeesLuidlaw, William .i MclilehTelin, QeorgMiddietou and other faithful friends oftbi ise The got remarkably fewJe.i- - from he watching thousands,which wa.--. ,n contrast l . former
parades, wh u the nu n were thebutl 'f Ihe sidewalk wit
Taeie wen dose to 1,400 children inline, Th;- - was l:i d.re.-- t opposition lotin- wishes of i iii. parade ,'ommlllee,which, mindful of ths criticisms of thsUltiS, tiled to lie,, (he lltlle Olli H OUt.
'Hut a largs 'ion,. ,,r Washington Irvingiiiga school girin insisted ,,u marching,and witn i n- Women's Political Cnlonsection which started ,n tlm lower MasiSide and fell n at Twentysi'eond street.were null, linrriot lllatch de Forrest,Hetty H..i s and about twenty otherchildren ,,l off! ers and members,Youngegl in iiic wa Pearl Hg'liaevlts,sgrd I year and ,; month.-- , who rodeIn a iiower trimmed baby carriage pushedby her moiher
Many sultrsge Hags decorated simpand houses along the w a) Collls rHuntington's home ar Fifty-Seven-
street was decoraitod Willi yeliow pen-nants and a group of faces watchedfrom the windows FfOm 'be HollandHouse windows handful of yellow biossoma were hung down on the marchers,and from other hiilldlngs came
of yellow ribbons. One busi
Bi jj
ness house just below Forty-thir- d streetwas placarded with banners demanding"Justice, BqualHy," and a big whitecard labelled "Sisterhood."
Many lltlle yellow pennants wavedfriendly greeting from the thousands onthe sidewalks. And even those whocarried no pennants and made no signat least refrained from crim Ism NearForty-secon- d street a group of your.g-ster- s
were offering pennants to the crowd, hut nobody bought,
"How much are they''" asked a man"Nothtn' at sli ' p.ped one of the
vendera,Hut the man wouldn't accept one at
thatThere were 1,010 bandsmen in th-- '
parade, but the group of professionalwomen were loo sior to afford oneSo the 'musicians and artists" sang tokeep them in step When they reachedForty --second street, after sunset, theyw. r.- singing "It's a Long Way to Tipperary" in heartfeft tones
EAST SIPE HAS PARADE.I
l.reat Tllrunu I heers Woiiiell'M Po-
litical I itlon on FWOti
The attitude of the Baal Side in re-
gard to suffrage is a debatable UcHtiO!l.
tint II cannot be denied that the peopleof Unit section are Interested In thesubject The sidewalks of Second ave-nue from Houston street to Twentysecond street were jammed from curbto hous.- Mm- with men, women and chil- -
dren yesterday afternoon eager to sectin- Ural suffrags parade
In past years If the dwellers In thatsection wished to sei' a parade th, y hadto go over to Fifth avenue, but thisyear the Women s Political Union de- -
Ided I" lake their parade over to theHast Side
After an hour and a half of franticmarshalling, while policemen held thetoo eager crowds back, the paradestarted from Houston at reel with anImposing squadron of about fifty horsewomen, or "cavalry-women,- " as ihe suf-fragists refer to tlnm, led by Miss Lea.he Johnson Thus, riders Impressed theHast Sile. Simultaneously with theirappearance comment in a dogen differcnt tongues slatted among the specta-- Ilor nld men wiih long gray beards,women in shawds and sweaters with,babies in their aims, prdlers. and gaylydressed young men ami women celebrating their holiday gazed in amase.mem at Ihe eight Maiiv of them hadnever seen a Woman on horseback before.
A warm reception gOS given to the8,000 women of the various sections ofthe Women's political t'nlon who foilowed on foot All of the women worepurple white and green s ami theeasy air ot confidence with which the)swung up the avenue in step and inperfect alignment brought cheers fromthe crowded sidewalks
Many women of in,. Kn Kidsmarched ill the parade, some taking
' their children along. The van "Winner(" which has been used extensivelyfor Street meetings, was at the end ofthe parade
PICKPOCKET IN THE CROWD.
Police iili Man In the Jam atTblrtt-foiirl- h Street.
Whlls throngs were watching thesuffrage parade In front of the Waldorfii'ilenl.iy PeteOtlVSfl I'nssassa and llav-no-
noticed a man take from (he pocketif Mies Naomi Ulnaburg of fiHH Many
avenue. Brooklyn, a sliver vainly eggsfussassa ran after the man, who wasL'aughl in a Jam at the Thirty-fourt- h
I reel crossing. While he was running'ia nor saw the man throw away apoi'kolbook, The vanity caee was foundhi his pockel
At PollOS I leadiiua ters. w here acharge ol grand larceny was madeBgalnsl him. tlie man said he was 1'asuunle Orlottl, U years old, a designer,living nt 711 I0a.it 183d etraet.
THE SUN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1915.
TAKEN ALONG MARCHSuffrage carrying
and
Jsi
1,650 UNFLINCHING MENIN SUFFRAGE PARADE
Two Judges and Other Men
After Waiting NearlyTheir Zeal
The enthusiasm ot . onuo 1.5' mensuffragists was put to the supreme testyesterday afternoon. It was nearlythree hours after the appointed meetingtime that the luudnews men's division,which marched last In the big votes forwomen parade, aWUItg Into Fifth ave-nue from We..: Thirteenth Street Allthe tune a stiff brsogs was blowing upreally wintry weather, but not a man ofthem wavered in Ills devotion to thecause. in this Unflinching band wereJustice Charles L, lu. Judge WilliamII. Wadhatna, President Henry Moekowits of the Municipal Olvtl Rervlos 'om- -
mlaslon, Comptroller William A, Prenilergast, Frsderla C, Howe. UnitedS'ates Cominlaalonor of Immigration i
President Charles h strong of the cityciuti, iicrber. Pnraona, Rvorotl Colby,Will Irwin, Sinclair HarrisonSmith and Percy Mackuye.
In addition to the 1,180 men wdio
marched there were 1,010 null In thbands, KredencK S ilnene was mar-shal of tlie division, which included IheBusiness Men's and tlie Sis lallalparty's contingent. There were reallymore than 1,650 men in line, as therewere delegations of nun parading withs,m rai of the women's argon! actions
aTaaiglBlS igplggd Men,ii anythlngi thaguffrnglata on ths hIu
Walks gave more applause to the menmarchers than to their sisters. Theywaved their yellow streamers franticallyas the Socialists, with S. John Hloch.nominee for District Attnrnex it t ihebead, kepi step to the chant ot
"Votee! Volts!Votes lor women !"
a in division neared Wxtieih stroat,w b the band playing "The Maisell-laiMe- "
and every man singing the "MarchOn!" of the French national anthem, oneof the most Impressive scenes of theafternoon was presented, ity this timewomen who bad inarched in divisionsnear the head of the procession filledthe hotel verandas and lined the side-
walks. They look up ihe words untilthe chorus nearly drowned 'the music ofthe bands.
William N. I.oew, 70, of 1000 WestThird Street, Coney Island, was prob-ably the oldest man In the parade. Heserved in the I'nloii army in an Ohioregiment and in 1K0K edited a suffragistpaper In in,, ciiy. Three generations ofhis family were represented In yester-day's parade lb sides Mr. I.oow, hisdaughter, .Mrs. Itoaalis Uow Whitney,wife of the Sec rotary of the Public Ser-vice Commission, and ins granddaughter,Mrs. II. A. I'onssirat. were among themarchers.
Near I lie head of the delegation of thenuslnesN Men's League was James I,.I.aldlaw the president. i C. AI, Hrlde
of Note March With WomenThree Hours to Showfor Cause.
I of HO Broadway, who curried s banner'in the suffrage parade of IBM, was' igain in tine.
"Times certainly have changed.'' hecommented Joyously. "Believe me. ntook nerve to carry a 'Votes for Women'banni r in this town four years agoIni lor suffrage, lor 1 know how itWork was a page m :he ColoradoLegislature when the first three Assem- -bly woman ever i looted look their seatsin that body."
I reel lluosta Sugraae Too.t lenrgs i 'reel, magalne writer, and
husband of Mian. he Hates, the actress,also had something to say while theparade was forming of the good resultsof woman suffrage in Colorado He wagformerly Police Commissioner of Peit-- I
".II. i Headle. who earrlsd a bannerboasted Hint he had marched in ovar)SUffraglal parade in this city in recentyears except one. years ago hotook part lu a parade ,n WashingtonJohn ' Mel lee. 411 Amsterdam avenue,let It be known lhat he voted for suffrage
II Wyoming thirty-tw- o years ago lieintends to do the same thing in Newfork on November 2.
I'ei. y Rlrharda, formerly n lieutenantin the Swedish army, now a concerts.ngi r. defied the elements by mar, hlngbareheaded and without oat or waist-coat His wife. Miss Edith How, wasin another division.
Oeorga Middleton was one of the cap-tains in the biiNlness men's division,while Mrs Middleton iFola Ui Vol-let- ti
I marched elsewhere.lu tllen McCurdy, ''ol Pied Irwin
and John Wolcotl Adams were amongthe oilier captains
In Die division was I'dward S Vane, author of 'The New Marseillaise,"
Which Was published III TllK Si w yes-terday.
Daniel Krlnonosky, president of thsStudents' council of the College ,,f theCity of New York, headed a delegationof a hundred cheering student! fromthat Institution,
forty-On- e striking drivers of the Shef-field I'nriiis-Slawso- n Pecker Companymarched With the business men, Just be-
hind an American flag L'O by 30 feet Insize.
Some of the banners carried In Mar-shal tlreene'f division bure these legends:
HP. It HA I.SPOUTS
AND LST Til KM VOTE
W 1! TTtl'HTUP It WOMH.V,DON'T tOUf
A. Ludlow Perkins was at the headof a delegation of two hundred menwho followed 3ufl women of the KingsCount) Woman Suffrage Association.
Plfty men marched with the Women'sPolitical Association of New Yorkcounty, Kather VV. A. Nlcholls. chap-lain at Blackwell'a Island prison, headedu delegation of sixty employes! of theDepartment of Correction.
PHILIPPINES BLOT
ON U.S., SAYS MILLER
Governor-Gener- al mpotontA in it VVreekaffe, Anipricans
I niil I t'd. Natives SneiT."
Minnkai o: is, Oct Sensationalbarges relative to conditions in the
Philippine Is'ands are made byClarence ii Miner of Duluth,
who has just returned from n summerspent in the islands,
"No American," he says, "can get anadequate picture ff th dishonor andsupreme disgrace hi country has sus-tained in the Philippines. "The
paralysed and palsied,with staring eyes and open mouth, sitsImpotent amid the wreckVige he and hispolitical policial hav e produced
"Americans whyi have been trained intil service and who upbuilt the liovern-mc-
have been discharged or resigned,leaving the "inking ship amid jeers nndiiaults from those whom they had given
the best years of their llvee to aid. Acertain political party of nativesscrambled to divide up the offices amongtheir tatn h followers without any re-gard to fitness or capability. Publicirth'e has become ft private snap for theofficeholder and all his relatives TheGovernment disintegrated 'and demoral-ised, has fallen in chaos.
"Hut don' I look to the offlolaldespatches from the tgUvvda,
for the;, are i.,,t true N'o ngMofl at warin Burops has a more rigoroue ,.woiisorslup ih.ui exists over all public
it sens from the islands Tin, truth is de-liberately, criminally concealed from theAmsrli an people, with the full kimwl-edg- e
that if they knew the truth tholrwrath would he all devouring.
The i kivernor-- " ienoral alts at one endof the cable In Manila and feeds theWashington (lover nment with udi itemsas he wants to go out. Hut the truthcannot forever be ooncentol. It mustcome out.
"It Is well within the facts to My thatihe personnel of the 'roveruineut force iscompletely terrorised and cow,.!. Togive some of the deu. Is by whloh thai'011,1110111 has heen producil wouUl stir
all the wrath In one,' eoul. Almost toa n an they were afraid to talk to me or
t!o be seen with me and it was only whentravelling in territory thatI receive! OOUrteouS and k.nd'.y treat-ment with full facilities tor securing information.
"Americans, everywhere, in theservice and out of It, told me
that they were being subjected to allmanner of Insults, sometimes covertly,at other times openly, and that therewns no redress,
"Recently it was found neceesar) todiscontinue playing 'The Star SpangledHaulier' by ihe constabulary band mithe I.uneta. bcause the Klliplnos de-- .lined to show respect for It Amer-
icans at the name lime blushed In shameand humllatlou as they beheld the ClOVSmor-Usnsr- al stand at attention, at apublic function, while the hand playedAgulnaldo's march. My Hod! What hasour country come to'
"Public indignation meetings, at-tended by thousands, ate of frequentoccurrence i if the four native papersthree are bitterly attacking the presentgovernment and the Filipinos in powerA new party has arisen that threatensto defeat the present supreme party atthe next election Anything to beexisvted there, and nobody knows wh itwill happen next,
"insurrection is constantly threat i
The Christmas trouble was mui h. m reserious than we were le,l to believe Inthis oountry, either sporadic movementsof a seditious Character have occurred"
Congressman Miller Is a member ofthe Congressional committee wnlch -dealing with Philippine affairs
SAYS CUBANS ARE ANTIS.
Wife ot Hennhlle'a President n
They Are Too II,,, i Home.Henot a Mariana Vera de Menocal, wife
of the President of Cuba, la emphaticallynot a suffragist. She sailed lesterdayfor home nn the United Print Com.pany's steamer TenadorM after n visitof several weeks In this country. Inview of ysstsrda) being a rail letterday oti the suffrage calendar she wasasked what she thought of ihe ballotfor the women of her own republic
"The women of Cuba have otherthings to do besides think of suffrage,"she replied. "They are too busy msking homes and helping their husbands,We do not think of II. for we havemore Important things to occupy ,,Urattention.
with genera de Menocal wai ColAtirello Hevla, Secretary of Qovetn-men- t
for Cuba He has charge of thedepartments of the navy, army and In-
terior and has been In this country tobuy supplies for the Cuban army.
Importers- - Originators
MEVER so ready with all that ia1 exquisite and distinctive in
GOWNS, SUITS, WRAPS,BLOUSES, HATS
Our location --just a little below the regularahopping district --enable us to offer suchsavinga that every economical woman owesit to herself to take advantage of them.
Fifth Avenue at 31st St.
The finest
COFFEESAt uncqualcd PricesMARACAIBO p ih,
Special selection 19
PLAZAA superior blend of selectedcoffees 22
FAVORITAOur famous blend. Superior inquality to coffees usually sold at35c. per tin 28JAVA AND MOCHAFinest quality .38
TEASof fragrance and fine flavor
at most attractive pricesIndia and Ceylon, per Hi. pk if. .50 GO
'2lb. ,k. .28 .35Orange Pekoe Cevloii,
Prrlb. Phg.. . .50 .60 .80Hi lb. Pkg.., .28 .35 .45
Knglifth Iirrukfiit,Per lfv Pkg .60 ,71 qo
2 II). Pg . .33 .40 .50Formosa Oolontf,
Per 111 Pkg . .50 .75 1.00'alu.l'kn 28 .40 .55
VEGETABLESIn cans, American
ASPARAGUS No. Si camColonial green, California, dor. em h
ljil.Moi.tr 2.35 .20
ASPARAGUS TIPS No. I en,Gre-n- , California, Del Monte 2.10 .18
BEANS No. f raniCone erago Bcnndi dos, earhRefugee, cut 90 ,osRefugee, String, Fine.... 1.05 .09Park & TUfordtRefuge, String 1.30 .11Flag lira nd :
Small Refuge, Stringlen . 1.75 .15F.xtra Small. Stringiest, 2.00 .18Attlrine Brand :
Limn, Medium 1.10 .10
beets ;;';Cut 95 .08Kosebnd, l.xtiu Small 2.00 .18
CORN gfSSCountry Gentleman 90 .08Extra, Little Quaker Brand 1.10 .10Extra Fancy, Malna 1.35 12
PEASFarly June, I.ilvrtv Brand .90 .OS
EarlyJiine.t'lnimiionbraud 1.05 .OnHart brand :
Selected, Barly June 1.25 .11Ungraded, Dainty Sweet. , 1.40 .12Park & TUfordtExtra Sifted, Karly June 1.75 .15
SPINACH !fcS2 '
Champion Brand 1.05 .OM
TOMATOESExtra, Bine Bell Brand l oo .09Hand packed. Flag Br i lid 1.50 .13
SOUPS ConcentratedFrnnroAmerifan nn
"Ready Maid' Scans for .25 .09Campbell's. Scans for 25 0Richardson & Bobbins:
Tomato ,07Chicken I roth 07
CHEESE Finest quality b.
Mild, New York State.wholemllk .20Diurj . Old English Style 22Gruyere (Sh'im,) .38Petit Gruyere (Wilis'.), per bos 40Boijiiefort 45
OLIVE OIL. ItalianPure Lucca, Park &: Tilford
Quart cans ontg gali cans ,55
gal, tuna 3.10
SUGARH.AtEFinoGranulated.lOlh bngi 53H.oiEJineGranuluted, jolb.b ig 1 jo
CEREALS packitgfPuffed Wheat, Quaker .09Rolled Hit. Quaker .0tFarina, Hacker's 08
WINES, ImportedPARK & T1LKOKL) BOTTLING
MADEIRA gal. .:
Sicily i pure juice) . . 2.:3 B.74 -Leacocki 8.33 ltii"i 1 2
Victoria 8.33 22 99Si rcial 13.08 34 99 3 02Malmsaji 13.33 34,99 3.02
PORTI'ookioR 2 S3 7.99Port 333 974 :Burgundy 4.33 1 : i l '
Corkburn'i 8.33 14 24 1 ?
Sanderoan'i Old ... 6.33 16.74 l 52London Dock 6..t 19.24 i "7
Kandeman's V.V.O, 10.33 28.24 2 --
Royal Buckingham(Very Old) 34.21 3.02
SHERRYCooking 2.os 6.24 .87Tonal 3.33 9 24 s- -Pemartln Brut 3,83 10.74Brown 4. .(3 1 I r .'
Carrey 4.33 1 74 l 0Oloroso 5.33 14 i
Vino de Pasto 5 14.74Imperial 8,33 16 11Amontillado 6.33 16 1 --
'
Amontillado, Kxtra 10.58 26.7 I 2 27
War stamps Included In ib
Delivvrirs by our own glltoi dailyWeslcheiter as far a, I'arrytown,Whit Plaint and Portcheitri )n
Long Uland, deliveries twice wrMlat far at Oyttrr Bay, Hempstea "'dWheatley Hill..
STORES IN NEW "ltFifth Avrnur anil 26th SlrrrlMaditon Avr. and 88th StrerlMsditou Ave. and 76lh Stl rlBroadway and 4 1,1 Sitnroadway and M,th Btri"!Broadway aad 1011 StlBroadway and 112th Si
Broadway and 146th SiColumbut Ave 72nd s "Lenox Ave. and 1 26th Si
Scud for romplel e cul82949 West 42nd Street, fit 1