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1 oUiSi 4 TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1914. TARRYTOWN FEARS INVASION BY I. W. W. Threats of Hond of Frco Speech League Causo Quick Preparations. SIEGEL AND VOGEL WIN IN FIGHT FOR CHANGE OF VENUE HOSK WILL BE BATTERY Abbott's Plan to Enter Town nt Head of Bcrkman Forco of 500. Justice Blanchard Decides Merchants Could Not Get Fair Trial Here---Case Delayed Until Fall. Tarrttown-, June 1. This town la pre rarcd te-nlKht to resist a formidable I. V Vf Invasion, which was hlntrd at to day by Leonard Abbott, president of the Tteo Speech Leame, nftcr ho had been refus'd a permit for a meeting In Foun tain S'lunro by Frank II, rierson, prcsl dnt of the villain. Then when Abbott said he would ask Altxandrr Herkmun to call for 800 vol unteer to inurcli on Tarrytown, the vll Uye he.i l Ix-san to plan for defence. He arrnnsed with Chief Knplncer Gerald Will. Um to hae a flro company In Fountain Hure to welcome the I. W. W. delegation ulth ft hlRh pressure hoso. The fentenclng of two men who took rut In the .Sunday demonstration, a nun ier strike which Is on In the White Mains Jill, wher fifteen I. W. W.'s are locked tip, and the arrangement of a debate on free epeoch on Saturday hero between itkmnder ncrkman and the nev. J. 12. Cite of St. raul's Methodist Church of JCorth Tarrytown are among the other developments of to-day. One Grim Three Month In Jail. David Sullivan, Joe Do Ilosa nnd Harry ,Wllke were arraigned before Judge Morehouse this afternoon. Sullivan was sentenced to thirty dayn nnd De flora got three months. Wilkes demandod to be (tnt before the (J rand Jury nnd his case wjj put off, although It Is thought that the county authorities will dispose of the cate m quickly as possible. After Abbott had mado his threat of tnvaalon he called up Alexander Herkman nnd then went back to New York to at tend a meeting nt tho Ferrer School, where he said hut plan would be worked cut Hut at tho school It was decided to rut the invasion off and that later. If the lime seemed propitious, a oall for volun teers would bo Issued. White Plains, June 1. The hunger strike atarted In the morning when tho fifteen prisoners In the White Plains jail refused their breakfasts. They seemed emeu hat disappointed when the keepers refused to nrgue with them. Until dinner the ranks remained unbroken. Then one, whose appetlto was stronger than his en thusiasm, wavered, and consumed his por tion In short order. I'm through with this bunch," he said, and Intimated that he might tell the Dis trict Attorney some Interesting things con etrnlng I. W. W. plans. The others remained firm, even when i-eme sympathizer appeared below tho Jail windows and offered to buy food If tliey would eat It In preference to prison fare. When Leonard Abbott went to the Jail this afternoon nnd asked to see the prisoners hn was refused permission to Mer. So he walked outside of the walls until some of the prisoners In cells near windows iccogntred him and called out. They yelled to Abbott that they would not eat the "rotten food" served In the Jail, fo Abtutt and his followers went across tiio street and bought fruit and sand t.ichts. Abbott Furnishes Appetite. When he returned. nnd was seen on his w.-iv tn the lull entrance Rebecca Edelsohn told him that they wouldn't eat anything nnd that they were on n hunger strike as a protest against their nrresU So Abbott nnd hts men ate the provisions them. n-Ives. One of the prisoners, whllo Justice Thompklns was charging the Grand Jury to-dy, started to howl In a tone that could be heard all over the court house. Ills cries died In a gurgle when n keeper turned a hose, on him. In his chnrsu Justice Thompkln said It was the duty of all peace ottuers to en force the law rigorously on such occasions as the Invnslon of Tarrytown on Sunday. 'There Is a good deal done nowadays under the guise of free sp-eoh," he said, "out constitutional free speech gives no man or set of men, no professional agita tors or mischief makers the right to en rourace the vicious. Idle and lazy to acts of violence. It gives no one the right to Invade our churches, desecrate our nltars and disturb religious services. It gives no cne the. right to disturb the peace of tho habbath as was done yesterday In one of the vlllage.1 of this county. "A village has the right to make ordi nances for the regulation of Its affairs and to-called freo speech does not give the right to any one to violate these village ordinance. It Is our sacred duty to keep a firm grip on the law nnd enforce the tame. Thc protection of property rights and the enforcement of the law to all people alike, bo they rich or poor, depend on us as public olllcers and we must do tur duty " Supreme Court Justice Dlanchard de cided yesterday that Henry Slegel and Frank H Vogol cannot have a fair trial In New York county on tho Indictments against them for grand larceny arising out of tho failure of the Slegel enterprises. and granted their application for a change of venue. The case Is the first In many years In which an application of the kind has been granted. Before the decision was handed down District Attorney Whitman had arranged to move the Indictments for trial beforo Justice Davis, who la holding the June term of the Criminal Branch of the Su preme Court becauso of Justice Davls'a ex perience In financial matters such as are Involved In tho proceedings against Slegel and Vogel. In view of the decision Mr. Whitman said that the trial woukl un doubtedly bo delayed until fall nnd that he will confer wlln John u. sinncnnoio. attorney for tho defendants. In an effort to agreo on some outside district to which the case can be sent. Justice nianehard'a Opinion. Justice Illanchard said tn his opinion: It seems clear that there exists In this community among thinking men, not only n wide spread belief In tho guilt of these defendants, but a deep rooted prejudice against them because of the loss which has been sustained : the character and station In life of those who havo sustained the loss, nnd because of the widely current allegation that tho defendants have misused benevolent funds entrusted . to their care for their own benefit, a belief which seems to lead large numbers of thinking men to the view that whether these defendants are guilty or not they should be hold re sponsible for the disaster that has oo cur red, and should be punished as a warning to others In tho future. In his onlnlon Justice Blanchard re viewed tho charges against the defendants embraced In the Indictments ana reierren to the enterprise conducted ny tne ue r.n,iiitit ii nrtvntH bankers and the do ductlon of 2 per cent, of the wages of their employees for tho benefit funds of the employees' associations, funds which were deposited In the oankn that failed. The cuurt said the 10,000 depositors had Jz.OOU.ooo in the banks, that there were 3,000 employees and about 8,200 credi tors. Widespread Comment on Case. The opinion continues : Tho Inceptldn of the proceedings In tho United States court nnd the consentient closing of the iluors of the defendants' stores anil bank ntoused widespread comment among peoplo of nil walks In life and In the public lress both because of the defendants' prominence In their own field an welt :is the largo number of persons who were affected. Some forty meetings nttended by depositors In the bank nnd their friends, which were char notorized by riotous behavior and at which the defendants were de nounced ns thieves nnd malefactors nnd their personal character and pri vate life assailed, took place In this city. Thero Is no question that the de fendnnts controlled thee various en terprises; that they were tho cus todians of large sums committed to their care: that these 'enterprises havo failed nnd that largo sums of money belonging to poor depositors and the benevolent funds havo been swept nway nnd that many creditors who can 111 afford their loss will suf fer. That these facts may be true must not prevent these defendants from obtaining thnt fair nnd Im partlnl trial, free from public clamor nnd prejudice, to which they nro en titled by law, and their guilt of crim inal nets Incidental to the collapse of their business must bo determined at such a trial. Justlco Blanchard said that the af fidavits submitted with the application show that hundreds of substantial and thinking men of th community wltn whom the persons milking the nfndavlts have come In contaur assert that the defendants should bo convicted "on gen eral principles" and also "as n. warning to other members of the mercantile trade" nnd "to those who do a banking busi ness" nnd "for the good of the community." TRUANT DEFENDED AT INDUSTRIAL INQUIRY He's Bed Blooded, Says As sistunt School Superin tendent Walsh. THINKS RULES TOO RIGID Others Urge Poverty Should Not Bo Allowed to Keep Children From School. KLEIST SAYS BREITDHGS POISONED WIFE'S MIND Sues "Wealthy rnrcnts-in-law for $250,000 Damages for Alienation. "IRISH EVENING" BEGINS EAST SIDE FESTIVAL "Killarney" Is Applauded by Successors In District of Sons of Erin. Rven tho school truant had a good word' spoken for him when the child labor laws and tho age at which children could safety begin work were considered by the United Elates Commission on Industrial Itelatlons yesterday. Industrial education and apprenticeship were also considered. Thcso subjects will again bo taken up by the commission to-day. Upton Sinclair appeared with Mrs. Sin clair and Miss Wood nnd offered Informa tion about the situation In Colorado. He probably will bo heard next week, Tho commission did not have time to hear him vestcrdav. Dr. C. It. lllchards, director of Cooper Union, told tho commission that he thought the child labor law good on the whole, nlthough thero were dllllcultles of many kinds In making It effective. Thero was a demand for evening Industrial schools, h said, whero drawing, shop mnthematlcs nnd other subjects tending to mako workers more elllclent could lw taught. Wants nrnadenlnsr of Work. "I nm In favor of broadening the work of the trade and vocational schools under the direction of the Board of Iducatlon, ho said. Dr. S. Josephine Baker, director of the division of child hygteno in the Depart ment of Health, said she was In favor of extending the school course until children were 16 years of age. No nvernge boy or girl of 14 knew what trade he or she would take up as n rule nnd were liable to tnko up unproductive trades which had no future for them. John H. Walsh, assistant superintendent! of the New York schools, believed also that tho school term should be extonded. He thought that the requirements In the schools were In somo cases too rigid. Ho said that r.o two children were alike tern-1 pernmentally and that a pupil might be1 dull on a subject In which another excelled and vice versa. He cnused a laugh by i saying: i "For Instance. It would not menace n boy's eternal salvation If he was dull on one particular subject thouzh he might be good In another. It would not feces sarlly be an Insuperable bar to his ad vancement In life If he dtd not know every t 1st In socne particular river." Then, peaking of the truant, he said : CUPID HAKES NEW RECORD. In Obtain One Day. 010 Con pi Mnrrtnge Licenses. The city pocketed $310 yesterday from marriage license fees alone, On tho mar riage bureau's first day In the Municipal Building It made a new record by be stowing Its benediction upon tlO couples. i iiu uiKgcsb nuinuer on any uay in mid um quarters In the City Hall basement was 242. It was the first day of the bridal month, tho first opportunity to visit City Clerk Scully after the double holiday, the beginning of tho Jewish festival, the Feast of the Weeks, and tho day on which tho golden lady who stands on tho peak of tho Municipal Building became the Qoddess of Chance. This combination produced such a run on tho bureau that Eddie Hart, the chief clerk; Policeman Jim Taggart and seven clerks had to leave their regular duties every half hour or so to straighten out the Impatient and crowding line of license seekers. Nearly 200 men and women of all ares and stamps were knocking at the doors at 8 o'clock, though tho bureau's regular opening hour la 10. To get somo sort of a start Mr. Hart began at 9 o'clock. A few minutes later ho found that several sharpers were getting n 2S cent feo for showing confused applicants how to fill out their blanks. As tho city has clerks who do that for nothing the pirates wero driven from the building I'rlses for Vacation rami Girls, Several thousand girls have 'applied for tickets for the Vacation Savings Fund dance this evening on the recreation pier at the foot of East Twenty-fourth street. This will 1m the last Vacation livening entertainment before activities are sus pended for tho summer season. One of The economy of Equitable Space is due to its efficiency To be quite candid, Equitable rents are higher than some rents and much lower than others. But where Equitable rents are higher than others it is simply the justifiable increase which the world always pays for something superior. And where Equitable rents are lower than others it is due to the efficiency of Equitable space, which makes it possible for a tenant to get what he wants without leasing any excess space due to faulty or extravagant distribution of interiors. Leases now being made from May 1, 1915. The budding, how ever. Is due to be completed 2 or 3 months ahead of that date. Equitable Building Temporary Office, 27 Pine Street. VANDERBILT QUITS WEIGHT CO. Aeroplane Inventor to Have Ilntlre Control, It la flald. It was learned yesterday that Cornelius Vnnderbllt has sold his holdings In tho Wright Company to Orvllle Wright. This step by Mr. Vanderbllt, who was not only a stockholder of the company but a di rector, follows that of August Belmont. ono of the men most heavtly Interested In, tho aeroplane corporation, nnd adds to the belief that Orvllle Wright wants to be come tho sole stockholder In ordor to havo the features of tho programme will b tho presentation of the prlxes to the girls J eo; dTcted entl.ely according Ho denied thnt he had been conducting, negotiations for tho sate of h! patent rights. He said, however, thnt 'he would like to havo the buslnes of the company In the hands of n manager under his per sonal direction. Annual Vacation Ball. Miss Cornelia Hedmond Hngagrd Mr. and Mrs. James Bowno Itedmond Orvllle Wright said only a few days aso that he wnnted to get free of the commercial side of the company's affairs 1n order to spend nis time experimetill. have announced the engagement of their tmt that he could not do this as long ns daughter. Miss Cornelia Itedmond, to' thero were stockholders who held a ma Henry Tobln Maury of this city. Miss 'jorlty of the stock and expected to roallrc Itedmond is n niece or .Mrs. Kdward'n pront rrom it. Hnullslnnnn anil Itnsslnn Accept Aero Cuniireas Inflations. Word was received yesterday at the oillci's of tho Aeronautical Society that 1). I. Illahollchlnsky, director of the Aero dynamical Institute! of Kentchttno, ltussla, has accepted membership on tho execu tive committee of tho International Aero nautical Congress to bo held nt ths Pnnnmu-raririo Exposition. Another who has accepted Is Dr. It. T. Olazcbrook, di rector of tho National Physical Labora tory of Teddlmtton, Htnland. nnd chair man of the British Government's advisory committee for aeronautics. Cooper nnd n cousin of Mrs. I.loyd R. Bryco. Mr. Maury Is n member of tho Untnn. Ilnequct nnd other clubs. The wedding will take placo late this month. Prom Dayton, Ohio, came the statement yesterday from Orvllle Wright that he had never thought of turning the company over to nny one mnn or body of men. r.-Srlintiir Krnn Seriously til. Hmsahctii, N. 3 Juno 1. Former X'nited Mtites Senator John Kenn Is in nt his home tn 1'rslno. He Is reported to b suffering from Ilrlght'.s disease. 'I. W. W'S A HOWLING SUCCESS.1 fhsr tint Wlmt Tliey Sought, Pub licity, ,Hns Ilolililns Oilman. Robblns Oilman, head worker of the I'nlverslty Settlement, told those who at- I'naeii the Intercity Conference of Set White Plains, N. T., June 1. Supreme Court Justice Arthur S. Tompkins trans ferred to the Federal Court to-day an ac tion brought by Max Frederick Kletst ngalnst Kdward N. Brtltung nnd Charlotte M. Breltung for $250,000 damages. Klelst charges alienation of Mrs. Klclst's affec tions. The dafendantfl are the parents of Juliet Breltung, who was married to Klelst at Grace Church, New York, on November 22. 1913. The plaintiff says his father-in-law Is a multl-mllllonalre and socially prominent. The action was before Justice Tompkins on a motion by Klclst's counsel, Joseph A. Shay, to give the case a preferred position on the June calendar. Do Lancey Nlcoll, representing Mr. and Mrs. Breltung. In opposing tho motion said that tho parties wero resi dents of different States. For that rea son tho case was sent to the Federal court. In the papers submitted by Mr. Shay Klelst charges that on November 30, 1913, eight days after tho wedding, his father-in-law and mother-in-law Jointly poisoned the mind of his wife, who was 20 years old, against the plaintiff and by various pretences and false Insinuations caused their daughter to separate from him. He also alleges that tho defendants fraudu lently Induced him to go to work In a gold mine at Mogollon. N. M., whero his health was Impaired. Klelst In his affidavit says among other things: 'In view of the Infatuation and esteem which were mutual between us the nets of the defendants wero cruel and heartless. The only opposition that tho defendants had to the marriage, I am Informed and believe. Is that I am of poor parentage and that for that reason I am unfit to oc cupy a placo In tho social sphere com mensurate with the enormous wealth of the defendanta. That notwithstanding that defendants knew of the deep love and affection that my wife, Juliet, had for me they set about to poison her mind against mo and conspired to degrade mo In the eyes of my wife.' MRS. B. T. PECK GETS FORTUNE , It. Hopkins Leaves Heir or iso late to Granddaughter, There was a time not so long ago when young Ned Harrlgan's Mulligan Guards used to march, "from Jackson street "way up to Avcnoo A." when "Klllarncy" nnd "(yDonnell Aboo" were more or less national anthems of the East Side. But last night down In tho big basement as sembly room of Public School 63. In Fourth street east of First avenue, there was truly a foreign celebration In the "Irish Evening" programme that opened a week long "Festival nnd Pageant of Nations." Tho People's Institute long ago took up the Idea of turning over the public schools during the evenings for neighbor hood celebrations by pupils and their elders, especially tho elders. The con certs nnd pageants which began last night are a practical result of the agitation. Names now raro to the neighborhood took part In the "Irish Evening" last night Dr. John O. Coyle, prominent In Irish and Catholic affairs as a scholarly orator : tho Misses Agnes M. Duffy, Mary Frances Fogarty, Gcrtrudo V. Malloy und Kathcrlno C. Creedon and John J. Cas sidy, John J. Naven nnd Frank T. Ma lony, song birds all. "Klllarney." "Mother Machree," "O'Donnell Aboo." "The Wearing of tho Green," "Believe Me of All." nnd other Irish songs were np plauded uproariously by the dark eyed, dark sklned grownups nnd their chil dren In tho audience nnd every song earned an encore. . Dr. Coylo sketched n history of 'The Irish In New York" from tho days of tho Dutch up to the time that "the grandson of an Irish political convict sits In the Ch ef Executive's chair or tne city, tne son of an Irishman Is Governor of tho Stato nnd the son of nnother Irishman repre sent tho Stato In the United States Senate," Dorno W. Barclay of the People's Insti tute, Dr. William E. Bohn, Chairman Louis Dalmant of tho pageant committee, Max Heidelberg, an architect, nnd Secretary John Collier of the People's Institute, all of whom wore prominent In last night's proceedings, promise an ecstatlo week for the P. H. 63 neighborhood. To-night will be Slavic night To-morrow night thero will bo a "Concert of All Nations." Thursday will be Yiddish night; Friday, Italian night: Saturday afternoon, a parade nnd pageant from the school to the playgrounds at Eleventh street und First avenue at 4 o'clock. In which 1,000 grownups and 1,000 children will take part, riaturnay nignt tne res Good Word for Trnnnts Too. "The truant has red blood In his vem I and tho other scholars know It. There , are some boys who are chloroformed nt S nnd don't come to life till they reach 8, A a rule th truant Is the result of !n elllclent handling by the teacher In the school." George Hall, secretary of the New York Child Labor Committee, said the commit tee had for ten years been trying to lessen the amount of child labor. It was at present trying to Improve the child labor law both In statute and In enforce ment. He thought It tho duty of the com munity to sec that cases of poverty which forced children to worlt too soon were attended tn. Dr. C. P. Stelnmetr. chief consulting engineer for the General Electric Com pany at Schenectady, who Is also profes sor of electro-physics at t'nlon College nnd was once Socialist candidate for president of the Alcermanlc Board In Schenectady, said that he was very much opposed to sacrificing the regular school course for technical eduntlnn. There should be both, but the period for genernl education was short enough already. I: should be made the duty of the com munity, he said, to see that nothing de prived the children of going through the full school coure. James L. Gernon, chief of mercantile Inspection In the Department of Labor; Owen It. Lovejoy, general secretary Na tional Child Labor Committee, nnd E. W. Weaver, a teacher of tho Boys Hlsh School, Brooklyn, thought that forcing boys to work too early made Idlers or tollers without ambition. One of the witnesses to-day will be Dr. W. H. Maxnell, superintendent of the New York public schools. DR. GLICKSTEIN LOSES APPEAL. 1 I t.el will Mnmtk with n "DrinA nt hn Vn. An appraisal of tho estate of Lyman . wtmbiy room of the school. It. Hopkins, who died at Cranston. It. I. I " on April 20, III 13, snows properly worm Most "Opium and Cocaine Ktns: Serve Two Years, Dr. Abraham Oltckstrln of 21S Henry street, known to the Federal authorities ns tho "opium nnd cocaine king," lost his fight for a writ of error when the United States Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed his motion yesterday. Dr. Ollcksteln was convicted In the Federal District Court last July of violat ing the Stato law prohibiting tho sole of cocaine by using the malls for that pur pose. Judge Julius Mayer sentenced him to two years In the Federal penitentiary and to pay a fine of 33,000. The writ of error was dismissed on tho technical ground that the Circuit Court of Appeals was without Jurisdiction In the mntter because the exceptions wero not filed within tlw term of tho Federal court In which Dr. Gllcksteln was convicted nnd sentenced. J1,20S,206.95, but only 1140.419.27 of this was In tho State or -New iora. ine np tlements at the Henry Street Settlement , prnlscr's report was filed yesterday In House yesterday that 'the work of tho lirookljn. whero Mr, .Hopkins had a resl 1 W W. Inst winter was a great and dence at 2S8 Uartleld place. He also had rand and nlmost a howling success. a plnco at Lakcylew, Me., until he began "If you don't believe It." he said, "It l probable that you don't understand !iat the I. W. W. set out to obtain, nnd "at they obtnlned it. They wanted pub lieltj to bring to the minds of the gen "il public that they existed and that thev were facing the problem of unem l'io ment In the middle of a hard winter. "Thej succeeded In getting what they .if'fr As one of them said to m, 'e re off tho front pngn to-day, hut "i to back again to-morrow' nnd 'e ' Re e " T . i w. W.'s nre red blooded men, irte leetuallv keen. They were nntmntrd, fi .is wo could see, with the highest n and were determlnd to work to- e, to do something to bring this slt 'imi'tn tiofore the eyes of the public and i v -oMietlilng done. They couldn't be ' r bullied. Each man was thinking for t mn.if They wero dealing with the hui, problem of unemployment, while the Itoaery mm were inertly concerned, each "ie n Hi his Individual need of n Job, and "in t the Intellectual ability to grapple ' "i wlmle nroblem. T I. V. w.'s nro relying upon tho ' ' ,f the public once tho situation of ' J'ieniiUed Is sufllclently brought to t r.r attention to do something about it." t, Itestrlctlnii Clause Upheld. The validity of the "residential nnd ox flulie" clause Incorporated In selling rontru-ts where the ptojierty sold Is In a f'sirii-ted tcetlon was upheld yesterday ' .Supremo Court Justice Kelly In Brook '' Mrs. Othilda Eltrman -d violated I" a clause by erecting n row of nine '' family houses In Forest Park East, 1 . a section devoted to detached ono 'fnuy houses. She was ordered to re all nlno forthwith. kpendlng part of the year with a grand daughter nt Cranston. Tho grnnddaughter, Mrs. Elsie O. reck, wife of Benjamin T. Peck, will receive 60 per cent, of the entire estate, but not until trust funds nggregatlng $212,500 have ex pired with tho death of the beneficiaries. With tho exception of n few ensh bequests of 5,0u0 and less the bulk of the estate. Including tho Brooklyn house. Is to be held Intact for tho benefit? of Mrs. Peck and tho other lineal heirs of the testator, In cluding the youngest born during his life time, These lulter ure to share equally In the 60 per cent, left after Mrs. Peck has received her share. ACCUSES MRS. MAYER. Ironworker Testifies Aualnat Woman Who Hued Miss Kleanor aicGlll, The suit of Walter Mayer, a chauffeur employed by Miss Eleanor McGlll. fcr an absolute dlvorco from Mrs. Mary Mayer of Jersey City was brought up beforo Vice Chancellor Lewis In Jersey City yester ilny, Mayer's wife has an action pending In the Hudson County Circuit Court against Miss McGIU, the wealthy daughter of tho latn Dr. John D. McQIU of Jersey City for ISO.000, charging alienation of Mayer's affections. Otto Dlckow, an Iron worker, testified that he had boarded with Walter Mayer nnd the latter'a mother nt 107 Charles I street, Jersey City, since February, 1913, nnd that In August he had misconducted i himself with Mrs. Mayer, the defendant. Mrs. Mayer was not living with her hus band during that time, Dlckow said. Ion Mnyer. a brother of tho plaintiff, testified that hn had been a witness of misconduct on tho part of Mrs. Mayer nnd Dlckow, Don't Risk Money in the mails. If you want money paid at a distance send it by WESTERN UNION Moneygram ' Payments made to the person or firm addressed; receipts obtained. Quick, responsible service. Rates very low. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. Full information gladly given at any office The Protection of BORDEN service will be doubly important during summer months. M MPS PASTEURIZED Pasteurized and Bottled in the Country. A Splendid Milk for Infants and Children. Sold at a price that MAKES IT AVAILABLE FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY. ILK is a delicate and highly per i s h a b 1 e product. Winter or summer the task of getting it to you in the condition you should expect to have it is a task that requires willingness backed by intelligence, exper ience, and organized ability. In the Summer time, how ever, the milkman's problems multiply tenfold. At this sea son nothing but the best ef forts of the best equipped milkman can guarantee you protection against the evils of badly handled milk. Borden Service offers you this protection. Will you let us demonstrate what it means ? BORDEN'S CONDENSED MILK CO. 108 HUDSON ST., N. Y. PHONE, FRANKLIN 5360 VACATIONS Happy Thought and it doesn't matter where you go on the watei" to the mountains the seashore to the comfortable farmhouse back to the old home town anywhere be sure to provide yourself with timely and appropriate books and your vacation will be doubly enjoyable. If you don't know just what books to buy and take along peruse the latest literary information and the Publishers' Advertisements in the Summer Reading Number t NEW YORK SUN SATURDAY, JUNE 13TH