Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“WANT TOGO HOME” SOLDIERS CLAMOR FOR LOST RECORDS SO THEY MAY BE PAID NOW Papers Missing, They Can’t HOW TO FIND WOUNDED Be Discharged Until They OR SICK SOLDIERS WILL A HERO OF TWO ARMIES. Get War Wages. | BE TOLD BY RED GROSS Information to be Given by Phone Concerning Location of Pa- Alphonse Tanguay, _ Yankee, tients in Hospitals, First Joined the French, 0 Wit Wiloteaatien abont Feue Then the American. home-coming sick or wounded svidier boy, tele- phone to either of the following Lost service records are worrying numbers: he soldiers back from overseas, and Vanderbilt 1464 (From 9 now at Camp Upton anxious to be A. M. te 10 P.M.) ‘home for Christmas,” far more than Gramercy 5100 (From 9 A. jerman machine guns and gas shelly M. te 6 P.M.) Aid on the battlefields where they fell These are Red Cross numbers, pronnded. Brig. Gen. George M. McManus, fhe mon at Upton have been shift-| in charge of troop movements at Grd from Camp Merritt, N. J. for their} this port, announced that the lischarge, companies made up. of] War Departmemt has authorized | Anen from a distance being sent to] the Red Cross to take up the work WILLIAM GUGGENHEIM % wamps nearer thelr homes. of notifying relatives concerning "; These men all ure members of} the location of the sick and “casual.” or emergency, companies} wounded in various hospitals Wetaghed from their regular com-| ‘there, The Red Cross has field di- mands, They have been in hospitals, rectore in each hospital, some of them in half a doze Ther | ——=—=> regular commands, now somewhere; graph for Mr. Horn's eye than to yin Germany, or any one of the hos- seek him among the thousands of i mployees, pitals may have their service records. |" OTS omourke of the 1024 Am- | | , Many of the mon have not been | munition Train, wounded in the Ar- | bald for several months, in some |gonne Oct 19. says he Is willing to | forgive all his enemies and live at gases for @ year, they say. ace with the world for the rest of "MUST BE PAID BEFORE THEY! his life if he can go home right away. CAN GO HOME. If he can’t there'l| be no peace. | © Uncle Sam cannot let them out of CARRYING A LOAD OF BOMBS,| the army until they are paid in full,| WAS HIT; BOMBERS ESCAPED. And this can omy be done when tho net r soldier with a forgiving ss disposition is Peter P. Phelan of tho eeece record 16 SrePEntec,) _|116th Infantry, wounded in the han: The only solution casual com ¥ jan. ack by shrapnel in the Argon efficers have been able to suggest !v| Phelan, who lives at No. 12 Amster- “supplementary,” or dummy service |dam Avenue, was carrying a 1c " w trench mortar bombs when wounded. arecords. These wil Le hed be made | 51, forgives the German that fred the np principally on iaformation from shraupnel, because he did not hit the ,the men themselves bombs Pholan was carrying. Had the If they are paid off on this basis | bombs exploded, Phelan says, he fears he ne they will pe strictly accountable for "ny fOrcive Frits, errors in pay, af shown up when the| James §. Spozell, No. 185 York origina) service records finally reach | Street, Brooklyn, was gassed in the @sining, the tearoom in ye ammunition. He was struggling Japan, the desert, the War Department, or puymastery |Afifonne while carrying machine gun reports are unscrambled months ‘under a heavy load and took his gas henoe. mask off for convenience. He was But by “supplementary” records or | s#ssed before he realized there w: otherwise, the boys want to get heme. Soticastye He was with the Chey want it “bookoo.” Shell shock, one of the most dread- ne Sh SBD Men: ene |Infantry Oct. 5. He is one of the for- out 4 flreater who almost had to|tunate ones on whom the effects of ight his way into the army. He ts|shock were only temporary. The| \Iphonse Tanguay of the 101th In-|#hell flung him twenty feet in the air, fantcy. Hla parents jive in Nashua, |%!# comrades say. N.M., and Ne was in France visiting Rpal Ge eAG AULA iho dyna rcnstaic' BENTLEMEN STOWAWAYS erved wit ¢ 1624 French Infan He was wounded by @ chine gun tn a Verdun battle, when the ground See was “drenched with blood.” He came |Suspected of Knowing About Plot | w yack to America with bis discharge rom the French Army. Ho had had enough of killing Portugal. Gerinans, for goon after America en- ered the war he enlisted in the 140th Perhaps they are members of no- (Massachusetts) Ir try, after quar- | bility travelling fnconspicuously and relin, with a dozen superiors who |incognito, even nameless. But gentle- said he was physically unfit. The off-|men they are, certainly, thelr appear- | cers tried to make an interpreter of jance, their demeanor, their servant pro- | ee TS ten cone nat tnat too lclaiming them so on their arrival in Cantigny he was wounded slightly |NeW York to-day on the Portuguese and at Chemin des Dames gas and|*twamship Dondo, although they oc- | shrapnel put him out of action, He|cupled no stateroom, had no pince at counts the hours now by a watch a table in the saloon and no mention) shed weighs nae poanes an meas on the passenger list They were a German. sole non’ whon laws : o New| Phonse bud played @ tune with Dik | ore aren ORR Cie OT Mew bi net. ork from Lisbon. 1 * was happy to fight for elther| “What does it matter if we occupie America. or france,” Tanguay said, ce in the hold in a cargo of cork ‘How much better to be able to fight not Miguel there to make us com- for both.” e cho to travel that “Tony,” ag one young Italian from Worcester, Mass, is known in his '¢ company, beca ot the song about several langua “Tony” going over the top and for- pained aloof, while at getting all about the barber shop, will the ship's officers with ‘a. trlumphant have to forget the barber shop for sood, He is Charles Russo of the 109th Infantry and used to be a bar- nor. His father wn invalid and “Tony” was pract the only sup- port of the family But he laid down his poke the elder of these two gen- and he repeated compa men from Port Tiut the three are being held by Gov ment age board t spect he D remain | quarantive w be receive Washington, The silence of the men about’ themselves or thelr ines has aroused the suspicion up a gun and ma &gents, Who think the stowaw ively obnoxious to 1'may Know ‘something about the ree inachine gun bullet cut three fingers 4s<issination of the President of trom his ieft hand and wounded him tusal, though the Dondo sailod seve remy ht Onecfincored barbers not days before the assassination tovk Dabo. | betng in demand, “Tony” is puz Sap..aS ae Wer the various schemes for | Dented Cardinal Mercier wtructing” the lives of soldiers | OTTAWA, Ont, Dec, trially disabled xian Consul Genoral for Canada to Herbert R. y hag el . ay denied the report that Caadinal chine Gun Ratt E ) Mercier would visit Canada and the porter to tell United States, He has beon o ull by The World, that he is home advised that Cardinal Mercier has no It is casier to write a pa nition of leaving Bolgium. WATCHES nue Pesce ON CREDIT’ Christmas Gifts Within reach of all. Easy weekly or moathly payments, All goods Charies Evaranteed. LIBERAL CREDIT. NO BRKD TAPE, Marr! ni reference necessary, All tramsactious strictly confidential, Tn riment of DIAMONDS, WATCHES and JEWELRY J Curtis, send reprenentative if desired. Opem Evenings, cha and Mrs. ROYAL DIAMOND x WaTcH @ _| Takes Place Night of Dec. 28, and Will Be Last Word in Costume Balls | —Entire First Floor of | -Carlton to Be Transformed for It— City’s Society and the} Nation’s toBe There. | The carnival de vict 4 de triomphe, riomopne, n{ a8 Well as the most ¢ dof Saturday most entertaining the costume bal >| large pa nud striking of all York hus ever Decoratively, it will be more than r would have been able to gorgeous, with every d beyond im- in green blue, the Hanging Gar- dens of Babylon, a glimpse of sailles beyond, (the grand whose colors wili THIS TANGUAY NOT CRAZY, JUST |¢d injuries of the soldiers, put Jacob TePresent every note in the prisin anu A FIGHTER. Schatz, No. 284 Henry Street, out of will change momentarily—and ager to get acton while Aghting with the 305th spots” turned on every costume worth all these, espe Five hundred florists have donated flowers for the Ritz | which is to be the Versailles of the One hundre | WITH SERVANT ARE HELD $=" sey i ed as Chairma. tumes, diamond white, with tall hats and bobbed hair. | ¢ the girls already 1 in black and to Assassinate President of mt Misa | Breat Jhouses. e hundr years smero? tne a Mrs. Boughton Cobb « In the grand ballroom | trfully » arranged to ac amodate six, | than boxes at great ball They are Metropolitan rooms of the ball , it will be rem t Hero Land wcocks and cockat {ts Nubian slay THE PERSONNEL OF NEW YORK’S GREATEST BALL, Among the box he seventy-five William Roy Flora How man, Mrs. Mra. n, Mr. and Mrs. §) 35 MAIDEN: LANE. Phone:243./din’ |; oer SOUTH EXPECTED, 4 WEST AND | 1 . LOMO QUININE Personnel no one can approximate, po wiihout causing nervousmoy oF With Little question, however, it wili Bidva's’swuniyre cous Use 30 pant be the largest in New York's history aborate decora- ively fhere will be innumerable ties of well known N Yorkers, holiday time and the hote vent will be very large. wre to be a feature. There will be three in all—but only for femi- hine costumes—and a committee of ‘ ntative artists will make the Among these prizes 1s to be 1 diamond & relet. The committee of the night, which Is, Mrs, Newbold Le Roy Edgar 1 and which comprises also Mrs ®. Baker jr, Henry Pairte Osborn, M Mrs, Wht K Mrs, 8H. Marshall, Mre, Frank y Griswold, Mrs Francis Key Vendleton and Mra, Lydig Holt, calls] the fact t ‘ Special meanir pleture, or which must be in k Is to be a great pi rst of all, It is to ¢ ea's elation over the vic of ple- that unifor s and plain do! uouy by (heir absence, that the "pic ture” may bx endid as possible. There is ¢ ndication that this going to followed both men and women as memorable figures. It since New Yerk has had a me ball. In New York s of splendid taney , hidden away for st of these s coatume Rus: ‘cted, will be won nted in the costume because of the inter of Russian life and way garments. Many of New York’s new ns hove been inspired by f many w make po! stim are going to the ynote, Italy, it is certain will be represented as well, and and French students and Mvors 2 othe ance of prof ture, with Rosina ils ik to be a ali, Yvette fuilbert and the Dun Dancers among the stars already an there will also bea eab-| rs to continue through “PEOPLE'S LEAGUE” FORMED | BY RIVAL BERLIN me: Nudes Prince Max, Bern Haase and Erzberg match {ror lor; Hugo Haase, Independe 1 Curdina hop of Cologne AMSTERDAM ia aaiy one "'Bromo Guinina? i Wee NATIONAL CITY C0. ond, in addition, this being being crowded With prominent people from the West and South who have many friends in New York society, it is a8 certain that the out of 4 rs. Charies B. Alexander, ey Warren, Mrs, William nnderbilt jr, Mrs. Henry Clewas, was a bond saleswoman for the js) tonal City Company, has filed sult in The only attend the Supreme Court against that com- for $125,000 damages, alleging] best man, The service w that she was roughly handled by em-| Father Bernard McQuade, There ployees of the company and sent to} were only 4 few guests, including “ital, where she was con-| Lady Colebrooke. ane for twenty hours with- p axks $25,000 jared she re- s and for the time she was! you might pelled to spend in Bellevue. thet reatment she dei the remainder of rhich Miss Byrd was Ml d, told a reporter for The Eve: World that he and Miss Byrd had, | had a controverry, me hysterical, as girls do,” physician nt to Bellevuc mended that she pe oo MONOTONOUS 1M ind Russian ideas, the con- | that happen durin, “There are probably twen r similar to Miss Byrd here waa a difference of opinion and Htehttul, | 1, wf very likely be the] Perham Jewett, other patient sent ther became calm. ne allegation Miss Byrd's ¢ $0th day of No . defendant by Uy assaulted plaintiff u von Bernstorff, former | ‘ut "UKRAINE SOLDIERS KILL FRENGH MISSION'S HEAD Details aa to the fatality are | eter ‘also wuss VENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1918. New York to Show Its Peace Elation With Great Carnival de Victoire and Masque de Triomphe, Its Greatest Ball HERMAN P.TAPPE, “OTH AVE. MODISTE, | —_— > — | Romance of Outfitter of Soci- ety Women Comes to Cli- max After Wife’s Death. | Tt was as long ago as February, 1916, that Monsieur Tappe, said with engaging frankness to a World re porter: "I love Anna very much, b | fortunately, 1 am already married.” 80 they—Herman FP. Tappo, Fitth Avenue millinys, and Apna Holeb, his favorite model—could not be married just then, But che obstacle sas since been removed by the death of Mrs. Ada Jaffray McVickay Tappe, in Sep- tember, 1917. And yesterday, at half atter five in the afternoon, in the Lady Chapal of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Herman and Anna were married. There is to be a mid- Victorian honeymoon at Niagari, then @ touch of the modern in tho form of an airplane fight im the vicinity of Dayton, and then the Ave. nue ogain—or, rather, just around the corner from the Avenue, No, 71 62d Street, Monsieur Tappe's un at Tro. : RE} mance home,” Pes: ) | All this is very exciting to peopl of the most fashionable circles, poo ple who have abundant reasons to be grateful to Monsieur Tappe, partly Decause his hats make them look more beautiful than they are, and partly, because, only @ few years ago, he went gallantly into voluntary bankruptcy rather than send peremp- tory collectors to the houses of “mes charmantes clientes” who had for- gotten to pay, He survived the bankruptey, branched out from millinery to the reat of the things that beautiful wo- men wear, discovered Anna, the won- derful model, and all went we He was writing magazine article regularly on the subject of clothes hnd to be something out of the eth nary, and it was, The official d scription is as follows “The bride looked like an animated early Italian portrait. The material {of her gown was brown matelasue. Former Employee Alleges She |The contrasting shade was found in Was Handled Violently and Sent to Bellevue. some gold flowers, adroitly placed, T \brown tulle. wn was thore- |largo cluster of ¢ t of the bride was Miss Gr and Arthur J. Flanagan was Monsieur Tappe read by uC) There is but one more thing to and Monsieur Tappe said tt fy wife is a daughter of Frank | Hetch of this city,” he said. “She ts jof Duteh des not German, a ‘9 from tho sound of the nar CELEBRATE END Fr One of Seven Companics Here Disbanded and Others to Take it Easy. companies of the Count a total of 1,092 mon, to-day celdbrated the end of the monotonous part of thelr war servi the work of guarding war siujs the ocean. They dried and Aste: to ad dresses in the 9th Re Ari then marched to tie t Fifth Av company was mustered out | and those who will have much less to do from now on Dr. L, 8, Rowe, Assistant So tary of the ‘Treasury t address in wt beak the present and former tur y of the Treasury appreciated work of the Coast Guard Mulia how disappointed the men bud cause they had net had « chance to fight on the other sid Byron R. Newton, Collector of the Port, and E, P, Bertholf, head of Coast juard Servic |uppreciation, Osear bert Cahan d’Any missioner, were gu Com uw al the armory CHURCHES INDORSE LEAGUE, Counc plen Wilson Ite Indorne= of Nation's Plan al ¢ of ends a oa . pt A ft for a league of natior nt conveying tho dece laration and resolutions, ! FIFTH AVENUE MODEL WHO BECOMES BRIDE OF HERMAN P, TAPPE MARRIES MODEL { } imprisonment, ac | staff, Mrs, Grace Humiston and ot j| volunteer workers prevailel upon Justic permitted to leave prison on parole said Gov. Whitman to-day at the Bt Regis, “Until we were absolutely # HERMAN P. TAPPE, LEAKING SHIP FLOUNDERED FOR WEEKS IN MID-OCEAN Crew of British Schooner Rescued by Swedish Steamer—Vessel Burned by Captain. h schooner Pauline Martin, foundered for told- Atlantic be- Hor hat was a mediaeval turban in| fore an exception to the rule in wed- lerking ding dresses, Ler bouquet likewise Miss Amanda Byrd, who formerlY/ way an excoption. It consisted of a Na- weoks In gales in. thi steamship Elisa- was soon re- d her crew was ‘GERMANS KEEP UP NOTES TO AMERICA WASHINGTON 20.—Germany State Department not making the PARDONS GRANTED BOTH STIELOW AND GREEN BY WHITMAN Men Out on Parole Since Last May Are Restored to Citizenship. Charles F. Stlelow and Nelson Green, convicted on false evidence of killing Charles B, Pheips and his housekeeper, Marcaret Wolcott, in Orleans County, have received full pardons and been restored to eitizen- ship, The papers were olgned by Gov, Whitman on Deo. 17. Green had been sentenced to life lclow was to pay the death penalty, After raveral | stays the hour of death had almost arrived for Stitlow when Irene Loeb of The Evening Guy to grant another stay. One year ago this month Gov. Whit man commuted the sentence of Stle low to life imprisonment. ‘This was done because the voluntcer workors produced evidence which caused roa- sonable doubt in the mind of the Chief Executive. With this much aceom- | plished those interested in the two mea went further, and last May they wore released on parole following an in- vestigation made by George H. Bond. appointed a Special Deputy Attorney General for the purpose, Sticlow is at present employed in Buffalo and Green on a form in Or- leans County. - “The granting of a full parton and the restoration to citizenship of 8 low and Green was in keeping with my promise last May, when they were no mistake had been made we wanted both men to remain in the State, an therefore they were kept on pavolv. We watched their conduct closely and Iam perfectly sure that they now ds- serve full pardon. Mrs, Humiston said: “It ts an ex- cellent ending to @ most remarke bit case and shows that justice sooner or later wins out.” ‘Remember This — There’s More Juice Tropiko Grapefruit than in any other. It's the |“‘Juiciest Frait in the World"’ The best of the famous Porto Rican grapefruit, carefully se- lected and trade-marked. » The name “TROPIKO” | is on every wrapper ontains no new und war entenprnses on this aldo of ~ (ITI ULDEN'S | EIS GULNEN, New yore ES RARE ZEST TO WELSH RAREBIT appetizing—the real mustard taste. materials —no preservatives, no Mustard is spicy, mera | GULDEN, Inc. MANUFACTURERS AND PACKERS ESTABLISHED 1867 W your dealer is enable to supply you, write Porte Rice Preit Exchange, 282 Prestiie St. New York Clty « here ts that the | ULDEN’S MUSTARD 1) years, A