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~ KIN AND FRIENDS the Argonne . w! | the Hindenburg }ine. paigns triumphs. and shared various in some apart. and The the camp bers in parentheses; tillery and 108th Fourth Avenue Battalion, 105th talion, | Supply Train, units cases being Bu Many Follow New York Sol- diers—Discharges Begin Next Week. needless (29): Avenue (4 Livery train arriving at camp carries ; 104th Machine its quota of families and friends. Gun said goodby and started for Camp |e Upton to be mustered out. Just as anxious for another glimpse | of them as though they had not seen |®F¢, kept, few instances, visitors whizzed by on| Rothing stands in getting back into “ passenger trains, past the side-{ tracked trains of the very men chey | were going to + Some of them had hours before the soldi hed barracks, “set up houseke to wait fe Pershing. AGood Fighter? O® course you'll come back with the answer, “Because he takes hold and keeps hold.” And that’s correct. It is this tenacity of purpose, this holding on “for the last fifteen minutes,” that makes him a good fighter and a winner. That, also, is the American spirit. It was the spirit of the famous “Lost Battalion” over in France, the Battalion which held on so hard that even their enemies envied them. That's the kind of fighters Uncle Sam had in his ‘army. That's the kind of fighters he wants here at home. Uncle Sam still needs your money—You still need to save And, remember this: you have got a real grip on the habit of sensible spending and wise saving. You’ve got your teeth fixed in the coat-tails of opportunity. Don’t let go! Buy more and more W.S.S. GOVERNMENT LOAN ORGANIZATION Second Federal Reserve District War Savings Committee, 120 Broadway, New York Oversea: in \Engineers, 1024 It is @ pilgrimage that started yes-|j02q Ammunition Train, terday immediately after the mon,|Lincoln Avenue, who had spent the night at home, | (123); 10 for France. 52d Artillery Brigade was sen Many of the old-timers are meet- again for the first time since they Ta! in the No. 1024 SI T No, y of the France same Upton is so large a camp that the are widely separated; located This leads to some confusion walking | by locations are as follows, miles visitors, with telephone extension num- 106th Field Ar- Infantry, 102 ignal Machine Gun Rat- 102d Sanitary Train, 27th Military Police, 1024 (Special from a Staff Corremondent of ‘The |62d Artillery Brigade and 5384 and World 64th |nfantry Brigades and Head- CAMP UPTON, March 27.—Hostess |quarters ‘Troop, No: 2028econd Street at Ca o od |(188); 106th ‘and 107th Infantry, ee ae eeriy Uwe nowded |togtn Machine Gun Battalion, 1024 O-day with wives, mothers and sweet- | Mobile Ordnance Repair Shop, 1024 hearts of the Division heroes. |Train Headquarters, No. 1601 ‘Third 104th Field Artillery Rattalion, Engineers’ 1024 rain, 1728 corner 18th Street h Infantry, 104th Field Ar- No. 1508 Fourth Avenue (15). These addresses just now are places | of intense interest to all the soldie! for it is there that the service records These service records are essential) them since the return from France, | gor prompt discharge and the men their familics trailed after them, | of the 27th would fight as hard to The troop trains move more slowly | protect them from harm oe they. aid! cul monies. traliik to smash through the Hindenburg, than regular passenger trains, and line and end the war | Sdsbatal be dla bake banat hina be The records have been brought up| Jar schedule be kept Thus in no to date since the jon landed, so! men ies” next week. ‘D, S, MEDALS FOR HURLEY, " ORAVATH AND FOUR OTHERS Morrow, Sherman and ng” soldier fas and could go to * eas the he Ss house in answer to a sum- ee | Mck adden, Because the mustering out is to] . Stettinius Decorated by Gen, wrt Monday and is expected to be| bil Sd eet beeke ae none hele %) WASHINGTON, Murch 27.—Gen. Per- Biee ye vere see 1 couraged. |shing has awarded the Distinguished But the hostess house visits will! service Medal to six officials of the not be the only chance to see the! American Government for exceptionally soldiers, Dances are to be held sat-| meritorious and distinguished services. urday and Sunday afternoon at the] They are Edward N. Hurley, Chair- K. of C. hut, Saturday afternoon's | ™4 the Shipping Board; Paul D. entertainment will be under the au- | Cravath, representative of the Treasury spices of a Brooklyn auxiliary, of| Department; George McFadden, repre- which Miss M. L. Brady is Chairman, | sentative in France of the War Trade She and 100 Brooklyn school teach- | Board; Dwight W. Morrow, member of ers will give the “lance and provide | the American Shipping Commission: 1, refreshments. 1 soldiers’ guests|H. Sherman, member of the American will be welcome, ‘The dan inday |Interallied Maritime Council, ‘and Ed- afternoon will be given by the K. of|Ward R. Stettinius, Special’ Assistant 4 , Secretary of War. ©, Albert H, Dockray, Camp Upton eS ne General Secretary. ———— Every night until the men are dis- Bjotr Lithaan Adviser. charged, tainments will be given| Appointment ot rl Byoir, an by the 'Y A., of which C, B.| American citizen and former member Phettep! acting chief at the|of the Committee on Public Informa- camp. ‘These will consist of moving] tion, as official adviser of the Lithu- picture shows, Vaudeville and lec-|anian Provisional Government and of ture the Lithuanian National Council in The division {s reunited in one the United States, was announced by for the first tlne since it the council last night — st FIRST into le the other unité were brigaded with the British on TO THE HARVARD FAGULTY; 1S INDUSTRIAL PHYSICIAN SE9b 06 096 6O00H000006-006 65 $ 2-93-04 298-9 79-OOO8G-O 6:3-9-6-4-23-3-00-08 rs > | FAM Sem e $OOFO DOP DOOOPDODOPOFIOHGE Dr. Alice Hamilton, Born in New York, Is Specialist in Occu- pational Diseases. Dr. Alice Hamilton has just been @ppointed as the first woman member of the Harvard Faculty. Dr. Hamilton come’ from Chicago and will be assistant fessor of in- dustrial medicine. he ts a skilled bacteriologist and specialist in indus- trial and occupational diseases. Dr, Hamilton was born in Now York, TRUPP AND HIDE HELD AS SLAYERS Wife of Murdered Man Says Both Were in Store When Husband Was Shot. ‘Weeping and holding her two-year- 1d son close to her, Mrs. Bessie Wolchoch to-day In the Gates Ave- nue Court, Brooklyn, positively iden- tifed Conrad Trupp and William Hide as the two young men who were in her husband's store at No, 208 Wyckoff Avenue on the afternoon of March 8 when he was held up and shot and killed. Trupp and Hide were held without bail for the Grand Jury on a charge of murder in the first degree by Magistrate Steers, Mrs. Kathryn Hide, mother of one of the men, sat behind her son as he was being arraigned and collapsed after he was held. Mrs, Wolchoch testified that she saw her husband, Samuel, in his store on the afternoon of the crime with his hands held up and Hide holding a near the door. She said she ran into the living rooms back of the store and heard three shots, She reached store with a revolver in his hand Fred Hempel, No, 350 Street, a butcher, identified Hide and Trupp as the men he chased, Trupp is twenty-tne and Hide twenty years old, They gave thelr address as No. 1096 Lafayette Avenue Three men walked into the grocery pursuit a¥ soon as the bandits were out Jor the store, The men ran north on | Madison avenue. They were overtaken at 119th Street by Detectives Vachirda and Dolan, who had heard the racket from gfar and siezed two automobiles for the pursuit One man was lost in the confusion, An hour Iater Samuel Wandler of No. 1469 Madison Avenue was arrested at Madison Avenuc and } Street and identified by Siege! as the third robber. All were locked up in the 104th Street station, SHOOTING ALARMS DINERS, | Several Bowled Over When Dinh- | washer, Who Used Gan, Flees. Guesta at dinner in the boarding house lat No, 114 West 79th Street last night | became greatly alarmed when two dish- | washers fought tn the kitchen, and one ff them, William Robinson, « nm shot Charles Harvey of No. 22 West 6id Street, also a negro, in the right jaw. Robinson then ran from the kitchen, bowling over several diners, and ¢ jcaped. A surgeon from Knickerbocker Hospital attended Harvey, who {s not {seriously hurt. Police said the fight be- kan when Robinson did not work fast enough to suit Harvey eaeemaniiad | | Edward Alle | ORAN March dward Allea Everitt, a banker of this city, died to- |day at his home, No. 104 Essex Avenus | f of « complication of diseases. He was la son of I J. Liveritt, founder of the | |Orange Savings Bank, to the manage ship of which he succeeded Ever was byrn in Orange ja ldo, OF WOLCHOGH revolver near him, while Trupp was. the street and saw Hide leaving the | Palmetto | store of Joseph Siegel at No. 69 East 11th Street when he was opening the place at 7.30 A. M. to-day, One of them pointed a revolver at his head, | while the others made a search of the cash drawer, which was empty, and Siegel's pockets, from which they took @ wallet containing $19, Siegel roused the nelghborhood to SAY OR. WILKINS WANTED ‘SECOND’ WILL PROBATED Na | sau County Officials A sert He Made Request Four Days After Murder. Four daya after the murder of his | wite at Long Beach, Dr. Walter Keene Wilkins walked into the office of Louls G, It was said to-day Friess, his attorney, Nassau County t Mineola, handed to Mr. Frieas what Dr. Wilkins called Mrs. Wilkins’s will, and asked the lawyer |to have it probated without delay. by authorities Dr. Wilkins as principal beneficiary, was declared to-day to be the mo- tive for Mrs. Wilkins’s murder. ‘The story of Wilkins’s visit to him | |to have the “will” probated, it was said to-day, was told by Friess on) Thursday of last week to District Attorney Weeks In the presence of County Detective Carman Plant, Will- | iam J. Bufny, Allan Myers and Leon- \ard Thorn “L looked at the paper,” Mr. Friess said, according to to-day's statement by officials, “and told the doctor it was no good because jt had not been witnessed property.” Mr. Friess is said to have teen jasked why, in view of this visit and | Wilkins's request to have the so- | i “will’ probated, he declared } two weeks after the murder that there was no second will and, so far as he knew, no will other than the original | will by which Dr. Wilkins was left | practically nothing. ‘The answer of the attorney is said to haye been that, looking upon the second Will’ as no more than a scrap lof paper, he had never considered it |a will and so had answered the ques- tion honestly. leanne WILSON GABLES SUFFRASTS HS HOPE OF SUGLES St. Louis Meeting Gets Best Wishes for Adoption of Federal Amendment, ST. LOUIS, March 27.—The follow- |ing message from President Wilson jat Paris was read at the session of the National American Woman ®ut- frage Association Convention here to- | day: e | “Best for convention. I earnestly hope Suffrage Amendment will soon be adopted, “WOODROW WTLSON.” With eight to be elected, the fol lowing have filed their candidacy with the special committee in charge of the election of a board of direc- tors of the association: Mrs. J. C, Cantrill, Kentucky; Miss Esther Og- den, New York Mrs. Benjamin | Hoope, Wisconsin; Mrs. B. L. Hutch- wishes j inson, Kentucky; Mrs, R. | wards, Indiana; Mrs. Ferrell, Michigan; Mrs, T. T. Cotman, Ar- kansas; Mrs. Arthur Livermore, New | York City; Mrs, Hugh Ward of Kan- | sas City. | Mrs, Raymond Robins, chairman of the National Women's Trade Union League, urged that the gap between social and industrial practises be bridged, in an address before the con- | vention to-day. She recommended: Abolition of child labor and com- pulsory education for children up to | sixteen years; an eight-hour day and a weekly day of rest; night work for women and minors;; minimum wage commissions; equal pay for euqal work; insurance against fickness, accident and un- employment and providing for old age, invalidity pensions and matern- ity benefits, and the right of worker to organize and barguin collectively, | —_— “HIS BANDAGES AFRAUD, BUT UNIFORM EXGITES PITY but two who they were Benny Piseatello, "No. 123 Mast 104th Street, and Morris Peff, & East 109th Street, were arrested. Plscatello hud #| revolver and Peff had the wallet with the $19, the detectives declare. |Boy in Navy Togs Tells Court Sailors Stole His Civilian abolition of | ROH Dad‘ Forgot’ Now at Home Delaney Wheeled Them Away After | Tiff With Wife, Then They | Plumb Escaped His .Mind—He Is | Freed, Thank's to Guardian Angel | Who Found Them. | Here is a complete because whether Charlie sptuced up nerve enough Margaret-that's Mra. their flat in West 53d Street; but the babies are back home, thanks be to little story it that ijan't | fails to say has face Dolaney to Charlie = in thelr guardian angels and an Uni- dentified Woman and the Children's | Society and Detective Pat Meaney. | The so-called “second” will, naming Charlie was discharged of an aban- donment complaint by Judge Ten | wyck to-day in the Wegt Side Court, and maybe the Delancys will all be together again soon and happy | The Delaneys had a tiff at breakfast Charlie the | | table. is only | twenty-two and Margaret is younger | than that, Whatever the row was! |about, on Monday morning, whether | it was about his people or her people | or tho strike of the Black and White chauffeurs, of whom Chariie is one, | Delaney finally got up from the table, grabbed his hat, put the babies in| their Pullman—Charles jr., three yoars old, and Annie, an infant of cighteen months-and marched out of the house, pushing the Pullman in front of him | Charlie, at the corner of S8th Street ‘and Ninik Avenue, met a friend who invited him to step in and have one. “What harm? mid Charlie, and he parked the baby carriage on the cor- |ner. 6-0 Two hours later the unidentified lady, unable to find anybody who could tell her whose carriage it was, took the little occupants to the Chil- dren's Society, in 23d Street An hour more ond Charlie Delaney walked into the house again, ready to take her back. “In the name of God,” said the frantic little wife, who had seen him coming along, “where did you leave the children?” A ae So Charlie Delaney went out again and from that day to this—three days in all—did not dare to face Mrs, De- laney, as little as she is. Somebody gave him the Children's Society tip and at 9 on Monday night he called them up on the telephone. Yes, they sald, the children described had been picked up on the corner ‘named and were well and happy. | Would the man at the telephon> please come right down? No, said the man at the telephone, he wouldn't, but he knew the parents of these children and—he hung up the telephone. Then the police of the West 47th Street Station got a call, A man at the telephone told them how two little |children who belonged to nice people at No, 534 West 53d Streep were be- ling kept by the Children’s Society \from their parents by force and stratagem. “Come on in,” said Pat Meaney— who knows Charlie Delaney well and by this time knew the story of the| parked baby carriage—“and tell us| about it" | Well, to make a long story no long- | er than the editors will stand, they | finally corralled Charlie and although Judge Ten Eyck declared that his conduct was not of the exemplary sort that society has a right to ex- pect of the father of two such won- derful and beautiful children as Ittle Charlie and his sister Anna— ‘alone the husband of one of the finest {aittle wives in all New York—he could not find @ reason at all to hold him for abandonment, | | | “Discharged,” said the Court. “Well,” says Charl-us to himself, says he, as he reached the street again, “so far, so good—but how | about going home? says he | natin | Died om Way to Hospi While being rushed to the Jewish | Hospital in # friend's automobile, Henry A. Felrabend, fifty-six years old, of No. 83 Haywood Street, Williamsburg, sud- im lin fighting denly collapsed and died a few minutes later, Mr. Feirab was or years al of the Chatham and Phoenix Bank and was well known in fraternal cirles of | Brooklyn. He is rvived by # wif and child. | Clothes. | Spectators in Magistrate Groeh Foourt were struck with pity this morn- ng when a@ prisoner who looked too] young for the navy, but who was wearng @ navy uniform and many bandages, was brought ir He's a fake, Judge d the com: Piaining policeman. “He ain't @ sailor [and he ain't wounded." | The magistrate ordered the bandage Beneath them not a wound Philade’ sailors stole | removed. | sound flesh, | "Lt come from was good anywhere the boy sad my civilian clothes and made me wear these, And |they put the bandages on me because “Some there were wound stripes on the unl- form."* He gave the name of Francis Hep hey, sevent years old. There wa no testimony to indicte that he had | tried to benefit in any way by the fraud, and the magistrate was per- plexed, He found the boy guilty 0 vagran d postponed sentineing him, There will be further | Mom, in the @ DhiteRrose Deservedly The Largest Selling Ceylon Packed Tea 27, 1919. - UARD OF 77TH COMES TO ARRANGE FOR HOMECOMING Lieut. Col, Campbell in Charge of Officers Planning Reception in May. The advance guard of 7ith Divi- sion reached New York to-day on the transport Great Northern to prepare for the homecoming of New York's! ational army men, ‘The ship docked at the army piers at Hoboken this} afternoon, landing o total of 1,791) officers and men, On the Great > Col. Douglas Campbell, 77th Division Commander, and Capt, Lindley, ad- jutant of the 308th Infantry, who will immediately headquarters at the Biltmore Hotel to prepare for the orthern were Lieut open arrival of the division in May, Major James A. Roosevelt, another mem- ber of the advance detail, died sud- denly on the transport yesterday. Another officer of the vanguard is Capt, George 1. MeMurtry, @ member of Lieut, Col, Whittlesey's famous “Lost Battalion.” Capt, Me- | Murtry was awarded the Cong sional Medal of Honor for his br According to a wireless message ory. received at the headquarters of the| Association pt No, 280 MeMurtry rd and revised 77th Division Madison Avenue. © bringing a complete re roster of the division, It was pre- pared by Major Francis M. Wild of the 24 Battalion, 308th Infautry, who was wounded near Oche and cited for bravery under fire. The army personne! of the Great Northern includes 69 nurses, 19 elvil- tans; 145th Infantry, Field and Staff, Headquarters, Machine Gun and Supply Companies and Cor to B, inclust men; Detachment Company, 143th Infantry, 19 men: Casual Company No. 745, 1 officer and 14 men; 22 casual officers, ——_< MILK TO BE CHEAPER HERE FOR NEXT FOUR MONTHS Price for April to Be Cent a Quart Less Than the Prevailing Quotation. New York will get cheaper milk in April, May, June and July, and it ta predicted that future prices will leas than ever, The facts were disclosed at the John Doe milk hearing before Chief Magis- trate McAdoo this morning when Shepard Rareshide said that an agrec- ment had been reached doing away with the Warren formula of establish- ing prices which has b in vogu with the farmers and which has kept up the price of milk, price for April wilh be one cent { less than the price to-day CASUALTY LIST METHOD TO BE CHANGED APRIL 6 WASHINGTON, March 27.—On April 1 the War Department will discor tinue the method of fawuing casualty lists which has hitherte mado them | available for simultaneous publica. | tion in all newspapers throughout the country. This has been decided upoa, was explained to-day, becaus practically all the casualties Incurred have n announced and be fow remain except deaths from injury or disease since the signing of thy armiatic The War Department will, furnial full lists for mailing from Washins but they will not be issued for publication on any specified date, and | may be published Whenever wa: | papers vive. them. lant let insued under the present ayatem will be published in the newspapers of April 6 BIG SALE Vacuum Cleaners | up next Monday before Justice Bene- Hart's petition, you it appeared to be Mt. Hart abandoned M expressed a willingness to decide petition for separation then a1 there, It was Mr. Hart's counsel Who } gaxed for the postponement until jonday, the HART'S BRIDE GOES AWAY FOR A REST BEFONE SUIT AGAINST HER HUSBARD, 87 While Mrs. Wolf chatted the parked, No \eporter has seen animal but all agree that the enter- tainment about (o open in Madison quare Garden will not be pout him. Using algebra, try and o stethoscope and > complete Reomes ecuallin the dog's bark. tie boys eay the Wol pup Is ax tall o« a miratte, a4 big an an ephant, how we like dachechund 4 Jand has fi 1s bik as the clocks tropolitan Tower. A regula nd-basement dog. , her mother says, is woll nthe four-story- | Mra, Ha land happy “NONE $0 GOOD” All the essentials of exclu- sive shoe designing with per- fection of fit and finish, yet every regard for absolute com- || fort. HAR, . vf Great Dog Keeps Reporters and Mavie Men Away From Her Mother's Home. Mr Harvey oighty-neven-year-old { |b Hart, whose husband = re- cently lost his suit for the annulment | of their romantic marrtage last May , when Katherine Wolf only || has C forepart, B instep, and cighteon—has gone away for a rést|| Aheel. Grips the foot firmly, before her suit for separation comes || Cannot slip at the heel. Cor- set fitting at instep. Absolute comfort in forepart. Wide, medium and narrow toes. Made over a special last— was dict Mrs, He t's mother, left alone in the | ome Ne 7 Monre ow | sean a ronartors unt motiguren ata |{ Out beautiful Cordovan shades ping reporters and imo i J | distance with an enormous dog. But | praligg e ible by using only the to-day she opened’an upatairs window | and talked with reporters | “Katle,” sald Mra, Wolf, ‘ys! with | friends in Ridgewood or Glendale or somewhere, [ don't care what any- ays, she is not in this house. | ovie men drove her away, and t the dog and the dog drives Hurleyized sectet process, which increases the life of the leather, re- taining its rich lustre to the end. eY SHOES 434 Broadway 1357 Broadway B 1177 Broadway best leathers, being treated by : 215 Broadway everybody away. He's the flercest 143 Broadwyy 39-41 Cortlandt Se dog T ever saw to “Justice Benedict, denying Mr tdnasoat Soocieemen BONWIT TELLER & CO. The Spaialy Shep, furTa AVENUE 36™ STREET ANNOUNCE FOR FRIDAY A Special Sale of HANDMADE UNDERGARMENTS Below the Regular Prices . Handmade Nightgowns..2.25 Formerly 3.09 Of fine batiste, hand embroidered, ribbon ties. Handmade Nightgowns. ..3.95 Formerly 4.95 and 5.95 Of fine batiste, hand embroidered and hemstitched. Handmade Nightgowns...2.95 Formerly 3.95 OF nainsook and batiste, colado embroi- dery and net trimming. Handmade Combinations 2.95 Formerly 4.95 Of batiste and nainsook, straight model, hand embroidered top and bottom. 155 » Le Font Agents’ Samples, Shopworn, Used | Cleaners. j Richmond, was $65 now $12 Frantz-Premier, was $35......now $19 Eureka, was $40.44... now $21 | Magic, was $38,...... now $19 | Ohio, was $35 now $21 Hoover, was $100. now $50 | And many others at big bargains USED CLEANER DEPARTMENT | Vacuum Cleaning Specialty Co. 131 West 42d St. World CHARITY. American Red Cross CHARITY. Clothing Drive, March 24-31 bundle up your bundle If you have two coats give one to your fellow man who is shivering in Europe. Give every practical garment you can. Give your second best dress. Give shoes. Give underwear. Give all the used clothing you don’t urgently need. Because men, women and children across the water need it desperately. Go Bundle Up Your Clothes! Take them toany of the 70 Red Cross Receiving Stations advertised daily in morning papers, or to the Central Receiving Station, 9 Union Square. \ | | | |