The evening world. Newspaper, March 31, 1919, Page 2

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AAS aes * ae a et : — ee FENG TROOPS AREATTACKED BY THAT RUSSIA JON ‘Clash on the ws Nail Zone Near | Promises to ay international Roumanian Border—Sweep- | Debts and Allow States to ing Changes by Government. Form Own Governments. PARIS, March 31 (Associnted| LONDON, March #1.—George tans-|Gen, Stansbury, Promoted Prese)—A small force of French | bury, editor of the new Labor news- al zone | paper, the Daily Herald, declares that troops, stationed in the neut between Hungary and Roumania, has |the Allies have receivel a propo! attacked by Hungarian troops, |for an understanding with the present Sf the French being taken prison- Tvlers of Russia and Intimates that Sef, according to an official report. |the conditions of that understanding from Russia and the abandonment of lhe ad ms nee in Russian Greatly disturbed conditions arc |the policy of Inter ported to exist in Hungary affairs, Russia, on bi Gen, Mangin, who, it baw beon re- |be willing not to interfere with the ‘od, will be appointed to com-|affaire of other nations, allow Mn- mand Allied operations in the Ral. |!and, Exthonla, Ukraine and other re- | add Russia, had a conference |publics formed from the bygone Rus- {th Premier Clemenceau to-day at sian empire to choose thelr own forms he Ministry of War. jot TT EEA ie hore to pay Russia's ’ 9).~ | international debts De GHALbA Cevetianel 1b re. | The writer minimizes stories of out- ported in Vienna despatches to have [Maes by Runsian revolutionaries, de- t an ultimatum to tho Crecho-|claring that such happenings ha Wwak Government. This action, it | been less frequent than in other revo- stated, wan taken because of the) that Nikolai Lenine, the Bolshevik jcentration ot Caecho- troops and @ rumor that there would | shevik Ministe r of War and Marine, th Bohemia | have been “outrageously slandered, iat ous. pe giata oy, and describes the present administra ).—Boviet elections will be held | tries 1s proceeding everywhere in fus- | thin a fortnight,” suid Foreign | si, Mr LARsiriry Be says, inisier Bela Kun, to-day. “Our! fctatorship does not mean terror. | latter will prevail only if it GERMANY READY jeceseary.” Bela Kun said that automony naa | granted the Ruthenians, The 10 BACK DOWN AND evolution is continuing to sccom- sweeping changes in econom|: ai) DANZIG ite throughout Hungary. Lawyers, yaiclans, engineers and other men- workers are forming trades | njons. Each hospital has been put in (Continued from First Page) — | of one physician and one aennmane | ther mental worker. Al clergymen |decide tho question within twenty- nd ni have been removed from |tour hours. | he capacity of nurses. Religious poeverrereesls } have definitely de- | tution schools havé been abolished, | cided to disregard the German objec- Military barracks have been re- {tons concerning Danzig and to lund) named after Lenine, ‘Trotsky, the Polish troops in this German port Gebel and other social revolu- | >¥ force. If that becomes necessary. tionary leaders. But thig move, says the Temps The Red Army le increasing [Mould not necessarily imply, in the daily. Eighty women at Szekes- mind of the Allies, the union of Dan-| d aig to Poland. Tho nowspaper adda feshes volunteered, but were re: thar concerning the question of the fused. | Polish frontier the Allied Govern-| A soldier, convicted of robbery by ments seem inclined to create about 3 he revolutionary tribunal at Kecske- , Danzig a neutral state in order to sat waa promptly executed, ‘This |&¥0ld attaching this part of the coast | ither to ‘as the first execution since the Sov- | °” jet Government was established. aa aes TROOPSHIP SEES DERELICT; DISTRESS SIGNALS FLYING Three-Masted Sailing Craft, Evident- th SHOWS BOYS IGNORED ly in Collision, Sighted North of Bermuda. Hylan Answers That it Was Per-| The transport Mauri, which r fectly Natural for Soldiers to Pre- New York today from Brest ted a : x Re derelict last Friday in latitude 36.60 de- fer Home to “Welcome. gress North and longitude 65.02 West A letter from Private W. M. Vosik,|about 29 miloa north of Bermuda, fly tery B, 164th Field Artillery, 27th {ing @ sienal of distress | vision, thanking the Mayor for the; Ieut. Everett H, Sanderlin, Navi theatrical ¢hows and the dipners which |!n& Otficer of the Mauri, and eighteen ‘were arranged for the soldiers of the| Volunteers, Inuched @ Iifeboat in a vison lust week by the Mayor’n Com. (terrific storm and after considerable imittee and which the soldiers very gen-| Work managed to reach the deck of erally failed to attend, was given out ai |th® derelict. No signs of lite we Puhe City Hall to-day. The Mayor's re. [UPd on board Wo given out. It sald io part: |acy teon emasued ani the wrees had “The people thoroughly understood | ait the sesamunae ot having rua that the boys took advantage of the | voilision. Th ela vee IArst opportunity they had to see father |magted sailing cra and mother and their swe oarts, oven ~ though they had to fortelt the enter dalpment and dimer proviged for them. | DEBS LOSES LAST APPEAL; | see HINDENBURG SAW FINISH. Wrote om Oct, 30 Last That Gere | wy agiINGTON, March 31.—sup many Couldn't Win, ‘ourt ‘to-day denied Bugeno V, Ds STOCKHOLM, March 31.--A letter] application for a rehearing of his ap written by Field Marshal von Hinden. al from conviction under the Kapton burg on Oct. 30, 1918, was published Act. The court several weeks ago to-day, It says affirmed Debs's conviction and sentence “In consequence of the Macedonian wif See centhant acorn /of ten years in the penitentiary for rmany or to Poland. ihe eet front, aad in conseqence af | utterances im a speech wt Canton, Ohio. | impossibility of replacing our great| ‘The action to-day cuts oft trom Debs ‘Seing abt Jonger any possibility jany further hope of freeing himself ye ’ through the courts, He must now either “struc ia eles rve hie sentence or depend upon from unnecessary sacrific Executive clement Deservedly The Largest Selling | Ceylon Packed Tea | men, These wore the Maui with| Reloase of the prisoners has been are the withdrawal of Allied troops! | 2,216 and the Lorraine with 287, r part, would| \87th Division, Ohio National Guards. | | Brig, @ (and the story of the 146th is the same jas theirs, They fought in the Ar- jutions on a similar scale, He avers|®0Nne-Meuse sector and at St. Miblel. lovak | Premier, and Leon Trotzky, the Bol- | tion of Russia as “clean and wncor-|man df Cin BUDAPEST, March 31 (Associated | rypt."| The reorganization of indus-|in th hin orderly. Gen, Stansbury's brig- | shock cases, most of which impro on the voyage. Two thousand men of the 446th In- | [var ry, 87th Division, came home on | |rived in France in September and | he hospitals, excopt thore acting in| The Temps declared to-day the | afterward to St. Nazaire. Just about armistice was Thirty officers and 1,049 men of the 246th will go to Camp Dix; three of-| La Lorraine of the French Line ar- rived to-day from Havre with 396 | RECEIVES DISCHARGE FROM oo snat-'s nein THE UNITED STATES ARMY ‘wns sine, nesday passen- MUST SERVE SENIENGE| Camp Dix, Bt 10 ths *ront as War Ended. ARRIVE. 'OHIO. HEROL France, Leads Guardsmen Back With Honors, Four troopships arrived to-day with 9,500 homecoming officers and 3,647, Siboney with Alaskan The Roma was due |} making the total arriv 500, The first to dock w Brest with the 146tl er with 875, Is nearly 10,- | the Maui from Regiment of the men, the senior officer on board being Gen, Sanford B. Stansbury of the 78d Brigade. Many of the troops of the 87th Division have already arrived Gen. Stansbury went away as the Colonel of the 147th Regiment was promoted on the other sid private life he is a wholesale lumber- nati, O., and has b rd for many years, His fe Carroll A, Stansbury, 1s G son, Priv ade headquarters also caine on the | transport, On the Maui also were eral | J + NAC KELVEY & LOOST casualty companies and 130 shell- the Alaskan, The regiment, while or- ARMY MEN nie jand sent to Camp Dix, where its ranks were filled. The regiment ar- was sent to Pons for training, and the time it was to go into action the 3 diers had to return without hearing | the bursting of a shell. The troops on the Alaskan were in command of Major R. B. Butterfield. Back From Four Years in Enemy Country. cers and 206 men to Camp Upton, and the remainder (o Western camps, The Alaskan also brought two casual civillan passenge companies, {companies of eight ofMfcers and | men and a number of casual officers jroush and last W gers were forbidden to ‘0 on deck. Commander of 27th Gets Papers atl ‘Among the Lorraine's passengers Biltmore—Members of Staff | was Miss Maude Burke of Being Mustered Out. |Bast 123d Street, a moving O'RYAN of the 27th Divi- |throughout the war sion received his discharge “Even after the United States went papers this morning at the Divi- into the war,” Miss Burke sald, “the sional Headquarters at the Hotel |only protection I needed was to make n, forwarded t6,him from the Port of |Up to that time nobody had made life Debarkation, Hoboken, by Major /the least bit unpleasant for me, but I thought it was best to go to the Gen, O'Ryan has not yet dn- |Police Administration in Budapest Biltmore. The documents were | it known that I was an Ameri Gen, Shank: nounced his plans for the future |and report that I was an alien enemy. nor signified whether he will con- |All they did was to thank me ve sent to lead again the New York |much for calling and give me a p State Guard. {good any time, anywher Austria- By a er of Gen, O'Ryan Hungary. follow staft officers rece | “We were in Budapest when t thelr final discharge papers to- | revolution was di day at Hoboken was very much a matter of form Col, Walter C. Montgomery There was no massacre or shooting Lieut. Cots. J. Leslie Kincaird, [into crowds, ‘The soldiers went Kawatd McLeer, Joseph J. Daly, |througn the streets in motor trucks Henry 8. Stornberger, Lefferts | firing their rifles into the air, Except Hutton, Lucius H, Sall#bury, Ed- [for the food shortage and high prices J. Mayhew Wainwright and uniform in the stres Waiter A, Delamater Majors Tristram Tupper mond 1’, Moniz, Sidney H. tion, This was also true of Vienna,” Auguste B, Peterson and Others on the Larraine we ther | hew F, Carney, P. A. Quinn of Stapleton, 8, 1, who Capts, Jo¥eph D. Eddy, George |was Chaplain of Base Hospital No.) W. Peppard and Louis M. Gin- [5 at Paris, and R. H. McKelvey of rat Suffern, N. Y., an insurance broker Lieuts. eodore Cran’, Henry | oe No, 40 Cedar Street, who worked A. Morr! H. King, Elisha K. Wetherill, Herbert Forsch, George E. Steri b Louis M. Clark, Josep! G, “Floersheimer, Charles C. | which served throughout the wai Budbs, Edwin L. Dale, George | ars ay a hospital dog, sed Pr Prove, Aired H. Hooker aaa |... wounded, and later « and Almon A. sarhe 4, 85,000 of eone” returned after a year abroad, Mr jem, dew aud Ca gr Lae are aie & Aaeah Rae and Sailors’ Club at Tours, One hun Bireet, Clifton, N. J. near Passac, thie] @red thousand enlisted men of tho| morning casted away a safe welghing| Army and Navy wero entertained 360 pounds and containir 00 of [the club, which was financed by i whiskey Cortifoates money and Jewels | man Wanamaker. Valued at $1,000, Tron filings found on cin Garvall, wif the floor indjeated that they had tricd| Madame Alexis Carrell, wife of the} to open the safe and faile French surgeon of the Rockefeller | bor Mrs, Silver, Who lives above the m- oan . | loon icard & noise, but thought it waa, iatitute, returned’in the uniform of | a dough mixer in a’ bukeshop across the|the French Red Cross, wearing the street, | Croix de Guerre and a Lorrain the World ———_— | seneaphentrenees terete ate as demolished by covered mutficiently 10 be lared, 40 the sl- | Collision nce ti Denied—Ac | und Elsie De Woife. for American e girls of the Signal Corps at! “] arrested Mrs. Nieman and five casual army | who went to Fra he ‘accepted the offer of a wagon who had taken to deliver two barrels of pickles | to the Ameri rs reported that there den with th b city. later the driver dragged . man by the scruff of and pulled him away from the wagon just in time to save cre, SAOO0U0 CLUB Yo. G4 cture and vaudeville actress, who was in M*or GEN. JOHN F. |tiungary, Austria and Roumania “Aside {rom t ishness of ridin said Mr, Dallam front moat commonplace Casual Company nw pickle wagon, nembers of th 88 Major Henry Rotrd Q | 0. has been In I ansportation A in October, It the Garonne liaison officer with the Czech ward Olmstead, William ‘T, Starr, |and the la: -e proportion of men in! forces *“, one would not have knowa, first, that here was a| war, or later, that there was a revolu- been sent to the lovacs to th the “AGQUSED OF PERIURY John Kerr, Edward in the Y. M. C. A. offices in Paris. | Mr, McKelvey brought with him a! Belgian police dog, named “Loost, ige Rosalsky on Bench hing out a sentry Chaplains Francis A. Kelley |dog, trained not to bark when he} sensed a Hosch approaching, but to paw and nudge with his noso the CARRY AWAY 35 350- LB. SAFE. |soidier with whom he was working. — Mr. and Mrs, Amos Tuck French | was arraigned in General Ses: warrant Frank Aenold, Accident charged that Joseph had French was manager of the Soldiers’ | Knocked him down in Ce in sustained by r in fall- » subway ct and against the pl rporation tor ins to slipping on an orange good jobs. Rytten- | y oollect~ teps at 110th) Stre Cross made from a piece of phell, She went | SERENE to ¥ t th ning of th | cere SE a cet atph an peck in-a bus Nov Assistant Distwet Attorne veons he had THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1919. GERMANS TO GIVE POLISH TROOPS RIGHT .TO LAND AT DANZIG LENINE PROPOSES |New York and New Jersey Soldiers Come Home on Transport Alaskan; Troops Landed a is Por MCA ECE F TIS... 227 Prom Landed ot The SAYS POLIGEMAN ¢ FRAMED ARREST Donohue Helped Convict Patrolman’s Wife. year-old boy, were made to- fore Judge Rosalsky in General Se | sions. w , i an effort to have Judge Ro- salsky reverse the ruling of City ! Magistrate Norman J. Marsh, who on F Mrs. Nieman’s conviction and in | Sullivan to start an investigation. “If these statements are true, Judge Rosaisky told the Assistan District Attorneys, “both these p< licemen should be jn prison.” On the night of Feb. 6 Mrs. Nie- man was arrested with her cousin, Ireno Webb, by Detective Donohue on Broadway near 61st Street. Be- service} fore Magistrate Marsh, Donohue! that it; swore that he had been watching | join her husband | Mrs, Nieman for more than a month on Broadway. He denied in police American | court that he knew Patrolman Nie- injured | man, but admitted having seen him Gervais a shell from the} there. Donohue charged that he had Friday | observed Mrs. y recently re- | # able to re- in civilian clothes in the police sta- tion one night he took Mre. Nieman; Nieman approach yen men on Broadway. “I have been practicing in the courts for many years” Mr, Chadsey told Judge Rosalsky, “and this is the Douglas Merritt of No.| most outrageous case of oppression trom|that has ever been brought to my Dr. attention.” Judge Hosalsky directed the As- ant District Attorn to pro- 58th | duce all the persona concerned before told of her work in managing| "im in court Monday that their! stories may be heard by a jury. Donohue denied the charges to-day. another woman on Feb. 5 at 59th newspaper man|Street and Columbus Avenue," he A . said he never saw real danger |the street for several blocks and saw the |them talk to a number of men. It Is under-|part of my duty to arrest disorderly said, “I bad no idea who they were at the time. I had followed them on! women. 1 made this arrest when! they entered a hotel with some men. an lines in front of Bar|], was not until] I got to the station) Nam said he had rid-| with them that I learned one of them ckles about a quarter e when the driver swung hia team around and made for a policeman's wite.” Nieman could not be reached this afternoon to tell his side, —=_— lesson in the tool: | 2481, SOMO aed | was made mical War- n in action upied by Americal troops from six to eighteen months. | !¢ halt of them had been | building has expired. \ ‘The new club house has been con- | a ceived with the idea of perpetuating (Continued from First Page.) se on the temporary Astor Library the Seventy-seventh Division Aseo- porte, was a|ciation, of which Major Gen. Robert | Major | ajexander, Commander of the Divis- | 2 at St. | near |the real founder of the association \and the one who originated the idea permanent club house | fon, {s the honorary President. He is) of. evecting 2 in New York. and| ‘The executive committee that has Voska has|the matter in United States to tell the Major #. Fullerton Weaver, Capt George C. McMurtry, Major Lewls Banders and Major Julius O. Adler, Major James A. Roosevelt, who died tl the 77th gets home. ‘The cost of ren- of into @ permanent organization, fr which tie work of rendering neces sary assictanee to dependents of s¢ n be di-| woclation intends to see | that the graves of the failen members Attorney. Tells Judge Detective Allegations that Detective Edward J. Donohue of Police Inspector Dom!- nick Henry's staff in the Fourth In- Home Auxiliary Association, co- apection District had conspired with OPerating with the Executive Com- vame district, to arrest Nieman's wife on @ charge of disorderly con- Dr, William T. Manning, Mrs. Rob duct in order, that Nieman would not | ert Bacon, Mrs, Snowden have to continue paying alimony and, Mrs. E. T. H. Talmage, Mr. Stephen to obtain possession of thelr seven-! pinot The charges were made by Attor-|‘T, Spooner, Major Delancey K, ney N. B. Chadsey, of No, 52 Broad-| Capt. J. M. Loughborough, Lietit b. 20 adjudged Mrs, Nieman guilty} of disorderly conduct but suspended ! | wentence. So impressed was Judge! ' Rosaleky with the statements of the) i WU attorney that he promptly reversed | James E. Smith and Frederick J.! ’ lon the transport Great Northern | while on his way home from France, IN $50,000 LAW SUIT | was also a member of this committee eaters and was one of those who worked out the plans for the permanent club Fowler Arraigned Betore | .ouse for the association, ‘A small army of workmen attacked the old library building to-day and will have it in readiness by the time ovating will be about $20,000, The library, which from the outside has Secre-|¢the appearnnce of an armory, will contain eight large meeting rooms, @ swore to! gymnasium, library, sleeping quar- in the trial of | ter and a restaurant. Members of the division who find themselves hard pressed financially | will discover that the club house ts » attor-ia friend indeed. Within its friendly swore | wails they will be privileged to sign accident | cheeks for meals and sleeping accom. modations, ‘There also they will find _ | @ branch office of the 77th Division's or $50,000 for, |Employment Bureau, an organization she lus \that already hae proved its worth by) |] Nat. para cro lacing 2,600 members of the 77th in of ple At the offices of the bureau, No, 280 Madison Avenue, it was said to-day ued, that'prdetically all the jobless men of. |the 77th would be provided with pos [tions within a few duys after their Jarrival. Ono of the principal objects jof the club house is to provide a place {tor the mén to make their headquar- ters while awalting jobs. Officers of the 77th believe that the lub house will weld tho ¢ jation jon, from diers who died in France rected. Thi of the division in France are cared for and that their relatives here re. ceive needed aid. The arrahgements for establishing the temporary club house and the permanent one that is to succeed it have been handled by the Executive Committee and the Committee on Ar- rahgements of the 77th Division mittee of the 77th Division Associa- Patrolman William C. Nieman of the | tion. The members of the Home Auxil- jary Association's committees a ‘ahnestock, H. Olin, Mra, Russel H.’ Hoadley, Mr. Bacon, Mrs. J. Lloyd Derby, Major Archibald G. Thacher, Capt. F. 8. Greene, Lieut. Col. Charles W. Whittlesey, Major Bradley Martin, Majot Kenneth Budd, Major Herbert Jay, Shelton Martin, Mr. Cleveland H. Dodge, Mr. Stephen H. Olin, Mra. J. K. Curran, Mrs, James A. Roosevelt, { Mr. Walter Grafton, Mr. 8. R. Bertron. Caer” «Sant re OCEAN FLIGHTS (Continued from First Page.) it. There is so much protest even now against our war time restric- | tions of liquor that they are begin- to be selaxed.” | among a fleet of Lipton trucks as i they approached the Lipton offices ot . 149 Franklin Street. ‘The drivers ognized him instantly and gaye him 4 rousing cheer. He Kot another just like it when he entered the gen- ‘eral offices. And there he breathed a secret. ‘There ia to be a syiccessor to his | y famous cruising yacht, the Erin, | which made a wonderful war record | and was torpedoed almost at the end of the war. [t was sunk just after it [had rescued a number of women and {children from another torpedoed boat. One boat that has been mentioned as a posstble successor to the Erin is the | Vanderbilt yacht Warrior, “Six of my crew were lont with the rin,” said Sir Thoma “And the mans cheered whe » went down,’ BOY SEES HIS MOTHER END HER LIFE WITH BULLET Seven Year “OW Louis Louis De Frazio Getting Ready for School When | Parent Shoots Herself. | Mrs. Lenn De Fezio, thirty-five, was found dead to-day in the bedroom of |her apartment at No. 198 Avenue A, with a ‘revolver bullet wound in the |} right ear, by a policeman who went to the apartment after the woman's son | Louis, seven, had run to the street and told passersby that his mother had shot herself, The boy, according to the police, said that a8 he was preparing to go to school |his mother took a revolver out of a | wooden box and, after firing a shot at | the ceiling, turned the we: n on hei leelf, She then fell to the ‘. The boy suld that ho pleked yp the evolver and placed it on @ trunk -and, fler locking door, ran to the street. | He was TOUNG criing in front of 8 alors in 12th Street, and when questioned told of the hooting. oe ALL DRAFT BOARDS CLOSE. | Employees Off Payroll To-Night, bac} Members Keep WASHINGTON, March $1,—All clerks | and other employees of local draft yoard’ throughout the country go off until they are released formally by charge consists of| President Wilson. ir Thomas's taxi threaded its way | the Gyernment’s payroll to-night’ at | midnight, Offices of the boards will be | closed, a their work is finished, but | the members retain thelr official status | GODSOL'S RELEASE UPHELD BY COURT; FRENCH LOSE FIGHT Paris Accused Army Mai otf Making Millions on War Contracts Here. WASHINGTON, March 31.—The de claion of the District of Columbia Supreme Court ordering discharge from custody, on habeas cdrpus pro- ceedings, of Frank J. Godsol, whore extradition was sought by the French Government, was upheld to-day by the District Court of Appeals. That Godsol, while acting as an agent of the French Governmen:, made several millions of dollars on contracts for automobile trucks was alleged in the proceedings ordered by Ambassador Jusserand. In defense it was asserted that there was noth- ing illegal in the profits. Godsol, who is about forty-five years of age, served as a private in the French army, coming to thi’ country as an attache of one of the French war missions. He was ar | rested March 8, 1918, the French Em- bassy complaint reciting that he had been indicted in France and that, as 4 measure to secure jurisdiction, the French military authorities had or. dered him back to duty. Upon the appedl of the French an- thorities from the lower court's 0 der for his release, Godsol furnished bail Sf $5 0,000 in A oes Bonds. MPAN TOLD U.S, TROOPS REFUSED TO CO-OPERATE Declined to Fight Reds at One Place in Siberia, Says War Minister. ON DON, March 31.—American roops tefused to co-operate with the Japanese in fighting the Rolshevik; near Blagiovestchensk, 600 miles morth- t of Viadivostok, War Minister aka declared in answering question Asked {f the Americans’ refusal to ¢o operate with the Japsnese amounted dination, ‘Tanaka replied — he ‘ood that the orders of Ge: lied commander in that regtor fective when consisten: Upies of America’s ma- were wean atritu ebly was cue to a dif: he sald, proo. nee between ‘the Americans ant Jananese as to why Bo Sl REDS DRIVE BACK COSSACKS. Retake Half of Don Territery They Had Lest. LONDON, March 31.—Cossick forces in retreat before the Bolsheviki have given up half of their hard won Don Territory, according to a despatch ated March 17 received by the ‘Times to-day from Ekaterinoslav. The Cox ka are now holding the line of th: Pathe” Bolshevik official e Bolshevik official communique dated March Is, says: “In the region of Pinego (98 miles southeast of A angel), we have assumed the offer and have occupied Toromsjoe anc stro fortified positions near Oger and soliansko BURKE.—JOHN BURKE. Services at CAMPBELL FUNERAL CHURCH, 2 o'clock. DINGMAN.—-HENAY DINGMAN. Services at CAMPBELL FUNSRAL onUncH, Broadway, 06 +» Monday, ar. xiao March 26, ANNA, belofed ife of Thomos King and daughter of Mary and Joho Shen. Funeral from her late residence, 4) dway, 66th » Tuosday, Prospe: ace, om April 1; A St. Agnes's Church, East 4 wt, at 10 A. M. STAUBSANDT, — on Saturd Maren 20, 1019, EUGEN® STAUBBANDT, in his @24 year, Funeral services at CAMPBELL ¥U- NBRAL CHURCH, Broad st, Tuesday, April 1, rment Mount Hop: en zAM "Coyne p Onete * matio delle nest ‘oil of CONPRCE fons = ie a eneneaan LD DUTCH STY LR, STYLE CHEAT OOF TERA Che evntis eat mentee y cream, prescmied dolfelous Verait Tiavors, " * Vert sare ‘of ow iar weet ne Nb ROS Chocol. ED CAK i re daluty squares rit caramel i 1 wot, ‘on att cea WL ied

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