The evening world. Newspaper, May 10, 1919, Page 2

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| Sarbor, ‘Nis plane taking the air op- | posite the Baltimore and disappear- Dy the trom view as it turned eastward @ mile or more frot The NC-3, her new propelier work- ing perfectly, got away 23 minutes after her sister plane. ‘The aviators were awakened at BA. M, and before 7 were in their machines and warming up @hgines. All were in high spirits and Gonfident of success, not only In the eruise to Newfoundland, but also in the flight across the Atlantic and ‘thence over European coastal waters .to Plymouth, England, ‘The start was made under an most cloudless sky, Rhortherly wind cutting across the { course, which lay slightly north of east. >» The people of Halifax, many of Whom witnessed the brilliant spec- tacle when the lighted pianes sailed the harbor and elty in the moon- were out in large mimbers to Watch the’ start for Newfoundland, a @istance of 460 nautical miles, eighty ‘was expected that the to descend at Chatham, of engine troubie, May 10—Amer- “jumped — oft” Halifax this morning on wecond leg of their trans- flight. The NC-1 took alr at 7:47 A. M., and the NC-3 18 minutes later, enroute to Tre- the navy department was in- this morning. The time of ——- ; DAMAGE TO THE NC-4 HAS BEEN REPAIRED; FLIGHT TO-DAY DOUBTFUL | Weather Conditions May Prevent Plane From Continuing the Over-Ocean Trip. ) SCHATHAM, Mass, ‘May 10—The M hydroairplane NC-4 was ex- d to resume her flight to Halitoy noon to-day if weather cor continued favorable. The di motors which forced the m.- to put im on her way trom y Beach to Halifax with the and NC-3 had been replaced. ‘Condittons were less favorable at and. while Commander Read planned to make a third “hop” he was tn doubt as to the ad- bility of attompting the long to Halifax, Reports on the of the NC-1 on her trip from fax to Newfoundland were re- ‘@thved bere at frequent intervals, "| Ae the trial flight was delayed some hours beyond the time for-which it was ‘Hirst pot, officers at the air station said “there was little probability that the tart for Halifax would be made to-day, that the attempt might be made to- and timed so that the hydro- would pick up the Nova Scotia after daybreak. Weather condi- would determine the question of a flight, tt was sald. Lieut. te say when it would be possible to | F e the journey, Conditions early were favorable although warn- hed been received of the approach mf a northeast storm accompanied by and rain, it. Commander Read was anx- to resume the journey and re- the other fliers and was receiv- frequent reports on weather con- Commander Read pianned make a short trial flight before c! off for Halifax. NC-4 came in here shortly af- daylight onerdey with 4 two ket Ine had been ob- to come ji Taretey of after- May -—Editors of Rome Gecided to-day to Invite the Italian daily press to » nding the (government's SOLVE THE RENT | PROBLEM | OWNING A HOME es Can Be Bought Reasonable Terms For a Large List of Bargains READ THE |Real Estate Ads 4 the | with a gentle) Commander A. C. Read, | Seommander of the NC-4, was unable | ery et abe: yy aren, CLAIMS OF ITALY STILL UNSETTLED; WILSON STILL FIRM ply Saar Adjustment to Fiume Case. PARIS. May 10 (Havas).—It derstood that the Councli of Four is continuing its study of the Fiume question on the basis of the agres ment reached relative to the futare status of the Saar region. [The Saar region, according to the terms of the treaty of peace Presented to the Germans, will be governed by & commission oon- sisting of five members appointed by the League of Nations. After fifteen years a plebiscite will be held to ascertain the desires of the population as to continuance of the existing regime under the League of Nations, union of the section with France or return to German sovereignty.) is une WASHINGTON, May 10.—Reports | from Paris that President Wilson had committed himself to a proposal to settle the Flume dispute by giv- ing that port to Italy after 1928, were said in despatches to the White House to-day to be “absolute fic- tion.” It apoeared from to-day's advices that the President had not deviated in the slightest from his original stand in opposition to Italy's claim to ths Adriatic port. Other despatches from the President would personally ad- Gress Congress and “discuss the whole subject matter” of the Paris negotia- tions immediately after his return to the United States. It is understood that the President is being urged by his advisers to make a speaking tour over the country after he addresses Congreas. PARIS, May 10 (United Preas) When the Italian delegates first r turned to Paris @ report was circu- ‘lated that a tentative agreement had been reached by the other allied lead- ra to internauonalize Fiume under ne League of Nations. ‘That such a compromise was over acceded to is now denied in American aq It i» further contended that no invitation of any sort was issued the Italians to return, and that they oame back solely on their own initiative. OFFICERS AWAIT ARRIVAL OF PLANES AT TREPASSEY All Confident of Success of Amer- ican Venture—Think British « Planes Too Light. ‘TREPASSEY, N. F., May 10.—Bvery- thing is in read mess at the Newfound- land base of the United States Navy transatlantic flight for the reception to-day of the two navy seaplanes ex- pected from Halifax. The navy tender and supply ships Prairie, Aroostook and Hisko will have boats in the water ready to tow the planes to moorings, 4s voon aa they alight, while mechanics aboard the Aroostook are prepared to make immediate repairs. News of the start from Halifax was eagerly ited by naval officers. Officers follow.ng British attempts think the Handiey Page machine has & good chance of crossing the Atlantic, but consider Hawker and Raynham too lightly equipped. All are confident of American success. Lieutenamt ©. A. ‘Tinker has arrived at the Newfound- and base, a special representative of Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roose- velt. British Handiey-Page Arrives at St. John's, ST, JOHN'S, N. F., May 01.—The Siant Handley-Page biplane which Vice Admiral Mark Kerr will drive in an at- tempted transalantc fight to England, reached here o-day on the steamship Digby and was loaded on freight cars for transportation to Conception Bay, where an alrdrome has been erected. Assembling of the machine, according to the Vice Admiral will take three weeks, during which Hawker and Rayn- ham, the Sopwith and Martinsyde pilots who have been here ready to fly for more than a month, hoped to get away im their attempt to win the London Daily Mail's $60,000 prise for the first non ato transoobanic AeA a ¢ would. attempt the “big Jump" woigit REATY Y UNBEARABLE, SAYS Paris sald) Mea Hs , L | i ac, aks re ay bn hate « Leading Members of the German Peace Delegation Leaving the Railroad Station at Versailles enone AOOAOOREO9O4O8 49 oe | Council of Four Seeking to Ap- | : eS HEAD OF GERMAN 10 INTERVIEW WILSON Fears esp from First Page.) eiffel! Tower, Twenty-five additional experts and aids are expected here to-morrow from Berlin. ateaaanatijpaniniion EBERT ASKS GERMANS TO STAND UNITED IN FIGHTING THE TERMS Note Will Be Sent to the Allies Asking for New Nego- tiations. BERLIN, May 10 (Associated Press).—The Lokal Anzeiger states that a note has been sent to the tente nations requesting that new in- FOAADAOAA SAAAAAESEAAESO SED en Vous nr ahah hacia cht thacatthcaccadach cata cicada cata tacadantatacaccatacacilaatacacedatacaachtaac OCKDOREF, POSOOSeesECRsEAEE maomeray 4 FCFOI EVE? Vorw ~ | ttatiom slavery of thi for the indignity of wage and the permanent fettering ung German republic by the | Entente’s tmperialvism is the aim ) f |'his peace of violence. The Pree | people's Government will answer the peace proposal of violence with & roposal of a peace of right Dante cof a lasting peace of the na- the imperial and Prussian Gov- ernments, in a joint proclamation Pastern Germany, assuring the popu itions of those provinces that the jovernment will its utmost to ward off the dangers threatening | them and enumerating the territorial ed in the Treaty of Peace, declare: “These encroach- ments are entirely irreconcilable to the principles solemnly proclaimed by President Wilson.” TREATY PERPETUATES THE SEPARATION OF AUSTRIA AND GERMANY Chancellor Renner Also Sounds Death Knell of the Old Alliance. hmanges pro} peace negotiations begun and that German prisoners of war be im- mediately released. Mass meetings throughout the country have arranged for Tuesday by the Social Democratic party the! terms of peace. \ be been to discuss President Ebert has issued a proc- lamation in which he saya: to the German people “Our nation must save itself by its own action, In view of this danger of destruction, the German nation and the Government which it shows must stand by each other, knowing | no parties. Let Germany unite in a single will to preserve German na- tionality and liberties. Every thought | and the entire will of the nation ought now to be turned to labor for the preservation and reconstruction of our fatherland. Te Government appeals to all Germans in this hard) hour to preserve with it mutual trust in the path of duty and in the belief ing the triumph of reason and right.” | “The first reply of the Allies to the sincere desire for peace on the part of our starving people was the laying down of the uncom- monly hard armistice conditions. The German people, having laid down its arms, honestly observed all the obli- gations of the armistice, hard as they were. Notwithstanding this, our op- ponents for six months have contin- ued the war by maintaing the blockade. The German people bore al these burdens, trusting in the promise given by the Allies in their note of November 5, that the peace would be a peace of right on the asis of President Wilson's ‘fourteen points.’ “Instead of that, the Allies have now given vs peace tevms which are ip contradictic. to the promise given, t Is unbearable for the German peo- vle and is impracticable, even if we ing with her load approximately 16,000 pounds. She will carry a high-powered wireless. = Sen GOBS GIVE ANOTHER SHOW. “Dr, Jeykll and Mr, Hyde” Will be Presented on Broadway May 18. A show given at sea in a $20,000,000 theatre is to be transferred bodily to Broadway. It ts the sailor's version of “Dr. Jeykli and Mr. Hyde," but that is only the ame, for it is ay manner of acts. The ‘Sur is, at the Pri Princess @ hit coming back from wn when we tite af ‘incr 1 guess sels a ot Resets a iat tl Dewager Empress of Russia Lendon. LONDON, May 10.—Dowager Em- press Marie Feodorovna of ba nnd and he fezpsricr Grand Duches: ‘- | rived "int England to-day ‘on boat a ut forth all our pow-rs, Violence without measure wouldybe done to the German people, From such an im- Owed peace fresh hatred would be wound to aris, between the nations 4nd in the course of history there would be new wars, The world would ve obliged to bury every hope of a League = Nations iiberating and ealing the nations and insuring neace, “Phe fact that all circles of the Ger- man people have been moved deeply teutifies that the German Gov- ernment is giving expression to the united will of the German nation, The German Government will put forth every effort to secure for the German 80 | Austria's separation | of Nations. | Altes’ * | Chancellor PARIS, May 10 (Associated Press.) {+The portion of the German treaty which hag not been made public contains a provision that German from Germany shall unless ap- be “inalienable,” | proved by the Council of the League The use of the word “in- ailenable” is for the purpose of set- tling the question not only for present but for a long period VIDNNA, May 10 (Associated Press).—The death knell of old Aus- tria was sounded in Parliament when |» Chancellor Renner, nomination as a peace delegate to go to St. Germain, said he relin- juished all hopes for a fusion with Germany. His speech was made while the Impression caused by the in uccepting the strong. The feeling in the Chamber was, according to one speaker, that “it would be madness to unite with | @ nation subject to such measures,” “The Austrian people must suffer for the misdeeds of their rulers,” the said, “We never wanted the war and we were bringing it about. 1 will do my best to secure better terms for ourselves,” The address was delivered within a stone's throw of the Foreign OM\ce | in Ballplatz, where the first ma- chinery of the war was set in motion nearly five years ago, and moved many of the Chancellor's hearers to tears. A Socialists demanded that no delegates be sent, bur thers was no attempt at revolt or Bolshev- ism, . DEDICATE TREES TO HEROES, Woodhaven, in Queens, to Honor Men Killed in War, r the Brooklyn line in the Borough of Queens to-morrow afte noon the people of Woodhaven will assemble in Forest Park to witness the dedication of 63 trees to the memory of the men of Woodhaven who made the supreme sacrifice in the great wa Senator Calder will deliver the memo- rial address, James Pasta, a youthful veteran, will preside. Dr. H, E. Meyer of Christ the opening prayer-and Father George D, Sherman of the Church of St, Thomas the Apostle’ will give the bene- diction, ‘The exercises will be under the aus- pices of the Department of Parks, Al- ert C, Benninger, commissioner, ALLIES AGAIN DEFEAT REDS, | | in Thre LONDON, Allied forces have inflicted additional defeats on the Bolsheviki in three north Russian sec- tors, the war office announced to-day, people the same National unity and independence and the same freedom of labor in economical and cultural respects which the Allies want to give to all the peoples of Burope, save only our people. “The dismemberment and man: ling of the German people, the del: ering of German labor to foreign cap- “On May our positions on the | Vaga River were heavily bombardea |wieh 500 shells,” reported General ron je. “Cur artillery and rifle fire broke iy two infantry attacks, We suffered only slight casualties, Qn May we took several pr: guna avnard, Rritiah . on the Murmansk front, rm at lon May 8, the shore of ‘Lake Segoulero was cleared of the Bolahev: terms to Germany was sti!!| not guilty of | Lutheran Church will make | THEATRE CROWD | IN PANIC. AFTER FATAL SHOOTING | —. Chauffeur Killed for Breaking Silence—Slayer Escapes in Rush of Spectators. | peed alas |examined more than a score of wit- |nesses early to-day in the Unton Market Police Station in a vain ef- fort to learn who killed Moses Cohen in the Odeon Theatre, No. 58 Clinton Street, and caused a panic that sent 1,000 men, women and children campering for stairs, doors and fire- Jescapes at 11 o'clock last night, Cohen, who was thirty-two and \lived with his wifeand three Htrle children at No; 217 Varet’ Street, Brooklyn, decided to go with seven friends to see a Western picture at the theatre. Cohen, in the lead, found the theatre packed downstairs and ran upstairs to see if there were any Assistant District Attorney Dineen “Come on upstairs,” Cohen called to his friends, “there are seats up here.” The east side movie theatres keep interpreters to tell the audiences what the lines with the pictures mean, and Cohen's words are alleged to have in- |terrupted the Odeon interpreter, A man walked up and struck Cohen, saying: Shut up! What all this noise for?” Some say Cohen then knocked his assailant down, and others say they went into @ clinch, Two shots were fired and Cohen sank to the floor with @ bullet through his abdomen. man who shot him escaped in the up- | roar that followed, Men, women and down the two flights of crowded the fire-escapes an fought at the doors to get out} Everybody was shouting and scream- ing and many women fainted, But the place was cleared without any | one’s getting hurt, Cohen's chums put him in a taxi- cap and hurried him to Gouverneur | Hospital, but he died five minutes after reaching it. The police rounded up all the witnesses they could find, including Cohen's friends, but no one seemed to know the man who did the shooting, The theatre's ular ushers were exonerated, but It was thought one of the ushers may be the man sought. Friday night ts the big one for east side movies and they usually put on extra men, Cohen was a chauffeur, having 4 taxicab built espectally for his own use and had paid $700 on tt. His friends say he was able to take care of himself in a fight, but was peacefully inclined, eceeiiieteaies MASS FOR NIGHT WORKERS. ‘The eighteenth anniversary of the newspapermen'’s night workers mass | will be celebrated In old St. Andrew's ‘atholic Chureh to-morrow morning, at 2.30 o'clock, Mgr. Luke J. Evers will be the celebrant, Invitations to attend have to Gov, Smith, President Dowling of an Borough, Justice Frescht 1 Sessions, and Robert Moran, tof the Board of Aldermen’ The musical programme will be under the direction of Prof. Bletiger. No admission tickets will be required. a are you making children piled) stairs, to | n sent | Cacehe Forty Miles From Budapest. COPENHAGEN, May 10,—Superior ‘ezech forces, after a bitter and fluctuating struggle, have gained fa footing in the Town of Nagysze- eseny, the Hungarian supreme army command announces, according to a message from Budapest to-day, The town is only forty miles north of Budapest, the nearest the Aliled troops have approached so far, Street Car Strike im Pittsbargh, PITTSBURGH, May 10.—Union street ei n have served a 24-hour strike on the recel of the Pitts- nidnight to-night unless the recetv~ agree to submit theg demand for wages to the war labor board, . hsdsthchchchititititahadatadietatadad The} He was | EBERT N COLD INTERNATIONAL LAW PLAYED OUT, Future of Mankind Depends on Relations of Nations, He Says in Paris. PARIS, May 10, | gramatic speech at @ dinner Right ‘President Wilson touched om the future role of International law in the development of the new order of | things. “One of the things that has dis- turbed me In recent months,’ "he sald, ‘is the unqualified hope men have entertained everywhere of immediate emandipation from the things that have hampered and appressed them. You cannot, in human experience, rush into the light. You have to go through twilight into the broadening } day before noon ‘combs and the full; sun js on the landscape, We must see to it that those who hope are not dis- | appointed, by showing them the proc- esses by which the hope must be realized—the processes of law, the processes of slow disentanglement from the many things that have bound us in the past. “The intelligent development of In- ternational Law will be one of the things of most consequence to men in the future, If we can now give to In- ternational Law the kind of vitality it can have only if it is the real ex- pression of our moral judgment, we shall have completed in some sense the work which this war was intend- ed to emphasize.” “In a sense, the old International Law is played out. The future of nankind depends more upon the re- lations of nations to one another than upon the separate and selfish develop- ment of the national systems law.” President Wilson, speaking at the session to-day of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences, of which he was elected a foreign associate last year, said that the United States came into the war In the cause of liberty. “Whenever we see the cause of liberty imperitled,” the President said, “we are ready to cast our lot in common with the lot of those whose iiberty is threatened. That is the spirit of the people of the United States.” The occasion of the President's speech was the presentation to him of a specially struck gold medal. pascal fied asl dean VATICAN INDORSES GLAIMS OF ITALY Hopes Wilson Wi on Will Approve a Compromise Giving Fiume to Rome. ROME, May 10 (Associated Press),— The Osservatore Romano, the organ of the Vatican, in an evidently insp'red article to-day deals for the first time with the Adriatic question before the Peace Conference at Paris, After re- viewing the history of the negotia- tions, the newspaper expresses the hope that a compromise will be reached at Paris by which Fiume will be agsigned to Italy in exchange for concessions to Jugo-Slavia in Dalma- tia. “Once Great Britain, France and [taly agree to this compromise,” adds | the newspaper, “there will only re- main to be overcome the opposition of President Wilson, but we trust that the eminent chief of the great Ro- |public, disregarding the utterances |Rgainst him which the majority of the | Italians have deplored, will with his |approval of the compromise insure toe final success of the great work of universal peace to which he has dedi- cated 80 much | muny.” DOCTOR SAVES BAS VICTIM BY 7 HOURS WORK Contractor's Wife, Found Uncon- scious in Room With Leaky Jet, Expected to Recover. Mrs, Anna Donelin, thirty-five, wife of @ Daniel J. Donelin, @ Harlem contractor, was found by her hus- band unconscious jn the Donelin home at No. 239 Bast 234th Btreet, the Bronx, at 1 o'clock this morning. Gas from a leaky jet filled the room, He telephoned to the Wakefield Po- lice Station and a Fordham Hospital ambulance came with Dr. Ronnal and a pulmotor, The physician worked over Mra, Donelin until 8.30 o'clock—seven and a half hours— when she was restored to consctous- ness and removed to the hospital, where it was said later in the day that she probably will recover. ‘The two ehildren of Mr. and Mrs, Donelin asleep in @ room near that of their mother, were unharmed. EE te eT CAN’T SEIZE BRIDAL GIFT. “There is no consideration in the law more highly regan’sd than that of ‘a promise to marry, not yet performed," said Supreme Court Justice Cohalan yesterday in upholding a gift of $100,- 00 which Reginald Ronalds, a broker, nade to Mildred Combs, now his wife, In an ante-nuptial agreement. State Senator James A, Foley, as re- ceiver in proceed brought by the Guaranty Company to have the gift set. Rather ‘ontended It was in fraud of creditors, Ronalds was one of six who indors a note to the trust com- pany on, which Judgment was obtained $183,914 t Mrs, Ronalds did epi- | last | In a brief, | | WILSON ASSERTS: ROCLA ROCKEFELLERS ON WAY HERE, BOUND FOR FRANCE TO AID RECONSTRUCTION MRS 2D ROCWEFRULER Have Been at Hot Spmgs, Va., With Their Family for a Month Resting. HOT SPRINGS, Va., May 10.—John D. Rockefeller jr. and Mrs. Rockefeller, who have been here with their family since early in April, left last evening for New York, Mr. and Mrs. Rockefeller will almost immediately start for France to engage in the work of reconstruction 50,000 GARMENT WORKERS MAY WALK OUT TUESDAY Result of Vote Known To-Day— Unions Have Strike Fund to Last Thirteen Weeks. A atrike vote is expected to be com- pleted today by the Cloak Maker's Union and the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, whore com- bined membership is about 50,000, If the strike 1s called, as the police believe it will be, it will take effect next Tuesday. The unions want a return to straight dey work plan instead of the plece work plan, ‘They want a 4-hour week and a minimum wage of §50 a week for operators of machines, The employers are opposed to the da: work plan because they say It offei Protection to lazy workers who, under the piece work plan, now get only what earn. the: The unions say their strike fund is ample to cover thirteen weeks of Idle- ness. Oo BUDAPEST SOVIETS IM PAN OVER ROUMAKIA ADVANCE Bela Kun Asks American Peace Rep- resentative for Safety of Wife and Children. VIENNA, May 10 (Associated Press) —The Soviet Government at Budapest is panic stricken owing to the narrowing circle of the lines of the Rumanians and Czecho-Slovaks and counter-rev lutionary uprisings in Western Hu wary Bela Kun, ieader of the Soviet, has visited Professor Philip Brown, Amer- ican peace representative in Hungary, and asked If the Americans would ntee the safety of himself, his and thelr child. It Is understood request is being favorably con- Professor grade for a Brown ojourn, has gone to Bei- ell Heads Research Counett. WASHINGTON, May 10.—Tho Na- tlona, Research Council announced to-day the appointment of Dean James R. Angell of the University of Chicago as Chairman of the council for the year beginning July 1, The National Research Council was or- ganized in 1916 by the National Acad- emy of Sciences as a measure vf na- ‘tional preparedness and was reorgan- ized a year ago under a Presidential crder. n Angell {8 a son of the former President of the University of Michie MATIO ees nen -eerneeeactinanconeceahsaemmeninassint ED NEW YORK LOAN TOTAL TO PASS $2,000,000,000 (Continued from First Page.) ported at Loan Headquarters to-day were: Equitable Li Adolph Lewisohn & Sons Liederkranz Club | 8. J. Ullman... Employees Nor. Pipe Lin: hn Jacob Asto Linde Air Products Co Joldman Sachs & Co. Mra. Dorothy Whitney Straight « Dr. Norman Bridge yacob Wertheim .. Bowery Savings Bank . Union League Club | Osceola Club..... B. Lissberger & Co. niamin ... Mrs. Mai Rogers Coe W. R. Coe... Henry Luhlender . John Muir & Co. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. Howard Gould .. . Wm. Salomon & Co. . Edward 8. Schenck ..., Clark, Dodge & Co. George J. Gould .. Cuban American Sugar Co. Remick, Hodges & Co. .... St. Louis, as in the three previous Liberty Loans, is the first district to fill its quota, The Treasury Depart- ment last night recognized it as the winner, New York jumped to second placo yesterday, with Minneagolis third, GATHOLIG WOMEN’S LEAGUE | TO HOLD VICTORY MEETING TO OUTLINE MORE WORK Members Have Made Made 1,000,000. Surgical Dressings, Shipped Through Red Cross, The Victory meeting of the of Catholic Women will be held at tl Maxine Elliott Theatre nex: afternoon for the purpose of »utlining the work aiready done and that re-, maining to be done by the organisa- tion. Mer. M. J, Lavelle of St. Pat- rick’s Cathedral will be the obief speaker, The league was organized six years ago, and over 150 subdivisions have been established in the Archdiocese of New York. A service club for sol~ diers, sailors and marines is main« tained, and the league does many other things for the fighting men, Inciden-. tally its members have made more than 1,000,000 surgical dressings and shipped them abroad through the Red Cross, Mrs, Michael Gavin, as Secre« tary of the league, has been bu: night and day at ties with its volu |Minoua correspondence, PIMLICO WINNERS. FIRST olds ; 102, i} RACE. four and a hi heek), Selling ff furlor $22. Kirah, 109, show $4.30, second; Little Alexs 107, (Corey Show), $4.50, third, time 58, Hidden Ship, The Wit, 3 Fisk, also ran. SHCOND RACE—Three-year-olds, mile—Comme Ci, 103 (Rice), 3.20 show Joan a (Stapleton), ple., $3.20, show $3.20 ‘secs ond; Frank Shannon, $1.04, (Ambroserg show $6.80, third. Time 1.45. 3.6, toinette, Kimpalong, Sunningdale, quato, Uncle John, Tommy Waac aled ran, /' ———_—_ D'IEO. DOUTHITT.—ANNA. Lying in state at the OAMPBELL + uU-' NERAL OHURCH, Broadway and 66th. JANSBN.—OLE. é Lying in state at the CAMPBELL Fu- NERAL OHURCH, Broadway and 66thé ———___ LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. Dost Growa, back “surayed " len trom” 110 wore lain Brown collar: $50" re return to 110 E. 6let, ‘! (Rise), ple, $5.80, ander, ee This space geaributed | So Help Finish the Job neceptan: he @ any Creditor. une efore was entitled 0,000, a us property, would | Protected, an to°retain ‘ube CURy Haase 3 | Rainbow Divi ion He | Advisory Trades Committee Second Federal Reserve District Aiberty Loan Committes, 120 Bway, SL %5' /

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