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Thirty-Five Thousand Defy Drigzling Rain in Big Parade in Borough, NOTABLES REVIEW IT. Pictures of Priest Shown— Banquet To-Night. ‘This Is the day of days in the Bronx. | It is the day set amide by the popu- | lation of the borough to do honor to one of the greatest figures of the war, who, before the war was a parish ct among them; beloved by all. It is Father Duffy's Day in the Bronx, 4 The gallant, self-sacrificing soldier priest was Opposed to any demon- { stration of the kind and voiced his i desire from France that no celebration be given him, But the Bronxites , would not have it so. A parade in cwhich thousands were in line marched through the principal thoroughfares « the borough. ‘The parade started at 3 o'clock from 168th Street and Conovurse and fin. ished at Kingsbridge Road and Con- course, with the reviewing stand at 18lst Street. Gov. Smith, Mayor Hylan, Archbishop Hayes, Bishop | ‘Greer and other city, church and State dignitaries were to be in the stand. ies were expected to be in the stand. For weeks the Bronx has been pre- varing for this living testimonial to the heroic chaplain, Catholic, Jew and Protestant joining hands in the celebration, The line of march was cecorated with flags and patriotic #treamers and the colors of the 165th, } the fighting regiment of which | Yathor Duffy was the inspiration. | "The shop and house windows, irre- spective of the faith of the dweller ‘within, are adorned with photographs of the chaplain. And the parade despite the rain was A "one of the most wonderful the Bronx y haa ever sean. A special detail of the 165th, in command of Lieut. Col, Al- «xander Anderson, was on hand to be tho escort of honor, and Father Dufty rodé in an automobile with Borough _dgpesident Henry Bruckner. Wrancis Martin, District Attorney of the borough, was chosen Grand Marshal of the procession, and civil and military organizations, led by scores of bands of music, were to be In line, Soldiers who were with the chaplain in France, soldiers who dida't get across the seas, members of the Salvation Army, Red Cross nurses and men and wome@ from all walks of life took part in the great pageant, The day will end with a-Danquet to Chaplain Duffy at Fordham Uni- versity, which will be attended py 700 guests. ‘The list of organizations and their place in the scheduled line of the parade were: Grand Marshal, Hon, Francis Marth, and Military Staff, aides to the Grand Marshal. Brig. Gen. George R Dyer and Staff, commanding ist Brigade, N. Y. G. 69h Regiment Infantry, 22d Engineers, Eighth Coast Artillery Corps. Nimth Coast Artillery Corps, 1th Regiment Infantry. 12th Regiment Infantry. Tiat Regiment Infantry. Signa: Corps. 24 Field Artillery. Field Artillery Armored Car and Motor M. G, Detachment, Squadron A (cavalry). Red Cross Unit (uniformed), A. of C, War Secretaries (uniformed), Salvation Army Units (uniformed), ¥, MG & War Secretaries §(uni- formed), Grema Army of the Republic Veterans (in automobiles). Asmy Nurses of the Civil War (in autos.) ‘Veterans of U. S. A. N. V. Association. Veteran Corps of 69th Regiment. and men of the 165th Infantry (ola 69th Hegiment) and other let men from overseas. FATHER DUPEY (in automobile), SECOND SBCTIO, Mom of the parish of the Church of Our Saviour, This includes the Holy Name Society and Chaplain Duffy Club, Giesoo Point Military Academy. Bronx we of Bika, Schnorer Club. Denominational Ministers. St, Jerome H. St Al it. N.S. No. 99, usuatine’s H, Ne 8, Color Guard, 4th Degree K. of Knights of Columbus, all council Friends of Irish Freedom. St. Angela H. N. 3. Br, St. Martin of Tours HN. § St. Euke's H St. Rita's H. Band (Catholic The Holy §; St Mary's H. The Holy y St. John A St. Margaret's If. N, Common Cause Soc ty, Modern Woodmen of America, John Kosiuszko Club, Y. M. C. A, (Not uniformed). 8. 0. T. C, CMU), unit.) ersity (Semi-=Mil,) (Fife and Drum Corps), is High School, IaH (own music) I s " N.Y, Univers: Fordham U Morris H, 8. Our Lay of ur Lady of V te, Brende ‘9 HN, §, *. hi HEROOF THE I6STH, HONORED IN BRONX | Streets Decorated and Many | ™ wi } Sophie Kiel, “Just Dotes” ‘on Mr. and Chief Nurse, Mrs. Wilson — Latter Is Good Story Teller and Makes Soldiers Forget Their Pains, When the steamship George Wash. ington backed out of her Hoboken plier to-day and headed for Brest there wasn't anybody on board nearly so happy as Miss Sophie Kiel, chief of tho navy nurses. The George Washington sailed at 7:10. Among her thirtee npassengers were the Swedish Minister to the United States, Wilhelm Hkengren, with Mrs. Ekengren; EB. Harrison Yel- verton, American Vice-Consul at Lon- don; O. Squires, chief of the United States Signal Corps and Lt. Col, Joseph Mauborgne, ‘Miss Kiel, who befowe being drafted by the navy to take charge of the first group of women nurses ever in- stalled upon a transport was As- sistant Director of the Red Cross Nursing Service of the Atlantic Di- vision, expects that among the George Washington's pacs. cers from Brest on the return trip will be President sd Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. s Kiel admits that she has the greatest respect in the world tur the President and Mrs. Wilson, and loves—"‘dotes on," to quote ber cor- rectly—"Mr. and Mrs, Wilson.” | When the Wilsons went abroad last December Miss Kiel was making her |first trip across the Atlantic, She s with them again when they came home by way of Boston, She crossed with them a third time when they returned to Paris, “[ don’t believe,” the head nurse said yesterday, “that there are two more democratic persons in the world than Mr, and Mrs, Wilson. “1 wish every woman in America could cross the ocean on the same ship with Mrs. Wilson, For kindli- ness, tact and lovableness she sur- passes any one I have ever seen, She spent a lot of time with the sick men in the wards. After the first five minutes of the first visit the boys forgot that their visitor was the first lady of the land, Would you like to know how they described her? ‘A ood scout,’ Befand they are quite right. Nobody else I have met has so ch a collec- tion of good stories or tells them halt so well, The boys would begin to beam the minute she appeared in a doorway. Here, they knew, was a woman who knew how to be witty with a chap with & grouch, tender toward the fellow who was suffering, companionable with the lonely, “And she remembers everybody; makes them feel that her interest is personal. When we returned to Bos- ton one of the crew of the George , organizations, Our Lady of Mount St. Anthony: of P BE Philip Neri Ht. Ni 8, Br, - Mary's, City Island, H, N. 8. Br., No. St, Barnabas x St, Plus H. N. 8. Br, 3 te St. Athanasius H, N, 8. Br. No, 135. St. Anthony H, N. 8. Br., No. 157, St Adelbert's i. N.S, Our Lady of N. 5. Br, No, 219, Bt. Vilentine’s HN. 8, Ann's Guard. gade and Drum Corps, and Fife and Drum Fiton Boy St, Anselin ¢ronx Miltary aud Naval Cadels, Joseph's Boy Scouts, Boy Scouts of America, Nurses, Lincoln Hospital (uniformed), Howes How MOA Wioreg ae, SRBGAH Washington was in the ship's hos- pital. The first thing Mrs, Wileon did on boarding the ship to go back to France was to walk straight to this boy's ward, call him by name and ask for all the details of how he'd been getting on since she last saw him. You can imagine what that lad wrvte to the home folks about the President's wife.” “And how about the President?” Miss Kiel was asked, “Couldn't be improved upon,” sald the nurse, “the best ever. I have never had a more intelligent or in-, terested visitor in any hospital. He) isn't fussy and he appears to be par- ticularly averse to being waited on,” And the best part of it is, ac- cording to officers of the George Washington, the President and his lady—or “Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Wilson,” as Miss Kiel prefers it— think quite as highly of the George Washington's chief nurse as she does of them. MAGISTRATE WARNS GIRLS, HELD AFTER STRIKE RIOT Fines Them and Says They Will Go to Jail for Next Offense— Eighteen Fined. rikers, six of them girls, 5 or $1 Oeach by Magistrate McCloskey in the Bridge Plaza Court, Brooklyn, to-day, for interfering with workers at the factory of the Moore Clothing Company, No. 178-180 Moore Street, where a strike has been in Progress for three weeks, Eighten were fined A pitched battle occurred near the plant last week and police reserves, summoned to check the disturbance, made the 18 arrests, “You girls have committed a serious offense in order that you might help Some men win a strike,” said Magis- trate MoCloskey to the girls. “I have no doubt you were urged to take the law in your own hands by these men, who abandoned you when they discovered you were in trouble. I could send you to jail for this offense but you all look like intelligent girls and I don't care to have you mixed with disorderly women, I warn you that you will go to Jjail'the next time without the alternative of a fine.” SENTENCE TO LAND DUTY GETS TIM CROWLEY'S GOAT Kentucky’s Mascot, After Two Years on Bounding Main, Dies of Broken Heart. A broken heart has got the goat of Tim Crowley, the angora mascot of the battleship Kentucky—Tim Crow- ley, known from Newport News to the Harlem flats. The Kentucky was manned by Brooklyn tars from the shores of Gowanus Canal, who one dark night off the rocky shore of Staten Island stole the goat from a therd named Riley. For two years Tim plowed the main and was happy and contented with the Gowanus tars and the tin cans they fed to him. The green seas reminded him of the green hills of Staten Island and he waxed fat on whatever he got But there came a day when they tied @ can to Tim Crowley, instead of feeding it to him. They sent him ashore to the Naval Reserve Armory at Bay Ridge, made a landlubber of him. This was three days ago. Last night he died. Loss of the green sva shell shock and lack of company of the Gowanus gobs were contriputory causes to the demise of the Kentucky's poor Billy goat, IMPERATOR SAILS TO-DAY, BRINGING TROOPS TO U. S, Giant Liner, Taken From Germans, ; Will Be Refitted Here to Ac- * commodate 10,000 Soldiers, ‘The Imperator, second largest ship in the world and the pride of the one- time German merchant service, was to sail to-day from Brest, bringing troops to New York. She will arrive about May 17. Throughout the war the Im- erator lay at Hamburg, her home port. On May 5 she arrived at Brest, flying | the German ftag and manned by a Ger- |man crew, having come from Hellgo- land, American Navy officers and men took over the ship. She now flies the Inter-Allied Armistice flag, a blue bar on a white field, A pier at the foot of 44th Street, North River, has been engaged by the Navy for the ship, where she will be refitted and converted into a troop car- rer. She will accommodate more than 10,000 troops. Capt. Barnard, in charge of docking all transports, expects no difficulty in handling the big vessel. The Imperator is 51,969 gross ton- nage. She was built at Hamburg for the Hamburg-American Line in 1912 and has made several trips to this country. She is 882 feet over all, 9 feet beam and has six decks. oO BONDS FOR FIGHTERS. Rickard Partner Bays $127,000 Worth Through Toledo, 0. Bank, (Special to The Ewening World.) TOLEDO, O., May 10.—Frank Flour- noy, associated with Tex Rickard in the promotion of the Willard-Dempsey championship to-day purchased $127,500 worth of Victory bonds to go to the boxers as payment for their services on July 4, Willard will get $100,000 of the securities, the balance going to Demp- sey. Flournoy arrived here this morning and bought the bonds through « local bank. BSE aed Sean Page to Resign Post When Peace Ste PARIS, May 10 (Associated Press). Thomas Nelson Page, the American Ambassador to Italy, has made known his intention to resign after the conclusion of peace, it was stated in high quarters in Paris to-day. Ambassador Page has conte.nplatod this step for th years. May 10. the Brit- ish Government has removed from the restricted list certain drugs and chem- icals which do not contain dutiable in- announee= sredients, In making ment to-day, the British dyestuffs were not affect the Protest Against Propo: Fin PARTS, May 10 Associated Press),— Belgium has protested to the Entente Allied Powers against the proposed use by the German Republic of a red, yel- | low and black flag, which Is almost | identical with that of Belgium, _— Itallan War Ships Go to Corfa, OTRANTO, Italy, May 10.—The Ital- jan dreadnaughts Conte di Cavour and Giutio Cesare, under command of Ad- miral Solari, have gone to Corfu. Corfu | is an Italian island in the Adriatic, off public eariy neal week the result of the strike vote being taken by commercial telegraphers throughout the nation, cout: ‘Navy Nurses oa Wounded Men All Say So = : vane WIR BON, cam Bromv, END OF EXPRESS STRIKE EXPECTED IN FEW DAYS Union Leaders and Company Offi- cials Confer To-Day—Post- office Swamped. A. M. Banks and William Black- man, field agents of the Division of Labor of the American Railway Ad- ministration, arranged for a confer- ence this afternoon between the of- ficials of the American Railway Ex- press Company, the leaders of the newly organized branch of the team- sters union which has declared a strike and representatives of the old Teamsters Brotherhood, a semi-offi- cial benefit society which the drivers, chauffeurs and shopmen have repudi- ated. Robert Cowie, First Vice President and General Manager of the express company, told the Federal agents the company would do everything possi- ble towards an immediate settlement. Chairman Muldrew of the strikers said that his committee was just as anxious to end the strike as was the company and the public. Without stating any probable basis of settle- ment, both sides seemed to feel that the strike would be ended in a few days, As a result of the strike which has shut off delivery and collection here, the New York Post Office has been swamped with Parcel Post packages to such an extent that every available clerk in the service has been put on emergency duty after his regular daily tour ‘has ended, Since the start of the strike the Parcel Post mail haa increases 500 per cent., according to the figures furnished Postmaster Pat. ten. soncheiarinaia: GEN. SCOTT IS RELIEVED Ends Duties at ¢ mp Dix and will Resame I Work, CAMP Dig, N. J., May 10.—Maj, Gen. Hugh L. Scott, who had be: charge of the mobilization camp li since December, 1918, was to-day suc ceeded by Gen, Harry C. Hale. Gen, Scott went to his home in Princeton and later will take up his duties as a member of the Indian Commission to which the greater part of his life has been devoted, Gen. Hale had been on furlough since he returned to this country with the 26th Division which was demobilized last month at Camp Devens, No change in the remainder of the camp Till be made personel ocers said to- jay. pms Ta HIS FIRST ARREST IN HOUR. Former Marine Gets Busy Soon After Joining Police Force, One hour after he had been appointed to the force, Patrolman Tuzzo, who served with the marines in the Cha- teau-Thierry and Marne battles, ar- rested George D. Derung, No, 71 Gra- ham Avenue, Brooklyn, on a charge of striking Solomon Diamond, 15, of 199 Stockton Street over the back with « rubber hose because, it is alleged, the youth made too much noise at play in front of Derung’s home. Derung was held in court, MANY SENT TO. ‘SEA DUTY. Adal to port Service Seen im Navy Cha BOSTON, Mass, ay 10.—"Thirty- two per cent, of the enlisted men of the Naval Reserve Force and the en- May ¥-—lresident Castro |the progress of a trivial fire in the lg ‘eeriounty Mi’ Swe "Sentens @re in| basement where some rubbish was constant attendance, | ablaze, Sin VAST: MI NA OEY es as » | MY DISCHARGE PASS TWO nN MARK, SAYS MARCH | A. E. PF. in France and Ger- many Will Be Reduced to 225,924 by Aug. 1. WASHINGTON, May 10.—Demo- ilization of the war army has passed the two million mark, Gen, Match, Chef of Staff, announced to-day, and the number of troops returned from France now exceeds one million, As an example of the degree to which the return of troops has been expedited, Gen. March said that the 90th, Texas and Oklahoma division, | which was scheduled to sail about the second week in June, would embark this month, Official estimates staff show that a continuation of the present rate of transporting troops from France will result in the reduc- tion by August 1 of the American force in France and Germany to 225,924 officers and meh, including combat and service or supply troops, }marine detachments and the navy personnel attached to the army. The movement from France in April totalled 303,178, Gen. March eald that the acceleration of the official schedule is proceeding to the point where it seems certain that the oMcial estimate of 310,000 per month will be exceeded. Gen. March stated that a report that the shipments might reach 460,- 600 men @ month are untrue. If the United States had ships enough to transport such a number, he sald, there would not be sufficient troops to go on them, The one millionth man to embark from a French port boarded ship May 7. This figure includes all of the personnel—soldiers, marines, nurses and civilian employees of the army in France, Seventeen combat divisions have been returned from France com- plete, Gen. March stated, Other di- visions are moving ahead of schedule and should embark one or two weeks earlier than estimates stated, he said. America’s steady increase in ship tonnage has resulted in complete re- versal of figures for British and American troop transportation, Dur- ing the war British ships carried 61 per cent. of American troops to France; United Stat ships carried 44 per cent, and ships of other na- tions 5 per cent. On the return home American ships carried 78 per cent., British ships 13 per cent. and other nations 9 per cent. Brest continues to be the leading port of embarkation from Europe, fifty per cent. of returning troops having passed through it to date. Twenty-three per cent. embarked at St. Nazaire, 18 per cent. at Bordeaux, 6 per cent. at other French ports and 3 per cent. at English and Italian ports. New York continues the leading port of debarkation. Seventy-two per cent, of returning troops have landed there, 19 per cent. at Newport News and 9 per cent. at Boston, Phil- adelphia, Charleston and other Amer- ican ports, Army enlistments, Gen, March stated, total 28,737, equally divided between one and three year enlist- ments. Gen, March reiterated that the 8,000 men to be sent to Siberia re replacements and have the same latus as the men being sent to the army of occupation, to relieve men enlisted only for the period of the emergency. Only 1,192 Injured Americans re- main in France, Gen. March sadd, and they are being brought home as rap- idly as they can be moved Gen. March announced that in his recent trip of inspection of demobii- ization centres he had ordered the personnel reduced, in many cases by half, to diminish the number of emergency men held in service. These men, who are doing clerical work, are to be replaced by hired civilians, ——— SEVEN CHARITIES BENEFIT. win of A of $100,000 Estate. ‘The will of the late Atbert Robertson, No. 590 West End Avenue, was filed for probate to-day. It disposes of per- sonal property valued at $100,000, In addition to a trust provision for the widow and small bequests to several persons, seven charitable inatitut are remembered. They are: Federati for Support of Jewish Philanthropi Societies, Society for Ethical Cultu New York Skin and Cancer Hosplt New York Eye Kar Infirmar Presbyterian Hos , St, John's Guild, and New York Association for Impro ing the Condition of the Poor. eat RIVERHPAD, L. I, May 10.—A jury in the Suffolk County Supreme Court ren- ‘dered a verdict last night in favor of the Patchogue Manufacturing Company, No, 1115 Broadway, New York, in a suit brought by William Tompkins at Pat chogue for the death of his sixyear-old daughter Martha. ‘The girl was burned in @ bonfire on ti property Seeretary Dai BREST, May 10—The transport Mt. Vernon was enroute to New York to- day with Secretary Daniels aboard. The i iat |tire enlisted personne! of the regular| Mt. Vernon, which sailed at 3 o'clock a a ani wadisd navy are to be assigned to sea duty | yesterday afternoon, also carried the nadine ie ardan first units of the thirty-third (llinols | Wire Strike Vote BR Dee Next ney SSOONTIDE 3° ares ‘od National Guard) Division | ‘Week. \f yard — . e pure WASHINGTON, May 10.—Presider i men for additions to| 4€¢4 Man Drops Dead During Fire. 8. J, Konenkamp of the telegraphers' | ‘he transport servic Nicholas J, Kutting seventy, of union announced to-day he would make . 55 West 84th Street, died of heart fall- ure at his home this afternoon during of the general TO WEALTH CO MISSI Pt IF HIS FIANCEE COMES HERE Miss EUZABETH RENT More, Philippine Governor Tells Copeland Report That Miss Wrentmore Has Diphtheria Is Mistake. If Miss Elizabeth Wrenthmore, fi- Francis ancee of Governor General Burton Harrison of the Philippines, stops in New York on her way ised to notify Dr. Royal 8, Copeland, Commissioner of Health, Miss Wrent- more, who is on her way East for her wedding, accompanied by her mother, is charged by the health authorities of California with being a carrier of diptheri The California State Board of Health has wired health boards tn the East to apprehend Miss Wrentmo' and her mother. When Mr Wrentmore, it Is said, has been tit with diphtheria, It is believed the message concerned her. Mr. Harrison JAFFEE NEVER INTENDED TO said his fiancee had received a certi- ficate from the health commissioner of Berkeley, giving hor permission to Have thé Staty. He had left the Knickerbocker Club this morning, where he has been stay- ing. ington. LEAGUE FORMED T0 DISCOVER NEW POOR MAN'S CLUB’ Anti-Prohibition Organization WII Also Seek Repeal of Dry Amendment. The Anti-Prohibition Leauge,whose object among other things js to “en- courage and maintain an acceptable substitute for the saloon *a eeaty Clerk's office the main pur- pose of the league is to secure the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, and to that end the incorporators an- nounced that Congressman Reuben Le Haskell of Brooklyn will intro repeal bill at the special » called for May 19. Tho organizers aro Samuel MeMillan, An apartment house owner of No, 936 West End Avenue who has served in Congress and as a Park Commissioner: City Magistrate Joseph K No. 3 Kast lth Street IUram Mann, No. 6 West End Ave- nue; ex-Assemblyman William J. Ellis of No, 461 East 140th Street; Monte Cutler, @ newspaper man of No, West 101st Street, and James 0. St of the Hotel Imperial. Attorney Mann, spokesman for the incorporators, sald to-day that no brewing, Hiquor or tobacco Interest is concealed back of the organization and it is absolutely non-partisan, non. tarian and non-racial. It expects million members by year, a the first of noxt saceuniiimeeaai NEW L STATIONS OPENED. ‘Neck Road and Avenue X Stops en Colver Line. Regulatory Public Service Commis- sioner Lewis Nixoxn, General Manager Royce and Superintendent Dempsey of the Brooklyn Rapid ‘'ransit Company to-day opened officially the new stations elevated railroad at Neck ation at Avenue X ts now the point at which those going to Coney Island by this of the Cub Road and Avenue X. The route must pay their second five cent fare instead of at Neck Road as hereto- fore. fective there will bi mi econd fare, Fund for Russ Children, kovaky Russi coring 4,000,000 orphan children in Ruasia, has been effected. The money j raised will be distributed by a non- Ri 1 Estat Ae partisan committee which will operate ea e only in those Russian provinces not oiled hy the Rolsheviki. Law rence F, Abbott, President of the Out- look, is Chairman of the committee, to Washington, the Governor has prom- Harrison d of this action he assured Dr, It is believed he went to Wash- @ poor | court. club,” was incorporattd to-day. | Jaffee told the court that his ording to papers filed in the| Were welcome to live rent free Corrigan, Attorney George When the three track elevated line is completed through to Coney Is- || land and the dual contract becomes ef- n of the Catherine Bresh- Relief Fund, for suc- | | | i Mrs, Ww F eigen and Friend pe" part With Trunks; Carey Says” im | “Rank Outsider” Butted In. Mrs. Helen C. Waterman, of No, 284 Sterling Street, Brooklyn, pretty — victim of an alleged cave-man woolge ” by John B. Carey, a manofactarer ~ and her next friend, Miss Marie Gaff- ney, left their home last night, ‘Theif — departure followed the arrest of ~ Carey against whom both women had Preferred charges, Both took thelr trunks, 4 Only the fragments of the window pane, which Miss Gaffney said Carey smashed before he carried Mra, Waterman away, clad only in her night clothes, to his apartment at No. .7 Livingstone Place, Manhattan, remained to indicate that anything — unusual had happened, Carey, who is manager of the New | York Surgical Instrument Company, No, 327 Becond Avenue, said to-day that the affair was a lovers’ quarrel, the excitment being due to a second woman, : He declared “no rank outsider could break up his tittle romance.” Mrs. Waterman, who Is twenty-five years old, appeared before Magistrate | Folwell ot the Seventh District Court last night. She admitted knowing Carey since last August and said he had visited her home. She denied he had ever paid any of her expenses, and promised to bring | into court next Tuesday ardent love letters sent by Carey. Carey was held on an abduction charge in $3,500 bail, which he gave. Miss Gaffney, who first told the Police of the Flatbush Avenue station, | of the abduction, charges Carey with felonious assault, declaring when sho tempted to aseist Mrs, Waterman the ‘cave man” threatened her with a gun, She is sald to be from Boston and bas lived at the home of Mrs, Watermun only a few weeks, } 7 OUST PARENTS FROM HOME Dispossess Proceedings Directed | Against Sister and Husband, — Records Show. At the request of Pinkus Jaffee, owner of the apartment house No, 223 Basi 80th Btreet, Municipal Court Juatice Oppenheimer reopened the di penal i Proceedings directed agai the parents of the owner who tive inn the house. Jaffee told the Court. that he never had any intention — Of dispossessing his parents and that — the suit wes brought against Mr. amd Mrs. Joseph Brecher who have been ec- _ cupying the apartment with the old couple. Mrs. Brecher is their daughter and @ sister of Pinkus Jaffee. Nd The original papers on file in the — court room were produced and showed _ that the proceeding had been started was mot present or represented by counsel when the case was called apartment and that he would but that he was mot willing that the: Brechers should remain without paying, The Brechers consented to move begore May 15, Justice Oppenheimer stated tn court that it was not true, as tha he had denounced Jaffee when the dispowsess proceeding was brought. pete WOMAN UNDER TRUCK. After being pinned under a heavy tor truck which had to be jacked up fore physicians could release her, Miss | Ethel M. Dickinson’ of No. 119 4 Avenue, Brooklyn, is in Volunteer Hos: pital suffering from a fractured a broken right arm and contusions. ‘The truck, driven by Crossley Green oa Philadelphia, skidded on the pavement — at Broadway and Dey Streets last striking i Miss Dickinson, whe Dr. Grossman truck to an enesthetic to the young womam, ee Gen, Lenihan Guest of D. A, B, A luncheon in honor of Brig, Gen. Michael J. Lenihan, commander of thy | 154th Infantry Brigade of the 77th Di- vision, was given at the Hotel more to-day ry th Heights chapter of th paw the American Revolutio guests of honor were Stephem roughs. On Reasonable for 8 ED ri ne 5 Te Morrow's Sunday i