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nee the “revo! termination of the | Batente to obtain ali desirable repar- GERMANY WILL NOT SIGN, “Let Allies Run the Country,” Says the Finance Minister, Com- plaining of Terms. LONDON, May 24—The Berlin core Fespondent of the Daily News, cabling ‘piainee | Mintster Dernburg, who yes- ‘Yerday returned from Spa, after @ conference with Count von Brock- dorft-Rantzau ahd other members of th®@ German peace delegation. The wubject of the interview wes this: “Germany is willitig to indemnify the Allies, but will be unable. to do #0 if she is not loaned sufficient coal for ber industry and given the opporta- nity for international commercial in- tercourse. “Nor is Germany willing to cede purely German territory and allow the gone of her country to bevome citizens of other nations simply because they lve on coal-producing soil. “Germany does not intend to offer arnicd resistance, but will allow the ‘Allies to run the country. “Tt is clear, Minister Dernburg said, ‘that we shal; be unable to pay an jndemnity if our resources are cut down by six-sevenths. Our stock of 014 amounts to 1,500,000,000 marke, ‘and that sum will Rardly suffice to buy necessary foodstuffs. We insist gn Deing granted a peace based on Pres- ident Wilson's fourteen points fairly and equitably applied. Tho peace ‘Which the Associated Powers now ‘want to force upon us is not a peace with, but a peace against Germany. “Lat there be an equitable peace. Lat us sit down and devise together terms which are not above our power to fulfil. And :f this cannot be done, Jet the Associated Governments run thia country. Let them get more oul AND WON'T RENEW WAR 74,598 SOLDIERS Sick or Wounded day, this week. The figures follow: BUNDAY. Antonio Lopes. A ‘Walter A. Lackenback Noordam o..-.+++ MONDAY. President Wilson... TUDSDAY. Manchuria . Mexican Ohioan .. Charleston Seattle \ Yale FRIDAY. Kalserin Auguste Victoria Of it sf they can. ~"'Rut we Geterminedly refase to sign the terms of the treaty which is ‘Tiow jaid before us. I can say this as ‘Vice Presideht of the Cabinet, and I eam add that the whole Government #@ unanimous.” ROCCO liminary to Proposed Trans- atlantic Trip. French aviator, started for Morocco from Villa Coublay, near Paris, at 8 @ proposed transatiantio flight. mapped out by Lieut. Fontan, from met with a mishap each time, —>—_—_ 1h S. TROOPS AID ADVANGE OF THE ALLIES IN Repair Bridge Destroyed by the Bolsheviki in Their Retreat. Southward. elated = Press.)—American = Railroad the Dice southward along the Murmansk Tellway. The Bolsheviki, as they move ard, are destroying bridges in an goon be operating with other ot Onega which is con- by rivers and canals with Lake Ladoga, the Neva River and Petrograd. petted oe io Maa aid ‘rene Town eof Leatsk Ukraint Prisoners. .'EONDON May 24.—Polish huve captured the important town of ‘Latex, in Volhynis, northeast of Lem- Newe despatch from Berlin says. end a lerge number of guns, Panaman . S181) neers Headquarters and ‘Medical De Merrebers 2425 | tachmenty 3 talion, Headquac- ters and Medical Detachments of $1 Otsego .... 1,011 Battalion, Hh, léth, tith and Tith Come Santa Elena ase 864) pany; 155th Infantry Brigade Head- SATURDAY. quarters, 308th Infantry apes And Medical Detachments 34 Bat- Santa Teresa . 1,870 talion, Companies D, Radnor ..... 1,909 |“ Otnego, Bordeaux, 1,011 be c ieolede America ing 311th Infantry ‘Headquarters and Medical Detachments, Companies A, nissan B and C; 84th Base Hospital, 333d ‘Total .. Rrbulance Company, 324 Evacuation The Santa Teresa, from St. Nazaire, with 1,870 army personnel, 34 officers and 1,386 enlisted men of them sick or wounded, and the Radnor, from ‘wit Follow Fontan's Route as Pre-|o" wounded. oe vera docked at 8 A. M, to-day at Pier 3, Bush Stores, Brooklyn. The Caronia of the Cunard PARIS, May 24.—Lieut, Rogot,| Line brought a number of casual off. cers with her civilian passongers, They were the vanguard of eight o'clock this morning, preliminary to| ships due to-day with a total of ap- He | proximately 20,000 soldiers and nurses, was expected to follow the route|more than 1,800 of the troops sick or Bosides the sick and the west coast of Africa to St, Paul's} wounded on the Santa Teresa, the Tocks, and thence to the Brazilian] hospital ship Mercy, from St. Nazaire, coast. Fontan made three starts but | has nine officers and 376 enlisted men wounded. who are sick and wounded. ‘The Teresa also brought members of the 644th Aero Squadron Detach- ment, 104th Engineers’ Detachment, and sanitary, field and basy hospital and ambulance company detach- ments. ‘Two surgical operations marked the passege home of the Santa Teresa and Radnor, Private Kelley Wheeler, Bethlehem, Ky., attached to Convalescent Detachment No, 191, had WRCHANGEL, May 24 (By the Asso-|been operated on for appendicitis just ‘ ey Another op- troops are playing an important part|eration proved necessary on the ship, rapid advance of the Ailled | ang the convulsions that followed due before leaving France, to seasickness proved fatal. On the Radnor, while a high sea to hold up the Allies in the|¥4# running, Edward Doheny of Har- The Americans are|lem, a mess attendant attached to the battleship Massachusetts, was suc- American motor launches have been | cessfully operated on and will be per- on flat cars from Murmanak | mitted to leave ship within a couple of days. On the Radnor were the 312th In- fantry (78th or Lightning Division, mostly New Jersey men) and Medical VICTORY FOR THE POLES, |Detschment D, tot Battalion supply Company and Companies I to M, 2,000 | clusive, 18 officers and 1,087 men; 370th Aero Squadron, 2 oMfocers and 157 men, troops |4nd %th Company Transportation Corps, 3 officers and 214 men. Many of the men were decorated. from the Ukrenians, a Central] Among them were Sergt. Henry P. Midland Avenue, Montclair, ‘The Poles also took 2,000 prisoners|who won the Distinguished Service Cross in the Argonne for carrying rations to isolated observation poste, Merritt, and Private Edward Rischman, 560 South 13th Street, Newark, who won the same decoration for taking a machine gun nest, a German Licu- tenant and forty-five men, Many of the troops on the America from Kan- 94s, Missouri, Nebraska, Arizona and Colorado, Reception committees from and Agamemnon are those States have chartered ‘This has been the record week for | the arrival of troops at this port, ac- cording to the Bureau of Information at the Port of Dobarkation. Thure- with the arrivals numbering more than 27,000, was the biggest day since the armistice was signed. More than 74,000 mon came into New York THE EVENING “WORLD, BATU TIRE GOVERNMENT OPPOSES TREATY, SAYS DERNBURG a 59-2 DDI IDPDIOO9-O ee ee 4% 6444 “Nickels and Dimes for Salvation Army Fund !’’ These Stage Women’ 8s War Relief Workers Plea BAGK THIS WEEK pwns SETS PORT RECORD pa Ee Eight Ships Due To-Day With 20,000; More Than 1,800 9900000006 44-606O000060 Detachments; 314th Ammunition Train, 314th Sani- tary Train, 314th Mobile Ordnance Re- pair Shop, 9th Infantry, Companies K and M, 806th Mobile Ordnance Re- S41st Field Artillery, pair Shop, 26th Engineers, Company C, 6th Army Corps Headquarters De- tachment, special casual companies, convalescents and 69 nurses. Santa Paula, Bordeaux, 2,166 men, including 82ist Field Artillery De- tachments of Battery C, 20th Engi Hospital. 1,500 BABIES IN BROOKLYN IN COMPETITION FOR PRIZES First Parade Gets Away to Fine Start At Red Hook Playground, With flags flying, bands from the Todd Shipbuilding Corporation play- ing and several hundred = ribbon- trimmed baby coaches carrying thelr Precious prize-seecking babies, the first baby parade of the day in Brooklyn got away to a fine start thie afternoon in the Red Hook Pia: ground, Richards and Pioneer Stree’ In various play more th ‘ounds of Brooklyn n 1,500 babies competed for prizes. They were all under three yea: Other parades took place in the McLaughlin, Fort Greene, Me- Carren Park, New Lots and Betsy Head playgrounds. SUBWAY TO PAY FOR ITSELF, PLAN OF STATEN ISLANDERS Proposal Made to Estimate Board For Port Terminal on Filled-in Land. A subway to and through Staten another puzzle, Island by way of Ellis and Bedloe’s Islands, which would pay for itself in port terminal on filled-in land between Ellis Island and Robbins Reef, was pro- posed to the Board of Estimate to-day by the Staten Island Subway Commit- tee. The plans hi Lewis H. officer. In addition to docks to accom- modate ocean-going ships and ware- houses and e' ything else necessary to @ port, the plans provide for a lwnding station for aeroplanes on the proposed filled-In development én the bay. iar ace oP HINES ASKS $1,200,000,000. | ¢ Rallroads Show 250,000,000 Dei Se War in 1919, WASHINGTON, May 24.—Appropria- ‘tion of $1,200,000,000 in addition to $500, 000,000 already provided, for use of the Railroad Administration during 1918 and 1919, was requested to-day by Di- rector General Hines. ‘The estimate revealed that there had been an operating deficit of $235,184,940 during the last calendar year and of at No. of 191 the $260,000,000 during the first four months steamer Montauk and will go down the bay to welcome the soldiers and accompany the ships to the Hoboken piers, The troops on board the ships dae America, Brest, 7,048 army person- nel, including 68th Field Artillery Brigade Headquarters, 1224 Field Ar- tllery, 128d Field Artillery, 124th Field Artillery, 340th Field Artillery Medical Detachment and Batteries C, D, E and F; 108th Sanitary Train (less Field Hospital), a casual company and 25 convalescent officers, Agamemnon, Brest, 5,628, including | 440th Field Artillery Detachment of | Batteries A and B, Supply Company | I and Of the total of $1,700,000,000 appropri- ated and requested, Mr, Hines said that $1,214,000,000 eventually would be re- turned to the Government, ———<————— Cap. and y Astor Sail, Capt. John Jacob Astor of the Brit- ish Army and his wife, Lady Violet, Sailed for England to-day on the Whi Star liner Celtic after being in_ the] tlm United States since February, Capt.]| “I know from Information which Astor dismissed reporters with ‘¢ smile} you have conveyed to me that you and a curt: “I don't speak English.” America, all Chinese, were reviewod lorday by, Dr. Chi Lien Daniel ont re, fates ae n| tration, the roof of the Fifth Avenue building | Pol Teur, Chinese | tg 245,000 IN NAVY DISCHARGED SINCE FIGHTING CEASED Strength Expected to Be Re- duced Below the 250,000 Mark by July 1. WASHINGTON, May 24,—Ways and means for getting the Navy and Marino corps strength down to a Peace time basis has been the sub- ject of several conferences between Secretary Daniels and his bureau chiefs in the last few days. The prob- lem is one of the hardest post-war puzzles before the department and al- though progress has-been made ‘n de- mobilizing the Nayy proper since the armistice was signed, thousands of of- ficers and enlisted men still must be released before normal strength reached, te It is believed by officers, however, that at the present rate of demob- iMzation the numerical strength of the Navy will be well below the 250,- 000 mark set by the Secretary at the . {end of the fiscal year, On May 1 there were 285,000 officers and enlisted men in the service, a re- duction since November 11 of 245,000. The figure strength of the Navy in the Senate Naval deficiency bill was 260,000 and in the House bill 225,000, total strength of 250,000 men, Naval officials are confronted with the ne- cessity for reducing the officer per- sonnel from more than 20,000 now on duty to less than 10,000 by July 1. ‘The question of adjusting the rank of officers of the regular Navy on the basis of the peace-time strength is To meet the rapid July 1, set for the increase of the Naval establishmen during the war practically all of the regular officers were temporarily pro- Getting connection with the establishment of althe Navy back to a peace-time basis moted one or more grades, means the majority of these officer: must be returned to their pein ank, While a majority of the line off rao © been prepared by| cers are said to favor a permanent Rabbage, a former naval| peace strength much in excess of the authorized 187,000 men there wil, ask Congress to increase thie figure. -His promise to the reservists that all reserve force members who desire release will be returned to eink life by August is taken to indi, cision. Major Gen. George Barnett, com mandant of the Marine Corps, said to-day the Marines will have jittle|in the Supreme Court to-day for a sep- reduced Based on a he intends to abide by his de- FIREMEN'S TWO PLATOON SYSTEM IN EFFECT JULY 1 Revenue ‘Bonds of $125,000 Voted in 1917 and Never Used, Avail- able Now For Change. Chief Kenlon of the Fire Department nounced to-day that with assurances received by Fire Commissioner Dren- nen from the Board of Estimate yes- terday the partial institution of the two platoon system for firemen would take effect July 1. President Dowling. of Manhattan called the attention of the Board to the existence af $125,000 in revenue bonds, voted by the Aldermen in 1917 and not useg for the purpose of Installing a two-platoon system. The Fire Department had asked for ht 105,000 to make the July 1 change. Chief Kenlon said that the 140 candi- Gates certified as eligibte;toybe firemen would be appointed at once. There are ecill 163 firemen in military service who will all be back by August 1. ‘The two-platoon system will take ef- fret at first In the districts of Man- hattan and Brooklyn where firemen have been most overworked. These are men of the first nine battalions In New York, all south of 69th Street and the 2st to 36th Bagtalions inclusive and the th Battalion in Brooklyn, pat deal - hate .| $760 ALIMONY JUDGMENTS Wife Says Figure in “Doughbag” Inquiry Missed Payments of $300 a Month. day recorded in the against Richard H. Burke, in the recent posed by ‘Thompson, The judgments are in favor of Mrs. State Senator close, made port of herself and four children. missed payments in April and the wife brought suit. it Signal Company. her children at No, 2468 Tiebou! Avenue, the Bronx, pss betaine ATA, HUSBAND OF 75 1S “COOL,” Bronx Drug Business Before Retiring to Farm, Charging that her 75-year-old Oe eee eie pret? | paid when the tine 1s crossed. Trans- - ]old, of Valentine Avenue, the Bronx, |ters from the main lines to local lines, who has four grown daughters, asks difficulty in reducing to the normal! | aration. strength of 26,300 officers and men by July MAYOR APPROVES INQUIRY INTO POLICE CAPTAIN'S ACTS Hylan Writes Enright There Is N Place in Department for Dishonest Men. Mayor Hylan to-day sent the fo! lowing letter to Police Commissioner Eagright: *I note in the press from time time reference to an investigation be-| and went to Bulfalo, where it was neces-|Township High School. te| ing made of the acts of @ police cap-|sary for relatives to : nape this same matter, While the all Chinese Boy Scouts Reviewed. | offense happened during the last ad- Troop 150 of the Boy scouts of|ministration and before my admin and befor a ye have some time been investigating | army ed Geven years after their gentleman while she was forced to scrub] sigs Kather W. 19 | floors and cook for farm hands, The! quarrels began, she said, when M: Simon went to the county seat in 191 to cast his vote, He rode a horse, but returned without It, 1} this, she declared, she upbraided him, asked her husband for a tol When he rushed madly from the hou; rsuade him return, He was served Will papers the suit at No, 2710 Fifth Avenue, whe he is stopping. ¢ Order Chanwed, WASHINGTON, May 24. fart that men enlisted in the Regul enlist only for the three-year term w: ee ited tere ‘one or three of the applicant, AGAINST LOBBYIST BURKE Two judgments aggregating $760 and representing unpaid alimony were to- Supreme Court who was styled the “Twentieth Century Lobby- legislative investi- | gation Into the $500,000 doughbag ex- George Elizabeth Burke, who, the papers dis- a separation agreement with her husband under which he was to pay her $300 a month for the sup- He and March Burke is connected with the Federal His wife lives with WIFE WHO SUES HIM SAYS is|Fred Simon Amassed Fortune in nothing to indicate Secretary Dantels bus- band Freddie was “cool and inhuman’ marriage, she said, her husband amassed a for- tune of $75,000 In the drug business, He then bought a farm tg Barryvillo, N. ¥, where he took his wife and| Sister of Movie Actress Victim of small family, She contends her hus- Auto Accide band enacted the part of @ country! AssURY PARK, N. May St.— “awell” For] riding skidded and overturned. Mra, Simon declared that in 1916 she] said, by Arthur Hotaling of Hackensack, new dres, A require. | © Army prior to April 2 1917, could re- by the War Depart- RDAY, MAY -24, 1 19, TRIALS ON MONDAY FOR RAISING RENT 60 10.90 PER GENT. eiontiimeen Hirshfield Plans Hearings in Various Parts of City to Accommodate Tenants. ‘The cases of rent raising that have/ aroused the Mayor's Committee on Rent Profitesring are set for trial Monday afternoon before Commis- sioner of Accounts, Hirshfield. In one, according to the committee's figures, the increase demand was ap- proximately 60 per cent. In the other it Is alleged the tenants were advised that their rent would be increased from $20 to $45 a month, and in @ few mstances as much as 90 per cent. Efforts of the committee to effect compromises have been futile. One of the cases is that of the Beech- wood Realty Company, of which A. Blumenthal is President, and man- ager of an apartment house at No. 559 West 164th Street. The records Jot Capt. Goldmmith, a field agent for the Mayor’s Committee, show the| company purchased the property May | 5. Ten days later, he says, the com- pany issued notices of rent increases of about 60 per cent, some greater. Joseph Jovans, owner of property at No, 66 Fort Washington Avenue, is the other landlord to be heard. Capt. Goldsmith said Jovans until two months ago was agent for the prop- erty and at that time became land- lord. Complaints from tenants, Capt. Goldsmith’ said, showed that in some cases a 90 per cent. increase had been demanded. For the benefit of tenants living far) from the Municipal Building, Com- missioner Hirshfield announced to- day that he will conduct a series of hearing at places more convenient to them. The first will be at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening in the clubrooms of the Washington Heights Taxpay- ers’ Association, 158th street and Broadway. Complaints to be inves- tigated at this meeting must be filed with the Commissioner by Monday morning. Louis Halperin, landlord of the tenements at Nos. 399 to 405 Hinsdale Street, Brownsville, is powerless to. evict tenants, who are now on strike, even with the law on his side. He hired “schleppers” to move furniture, | but they walked out. The tenants | are still holding the fort, police pre- serve order and City Marshal David Goldberg rails when men he hires re- fuse to work. Standholders in Washington Mar- het are threatening to hale Dr. Jona- than C. Day, Commissioner of Public Markets, before the Mayor's commit- tee a8 a profiteer because he has in- creased some rents there as much as 100 per cent, beginning July 1. They also declare they may have to in- crease prices to consumers. Commissioner Day said the !n- creases were necessary to equalize rentals, Rentals in Wallabout Market were increased 33 1-3 per cent. beginning May 1. PORT CHESTER AND RYE AGREE TO FARE INCREASE Stamford Railway Company Says Bankruptcy Threatens Unless Raise Is Granted. it] PORT CHESTER, May 24.—The vil- lages of Port Chester and Rye have agreed to an increased fare on the lines of the Stamford Railway Com- pany, which operates surface cars be- tween New Rochelle and Stamford, Conn, The towns of Rye, Harrison and Mamaroneck and the villages of Mam- aroneck and Larchmont have not taken any action, The company seeks approval before putting the case for an increased fare before the Public Service Commiasion. Under the proposed arrangement 5 cents will pay for a ride within the vil- lage limits, but another fare must be now given free, will cost 3 cents, Tho company contends that only this zone plan can save it from bankruptcy, polidatlbss Rote assay ESTHER ELVIDGE KILLED Hlvidge, aged gixtee. it} sister of June Elvidge, motion picture Ts )actress, was killed last night in an °. | automobile accident at Glendola, near here. The automobile in which she was She was in her own car, driven, it is who had come to Ocean Grove to attend “Prom.” of the Neptune Hotaling was se | the Junior The 319 to[ not badly hurt. in] home ie at Now re | Avon: ents are Mr. an who live Curing the winter at No. te | West Ande: Hackensack, Alumni and faculty members of the '4t.) College of the City of New York who erved in the war will be welcomed BOLSHEVIK POWER CRUMBLES AS BIG ARMIES ADVANCE dna |Lenine and Trotzky Rule Near TMNSTERS SON HAS THO WES CARE W COURT lines R. G. Quennell Wooed One End; Petrograd and Mos- cow Menaced. LONDO™, May 4.—The rule of red terror instituted by the Bolshevik under Lenine and Trotzky is crum- bling fast and competent observers to-day predict its speedy and com- plete collapse, It is believed that within a short time a strong govern- ment, under Admiral Kolchak, will be in complete control of the Rus- sian Government and that the Kol- chak regime, which stands for law and order, will be immediately recog- nized by the Allied and Associated Powers. Moscow, the present capital of the Bolsheviki, is being evacuated by the Reds, according to reports from Pet- rograd to Copenhagen, forwarded here by the Exchange Telegraph Company, A typhus epidemic is rag- jing there and conditions are re- ported to be terrible, The railway lines between a num. ber of places in Central Russia have been dismantled, the reports say, in order to improve main line service out of Moscow. The operations of non-Bolshivik forces against Petrograd are’ having great and rapid success, according to various repores seceived here from Helsingfors, The correspondent of the Daily Mail at the Finnish capital says that the Bolshevik re- sitance scems to be broken and that they have lost several thousand Prisoners and thirty guns, A great number of machine guns and five armored trains also were captured. ‘Thousands of Bolshevik soldiers tn the Gatchina area and in the coast region west of Petrograd who sur- rendered with thele arms and ammu- nition, the correspondent adds, sub- sequently joined, in the attacks’ on their former comrades, It {s reported in Helsingfors from Petrograd that the Holsheviki are prepared to defend the city, and that at Church Socials, She Says, Asking Annulment. After listening to testimony from two alleged wives of Robert G. Quen- nell son of Rev. R. G. Quen- nell, for years rector of the Church of the Ascension on Iiftn Avenue, Supreme Court Justice Greenbaum to-day asked for Quennell's present address and intimated that he would send the evidence to the District At- torney. The testimony was given in arinulment proceedings. Quennell, who is a brother-in-law of Albert R. Gallatin, the banker and broker of No. 111 Broadway, is em- ployed by the IL, W. Lawrence Com- pany, No. 40 Nassau Street. At that office it was said to-day that he was away on leave of absence. Madeline Piercy, a young chureh worker of Belleville, N. J who mar- rfed Quennell at her home, on March 21 this year, but who declined to ca!l herself “Mrs, Quennell” on the wit- ness stand, tokl the court that four days after her wedding Quennell’ took her to the home of his parents at No. 133 West 11th Street. When he in- troduced her to his mother, the latter informed heb, she said, that he was already married. Miss Piercy left the’ house immediately, returned to Belle- ville, took her maiden name and con- sulted « lawyer. “I was completely overwhelmed by said Miss Piercy, “I met Mr. Quenneli in church circles. We went together two years before we were married. I never dreamed he had another wife, for he was a minister's son, and I trusted him”, Evidence of the earlier marriage was furnished by Mrs, Jane Quennell. She said she had come from Jersey at her own experise to ald Miss Piercy untangle her blighted romance, Mrs. Quennell testified she married the all the workmen have been armed. The defenders are sald to number 300,000, Gen. Maynard, commanding the | Allied forees on’ the Murman front |im Russia, bas removed his head- quarters 400 miles southward on the Murman coast to Kem, on the White Sea at the mouth of the Kem River, according to Reuter’s corre- spondent with the British Murman expedition. LOST $3,600 RING AND ROW IN GAFE LEAD T0 ARRESTS Wife of Cotton Broker Admits She Was Fascinated By Married Salesman, Mrs. Marian Grunder, young wife of cotton broker, who parted from her husband recently and rented @ room in her apartment at No. 150 West 87th Street to John Feiger, a salesman, ap- peared in the West Side Court to-day to prosecute him for the alleged theft of a $3,000 diamond ring. At the same time Feiger's wife, Bar- Dara, was’ arraigned on a charge of disorderly conduct made by Mrs. Grun- der. The latter told the court that sev- eral nights ago she was dining in a restaurant at 96th Street and Broad- way with Felger when Mrs, Feiger burst Into the room, upset the tabie and chased her down Broadway. Mrs. Feiger denied the oharges, but Magistrate Corrigan fined her $26, Feiger wes held in $5,009 bait for fur- ther examination on a charge of grand larceny. Mrs, Grunder soid, she met Felger about three months ago and he fascinat- ed her to such an extent that she left her husband for his sake, Recently she discovered that her jewelry was disappearing. Feiger was arrested fast night at No. 344 West 14th Street, where he lives. i FIELD MASS TO-MORROW. Mer. Chidwick to Be Celeb Brooklyn Park. The annual memorial field mass for soldier, sailor, and marine dead wil be held to-morrow morning in Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn, under the Auspices of Gloucester Camp No, 5, United Spanish War Veterans, ‘The celebrant will be the Rev, Mgr. Chidwick, Chaplain of the U. 8. 8. Maine when she was sunk at Havana. A cholr of 200 voices from various churches will assist at the mass, and the police band will play. *|birthday of Dolly Madison by @ noon clergyman’s son in 1903 and separated from him three years later because of religious differences. She testified she knew nothing of her husband's second marriage until Attorney Leon Ginsbetx of No. 132 Nassau Street wrote her in behalf of Miss Piercy, Justice Greenbaum after hearing the testimony asked if Quennell had ever been arrested, When informed that he had not the court took his address and directed that the minutes of the trial be written up and sent to him for further action, —_>———- ACCUSES WIFE OF BIGAMY. 6 Woma: Brookiyn rt. Charged with bigamy, Mrs. Minnié Trainor, 24, of 398 Knickerbocker Aves nue, was arraigned before Magistrate McCloskey in the Gates Avenue Court, Brooklyn, to<lay and after waiving exe amination was held in $1,600 bail, Peter V. Trainor, No, 33 Hemlove Street, recently discharged from the Army, says they were married at Woods haven in 1912, and that on April ty 1919, his wife married Frederick Bohe ner at the St. Mark's Lutheran Ghar: Ny Bushwick Avenue and Jefferson Street. Fuchsia Bi kcal GOVERNOR'S WIFE IS GUEST, Mre. otf 24 tn Alfred KE. Smith Honored af Women's League Breakfast. The Women's Democratic League of he Btate of New York celebrated the breakfast at the Hotel Biltmore to~ ay. Mrs, Alfred E. Smith, wife of the Governor, was the cuest of ho aldedin’ the. recepion” preceding ‘thiy breakfast. SP CIAL NOTICES, HORLICK's THE ORIGINAL MALTEDM imitations and As) | DIED. | MILLBISER.—CLARENOB, Lying in state at the OAMPBDLL Fue NERAL CHUROH, Broadway, 66th sh” RELIGIOUS NOTICES. a sy pe NAGOGUR, " Bt.. cor, x one oe th Lost. FOUND AND SEWARDS, vost; brown, Drs shal raat ii of ation trees 10 ‘ist wore plaia collar; $60" reward. Pa] Miure%e tie tus reward offered tog THE ART OF DINING he afternoon's business, hour of sleep “MORE THAN A FRESTAU J victory dinner at Ave fut ti Br and fevoked y Be Ti fe, "soul aie Wiabaiht Bante se ioe ye Seas alumni of col- werv! Anybody can dine, the art lies in knowing how to dine, and practice have made the Churchill perfection for the knowing guest. the evening's enjoyment and « are all better after a good st ORFUL CABARET FOR MENTAL, aE 8 AND 11.15, —A HOB WNY INSTITUTION" CHURCHILL'S BROADWAY AT FORTY-NINTH STREET Study ie zero re]