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| and recently came from the Bast to be- | come a member of the Cleveland-Chi- LEAP FROM BIRRINS PLANE cago Air Mail Service, Me had been + gyne KILLS AIRMAIL PILUT | titi Neve for severat days, but yoster- BOA etn tel eh | day was set for the start of his first i. ae ay gq | Mull Might, chetle, have First Fatality Among Flyers in U.S.| A second accident occurred several Postal Service at | hours after McCusker was killed, T. C. One guang | Fry, carrying the mail from Chicago, | was bruised when he turned his machine sharply while landing to avoid @ col- of Frank McCusker of New York, who Usion with an automobile, eaped 200 feet from hi« blazing. falling plane at Woodland Mills Park, neer| MACKAY SENDS NEW here, is recorded the first fatality amone | the flyers of the United States air mail|, service Hundreds watched the flyer as he stood on the frame of his machine for a few seconds and then jumped. His Cleveland. CLEVELAND, May 26.—In the death fed with Postal Head Urges Congress to limba were singed from the ankles to Pass “Immediate Re- mt .. Skinner into Colonel Bridau, with! nandied. . the knees, his trousers had been par- turn” Bill, Triumvirate at leering face and a battered stovepipe| In his “The Old Mill in Moonlight” | tially burned, and there were other in- 9.,|a8 headgear, The tasseled cane as he divides bis pleture space almost Aieations that he attempted to ex«| Clarence H. Mackay, President ot Kraushaar 8 hg end mathematically. The old mill of the . tingulsh the fire before he took his fatal | the Postal Telegraph-Cable Com carried 1s @ relic of former splendor. ‘dimly outlined, and in . an” Mr. Lal wi “ean. ten addrensad’ a totter, tall (8 I ee ety ian Mare atauen thes carmics that admits F McCusker was twenty-three years ol| members of an the B turns from the profane to the sacred, : Mant, A rather heavy; Congr reing y W. G. Bowdoin. And incidentally registers the priestly| the moon's pale light, A rather henty cloud occuples the left. This picture, | prompt passage of the Steenerson bill providing for the immediate re- turn of the wire lines to the com- panies, and reiterates that his com- -AROYAL RELISH exhibition ‘The merchants of New Rochelle are to Parent-Teach: the Mayflower Avenue School, New Ro- tion to bave the course of Summit Ave hue changed 40 ax to, acquire, land to ¢ school playground. school Is in one of /the exclusive resi- dential sections of the city. ‘A committees is sodn. to be formed of | the heads of the organizations connect- Salem Baptist Church, New | Rochelle, to | the late ‘Joni | the Metropolitan Life, who was one of DEMAND FOR WIRES mee. active members of A Painters’ George Luks, A. Monticelli and A. P. Ryder enter amiably into a group ‘THE EVENI Art Gallery, No. 260 Fifth Avenue, which contains ten numbers and Is to remain on view until May 29, George Luks is represented three canvasses, His “Otis Skinner as Colonel Phil- ippe Bridau” and “The Honor of the Family” is a character sketch which features Mr. Skinner in excellent make-up. The painting treatm@nt is broad and somewhat loose, but Mr. Luks’s paintings are said to mellow with time, 6o that this picture may that | become narrow and tight as an ulti- matum. At all events, Mr. Skinner ts here shown in the exercise of his Thespian art, and is translated from the man tiven distinctive personality. her son, “Peace Celebratior Harrison range, N. J inner to-night. ‘s’ Association of bY}in which asked the Board of Educa- and the tall have been pBasingly painted. The jects. Tho we ers have used is by him severe! strained and his pictures arrange for e memorial te rather than record. mn Re in, President ‘of small ‘tings, of which “The Wb Horse’ mental. stands in and with is significant, ors used have been conservativ horse of figuro with facile mellowness, The in the prea cofors used have a tonal richness, and churchly: personage ha: as well as the ot! exhibition, is all definition. at the C. W. Kraushaar| th . that for four genera.‘ tions has given millions of people perfect satis- 4 faction is pany will reduce the telegraph rates by 20 per cent. the day the wires are returned, bd He further says that the legisla~ Le re v2. . tion proposed by Postmaster General aed Burleson would mean a combination SAUCE a of the Bell Telephone and the West- ern Union, the elimination of the Postal Telegraph Company's compe- tition, a country-wide monopoly of the wire communications and’an in- crease of rates. “The deteriorating service and the inerensing rates during the past ten rionths of control of the wires by Mr. Burleson are just a sample of what the country would have to endure if the wire communications were al- lowed to pass into the control of one man or set of men,” Mr, Mackay wrote. “He has given the Postal Tele- graph-Cable Company only $1,680,000, although he admits it earned $4,269,- 000 even before the recent 20 per cent, increase, while he has given the Bell Soups, Fish, Roasts, Game, Gravies, Rarebits and Salad Dressing are made more enjoyable by its use, LEA«PERRINS SAUCE ‘THE ONLY ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE : Plates H| Telephone and Western Union more ; | than they earned. I Save Decayed Teeth, Tighten Loose [Fi | “This is a gross abuse. It is in Teeth, Treat Di ed Gums. || your power to correct it, and imme- SETS OF TEETH lately upon your doing so we will cut away the 20 per cent. increase in telegraph rates.” emceeneniiintaten WESTCHESTER NOTES. ‘The White Plains committee to ald tn the membership drive of the Westches- ter County . Children's, Associati Gol4_ and Porcelain Crowns, Bridgework Fillings and Inlays of Gold, Silver and Porcelain Made at Reasonable Prices. Badly decayed Teeth and Roots carefull; extracted. Teeth thoroughiy cleaned. Broken plates repaired while you walt. 3 OFFICES 2 E. 125th St. |169 E. 34th St. E. Cor, Bth Ave. IN, W. Cor, 34 A' 740 Lexington Ave which begins June 1, 1s its canvass, having been a quota of 235 new members. The co! ludes the following: Mra Prederick W. ve Di , William A. NG WORLD, MONDAY, MAY 2 New York city ilitary crowd, under the influence cf the manual, is hap- pily featured. Tne fiag incidentals ropolitan buildings ‘A. Monticelli in his two pictures plays up the spiritual side of his sub- th in color that oth- A,_P. Ryder is represented by five eter the most tempera- 0 e painting d the low-toned col- king in sharp it ely ent | . W. Cor. 58th 9" HOU 5 a ‘rench, Miss Livingston, bard, Tracy W. Reddir Whitmore and Ambrose F, McCabe, ‘The annual memorial service honor- ing the memory of the forty-one White Plains men who made the supreme sacrifice in the war was held yesterday | (Sunday) afternoon at the high echool auditorium under the auspices of the White Plains Memorial Association, and was largely attended by the people o: the city, Harry C. White and James A. | Whitmore, International Y. M. C. A. secretary, both of whom spent many months working among. ie ochfiers of the firing line, made the pringipgl #a- dresses, FAN OP, RARGES, William B, Osgood Field. and Mary P. Field of Mohegan have been appointed by Surrogate George A. Slater of West- | chester County to administer ‘the estate f their mother, Mrs. Augusta C. Field, who died April 4 last. mn states that she left more than $400,000 in real and personal property. ‘The regular business meeting of the Women's City Club was held this after- noon at the home of Mrs. A. L. Reyn- olds of No. 31 Court Street, White Plains. Mrs, Edward H. Gardner of Hartford, Conn., is spending a week with relatives in Whit in Mrs, L. H. Maxwell has returned to her home in’ White Plains after fifteen months’ service at Y, M. C. A. head- quarters in Paris, Margaret Schlinger of White \GRAPE FRU Dailey's Old Fashioned Jams AssovuTety Pure snghdy | goed Horlick’s ‘The Original ‘" Maited Milk For Infants and Invalids ‘OTHERS are UMITATIONS ANpReEW ALEXANDER SIXTH AVENUE CORNER I9=2S: Pre-Holiday Shoe Sale ‘Substantial Savings——Large Variety ——Incomplete Sizes Women’s Pumps at $6.90 Patent leather, gun metal and tan calfskin, includ- ing the high front plug pump now extremely pop- ular, High Louis heels or the lower Cuban styles. Also, oxfords in half a dozen at- tractive, com- fortable styles in various leathers. Men’s Shoes at $7.85 Were $8.50 to $12 ‘Tan calf high shoes and oxfords. Cordovan leather and black calf oxfords. Some sport shoes included. These are all good for present wear—and next fall they will be superlative bargains. Women’s Boots at $7.85 Were $8.50 to $14 Tan and brown calfskin and kidskin laced boots. Some of white linen—a few buckskin. Black kidskin in several toe shapes—and all are our own best grade shoes, The Man’s Dish Perfected by Scientific Men They are baked in steam ovens — baked for hours at 245 degrees. They are made easily digestible, as old-style beans were not. Yet these super-baked beans are un- crisped and unbroken —nut-like, mealy, whole. The sauce we bake with them is the final result of testing 856 formulas. It gives the beans de- lightful tang and savor. ary ¢x erts, college Pte have Pereated, in Van Camp's a new-type Pork and Bean dish. The beans are digestible. They are mellow—-uncrisped and un- broken, And every granule is made zestful by @ matchless sauce. Took 4 Years These scientists spent four years on this dish, Now the beans we use are lected by analysis. They are boiled in water treed from min- erals, so the skins are tender. VAN CAM ” Also Van Camp's Soups Baked with the Van Camp Sauce Van Camp's Spaghetti oy ‘The result is a many‘times bet- ter dish than old-style Pork and Beans. It will take a new place in your diet, and give you vast respect for scientific cookery. Don't forget it. Ask your gro- cer to send a few cans now. BS "sus Van Camp's Peanut Batter TMi nn BROOKLYN THE BOROUGH OF PROMISE AND PERFORMANCE 4TH LIBERTY LOAN Subscription Over-Subscription $102,549,000 28% Allotment $79,233,800 5TH VICTORY LOAN Subscription Over-Subscription $102,000,000 70% Allotment $59,847,500 COME TO BROOKLYN ====THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE=== = a : | a a = 1919," Brothers Stern West 42nd Street WOMEN’S SHETLAND SWEATERS. Exceptional Offering To-morrow at $7.50 , fashioned with large sailor collar, belt or sash, in all the esirable colors. Sale will be held on the Main Floor. Extra qualit most WOMEN will be assured by Silk Hand Bags Suitable for Summer use; two models with metal frames and double compartments, $2.95 and 5.00 Cowhide Traveling Bags Walrus grain; linen lined; sizes 16 18 inches; attractively priced, at $5.00 Bicycles for Men, - Bicycles for Boys, : Bicycles for Women, - Large packing capacity; hangers, five drawers, shoe pockets and hat compartment; 45x23x22 ins. Taxi Wardrobe Trunks, (Between 5th and 6th Acenues) ’S PUMPS & OXFORDS Reduced for Tuesday A number of this season's newest styles taken from stock and reduced for this sale. Models suitable for semi-dress wear—Patent Colt, Gun Metal, Glazed Kid ” and Tan Russia Calfsking,military or’ Cuban heels; a full range of tinea, TRAVELING ACCESSORIES At a Saving of About One-third! The comfort of convenient Bags, Suit Cases and Overnight Fitted Bags rchasing your holiday equipment from the following assortment To-morrow: Enameled Duck Suit Cases, sizes 24 to 28 ins., Enameled Duck Overnight Bags, 14 inch size, Enameled Duck Hat Boxes, 18x 18x19 inches, ’ SPORTING REQUISITES Specially Priced for To-morrow TENNIS RACKETS -- Gold Medal, International, Olympic and other standard models, with best quality frames and fine stringing; all weights. at $6.25 $5.00 Rackets with reinforced shoulders, $2.00 Rackets with strong gut stringing, Championship Tennis Balls, “CROWN” BICYCLES finished in maroon with white trimming; fitted with new departure coaster brakes, motor cycle handle bars; spring saddles ‘and guaranteed tires. “Rite Hite’? Wardrobe Trunks, : Dress Trunks with two trays, - : : West 43rd Street Regularly $11.95 $6.50 pr. id street. Fitted Overnight Bags With all the: attendant necessary fit- | - “tings; 14 inch size; unusual values, at $7.50 Traveling Bags Genuine Cowhide Leather; leather block with mammoth ‘grain walrus pressing; hand-sewed frame; 18 ins., at $8.75 to $5.00 | Regularly $10.00 - - at $3.50 oa so ome seh «Ses $6.00 $50.00 $40.00 $50.00 WARDROBE AND DRESS TRUNKS Five Holiday Specials for Tuesday! Above ali traveling equipment the Wardrobe Trunk is the most conveniently condensed and perfectly appointed. PEN-TOP Model, designed especitlly for Stern Brothers; constructed for durability; 43 inches high; made of three- ply veener wood, covered with dark blue fibre and bound with heavy black fibre; fitted with 10 polished wood hangers, five drawers, shoe pockets, laundry bag, ete., at $50.00 Wardrobe Trunks at $36.00 (FULL SIZE) covered and bound with hard fibre; contains 1 $22.75 $37.50 $16,50 . : , > at sganeief