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1, the destroyer Thompson, between Wixty and seventy miles east of Ponta Deigada, at 11.18 Greenwich time (7.13 “Washington timo), Admiral Jackson Teported to the Navy Department. ‘The Thompson ts the first of the four- Teen destroyers marking tue 800-mile course to Lisbon. Station Ship No, 2, fifty miles fur- ther eastward, reported the NC-4 had passed at 11.38 Geenwich time (7.38 A. M., Washington time), Rear Ad- miral Jackson reported ‘The reports show that Lieut. mander Read made the firet Iap a a his voyage in less than an hour, bis : “Wpeed being in excess of 6 knots. g Station Ship No. 6 reported thi passed at 14.06 Greenwich time Err} A. M. Washington time.) ‘The NC-4 passed Station Ship No. 4, approximately 200 miles out of Ponta Delega at 12.54 Greenwic! time, 8.54 A. M., Washington time The report from Station Ship No. showed that the first quarter of the trip to Lis- bon, was averaging more than sev- epty miles an hour. "Btation Ship No. 5, more than 250 a miles out, reported the NC-4 had “ Passed at 12.3 Greenwich time (9.36 P A.M. Washington time). es, more han halt way a. the 450 miles flight in approxi- itely wix hours. At 1.10 P. M. the NC-4 was reported having passed over Station il, vingf only approximately 20 miles of the journey to Lisbon to go. ‘The apparent long in speed. of the “NC-4 detween station ships § and 9 ©aséd some concern at the Navy De partment. The plane cov e bo f of water between ship 7 3 an $0 knot elip,whtle 4 between 6 and 9 ap- rently took than an hour. me oMcers it was station os 10 that had been passed at 12.18 3M. and an inquiry was sent to Delgada. said it was possible that Read hati had some roubie with bis engines which im down, but they added that with ‘half of his trip behind him he could nish the journey to Lisbon on three motors if neecssary. American Officer tn Copenbagen- Stockholm Flight. ~ STOCKHOLM, Gunday, May 2%5.— ee conerees eaves extteess is ying from Copenhagen to this , arrived at Calmar at 12.20 o'clock yy ‘eroning and afer deaceted u ocho. “The again, rome wt 10 oick ‘not arrived here up to-night. lt Presumed that he wv the “nana ‘islands whout the PROPOSES CONGRESSIONAL _ MEDAL OF HONOR FOR READ Representative Briten Britten Would Give : * Commander Nation's Highest (WASHINGTON, May 27.—Awarding i of the Congressional Medal of Honor, Nation's highest mark of service, to it. Commander Read and the crew ‘df the NC-4 tn the event of their suc- deestul completion of a transatlantic flight, was proposed in a House resolv- tion prepared by Representative Britten, Wmoia, Announcement that the NC-4 was expected to complete a transatlantic Might before sunset was the signal for applause in the House, “The NC-4," declared Representa- hie presages the successful termi- of preparations of the Ame vy to be the first to carry the across the ‘seas in an airship by American engineers, con: y Ametioan workmen, pro- yy American motors and Meaop-d by American officers.” *Mr. Hicks announced he had pre- @ Dill extending the thanks of to the crew of the NC-4 as ae to Commander J. H. Towers Lieut. Commander P. N. L. Bel- by Gd {ye drows of the NC-1 and No-e ALDERMEN DEFEAT PLAN FOR THREE’ FIRE PLATOONS Dowling Says Two-Shift System Will Be Established in 100 Houses by June 4, By a vote of 42 to 16, the Board of Aldermen this afternoon defeated two ; ‘ordinances, one introduced by Aldermen bert and Gilmore, Democrats, and other by Socialist Alderman Becker- mpan, each of which provided for a three @atoon system in the fire department. Thstead, the Board of Estimi will , formally adopt the two platoon system ‘(atymemt Friday's meeting, and it ex. speeted the Aldermen will endorse that body's action “The two pletoon aystemn will be in- malied in 100 fire houses by the first al June, id Borough President Frank 1 Dowling in opposing the three Biatoon ordinances, “In order to estab- High the two platoons the city will appro- priate $105,000 immediately for the ap- poipiment of 160 men, and more ¢unds te available as soon as we succeed pomp new civil service BOLSHEVIK BATTLESHIPS SUNK BY THE BRITISH WASHINGTON, May British Warehips sank the Bolshevik battleship Wovick and forced the dreadnought Anérea-Pervorvany to retire from av- 4 femry 24 the big seaplane, over | ~ | they started for London, HAWKER TO TRY ANOTHER FLIGHT OVER ATLANTIC Pilot and Grieve W Wildly Wel- comed in Scotland on Way to England. | LONDON, May 2.—Harry | will make another attempt to fly | aaroms the Atlantic, according to @ statement attributed to him by the Dally News to-day | “L will try again and think I can | mucceed,” Hawker waid at Inverness, | the newspaper announced The Duke of Athol will head 200 members of the Aero Club who are ‘to greet Hawker upon his arrival in; London this evening, The automobile procearion will pass slowly from the railway station to the Aero Club, All the Australian soldiers in London |will }ine*the route. Many bands are to be in Hine. | Last night when Mra, Hawker wit- Neased motion pictures of her hus- band at Newfoundland, traffic was }delayed for an hour by crowds whieh thronged to cheer her rsa ‘throw flowers. ‘The King invited Hawker to wat | him at the palace to-morrow Hawker Thurse, the litte town where tne aviators landed after having been mourned as lost for nearly a week. ‘There were cheering crowds ut all sta- Hong in the Highlands ‘When their train pulled into Inver- ness ‘they were greeted by Provost MacDonald “I'm glad you have lived to fly again,” he said. “I hope that after & needed rest you'll win the prize.” “This welcome is most embarras- sing,” replied Hawker. “The risk wasn't #0 great as people thought. {t wes © perfectly straightforward ag tempt to fly over, not a do-or-die enterprise.” After having been entertained at @inner by the provost, Hawker ap- Peared on the balcony of the hotel and thanked the crowd, which blocked the street, calling for him, ‘The crowds at Edinburgh, where Hawker agrived this morning, were even moré inakwtent. When Hawkor loft the train he was soized, elevated to the shoulders of « cluster af men, and borne Gn triumph through the streeta to his hotel, while people at. on all sides to shake his gs Hawker eagerly heard the ac- counts of the airmen’s progress. She starts for Grantham, twenty-three miles from London, to-day, and will meet her husband there. Preparations were started to-day for an aviation carpival at Hendon airdrome Saturday and Sunday, in honor of Hawker and Grieve, Many famous pilots are expected to do tricks in the air. Hawker will be asked to loop the loop and perform other aerial capers, Thureo, where the aviators landed, The pro- Yost, meeting them at the pier, called attention to the fact that in landing from their bistoriq voyage they stepped on the same dock that Lord Kitchener departed from when be left on the trip that resulted in his¢ death at sea. Destroyer to Awalt NC-4 Between Plymouth and Brest, PLYMOUTH, England, May 37,—The destroyer Stockton leaves Plymouth to- day to take up @ position between Ply- mouth and Brest, ‘swalting the the NC, PETROGRAD REPORTED UNDER BOMBARDMENT Chinese, ‘Letts and Finnish Reds Said to Have Overthrown Soviet Government. LONDON, May #7 (United Preas,)— Petrograd has been thrown into a panic dy 4 bombardment directed against the city from the sea, according to a news Agency despatch received here to-day (Bethonians and Finns, with Brit jah support. have been reported oper- ating against the Bolsheviki in Pet- rograd, amd a despatch yesterday head the Methonians only twelve miles from Petrograd’s outskirts.) The city 1s rumpred to Ye in the hands of the Chinese, Letts and Finnish Reds who, this report has it, have overthrown the Goviet Government there. (Chinese mercenaries have been employed by the Bolsheviki in the past. If there is any truth in the rumor, these mercenaries, together with Lettish and Finnish troops Brought into Petrograd by the Soviets to help defend it. appear to ken control of re there id the city authorities.) | ae Bisty-Beven m SH Mile Hike, Herbert Welsh of Phiiadelphi who is on his fourth annual 600. walk from his home to Lake Sunapee, N. H., where he will pass the summer, will leave this '¥ to-day for No Haven, and will continue by way of Waterbury Mon, disabled and in flames, in a battle Doyd May 18, the State Mepartment wa ry cable sopiy: pm y and Boston, He Is sixty-seven years jold and carries a pack of twenty-four | poonds including blankets and poncho cam, wee Dispatches from the north to-day | told of the triumphal progress from | “THE RVENING WORLD, ru EBDAY, MAY 27, 1919; “ENGLAND JOINS iS TO-DAY IN ROYAL WELCOME TO FLYER; NC-4 AT sles AWAITING CHANCE TO START [ae N+C-4 AT _ THE AZORES a AUSTRINS HEAD MAKES NEW PLEA TD JOIN GERMANY Seitz Says That Other- wise His Country Is Doomed to Die. VIENNA, May 27 (Associated Press).—Dr, Karl Seitz, President of Austria, bas made the following statement: “During the armistice we had hopes that President Wilson's fourteen paints would be observed, But we fear now that we will be badly dis- appointed, first, as regards the self- determination of peoples and in giv- ing now statos frontiers according to the principles of nationality. There are 3,600,000 German Bohemians who aro made foreigners in their owa country under the rule of a people not sympathetic to Germany, The same may be said of the Tyrol, where commercial and racial questions are subordinated to the strategic, al- though President Wilson's point said the opposite. “We are also troubled about the Jugo-Slay claims on Marburg and Klagenfurt, which are Austrian cities, | \ | GERMANY TO REBUILD FRANCE AND BELGIUM, PLEDGE OF SCHIEVEMANN a (Continued from First Page.) |from a people and then demand that they work. The German people are like the Jews when they were led by Moses, They face a 40 years’ march in the wilderness but musn’t perish in it, “Your president has put into force his idea of a League of Nations. At the top of our counter proposals standd our demand for immediate admission to that League, through it and mutual destruction be closed.” GERMAN LEADERS DROP FIERY TONE; READY TO SUBMIT Nation-Wide Storm Against Peace Terms Dies Down, Government Halting Protest Propaganda, ome, at: DM any o> BERLIN, May 27.—First impres- sions after the publication of the peace terms that Germany would sign befure the last hour seem confirmed by the latest developments. The nation wide storm of protest Last November wo gave up our! has died down, except in the east, claims to the territory south of these cities which is Slovene, but the Jugo- Slavs are not content, notwithsatand- ing the fact that there are only a few Slovenes in the territory we claim and that they dive with us for busines reasons. We also gave up | the Trentino without a question. | “I wish to say in the most solemn manner that Austria is doomed to die! if she is not permitted to join Ger- many. We cannot live alone, We have @ great city with @ small ter- ritory composed of mountains and plains, lf the Allies give our Ger- man provinces to the Czecho- Slovaks and Jugo-Slavs without making the new owners take wp the burdens in the way of taxation and war debts, it wi mean our bankruptay. If we bankrupt it will mean worse social trovbles than those of Russia with @ menace to the peace of rope, “It must be understood that many of these war debts were contracted not for war purposes, but for ullow~- ances to families distriuted through- out the empire, not in Vienna alone. Another point is that part of the war debt was contracted for supplies manufactured by the industrial towns of Bohemia, who profited by it, They are willing to take the profits, but not the losses, “My thought is that the war bur- dens should be distributed per capita among the 28,000,000 persons making up the former empire, not including br gs it is imposmble to make 1-2 per cent, of the people pay all the debt. If it is argued that the Czechs are entitled to special con- sideration becaupe they are one of the associated powers, It must be taken Into consideration that a majority of the Austrians did not want the war They were forced to fight, just as the Czechs were, As it stands, we have hardly enough money to pay for our daily food.” BIG FOUR AND JAPAN AD BOLSHEVIK’ FOES Offer Holchak Forces Money and Supplies if Elections Held, PARIS, May 27 (Associated Press).— The Council af Four and Jwpan have offered Admiral Kolchak, head af the Omsk Government, money and supplies to maintain the All-Russian Govern- ment provided he promises to hold elec- tions for a Constituent Assembly as soon 4s he reaches Moscow, or, if conditions are too disturbed to hoki elections, to reconyoke the former Constituent As- som, ‘ and the Government has called off the violent protest propaganda, The | offictat lid seems to have been clump- ed down on President Wilson's four- teen pointa, Only the nationalistic press con- tinues to root enthusiastically in favor of rejecting the proposed treaty or anything resembling it, and it con- Unues to harp on the argument of President Wilson's fourteen points. Count Prnst su Reventlow in the agrarian Tageszeitung says: “Nothing has been heard now for some time concerning President Wil- son's fourteen points from members of the Government who are usually verbose, or from thelr press, If the Germans were now to abandon the Wilson programme and sign the treaty they would justly earn the scorn of the world. Nowhere would they find present help, and they would bury their future. Such would be the Scheidemann peace, “Significantly the Government is skilfully preparing the public for an infinitely hard peace, There is no longer official taik that any kind of Peace would be absolutely unaccept- able." It really seems as if a radical change Government. The Erzberger faction, which is 1n favor of signing after the exhaustion of all chance to obtain con- cession by negotiation, appears to be top dog in the Government, Chancellor Scheidemann is appar- ently looking for ways and means to sign and save his prestige despite his declarations that the treaty is “unac- ceptable," In political circles the beliet has gained currency that some con- cessions, chiefly of an economic and financial nature, will be granted by the Allies, sufficient to enable the Govern- ment to go before the peopie with a show of success at Versailles, which in turn would enable it to sin gracefully and stay {a Cai FRENCH GENERAL CONFERS WITH LIGGETT ON RHINE ADVANCE Activity of Troops Within Bridge- head Greatest Since Americans Occupied It. SEigae shag May 27 (Associated Only! ean this epoch of hate; of head and heart had come over the | mander of two French Armies of oc- cupation, arrived here to-day for a hurried conference with Lieat. Gen. Hunter Liggett regarding the emer- gency plans of the Allies in the event the Germans refuse to sign the terms of peace. The activity among. the troons within the bridgehead area has been more marked during the last fe days than at any time the reached the Rhine.’ The American| oughboys are preparing for action, some,of them stating that in the near future “they will probably be moving in the direction of Brandenburg Gate, Porlin, or toward the Statue df Lib- erty in New York Harbor." — WILSON TO SAFEGUARD RELIGIOUS FREEDOM Sends Message Concerning New States to Rabbi Wise Through the White House. WASHINGTON, May 27.—President Wilson will use his influence to safe- guard religious freedom in new states, set up by the Peace Conference, he has assured Rabbi Stephen Wise, in a cable- gram forwarded through Secretary Tu- multy to-day. The message, while containing no direct referrence to the reported Jewish | troubles in Poland, was taken hero us showing the President's attitude on that! question. ‘The message which Tumulty sent to Rabbi Wise reads “The President requests me to assure you that safeguards against religious discrimination which the President says he has so much at heart will be embodied In arrange- since ments by which new 61 are eet up. PARIS, May 27.—American Peace Conference delegation experts in inter- national law are drafting a covenant de- shgned to protect minorities in the new- ly created states, particularly the Jew- ish minorities, It te desired through this covenant to insure equal rights and privileges in religious and educa- tional matters in regions where hereto- fore there has been oppression of minority populations. ee BELMONT PARK RESULTS. FIRST RACE—For two-year-olds selling; $700.66 added; four and ao half furiongs, Staaight. Flying Orb, 12 (Ambrosee), 8 to 6, 3 to 6 and out, first; Phantom Fair, 106 (Schuttinger), 8 to 5, 3 to 5 and out, second; Our Maid, 100 (Steele), W to 1, 6 to 1 and 2 to 1, third, Time, 825. Brynhild and Headman also ran. BELMONT PARK ENTRIES. RACK TRACK, KBLMONT PARK, N. Y,, May 27.—/The quirks for (Oanocwow's mom am as ed FURAT RACH—Kor dwo-gearokis, selling, four And @ bail farlongs.-Oovanoe, 108; Ureinnd, 108; | Marry Sinner, 106, Sacto D., 100; Mand lever} 1, 108, *Haamxbon, 10; Tudou, 105; 1rd, 105; Aerial, 110; EMbioler, 100; Mile Usale, Ne; Deme, 105, BHCOND RACH —Steeplathen; selling; for four-yearolds and upward; sbout owo miles end 8 quarter, "Hea ont, 135; *Rhomb, 147; Creat HOI, Me: "Garter, THIRD RACE ditions; four aml Muth K., 110; Lady Frumeed, 113; Quictdire, 104; Germe, FOURTH RAOB-—The healt fartongs.—-Strmaght, ton, 12 Atmdane, 116; + Rol Cowie, 1B; Scwntiants UL jot: "antes PIPTH WAC i ihe for there sear ive wet vere! init aan as tenth. Valor ta Mewte, © 1s areaon © ks a Demon’ wr Ok; Heo 10h Wee Masta HOCH: Tip “Te won: ume pear oh aunt gear! whores: Merwigint Cincy foeger i Nea a is," 113; i ‘vite, mice, a al iG: Catatibe TRY 1105 ITALY WITHDRAWS TROOPS LANDED IN ASIA Action Follows Protest of Council of Three—Turkish Troops in Charge at Sokia. PARIS, May 2 (Associated Press.)— ‘The Italian troops who occupied Sokia, 50 miles southeast of Smyrna, Asta Minor, have re-embarked on their trans- ports, ‘They turned over the control to Turkish military authorities. Announcement was made in Paris Monday that the Turkish Government had protested to the Peace Conference against the landing of Itadian troops at | Sokia Last Thursday it was known in Paris | by the Associated Press that the United States, Great Britain and France had sent a joint note to Italy requesting an explanation of the landing of Ialien forces in Asin Minor during the absence of Premier Orlando fram Paris. At @ meeting of the Council of Four, ;|hearings will begin Friday on resolu- at which Premier Venizelos of Greece ‘was present, Premier Orlando was asked by President Wilson what bis answer was to the note of the Three Powers. Premier Orlando declined to explain in the presence of Premier Venizelos. Thee has been no information as to what the reply of the Italian Premier to the Three-Power note was. ‘COURT UPHOLDS WILL MADE ~ ON WORLD ALMANAG RULES Instrument Drawn on Wrapping | Paper, Disposing of $600, Gets | Surrogate’s Approval. | Mrs. Hermione Gielen, knowing she MONROE DOCTRINE. LED UP 10 LEAGUE, WILSON ON DECLARES Mutual Sepreeion of Good Will Between President and President-Elect of Brazil. PARIS, May % (Associated Press’) Speaking inst night at @ dinner given by the Pan-American peace delegation in honor of Dr. Bpitacto Pessoa, President-elect of Brazil, President Wilson said the League of Nations was indirectly the outgrowth of the bonds between the American nations. He referred to the Monroe Doctrine and to suggestions that had omee been made to broaden the Principle af non-aggression on the American hemisphere. Mr. Wilson remarked that while the United States had undertaken to be champion of America against aggres- sion fom Europe, it gave no assur- ance that it would itself never be an aggressor. “The honor has been accorded me,’ President Wilson said in beginning his mpeech, “of making the first speech to- night, and I am very glad to avail) myself of that privilege. 1 want to say that I feel very much at home In this company, though, after all, 1 suppose | no one of us feels thoroughly at home except on the other side of the water. We all feel in a very real sense that we have a common home, because we live in the atmosphere of the same conceptions and, I think, with the same Political ambitions and principles. “I am particularly glad to have the opportunity of paying my respects to Mr. Pessoa. It is very delightful, for one thing, if I may say 0, to know that my Presidency is not ahead of me and that his Presidency is ahead of him. [ wish Bim every happiness and every success with the greatest earnestness, and yet I cannot, if I may Judge by my own expertence, expect for him a very gréat exhilara- tion in the performance of the duties of hie oilice, because, after all,’ to be the head of an American mate is a task of unrelieved responsibility. American constitutions as a rule put so many duties of the highest sort upon the President, and so much of the responsibility of affairs of state is centred upon him, that his years of office are apt to be years a little weighted with anxiety, @ little bur- dened with the sense of the obliga- tion of speaking for his people, speak- ing what they really think and en- deavoring to accomplish what they really desire. “The United States upon a famous occasion warned the Governments of Burope that it would regard it as an unfriendly act if they tried to over- turn free institutions in the Western Hemisphere and to substitute their had but @ few hours to live on Oct. 18, 1918, asked her next door neighbor, Mra. | Edward Lambert, at No. 491 East 188th Street, to help her make a will dispos- |ing of @ $600 estate. Mra, Gielen was living apart from her husband, with whom thelr two-year-oN son, John A. Gielen jr. ved at No. 2418 Bathgate Avenue, Mra. Lambert remembered having seen simple rules for making and exe- cuting a will in The World Almanac. With the ald of the Almanac the two women drafted a will on a piece of wrapping paper, leaving the entire $600 to the little boy. Mrs, Gielen died the following day, Mr. GHelen contested the will on the fround that it was improperly drawu, improperly executed and was made un der undue influence. Before Surrogate G. M, 8. Schulz of Bronx County, Mrs. Lambert was closely questioned regani- ing her qualifications for aiding in drawing up a will, She produced The World Almanac. Surrogate Schulz sustained the will. BOMB SCARE FURNISHED BY SMOKING LEATHER BAG Fears of Clerks in Chief Magis- trate’s Office, However, Prove Unfounded. Fs A leather bag from which amoke trickled on the floor of Chief Clerk Frank Oliver's quarters in the Chief City Magistrate's offfce caused conali- erable excitement this morning. Em- ployees were sure it was a bomb, When Oliver appeared he explained that the bag belonged to one of his friends who had left it there. It con- tained several pistots which had been tried on the ahooting range at No, 300 Mulberry Street. Some of the smoke remained in the barrels and gradually worked its way through the lock of the bag. > earings on Wire Control Retarn Friday. WASHINGTON, May 27.—Public tions to return telegraph and tele- phone systems to private ownership the before House Commerce Com- mitt SPECIAL NOTICES. HORLICK’S own systems of Government which at that time were inimical to those free institutions; but while the United States thus undertook of its own moton to be the champion of America | against § guch aggressions § from BDurope, it did not give any conclusive assurance that it would never itself be the aggressor. What I wanted to do in the proposals to which I have Sust referred was to offer to the other American States our own bond that they were safe against us and any illicit ambitions we might entertain, aa well ag safe, oo far as the power of the United States could make them safe, against foreign nations. “No doubt the impulse was con- trituted to by us which has now led to a sort of mutual pledge on the part of all the self-governing nations of the world that they will be friends to each other not only, but that they will take pains to secure each others’ safety and independence aad terri- torial integrity. “No greater thing has ever hap- pened In the political world than that, ang I am particularly gratified to- night to think of the hours I have had the pleasure of spending with Mr, Pessoa a8 @ member, ulong with him, of the Commission on the League of Nations, which prepared the covenant which was submitt the conference. “I have felt as T looked down | dibs and caught his eye that we {the same American mind in regard the busincss, “It is therefore with a rel se of fellowship and of something m than neighborly familiarity that ind myself in this congenial compal and that I take my part with you paying my tribute and extending warmest best wishes to the gre country of Brazil and to the gentle: men who will worthily ‘represent hei in her Presidential chair, “1 ask you to join with me in drink ing the health of the President-elect of Brazil.” . Dr. Pessoa, in his address, said: “One and the same ideal bring us to- gether—that of American solidarity for peace, right, justice, work, order and concord—which are the eternal foundations upon which rests the bal- ance of the world. One of my dearest ambitions tn the office to which I have been calied by the generosity of my fellow citizens will be to strive for the intangible continuity of work for American concord. In the vast work of evolution which is at hand as a re- sult of the great commotion which we | have all witnessed, the preponderant part will fall upon America as the un- fathomable source of the forces of the future. “America, after having used for her emancipation that which was most practicable and noble to be secuhed from Europe, will in turn become a powerful factor in the work of ci ilization and progress which synth sizes all the happiness of mankind Closely united and firmly attached to the ideals of American solidarity, let us set to work with other peoples in keeping « Lrotherly spirit for the ad- vent of this new era in which some day a happier life will open on a be: ter world. teh a dream of happiness ts no Utopia, after the catastrophe which has shaken the world to its foundations, we may be gilowed to believe in the dawn of a long period of peace, where men, even without | having accomplished Evangelical ideals, will lead us in believing in |the fraternity of peoples. If this be ja dream, may I at this moment be allowed to suppose that it forqe shadows good for the future.” ALBANY, N. Y., May 27.—Dr. Pitt Warren, head master of the Alban: Academy for many years and an edu: cator known throughout the country, diced to-day, He was born in Wyndham, in 1846 and wos graduated from Yale in 1870, H : g 8 z DIED. Farns.—saurs. ; Lying in state at the CAMPRETAZ, FU. NPRAL CHURCH, Broadway and 66: FIELD.—MARGARET, Services at the CAMPBELL FUNE! CHUROH, Broadway and 66th ot., day, 8 P.M. TAYLOR—On May 26, ROBERT ae loved husband of Maude Taylor, father of David, Funeral from fie late residence S4th st., Corona, L. I., Wednesday, AM. Interment Greenwood Cy WARWICK.—RACH EL, Services at the CAMPRELI, n CHUROH, Broadway and 66.n ot, day, 2 P.M. LOST. FOUND AND REWARDS. Toar—Airdala, back; aiayed asin esiea trees oR Toe “Sta were plain collar; Forura'te 110 lon HELP WANTED—MALE, WASTLEN and floorman wanted; must be wl alley, 123 W, BOLD at, “ me. 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