The evening world. Newspaper, May 31, 1919, Page 2

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oe Sf _THE EVENING WORLD, 31, IS READY FOR PRESENTATION NEXT MONDAY. | N TREATY re ‘ TS BOYS FELL GUARD, |Zs¢ Stages of NC-4’s Flight | PHONE COMPANIES [NOMAN FLYER'S From Rockaway to England FLE ISLAND PRSON, AND ARE RECAPTURED (Continued From First Page.) AUSTRIA Rear Admiral Ptunkett, in charge of ‘at the Royal Air Force will the American airmen this 1 Major Raoul Lufberry, who was killed, and Capt. James Norman Hall, author of “Kitchener's Mob.” Among the aces who came back on the Loutaville were H. Weir Cook of In~ diana, Bam Kaye of Mii ppl, and Joseph Dawson, Willie Palmer and John Jeffers of Los Angeles. A committee headed by Bddie Rickenbacker was to have met the Louisville, « but faller to connect, However, Capt, Eddie will preside at a dinner to be given for his boys next {Tuesday night by the American Fly ing Club, The 94th Pursuit Squadron first went into action on Feb. 27, at Cha- teau-Thierry and their especial “meat” was Richthofen's Flying Cir- jews, with which they ‘battled from the start, followed them to Rheims and finished them at the Argonne, He was succeeded by Capt. James Norman Hall, who was followed by Capt. Rickenbacker. Major Reed M. Chambers brought the flyers home. Major Chambers has been awarded the D. 8 C. four times, He wears | also the French ross of War and bas ‘een decorated by the Legion of Honor. Out of the men who returned all but twenty have been decorated. » Besides the 94th, the Loulsville had aboard 1,897 military passengers, the 3 FACING A CRISIS, | TRIP FROM CAPITAL) “3 SA wiswesrn CONGRESS IS TOLD “SIMPLY PERFECT" A. T. & T, Official Says U. S. Mrs. Ernest E. Harmon Says | | j Na More Autos or Rail- road Trains for Her. Control Caused Large De- mands for More Pay. } ! i el (i ee ee As tar as Mrs, Ernest E, Harmon is concerned, Mr. Hines can take his little old system of railroads and throw it—trains, rails and everything —right into the junk heap. In the future Mrs. Harmon is going to do all her travelling via the air. For to-day Mrs, Harmon is the proud possessor of the distinction of being the first woman to fly from Washington to New York, having made the trip yesterday seated be- side her husband, First Lieut. Brnest E. Harmon, who was piloting a big WASHINGTON, May 31.—Govern- ment control of the telephone and telegraph properties resulted in larger demands for wage increases than would have been made if tele- phone and telegraph companies had continued under private operation, N. Cc, Kingwbury, Vice President of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, told the House Interstate Commerce Committee to-day at its hearings on legislation for return of the wires. nder this public operation has 5 : H H i f U i PASSED STatiOon @ ue HI : I j { : REFREE BAND, WHISTLE AND SING IN CELL. &® carefree lot, despite the experiences of the night and the grave charges against them. In the Bast 126th treet station they i (By Biscay © 2 Pp - i fi ich for to whistled and sang and begged cigar- their home address and the offenses the. Government received anything that It would not have received from private operation?” Mr, Kingsbury was asked. “I know of nothing,” was the reply. Martin bombing plane. | At the Vanderbilt Hotel, where Mra. Harmon went after the arrival of the Machine at Mineola, she sald to-day that her trip had been “simply per- fect.” MRS. ERNEST E. HARMON 2d, 4th and 6th Photo Sections; 334, 28th, 100th and 218th Aero Sduad~ | rons} 24th Evacuation Hospital, sot Base Hospital, Company C, 601st Engineers, and twelve casual officers, More than 10,100 soldiers will gee jt out| for which they were confined are: ‘ke Louls DB. Dominico, 18, No. 468 her about fifty | adeiphi Street, Brooklyn, petty lar- " ror after |Ceoy; William Grogan, 18, No, 64 ing a notable |Sixth Avenue, bighway robbery; Flenry Kerley, 19, No, 288 St. Nicho- las Avenue, heroin in his possession; Angelo @pano, 17, No. 621 East 14th Street, petty larceny; Frederick Cala- mio, 17, No. 218 Bast 34th Street, pet- ty larceny; Jerold Pontusco, 17, No. 418 West 40th Street, possessing @ revolver; Frank Franclotto, 16, No. fliett from |3¢ Hamilton Street, Long Island in better |City, petty larceny. Frank Di Marco, 19, No, 200 East allable |108d Street, violation of Sullivan the harbor sks |Law; Jacob Orgen, 17, No. 83 Attor- ney Street, violation of parole; lsa- dore Jorosky, 16, No. 1783 Prospect Place, Brooklyn, stealing an auto; Leo Schulman, 19, No, 545 Sackman Street, Brooklyn, petty larceny; Joseph Quinn, 17, No. 87 Grand Street, ‘demand |2rooklyn, grand larceny; John Mi ing |Zelo, 18, No. 366 Columbia Street, It|Brooklyn, petty larceny; Harry Luckasik, 17, No. 1890 Second Avenue, petty larceny; William Corletti, 16, No, 14 Lafayette Avenue, New Ro- chelle, petty larceny, Dominico and the fourteen boys who escaped With him were arraigned before Magistrate Koonig in the lem Court this morning on @ short affidavit charging them with felonious assault, Chief Parole OMecer Freder- ick C., Helling asked for an adjourn- ment of two weeks and the case was postponed until June 16. A certificate ‘was presented from Dr, Nelson A. Craw showing that Keeper Downs is from concussion of the brain, @ possible fracture of the skull and lacerations. The defendants wene held without bail. 918 TRAFFIC GASES IN 4 DAYS UNDER “WAB 5 A DAY” ORDER She is man—pardon, woman— enough to admit though that during a certain part of the flight she be- came slightly dirsick. “But,” she added hurriedly, “it was quite worth It for alt*-s-%, sccause of strong head winds, the trip took tvo ‘ours and ‘forty-five minutes, it was simply ,:>fect and I am fully de- te * that in the future I sball travel by air only. “In fact I’ “ough how with auto- mobiles also, If :ubby comes around on @enday with ‘1 little Sivver I'l! 1 him rilut back for un aeroplane and in I'll pile with our young hope- fuj, the dog, the cat and ‘* 2 rubber plant and off we'll go for a hop.” Mrs, Harmon was dressed in the regulation alr service “Teddy Bear’ | suit and wore helmet and goggles, The air, she says, was perfect until they wera over Philadelphia when cross currents appeared and from there on the big plane joggled about like a cork in a whirlpool, It waa then that she got airsick and Lieut. Harmon ond the other passengers admit that they became slightly squeamish also. Mrs. Harmon and her husband, who live in Washington, will return to that city to-morrow in the bomber. With them will go Col Robert E. O'Brien, Col, William C. Sherman and Major Raycroft Waish, who made the trip with them to this city. VERDICT FOR SOCIETY WOMAN IN $10,000 SLANDER SUIT Miss Irene Lewisohn Aoquitted of Charge Made by Mother of Girl in Former’s Dancing Class. Miss Irene Lewisohn, society wo- man and banker's daughte: 43 Fifth Avenue, was to-day awarded a judgement of $108.45 against Mrs, Jonnie Batkin, mother of Rose Bat- Declaring telephone companies “are facing a crisis,” Mr. Kingsbury urged that Congress in returning the com- panies pass legislation continuing the Government-fixed rates, both inter- state and Intrastate, until proper au- thorities might determine whether they were just. Without this legisia- tion, he sald, the companies would suffer heavy loss. Committeemen expressed doubt that Congress could fix rates to be en- forced after the proclamation of peace, but Mr. Kingwbury said he be- leved it could be done under Con- gress’s war powers, as conditions brought about by the war still would exist, Mr. Kingsbury presented a copy of & proposed bill which would guarantee to the telephone companies compensa- tion for the period under Federal con- | tol and also the continuation of pres- ent rates. The Government's deficit in operating the Bell telephone tem is approximately $9,000,000, Kingsbury said, due to the fact that the Government could not get the rates increased in time to meet higher operating costs, Edward Reynolds, General Manager of the Postal Telegraph-Cable Com- pany, asked for immediate return of the company’s property without reme- dial legislation and opposed legisla- tion keeping present fates in effect. He said the public is paying extra charges of from $60,000 to $75,000 a day on telegraph servic ELSIE JANIS BACK. AFTER THO YEARS WITH DOUGHBOY {r to-day if all the trangports arrive, which would bring the arrivals for the week up to approximately 65,000, The Yosemite docked last night a6 Bush Terminal with 32 men of the Ordnance Convoy. The Pueblo docked with more than 1,800 troops aboard. Tho other ships due to-day are: The K. L Luckenbach, Bordeaux, 2,833 men, including the 20th Eng! neers Headquarters Detachment, 10th Battalion and Medical Detachment, 303d Supply Train Headquarters and Medical Di bments, Companies A to F, inclusive, the 683d Casual Com- pany of New York. The Lancaster, Bordeaux, has 2,016 officers and men, including the 309t! nfantry, ‘one casual company and two civilians, 340,000 SOLDIERS BACK THIS MONTH BEAT OUT-GO MARK (Continued From First Page.) order the rolling stock and tracks which had given out under the strain, with no men or materials for restor- ing them. “At La Rochelle a plant for assem- bling cars shipped knocked down from the United States was erected; 4 similar plant for assembling loco- motives was established at St. ‘Naz- aire, After a time locomotives, eom- pletely built were shipped to. St. Naz- aire to save time and labor; these were carried on special. ships. “In spite’ of the enormous sh{pmerits”of materials there was never a time when there was any prospect of a surplus over the urgent néedwidf the army.’ AS an example of the extent of the | work undertaken, Gen. Atterbury mentioned the project at Gievres, where 264 miles of track were planned, with 1.162 turnouts or sid- ings over 4,000,000 square feet of covered warehouses and over 10,000,000 square feet of open storage space. More than half of this big yard had been finished when the armistice was signed. ‘The plant covered 2,600 acres. ‘This was only one of the centres of the American Army, each of which was bigger than anything of the sort the world had ever known, Other passengers on the Rotterdam ATLANTIC OCEAN oy BROKER HELD INCOMPETENT Friend Appotnte Person of J HM. St John H. Stevens, a member of the | Consolidated Stock Exchange, was de- clafed incompetent to-day by @ jury in Justice F. B. Delahanty’s part of the Supreme Court. The proceedings were” brought by J. F. Goodell of Peabody, Mass., © wealthy friend, Stevens lives at No. 173 West 78th Street. He ts now in the Rivercrest Sanitarium. W. A. Waldron, an old friend of the incompe- tent, testified that Stevens labored un- der ‘the hallucination {het he owned, al the railroads in the Un es Al the beats on the Consolidated Bx change. Waldron was appointed com mittee of hig person. jn Bn =» “SR BOY’S BODY WASHED ASHORE, y Search get him to sign the treaty than Coun! Commit von Brockdorff-Rantzau. “If our opponents sincerely wish pei he continued, “there Is only one way—to amend the unacceptable and unfillable stipulations of the treaty.” REDS EVACUATE ORENBURG, ONE OF THEIR STRONGHOLDS LONDON, May 31—The evacuation of Orenburg, one of the last Bolphe- vik strongholds in southeastern Ru: sia, is suggested in a Russian official received to-day from ‘The message says that to the west of Orenburg the Bolshe- viki abandoned ‘atikevo “under enemy pressure.” ‘The Russian wireless adds that the Rolsheviki drew back their flank to the Orenburg-Samara railway line, ADVANGE OF 50 MILES OOERED IF CERMANS REFUSE TO SEN PAT (Continued From First Page.) thé ig powers insists upon this prin- ciple, Inasmuch as the responsibility for a just peace falls upon them. Premier Paderewski of Pol former Premier Bratiano of Rou- mania an dother representatives of small nations presented objections to the provision of the treaty designed to safeguard racial, religious and Unguistic minorities. While accepting it in principle they argued the pro- vision would foment discontent. | Found by Father After Mi cht. Armed with lanterns and flashlights, police of the Bath Beach station and residents of the colony at the fogt of Bay 17th Street, Brooklyn, searched the beach all night for James Murran, four- year-old son of Robert Murran. At daybreak the father, exhausted and, fear stricken, saw a dark object wash ashore. He ran to it and the A telegram from Omsk received in London Wednesday said that on May 21 the Siberian troops of the Kolchak Their objections will be taken under | advisement by the Big Four, as well | as some objections which were rej Government were storming Orenburg. | Occupation of Orenburg by the Kol- chak forces will be a serious blow to (Continued From First Page ) kin, thirteen-year-old prodigy to whom Mis dancing Lewisohn has were Herbert H. Brooker and Alex- ander Legge, attaches of the Ameri- |, body of his sen. os It is thought the boy wandered away’ e Memorial Day crowd and drowned Continues, Magistrate Hous Says at First Saurday Session. Magistrates House and Cobb de- clared to-day that the extra work im- posed upon the Traffic Court by the “nam five @ day” order was not of im- portance if the safety of the streets was really “But the result,” said Magistrate Cobb, “is that men who make arrests to full a quota do not take time to get clear cut cases and the Court in ctat- tered up with cases which must end ierniasa." the hotel de Crillon at 1 Magistrate House said: “If this sort| The American conferees of thing is necessary we must not] phases of the German peace terms, as only two Traffic Courts in Man-| well as the Adriatic and ether pending h but one in Brooklyn and ono | problems. im the Bronx. If the crusade con- tinues another week the Traffic Court will be swamped and the enforcement of the law become a far ‘Tho court handled 918 cases in four LEAGUE OF NATIONS TEMPORARY OFFICE days up to Friday and fines aggre- WN OFF wating $7,347 were imposed. Magistrate House's Traffic Court was| Secretary General Occupies Rooms in weasion to-day for the first Satur- day since the Court's inception three in say Near House of mmons. years ago. Overflow casea put over been teaching in the Neighborhood playhouse founded by the Lewisohn family. ‘ ‘The judgment {s for costs in a suit against the society woman for $10,000 | 1, Noee of Liege University, a Lieu. damages for alleged slanderous state- " ments made by Miss Lewisohn about | £epant Colonel in the Belgian Army; Rose. Thieves had pilfered. purses | Francis R. de Schodmhole, a Siberian and jewelry from wrapa loft in the |@elegate to the Peace Conference; coat room and in an effort to trap the | Thomas A. Wilson, Chicago packer; thieves a decoy purse was placed in| Arthur G. Leonard, President of the the pocket of a coat of Miss Mabel! Union Stockyards in Chicago, and Moore, also an instructrese. It is al-| unji Sijiki of the Japanese Federa- leged that Rose Batkin handled the eion of Labor, who has been at the coat and afterwards it was found that | po.00 Conference and will attend the the purse had disappeared. Mims Lewisotin questioned the girl {convention of the American Federa- and then called on her mother “in the | tion of Labor at Atlantic City next true interests of the child,” to use) week. Miss Lewisohn's own phrase. Mr, Wilson and Mr. Leonard have The mother alleged that Miss| been studying food conditions in Ger- Lewisohn called her daughter @ thief | many, Italy, and France, They found and accused her of stealing the DUFS. | the fat and meat situation In Ger- The society woman's attorneys con-| many critical, they said, and in 20 tended that Miss eLwisohn had not] o0.” of atteen square miles found there was an average of but one art made the accusations publicly and nder and the court Hare, way Fe, REOM, fa half head of cattle, one horse and one hog to the square mile, can Peace Commission; B. J, Boremdsz of the Dutch Legation at Washington, Gen. L. Melin, physi- clan to the Belgian royal family; Prof. nt while wading. __ eA BELMONT PARK ENTRIES, BELMONT PARK RACE TRACK, NEW YORK, May 31.—The entries for Manday‘’s rac correspondent, has written one recol- lection of the work of Miss Janis: “On a stormy night in the spring of 1917 Miss Janis set atout 5,000 American soldiers wild with en- thusiasm by @ sensational entry into an impromptu place of entertainment back of the lines on the SO 8, The town, if memory functions correctly, was Nevers, The place selected for the entertainment, to be given by Miss Janis, with the ald of a volun- teer soldier pianist, was an immense railroad repair shop. “The audience sat on machir. or on the concrete floor or swarmed aloft and perched on cranes or the beams supporting the arched roof. The little stage was built over a rajl- road track running down ‘\e middle of the shop, “When the audience was assembled there was heard just outside the hoarse oot of an American locomo- tive, The big doors swung open and in moved @ majestic Baldwin engine the Bolshevik position in southeast- | ern Russia, It was through Orenburg that the Bolshevik! maintained com- length with the entire American delega-| munication with Turkestan and China. tion with the exception of President |™ 4 Kolel Wilson, ‘The conference. was over the/FTom Orenburg as a base the Kolchak {Government will be able to join read 1 eee teres, the Tewostaee|fronta with the Ural Cossacks in the region of Uraisk and thence with Gen, janding firmly for their claims, It is Denikine. than the Tatlans "at pretent to. eve | FIRE IMPERILS 350 WOMEN AND CHILDREN AT CONEY ground in the controversy. President Wilson joined Policemen Fight Flames and Rescue Inmates of Sea Breeze Home Before Firemen Arrive, More than 950 excited women and frightened children filed safely out of the Sea Breeze Home, West 29th Street and Surf Avenue, Coney Island, to-day, when flames were discovered shooting from the rafters at the east end of the frame structure. The cause of the blaze is being investigated, Before the engines could respond to tered agninst the financial terms. ‘The Jugosiav delegation conferred at A ringer, 11d; Bi forchbearer, TLi; Babette, 113; Poacher, 14. SBAOND RAOK ‘Three-year micas ee x rina Pandit, od Mi a. the oth —_—>— my teent "Pastoral Swain, meme RAOK—Four.year-olde and 1 oe ule, ate alxfeen th, Lady Brighten, Liz: accepted this view, dismissing the 118! Game Chick, 212; "ad Bed, #0 complaint and assessing costs against «e. to Commander Read Naval Air Service from Thursday were heard. Magis- trates House and Cobb heard no new cases, The Traffic Court has always been known a8 a@ five-day-a-woek Court, Persons guilty of speeding are heard Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri- LONDON, May 31,--Temporary head- quarters of the League of Nations has Deen opened here with democratic sim- plicity, It consists of a barren suite of rooms in a building near the House of the alarm,’ Policeman Peter Daley and Sergt. John Keyes of the Coney Island Station rushed to the Home and with axes and the fire hose of the Home succeeded in putting out the blaze. Excited residents living near the Home went in a call for the Police Reserves. with Elsie Janis, dressed in white and waving two American flags, riding on the cowcatcher. The American loco- motive proceeded along the track to the stage and Elsie stepped off, turned a couple of handsprings and WIDOW ENDS LIFE IN GRIEF Mrs, Batkn, —_> PREMIER U, S. AIR UNIT RETURNS ON LOUISVILLE 115 tice allowance \pprentivs claimed, attr clear, fant. “___ SPECIAL NOTICES. HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL FOR SOLDIER HUSBAND; Day AHEAD OF SCHEDULE J. Wolgus Was | ig oe 5 ED Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker to Wel- come His Famous Flyers at jdays, while traffic violators come be- 'fore the Court Tuesdays and Thurs- days, Cas RR EX-CHIEF QEVERY SUED. start d in to a@ song, but it was tex minutes before she could be heard in the tumult of applause. She was the first entertainer to invade that area.” Miss Janis wound up her public service by giving two entertainments to the 310th Sanitary Train and the Commons. There is a staff of half a 4 & few desks and one tel- MALTED MILK — Avoid Imi iy LOST. FOUND AND REWARDS, Sergt. Keyes and Patrolman Daley aided the nurses and mothers in the children to places Breeze Home \8 rity organization nd their children of ‘was quoted in the following o from Admiral Knapp, received at it to-day: the British Ad- Daughter of Wm. Proprietress of Yum Yum Cafe, in Greenwich Village. Lge i Dinner Tuesday. | Sorrow due to the death on a return: | 2 ‘ing transport of her husband, Sergeant; The transport Loulsville slipped Clarence H, Smith, caused Mrs, Mar-| tn from Brest at 3.15 A. M. to-da: 1,600 casuals who returned on the! garet Wilgus Smith, proprietess of the | twenty-four hours ahead of time, with |% Rotterdam, | Yum Yum Cafe at No, 184 West Fourth lone of the most famous American ipeclin Praca” - “And now,” she said, “I'm tired, I'll | Street, the heart of Greenwich Village.| \.rats of the war—Capt. Eddie Wino, ‘sable Rechplece: bevel say. And I am going home to Tarry- |t° cimmit suletde, Aileen aLne, an art} kenbacker’s 94th Pursuit Squad- Keouy. tc town and put my feet on the mantel. |student, and James Sloan, ab ert the first pursuit squadron on Two tugs filled with friends of the| 4 |. Jet. down sixty-nine German planes and actress went down the bay to meet) “Wi 3 wiigus, of No. 165 Broadway, |Many observation balloons, and lost the Rotterdam. They had big “Wel-|er father, and other priends told Pa-|ten killed, fve wounded and three come Home, Elsie” ptreamers @l0ng 'troiman Frank Crepeau of the Mereer | taken prisoner. 5 jenough to Arey gtaumanis Sor Mins (Street Station she had threatened to| This outfit, which was command- * |Janig to see who her friends were, | Kill hergelt. ithe medical exaitlie ed by America’s acc of soe, Capt. WIFE SUES PLAYWRIGHT, but Sho said sho thought it was al-'Tyo'children, living with friends in New |Rickenbacker, adopted = the red, — — | together nice of them to be so cordial. | Jersey, Sergt. Smith ‘was buried with! white and blue “hat in the ring” in- ‘Alleging that her husband withheld | —>__— military honors at White Plains 10|.ignig, which soon ame disagree- from her fact. that he had a wife liv- 200,000 B, R. T, Fares Memorial Day, wired ably and frequently familiar to the ing, at the time of their marriage, | sey 000.008 seeeenaes pald Germans, Machines so marked had Adele G, Stoddard gtarted suit to-day their nickels to ride on the subway, high f living 800|the credit of bringing down the first 50,000 ‘elevated and surface lines of the| Despite t gh cost 0 Gj i Tisai bla name ton Asoument énnive- | (Ron aeaprene Court, to, recover # Brockiyn Rapid. ‘Tranelt Company | brave swaina with fair ladies applied |and last German planes bagged dur Jent to a death sente: te the Father The plaintiff alleges that Stoddard is | y The compe ¥ reported it to-day for marriage licenses at the|ing American participation in e » land! "Count, von Lorit when | man of large means and is the author i¢ larmest writ Jn Brooklyn Bureau, Many were soldiers | war, tn. port of now ruaning at the Knieke 0 had returned from Bet seer ede) Lord Colum Crichton-Stuart, Seere- tary to Sir Eric Drummond, Secretary- General of the League, is in charge. Drummond is preparing the provisiona: scheme of orgunization and selecting the personnel of the secretariat. Among the first duties of the secrets riat will be to arrange the firs of the League in Washington and ap- int certain commissions, which must 4et up within Afieen days after rati- feation of the treaty, such as the Saar boundary commission. te cintoved « crite NO GERMAN WOULD SIGN TREATY, SAYS BERNSTORFF Equivalent to Death Sentence of Fatherland He Asserts in Interview, BERLIN, May 31 (Associated Press). “No German can be found who would maintained by a for mothers Greater New Yor —_ ee BOY FALLS 5 FLOORS: LIVES.) After Plunge Down Ele- vator Shaft, While repairing a dumb-waiter at No. 176 West 95th Street to-day Willia thirteen, son of the of the building, slipped and fe! Stories in the shaft. He was conscious when picked up, but suffered multiple contusions and bruises about the head taken to Knicker- here Dr, Sceni de- even chance of ree|the rails, William 8. Devery, former Chief of! Polico, is the defendant in a suit, brought in the Supreme Court to-day by Dr. Joseph M. Helmerdinger, a chiropodist, to recover $7,000. ‘The plaintif€ alleges that on March 28, 1918, the former chief gave a prom- | isory note for the sum named and has fatied to pay pleasure that their have learned of this success, to offer thelr con- rew of the seaplane United States Naval ae wes you goon your vaea- tion this Summer have your favorite paper mailed te you every day. Evening World, 12 por wosk Dally World, 12 per week Sundky Werld, 6¢ pcr Sunday x SP Chart on, m6 woe or Reese ie May 8 and who as a re- ir success will go down in iT Plymouth Harbor he finish of about 3,900 water flight. Hie average fying speed for tho tire trip was considerably above the average speed allowed in calculating the fight, i CAPRONI FALLSj: UNHURT. pperator, Bosign HC Rodd. | MILAN, May 21—Signor Caproni, in- 3 Dts caste © Rhodes |ventor of the airplanes of that name, ary Bineer, Lieut. J. escaped unhurt when a big triplane full i . jusand feet here to-jay. other four occupan' from the United States to 3 a ding officer, A C. Read. Lieut. B. F. Stone. Aeut, Gunior grade) W. Hin- Lieut. Com- 300 Couples Seek Marriage Licenses, tee wens Among the Glers ta the 94th were ae

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