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NOTED ATHLETES INPARADE WITH 2000 SCOUTS Thousands Lining Sidewalks Heartily Cheer Boys in March for $1,000,000. Oh, Finer ‘The Boy Scouts, 2,500 strong, pa- raded along Fifth Avenue, and spoke for themselves this morning in the campaign for the raising of $1,000,000 @nd 375,000 associate members in Greater New York by Suturday night. Tt was tho dandiest poy parade ever seen in this or any other city. Plenty of music, plenty of pep, as with heads erect and eyes front, the lads in khaki marched from the Washington Arch to 69th Street to the cheers and shouts, hand-clapping and handkerchief waving of the thou- sands lining the sidewalks and filling the steps and windows along the line. The start was made at 10 o'clock and the shoppers stood in line while stores emptied of their employees, | giving the avenue a holiday air. In the ranks with the boys were present day athletic champions and cham- pions of a bygone day. All the base- ball players in the city; all the box- ing, football, swimming, running, billiard and other champions in ath- etic contests marched to show that their hearts were with the little fel- lows, coming “champs” and real men of Greater New York. Features there were galore. Be- hind the mounted squad of police marched former Secretary of the| Treasury William G. McAdoo carry- ing on his shoulder a great American flag. At his side was “Big Bill” Ed- wards bearing the Princeton flag. Brigadier General George R. Dyer was Grand Marshal, assisted by his Chief of Staff, Major Herbert Reed. Major George Daly, also on hie staff, directed the parade. The Boy Scouts bore litters atea| ith boxing gloves and punching baga, footballs and bats, golf clubs | and tennis racquets. On one im- mense fioat there were depicted the camp activities of the organization and at one end of it was a big camou- flaged water tank bearing the legend “Old Swimming Hole.” ‘Troop No, 503 of Manhattan's Boy Scouts wore spick and span new un-i forms and marched proudly behind the Police Band which is doing yeomens work in the drive. The Boy Club Band from Avenue A and 10th Street, with its forty-eight pieces, made bully music, while the Naval Band from the Bay Ridge Naval Training Station set heads bobbing, feet slip- ping and shoulders shivering with its jane. The parade was reviewed by Mayor Hylan, Mr, MéAdoo, Mr. Edwards and others at the Public Library, Miss Dorothy Cooper captained a bevy of girls, each as pretty as her- self, in a scouting party in the Hotel Commodore jast night, after ting a hearty indorsement and a Managing Director, Chairman Edwards of the Citizens’ Committee for Greater New York an- nounced to-day that more than $200,000 had already been received and that the stamp of success was Roy Hubbell, Assisting | Boy Scouts Marching Up Fifth Avenue ° With Two Well Known Leaders in Their Ranks PARADE OF BOY ARRESTED AS LOITERER, [mois ite peas REFUSES HIS DISCHARGE ssweas. ‘serene cru SWIG Me ADOO AND BIG BILL FOWARDS.. George BP, Crater has offered for the annual outing of the Scouts his Ferndale property at: at Yaphank. ABANDON SEARGH FOR MISSING BRITISH FLIER Capt. James’s Uncle, Hopeless of Finding Aviator, Prepares to Retum to His Home. Search for Capt. Mansill R. James the British aviator who disappeared a week ago Thursday while essaying a flight from ‘Boston to Atlantic City, has Sarania, Ont., Capt, James's uncle, who has been working with the Army air forces seeking a trace of the missi eviator, 1s preparing to return home. by-the-Sea, L. 1, seem to establish that Capt, James passed out over the Atlantic at about 3 o'clock the aft noon of the day of his disappearance bound in the direction of Atlantic City line supply ran out and he fell into the on the campaign. He said too, that ocean, EMGATILEse ee) . Platinumsmiths. 630 FIFTH AVE. Jewelers An impressive showing of modish Platinum Creations designed especially for the Wedding Season Opposite St. Patrick's Cathedral MAYFLOWER! MAYFLOWER! MAY FLOWER GINGER ALE — Chairman, Mrs, been abandoned. J. A. James of Reports from Wantagh and Nassau-| It is supposed that Capt, James's galo- | FREE DISTRIBUTION OF ICE AT BRIDGES URGED | Another Suggestion Made to Mayor's Committee Is Use of Station Houses. City Chamberlain Philip Berolzheimer Is considering several suggestions for dis-| tributing ice to the needy. One prope is to use space under all bridges as distributing points. (An- other is to make similar use of police} stations, and yet another is to employ several ice Wagons, Although the c mittee was organized less than a week ago, it has already collected $6,500, ANOTHER HARLEM BABY ™m ATTACKED BY BIG RAT | Mother Chases Animal After It Had Bitten Two-Year-Old Daugh- ter on Arm. Tenants in one Harlem neighborhood forgot ‘all about rent profiteering to-day in thelr terror of hungry rats, ‘The second case of an attack by a | rat upon a baby was reporied when Mrs. Mary Schenkin of No. 111 East 115th Street brought her two-year-old daughter Ida to Beth David Hospital for treatment. The little one had been | bitten on the arm by a bix rat which Mrs, Schenkin chased from the apart- ment, ‘J Yesterday a rat attacked two-year- oki Leonardi Godfredo of No, 225 Kast f118th Street. 4 $ \ ‘When Mrs. Minerva C, Wolf, well! \ | Coffee Broker Insists on Hearing, Calls Seizure on Broadway an “Outrage.” Ray Bimberg, forty, of No. 30 Con- coftes broker, one of | 8ve It UP. Then he went to see 23 men arrested for alleged disorder-| Wolf and told him what his wife Broadway corners | was trying to do. Wolf immediately from 47th to 50th Gtreet early this| | took Nudelman into his own employ, be discharged | and he says that he and three others | nated | atters anarenent, ™ ** ™™ © TWO ACCUSED OF FLEECING WEALTHY MAN OF $7,000) Was Victim of Wire- Tapper in alt Game at Hotel, vent Avenue, | ly conduct on morning, declined most of the trate FrotHingham. was continued| Jugt “The whole affair was an outrage,” was breaking no; be | Tald was ripe, cash| “I heard them xi aid Bimberg. law and had a perfect where I was. and jewelry worth $500 but they in- sisted on $500 cash like The rest were with Bimberg om ® trial. discharged ‘by, the Magistrate the warning that in the future Broad- way early-morning loiterers against whom the police make of disorderly conduct will be sent to the| her up.” "26 MOTORCYCLE COPS HALE The Mayor's Ice Committee, of which | out a case|the meeting in an attempt to “frame Henry Zuckerman Vico} Chairman, and Major Sennie Ward ot | All but Two Plead Guilty, and Eyen © Salvation Army Secretary, is to-day | These Are Convicted and Twenty-six motor ‘Traffic Court to-day Jobb in all cases save two and the guilty and were fifty-five speed- ing offenses, one of which was tric for a third offense, was sent to city for fifteen days and stripped of his licen: offense defendant was fined $50 and another $60 for Magistrate Cobb that a third offense meant the his driver's licen: loss of right court and ss] DIYQRGE SUIT DEFENDANT al number of “ine| WHOSE SLEUTHS TURNED AGAINST HER AT TRIAL |r: | aa aa BUDAPEST SLOWLY STARVING _— Has Become Intolerable, brought twenty-one turning without Comparison of the tc ‘day with the t BERLIN, June lated sPress) war in ws to a special corre- Tageblatt of Berlin who Jed in evading the Communist censorship by @ rounda- Hungarian ondent says, ow that the Mags grown intolerable again e Czechs are Ueeing before yars and the Roumanians are weakening. starving have will not sell the peasants boycotted the capital, food unless paid with real money goods, neither of whi PLENTY OF ROPE AND POLES. Lawyer's Reply to Charges of “Ma- or in chine” Rale in Kansas City, WASHINGTON, before the House Elections Committee yesterday that Charges &® Democratic political os DFO cement of Federal laws yesterday by attorney for W. Bland, whose seat in the House is’ be- ing contested by A. “We have telephone poles in vented the enfoi were declared J, a3 ¥ of | If conditions pictured before this | committee existed, both the rope and n be made use of.” | Railroad Men Want Debs and Mooney | DENVER, June 11 Brotherhood Firemen and En ® convention Locomotive inemen has adopted Debs and Thomas J. Mooney, now in —__— i Trafficke: drug addicts bharged with This e arrested here to-day, Violations of the makes @ total of twenty-one persons ar aud SLEUTHS SHE PAID TO TRAIL HUSBAND | Mrs. Minerva Wolf Hears at Divorce Trial Witnesses Worked for Plaintiff. to do Red Cross worker, of No, 664 St. | Nicholas Avenue, appeared before a jJury in Justice John Ford's part of the Supreme Court to-day she was amazed to find that the men she had engaged to trail her husband, James Charles Wolf, had trailed her instead | and were in court to testify against her in a suit for divorce brought by the trusband. Arthur A. Jacobs, a salesman, was named as co-respond- ent. Mrs, Wolf, who has been married | three times, owns the apartment in which she lives. Wolf is much younger than his wife, Jacobs is mid- dle-aged and was in charge of we, “shadowing” of Wolf. Simultaneously with the beginning’ of this trial, a suit for separation and annulment brought by Charles Wolf of Sea Cliff, L. L, father of the young plaintiff, against the plaintift'e mother, Mrs. Mollie Delean Wolf, was Albert Nudelman, a discharged sol- dier, admitted on the stand that as a favor to Mrs. Wolf he agreed to fol low Wolf in company with Jacobs. He tried to trail Wolf one night, but the latter used so many taxis they © Ford asked Nudelman what he heard through the door that convinced him that the time for a s," said the witness. | I offered] “You didn't see them? How do| brought | you know it was Mr, Jacobs kissing around and leave that but the police| Mrs, Wolf,” inquired the Court, wouldn't listen to it.” it,” replied the witnes: Attorney Bennet E, Siegelstein, Mark Oppenheim, an and that he later tried to “adjust | 120 TO COURT IN A DAY |s'tere” ies ates Wout be BARS RECORDS AT TRIAL. George T. McQuade, President, and policemen | fourteen other officers and employees in the] of the Coastwise Lumber and Supply of guilty | Company, on trial in the Federal Court in Brooklyn on charges of defrauding the Government in war contracts, scored an Important point to-day when Judge | Thomas handed down a decision on al books and records of the company ‘These books and records were seized by secret service agents when the prosecu- tion began ranted,, unconstitutional and unreason- able and that the books and records can- not be Introduced. ‘| Brooklyn’s Perfect Baby Who Won First Prize in Contest TURN AGAINST HER § Sixty-four babies met yesterday at the Borough Hall, Brooklyn, and were presented with medals won in a contest conducted by the Board of Health. Two-year-old Alice Wolf of Brooklyn was the winner of the She is shown in the above photo with her mother, Mrs, A. A fire which in the marine coppersmith shop of J Brighton. 8. 1. clook this after- op and lumber yards of Frank Qeawitllams ‘and slightly damaged the SECRET SESSION OF BOARD WAR ON BOLS Tasty at Opening of Im * quiry To-Mofrow. " Behind closed doors and Sergeant at Arms Hotaling.on the Joint Legislative Committed which is to investigate Bolshevism held a mysterious hour session i City Hall to-day. It was attended Gy Attorney General Charles D. Ne’ who is to be the committee's croste examiner. ; While Senator Clayton R. Lae® would admit that subpoenas had peel lasued or would be issued for witnesses to testify to-morrow, refused to reveal the name, J hearing will begin in the Board of Extimate room at 11 o'clock, Senator Lusk’s air of deep my concerning the identity of witi has led many to believe that at least one of them is an extreme ra Another member of the committee declared that one of the witnesses Was @ person of considerable promis nence. One report is to the effegt that former Police Commisat Woods is to testify. The pubile not be admitted, It was admitted by a momber Of the committee that one of its w and advisers is Archibald Stev who is @ member of the Union League Club and who gained consid« erable notoriety during the war through @ report he made as an ine vestigator to the United States Sene ate Overman Committee, This repont contained @ Hat of alleged pro-Gere mans. On it were the names of many * prominent persons, among them cole lege professors and an ex-Mayor of ew York. Secretary of War Baker disclaimed all responsibility for the Stevensa: y 0 eothmated at $135, 000, said to’ be covered by | How Newport Logan, @ wealthy cattleman of Australia staying at the arated from $7,000 \by alleged confidence men yesterday in a room at counsel for Mrs, Wolf, endeavored to favor whe Oe to-day to re larsh in the Yorkville Police Cow show that Nudelman had arranged ih ialepeens alias J. P. Har- “Ob, I know his kiss when I hear| Biltmore, was # |John P. Kent, lias John Baker, ria, forty-two years old, insurance | police to be a wire-tapper, and John solicitor of No..7 West 123d Street, | Parker, said he was also present at the ~aid,!grand larceny in $10,000 ball each. Detectives John |Pranter and James Smith saw Kent rker’s room otives arranged room next do with Parker's phone \n mber | Mr. |The detectiv Joutside party t to put @ big bet on Sand Fly on the Logan says that he handed over $7,000 against which the others put up a like Kent and Parker started to leave the |room they phoning in to In Goes the Ice to make a chilled, tinkling glass of Tetley’s iced tea cooling and refresh- i It drives the heat away! a Tetley’s Teas are selected from the world’s finest tea gardens—blended from 15 or more teas—carefully packed to protect the strength and flavor. Enjoy a cooling, frosty glass of Tetley’s clear amber-colored Orange Pekoe Tea with dinner! TETLEY’S TEA a es AH. SMITH HEADS BIG FOUR. AS W.K, VANDERBILT QUITS, The Court held the seizure unwar-|R. S, Lovett Named to Succ Seger as Company’s Vanderbilt jr. resigned to-day as President of the Big Four Railroad, . President of the New York Central Railroad, was elected taken in respect to the New York Central subsidiaries, Lovett succeeded ©, a Big Four director. U.S, CARTOONIST SUDDENLY list which came in for much eri cism. altel DISAPPEARS WHILE IN PARIS |Embassy Is Asked to Help Locate Robert Minor, Formerly of PARIS, June 11—Col the United States peace de! the disappearance of Robert Minor, newspaper correspondent and cartoon- . who was taken from his hotel, pre-| Minor recently came to France from Germany, and was in Russia for many months preceding — GERMANS BEING SENT HOME. WASHINGTON, June Bertling of New York will erned Germans to 6@ repatriated on a ewport News soon, » being interned was in rge of the New York branch of the Bertling befo: 4 Goldachmidt NEW BRITISH MYSTERY SHIP. ft to Raise Ves- is Sunk by U-Boat but for salvaging 6 Six shins of the » buat DELICIOUS WHOLESOME GULDENS Mustard AN INEXPENSIVE CONDIMENT GOOD WITH STEAKS AND CHOPS