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' q . tee Society Of 200 voices. in cusp FRST U.S. COLORS SEEN BY FOE IN WAR PLACED ON VIEW AT PUBLIG. LIBRARY an Historic “75” From Which First Shot Was Fired by Yankees S Also Exhibited. RUSH WORK. ON STANDS. Flood of Invitations for Gen. Pershing; Entertainment Plans Made, The first formal ceremony of the gelebration of the return to the United States of General Jolin J. Pershing took place at 10 o'clock to- daf in front. of the public library when the colors of nine of the units of the First Division were placed on Public display. The colors were brought to the city from the camps by color sergeants, A great crowd assembled on the east side of Fifth Avenue during the ceremony, which was simple but im- pressive. The color guard, under command of First Lieut.\ Alexander Guenette, 16th Infantry, and Second Lieut, Mervin G Epply, 26th In- fantry, was drawn up at the foot of the library steps. The color ser- geants marchéd up -to the guard which presentéd arms and received the colors, The men in the crowd of spectators bared their heads. The flags were then placed in racks and will remain on exhibition daily from 10 o'clock in the morning until 6 o'clock in the evening up to next Wednesday. Of chief interest are the colors of the 18th Infantry, the first American colors to appear on the battle front in France. Stands of colors trom the Sixteenth, 26th and 28th Infantry regiments, the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Field Artillery regiments, the Second Field Signal Battalion and the Piret Engineers are also shown. | A radiogram received to-day from the Leviathan states that the big transport will reach Ambrose Chan- nel light at 4 o'clock next Monday morning and will dock at Hoboken, Pier 4, at & o'clock. It fs probable that Gen, Pershing will reach the Battery and start on his way up Broadway to the City Hall about 9 o'clook. HISTORIC “75” PLACED ON PUB Lic VIEW. officers on the Other Leviathan with Gen. Pershing are Major Gen- | erais C. E, Summerall, J. L. Hines And A. W. Brewster; Brigadier Gen- crals R. E. Davis, Walter Bethel and Fox Conor; Colonels G. C, Marshall, J. G. Quakemeyer, Liyod C. Grisscom, | ™. C. Burnett, E. C, McNeil, A. Mo- rene and C, 8. Babcock. The camouflaged old “75" from which the Sixth Field Artillery fired) he first American shell at a German ‘position in October, 1917, was placed on view at the Public Library to- day and will remain there until the day of the parade. In the 9urade this gun will be escorted by all the nen who can be gathered together who oMciated with the battery when the first shot was fired. Major Coulter, chief of stat of the committee at the Hotel Biltmore, re- quests that all wounded mon of the 1st Division who wish to se+ the pa- rade or take part in it shall communi- cate with him as soon ay possible. |WEEK OF WELCOME PLANS FOR GEN, PERSHING BY CITY = AND FEDERAL OFFICIALS Programme of Parade, Reception and Banquet With Several Open Dates. Here is the tentative pro- gramme for the official welcome to General Pershing and the ist Division, MONDAY—8 to 8.45 A. M.: Gen, Pershing will be met down the bay by Secretary of War Baker, a Congressional committee, the Mayor's Committee and a fleet of air and water Grate and es- corted in. 9.45 to 10 AYM.: Gen. Pershing and his staff will de- bark on the south side of Pler No, 4, Hoboken, and transship to (probably) the police boat Patrol. 10 to 10.45 A. M.: Party will debark at Pier A, Battery, and enter autos, proceeding north to City Hall» 11 to 11.30 A. M.: Reception at City Hall for Gen. Pershing. 12 to 12,80: Arrival at the Hotel Waldorf-Astoria, 3fd Street entrance, TUESDAY—An open date, Prob- ably Gen. Pershing will receive at the Waldorf part of the day. Tho George Washington Memo- rial Association announces a big reception to Pershing in Carne- gio Hall at night WEDNESDAY—10 A. M.: Parade, led by Gen. Pershing, staff with “composite regiment” as escort of honor, of the 1st Division, with full fleld equipment. 4 P, M.: Probable end of parade, Gen, Pershing returning to hotel, ar- tillery of 1st entraining for Washington, motor equipment leaving for Waghington over- land, and return of infantry to Camp Merritt. 8 P. M.: Dinner to Gen, Pershing and staff at Waldorf-Astoria, Rodman Wan- amaker, Chairman of the Mayo: Committee, presiding. THURSDAY—An open date. FRIDAY—Probable departure of ! Gen. Pershing for Washington. PIE anon steht on of rain the concert will be given ou | Thursday evening. Work on the grand stands which | will be erected with part of the $100, ;000 appropriated yesterday is under |way and will continue right up to the morning of the parade, Gen, Pershing will occupy, while | guest of the city, the same suite | jin the Waldorf that was occupied by Admiral Dewey. It consists of Six rooms on the third floor. The War Department announced to-day from Washington the staff and regimental commanders who will | ride at the head of their organiza- tions in the parade, as follows: Commanding Genera, Major Gen. MeGlachlin jr.; Chief of Statt, Col. Stephen O, Fuqua; G-1 (As- sistant Chief of Staff), Lieut. Col. Paul E. Peabody; G-2 (Assistant Chief of Staff), Lieut, Col W. R. Scott; G-3 (Assistant Chief of Staff), ut, Col. W, F, Hoey; Ad- jutant, Lieut, Col, B. Re Legge; Di- Vision Quartermaster, Lieut. Col. F. H. Lomax; Division Ordnance Officer, Major J. A. Long: Division Burgoon, | Every old-timer will be taken care of if he sends in his name It ts probable that G Per will lead the parade all the w 110th Street to Washington Square next Wednesday, Gen. McAndrew, who was Gen. Pershing’s Chief of Staff in Trance, sent a radio to the commanding general to-day suggest- ing thfs course of action, The de- mand that the Genera! show himsclf to as many, Americans as possible while he is at the head of the parede is overwhelming. Gen, McAndrew has received at his headquarters at the Waldorf enough invitations to Gen, Pershing to attend every sort of an entertainment from a society reception to a block party to keep him in New York r. Thus far the Mayor's Committee has au thorized only two big affairs in honor of Gen. Pershing. PUBLIC RECEPTION AT CARNE- GIE HALL NEXT TUESDAY. The first is a public reception at Carnegie Hall next Tuesday evening} under the auspices of the jeorge Washington Memorial Association, which promises to be the biggest at- fair of its kind ever achieved here. | The patrons comprise about every- bedy in New York prominent in so- clety, finance or patriotic work. Mra, Henry F. Dimock, a sister of the late William C, Whitney, is President of the George Washington Memorial Association and manager of the re- ception. Under the auspices of the Mayor's Committee a public concert in honor of Gen, Pershing will be given on the Mall in Central Park next Wed- nesday evening, Walter Daimrose) will conduct the New York Symphony ‘a of 67 pieces and the 0: |QFF TO CATCH RARE BISON. Lieut. Col. O,. Magnard; Division Trains, Col. W. Stewart; Division Judge Advocate, Lieut, Ce mR Bitaln, Division spector, Lieut, Col FF, F. Black; Division Machine Gun Officer, Lieut. Col C. K. La Motte; Division — Signal Officer, Lieut Col w L. Robert Ist Macaine Gun Battalion, Major kh. M. Youell; 1st Infantry Brigade, Brig. G Frank Parker; 16th” Infantry, Lieut. Col. G, R. Huebner; 18th In- fantry, Col. C. A, Hunt; 24 Machine Gun Battalion, Major 8. Warre: 2d Infantry Brigade, Col. R, A. Brown: 26th Infantry, Lieut. Col. C. W. Ryder; 28th Infantry, Col. A. H. Huguet; 34 Machine Gun Battalion, Capt. C, Pickett; Ist Field Artillery Brigade, Brig, Gen. A. Molntyre; 6th Field Artillery, Lieut. Col, N. W. Polk 6th Field Artillery, Col. Mar- getts; 7th Meld Artillery, Col. Rugetes; Ist Engineers, Col. E. kinsoni 2d Field Signal Major H, F. H 7; wy ¥ J. Ate Battalion, MC. A, Gives Fo Lf diers’ Discharge per Members of the Ist Division will have no soiled creases in thelr dis. charge papers, for the Y. M. C. A, as part’ of tho $44,000 worth of home- coming gifts it ‘has allotted this fa nous ‘division, is giving each man gold-lottered leatherette folder, into which the discharge will ft. petal Sol-| New amen Leave for m Rocktes, A party of New York sportsmen and writers started yesterday for the| Canadian Rockies in search of a speci- men of an almost extinct type of bison Which has doen reported in the region they visit, If they catch one, the| hunte Ml present it to the Ameri- can Museum of Natural History. ‘The party Was organised at the Ho- | tel Commodore under the direction of Captain Norman Pei Others in the group are Cornelius Vanderbt, r., J. O. Coyt, John Brodix, Warren “H. tes and J, W, Hutchins, pee eat Drops Dead Auction § Joseph Marks, of No. Street, the Bronx, died suddenly to-day while conducting an auction sale at Yo. 42) Broadway, Death was due to rt failure, Marks {8 married and bad been employed by VBR, preag and GERMAN PACE ‘ONE FOR SAFETY Justice Dowling at La Fay- ette-Marne Memorial. Jean Adrien Antoine rand,, Ambassador of France to the ited States for the | years, speaking to-day at New York's Jules Jusse- seventeen celebration of Lafayette-Marne Day in the Aldermanic Chamber at © Hall, declared the peace with Ger- many to be “not a eace of vengeance but a peace of safety.” “The fate of the vanquished sor,” his comfortable said the French Ambassador, weil closed homes, with heat and electricity, everything in order, the streets and monun the factories, schools and churches intact, will be a most enviable one as compared with that, next winter, of millions of the victors, Hvihg in thier dreary hovels, burrowing under the wreckage, in the cold and the mud. For whom will the harshness be?” Supreme Court Just Vietor J. Dowling presided at City Hall, where the speakers, besides \M. Jusserand, Included former Governor Myron 7. Herrick of Ohio, American Ainbussn- dor to France at the time of the First Battle of the Marne, and Dr, John H. Finley, president of the University of the State of New York. France, Great Britain, Italy, Japon, Bigium, Russia, Poland and Greea were represented by official delega tions. Major Gen, Thomas H. Barry represented the Army and Admiral Ruse and Goodrich the United States interest to become to my let by- we would simply weuk niy would be in our te friend of our enemy and to the blood-stained German, gones be bygor reply to them: Remember a peace and weak resolves would cause scorn and tempt to new gressions; which is not a way of jepeaking, but the stating of actual incontrovertible fa 5; just remem- ber, After desertbing what Germany had 37 Broadway, watianeers, of done to invaded France the Ambassu- dor told bow Wrance is “coming Prone? vv eas SANS JSGERAND French Ambassador Decorates | ty] Navy, Ambassador J serand began with a tribute to the prophetic vision of Justice Dowling when, a year ago, he spoke of the complete victory of the Allie ecause which would by celebrated to-day. “put,” said M. Jusserand, “we mourn the absence of one man, the voice of Theodore Roose velt.” The Ambassador took up immedi- ately a discussion of the peace with Germany “If any who have not seen wat we have seen and suffered,” he sa’, “the wilful devtsation, the shootfag or carrying away of civilians, tne ruining of mines and machinery, th« methor al blowing up of a city like Chauny, house by house, if any such may be tempted to consider th's aj/ harsh and cruel pea: and that it 9900906: 4 |_AND AMERICA WAS NEVER | OBSCURED,” SAYS POINCARE |French President Sends Greetings to U. S. Soldiers and Mothers Bereaved by War. HIS was the Lafayette Day message of President Poin- care of France to the Amer- | lean people ‘In the hours of trial and of the needed common efforts the Amer- | ican people and the French people sunited their thoughts in order to commemorate at once the birth of Lafayette and the battle of the Marne. How could‘our two na- | tons not seize, in this year of in- ternal peace, the occasion to cele- brate together IT the same anni- | versaries, | © “The brotherhood of America and France was born in the War | of 'ndependence, It has never been obscured since. its final conseers fight we have to shoul It has found ton in the great just fought shoulder r the liberty of the world, It will keep all its strength in the future and contribute to consolidate, in the interest of hu- manity, the peace which has been established, at the cost of ws many sacrifices, by the defenders of right. To the people of the United. States I send the greetings of the French Republic, to the American soldiers the cordial remembrance of their brothers in arms, to the American mothers who have lost their sons on the battlefleld of Europe the homage of my pro found sympathy “RAYMOND Pv INCARE.” back.” ing,” cinnati the nat For earnes| ryette ple, At th of the ¢ | bassade dl Dowling with the insign of the Lesion of Hon the deeorat the Am Huastic wling typified reiations between France | New York “They are indeed d, “and the modern Cin- returned from the camp e flelds are not idle," Herrick paid tribute to La und her p gress. he sa vernor nd eloquent emonies Ain- a Juste a kni In bestow yawmndor ad Fuse d dal Amer of Lafayette-Marne Day beg Yolock ‘this morning with at the Joan of Arc Statu: [Drive at 98rd. Street f the Joan of lebration in at 9.30 exercises n Riverside under the aus- ° Statue Com- e Day Nation- [mittee and the Lafaye al Committe Fifty American eitic 16: I 8 eclebrate to- J anniversary of the birth 1 Joseph Roch Ives Gil- ntler, Marquis de Lafayette Atlantic to the Pacific and South, assem riotie und ‘grateful homage to the youn nobleman who, fired with the love of liberty, left home and all that was dear at the age of nineteen and at-his Jown expense set forth on a fifty-five- day yoyage across the Atlantic to offer his services to the Continental |Congress, There are no nobler pages jin history than those which partly tell the story of Lafayette. | At the close of the exercises at the Joan of Arc statue three carrie: Pigeons were despatched with mes- sages to Major General Thomas H Barry, C r of the Department the Governor's Island, from Knecht of the Jon and Canon Giles B aller of the Legion of of the Chas- day the jot Marie j bert de | From th the North blages of Americans pay at Ch ‘Honor and Chaplain sours d’Alpia, the ‘Blue Devils.” Cabanel, ~ - aaa French | _ THE averne ‘Wont! @ievavir. s sEPTEM Eno, 2462090000006 First Division’s Colors, First to Face the Foe, Presented to Color Guard for Exhibition Here | 00000-00040 68 16-5084-6-060544440506-466064EOO1060636 HECOEEOOEEM IEEE ENE EEEESEESEOOEENS _FAUTS NEGLECTED vgroTwennooo OF FRANGE IN WILLIAMS GASE, ‘DECLARES BULLOGK Good Govsinaie! Bureau Di- rector R | | | \ William Bu Good Government eplies to State- ment of Hirschfield. director of the flan Hock, Bureau, re- plied to the answer made by Com- missioner of Accounts Hirschfield fol lowing charges administration the ment and by, Bulloc of office against the of Hirschfield. | Bullock had charged Dr. Smith, Medi- |to duty when h ter following a Hirschfield dec professional the incident for six months mental dulge play to every ¢ “But the fact be glossed over “Williams w fire engine by of the Company on a fracture of th filed guit for pany. Sayre, of the Jacket, Willams a not reveal is thi office then is. t Medical ment. Board office in the mistalee Bullock of pers to reply of Bullock to thi “Commissioner Hirshfield neglects | the facts of the tragic gineer-Fireman Henry lying in plaster in B blundering in personalities. sioner also neglects the judicial calm fale becoming his office » Willlains are spec Americ: Jan. On March Medical College, put him in a plaster and gave him a letter to Dr. from his arms to his feet and support block and tackle, | signed to conduct the Commis» Accounts “investigation” cal Examiner of the Fire Department, with ordering Engineer Williams buck ¢ was encased in plai fracture, of the spine lared the order was o| and | accused aul motives in calling public notice, The follows: case of En- ¥, Williams, ‘ue Hospitai esult of depart- worse, in- The Commis- asa of agent for ity employee # in the case of F je and cannot or evaded. kn an ai an d off hie apis Railway Express 12, He sustained spine, On Fob, 19 he ,000 against the com 19 Prof. RH. New York University mith, ‘This letter stated Williains |needed ‘absolute rest’ for his spine, Jand requested leave for such rest in jbed, Smith or Williams back to duty. Williams opened his cout and |showed Sinith the plaster jacket Smith again ordered him to duty, and Williams obeyed. Five minutes at-| ter reaching his engine house, No. 16, he fell fuinting. He reguined his senses in Bellevue Hospital, and has been theré since, encased in plaster ed by “These are the specific facts: By his own statement Commissioner Mirsch- field investigated these facts in May last, and found them not worth re- porting to the Mayor, What Com-! missioner Hirschfield does nyt reveal is that his office in May tried to prove sufferer What Commissioner lumbago. Hirsehfeld does | at the man used by his he samg man now as- vioner of | of the entire Fire Départ- from of the | “Commissioner Hirschfield makes | public avowal of personal interest tn! my welfare, This is not his first ox. | press of the kind, Thus th Jan ary 2, 1218, he was the messeng: of Mayor Hylan to me to accept public | While Department of Strect the Fire Depart- | (AMERICAN WOMAN BRAVES ; PERILS | | People of Hill Heroism of TO HELP THE ARMENIANS EE LSE ERS PERE GE-OPITE 1S LOLECES SOOEDESEIOESIEEE EOE EGEE OF FOES T HID DODEOOES OF MASSACRES burn, N. Y., Celebrate Miss Margaret Mack and Miss Ruth Stuart, The celebrating the garet Mack, the world does olsewhe} A dispateh s how Mi rt, a Relief Com te Stu ca people of Hillburn, who . Y., are heroism of Miss Mar- lives there when not need her services from Constantinopt Mack and Miss Huth another worker for the Ameri- nmittee, have been risk. | ing thelr lives at Shusha, Arn They werg recalled after a massacre there, but they begged to ‘be sent back and their request was granted after, they had signed a statement that they wer i voluntarily und ingfull knowledge of the peril Miss Mack ts a graduate of Moun- tainale Hospital, Montclair, N Misa St t, daughter of the li Capt, Sidney B. Stuart, U. 8. A. was | assistant (o the superintendent of Sloane Hospital, New York, before she joined the Armenian Relief, sloner’s own words, convince me His; Honor must have you. in his adminis- tration by hook or by crook.” ‘Another fact which Commissioner Hirschfield fails to mention is that| in March, 1918, he besought m | cept uppointment in his own | and voluntarily pledged himself that he would arran, that my compensa- tion be equal to his own “Commissioner Hirschfeld was not | the only messenger sent to me by Mayor Hylan, A din June, 1918. informed me’ h straight’ from the Mayor's offic nd urged me to undertake, on a fe basis, an inves- tigation of the Board of- Water Sup- ply, covering its twelve years of ac- tivity, Fourteen months have passed since this offer was made, and the! Board of Water Supply inquiry has yet to be started.” \3 TREATIES N NEARLY READY. Hungarian PARIS, Sept, ompact Aw 5 Ore nization of Government, 6 (Associated Press), Tho Austrian and Bulgarian treaties are Vv aally out of the way, owirt to the gcent work on them by the Supreme | | Council | ‘Austrian treaty Is Ukely to be signed next Thurslay, and the Bulgarian ‘ompact probably Within a fortnight, | the Hungarian trot» will be | ready for pre: Government at Nation a8 Soon as the INWOOD WELCOMES pen’ to its own plant. . TTS WAR HEROES IN +ALL DAY FESTIVAL Parade. in ‘Aferibos Followed) by Frolic Lasting Until Midnight. Welcome home to the veterans of the war who went away from the Dyckman or Inwood section of Man- hattan will be fittingly celebrated this afternoon and to-night, The sec- tion embraces the territory between the Harlem and Hudson Rivers lying north of 191st Street as far as Spuy- ten. Duyvil Creek (21st Street) with & population of 26,000. With @ parade starting at 2 o'clock this afternoon at Broadway and ‘Nagle Avenuc, the celebration will be kept up till midnight with some- thing doing every minute, The parade will embrace twenty-three military and civil organizations and six bands will furnish music, The route wiil take in the neighborhood Isham Park in the hillb west of} Broadway from 210th to 226th Streets, On the line of march pause will be given at the Memorial Tablet where @ short, but impressive ceremony will be held in honor of the men who gave their lives to the cause and whose bodies He among the hills and val- leys of France. There will be a number of floats the parade and one of the features will be a detachment of the 22d Regi- ment, N. ¥. G., through the courtesy of Col. H. H. Treadwell, At the park athletic exercises will be held for which prizes, useful rather than orna- mental, will be awarded. Handsome- ly engraved certificates of service will be distributed at a dinner to be given the veterans, 450 of whom will by resent in their service uniform: Mrs. George N. Spence, assisted by sixty ladies of the neighborhood, will be hontesses of the boys at the tables, ‘included in the list will be the local Red Cross unit, at the head of whieh is Mra. Charles Ennist. ‘The dinner will be followed by a block party which will embrace three blocks of Sherman Avenue, ablaze with varl- colored electric lights and the houses vieing with one another in decora- tions John J. Ready of No, Sherman Avenue is Chairman of the Commit- tee of Arrangements; Alfred H. Lee, No. 561 West 207th Street, Chairman of the Parade and Programme Com- mittee; Sigmund Weltchek, No, 221 Sherman Avenue, Chairman of the Finance Committee, To these gent! men is largely due the credit of the success of the affair, and Edmund Flinn helped with all his might as Chairman of the Publicity Committee, ponte S ~ Asan Me LONGSHOREMAN ADMITS KILLING IN SELF-DEFENSE Accompanied by his counsel, Thomas Pollack, longshoreman, twenty-five years*old, of No. 748 Ninth Avenue, walked Into the Homicide Bureau of th District Attorney's office and surren- dered himself as the slayer of Michae! Stinson, longshoreinan, of No, 201 West 16th Street, who hot and killed at Eleventh Avenue and 14th Street last Wednesday night. Pollack refused to make any state- ment, exeept to say he shot Stinson after’ the latter had drawn a pistol to shoot him, SKYSCRAPER ELEVATORS RUN THOUGH STRIKE IS STILL ON Emergency Service Ends High Stair Climbing in Metropolitan Building. Almost all the Mevators in the fifty- story Metropolita Life Bulldin Madison Square, were running to spite of the strike of the ft de everybody walk up y rtrike ts still on, bul night an emergency power was installed by hooking up Edison Company wi pig cables Iny along the aide- beside the building this morn. The cable will soon be per ntiy instatied out of sight. Then building will have power at all ns. Fegardicns of what may hap- with th t 124 MILES IN 48 MINUTES. French Alp Levointe Wins French Aero Club Cap. PARIS, Friday, Sept, 6&.—The French airman Sadi Lecointe won the cup do- nated by Henry Deutsch de la Meurthe President of the Aero Club of France, by flying around Paris on Tuesday inst by way of St, Germain, Senlis, Meaux and Melun, « distance of 200 kilome- tres (124 miles), in forty-eight minut 1 rea an hour. The cup was last won in 1914 by the Lecointe ‘made of 240 kllometr an a 307 pe Emile kilometr Ibert, whose speed was hi Budapest is org Cleaning and, using the Commuis- and sends o delegation to Paris. nl ind end at | UNVEIL A TE FOR WORLD HEROES TO-MO aiciajadolens Prominent Men Will Tribute to Men Who Lives in War. In honor of the men of The and The Evening World who the uniform of thelr country the memory of those of them’ made the supreme sacrifice, & tablet will be unvélled in the of the Pulitzer Bullding at . to-morrow morning, The vealing the newspapers’ roll of with twelve gold stars among ames will be drawn aside by Pullteer jr. ‘The tablet, the product of the Jelim Polachek Bronze Company of Iie Island City, is attached to one . big pillars on the lower floor and@Ome — tains the names of all the 4 every department of the Morning: a Evening World wao enlisted or wete | drafted. Not a few of the newapaphe: men who went “over there’ —thete | Were 125 in all—came back as ofeaim, / fem shavetall to Colonel, and other honors, And the difference in every sulary wag paid from the left his post on the two pepe he was mustered out and returned@e his former job, Some of them slid tes © come back to their jobs; somevet them lie under the soil of Frame, which thelr blood helped to enrighy After the unveiling Mgr. Luke @— Evers of St. Andrew's, who celebrated = the firet early morning mass for, |news gatherers an@ printers « others of Park Row, will offerem prayer for the repose of the the dead and for the welfare of who came through the war un! Robert L. Moran, President Board of Aldermen, Police sioner Enright, Murray Hulbert, missioner of Docks, and At Healy, a graduate of The Pressroom, Will follow with MAdreases, Gov. Smith sent a letter of saying that a previous long standing prevented hi Ing. and in his @ work a erous: ret World ‘nnd "ie Evening employees in the Liberty Loan paigns. Of the tablet he said: The World ana Evening We e ‘01 who gave up thelr lives and who, fort) myst arrived back overseas, The remainder “ot the day wl spent at Duer’s Pavilion at tone, where there will be @ home to the boxe who has who ha’ The party wi Pulitzer Buildt te the "tne Toot of board the Street and thei Hempstead, tn the pavilion be regaled with a great shore ond the day will be spent in . ment and a! kinds of athletic gumam. — $$ Police Believe fawy Is Clueste © Smuggling Gang—Five Seized in New, York. iat, TOLEDO, Ohio, Sept, 6.—In thew reat of « woman known to New ‘Sovk police as “Goldy Goldman,” 37 years — old, government officials to-day der clared that an opium smugsiing iaation having its headquarters York has been discovered. ‘The nother — EA, ihe mane, ing to the offices day in ‘Albany, reiats en on the Cai more are sought. Five men were “arrested in New on Thursday and $1,000,000 opium and cocaine seized by agents, A smuggling plot was —- REDS SHOOT U. S. AGENT. WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—Acting retary of State Phillips to-day. nounced that the State De; been advised that the shot an agent who had en investigate ® rumored violation American Embassy premises at grad The department, he said, had me ther advises on the incident, the of the execution of the agent, not an American, having come ly to the State Department, oo WASHINGTON, Bept, Farragut’s |old flagship, the Hartford, in when | |e defled the mined waters of the lower\ | Miasissipp! and which recentl | threatened with arty will s n her original at one of toric relics of the Nation, the fi nnounced to-day.