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ug WOMEN IN POLIGELESS BOSTON ‘NAL | LAND 4 HURT One Racing Car Sidewipes Another and Both Are SCARED AS THOSE IN SOVIET RUSSIA OR INVADED BELGIUM ’ * . +, |NO means the only damage Boston Hid in Homes Shivering in| merchants have received from the po- Fear, but “Mad and lee strike. Disgusted.” SHOP IN PAIRS WHEN ESCORT 18 LACKING. ‘The women who were to be found ONLY FEW IN STREEETS. | in the shopping district all showed « marked tendency to cling. Whenever q — y . possible they clungtoaman. I never Shops and Theatres Deserted] \?'ny tite saw 20 many patient, mid- Till Soldier Guards dle-aged husbands doing guard duty Calm Fears over women with the Boston mark of alm Fears, the shopper—the Boston bag, stuffed full of small parcels. oR ‘An automobile crash resulted in the death of one man and the injury of a girl and four men at Queens Boulevard and Cleveland Avenue, Woodside, L, 1, early to-day. ‘The man killed was John Hartman, thirty-seven years oli, of No, Wilbur Avenue, Long Island City, The injured are: Alice O'Neill, eighteen years old, No, 2486 Morris Avenue, the Bronx; Marguerite Mooers Marshall.| Some women were most fortunate (Stalf Correspondent of The Eve-|in their escorts, I saw one handsome ning World.) creature with a guardsman on one BOSTON, Mass., Sept. 13.—Women | side and a sailor on the other—only of this town are to-day putting on|/a marine was needed to complete the their bravest smiles, making engage-| picture. On the other hand, I met two women, each of whom was firmly clasping the hand of a small boy and marching along like Joan of Are on iments over the phone for shopping or lunch or matinee without e en a quiver in thelr keen New England] the way to the stake. When no man, voices, shrugging their shoulders at}was available the women usually , the very notion of being afraid, and| went in pairs, arms closely linked. Handbags and pocketbooks were gripped with bulldog tenacity, One woman had pushed the handles of her sea of fear that has overwhelmed the! brown leather bag up her arm to a women of any modern American com-| point above her elbow, and had her munity, whole hand curled about the bottom of the bag. so emerging like chilled, yet resoultely cheerful, bathers, from the deepest The mon in khaki guarding the! streets and public squares with lifted! \ smnen walked with long, swift steps, bayonets, have convinced the Boston | casting suspicious glances at the un- woman they are to be trusted to pro-| shaven or too flashily dressed men tect her pocketbook and her person. Who loafed along the curb. The men were quie So she has come back to what from Wednesday night to Friday noon, was for her a beleaguered city. During that] chadow of the Old South Church and period Boston was not merely a| brazenly smoking cigarettes or pipes. policeless city, it came close to being} The woman alone was a decided something much more unique and|Frity, and in Boston she is by no phe {™eans an unusual figure when condi- | tions are normal. Besides its business anti-Suffragists of Massachusetts| women, Boston has @ specially large should pass a vote of thanks to the! group of teachers and students who striking pollcemen—they convinced} trop about the city’s short blocks as Boston women, ut least temporarily, | ney would trot about thelr own vil that woman's place is in the home. |1.°%.” ana never think of sceking While Boston was truly policeless,| oF uny. In a policeless city, how- before the guardsmen bejalghtospe not ever, they go as the animals went into merely the streets, put also the popu the ark, by two and two. lar imagination, Boston women sbut their doors and stayed behind them, |SRAVE MOTHERS VENTURE OUT Shopping almost stopped. ‘The thea-| TO PROTECT THEIR CHILDREN. tres wero practically emptied of femi-| Before lunch I trolleyed to South nine population, Markéting either) Boston, where Broadway (that is was not done or the men did it. The| really its name) is a double line of tea rooms and the restaurants popu-|boarded-up store fronts and tenement jar with women showed only a sprink-| buildings with hardly a whole pane ling of their usual patrons, of glass left in them, ‘The street might Two groups of women were to be/have been under shellfire, but actual- ecen on the sidewalks. There were|ly was swept by hoodlums and thugs, the business women, stepping along|with soldiers in pursuit. Now it is swiftly and sternly, resolutely Con-|jike a deserted village. Although I trolling the fear that showed itself in} saw it at what should have been one the way they gripped thelr pocket-| ofthe busiest marketing hours of tho books and travelled in couples oF | da: the little vegetable, fruit and squads. And there were the mothers] grocery shops were almost empty. wneven the tenement mothers of 14W-|Children were hurrying timorously Jess South Boston—who faced all real) from school, and many mothers had and imaginary dangers to take theiF| gone to fetch them and were holding Hite ebildren to and from school. |tight to the little hands. Tho young- WHAT FRIGHTENED THE WOM.-|sters alone held hands or interlocked EN OF BOSTON. _ | arms and scurried along, each watch- its and| ing out of the tail of his eye the eae eH RCP ror een | guardsmen with sbarp pointed bayo- acted very much a8 Bt giMinvasion,|Rets Who strolled back and forth in at the time of the Gilling the first| front of the boarded-up windows. oF Russian Woy scenes, Curiosity| Even at lunch hour, between 12 and wild revolutionary Noted the younger | 1+ the number of women abroad was at the beginning Mm ey suffered for|far below normal, The lunch and ones outdoors, th Boston—for which |tea rooms, the soda fountains, held ie Hore in ork equivalent 8 Hell's| Dut a scattering of patrons, The ed fits west side gangs—| Woman's City Club, usually crowded Kitchen and “tmen were wounded | to the doors with business women and raed . sa evensae's disorder. more leisurely patrons, had many uring an eve women heard of this|empty tables, As in the earlier morn- Iwhes frankly seared. And with-|ing, women abroad went in groups they were finthem, they cowered ut} and, when possible, with male escorts, cut shame to ave woman cowered be- | Some of these escorts, incidentally, bome as tt when there was no reign | Were muca more “possible” yesterday, side her fre Wiener forget her phys-| from # social point of ciew, than they of law ee would have been a week ago. I saw i Pare some things I saw In Bos-|@ young Woman in a smart blue silk Pel agab hae morning: Walking at|frock and with the haughty private jo Ninck trom the South Btatlon to|secretary expression, fairly run to Be oingten, Street—as it in New|eatch up with @ red-eared youth in | 1k from the Grand | long trousers he had outgrown, obvi- terrifying—a womanless cit: should wa i aehen 34th Street— I counted Just |ously, the office boy, and as such, women, and only three ofjquite beneath the notice of private esa ere without an escort. secretaries, Another well dressed, ~ OE 11 L walked along Wash-|refined looking young woman was Mate aad Tremont Streets in tne|walking cheerfully beside @ youth heart of the city, the equivalent of| who not only wore overalls, but who our Sith to 424 Street shopping sec- smoked a pipe. tion. It 1s tho time of year when! ‘The point of view of the business women home from summer vacations gir] in a policeless city was expressed ~are furnishing up their fall ward- forcibly by a clever young woman I robes, when mothers are buying new|know who worked in the State outfits for the sons and daughters House, It had just been closed to the Ghout to set off for school aud college. | public because of rioting on the Com~ Yet on an average I counted one) mon. woman to every ten men, nor were| ‘I'm afraid,” ehe admitted candid- men crowding the sidewalk. ly, “We're all afraid, Not to put It was clear that most of the women |too fine a point on It, we're scared 1 saw were bound on more important stiff. We don't know what will hap- Business than mere shopping. For pen next, Our folks don't want us the departinent stores wero almost to come to work, but business women Gecerted, In one on Tremont Strect don't give up so easily. Department at a quarter past ten half a dozen heads and employers are considerate, women clerks were whiling away the sending us home early, time by treating each other to sodas However, we don't go out of our At the store fountain, In a Washing. buildings If we can help it, We duck into the nearest lunchroom, ‘like a rabbit into its hole, instead of going to-our favorite places. One of the girls wanted to walk down to the fovt of Park Street-—Just a long block—yesterday afternoon and buy # blouse. All the rest of us urged her not to go, and she put it off for an hour, When ghe came back she sa! Bare and empty ae a church en Week Sh9"worey were almost empty. ond ys. sic _ Broken plate glass windows are by (Continued on Tenth Page.) ton Btreet store, whose owner has a national reputation, one group of saleswomen was trying hats on an- other half dozen, occupied as wornen clerks. At the gloves, neckwear, jews elry, bedding, hosiery, tablo linen counters, there were almost no cus- tomers, and the long aisles looked as Internal injuries and cuts Wallins, twenty-six years 138 Raddie Street, Long » injuries and Island City; William Carbach, thirty-five years old, No. 86 Raddie Stree: Herbert William: internal injuries and cuts. Willtam EB. German ,eighteen years old, Laurelton, 1. I; fractured skull. Laurelton, L. I. ' Graebner and Herman, stationed at a | Police booth a half mile ‘from the scene, one of the cars attempted to pass the other in the stretch of de- serted road along the Calvary Ceme- tery. Tha passing ‘idewiped the other and both were The occupants Were all Mung First Trip to America in Six Years; Tuesday, when the hour for Garcia LADY DECIES. There was no window shopping. The ditched. A passing motorist speeded to the | by the Former Vivian dooth and reported the accident. The | police called St, John's Hospital and Dr, Fressig responded and the injured | little toughs of ten or twelve, WhO| Victims were taken there, None was were still shooting craps in the! however, and so were the! New York to-de able to give a clear account of the Making the first visit arn, Fould) O- | Ay to go to a hotel at’ tation and the Play how | «| MAMONDS WORTH $10,000 vom. STOLEN FROM APARTMENT AT THE VARIGK HOUSE Charles Walling was driving a big owned by D. P. Harris of the New York Athletic Club, and with him was Hartman, a chauffeur, and Carback. i German was driving a heavy car, owned by his father. Miss O'Nelll and Williams. pevadintedes bana TICKET SELLER SAVES MAN FROM SUBWAY TRAIN WHEE Shuts Off Power When Machinist Either Leaped or Fell Before Onrushing Cars, believed to be an at-| tempt at suicide under the whee & subway express in the presen: crowd at the Thirty-third Str station of the East Side line was pr: vented this morning by the quick ac- tion of Caiman Pinsker, ticket splier at the station. | trains were passing under | a headway of one and one-half min- | n Stanislaus Borosskuy, Oakland Street, machinist employed at the Navy Yard, | leaped or fell platform to the local track and then rolled and fell about four feet to the Women screamed « in his booth, had happened. ch which shut off the pow @ train only @ short dis- | we | touring car, In the war Lord Decies w With him were Squad Cause the|club, at No, IL Dom Hill,{where her sister, Mi when | ris, I rob- | were lost. express track. nd | hold-tp ten realized what | series in Mant to Bellevue halted about Assos | bilities. The first iv that any pe and| Son in the house could have Th ten minutes durin, and Woodhaven Hospital MRS, WILSON ‘AD | WAR ORPHAN IN EAST President’s Wife Sends Check for! $180 to Care for Armenian Child a Year. ‘The Armenian and Syrian Rellef Com- Madison Avenue, vilion to transform it visohn, No, 91 1 Street, is one of the tr told to-day what d was eitag of who the entertainment. | told of others by waitin, So, sons in the »ck, most of them women Morris Jand young ¢ of the Richmond Hill Station, ent with a Sergeant and eleven dete scclol's, SUES TO PREVENT ELECTION Wilson had assurhed the entire support of a war orphan picked up in the rav- aged lands of the Near East. son sent her check for $180, which will support the child for a year, ‘The committee hope en will follow the example of Mrs son, as there are thousunds to be cas or elght othe the shrupber “1 have orders from } said Capt, Morris to Dr shut you people down if that many wom Mquarters,” ou attempt | _ entertainment for dancing comes from the station house blotter FARMERETTES TO FROLIC. Broadway To-Day, nd Sing To-Night, er beauty choruses Broadway will wings and give us achance to see the Farmerettes before tie footlights extravaganza merette Frolics’ ts on | Thave| A taxpayer's suit was started in that | Queens County to-day to prevent the you do not viol band was just ; march wher about to strike will be presented to- night at the Amsterdam Opera House, 44th Street, west of Broadway. ls have been rehe Camp Community Service be given at Admission will cost a quarter fo villians, nothing for soldiers and s: ors in uniform, ‘The girls will parade in Broa y ft this alternoon: in cout audience by vote sorts of excitement ing that they were to be arrested be- | tion in 1917, He came hysterical, Dr. Freitag in his to Mayor 8d should remain in offic in Brooklyn, The Feb. 1, 1920. Th Mayor was not at home, but his sec- in touch with to the retary said he would ¢ Freitag went police were still on the Job, inside and outside, 10,30 o'clock peared on t It was about maid of the lot. rounds and called out; | Charles Bast, No. $705 102d Stre nnounced &@ man ap- Court to enjoin the Board of LI LONDON, Sept. ring out of the simplicity typifying Britain's “silent of Admiral conveyed from they can BO OM qigates for Sher xaid the polic - nside the hall three Rich with their dane Beresford was West End home to-day naval guard. After the funeral oy.) Mond Hill stat vices, the cofffn was covered with thu Union Jack and | Cemetery ned tropical storm ix mor rters, Louisiana we nis, Mississipp nerally probably re enjoyed themse . Dem= riff and As- Hazleton, who helped calm the assemblage, jumped from a window of hi iment on the second instantly killed, een Ill for veveral motos, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 19 LORD AND LADY DECIES ARRIVE ON AQUITANIA T GOULD FAMIL WATCH STEAMERS. MRS. PANKHURST MOTOR BUSES "TO REGAN §15000 ARRIVES FORWAR. WHEN -INSTOLEN JEWELS ON So%9 ee Count and Gems Disappear at Same Time, Detectives to-day are watching outgoing steamers In an effort to di- miniah the desolation of the Countess Alvise Bragadin for the loss of $15,000 in jewels, A butler disappeared at he same time, The jowels and the butler were missed Tuesday morning from the apartment of the Count and Count- oss at No, 829 Park Avenue, at about the hour when (t was customary for Antonio Garcia, the butler, to carry | coffee to the Count and Countess. For a week since Garcia's services had been obtained through the em- ployment agency of Joseph Rouxel, No, 641 Sixth Avenue, the butler had been punctual in serving the morning coffee and his agher duties. Several days before the disappear: unce, the Countess had missed an an- tique bend necklace, but harbored no suspicion against so effictent a ser- vant a8 Garcia showed hitnself. Monday night, after returning from a stroll with the Count, the Countess placed a diamond lavalliere, three diamond rings and a pair of diamond earrings, all valued at $15,000, im the drawer of a dressing table in her | boudoir, & 59-96 3-4-3-9998-22-9-54-5¢ 1-3-9 4-0: 2F30e tu bring coffee was long past, search failed to reveal either the butler or the jewels, Tho Count reported the loss of the valuables to the police, who believe Garcia will try to return to Aquitania, | ty France, war| Count Bragadin is a member of the Italian nobility and is representative of several Itallan firms, including the Marine and Commerce Corporation of erica, the Americus Realty Corpo- Mill Co. p then he has been control officer Gift in Memory of Escape trom German Bombardment. | Mme. Frederic Guerquin, wife of a wealthy mechanical engineer of Paris, jhas reported to the police the loss of 00 jfour diamond rings valued at & jto $10,000, One of them she valued | pS ER especially, she said, becwuse tt was |siven to her by her husband in mem T ory of her escape in the tragedy of * error at HOS-/s¢. Gervais Church in Paris, where pital Fair It Tries to Close Up. lseventy persons were killed by Jong ran, Jerman bombardment } Mime erquin has ind ‘York two months. About a week aso be |she moved to Varick House, a girls’ nick Street, It was th in} She left them on the dresser of t bedroom Sunday afternoon and we out without locking the door, | police have considered three possl- nLered the room and taken the ring: t any to Mm@ h wearch of the buliding for the gems was futile, Mme, Guerquin is Am birth and French by marriage, She and her husband were both engaged in war wrk, and he Is still busy on ‘ reconstruction work, ‘ ov an by ives "OF NEW SHERIFE FOR QUEENS to is ims Term of Man Chosen to and not | Succeed Slain Official Has order | Not Expired, | holding of an election to fill the of- fice of Sheriff. The problem dates back to the killing of Sheriff Paul the police | steier in October, 1916 was all! Samuel J. Mitehell, the present Women believ- | Sheriff, was clected at a special elec laims he was elocted for the regular rm of three year. until Corporation Counsel holds that the election was only to fill the vacancy for the unexpired term, acting on this opinion, Democratic and Republican organiza- tions have nominated candidates. up-| ‘The taxpayer's suit is brought by Richmond Hill, who asks the Bupre tions from pri ing any names of can ff on the ballot Horricane Along tho NEW ge northward in t of the mouth of th roun © ye hu urday and Saturday westerly on the west southerly who had the east coast Sunday moming, are pro Por dicted, ewei for which anxiety waa Northeastern Navigation nip Mexico, due ‘Thursday from P 4 wel car jo and & passenger list, wreso via Merida with a gas \ ’ cnEsaN ae oT CROSSTOWN LINES SUSPEND $ Butler at Home of Italian Duke and Duchess of Suther-, Mayor Hylan Promises Public | land Also Land Here From Adriatic. BOLSHEVISM a Better Service by New Mayor Hylan charged to-da Vederal Court The White Star liner Adriatic from Southhampton, Sept. 3, arrived here in issuing an order discontinuing ser- vice on a number of New York ttul- having stopped Halifax, where she £449 passengers ways Company crosstown board were the Duke and Duchess of Sutherland, who owned by the chises doap: that they are violating th dering service. thee Lines ceased came for 4 month's stay. rita co cloak of the law thrown about against Bolshevism and will endeavor the Mayor, they would have broken thelr | tions amon Sir Arthur was sent here by the British Chamber of Commerce trial relations of Britain aud Amer- Franklin, president of women workers. been in @ position to revoke the con. ponsibility for the closing Mayor, referring to the Avenu Madinon Street, the Spring and De te and the Sixth Avenuc ferry routes which are to diseontinuc was another: passe minus doth legs and bis left arm and has only two fingers on hand, returned after six months sp: in teaching war cripples along’ without “rests entirely with Judge Ma the Federal Court, and Lill aaah Jurisdiction The closing down of thy order of Judge Mayer, however, ity to submit to the de- mands of the traction interests for an ease in fare, The Adriati of Philip FY Philadelphia, also brought the body ung, sixty, manager in internattonal Marine, who died at 1,755 U. S. AIRPLANES LOST IN FRENCH ZONE 943 Craft Ready for Use on Date of Armistice, Says War Department. not force the the car lines n tioned in Judge Mayer motor bus service will be on the routes abandoned We will see is fur better that given under the old system, tricts affected given the best transportation States to the gone of the ad- ‘rance during the war were The motor bus service referred to under private in charge working under temporary permits to be grant- ed by the Board of Estima delivered 1,765 | the holders of the permita fail to j make good the city reserves the right “ro | immediately to take away thelr priv- Mayor will b Airplanes sent 0 2.495 war delivered to troops, including: airplanes lost at the armistion was signed t 3 planes in tie sone of advas armies and 203 in d In a statement issued to-day Mayor United States at present there! tyian tells why the at lcrosstown lines are being abandoned. ve been overenpitalized. street car horses were restore the alimony and revive the nt to the boney ‘or horse cars Ww ve mentione owtla condition ent announced alee that | He says all ha y smmunition |" the United States 1 France and 660,000 rounds of smait | 624,000 rounda of artill id to the ¥ property worn out and new equipment purchased, a rifles, 900 Browning | new debt would be incurred on top of #UtO-! the original indebtedness, and that process was continued without reduce. | ing any of the old indebtedness, untit endeavoring to pay rest on all the indebtedness wh other than worth nothin, returned list ewis anti-aircraft guna, millimeter guna, 6 iniilimeter ho- 165 millimeter 7 trench mortars. awaiting ship- ere luge quantl- the property, | chine, ts practically s Barbara Jar- | re that the rings mum to repla mous divide after year on resulting in the holders of enormous Profits without storing up anything for an qnergency | of thiy kind, “If the corporation 6 such property. da have been pald year CAR MEN TO VOTE ON STRIKE. ployees Henew y Demands, returns out ena Traction Corp Jay that they will nndt get more ‘ople for fares, | they put the road in the hands of a then the receiver, at the direction of @ judge of the I Court, closes down these lines, It 1s no wonder that the plain people oxreements that t Nerz's Pa-|Workmen have been making repairs |) spital,| about the building, and th nard| outsider could have entered a back toes and he| door, mounted to the gymnasium and | He passed into the dormitory and thus |!er Guerquin's room, A thors! an ir demands until elty to allow It to Fea a Wie company | one stroke of the pen to repudiate a dmity that th money but clatine * running be peaple and | charge more than the c If the courts uphold this one- of the transit tract calls sided policy in corporations, | >. RYE WELCOMES SOLDIERS. | “[ rely on the people to help me in {this ght against stock-jobbing, interests and old village je r sympahizers, “The time is near at hand when the they should have some little solicitude about the people's interests as well as the in- terests of the traction compante PUB Ral Thuraduy af rnoon and ev! courts will © To-Day From Among passengers due on the Aqui- tania this morning is Mile. Jane Her- veux, famous French aviatrix. 2M. | MARGARET MAYO DIVORCED. | © Actress Wins Decree From © Inn and o dance at the nds of Margaret Mayo, p thor-manager eres Was grant: | that they be- two years ago mitted his wile had obtained | ‘0 Is in Boston, S INTO CAFE. Sept. 13.—'Tne| Nid not stop until it bad Klass window wr of 84th Street and Colum- belongs to ¢ a large plat urles Heim, was driven by Ber- He said the steering gear ef COURT DENIUNGE “THEVA” ~GOME SORE SPOT Justice Tierney Calls It Centre of Lawlessness and Degeneracy. Dencribing Greenwich Village ae ® Sourt Jwe- tiee John M. Tlerney, sitting in the Hronx, talked at some length during the court session to-day about the erlon of sandals and bobbed halr ind unconventionality, The occasion was the prewentation of a motion for ilimony in the divorce suit of Mrs, Margaret Eatetie Judson Hand against Claudius Q. Hand, a corpuration law- !yer with an office at No. 46 Broadway, Mrs. Hand brought sult last Janu- ary. The evidence was taken by Robert Lee Morrell, as referee, Jus- Itico Tiernoy reviewed the evidence to-day. ivle sore spot, Supreme jew Jones, a private detective, rs told of finding Hand and Vlora M. Pelma, of No, 648 West ieath t, a pretty stenographer, n a magnificently appointed studio Mt No, 10 Kast 15th Street on a night yn January, Jones had trailed them from 424 Street and Broadway. _Aftor visiting « resort called the Mill and drinking and dancing, they went to the studio which Hand main- tained under the name of Bertram Parker, Jones sald he telephoned to Mra, Hand at the Hotel Newton, Broadway at 02d Street, where she idew and Mrs, Hand and some friends motored downtown and raided the studio, What they saw there prompted Mrs. Hand to ask for a divorce, Hand and the girl testified. They admitted meeting each other on @ subway train Hand said he adopted the name of Bertram Parker for use in the oper- ation of @ side line to his law busl- ness—namely, dealing In objects of art and curios, He did not wieb his legal associates to know that he was also an art dealer, On the occasion of the raid, he said, Mia Pelma was at the studio to look it over because she thought she could sell the pictures and furniture, He had told her he wanted to sell the place and ghe believed she could fad rchuser, Miss Velma testified to sume effect. ree, in a report made last July, recommended that the suit be disinissed and Hand promptly ceased paying his wife §70 a week alimony. i y Justice Tierney was asked suit Justice Tierney said he did pot think the aetion of the referee was justified by the evidence, even though Hand had testified truthfully. Then the court took up Greenwich Village: “This,” he said, ‘is a Greenwich Village case. Greenwich Village was cuce the favorite residence section of no of the best people in New York. It wax 4 refined and delightful and uaint part of the city. To-day it has deteriorated. tt ‘s now the rendezvous of lawlessness and degeneracy, The descent has not been caused by New Yorkers. ‘The rotten atmosphere of Greenwich Village las been imported from the old world, ‘The weird custams found there and tolerated or taken part in by many people who profess to have high scelal and moral characters are t New York customs, The , so- celled Bohemians are not typical of this city, + ’ “It ig astonishing to find people of supposedly sensible habits of mind going down to Greeawich Village and ring food in the resorts there and dancing the disgusting dances aces and kicking up dust and germs which settle on the food, It is deplorable that men of substance frequent these resorts, Of- ten they become addicted to the hab- its and customs of the habitues of those places.” The court directed the lawyers te submit briets, ‘The Hands were married in 1911. Mrs. Hand is the daughter of Mrs, Harriet 1. Judson, who owns much New York real estate and is socially prominent, —___. CHURCHES TO AID LEGION, je From Service stars that showed on the war flag of New York churches are te bo represented in tho roll of the Ameri- can Legion, as a result of the ald churches will give to the Legton’s nembership campalgn from Sept, 1) In practically all the hatched HH city, announcement will be made to- morrow of the Legion's need of all the men who served in the army, navy and marine corps. Do you know “ale tenitory. is he largest ead field. om Ke. 5.? 10D