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re Corona Post of the American Legion, Tecently organized at Corona, L. 1, is conducting a campaign to obtain 500 members by Nov. 1. ¢ 200 mark Was reached at a recent meeting. As part of the drive for more members &h auomobdile parade will be hei- to- morrow evening, starting from Kings- and Louona Avenues, at 8 P. M. jectings of the Post are held at No, Louona Avenue on the second and e— Cranberries have no waste such fourth Tuesdays of each month. Ex- service men can enroll by communicat- ing with A. R, Gormley, No. 88 Corona Aven nd are urged to do so im- media MRS, ELLSWORTH WL GET VORCE FROM WAR HERD German Officers tn South Amerten. RIO JANEIRO, Oct. 17.—Among the Passengers of the Dutch liner Hol- landia, arriving here to-day from Am- sterdam, were 406 former German nd soldiers, Of these 26 will remain in Bras.l, while the re- mainder will go to Argentina, where they will become settlers. Decree With $2,000 a Year for Child. The formal decree in the divorce ac- Court by Capt, Juliet 1. County Red Cross Motor Corps, will be handed down within the next day or ywo, Justice Platsek announced ‘to- day after hearing testimony. Red Cross Worker Assured of tion started July 22 last in Supreme Elleworth, during the war head of the New York plaintiff, he ruled, t# entitled to her deoree from Capt. Bradley Ellsworth, eon of W. W. Ellsworth, former pub- lisher of the Century Magazine. ‘The plaintiff did not ask alimony or but Justice Platzeck as pits, cores, and ‘peelings. counsel fees, awarded her $2,000 a year for the sup- port of her thirteen-year-old son, George Inness, now in the custody of his mother. One of tho witnesses called was H Van Cortlandt Fish, Westchester County real estate man, who served the papers on Cat, Biisworth. Mr. The Store is closed at 5 P. M, daily GB. Altman & Cn. MADISON AVENUE « FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street The Boys’ Shoe Department is making a special feature of Boys’ & Youths’ School Shoes (sizes 11 to 1314 and I to 6) at $5.75 per pair: These Shoes are made of selected elkskin, and may be obtained in brown or black. roomy toe and a specially treated sole that is admir, The model is a Blucher, with ly adapted for the hard wear which a normally sturdy boy will inevitably give it. All Shoes sold by B. Altman & Co. are made of el muine leather throughout The Boys’ Shoe Department is located on the SIXTH FLOOR more price Why Pay it ? Coffee is costin Postum-—now used so ex~ tensively instead of coffee —is sold at the same fair POSTUM instead of coffee? ‘Made by tiie POSTUM CEREAL” COMPANY Battle Creek, Michigan) a lot than it used to cost. as usual. Way not use “There's a Reason” seen ae Fish is a friend of the family and related to the wealthy Fish family of New York, Mrs. Ellsworth is a daughter of George Inness jr the artist, and married Ellsworth Dec, 1, 1904. Capt. Elisworth entered the army as a pri- vate and rose from the ranks to a captaincy in the 27th Division, He was decorated for distinguished ser- vices in France, Mrs, Ellsworth is living, with her child, at No. 7 East 36th Street, while the defendant is living at the Calu- met Club. Ho was a member of the Yalo 1904 class. Mrs. Pilsworth alleges her husband was found in an apartment at No. 121 Madison Avenue with '@ strange woman on July 10 last, | ——- VARIOUS METHODS OF WINNING STRIKE, SAYS PRESSMAN Will Not Desert Cause Even in | Face of Starvation, De- clares Union Man. In addressing a meeting of Local No. 1 of Printing Preasmen and Franklin Local No. 53 of the Jot Press Feeders at Webster Hall this morning, James Bagley of the Feeders Union intimated that the junions, which have practically se- ceded from the International Unions | by insisting on a strike for the im- mediate institution of the 44-hour week and $14 a week increase could employ various methods of gaining their ends. “If {t comes to pass," he said in substance, “that we cannot gain our rights by peaceful means, there |s another way. I have all along, as you know, counselled egainst guer- rila warfare and dirty work. All of us have spoken against it. But we have known that strong measures have won strikes, even though we have counselled against such actions. “If they get us cornered like rats— if they get us facing hunger and starvation, we will not desert the cause and qnit. We will go over in a body into these new Interna- tional unions and if the employers insist on hitting below the belt, as they are doing now, we will show them we can do the same thing.” Bagley’s talk followed an address by Bernard Nolan of Local No, 51, in which Nolan advised the adherents of the seceeding unions not to take alarm because of the threat of period- | ical publishers to remove their busi- | nesses to other cities, the appearance | of the Literary Digest with its columns printed from photo-en- graved reproduction of typewriting, or rumors that the foremen of the Job offices had deserted to the inter- national organizations. Both Nolan and Bagley said that the foremen's meeting yesterday had | refused to adopt a resolution to join the international's new Unions and that only a small majority of the fore- men had transferred their allegiance jas individuals. Bagley declared that invitations had deen issued a meeting at Ca- taurant in West 23d for a co ence be- € Iclals of the new unions, those of the seceding unions and the foremen. If such a meeting could be he said, there would be “an op- | portunity to lay the cards on the table and show who is right and who | 1s wrong.” | Sclalalilliceebuiieitels | BRITISH SURGEONS HERE | TO ATTEND CONFERENCE | Men Who Evolved New Methods | of Treating Injuries Arrive on the Adriatic, Major Gen, Sir Anthony Bowlby, con- | sulting surgeon to the Rritish forces in France during the war, and now sur- geon to the British forces in France during the war, and now surgeon-tn- osdinary to King George, and Sir Robert Jones, chief consulting surgeon and spe- claliat In restoration of injured limbs, at the army hoapltals in France, England and Ireland, arrived here to-day on t Adriatic to attend in mbersa of th prinetpal c eling they id will be the developments in surgery. resulting. from the war, and the a ation to civil life of many of the methods which proved successful in the wi CIRCULAR PASSERS FINED. Advertined € Meeting of the unist Party, New Sergi Binibob, a longshoreman, No, 319 |Bast Ninth Street; Theodore Keiser, salesman, No, M43 East Fourth Stre ar adore Seldenbaum, a No. Rast Mth Street, wer each for distributing circulars at°Fifth Strect and Second Avenue last night tives of the Bi fore Magistra mb Squad testi- Nolan that they advertia x of the New Communist Party i for “yceum, No. Manhattan our | Banner to Be r the Bronx To-Night. nt the Co y wil be held n't Republican Clu, No. 96t Reports e | WASHINGTON, 17.-By unani- mous vote the § Military Commit- tee today ed favorably reported & dill confer the permanent rank of | Lieutenant General on Gen, March and Major Gens, Robert L. Bullard and Hun: }ter Liggett in recognition of their ser | vices during the wary THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1919. NOTES IN SOCIETY. In the Cathedral of St. John the Divine yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock Miss Margaret Jean Turner, daughter by a former marriage of Mrs. Richard Arthur Belding of No. 39 Claremont Avenue, was married to Harold Church Hahn, son of Mr. and Mrs, Louis C. Hahn of No. 258 River- side Drive, Dean Robbins performed the ceremony, which was followed by 4 small reception for relatives at the Plaza, The bride was attired in her mother’s wedding gown of white satin and rose point lace, Her only attend- ant, her sister, Miss Virginia Belding, who served as maid of honor, wore a costume of orchid taffeta and a tu quoise blue velvet hat. Douglas Brooks of Yonkers was best man, and the ushers were Roland Haines and| , Roger Thompson of this city Benjamin Stilwell and John Allen of Ridgewood, N, J. Mr. and Mrs. Habn will make their home in Yon- ors, x Miss Carol Coe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George 8. Coe, was married to Robert Browning of Minneapolis yesterday at the home of her parents Miss Constance CRUSHED BETWEEN TRAINS. While on the platform of a north- bound elevated train drawing up to |the station at 99th Street and Third | Avenue early this morning, John Healy, twenty-four, of No. 299 Bast 142d Street, slipped and fell in the space between the two cars, where he became wedged. The train was immediately brought to & stop and passengers rescued him. He was taken to the Reception Hospital suffering from a knee, a possible fr: and internal injuries an employee of Denles Duteh-German Labor Confer- ence Report, WASHINGTON, Oct. 17, — The | Netherlands Legation has received a a jen Office at The Hag’ hat the report that Dute to the International Labor ¢ ington were discussing details of the meeting with a representative of the German Government, is without foundation. | Action on Berger Case Deferred. WASHINGTON, Oct. 17.—Final ac- tion by the House Committee investigat- MORRIS | Supreme in Englewood, N. J. ah De ptt ay ad Mr, Brown-| ing the right of Victor Berger, Mil- ing served with the Aviation Corps in @, Socialist, to a seat in the House France, and several of his brother 5 on under the fa: officers attended him { uring the war was ae- Mr, and ire. after a long discus- of No, 817 Fifth Avenue and Rum- fe sion of legal questions. The committee will meet again next Friday, Raymond Hoagland each ‘au fined $2] rooms of the North Side N 6 hird Avenue, son, N. J. have announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Miss Katharine Hoagland, to C. Maury Jones, a son of Mr. and Mrs, W, Strother Jones of Vaucluse, Red Bank, N. J. Miss Hoagland was a debutante of last winter. Mr, Jones is a brother of Ensign Howland B Jones, who married Miss Marga Haskell, and of W, Strother Jones jr who married Miss Katharine Duane. | Rich, fresh mitk, carefully pase teurized and combined with pure Lancaster, ‘daughter of | Mra. John ingredients, gives Marigold its | Warburton jr, son of Major’ and fine flavor. Ask for the kind | Adelphia, aad’ ‘grandson of John | with the yellow and black label. | Wanamaker. Mrs, Lancaster and 6 BeLtans | her daughter expect to pass the wir ter at the Ritz Carlton, this city, They are at present at Virginia Hot Springs. Mr. Warburton served in was with the Hoover Commission in Poland. Ory this Recipe Little Miss Muffet Porridge 1 cup Ralston 34 cups boiling water 1 teaspoon salt 4 Ib. dates Hot water Sure Relief FOR | INDIGESTION | “I couldn’t wait, Daddy; I’ve eaten your Ralston!”’ MORRIS & COMPANY Children do not have to be coaxed to eat Ralston. They love its wheat flavor. Ralston contains just the nourishing wheat elements that growing children need. It is mildly laxative, which means better digestion. Grown-ups love the taste, too. Try Ralston for tomorrow’s breakfast. At your grocer’s—in check- | erboard packages only. | Try Purina Branzos— | The Wheat Food Laxative The only bran food than can be cooked as porridge. Makes fine bread and muffins, In checkerboard packages, at your grocer’s. Mother Goose Recipe Book Send the top of a Ralston box for Mother Goose Recipe Book, illustrated by C. M. Burd—in eight colors. Ralston Purina Co.; St. Louis, Mo. Represented by George A. Mendes & Co., 1—2 Hudson Street New York City