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‘ 5 Sas 16 CHURGH LEADERS BREET NEW BISHOP AT CLUB BANQUET penny an ew Among Guests Are Many Who Have Adventured in All Parts of the World. altpeaee The Right Rev. Charles Sumner Burch, D.D, the new Episcopal Bishop of New York, was the guest last night of the Church Club of New York at a banquet in the grand ball- room of the Waldorf-Astoria. The banquet was unique in many respects. An organ, augmented by brasnes, furnished the music. The walls were destitute of the usual display of flags and banners. Men and women of the @iocese in evening dress surrounded the tables and filled the galleries, while the upper tiers were crowded with deacons and deaconesses, the latter in their robes giving an air of folemnity to the occasion, There was the atmosphere of the church, fre- quently disturbed by gay laughter, as if the door of the church during ser- vice had been swung open by a gust of wind, admittting the sounds of the outer world. Men of the industrial world, men of might and millions were there; wom- @n leaders of settlement work, of so cial and charitable election, and of New York's Four Hundred. But the Greatest interest was manifested in the men of the cloth, men of the church, soldiers of the Cross, who Dad done their work not only in the ehureh, but in the vast beyond, in the ley confines of the frozen North and on the battlefields of France, Adventurers they were in the true pense of the word, real adventurers 4 the service of the Lord and in the service of their country, Their con- gregations listened to sermons through which they equid feel the breath of the White Silence and hear the rattle of musketry and the roar of artillery, Bishop Burch, big man in staturé and big man in brain, but humbte in fils calling, has had a career of ro- mance and danger. He was not or- @ainedguntil he bad reached the age of forty and had lived the life of the man of the world, He had beon a mewepaper man and had run the ga- mut of the game from reporter to path, His sudden elevation to the Vighest position in the Diocese of » New York was a surprise to many. From an obscure parish priest he had een shot like a star shell into the Jpad of the church in New York. A FRIEND OF PERSHING'S A STRIKING BANQUET FIGURE. A striking figure at the banquet, and one of the speakers, was the Right Rev. Charles H. Brent, Bishop of ‘Wertern New York. He was Chap- Main General of the A. EB. F,, sent cross the seas at the request of Gen, Pershing and attached to the latter's) headquarters, . The Right Rev, Edwin 8. Lines, D..D., President of the Province of New York and New Jersey, was one Of those who put out the glad hand of @kcome to the new Bishop of New fork. The Episcopal Church in erica is divided into eight prov- the munists of America is an ‘New HENRY LL. HOBART PRESICING KHarmon, BOYCOTT ELECTION, BRO “COMMUNE” ADVISES VOTERS, People Are Urged to Stay Away From Polls to Aid the Proletariat. A circular distributed Bronx yesterday by throughout the Com- admonition *, and Dr. Lines presides over | that the people boyoot: the election, which includes New York. he venerable Hudson Stuck, Arch- deacon of Alaska, was one of the reh's heroes at the banquet board. x twenty-two years he has been ‘@oing the work of God in the wilds of Alaska, going into the little known country with the Klondike boom, see- ing both the picturesque side and the Dieak side of the land of ice and the |! © midnight sun. letarist. at the polls has been part of our rev- olutionary propaganda only.” Dr. Percy Stickney Grant is pastor of the Church of the Ascension, which is the heart of Greenwich Village, He is a8 varied an assortment of men women as does the Archdeacon of jaska. ‘Tey don't come to his ner- ice, all of them, on Sunday nights, hen he turns the church into a uin, the denizens of the village long haired men and short haired men, the mouthing Bolsheviki and fierce spouting Anarchists—and give utterance to sentiments ‘which to breathe them outside the ghurch would mean a hurried ride in hurry ap wagon. Bernard Iddings Bell, called by thany the Socialist pastor, is a well Known character in the cause. He is President of St. Stephen's College at Annadale-on-th=-Hudson, which was always & favored school for the pam- Bored sons of thelr wealthy fathers, 6 collese was wabbling with decay when he first took charge, and now the enrolments are far in excess of fhe accommodations. He woke that ollege up. AN OLD MAN IN THE CHURCH AND HE’LL BE OLDER, sien, W. W. Skiddy is Treasurer of the Episcopal General Convention and bas for twenty-two years, dur- ing which time he has never been ubsent from a session. He feels quite etre that he will attend the next in 1922 at Portland, Ore., notwithstand- fing that both ‘tye convention and nd are a lohg way off. “We urge workers in America to stay away from voting,” says the cir- cular. ‘There are two reasons for this advice. O1 being tu renounce Pahiasengtadie, the other as the next step in the industrial crisis. There must be an overthrow of cap- ialiam and a dictatorship by the pro- Our appearance heretofore The circular caused no end of dis- cussion among the leaders of both political parties. by some that it would be to the best interests of the two big parties that Jt was pointed out the idea be spread. It would save money, Campaigning by both parties has warmed up In the Bronx. County Clerk Joseph M. Callahan, candidate for Justice of the City Court, who has proved the most strenuous candi- date on the Democratic ticket, will head the speakers at a big rally in McKinley Square Casino to-night un- der the auspices of the Democratic clubs of the county. Borough Presi- dent Henry Bruckner, who is carry- ing Robert I, Moran's personal mes- sages to the voters of the city, will Also address the meeting. At a meeting of the Executive Com- mittee for Moran's re-election, held last night at No, 2863 Third Avenue, it was planned to hold fifteen mect- ings each night between now and Election Day. A series of Republican meetings will be held during the week at the Bronx Republican Club, Church House, ir. Horace Perey Silve fhe Church of the Incarnation Street and Maclison Avenue, wa: erly Chaplain at West Point and et Fort Leavenworth, after serving a8 Chaplain in the Regular Army for sare ive years. He was elected Bishop and Bishop of Texas, but ps Pee both calls, preferring to re- main a simple rector, Arthur H, Woods, former Po- Hee Commissioner, was’ one of the . rector of | at! Barnes and Morris Avenues, Van Nest. There will be an Italian raliy, with Major F, H. La Guardia as the chief speaker, at 187th Street and Lorrilard Place, and an indoor meet- jing at No. 800 Hast Tremont Ave- nue, Friday night. Other meetings | will be at 204th Street and Villa Ave- nue, and Jerome Avenue and Ford- ham Road. Assistant District Attorney Julla at the banquet. The Colonal , ‘been made one of the Commission | Fifteen to take charge of the $42,- Alice Gainey has organized a corps of women speakers in the interest of County Clerk Callahan's election as Judge of the City Court. ,000 which is to be raised in the m-wide campaign of the Episco- Church. With him on the com- for New York are and Heury P. Davison, task of the ou | in Bid York LJ waine $25,000,000 of the amount opt Me task a a hee tomer seamgtnae we Hey, District Attorney Francis Martin ts Chairman of the big mass meeting | for Irwin"Untermyer at Hunts Point Palace to-morrow night. The speak- ers there will be Louis Marshall, Aaron J, Levy, Henry M. Goldfogi George Gordon Battie, Surrogate G. M. &, Schulz, County Judge L. D. G¥obe, Mrs. Anne Moskowits Cross and Mrs. Lillian R. Sire, Episcopal Bishop of N of New York and Some Notables Who Greeted Him at the Church Club Banquet | Government, THE EVENING WORLD, bs 35 3 bby OCTOBER 29, 1919, WIFE, ADMITTING HER-GUILT, TURNS ON CO-RESPONDENT sneasiaslinitis Mrs. Morris Levenson, Piqued, Takes Stand to Vindicate Husband’s Name, PITTSFIELD, Mass., Oct. 29.—Mre folen Tevenson. wife of Morris Lev- ngon of New York, testified for her husband here in hie suit for $75,000 lamages against Raymond M. Terry of No. 18 Engle Street, Englewood N. J for the alienation of Mra, Lev: enson's affections, Weak from an at tack of influenza from which she bas oarely recovered, Mrs. Levenson told a jury hér presence on the stand wax to vindicate the names of her bus- band and of her children. Mr. Levenson's business kept him at his office daily from 9 morning often until 11 at night. One jay in March, 1919, he returned home arly. His wife came in wearing a new fur coat, She said {t had been left her by a sister who died. Lev- nson testified that he became su Trlony ‘enngies C GAEN i ps picious and watching from the el vated railroad saw his wife meet = Terry. Confronted with the fact, his KUO THE RIGHT Rev bp 8 cHaRLES - wife told him ghe had been neglected, that Terry was giving her a wonder- ful time and was introducing her to,| wealthy persons. She refused to oreak with Terry and in June Leven- von sued his wife for divorce, naming ferry as co-respondent. Since then SUMNER the Levensons have been living apart BURCH Terry is a stock broker with offices it No. 2% Broad Street, New York. Levenson is a ship broker, He lives atthe Hotel Commodore. He mar- ried his wife, Helen Hauser, in New York on Dec. . They have three children, Irv fifteen; Char- lotte, thirteen, and Oliver, 11 years of age. He was in the lumber business n Hoboken until the war, and lived p here. The following 18 the story DR. BLE. BELL told on the stand to-day by Mrs. Levenson of the circumstances that resulted in the divorce suit: TELLS OF MEETING AND TER- RY'S LOVE- MAKING. In 1917 the Levensons went to live at the Hotel Hargrave in 72d Street, | malady is arrested, will be vision. Subsistence, supplies, tuiti and medical'care for each nd their training started under medical super- p, travel disabled |man in training will average $1,500 a] New Yor Their children were If there shall be 35,000 men in|!" private schools. ‘Time was hea by next May, Congress must {OD her hands. She entered the § foal not only the $16,000,000] Of Expression, run by a Mrs. Bre | appropria dy provided and also $20,000,000 more, and a further, sum of $96,000,000 will be needed to carry forward: the work efficiently for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1920, oie iio la le TROOPS TO STOP LOCKOUT. It was ag as unmarried. : : t U.S. TOHELP MANY HURT IN INDUSTRY HERE EVERY YEAR Shia Ee, Federal Board Platis Rehabili- tatiorr of 30,000 of 300,000 Crippled Annually, ih Employers. MADRID, Oct. 29 (Associated Press), Measures to break up the contemy plated lockout by all employers in Spain next Tuesday have been taken by the Minister of the Interior, who de- clared that he will punish sternly em- ployers who attempt to coerce other employers to ‘ring about .a general eckout. Troops have been sent to the 8 of production. Spain needs a radical Government, Senor Alvarez, leader of who Ig expected to ition. “He says the of Sugar, in part, in maki not carry out a radical programme, and Insists Spain needs a radical budget which will increase taxes. He says he expects a political crisis which will be followed by a solution of Spain's ab- norma! social situation, ays he is the man to carry out the programme. All newspapers are following Madrid Journals to combat the generat, union of workmen, composed o and mechanical a Boine of the rovinelal newspapers which are re- using to recognize the union may be 4, La Jornada! of this city, ubiiention. WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—Plans for the rehabilitation of persons injured \n the industries of the country have been taken in hand by the Federal Board for Vocational Education, in anticipation that the Cripples in In- dustry Bill will soon emerge from conference in Congress and will be signed by the President. ‘The board estimates that of the 300,- 900 persons injured in the industries each year about 30,000 will require complete retraining, and 10,000 of this number have dependents. In the first year $500,000 will be available for the work, in the sécond $750,000 and in the third $1,000,000 for the rehabili- tation of handicapped men, women and children The Government will give $1 for each $1 given by a State in which a disabled worker needs to be re-edu- cated. Some of the States are pro- posing to give $3 or $4 to one by the editorial Cranb BROOKLYN Fulton Street, Brooklyn in the; Sauce, Pie, Butter and Tarts. OPPENHEIM. GLLINS & © James P. Munroe, Vice Chairman of the board, has issued a statement to refute some of the rumors con- cerning the training of veterans under the Rehabilitation Act. He says that Instead of 20,000 as reported, pros- pects Indicate that from 35,000 to 50,~ 000 soldiers, sailors and marines will be found entitled to retraining. The board already has cared for 13,000 who are under training and ts placine men in training at the rate of 1,200 weekly, About 12,000 are on the lists, making altogether so far 25,000. As soon as a man decides to take training he will receive $80 a month if he has no dependents and $100 a month if he has a family, with allow. ances up to $150 a month. About 20,- 000 men who will be entitled to train. ing are still in hospitals, Others have tuberculosis and cannot be trained at in sanitartums, be kept until present, where they ‘They are will the U. Ss. (GOVERNMENT | HOSIERY AND UNDERWEAR ON SALE Reject Wool Underwear, 97c, $1.37, $1.47, Reject Wool Sox, 21c, 29¢, 37¢, Reclaimed O. D. Shirts, $2.40, Hip Rubber Boots, $3.85. vu. 8. Army Munseystyle one J. 8. Naty Blankets, all wool, $5.50, Gray Wool-Nap Blankets, $3.75, Army Raincoats, $3.00 up. Root’s Tivoli 1 Roya Underwear, $1.78 ea. WHITEHOUSE DEPT. STORE 151 Bridge Street, Near Sands Street, Brodklys. Shoes, Standard | Will Place on Special Sale Thursday (Only) 800 Pairs High-Cost Boots For Women and Misses This offering includes distinctive styles developed in Patent Leather with Ivory Suede tops, Black Glace Kidskin with Grey Suede tops and four Kidskin Models. * Exclusive Models ‘Values to 12.50 Sale Price 8.75 None Sent C. O. D, attractive Also on Sale in Our New York and Newark Stores ‘0 Approvals or Exchanges Louis XV. walking or military heels. near the hotel. He spoke to her while! she was with her daughter, Charlotta, | They went to ride in Terry's auto- mobile, She met Terry again, The third time they met, Terry proposed marriage to her. She then told him she was already married. Ho was infatuated and waited for hours in the corridor of the hotel to see her. Repeatedly he called her on the telephone. Terry leased an apart- ment just behind the hotel and facing her rooms. They had a code of sig- nals to indicate when Mr. Levenson was away. She went every day to Terry's apartments, He proposed that she become a third member of his brokerage firm. He bought her a fur coat for $2,000, @ ring for $1,600 and other gifts. He ridiculed her husband as one | neath her and gained her affections. | She became madly in love with Terry. She tried to break off the relationsh.p, | put could not. Terry told her he) would kill her and blow out bis own| brains if she left him. WHY SHE DECIDED TO TELL| HER STORY., Aithough she had given Levenson's attorney her word of honor t she would not’see Terry again, she went to his apartments after Terry's sister had called her to the telephone and told something terrible had happened him. She found him badly bruised | and cut. He had been drunk and said | she was the cause of it. He had been robbed of a ring and $2,000 in money and had to pay $200 at the police sta- tion to have his name kept off the blotter, “So T went back to him. I knew," she testified, “I could not keep away from him, I loved him so dearly.” They went to Great Barrington, where Terry had a country piace. Levenson followed and had Terry ar- rested. Terry wanted her to make up with her husband so that the case against him could be settled, and she became disillusioned, she said, adding that she would never have been a witness had. not a lawyer showed her Terry's answer to her husband's suit. She said it alleged that she had never married Levenson, that her children were illegitimate and that she was party to blackmail. Then she deter- mined to testify. Since the present action she has brought an action against Terry for an accounting of the profits of his brokerage business as a third partner. ————— A. E. F. UNITS ON WAY HOME. Last of Brooklyn Wighters Here Friday. Due The last of the 2nd Pioneer Infantry, which was organized from the old 14th Regiment of Brooklyn, and comprises the last New York City unit to return from the war, will arrive in New York on Friday on the transport Pocahontas, which sailed from Brest Oct. 21 Col. James R. Howlett, who was in charge of the old 1th and who was one of the youngest colonels in the service, is with the units on the way » which include also the Field and fi,’ Headquarters and Supply Co pany, a med Hen} detachment nd four teompe F, L and M. The out- n t Cob White Corn Syrup may be used in place whole or in ng Cranberry erries all. over Black DUKE. YORK Turkish Cigarettes EYOND a shadow of doubt the Duke of York represents the utmost value possible ina cigarette. Its rare Turkish quality would be remarkable at any price. And yet the Duke of York sells at 18 cents for 15. Sure it’s re- markable!—a millon men have said so! Meet the Duke of York to-day—you'll say a good word for each cigarette, Sure—Your Dealer Has Them! 18 cents for 15 One of the Quality Cignraties of the Tovacceo Propucts CorroraTion AUS NortHWest Corner SIXTH AVESIS= STR, Take Our Advice, Buy Furniture Now Furniture is going higher without (ec) a question of doubt. Prices will be much higher next spring. They can- not drop for a long time to come, and any one who del 8 purchas- ing, expecting low prices, is bound to be disappointed. The values of-~ fered in this sale are based on last season’s costs. They are lower than we can hope to offer again for many months—perhaps years. “We Make Terms to Fit”’ Plain Ficure Tags on Every'hiag Motor Truck Deliveries Everywhere Wing Rocker Upholstered in Imitation Leather, $2 6” 4-Piece Queen Anne Period Dining * Room Suite in Quartered Oak Consisting of BUFFET 60 inches wide, CHINAS 50 CLOSET, SERVING TABLE, DINING TABLE 48 27 inches, 6 ft. extension; Four Pieces; at.... "eiaere Table mahogany finish, Colonial ‘26%: : with drawer 72 3° OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS, WNCon.6" ve \5" ‘St. Tea Wagon Period design with removable glass tray in mahogany, In