The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1919, Page 3

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¥ 4 1 ANNIVERSARY (If ARMISTICE [New York’s Own Portia, Judge Norris, Is All Heart and Soul and Sympathy; THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER il, 1919. MOTORMAN SAVE LIFE BY LEAPING IN CELEBRATED IN NEW YORK Women Culprits Call Her a Just Friend ‘T’ TRAIN WRECK a RICH AND A Fd POOR SHOPLIFTER - WITH PATRIOTIC EXERCISES \ ety Commodore to-night, with Benedict Services in Churches Are Held Crowell Assiatant, Séeretary of War, ‘ and Major Gen. il m T. jenoher in Memory of Those Who jas the speakers. oes aaa . ’, Mally every post o: 1e eri~- Died in War. can Legion in this city has arranged . [a meeting for to-night. At the meet- MANY EVENTS TO-NIGHT, | si'ne'Chy College the apeaners wit jall at City College the ers , ENTS “|be Senator James W. Wadsworth, a Chairman of the Senate Committee on Obsérvarice Is General, Not] Milttry Amir, sng monater George | , of Oregon. } A memorial mass was held at} Only Here, but Throughout | .,¢ church of St. Paul the ‘Apostle, f Nation. 60th Street and Columbus Avenue, at | ad 10 OF gg Syl orice, ip reas of the iment oO | members of the 7th New. York In-| On the first anniversary of the ar-| members of the en evar mistice between the fighting nations Greenwich piviliage (fost, ot ithe American Legion, No. wi old a) of the edi celebrated with spi parade and ® fag pre entation and ous recklessness a year ago, New| dance, centreing at 9 o'cl 1 | York gave iteelf to-day to a reverent! Hublic School No, 41, No. 56 Green-| wich Avenue. | rial to th hs ffered| Former Ambassador Gerard will) seed in the war Churches | Speak at the Cathedral of St, John - . ie the Divine. throughout the city held special ser-| "A reception for all members of ne- vices. Many meetings and banquets| gro organizations who served over. TODGE eC SEAN NORRIS will be given. seas will be held to-morrow by th FResiowG AT ~ From dent Wileon, from Gov- Brooklyn Victory Celebration Com DEFFERSON MARKET ernors of States and city officials, S. Rankin Drew Post, American came statements appreciating the poor sth will te MM bag} bs aged entertainment al eene’s Cho} solemnity of the memories of the | House No. 107 West 44th Street at | day. 11 o'clock to-night. A period of silent prayer for the] Residents of 38th Street, between fallen had been set aside in many First and Second Avenues unveiled | churches, on the hour of the ceasa-\2 Bronze tablet to the memory of | ‘ » es8A- | cight former residents of the block tion of hostilities on Nov. 11, 1918.| who were killed. and eight-four Although the fighting ended at 6 A. | soldiers and sailors who went into the M, New York time, this period of | service. je tablet was placed on Tent wrayer Nore was at 1} o'clock, {tHe Mivbank Memorial Baths. | SARS prayer oF f : “. | The Teachers’ Loyalty League held | Governors of six States, Orogen.|a celebration in Morris High School | Michigan, Massachusetts, Texas, Min-| this afternoon with Thomas W. nesota and Maryland, proclaimed | Churchill, President of the Washing- today a_ legal. holiday, ‘Twen- | (8 Heights Patriotic Association, as the orator. Miss M, Louise Carlucci ty-one other States, including New| sang. York, held special exercises. —— The celébration was nationally au- Two ' thorized by utterances from President WILSON, IN BED, SENDS DEFENDANTS INA DIST ATTY Wilson, Gen. Pershing and Secretary TENEMENT LAW Rose ROTHENBERG CASE. Theo President, after rehearsing the achievements in arms and the mobili- zation of resources of the United | vent Fills All Americans’ “With ey . ; , States, saide “Phe war showed us| Solemn Pride,” He Says— | Her Judicial Mind, Combined With a Woman’s he ‘h t th } i 7 : : toscther for high purposes, and the | _ Celebrations in All Cities.- Viewpoint, Makes’ Her Valuable to the Com- ct ft f 1 uy WASHINGTON, Nov. 11.—Th $ . citata which con be mide In pease | frst anniversary of the signing ot ine| -HAUNity’s Welfare as She Presides Over the when nations act justly and in fur-| armistice was observed to-day Woman’s Court—Gives Unfortunate Girls a therance of the common interests of | throughout the United States. of War Baker ARMISTICE DAY MESSAGE men.” Governors of nearly a dozen States Chance Where There Is Hope of Reclama- Gen. Pershing said in part: “Our| "#4 proclaimed the day a legal holi- . 70 ‘ armies have teen demobilized ana!¢ay while many Mayors called at- tion, but the Incorrigibles With Records our citizen soldiers have returned | tention to the significance of the day. rtial i H again to civil pursuits with assurance| President Wilson in @ statement Get Exact, Impa Justice, of their ability to achieve therein the | “dressed to all Americans declared success they attained as soldiers, As| ‘the reflections of Armistice Day will By Fay Stevenson. , [ber_story, but when tho veil was we pay tribute to our fighting men|¥¢ filled with solemn pride in the drawn back Judge Norris knew the PAY. y heroism of those who died in the HERE is a second Portia over} whole story at once, | we remember that solidly behind | country's wervice and with uraditens in the Market Street Court at} ‘The girl is a drug fiend,” the Judge them stood the American people with | for the victory both because of the Sixth Avenue and Tenth|{old me after the private interview, | all our resources and determination. | thing from which jt has freed us, and This common service has welded to-| because of the opportunity it has wether our people. These experiences rom the bench I was inclined to pity her, but when I saw her eyes and Street, only—her name isn't Portia— Empty Coaches Splintered on | Third Avenue Line—Traffte Tied Up Two Hours, Three wooden cars and one of seml-steel construction were wrecked on the Third Avenue elevated line at 11st Street at 9.20 o'clock this morn- , ne Patrick J. Kelly, operating the | steel train, saved his life by a jump | after the brakes had failed to work. No one was hurt. | The accident occurred on the mid- | dle track. Both trains were without passengers. A ton of debris crashed to the street, however, and almost bit a padsing trolley car loaded with pas- | sengers. The semi-steel train had finished its rush hour work and had been turned over by its motorman, Walter N. Brown, to Kelly, a switchman, who proceeded to run it over to the | middle track, where it was to remain until the afternoon rush, A long line of wooden cars, empty, were already on the middie track: As he passed the switch Kelly saw that he would not be able to stop, 80 he threw open the door and leaped to the board walk. The smash scattered wreckage over both the outer tracks, tying up north and south bound traffic for more than two hours, Passengers were given transfers to the subway. Police reserves and fire companies wore called out. For a time it was believed that Kelly must be buried in the wreckage, and firemen made heroic efforts to find him. He had walked back to the station and down however. He was told to appear at the District Attorney's office later for questioning. 10 HURT, 3 SEVERELY, WHEN STREET GAR JUMPS STATEN ISLAND TRAGK Filled With Shipbuilders on Way to Work—Run Into Tree at Rich- mond Terrace, Ten persons were injured, some seriously, when a big trolley car of the Richmond Light and Railroad Company jumped the track at 7.45 o'clock this morning in front of the Staten Island Shipbuilding Company's plant on Richmond Terrace, The car | struck a tree and turned almost over, |It was crowded with shipyard | workerg and others, Three passengers were taken to St. Vincent's Hospital, West New Brighton, ‘They were: Frederick Field, thirty-four, of West New Brighton, laceration of the forehead and left hand; Robert Lucarnice, of West New Brighton, aiken ac fe r twenty-thre given America to show her aympathy | {tS Jean Norris. Though we sball/quivering chin I knew where. the NEW YORK’S PROGRAMME serious injuries to right arm and left with peace and justice in the coun, | have to call hier Judge Norris hence-|trouble lay, She became hysterical 1 g: Joseph Madden, sixteen, of Port safeguard the future of America and | cils of nations,” forth, because she is the first woman | #94 aimee sollapaed as I falk to her, | FOR THE FR ATI N T0 (Bhmond injuries to forehead and ; confidently | Washington observed the 4: ' Lyset i pecause she needed her herola an right arm, ‘othe Mevctaaat & cheater ake | exercises Centering Shout ener aitate Judge in New York City, and because} hag been deprived of it over night in | Seven others were suffering from @ development of « stronger na-| exercltes, centering about the Blant- ane iy yory Judicial looking in her |her cell, She willbe sent to an insti- HONOR ARMISTIGE DAY | minor injuries ana’wene nome atter Bisuican wueniieat coon ua he | vette Square opposite the White|brand new robe, just remember that | tution and properly cared for.” treatnient by Dr. Charles J. MoDon- Secretary Baker's message, in part | House. Members of the Cabinet and|this bright, energetic little woman is), Of all the fallen women who came was: “Whilg‘we mourn the dead. we | Gens. Pershing and March arranged| a1) woman and heart and soul, and |Pefore Judge Norris not One pleaded | First Anniversary of Endigg of Hos- ¢ dead. we| to take part in the ceremonies while " to ‘not guilty.’ There was a woman . af au Se aeeieveer* | Rear Admiral Grayson had given as-|that ag she sits upon the bench day /to woman, confidence and exchange til Will Be Fittingly and ‘in the name of both we may |surances that should President Wil-|after day, Sundays and holidays in-|of looks. They knew she knew and Ohara ’ hope for an early accomplishment 8f|80n'8, condition permit, the Chief| cluded, the fallen women, incorrigible With bent heads they acknowledged served, the terms of peace that shall finally | Executive would be allowed to view | giris, shoplifters and all women of- t aay ld hany cases she cailod This is Armistice Day. Com- them by their first names and several Gis SamEaN ore Woon thE Battier Herta range from & window in the! renders feel that she 1s quite as much Limes when " groups. of girls were | memorative services and other ob- —_—>— woman as Judge. I sensed this wom-| brought before her and the probation | servances scheduled for the city Pei Pe eee rete oe path az ped an's sympathy, ombined with a judi- | officer roferred to ‘Gertrude’ or ‘Mary’ | anq vicinity are: this morning for two minutes in com- ALL ENGLAND IS SILENT cial mind and fawyer's viewpoint, as! ® aghb he a hich is Gertrude Meeting of Episcopal churches, at! of the signing of the I sat beside Judge Norris a greater | 0T ich is Mary?" and then smil- memoration of the signing é . »!ing in a friendly, womanly, wholo-| Cathedral of St, John the Divine, Armistice and in memory of the dead. ¥ part of yesterday, and I know the vs ¥ Major Gen, John F. O'Ryan and IN HONOR OF WAR'S DEAD Women who stood before her, at her|s0me way draw a sparkle of color! under the auspices of the Nation Martin Conboy, Director of the Draft, mercy, felt it too. te causa ready Mgnly colored chees | wide Campaign. Addrcases by will speak at a dinner given to Draft} ain “You will be surprised at the num- se @ head to bow in shame. : There is something.s0 wood and pure | Bishop Burch, George W. Wicker- , ; irls you s re pur Beal Gna lclenicel peat ineyekay | People Stand Bowed and Mute for Testa Y, wartod me ast took {and sweet in that smile that I won-| sham, Alton I. Parker, James W. ff which George Mohr was chairman.| Two Minutes—Tribute Planned | my place beside her. “In many cases|dered if some of the very young| Gerard and others, 8 P. M : ouldn't see thelr mistake and turn A fla s t Board they are nothing but children, and | Couldn’ i American Legion. Dance: Nor 3'by the ‘Government Yoremelency By King. frequently. upon talking to the|@bout? I wondered if they couldn't a a as egion. Dances at superior to that of any other board ‘DON. fnothers 1 am surprised and annoyed | Tealizo how high woman can be and| Waldorf-Astoria and Tist Regi- in the United States, LONDON, Nov. 11.—All England | tt’ their apparent indifference. how low she can fall. ment Armory, New York; 23d Reg- mes W. Gerard. was the prin- |Stood in absolute allence, with bowed,| “Do you know where your daush-| pupgE x aie Garis .| tment Armory, Brooklyn, cipal gpeaker-at a luncheon at the |uncovered heads, for two minutes to. |ter goes evenings?” 1 asked one J DOE NORRISS Portis-Yke'qual ‘Anetleaa Fiviaa Gus tinade Bryn Mawr Club at 1 o'clock at No. , h f ve ages mother. ‘She works, she earns her itles were most prominent during . C , 137 East 40th Street jday in honor of the cmpire’s “glo-|OWn living,’ was the reply, the idea|two strikingly different shoplifting| Hotel Commodore, The American Flying Club has a|"lous dead.” From 11 o'clock until/being that as long as the girl Was] oases which came before her, The| Senator James Wadsworth, of dinner to-night at the Hotel Commo- | 11.02 not a wheel turned, ships at sea | self-supporting she was her ownla. + 160 was of a very poor girl who| New York and Senator George F. ar F Players mistress and no longer under the c i ° eK! ore. The Lambs, Friars and Players cut off thelr engines, telephone and | Musial, 0", he, parents in these |had stolen a shirtwalst, It was her| Chamberlain of Oregon will be the i ( elograph service ceased and thou- |Zites 1 need the co-operation of the|frst offense and ehe was very much| Principal speakers this evening at tainment features of the celebration.|sands of motor vehicles stopped, It | C4 1 «Every |o,, y the celebrat by I » Several Senators have been invited to|was Great Britain's remembrance of |Mother if there is one. | Fvery lenichtened. Calling her by her first @ celebration by Harlem Post risk their fat or otherwise persons in| Armistice Da; mother should insist upon knowing oe eee: Ser ee No, 183, Américan Legion, at the Coming from Washington. to New| pneland's ecriking di ¢| Where her daughter goes and with name Judge Norris rebuked her in @) 7) ts ity of Ne. Ste aeroplanes. piloted by the] gpnsand's striking demonstration of | wnom she goes. The probation offi-|motherly way and put her in charge e City of New York, Nor silence is aid to have been concelved {Pers and I will do everything in ourlot the probation officer. Of course] A band concert and organ recital apa, x » of the |?% mins George, power to keep these girls along the], . o ipa ee, | will be given ‘A special service in memory of the Innumerable memorial exercises | right path, but the mothers must do the girl stole the waist, and she will was held in St. Patrick's) », el . ” ” e to er ¢ 7 " sdral at 12,15, with sermon and PA ge iat ge London and | their part too have to have her case settled in the os The largest here were | tog Bh ? eT peer prayers of Thanksgiving. The chimes |ar gt. Paul's and Westminster Ce, |, 2uise Norris had a ‘number of|Court of Sp al Sessions, but there | prints will be taken and they will be; miles away, to receive certificat ough, ambulance surgeon from St. Vincent's Howpital, They were: Les- | ter J. Watson, thirty-five; Rose Pow- ers, twenty-four; Elizabeth Draper, eighteen rco Deviacquo, tyenty- one; Samucl Nadassa, nineteen; Peter Dufties, thirty-one, all of West Brigh+ ton, and Harold Ledward, thirty-nine, of Port Richmond, The car was in charge of Motorman William Wolse and Conductor Will- iam Turner, both of Stapleton, It was on ity way from St. George Ferry to Mariners Harbor, GREAT NECK PATRIOTS OBSERVE ARMISTICE DAY 240 Service Men and Women Will Receive Certificates While People Cheer, | Armistice Day (which @ year ago put the hose cart of the Vigilants of the| pletely “on the bum") by giving a eption to the men and women who returned from service in the way. Two hundred and women we from the railroad station to a court | of honor in Great Neck Village, two | + ; ay : 4 young colored girls, all giving the|/was a marked contrast in Judge |examined by the Board of Health; but! and hear speeches by Bourke Cock- Pbves Sree: 1B to mlaineh at 1.60, | medral good old names of Jones and Brown|Norris's manner to her from the case |the third young woman was telephou-|ran and others, Bulogies of the ten Hoe eee eee who was | comrades of the various world war |and Smith to start off the day. Most |which followed ing and fully dressed at the tune who died in the service were pre- scnior chaplain of the Firat Army, |@sfociations assembled in St. James |o¢ these girls were about fifteen or| Although the next case was also a|the raid, so that her lawyer was abie| pared by the Rev, Kirkland Huske senior SnaplRIA Of fhe. Firat. Ary, "k and marched to the cenataph, sixteen, although in every case they| first offense, there was a different|to have her released and the Rev, J. P. Rogers. wi fe spes an r |erected in honor of heir fallén | swore to eighteen or twenty-one, Alllatmosphere about the woman who| Perhaps few ple appreciate the After certificates had been h ed | vices in the Calvary Episcopal Church | brothers. and heard addresses by |ndmitted their misconduct with fallen “ . f, cereinonten: ac been bended at Fourth Avenue and 2ist Street. | had stolen quite a number of knick- | time and energ this Judge and Di Bishop ‘Taylor Smith, chaplain|heads and liquid eyes, If the court|\Knacks from a + : ss ‘ ea} department. store |trict Attorney have devoted to th 7.45 o'clock. The Rev, G. A. Carsten- _ Flags were draped end monuments |ougs they were turned over to the!|woman, well dressed, with all the|ries attached to each position, but te ‘ or at the noon pers | (oora a” With ‘wreatha, probation officers and the Board of}mannerisms of a perfectly sophisti-|sit day after day and hear ‘all the : ‘Chapel. Pepe, oe ” j Heaith Old offenders. whose finger-| cated “shoplifter.” Judge ris|morbid trialy and tribulations of bu The Zionist Organization of Amer-| PERSHING THANKS WOMEN, Prints and records are known, were |jooked into her face and finding |manity, to usten to all the wrong went to the workhou or, he e eart nor s¢ or remo y ol eo erworld aad to re ica announcéd that an Armistice Day r, if thelr} neither heart nor soul nor remor doings of the underworld and to real condition made it necessary, | . 1 give eve- turned her case ov or the Special |!ze that this world is far from PrOsrarine would be sven this eve: |General and Mi Sewell Send| Riverside or Kings County|xeasions Judges. The first case was |perfect requires no small amount o FN RS cert lee Greetings to el. Hospital, evidently the case of a poor shop- |stit and determination, faith in man heatre, at Houston Btrest and § ST. LOUIS, Nov. 11,—Hlimination of | : ond Avenue. Judge Otto A. Rosalsky will bo the speaker Armistice Day will t ITH all a woman's instinct of |!ifter and the second was the case of | kind and good, sound judi going to the roots” of matters, {2 "oman of means who made shop- | ——_ ~—-—— TO HONOR MAX NORDAU hatred and injustic of co-operation in and substitution | cial and indu mmemorat lifting a pastime, | tc ll the heroes they were invited to ests at a dinner served by Tom ffey in the Alert Fi » there was dancing arranged for the a "is VANISHING FIANCE'S VISIT f "| DENIED BY MRS. GOEDEKER Hope that at last somebody had come in the Brone wt Me mootinee tonight M | trial activities was urged ‘in a me Judge Norris frequently leaves ‘i ae ee eset OsPltal | dont of the International Council of |terview in an adjoining room with day a “big ease” came up which erve His Sevem-| with the unscrupulous man who, mas- 169th Street. Borough President Henry read at the convention of the | gome female offender, There gvas one |needed the attention of the District tleth ay Anniversary, querading as Dr, William A. Hoffman Bruckner will be the recipient of a|Netlonal Council of Women here to-) oo any gad case*of a young|Attorney, Miss Rose Rothenberg, the ew York Zionists will celebrate the jr, courted Miss Sophie Loderhouse of testimonial in appreciation of h k a . > 1 aw ue Morals, anew, a ve for the hospital Arrangements will be |. Gen. Pershing gent greetings and woman about eighteen who had been an to hold that position in|70th birthday of Dr. Max Nordau, No, 1477 Dean Street, Brooklyn, van- concluded for a $100,000 campaign to|thanked the women for thelr work || osteq for stealing a suit from a A ot the ploneers of the movement, at a ished to-day when Mra. A. Goedeker fen heer auc HA etter will be suring the eg lae partment store valued at $49. The| Thl# case was a violation of the Washington Irving High Senoot, “* ‘® of No. 44 Sunnyside Avenue, Brooklyn, hospital fund. A le ° ed at $49 f t NC ; aa’ teont. ¢iow. mith’ Indorali the Te-Merrew, girl burst Into tears and begged tor| Tenement Houso Act and involved) ,DUrINE thy, war, when, Zioniata be. denied the story printed In & Manhat: campaign and calling, upon “women in ublic Service Commission will mercy, stating that she had no rela-|thFee women and two detectives, Both) pritish Gavernment in pledgine to ese the, doctor twie Be A ee |to-marrow decide the right of the tives and was all alone in the world, |the Judge and the District Attorney [tablish Palestine as a Jewish homeland, “The story, that any uch man ever Regimental organizations and posts| Brooklyn City Rajlway Company to wore a long dark veil ov listened atte: spe over deprived of Dr, Nore vislled thle house, ie false,’ said Mire. ne ively to the testimony and Judge Nortis could neither !of the two detectives’ description of }been born in Hungary, was an nem: i te see hor features nor understand her| low they entered the suspected apart- | le was fore @f the American Legion will have|compe} a ten-cent fare on the Fla: meetings to-night in armories and in| bush Avenue line. Briefs were su’ voter mitted yesterda: tl om = ui » leave Francs peek tee ee cerns ae ith Reels pany’ and Corporation’ GauWay SoM muttsred words between sobs, Tak-| ment and trapped the young women [Pd is now living in Spain, ~ | to-day ing pity upon a friendless, lonely girl, ment Armory, An Armisticé Day loppositon to the coutentlon ae the thd Jud y ie th@ Judge took her into the littl held fi f bi ; dimmer will be given i. the Hotel company, dence rvOm" to hear more of pours, during wuleb. time hale Sosunn lak Minaial etesteae : has scaled ai Reh basses dau's leadership because he, having deker, ‘My daughter’ Lydia "has y met Miss Loderhouse twice, No other e member of the family ever saw bhr, She has never called opon ui Ne speake: bth SM a Thi the uM Tvthae own we. Fg of the Yuna uaa aa atasn"h Wha ne euie 18 Sale Al and Miss le thera { Great Neck, l. 1, 1s celebrating REPUBLICAN WOMEN ny “fee oo perme FORREUNON American Aces Coming om Wing to Get Together TI Armistice Day. Whatever the transconti nd the cross-Atlantic hops to promote aviation, It is whether anything has more proved that the air is now Mi) cepted route of travel than hmm! arrival in New York of the aviators who have flown corners of the country to aviators’ reunion dinner at the Commodore to-night. All the way from Texas aviators have flown to the while others have taken the route from lowa, Georgia, and North and South Carolina, have flown from Canada for. event, while at Roosevelt : day the arrival is awaited of amis tire #quadron that is fying bere Rigi Langley Field, near Norfolk. To-day, and for several days. for that matter, the club house Of | American Flying Club, at No, 11 38th Street, has been turned huge wartime aviation feld. every squadron that a year age on active duty im France is sented, and from the greetings to heard as long absent pals join, different groups, one would thi the war was still on and that squadron was just “standing to” ing to “take the alr.” FOUGHT TOGETHER, TH NOW FEAST TOGETHER. © ‘Say, Scotty,” comes from representing one of America’s pursuit groups, “remember the we ran Into that Boche circus Bar-le-Duc? 8° me show, w ‘Remember that raid we Metg? ‘Archie’ surely was day,” from another, — * “Phat was a mean night w! and I stole out of Karisruhe,” fre recent flying Captain to @ Plan for a Division in National) whom he had’ seen last when * “1 th as break from a G Committee and Courtil of pe noe By And so it ges. Aces and 100 “Adopted. aces; flyers who were CHICAGO, Nov, 11.—A detailed nd | Miss. MAUDE WETMORE VROERWeoe © UNORA FOOD jan | the Repieboe pW omic) and ktew bird: ‘ound officers) are to-day. of organization which will provide | jy pSigdes an over namin, for full participution of Republican | it was a fine war; the best war, qm way, they.had ever been in. women in the affairs of the party has if one of the Artnistice Day ‘ Baer, the first American ace: tional Committee, now Major Paul Baer of the Pi ‘The plan adopted was recommenfed | Air Force, and it Is bis clal 1 by the Republican National Women’s | came all the way bo Mega « Executive Committee, of which Mra. ieee aS eatrecern ye Medill McCormick of Illinois was! [iter date to ubtain recrults fOr? Chairman. Polish Air Foree, but when he In putting this plan into effect the | of the Armistice Day celebra\ created a woman's division | Seeded up his plans so that he of the Republican National Commit-| “4h ‘\nother group, reaplendent 1m a tee and elected Mrs, John G. South | field blue uniform of tl rene of Frankfort, Ky., Chairman, ing corps, is “Ted” Parsons, enititen, eh : the original members of tb This Executive Committes of Ten} the original members of committee was named: Miss Mary Garrett Hay,| (he famous Guynemer’s 9qi New York, Cf™irman; Mrs. Thomas| Former Major Gen. Wiliam L. Kew H, Carter, Montana Hill McCarter, Kansas; Mrs, Jo: Phine Corliss Preston, Washington Mrs, Florence Collins Porter, Califor-| William Mitchell and Colonel Mrs, Raymond Robins, Llinois;|Hartney are flying from Wi Kentucky; | ‘0-day to attend the dinner, John Glover South, howe who made aviation Ming Maude Wetmore, Rhode Island; |{yry and are already here are: Mrs. Margaret| who was chief of the alr se France, is on hand to meet many of the youngsters whom, commanded overseas. Brig. | station and the old whistling steamer! Armistice Day wedding was per- nd forty service men | W. C. A. girls who sistered the boys p lined up to march | of the A. EB. F. Hall, and | CO™PS. rest of the night in three halls in the | four was in a Coblenz cafeteria VV the food two villages: | partment and the direction of Specia!) worth, Miss Bina M, West, Michigan, and) iam’ Bartlett Bacon of Boston, Mrs, C. A, Stevenson, Minnesota. Younger, Capt. Field Kindiey ‘There will bo a representative of| “DouK’ Campbell, the firgt a the Woman's Divisidn in every State.| "intermingling with the younges In addition there will be a National/ers at the club are men who Woman's Council of One Hundred, he srcanars (8 toe ae — . who laid the foum lor the personnel of which will be an-| Who laid the femre te nounced soon. The active head of| jard, the first Curtiss flyer; thé Woman's Division is a daughter| Haustetter, whose inventions of the late Senator William O. Brad-| aerial instruments have made icy ik Maniuale the recent remarkable alti pile flights; Lawrence Sperry, inven' the stabilizer; Chance Voght ARMISTICE DAY WEDDING = Sirota {s°Mtarmon, who few awe IN WAR WORKERS’ ROMANCE) Sein 'cuy tipacric, whome ald been adopted by the Republican Na-| fests at the Flying Club was | « ' records {a 1911 and 1912 were then sidered unbeatable, : ‘The dinner, which will wind F s Are Reunited for the First| reunion, is under the auaplees of Gues ri i : American Flying Club, Maurie Time Since the March to Sry i seeataad ee phy Coblenz. gressman from Iowa to b " may ,| Major in the Air Service, is in PHILADELPHIA, Nov, 11, — The | Mador in She Ate eer the affal he has prepared ey. features thal jor the Alerts of the village com-| formed here to-day. will bring back vividly the goods Miss Dorothy Nell of Birmingham, | days when It) was “out with _<imot) dawn” and "back—if you're lucky... Ala,, the bride, was one of 2,700 Y ———>_—— . stat ope to 8 Milliners’ In an effort to settle the strike get” Capt. Joseph M. Schrufer, the bride- | the downtown milliners, the As : groom, served in the M. T. C, of the| tion of Ladies’ Hat Manufactw Third Army. was to meet at the Martinique ‘ ree ho of. | this afternoon. ‘The manufa Rev. Michael A. Bennett, who of-| this, od to the demand tanta ficiated way chaplain with the troops} i, put are holdi i a ‘minimum wa) in the Rhineland | eek ‘Apout 8.000 work John P. Mc ohan, best man,/downtown section are aff served with the American Ambulance | strike has been in progre: The last previous meeting of the egy t does not o FOOD AT COST TO POLICE. | tain a// the sixteen substances Sales Will Begin To-Ithy and Later| Your body you are nabs | perfectly fe + vats a i 8 de Unt 5 x RING? RAUAIEY Wheatsworth Real Rk Sales of food and other abmmodities ey at cost price to the Police Depart- | Wheat Flour contains every one of the sixteen substanc A ment will start this morning In the stations of the Fifteenth District of} Nature needs to build you Brooklyn, The sale will be under the| Perfect body. Home Service Division of the de- Remember—all 16—-Wheat . s Deputy Ulman. Deputy Ulman yesterday explained | to the policemen that it was planned You can’t cheat Nature, * Ground fresh daily. Good fs recipes in every bag. At aE, + to sell not only edibles such as every good grocers, “ canned goods, sugar, bacon and the! ¥. H. SENNSTT RISOUIT CO., NO¥, like, but articles of clothing, at about @ +5 83 per cent, lower than in the chain stores, Eventually uniforms and shoos will bo the - wil sold, ‘he sald, Police ade

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