1
Eairth-to-jMoon Rocket Soon To Be Tried Out prof. Goddard Within Month Will Fire Experimental Miseile to Estahlish Prin¬ ciple He Has Evolved Retarded by Scant Funds AJÍ Thafl» Needed, He Says, a Projectile That Can Go Seven Mi'es a Second Special ->isp<itctk to Tk« Tribune WORCESTER, Mass., Sept. 19..Pro¬ fesser Robert II- Goddard, of Clark Col- life, designer of a rocket which he be- |!«Tts will reach the moon, said to-day that within a month he would send up |js first experimental missile. A2- t_eBgh it would shoot only a mile or tee, Professor Goddard said, it would iMienstrate the principie upon which bis dream was founded. "As soon as I can accumulate funds necessary to complete my plans 111 Imbc- my great rocket," said Professor Geddard. "This first one is worthless, tiieept to demonstrate what might be .Fer approximately $15,000 more I (»aid construct a rocket that would tbeot to an altitude where data abo*-a the reach of sounding balloons might beebtained. No Quick Profits in Sight "It would cost a fortune to make a racket to hit the moon. The great pity b that I cannot commercialize my idea. Jf I could have promised a 100 per cent retara in forty-five days I'd have been financed long ajo. But unfortunately Üw proposed rocket is worth litt e save to the world of science. It is invalu- aale, of course, for meteorological in- [ aair'y and will undoubtedly be of prac- SEjj value to astronomers. "Science has established this postu- 1st«, that a projectile could escape from the earth forever.that is, it could overcome the force of gravitation.if it ee.ld attain a speed of sev«n miles a tseond. Of course. th«t is faster than esa be observed with the naked eye. It baffles contemplation. "Yet the only possible way of reach- ! fag the moon is a simple one, after all- My sky-high rocket will contain many separate power charges. Starting from the ground at a speed progressing to t.OOO feet a second, the first explosion rill be rapidly succeeded by other?, each successive discharge giving an ad- (¡itionsl speed of 8,000 feet a second. "The great scientific value of the little rocket which 1 intend to shoot j frs_t Worcester lies in the possibility «Í seeding recording apparatus to ex- treme altitudes within the earth's at- masphere. My rocket witl come down «1ère it goes up. "I «houîd like to*propose, if the work it of sufficient inter&st, the raising of $190 000 by popular subscription, to bel ued by the Smithsonian Institute in undertaking a stupendous exploration tf Use atmosphere." -.- Chemical Show This Week Exposition Will Open To-day in Grand Central Palace The world's greatest chemical show will begin this afternoon in the Grand Central Palace, when the»deor* of the sixth National Exposition of Chemical hdastries are opened to the public. Tie exposition will close Saturday. | The show will be based entirely on &t point of view of the problems of neonstruction. The managers have ! planned the exposition for the purpose «f showing the latest developments in t-Mniitry and what the United States car. accomplish within the next decade bj the employment of the mostr ad w/iced methods. s Colonel Haywood to Preside Colonel William H. Haywood, who to-unanded New York's negro regiment » France, will preside this evening at S meeting of salespeople, held in Car- n»jie Hail under the auspices of the New York Harding and Coolidge Sales- ses's League. WANAMAKER BOOK SHELF Net* books for the eoy and girl mi (he wee lot. wkfeet's Fairies" By Mrs. Sinclair Stevenson; Wtghtíu! tale« of fairies and Bridget's .»«tares with theln. »irions whom aro Macéese* Poetry and Art. Old fiddler Coorag» and Lady iJeography. S2. "The Whirling King" By Harriett Mead Olcott ; Weriw a4apted from the FYenrh ; which «»eared before the American P.evolu- two and must have been part of the boy- WSM of Lafayette and his gallant oora- i*St*¡; quaintly Illustrated with sllhou- «**». I! ;o. The Third «Book of Stories for the Story Teller" By Fanny E. Coc: .wie» old and new which partie.larly **P»aI to children. Invaluable for the «»other or ie*«,h'-r or aunt who a mtsry teller. !.. "The Crimson Patch" By Augusta Huicli Seaman; * «»»tery story for girl»; the adventures room, daughter of a Captain, late ¡J*** * Oerman prison camp, who seeks ¦ secure that invaluable paper, the t-rim- **a patch. $1.7-, r Adele Döring on a Ranch" By Grace May North; JJ^od book of the serle«; the Sunnyslde SP «Peaaa a merry summer on an Arl- J_?*-_*a,!h where adventure« of the cor- ¦f« Weatem kind abound. 11.78. f our Girls of Forty Years Ago" By Nina Rhoades; ¦jwnttl« gu!» live with a «tep-grand- _J»«-*r »bile father la In <"htna. In the fj* »t'en a telephone a wonder. 11.50 »he Book of Bravery" By Henry W. Lanier; _»_lítírJ eenea; a collection of stories w bravery of various kind«, from that of m «.»! rider to epltxUm In the Hertdan ¡¦Nat, s_ j». The Mystery of the Sea-Lark" By Ralph Henry Barbour and H. P. Holt; * .**** xarn ab«at two b*y- who buy ¦.«14 «Wop to ose aa a ferry boat with -W » P*r a debt. And they make a __*««. of their venture. In «pit« of "The Scout's Book of Heroes" J-J**M of the work wb>h the «cout» Z*J* '*e war, with a foreword uy Mir P-PW* H*d*f»-P»w»ll, K C. B. ; «routs ¡¦awj yo-ifig fleure In this stirring .we» I. Si M. Vi»U cur Foreign Language Book Section. Teiephone and mail orders re¬ vs* careful attention. B1*hth Oallery, Jf*w liuild.ftg muth. Ksm VorU A Bride of Last Week Mrs. Herbert R. Conner She was married last week in the Cnurch of the Transfiguration. She was Miss Sarah M. Rush, and is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Rush, of 400 West Twentieth Street. Anti-Suffragists Call On Colby to Publish Rescission Speaker Walker Heads Ten¬ nessee Delegation Urg¬ ing That Final Action of Legislature Be Announced WASHINGTON, Sept. 19..A delega¬ tion of Tennessee anti-suffragists, headed by Speaker Seth Walker, and including Representatives Frank Hall, Sharp«? and Bràtton, with Marcellus Frost and Frank P. Stahlman, arrived in Washington to-night. The delega¬ tion will call en Secretarv Colby to¬ morrow morning and ask that Tennes¬ see's final action bo recognized and an-1 nounced by the State Department. Precedent for this request is found) in the action of Secretary of State Seward in conditionally proclaiming Fourteenth Amendment, and that of Secretary of State Hamilton Fish in proclaiming the Fifteenth Amendment. In both cases, although there were enough ratifying states otherwise, the State Department announced with- drawals, while in the present case the Secretary of State has declined either to consider or announc Tennessee's final action, recently certified by Gov¬ ernor Roberts. The Tennessee antis planned this action a week ago, but postponed it when advised ihat Connecticut also had ratified the su (Frage amendment. Feel¬ ing in Tennesse Í3 so intense on this issue, however, that it was decided to carry out the original program, regard¬ less of any other state action. The antis, in their court briefs, as in the Maryland and Louisana rejection res¬ olutions, contend that Congress, under Articles IV, V, IX and X of the Consti- tution, had no power to propose such an amendment, and that if it did Ten-1 nessee, West Virginia and Missouri have not legally ratified in any case. The Tennessee delegation will make, its headquarters while in Washington at the New Willard, and will be met to-morrow by delegations of antis from other states, headed by Miss Mary G. Kiibreth, president of the National As¬ sociation Opposed to Woman Suffrage. A large delegation is expected from Maryland, where the Legislature meets in special session to-mor.-ow. , Suffragists, according to a statement] issued from the headquarters of the National Woman's party here, are doing everything possible to obtain imme¬ diate ratification of the amendment by the Maryland Lecti."lature. Replies received in answer to queries sent out by the legislative department of the Woman's party show many legis-: lators who formerly voted against the amendment are now ready to support it. Miss Anita Pollitzer, legislative sec¬ retary of the Woman's party, is in Maryland interviewing political leaders. She is assisting Mrs. Donald Hooker, state chairman of Maryland, and Mrs. Hooker'a organization, in a final can- vass of political leaders and legisla- tors. | Maryland voted on the amendment February 17 and defeated ratification by a vote of 18 to 9 in the Senate and 64 to 3*3 in the House. If Maryland ratifies there will then be seven etate?«, which defeated the amendment Alabama, Georgia. Missis¬ sippi, South Carolina, Virginia, Dela¬ ware and Louisiana, and two states which have not acted, Vermont and Florida. Navy to Favor Radio Men A new system of service in the United States navy has been inaugurated at the local recruiting station, 34 East Twenty-third Street. Authority was received from the Bureau of Naviga¬ tion yesterday to promise all men en¬ listing as qualified radio operators for four years a period of two years at a naval utation in any naval district the man selects. Preference of «stations in the district «se!ect<«d will be granted wherever practicable. ^ i \jj/gagaa*aaaf*aamaKmi am Ni«awm«w»iw»«w^| SINGERS WANTED The Oratorio Society of New York, Walter Damrosch, Con- ductor, will increase it« New York membership to 500 voices for its second great FESTIVAL OF MUSIC to be given this season at the 71st Regiment Armory. Ap¬ plicants must have fair voices and ability to read music at night. Voice trials will be held Thursday evening, Fept. 23d, at 7:30 at Chamber Music Hall of Carnegie Hall, 57th St. smi 7th Ave. Oui-tttUiwn i^rtMsn» rmtming to New fork M»«*i;y raaA Th* Tribun«. A<1v«sr- ¦n.« thai Kurnlub«"! Hoom to J^t. i'honi» Uwkman Vfj'i Advt. Two Dead, Three Hurt In Motor Accidents Man Learning to Drive Car Loses Control of Steering Gear and Hits Another Auto One man was killed and two women were injured in an automobile collision on Amboy Road at Drossville Avenue, Princess Bay, Staten Island, yesterday. According to the police, George Blanch¬ ard, who was learning to drive a motor car under the instruction of a licensed chauffeur, lost control of his steering gear and crashed into a car occupied by Albert P. Gieles. his wife, Anna Gieles; Mrs. Minnie Davis and Clarence Travis, all of Catskill, N. Y. Gieles died at Memorial Hospital an hour after the collision. The women were injured, but will recover, surgeons at the hospital said. Travis, owner and driver o'f the second car, escaped in- jury- Blanchard, who lives at 2020 Rich- mond Terrace, Port Richmond, is held at the Tottenville station on a charge of homicide, Gieies was sixty-nine years old. He was superintendent of the American Ice Company, at Catskill. -v Mrs. Elizabeth Keenan, of 2268 Wash¬ ington Avenue, the Bronx, died at Ford- ham Hospital of a fracture of the skull she suffered when, she and Mrs. Cath¬ erine Snee, of 2194 Morris Avenue, the Bronx, were run down by an auto¬ mobile at Washington Avenue and 183d Street. Mrs. Snee suffered a compound fracture of the left leg. Andrew Jack¬ son, of 55 West 132d Street, driver of the car, was locked up at the Bathgate Avenue police station. Girl Killed, Nine Hurt, . When Car Turns Turtle PHILLIPSBURG, N. J., Sept. 19.- Ten persons riding in one automobile nine of them members of one fami'.y all residing at Raritan, N. J., were badlv injured to-night when their ma¬ chine turned turtle near here. One ol them, Grace Accordino, seven years old died later. It was said at the hospital that th< others, including the father, Angele Accordino, were in a critical condition -9-_ Passengers Robbed Him. Taxicab Driver Charges A taxicab driver was a complainan in Tombs court yesterday morning. asserted that he had been robbed an< accused three men who had been pas sengers in his car the night before. Jacob Scharfstein, the driver, of 26: South Third Street, Brooklyn, said tha while at Coney Island he was accoste by four men, who engaged him to driv them to Manhattan. At Renwiçk Street near Canal Street, Scharfstein said, h was ordered to stop. The four men go out and one of them pointed a revolve at him and tod him to hold .up hi hands. Scharfstein says he was the robbed of $39, struck in the face sev eral times and commanded to jro on. Police soon after arrested Charl«? A. Wilson, thirty-two vcars old, of 15 West Sixty-fifth Street; Joseph O'Cor nor, twenty-one years old, of 53 Greenwich Street, and Joseph Meahe twenty-four years old, of 327 Wes Houston Street. Scharfstein identifie them. The fourth ma ngot away. The prisoners «leaded not guilt Each was held in ¡52.000 bail by Magi: trate Thomas J. Nolan. Examinatio was set for to-morrow aft«%rnoon. '-«B. ¦ Miss Nevada Mi>kes Debut PARIS, Sept. 19..Miss Mignon N vada of New York a yuung .-vmeric* vnc'»'-. mvrin h«""" ''¿but «p the Onei Comique last night in the part Mimi in "La Vie de Boheme" SI achieved a great success and was a corded an enthusiastic reception. Mifrn^n Wv«»»i who?e rna] nTi» Mignon Gloría Palmer, is the daught of Emma Nevada, the American singi She was born in Paris. She made h début as Rosina in "Il IJnruicre Sivlgli^" '-t the Con°t«nr.i Theater Rome. Later she sang at the Si Carlos in Lisbon, at the Pergola Florence, at Covent Garden in Lond« ;.nd nt th«- R .. The.it - in »nt As early as 1913 she attracted atte tion in both the musical and scci world in Paris, where she appeared a theater lht«n ju.-f. opt-neu near t Champs Elyseea, as well as in ma drawing rocms. ,. * «» lee Cream Betrays Wome: BEDFORd7n. Y .f1 Sept. Î9.--A we« ness for ice crenm pr<<v«i! the unioi of two women who escaped front t State Reformatory for Women to-di Pearl Allen and Bcrnice Law, the rt aways, were employed in the storeroo The matron «here took an afternoon t and during her abrence the prison« disappeared. After a four hours' stei a state policeman found the women nn ice erttrm parier in Kntonah. T'> were returned to Bedford in an au mobile. "One of the girl«? was so glad to back," sold Mr«. Fran» L. Christi acting superintendent, "that she thr G B. Falls Wins First Prize for Victory .Poster Edward Penfield Second and Martin S. De Math Third in Memorial Hall Asso¬ ciation's Fund Contest Winners of a poster contest con¬ ducted by the Victory Hall Associa¬ tion as a preliminary to a drive for funds for a memorial building in Pershing Square were announced yes¬ terday by General George W. Wingate, president of the association, and Colonel Wade E. Hayes, director of the contest. The winners are Charles E. Falls, East Twenty-third Street, first prize of $1,200; Edward Penfield, Pelham Manor, second prize of $800, and Martin S. De Muth, 84 Vennilyea Avenue, third prize of $500. Mr. Falls in 1918 was awarded the Beck prize by the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Mr. Penfield is a well known illustrator, whoBe work ¡n cover designs and poßters has won country-wide recognition. Mr. De Muth is a student at Columbia College and a member of the Art Students' League. Honorable mention was given to Wal¬ lace Morgan, 7 East Eighth Street; Herbert Paus, 116 West Thirty-ninth Street; M. Leone Bracker, 644 River side Drive; George Harding, 10 South Eighteenth Street, Philadelphia, and George Mian, 11 East Fourteenth Street. The jury consisted of E. E. Calkins. Calkins & Holden, advertising man- agers; Heyworth Campbell, art direc- tor, Vogue and Vanity Fair; F. De Sales Casey, art director, Life; J. H. ¡Chapín, art director, Charles Scribner's Sons; Arthur W. Dow, art director, Teachers' College, Columbia Univer- sity; Allen Eaton, field secretary, American Federation of Art; Roy Greenleaf. art director. Ward & Gow; Hal Marchbanks, art printer; Matlack ¡Price, writer on posters; William Edwin Rudge, art printer; Frank Weit- enkampf, curator of prints, New York Public Library, and Henry L. Sparks. G. A. R. Reunion Begins To-day in Indianapolis ¡30,000 Veterans Registered So Far; Governor to Make Address of Welcome INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept 19.The host of veterans of the Civil War be- gan marshalling here to-day for the! fifty-fourth annual encampment of! the Grand Army of the Republic. More than thirty thousand soldiers of, the war of 1861 to 1865 arrived during the day and registered at the State Capitol. The encampment will be officially, opened with a reception to-morrow night at which Governor James P.I Goodrich will welcome the veterans.) Commander-in-Chief Daniel M. Hall! .will respond for the G. ,A, R. Services in many churches to-day were devoted to patriotic celebrations: in which G. A. R. members partici¬ pated. The remainder of the day was devoted to informal reunions. Numerous auxiliary associations will hold meetings to-morrow. -_-*- First Division on Way To New Home in Jersey Mnj. General Summerall Leaves Louisville for Camp Dix; More Men Coming Soon LOUISVILLE, Ky., Sept. 19..Major General Charles P. Summerall, Com- mander of the First Division and Camp Zachary Taylor, left here this after¬ noon for Camp Dix, N. J., the new home of the division. He was accompanied by Mrs. Su:.nmer_fll and his aide, Lieu- j tenant Florian D. Giles. Officers and enlisted men to the num- Der of 4,326 have gone to Camp Dix and this week thirty-two officers and 748 men will leave for the New Jersey camp. By October 8 the transfer of the division will have been completed. -¦- Dry-Wet Fight Enlivens Night Life at Murray's Police Arrest Restaurant Man¬ ager and Three Waiters After Clash With Federal Agents Half a pint of whisky'labeled "Ken- tucky Colonel," alleged to have been purchased late Saturday night by Fed¬ eral agents at Murray's restaurant in West Forty-second Street, led to tur¬ moil and arrests, it became known yes¬ terday. While the restaurant was packed with a late crowd prohibition agents Moe Smith, Isadore Einstein and Herman Wittenberg: attempted to ar¬ rest Atchinson O'Brien, a waiter, after they say they had purchased the liquor! from him. Charles L Flanders nnd William Kerridge, two other waiters,! interfred, the agents say, and a fight resulted, during which a mirror was broken. The place wes thrown into wild excitement. As a result of the struggl the police arrested the manager, William Cox, of 228 West Forty-second Street, and the three waiters. All were charged with violation of the Volstead act. Cox and Flanders, after they had been taken to the West Thirty-seventh Street po- lie« station, were released in $500 bail. The other two were locked up. They will be arraigned to-day in the Fed¬ eral court. -s-- 3 Stabbed Chasing Negro ..- Fugitive Captured After Alleged Breaking of Window David O'Connor, seventeen years old, of 550 Weit Fifty-first Street, is in Roosevelt Hospital with a stab wound in the right side, inflicted, it is said, by George Williams, a negro, thirty-one, of 427 West Fifty-third Street. O'Con- nor said he mw Williams fleeing from a window which he had broken, and when he had attempted to stop him Williams plunged Ea knife into his sfde. j A crowd pursued Williams, and two j men who caught up with him also suf-1 fered stab wounds. They are Thomas Fleming, twenty years old, of 655 West Fifty-first Street, and Fred Dyzuhn, forty-five vears old, of 534 West Fif¬ tieth. Street. I Williams darttd into a doorway at Tenth Avenue and Fifty-second Street and ran to the roof, where he was cap-1 tured by Patrolman Frey, of the West Forty-seventh Street station. He íj charged with felonious assault. Dancing Teachers to Give Reception for T. G. Dodworth Several hundred teachers of dancing were present yesterday morning when the New York Society of Dancing Teachers met at the studio of Louis Cha'if, 163 West Fifty-seventh Street. to arrange for a reception to be he d j in the second week of October for the retiring,president of the organization, T. George Dodworth. Tuesday evening the society will meet at the samo place t. conv¡et| the program. $1*200 Memorial Poster Prize design diawn tor tue vic«.«jiy ^a.« ¿\¿a~\¿.mi.vu iu«.u ui.»«- «^y rliovloQ R Fnllc The Tribune Fresh Air Fund The Fund's Deficit Cut in Two! Appreciations ! The deficit of $2,289.78 reported'by the Tribune Fresh Air Fund on Sep¬ tember 16 has ben cut almost in two and now stands at $1,236.35. Who will help to reduce it to zeroï With the fund's active work finished for the season, reports are beginning to come in from She two hundred or more organizations which recommended the children whom the fund sent to the country. They are intersting as giving the impressions of workers who were in personal contact with the work dur¬ ing the summer. The following is from the rcnort of the summer activities of the Hudson Guild: "A report of the work of the Hud¬ son Guild during the summer months shows that the Tribune Fresh Air Fund has been the chief co<"»p«rating agency in the distribution of its fresh air children this summer. "During the past two months 100 children from the guild received out¬ ings under Tribune management In rely'ng upon the efficient method of the Tribune organization the guild ia only one of the many institutions now wording by that meana. « Eight Gronps Sent Out "Eight groups of children selected by thj Hudson Guild Settlement Hous-e from among those known to the work¬ ers through the medium of their win¬ ter classes have been sent to the coun¬ try for two week3 each, either to the camps maintained by The Tribune or to fami'ies willing to take one chi;d or more into their midst. Every family is carefully investigated under Tribune direction. '. 'Most of our children were sent to families,' said Miss Gertrude Greene, director of fresh air work for the Hud¬ son Cuild. 'Tlva arrangement we par¬ ticularly like, fhey went in groups of eight or ten, usually to the same vil¬ lage, and they received the best of care and a great amount of personal inter¬ est from the entire population. They come home laden with supplies and other gifts.' , "In making use of the Tribune fresh air opportunities the guild wai responsible only for taking the children to and from the physical examinations given them by a nurs before they were sent off, and to and from trains Everything else was arranged for by the Tribun«^ Fund. "The fresh-air children might have been seen in the stations during Julj and August, sometimes boarding trains close on to midnight. But this was because the journey by night, wher several hours are involved, is made more easily by the children than th« journey by day. At that time the da\ coaches are practically empty and th< little travelers can spread themselves about and sleep., Marvel at Reception "Guild vork^s meeting returning Fresh Air children are regaled with the marvels encountered on their outings 'I had milk frcm a cow,' said one iitt.e J i from hing to >n Guild york we lity, we nding a iay for tions. 'or your ces and eciation associa- HA, iwling tíocia- rateful- 3U have r. They nd men- ige, and pprecia- n. Very ER, ; De- ;a!." e Fresh 170,079.11 7.43 5.00 2.00 2.00 5.00 10.00 10.00 7.00 .".00 f71.132.D4 j y check! t to The Tribune, 920, The :eived a ded as a lo signa- Coney Island's Biggest Mardi Gras Week Ends 150,000 on Fnal Day Witness Coronation of Boy and Girl as King and Queen Coney Island's Mardi Gras, consid¬ ered the most successful from a finan¬ cial standpoint in the history of the island, came to an official close at mid¬ night last night. Concessionaires, who had* suffered a loss running into the hundreds of thousands of dollars, due to inclement weather and the transit strike, recupeaated during the seven days of the carnival and exceeded by far any receipts hitherto made. Yesterday's attendance was large, there being more than 150,000 persons present. They witnessed the mock cor¬ onation of a young boy king and his queen consort. This honor fell to Jack Baker, one year and eleven months old, of 128 Dean Street, Brooklyn. His queen was slightly older. She was Miss Lydia D. Reese, seven years old, of 2940 West Sixteenth Street, Coney Island. Admiring crowds watched with inter¬ est as Samuel Gumpertz, president of the Board of Trad«?, and VVüliam F. Mangels, official president of the Mardi Gras celebration, bestowed the crown and scepter. One hundred other children were awarded a miscellaneous assortment of pri.-.es for their quaint costumes, grace and beauty, and at the conclu-ion of the presentation managers of both Luna Park and Steeplechase Park an¬ nounced the closing of their resorts for the wmter. Other p easure resorts at the island will remain open while the weather permits. o Jews Demand Government Free Political Prisoners WORCESTER, Mass., Sept. 19..Dele¬ gates from many states attending, a meeting of the Jewish Cooperative So- ciety of America here to-day adopted resolutions calling on the United States government to free all political pris¬ on::rs and to recognize the Soviet gov¬ ernment of Russia. Committees were appointed to organ¬ ize and conduct addit'onal cooperative stores in all states of the Union for the purchase and sale of necessaries. -a- Expert to Lecture on Dress A course of sixty lectures by Miss Clover Morgan on the evolution of dress designing will begin to-night at the Textile School, 124 West Thirtieth Street. The lectures are under the auspices of the Board of Education, and arc to be given every Monday and Tuesday evenings. The purpose of the course is to create a better understand¬ ing of the tranc among those who earn their living by dressmaking. Applica¬ tion to atiend the course, which :s free, niubt be made to the superintendent of the school. Going On To«day HAY American Museum of .Natural History; ad- m salon fr*r. 51 ir-polltan Museum of Art; admission .5 ci nts. Aquarium; admission free, Zoological Park admission free. Van Cortlandt Park ; admission free. Lunchen of the P.^presenlattve» Club, I i or. 1 McAlpln, 12:30 p. m. Op n.nir of the sixth N'ational Kspositlon of Chunleal Industries, Grand Ontrai Paite-, all «Jay. Convention of Association of Iron and Steel Hlectrlcal Engine, rs, Hotel Pennsylvania, 10:30 a. m. Convención of Italian American Republican !., aifj'-. A-ol!an Hall, 34 West Forty- th rd Street. 9 a. m. Lunh .m of the Fifth Avenue Association, Wa!dV>rf Astoria, 1 p. m. Meeting of th Container Clob. th« Bilt- more. 2 p. m. NICHT Me«tlnj? and dinner of the National Oar- imnt ItMaiiir» Association. Waldorf A»- t( ría. fl:3n p. rn. M>» m etinir of local salespeople. Carnéele Hall. $ p. m. Address by .Tames M. Beck, f.ecturo by John Cowper Powys on "Shaw and Ch^aterton: a Contraat," at the Laurel OarduoY, 75 Bast 116th Str.v-t. f:30 p. m. I Obituary WALLACE H. WHITE LËWISTON, Me. Sept. M..Walla* M. White, & lawyer and father of Rep¬ resentative Wallace H, White, died suddenly to-day at his home here. He was one of the United States Repre¬ sentatives ia the Alabama Claims case in 1882 and 1883 and had served in both branches of the Maine Legisla¬ ture, and as County Attorney of An- droscoggin County. He was seventy- two years old. ROBERT BEA VEN VICTORIA, B. C, Sept 19..Robert Beaven, former Premier of British Co¬ lumbia, died to-day at his home here. Mr. Beaven, who was eighty-four years old, served two terms as Mayor of Victoria. He was born in England. CHARLES L. THOMAS OMAHA, Neb., Sept. 19..Charles L. Thomas, news editor of The Omaha Bee, and formerly a. well known ath¬ letic and football coach in the Middle West, .died at his home here to-day. Death was caused by paralysis. . - Bodies of Two Naval Officers Who Died in Scruall Recovered PENSACOLA, Fla., Sept. 19..The bodies of Chief Petty O facer« Percy Fuller, of Orlando, Fla., and Charles B. Arthur, of McKeesport, Pa., who lost their lives in a sixty-five-mile squall here last Friday, were found to-day by searching parties from the naval air station. A board of inquiry convened to de¬ termine whether the chief flying officer could have ordered the men in ahead of the squall is understood to have held that the storm came with such force and suddenness that the officer could not have anticipated it. . . Á. H. Green Memorial Committee Is Named Celebration To Be Held Octo¬ ber 6 in Honor of Father of Greater N*w York The Mayor has appointed a memorial committee to arrange a suitable cele¬ bration on October 6 of the 100th anni¬ versary of the birth of Andrew H. Green, familiarly known as the "Father of Greater New York." The executive committee of the general committee is made up of Joseph Haag, secretary of the Board of Estimate, chairman; Al¬ bert C. Hensche, vice-chairman; Fran¬ cis C. Bent, secretary; Jacob A. Can- tor, Dr. George F. Jiuni, Willis Holly and John F. Sinnott, secretary to the Mayor. The first meeting of the committee will be held to-day in the Couneil Chamber of the City Hall at 4 p. m. In conn«8cti»n with the appointment the committee the Mayor issued a state¬ ment, in whieh he said he had done sc pursuant to a resolution adopted by the Board of Aldermen. "I have appointed such a committee,' said the Mayor, "including many whe wi'l take a deep personal interest ii «doing honor to the "Father of Greater New York' because of their relations to the work of that truly great municipal statesman. To him the city and State of New York are indebted for the crea¬ tion and' promotion of institutions which are landmarks in our civic prog¬ ress and enduring monuments of An¬ drew H. Groan's practical interest in the welfare of oar people. "It is well that we pause occasionally in the tumultuous onrush of publie and private affairs to give grateful thought to those gone bef-are» to whoae wise initiative and unselfish championship of public projects we are indebted for the stature of our municipal achieve¬ ments. I am glad of the opportunity to assist iu doing hAor to the memory of Andrew H. Greel r ni s «r hAo Woman Believed Victim . Of a Sleeping Potion Found in Hotel Room on Sat¬ urday Night, She Is Still Unconscious in Hospital Elizabeth Anderson, twenty-seven years old, who was found unconscious in her room at the Seville Hotel on Saturday night after the hotel manage¬ ment had forced open the door to h*r room, was still unconscious at Bellevtie Hospital last night. It was said her condition was critical. According to Seville officials and at¬ tending physicians, the woman took an overdose of sleeping powders. They said several tablets remained in a small bottle beside her bed. She had placed a eard on her door requesting she be not disturbed. Miss Anderson came to the Seville last Monday. At 1 o'clock Saturday afternoon a maid tried to enter her room, but was asked by the young woman not to do so as she wished to sleep. Later the guest tacked the card on the outside of the door. Late Sat¬ urday night the housekeeper attempted to gain admittance to the room, and gaining no response, after knocking and ringing the telephone bell, caused the door Ho be forced. The young woman was found unconscious on her bed. Several doctors were summoned. When emergency treatment failed to restore her to consciousness she was taken to Bellevue. Nothing is known of her identity ex¬ cept the name she wrote on the regis¬ ter. She gave her address as Chicago. She was unusually well dressed, and, according to the hotel management, ap¬ peared to be in good financial circum¬ stances. Frank Copeland Page to Marry Miss Harbison, of Kentucky Special Dispatch to The Tribniui LEXINGTON. Ky., Sept. 19..It was announced here to-day that Frank Copeland Page, of Winston-Salem, N. C, son of Walter H. Page, former United States Ambassador to Great Britain, and Miss Anna Howard Har¬ bison, daughter of S. T. Harbison, will be married at Christ Church Cathedral here next Saturday. Arthur Page and Harold Fowler, of New York, will be among the attendants. Mr. Page will arrive here Thursday, accompanied by his mother. Mr. Page and Miss Harbison met while the latter was staying at Winston-Salem a few months ago. He is a newspaper mm and a graduate of Harvard. Miss Har¬ bison's" father is-afllhoted horseman. Birth, Engagement, Marriage. Death mid in ftfemoriam Notice* may be telephoned to .The Tribune any time up to midnight for unsortiert in the next day's paper. Telephone Beekman 3000. BIRTHS A_.T8C_iri._51t.Sir. and Mrs. Bernard Altchuler «nee Eva Polîaek) anro'inca the birth of a daughter Friday, Septem¬ ber 17. at 35 St. Nicholas Terrace. »ANNRECTÏIF.R.On September 1§. 1059, to Sir. and Mrs. Martin Taylor Dann- reother, of iù'J Edgecomb« av., a daugh¬ ter, Susan. * ENGAGEMENTS LEDER.8ARZ1N.Mr. and Mrs. Herman Sarzln, of 122« 39th st.. Brooklyn. N Y announce the engagement of their daughter. Mollie, to Mr. Nathan Leder, of New Tork. MARRIAGES JONES.WT MAN.On Saturday. Septem¬ ber IS. at Worcester. Mass., by the Rev. Benjamin F. Wyland, assisted by the P.ev. Marshall N. Qoold. Louise Wyman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall N. Goold, .to De Witt Clinton Jones Jr. of Elizabeth. N. J. SCHULHOFER . SCHFLHOF Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schulhof, of 58 Chicago st., Elmhurst, I_ I announce the marriage of their daughter, Ida. to Dr. J. .1. 3chulhofer, son of Abraham Schulhofer, of 709 Union av.. Bronx. DEATHS ABKL.Louise. Funeral services Sunlay, « p. m., at her late residence. 2052 Bath- gate av. Funeral Monday, 10 a. m. ALLEN.On September IS, 1920. William E. Allen, aged 76 years. Funeral aerv- lce at the residence of his son. Charles 8. Aller. 179 Sickles av.. New Rochell«, N. T., on Tuesday at 10.30 a. m. Inter¬ ment Bridgeport, Conn. BISHOF.Suddenly, September 17. Mar¬ garet Helen Bishop, beloved daughter of the late F. C. Bishop and Margaret Kennedy. Funeral Monday, 9:30 a. m., from her lato residence, 1040 Park pi., Brooklyn. Requiem mass 10 a. m. at the Church of St. Gregory, St. John's pi. and Brooklyn av. BENDER.Funeral services for William O. Bender, who died at U. S. Hospital, Prescott, Ariz., September 12. 1920, will be hold at St. Stephen'. Church, East 28th st. and Newklrk av., Brooklyn, at 10:30 a. m. to-day. Interment Ever¬ greens Cemetery. BOWERS.On Friday. September 17, at the Morristown Memorial Hospital, Eleanor Agnes, wife of the late WMllam Dlnsmore Bowers and daughter of the late Major Oeoge and Mary Hartney Boyd. Funeral private. Bl'TLER.Charles. THE FUNERAL CHURCH. Broadway and 66«h st. Mon¬ day, lia. m. \usplces Act« rs" Fund. Cl'BBY-On Friday. September 17. Rom (nee Kelly), beloved mot- of the late Charles, formerly of ', '"Insson at. Funeral from her lat» ildence, 89 Christopher st., Tuesday. 3 c j m. thence to St. Joseph's Church. I mermen*. Cal¬ vary Cemetery. DAVIS.On Thursday, Sept-mber 1«, 1929, Phoebe J., widow of James E. Davis' Funeral private. DONOIU'E.On Friday. September 17. John A. Donohue beloved hx:sband of Mary E Donohue (nee Marsh) and son of Wini¬ fred Donohue. F'-n-ral from his late residence. 103* East Fourteenth st Brooklyn, on Monday. September 20 at £m ' wh<>^.a *Zu'm" requiem maas will be ofrered for the repo_e of his soul. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Automobile cor'pge. DRIPPS.At Hnstlngs-on-the.Hudson. Sep- ember 17 1920. Adeline, beloved dkugh- '"«'. J"h" Grlbben. of Crawfordborn*. County Down. Ireland Funeral serv¬ ices from her fathers home. VilUrd av. ZT^ny' - "clrk- ^ferment Mount" pleSÄpy ^ <^>»nd> paper, E\.t?TAt_Xe*ra,,t- x J- Satur¬ day September 18. 1920 Ella Corv widow of William H. Evei-e« fnd moth,-r ?,f, Caroline Evemt Morrison, wife of .', -Morrison, of Jamaica, L. I, and Brooklyn. N. T. and Lynn Cory £_*__& uf _,Vr*rk' N. J. Funeral serv¬ ice w4il be held at her home. 107 Court ber N2ÔW.%rk8 ""clock.^' ^"^ SePtem' VOGARTY.Nelll« ,nee O'Sullivan). on «-ntm_f.r./u7, 195¿' b«»°v«"» wife of Ser¬ if f._frtthew K°ffart>' *«»d aiater of ,vJV.., LennJ?n. Joseph and Dr. John J. O Sullivan Funeral from h-r late real- t:%v *,81 T_,lr,t av .*«¦« tstSss city. on Tuesday, September 21. at »-.0 a in thence to the Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel where solemn req.iem mass will be offered. Interment in Cal- OILL.September 17. George W. «Ill estWVT. BMton_;yBaîPtp"tmH"me- llf E"< h«.b*nd of Mary Gylaen. Service. Son* day evening. S o'clock, at hia late real. va?«*' *M We,t ,30tn ¦*¦ *«5wS_*Ä BALL.Oa Friday. September 17. 1920 w**». T?ere_* JUl!_ «»««"ved wtf. ¿f JoU A ' Bur'e ÎÏÏ í*"«?*«' ,.» **»* late . ohS A^Burf and Ann Lovely Burr. Funeral WoTdhlVen*'? T1*!?"; M"" « woodha-en. I* I., Monday. September 20 9 a. m.; thence to St. Thorna. . RC Church. Int.rm.nt Holy croa* c'nUi.t-; DEATHS HAMERSLEY.William Hamersley, Sep¬ tember 17. .¦red 82. Fur<ral service* Trinity Church. Hartford. Monday. Sep¬ tember 20. 2:30. HEALY.On September 17. Mary E. (ne«' Carroll), widow of John Healy, native of Dublin. Ireland. Funeral from her late re»ldence, ISO East I05th st., Tuesday. September 21, 9 .',0 a. m.; then«-e to Church of St. Cecelia, where a mass ot requiem will be celebrated. Interment Calvary- HOOFER.On Sundav. September 19. 1020. Mathew E«ime«i H.mper. In his 73d y«-ar. at his residerce. 11 South Portland av., B-ooklyn. Notice of funeral later. HOOPS.On Friday,»September 17. 192«. Ann Re-j-lna Hoops (nee Fol«-y), In h»r 25th year Survived by her husban«l. Christorher; two children, i'atricla an«! Christopher; three brother«. Patrick. John and Thomas Foley sister. Mury Foley. Funeral Monday. September 20. 9 a m. from her late residence. 3K, Bleecker »t.; thence to St. »ridiret's Church. Interment Calvary Cemetery KAHN.At Larchmont. N. Y.. on Septem¬ ber 19, 1120, Nan Flsh«>r. beloved wife o. Eueene W. Kahn and mother of Hun« Derr. Funeral services at her home. Larchmont ave Larchmont, Tu«-»day. »'. 11 a. m. Interment private. KE\TIN«0.sudderly, on Friday, Septem- ber 17. Taniila Serrano Keatlnic. younger daughter of Mrs. Mary J. Serrano, of 21» \V«-st 69th r-t. Funeral services a' All Souls' (Unitarian) Church, 4th a\ and 20th st., Monday. September 20. a' 11 a. m. With regret announcement Í9 n.ad« of the death of Canilla Serrano Keating, on September 17. Members are re¬ quested to attend funeral services 11 o'clock. September 20, All Souls' Unitarian Chun h, 20th st. and 4th ¿i. ST. CECILIA CLUB. LEITIÏ.Suddenly, on Thursday, Septem¬ ber 16. 1920. Alexander Lelth, of Wick. Scotland. Funeral service» at Grace Church, White Plain«. N. Y., Monday. September 20, at 10 a. m. MKÍROWITZ.Max. In his 57th year, be¬ loved husband of Hattie (nee Weiss) and father of Dorothy Reiner. Servie«1«« at Meyer's Funeral Parlors, 228 Lenox av.. Monday, September 20, at 10 a. m. MIBTHA-On Friday, September 17. Jos««ph J.. husband of Jenni» C. Weldor. Funeral Monday, September 20, from hi» late residence 459 1st St.. Brooklyn Ke«iui^m at Church of St. Franci- Xavler at 10 a. in. Funeral privat«. Kindly omit flowers. O'NEILL,.On September 16. Edith E. O'Neill (nee Kelly), dearly beloved wife of Thomas O'Neill Jr. Funeral from her late . residence. 631 West 142d st., Monday. September 20. at 9:30. tb««no- to St. Rose of Lima's Church, West l«i5th at., where a high reqstiem nnua win be suns. Interment Calvary. ROWB.At the Conact Hospital. Boston, September 18. suddenly, of heart tellure. Anna Forrest, wife of William V. Rowe, of New York. Services at Mount Au¬ burn Chapel. Cambridge, Mm»*, Tuae- day, September 21, at 3 p. to. SHTJLTZ.Trances R.. in her 72d year. daughter of the late Charlea and Cath¬ erine and sister of the late O-eorge S. and Charles A. Shulte. Services win be held at Universal Funeral Parlors. S97 Lexington av., corner S2d St.. on Tues¬ day, September 21. at 10 a. m. VAN Dl'SKK.At Englewood. N. J. Sat- urday. September iS, 1920. Ella, widow of the late S. M. Van Djs« n. of parie av., Englewood. Funeral service« at her late residence. Park av., Eng.ewoud. Monday. September 20, at 3 p. m. In¬ terment Brookside Cemetery. Engle¬ wood. »VEIL.Samuel, on September 16. in his Í7th year, at his residence. 601 st. 113th st., belo ed father of Mrs. Adgar A. Solom-in and Marshall Weil. Funeral private. WEIR..Hu«*denly, September 17. John W in h.s 27th year. The beloved s«;n of Thomas J. ami Eva Weir (nee n ) an«! beloved brother of Thomas J.. Jr. Mary and Margaret Weir. Funeral from his late residenc««, 460 West 5Tth »'.. on Monday. September 20. at 9:30 * rn , thence to the Paulist Fathers' Church! where a mass will be ofTered for th« repose of his soul Interment Calvary. YARD«.September 17. Margaret L Ya«-«l (nee Barry), beloved wife of Harol«! « Yard. Funeral from her late résidence, 60 Northern a*-T Monday. September 20 10:30 a. m., »hence to Church of the Incarnation, 175th st. and at. Nicholas av.. where a solemn »equiem mass will be celebrated. Automobile cortege. Aarwaw« "Cai«pb*il S*rrka" Calí "Colmas, «20<T -JgAgg F. CAMF-Bw-it TBt nSNOtAL CKU1CH" lac (Noa-ac-ctJUMs) Cwt^ti «Office 2M St. à Ct> A». w>« » "¦¦ aw iiii»»ii «aggssWssWi_ ¦IBM W. By Hsris-i« Train and by Trettjy. irfSfta «f smau atsi tor ami« * . - M Sa« IM ¦*, M. t» J

New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1920-09-20 [p 11]. · 2017-12-18 · ham Hospital of a fracture of the skull she suffered when, she and Mrs. Cath¬ erine Snee, of 2194 Morris Avenue,

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: New York Tribune.(New York, NY) 1920-09-20 [p 11]. · 2017-12-18 · ham Hospital of a fracture of the skull she suffered when, she and Mrs. Cath¬ erine Snee, of 2194 Morris Avenue,

Eairth-to-jMoonRocket Soon ToBe Tried Out

prof. Goddard Within MonthWill Fire ExperimentalMiseile to Estahlish Prin¬ciple He Has Evolved

Retarded by Scant FundsAJÍ Thafl» Needed, He Says,

I» a Projectile That CanGo Seven Mi'es a SecondSpecial ->isp<itctk to Tk« Tribune

WORCESTER, Mass., Sept. 19..Pro¬fesser Robert II- Goddard, of Clark Col-life, designer of a rocket which he be-|!«Tts will reach the moon, said to-daythat within a month he would send up|js first experimental missile. A2-t_eBgh it would shoot only a mile or

tee, Professor Goddard said, it wouldiMienstrate the principie upon whichbis dream was founded."As soon as I can accumulate funds

necessary to complete my plans 111Imbc- my great rocket," said ProfessorGeddard. "This first one is worthless,tiieept to demonstrate what might be

.Fer approximately $15,000 more I(»aid construct a rocket that wouldtbeot to an altitude where data abo*-athe reach of sounding balloons mightbeebtained.

No Quick Profits in Sight"It would cost a fortune to make a

racket to hit the moon. The great pityb that I cannot commercialize my idea.Jf I could have promised a 100 per centretara in forty-five days I'd have beenfinanced long ajo. But unfortunatelyÜw proposed rocket is worth litt e saveto the world of science. It is invalu-aale, of course, for meteorological in- [aair'y and will undoubtedly be of prac-SEjj value to astronomers."Science has established this postu-

1st«, that a projectile could escapefrom the earth forever.that is, it couldovercome the force of gravitation.if itee.ld attain a speed of sev«n miles atseond. Of course. th«t is faster thanesa be observed with the naked eye. Itbaffles contemplation."Yet the only possible way of reach- !

fag the moon is a simple one, after all-My sky-high rocket will contain manyseparate power charges. Starting fromthe ground at a speed progressing tot.OOO feet a second, the first explosionrill be rapidly succeeded by other?,each successive discharge giving an ad-(¡itionsl speed of 8,000 feet a second."The great scientific value of the

little rocket which 1 intend to shoot jfrs_t Worcester lies in the possibility«Í seeding recording apparatus to ex-treme altitudes within the earth's at-masphere. My rocket witl come down«1ère it goes up.

"I «houîd like to*propose, if the workit of sufficient inter&st, the raising of$190 000 by popular subscription, to belued by the Smithsonian Institute inundertaking a stupendous explorationtf Use atmosphere."-.-

Chemical Show This WeekExposition Will Open To-day in

Grand Central PalaceThe world's greatest chemical show

will begin this afternoon in the GrandCentral Palace, when the»deor* of thesixth National Exposition of Chemicalhdastries are opened to the public.Tie exposition will close Saturday. |The show will be based entirely on&t point of view of the problems ofneonstruction. The managers have !planned the exposition for the purpose«f showing the latest developments int-Mniitry and what the United Statescar. accomplish within the next decadebj the employment of the mostr adw/iced methods.

s

Colonel Haywood to PresideColonel William H. Haywood, who

to-unanded New York's negro regiment» France, will preside this evening atS meeting of salespeople, held in Car-n»jie Hail under the auspices of theNew York Harding and Coolidge Sales-ses's League.

WANAMAKERBOOK SHELF

Net* books for the eoy and girlmi (he wee lot.

wkfeet's Fairies"By Mrs. Sinclair Stevenson;Wtghtíu! tale« of fairies and Bridget's.»«tares with theln. »irions whom aroMacéese* Poetry and Art. Old fiddlerCoorag» and Lady iJeography. S2.

"The Whirling King"By Harriett Mead Olcott ;Weriw a4apted from the FYenrh ; which«»eared before the American P.evolu-two and must have been part of the boy-WSM of Lafayette and his gallant oora-i*St*¡; quaintly Illustrated with sllhou-«**». I! ;o.

The Third «Book of Stories forthe Story Teller"

By Fanny E. Coc:.wie» old and new which partie.larly**P»aI to children. Invaluable for the«»other or ie*«,h'-r or aunt who i» amtsry teller. !.."The Crimson Patch"By Augusta Huicli Seaman;* «»»tery story for girl»; the adventuresg« room, daughter of a Captain, late¡J*** * Oerman prison camp, who seeks¦ secure that invaluable paper, the t-rim-**a patch. $1.7-, r

Adele Döring on a Ranch"By Grace May North;

JJ^od book of the serle«; the SunnysldeSP «Peaaa a merry summer on an Arl-J_?*-_*a,!h where adventure« of the cor-¦f« Weatem kind abound. 11.78.f our Girls of Forty Years Ago"By Nina Rhoades;

¦jwnttl« gu!» live with a «tep-grand-_J»«-*r »bile father la In <"htna. In thefj* »t'en a telephone 1« a wonder. 11.50»he Book of Bravery"By Henry W. Lanier;

_»_lítírJ eenea; a collection of storiesw bravery of various kind«, from that ofm «.»! rider to epltxUm In the Hertdan¡¦Nat, s_ j».

The Mystery of the Sea-Lark"By Ralph Henry Barbour andH. P. Holt;* .**** xarn ab«at two b*y- who buy¦.«14 «Wop to ose aa a ferry boat with-W » P*r a debt. And they make a__*««. of their venture. In «pit« of

"The Scout's Book of Heroes"J-J**M of the work wb>h the «cout»Z*J* '*e war, with a foreword uy MirP-PW* H*d*f»-P»w»ll, K C. B. ; «routs¡¦awj yo-ifig fleure In this stirring.we» I. Si M.

Vi»U cur Foreign LanguageBook Section.Teiephone and mail orders re¬

vs* careful attention.B1*hth Oallery, Jf*w liuild.ftg

muth. Ksm VorU

A Bride of Last Week

Mrs. Herbert R. ConnerShe was married last week in the Cnurch of the Transfiguration. She

was Miss Sarah M. Rush, and is a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.John Rush, of 400 West Twentieth Street.

Anti-SuffragistsCall On Colby toPublish Rescission

Speaker Walker Heads Ten¬nessee Delegation Urg¬ing That Final Action ofLegislature Be AnnouncedWASHINGTON, Sept. 19..A delega¬

tion of Tennessee anti-suffragists,headed by Speaker Seth Walker, andincluding Representatives Frank Hall,Sharp«? and Bràtton, with MarcellusFrost and Frank P. Stahlman, arrivedin Washington to-night. The delega¬tion will call en Secretarv Colby to¬morrow morning and ask that Tennes¬see's final action bo recognized and an-1nounced by the State Department.

Precedent for this request is found)in the action of Secretary of StateSeward in conditionally proclaimingFourteenth Amendment, and that ofSecretary of State Hamilton Fish inproclaiming the Fifteenth Amendment.In both cases, although there wereenough ratifying states otherwise, theState Department announced with-drawals, while in the present case theSecretary of State has declined eitherto consider or announc Tennessee'sfinal action, recently certified by Gov¬ernor Roberts.The Tennessee antis planned this

action a week ago, but postponed itwhen advised ihat Connecticut also hadratified the su (Frage amendment. Feel¬ing in Tennesse Í3 so intense on thisissue, however, that it was decided tocarry out the original program, regard¬less of any other state action. Theantis, in their court briefs, as in theMaryland and Louisana rejection res¬olutions, contend that Congress, underArticles IV, V, IX and X of the Consti-tution, had no power to propose suchan amendment, and that if it did Ten-1nessee, West Virginia and Missourihave not legally ratified in any case.The Tennessee delegation will make,its headquarters while in Washington

at the New Willard, and will be metto-morrow by delegations of antis fromother states, headed by Miss Mary G.Kiibreth, president of the National As¬sociation Opposed to Woman Suffrage.A large delegation is expected fromMaryland, where the Legislature meetsin special session to-mor.-ow. ,

Suffragists, according to a statement]issued from the headquarters of theNational Woman's party here, are doingeverything possible to obtain imme¬diate ratification of the amendment bythe Maryland Lecti."lature.

Replies received in answer to queriessent out by the legislative departmentof the Woman's party show many legis-:lators who formerly voted against theamendment are now ready to support it.

Miss Anita Pollitzer, legislative sec¬retary of the Woman's party, is inMaryland interviewing political leaders.She is assisting Mrs. Donald Hooker,state chairman of Maryland, and Mrs.Hooker'a organization, in a final can-vass of political leaders and legisla-tors. |Maryland voted on the amendmentFebruary 17 and defeated ratificationby a vote of 18 to 9 in the Senate and64 to 3*3 in the House.

If Maryland ratifies there will thenbe seven etate?«, which defeated theamendment Alabama, Georgia. Missis¬sippi, South Carolina, Virginia, Dela¬ware and Louisiana, and two stateswhich have not acted, Vermont andFlorida.

Navy to Favor Radio MenA new system of service in the United

States navy has been inaugurated atthe local recruiting station, 34 EastTwenty-third Street. Authority wasreceived from the Bureau of Naviga¬tion yesterday to promise all men en¬

listing as qualified radio operators forfour years a period of two years at a

naval utation in any naval district theman selects. Preference of «stations inthe district «se!ect<«d will be grantedwherever practicable.

^

i

\jj/gagaa*aaaf*aamaKmi am Ni«awm«w»iw»«w^|

SINGERS WANTEDThe Oratorio Society of NewYork, Walter Damrosch, Con-ductor, will increase it« NewYork membership to 500 voicesfor its second great

FESTIVAL OF MUSICto be given this season at the71st Regiment Armory. Ap¬plicants must have fair voicesand ability to read music atnight. Voice trials will beheld Thursday evening, Fept.23d, at 7:30 at Chamber MusicHall of Carnegie Hall, 57thSt. smi 7th Ave.

Oui-tttUiwn i^rtMsn» rmtming to Newfork M»«*i;y raaA Th* Tribun«. A<1v«sr-¦n.« thai Kurnlub«"! Hoom to J^t. i'honi»Uwkman Vfj'i Advt.

Two Dead, Three HurtIn Motor Accidents

Man Learning to Drive CarLoses Control of Steering Gearand Hits Another AutoOne man was killed and two women

were injured in an automobile collisionon Amboy Road at Drossville Avenue,Princess Bay, Staten Island, yesterday.According to the police, George Blanch¬ard, who was learning to drive a motorcar under the instruction of a licensedchauffeur, lost control of his steeringgear and crashed into a car occupiedby Albert P. Gieles. his wife, AnnaGieles; Mrs. Minnie Davis and ClarenceTravis, all of Catskill, N. Y. Gielesdied at Memorial Hospital an hourafter the collision. The women wereinjured, but will recover, surgeons atthe hospital said. Travis, owner anddriver o'f the second car, escaped in-jury-

Blanchard, who lives at 2020 Rich-mond Terrace, Port Richmond, is heldat the Tottenville station on a chargeof homicide,

Gieies was sixty-nine years old. Hewas superintendent of the AmericanIce Company, at Catskill. -vMrs. Elizabeth Keenan, of 2268 Wash¬

ington Avenue, the Bronx, died at Ford-ham Hospital of a fracture of the skullshe suffered when, she and Mrs. Cath¬erine Snee, of 2194 Morris Avenue, theBronx, were run down by an auto¬mobile at Washington Avenue and 183dStreet. Mrs. Snee suffered a compoundfracture of the left leg. Andrew Jack¬son, of 55 West 132d Street, driver ofthe car, was locked up at the BathgateAvenue police station.

Girl Killed, Nine Hurt, .

When Car Turns TurtlePHILLIPSBURG, N. J., Sept. 19.-

Ten persons riding in one automobilenine of them members of one fami'.yall residing at Raritan, N. J., werebadlv injured to-night when their ma¬chine turned turtle near here. One olthem, Grace Accordino, seven years olddied later.

It was said at the hospital that th<others, including the father, AngeleAccordino, were in a critical condition-9-_

Passengers Robbed Him.Taxicab Driver ChargesA taxicab driver was a complainan

in Tombs court yesterday morning. H«asserted that he had been robbed an<accused three men who had been passengers in his car the night before.Jacob Scharfstein, the driver, of 26:

South Third Street, Brooklyn, said thawhile at Coney Island he was accosteby four men, who engaged him to drivthem to Manhattan. At Renwiçk Streetnear Canal Street, Scharfstein said, hwas ordered to stop. The four men goout and one of them pointed a revolveat him and tod him to hold .up hihands. Scharfstein says he was therobbed of $39, struck in the face several times and commanded to jro on.

Police soon after arrested Charl«?A. Wilson, thirty-two vcars old, of 15West Sixty-fifth Street; Joseph O'Cornor, twenty-one years old, of 53Greenwich Street, and Joseph Meahetwenty-four years old, of 327 WesHouston Street. Scharfstein identifiethem. The fourth ma ngot away.The prisoners «leaded not guiltEach was held in ¡52.000 bail by Magi:trate Thomas J. Nolan. Examinatiowas set for to-morrow aft«%rnoon.

'-«B. ¦

Miss Nevada Mi>kes DebutPARIS, Sept. 19..Miss Mignon N

vada of New York a yuung .-vmeric*vnc'»'-. mvrin h«""" ''¿but «p the OneiComique last night in the partMimi in "La Vie de Boheme" SIachieved a great success and was acorded an enthusiastic reception.Mifrn^n Wv«»»i who?e rna] nTi»

Mignon Gloría Palmer, is the daughtof Emma Nevada, the American singiShe was born in Paris. She made hdébut as Rosina in "Il IJnruicreSivlgli^" '-t the Con°t«nr.i TheaterRome. Later she sang at the SiCarlos in Lisbon, at the PergolaFlorence, at Covent Garden in Lond«;.nd nt th«- R .. The.it - in »ntAs early as 1913 she attracted attetion in both the musical and scciworld in Paris, where she appeareda theater lht«n ju.-f. opt-neu near tChamps Elyseea, as well as in madrawing rocms. ,.

* «»

lee Cream Betrays Wome:BEDFORd7n. Y .f1 Sept. Î9.--A we«

ness for ice crenm pr<<v«i! the unioiof two women who escaped front tState Reformatory for Women to-diPearl Allen and Bcrnice Law, the rtaways, were employed in the storerooThe matron «here took an afternoon tand during her abrence the prison«disappeared. After a four hours' steia state policeman found the womennn ice erttrm parier in Kntonah. T'>were returned to Bedford in an aumobile."One of the girl«? was so glad to

back," sold Mr«. Fran» L. Christiacting superintendent, "that she thr

G B. Falls WinsFirst Prize for

Victory .PosterEdward Penfield Second and

Martin S. De Math Thirdin Memorial Hall Asso¬ciation's Fund Contest

Winners of a poster contest con¬ducted by the Victory Hall Associa¬tion as a preliminary to a drive forfunds for a memorial building inPershing Square were announced yes¬terday by General George W. Wingate,president of the association, andColonel Wade E. Hayes, director of thecontest.The winners are Charles E. Falls,

East Twenty-third Street, first prize of$1,200; Edward Penfield, PelhamManor, second prize of $800, and MartinS. De Muth, 84 Vennilyea Avenue,third prize of $500.

Mr. Falls in 1918 was awarded theBeck prize by the PennsylvaniaAcademy of Fine Arts. Mr. Penfieldis a well known illustrator, whoBe work¡n cover designs and poßters has woncountry-wide recognition. Mr. DeMuth is a student at Columbia Collegeand a member of the Art Students'League.Honorable mention was given to Wal¬

lace Morgan, 7 East Eighth Street;Herbert Paus, 116 West Thirty-ninthStreet; M. Leone Bracker, 644 Riverside Drive; George Harding, 10 SouthEighteenth Street, Philadelphia, andGeorge Mian, 11 East FourteenthStreet.The jury consisted of E. E. Calkins.Calkins & Holden, advertising man-

agers; Heyworth Campbell, art direc-tor, Vogue and Vanity Fair; F. DeSales Casey, art director, Life; J. H.¡Chapín, art director, Charles Scribner'sSons; Arthur W. Dow, art director,Teachers' College, Columbia Univer-sity; Allen Eaton, field secretary,American Federation of Art; RoyGreenleaf. art director. Ward & Gow;Hal Marchbanks, art printer; Matlack¡Price, writer on posters; WilliamEdwin Rudge, art printer; Frank Weit-enkampf, curator of prints, New YorkPublic Library, and Henry L. Sparks.

G. A. R. Reunion BeginsTo-day in Indianapolis

¡30,000 Veterans Registered SoFar; Governor to MakeAddress of Welcome

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept 19.Thehost of veterans of the Civil War be-gan marshalling here to-day for the!fifty-fourth annual encampment of!the Grand Army of the Republic.More than thirty thousand soldiers of,the war of 1861 to 1865 arrived duringthe day and registered at the StateCapitol.The encampment will be officially,opened with a reception to-morrow

night at which Governor James P.IGoodrich will welcome the veterans.)Commander-in-Chief Daniel M. Hall!.will respond for the G. ,A, R.Services in many churches to-day

were devoted to patriotic celebrations:in which G. A. R. members partici¬pated. The remainder of the day wasdevoted to informal reunions.Numerous auxiliary associations willhold meetings to-morrow.

-_-*-

First Division on WayTo New Home in Jersey

Mnj. General Summerall LeavesLouisville for Camp Dix;More Men Coming Soon

LOUISVILLE, Ky., Sept. 19..MajorGeneral Charles P. Summerall, Com-mander of the First Division and CampZachary Taylor, left here this after¬noon for Camp Dix, N. J., the new homeof the division. He was accompaniedby Mrs. Su:.nmer_fll and his aide, Lieu- jtenant Florian D. Giles.

Officers and enlisted men to the num-Der of 4,326 have gone to Camp Dixand this week thirty-two officers and748 men will leave for the New Jerseycamp. By October 8 the transfer ofthe division will have been completed.-¦-

Dry-Wet Fight EnlivensNight Life at Murray's

Police Arrest Restaurant Man¬ager and Three Waiters AfterClash With Federal AgentsHalf a pint of whisky'labeled "Ken-

tucky Colonel," alleged to have beenpurchased late Saturday night by Fed¬eral agents at Murray's restaurant inWest Forty-second Street, led to tur¬moil and arrests, it became known yes¬terday. While the restaurant was

packed with a late crowd prohibitionagents Moe Smith, Isadore Einstein andHerman Wittenberg: attempted to ar¬rest Atchinson O'Brien, a waiter, afterthey say they had purchased the liquor!from him. Charles L Flanders nndWilliam Kerridge, two other waiters,!interfred, the agents say, and a fightresulted, during which a mirror wasbroken. The place wes thrown intowild excitement.As a result of the struggl the police

arrested the manager, William Cox, of228 West Forty-second Street, and thethree waiters. All were charged withviolation of the Volstead act. Cox andFlanders, after they had been takento the West Thirty-seventh Street po-lie« station, were released in $500 bail.The other two were locked up. Theywill be arraigned to-day in the Fed¬eral court.-s--

3 Stabbed Chasing Negro..-

Fugitive Captured After AllegedBreaking of Window

David O'Connor, seventeen years old,of 550 Weit Fifty-first Street, is inRoosevelt Hospital with a stab woundin the right side, inflicted, it is said, byGeorge Williams, a negro, thirty-one,of 427 West Fifty-third Street. O'Con-nor said he mw Williams fleeing froma window which he had broken, andwhen he had attempted to stop himWilliams plunged Ea knife into hissfde. jA crowd pursued Williams, and two jmen who caught up with him also suf-1fered stab wounds. They are ThomasFleming, twenty years old, of 655 WestFifty-first Street, and Fred Dyzuhn,forty-five vears old, of 534 West Fif¬tieth. Street. IWilliams darttd into a doorway atTenth Avenue and Fifty-second Streetand ran to the roof, where he was cap-1tured by Patrolman Frey, of the WestForty-seventh Street station. He íjcharged with felonious assault.

Dancing Teachers to GiveReception for T. G. DodworthSeveral hundred teachers of dancing

were present yesterday morning whenthe New York Society of DancingTeachers met at the studio of LouisCha'if, 163 West Fifty-seventh Street.to arrange for a reception to be he d

j in the second week of October for theretiring,president of the organization,T. George Dodworth. Tuesday eveningthe society will meet at the samo placet. conv¡et| the program.

$1*200 Memorial Poster

Prize design diawn tor tue vic«.«jiy ^a.« ¿\¿a~\¿.mi.vu iu«.u ui.»«- «^yrliovloQ R Fnllc

The Tribune Fresh Air FundThe Fund's Deficit Cut in Two! Appreciations !The deficit of $2,289.78 reported'by

the Tribune Fresh Air Fund on Sep¬tember 16 has ben cut almost in twoand now stands at $1,236.35. Who willhelp to reduce it to zeroïWith the fund's active work finished

for the season, reports are beginning tocome in from She two hundred or moreorganizations which recommended thechildren whom the fund sent to thecountry. They are intersting as givingthe impressions of workers who werein personal contact with the work dur¬ing the summer. The following is fromthe rcnort of the summer activities ofthe Hudson Guild:"A report of the work of the Hud¬

son Guild during the summer monthsshows that the Tribune Fresh AirFund has been the chief co<"»p«ratingagency in the distribution of its freshair children this summer."During the past two months 100

children from the guild received out¬ings under Tribune management Inrely'ng upon the efficient method ofthe Tribune organization the guild iaonly one of the many institutions nowwording by that meana. «

Eight Gronps Sent Out"Eight groups of children selected

by thj Hudson Guild Settlement Hous-efrom among those known to the work¬ers through the medium of their win¬ter classes have been sent to the coun¬try for two week3 each, either to thecamps maintained by The Tribune orto fami'ies willing to take one chi;d ormore into their midst. Every familyis carefully investigated under Tribunedirection.

'. 'Most of our children were sent tofamilies,' said Miss Gertrude Greene,director of fresh air work for the Hud¬son Cuild. 'Tlva arrangement we par¬ticularly like, fhey went in groups ofeight or ten, usually to the same vil¬lage, and they received the best of careand a great amount of personal inter¬est from the entire population. Theycome home laden with supplies andother gifts.' ,"In making use of the Tribunefresh air opportunities the guild wairesponsible only for taking the childrento and from the physical examinationsgiven them by a nurs before they weresent off, and to and from trainsEverything else was arranged for bythe Tribun«^ Fund."The fresh-air children might have

been seen in the stations during Juljand August, sometimes boarding trainsclose on to midnight. But this wasbecause the journey by night, wherseveral hours are involved, is mademore easily by the children than th«journey by day. At that time the da\coaches are practically empty and th<little travelers can spread themselvesabout and sleep.,

Marvel at Reception"Guild vork^s meeting returning

Fresh Air children are regaled with themarvels encountered on their outings'I had milk frcm a cow,' said one iitt.e

J

i fromhing to>n Guild

york welity, wending a

iay fortions.'or yources andeciationassocia-

HA,iwlingtíocia-

rateful-3U haver. Theynd men-

ige, andpprecia-n. VeryER,; De-;a!."

e Fresh

170,079.117.435.002.002.00

5.0010.0010.007.00.".00

f71.132.D4 jy check!t to TheTribune,920, The:eived aded as alo signa-

Coney Island's BiggestMardi Gras Week Ends

150,000 on Fnal Day WitnessCoronation of Boy and Girl

as King and QueenConey Island's Mardi Gras, consid¬

ered the most successful from a finan¬cial standpoint in the history of theisland, came to an official close at mid¬night last night. Concessionaires, whohad* suffered a loss running into thehundreds of thousands of dollars, dueto inclement weather and the transit

strike, recupeaated during the seven

days of the carnival and exceeded byfar any receipts hitherto made.

Yesterday's attendance was large,there being more than 150,000 personspresent. They witnessed the mock cor¬onation of a young boy king and hisqueen consort.This honor fell to Jack Baker, one

year and eleven months old, of 128Dean Street, Brooklyn. His queen was

slightly older. She was Miss Lydia D.Reese, seven years old, of 2940 WestSixteenth Street, Coney Island.Admiring crowds watched with inter¬

est as Samuel Gumpertz, president ofthe Board of Trad«?, and VVüliam F.Mangels, official president of the MardiGras celebration, bestowed the crownand scepter.One hundred other children were

awarded a miscellaneous assortment ofpri.-.es for their quaint costumes, graceand beauty, and at the conclu-ion ofthe presentation managers of bothLuna Park and Steeplechase Park an¬

nounced the closing of their resortsfor the wmter.Other p easure resorts at the island

will remain open while the weatherpermits.

o

Jews Demand GovernmentFree Political Prisoners

WORCESTER, Mass., Sept. 19..Dele¬gates from many states attending, a

meeting of the Jewish Cooperative So-

ciety of America here to-day adoptedresolutions calling on the United Statesgovernment to free all political pris¬on::rs and to recognize the Soviet gov¬ernment of Russia.Committees were appointed to organ¬ize and conduct addit'onal cooperativestores in all states of the Union for the

purchase and sale of necessaries.-a-

Expert to Lecture on DressA course of sixty lectures by Miss

Clover Morgan on the evolution ofdress designing will begin to-night atthe Textile School, 124 West ThirtiethStreet. The lectures are under theauspices of the Board of Education, andarc to be given every Monday andTuesday evenings. The purpose of thecourse is to create a better understand¬ing of the tranc among those who earntheir living by dressmaking. Applica¬tion to atiend the course, which :s free,niubt be made to the superintendent ofthe school.

Going On To«dayHAY

American Museum of .Natural History; ad-m salon fr*r.51 ir-polltan Museum of Art; admission .5ci nts.Aquarium; admission free,Zoological Park admission free.Van Cortlandt Park ; admission free.Lunchen of the P.^presenlattve» Club,I i or. 1 McAlpln, 12:30 p. m.Op n.nir of the sixth N'ational Kspositlonof Chunleal Industries, Grand OntraiPaite-, all «Jay.Convention of Association of Iron and SteelHlectrlcal Engine, rs, Hotel Pennsylvania,10:30 a. m.Convención of Italian American Republican!., aifj'-. A-ol!an Hall, 34 West Forty-th rd Street. 9 a. m.Lunh .m of the Fifth Avenue Association,Wa!dV>rf Astoria, 1 p. m.Meeting of th Container Clob. th« Bilt-more. 2 p. m.

NICHTMe«tlnj? and dinner of the National Oar-imnt ItMaiiir» Association. Waldorf A»-t( ría. fl:3n p. rn.M>» m etinir of local salespeople. CarnéeleHall. $ p. m. Address by .Tames M. Beck,f.ecturo by John Cowper Powys on "Shawand Ch^aterton: a Contraat," at theLaurel OarduoY, 75 Bast 116th Str.v-t.f:30 p. m.

I ObituaryWALLACE H. WHITE

LËWISTON, Me. Sept. M..Walla*M. White, & lawyer and father of Rep¬resentative Wallace H, White, diedsuddenly to-day at his home here. Hewas one of the United States Repre¬sentatives ia the Alabama Claims casein 1882 and 1883 and had served inboth branches of the Maine Legisla¬ture, and as County Attorney of An-droscoggin County. He was seventy-two years old.

ROBERT BEAVENVICTORIA, B. C, Sept 19..Robert

Beaven, former Premier of British Co¬lumbia, died to-day at his home here.Mr. Beaven, who was eighty-four yearsold, served two terms as Mayor ofVictoria. He was born in England.

CHARLES L. THOMASOMAHA, Neb., Sept. 19..Charles L.

Thomas, news editor of The OmahaBee, and formerly a. well known ath¬letic and football coach in the MiddleWest, .died at his home here to-day.Death was caused by paralysis.

. -

Bodies of Two Naval OfficersWho Died in Scruall RecoveredPENSACOLA, Fla., Sept. 19..The

bodies of Chief Petty O facer« PercyFuller, of Orlando, Fla., and Charles B.Arthur, of McKeesport, Pa., who losttheir lives in a sixty-five-mile squallhere last Friday, were found to-day bysearching parties from the naval airstation.A board of inquiry convened to de¬

termine whether the chief flying officercould have ordered the men in aheadof the squall is understood to have heldthat the storm came with such forceand suddenness that the officer couldnot have anticipated it.

. .

Á. H. Green MemorialCommittee Is Named

Celebration To Be Held Octo¬ber 6 in Honor of Father of

Greater N*w YorkThe Mayor has appointed a memorial

committee to arrange a suitable cele¬bration on October 6 of the 100th anni¬versary of the birth of Andrew H.Green, familiarly known as the "Fatherof Greater New York." The executivecommittee of the general committee ismade up of Joseph Haag, secretary ofthe Board of Estimate, chairman; Al¬bert C. Hensche, vice-chairman; Fran¬cis C. Bent, secretary; Jacob A. Can-tor, Dr. George F. Jiuni, Willis Hollyand John F. Sinnott, secretary to theMayor.The first meeting of the committee

will be held to-day in the CouneilChamber of the City Hall at 4 p. m.

In conn«8cti»n with the appointment oíthe committee the Mayor issued a state¬ment, in whieh he said he had done scpursuant to a resolution adopted by theBoard of Aldermen.

"I have appointed such a committee,'said the Mayor, "including many whewi'l take a deep personal interest ii

«doing honor to the "Father of GreaterNew York' because of their relations tothe work of that truly great municipalstatesman. To him the city and Stateof New York are indebted for the crea¬tion and' promotion of institutionswhich are landmarks in our civic prog¬ress and enduring monuments of An¬drew H. Groan's practical interest inthe welfare of oar people.

"It is well that we pause occasionallyin the tumultuous onrush of publie andprivate affairs to give grateful thoughtto those gone bef-are» to whoae wiseinitiative and unselfish championshipof public projects we are indebted forthe stature of our municipal achieve¬ments. I am glad of the opportunityto assist iu doing hAor to the memoryof Andrew H. Greel

r nis «rhAo

Woman Believed Victim .

Of a Sleeping PotionFound in Hotel Room on Sat¬

urday Night, She Is StillUnconscious in HospitalElizabeth Anderson, twenty-seven

years old, who was found unconsciousin her room at the Seville Hotel on

Saturday night after the hotel manage¬ment had forced open the door to h*rroom, was still unconscious at BellevtieHospital last night. It was said hercondition was critical.

According to Seville officials and at¬tending physicians, the woman took anoverdose of sleeping powders. Theysaid several tablets remained in a

small bottle beside her bed. She hadplaced a eard on her door requestingshe be not disturbed.Miss Anderson came to the Seville

last Monday. At 1 o'clock Saturdayafternoon a maid tried to enter herroom, but was asked by the youngwoman not to do so as she wished tosleep. Later the guest tacked the cardon the outside of the door. Late Sat¬urday night the housekeeper attemptedto gain admittance to the room, andgaining no response, after knockingand ringing the telephone bell, causedthe door Ho be forced. The youngwoman was found unconscious on herbed. Several doctors were summoned.When emergency treatment failed torestore her to consciousness she wastaken to Bellevue.Nothing is known of her identity ex¬

cept the name she wrote on the regis¬ter. She gave her address as Chicago.She was unusually well dressed, and,according to the hotel management, ap¬peared to be in good financial circum¬stances.

Frank Copeland Page to MarryMiss Harbison, of KentuckySpecial Dispatch to The Tribniui

LEXINGTON. Ky., Sept. 19..It wasannounced here to-day that FrankCopeland Page, of Winston-Salem,N. C, son of Walter H. Page, formerUnited States Ambassador to GreatBritain, and Miss Anna Howard Har¬bison, daughter of S. T. Harbison, willbe married at Christ Church Cathedralhere next Saturday. Arthur Page andHarold Fowler, of New York, will beamong the attendants.Mr. Page will arrive here Thursday,

accompanied by his mother. Mr. Pageand Miss Harbison met while the latterwas staying at Winston-Salem a fewmonths ago. He is a newspaper mmand a graduate of Harvard. Miss Har¬bison's" father is-afllhoted horseman.

Birth, Engagement, Marriage. Death mid in ftfemoriam Notice*may be telephoned to .The Tribune any time up to midnight forunsortiert in the next day's paper. Telephone Beekman 3000.

BIRTHSA_.T8C_iri._51t.Sir. and Mrs. BernardAltchuler «nee Eva Polîaek) anro'incathe birth of a daughter Friday, Septem¬ber 17. at 35 St. Nicholas Terrace.

»ANNRECTÏIF.R.On September 1§. 1059,to Sir. and Mrs. Martin Taylor Dann-reother, of iù'J Edgecomb« av., a daugh¬ter, Susan.

* ENGAGEMENTSLEDER.8ARZ1N.Mr. and Mrs. Herman

Sarzln, of 122« 39th st.. Brooklyn. N Yannounce the engagement of theirdaughter. Mollie, to Mr. Nathan Leder,of New Tork.

MARRIAGESJONES.WTMAN.On Saturday. Septem¬

ber IS. at Worcester. Mass., by the Rev.Benjamin F. Wyland, assisted by theP.ev. Marshall N. Qoold. Louise Wyman,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall N.Goold, .to De Witt Clinton Jones Jr. ofElizabeth. N. J.

SCHULHOFER . SCHFLHOF Mr. andMrs. Henry Schulhof, of 58 Chicago st.,Elmhurst, I_ I announce the marriageof their daughter, Ida. to Dr. J. .1.3chulhofer, son of Abraham Schulhofer,of 709 Union av.. Bronx.

DEATHSABKL.Louise. Funeral services Sunlay,

« p. m., at her late residence. 2052 Bath-gate av. Funeral Monday, 10 a. m.

ALLEN.On September IS, 1920. WilliamE. Allen, aged 76 years. Funeral aerv-lce at the residence of his son. Charles8. Aller. 179 Sickles av.. New Rochell«,N. T., on Tuesday at 10.30 a. m. Inter¬ment Bridgeport, Conn.

BISHOF.Suddenly, September 17. Mar¬garet Helen Bishop, beloved daughterof the late F. C. Bishop and MargaretKennedy. Funeral Monday, 9:30 a. m.,from her lato residence, 1040 Park pi.,Brooklyn. Requiem mass 10 a. m. atthe Church of St. Gregory, St. John's pi.and Brooklyn av.

BENDER.Funeral services for WilliamO. Bender, who died at U. S. Hospital,Prescott, Ariz., September 12. 1920, willbe hold at St. Stephen'. Church, East28th st. and Newklrk av., Brooklyn, at10:30 a. m. to-day. Interment Ever¬greens Cemetery.

BOWERS.On Friday. September 17, atthe Morristown Memorial Hospital,Eleanor Agnes, wife of the late WMllamDlnsmore Bowers and daughter of thelate Major Oeoge and Mary HartneyBoyd. Funeral private.

Bl'TLER.Charles. THE FUNERALCHURCH. Broadway and 66«h st. Mon¬day, lia. m. \usplces Act« rs" Fund.

Cl'BBY-On Friday. September 17. Rom(nee Kelly), beloved mot- of the lateCharles, formerly of ', '"Insson at.Funeral from her lat» ildence, 89Christopher st., Tuesday. 3 c j m. thenceto St. Joseph's Church. I mermen*. Cal¬vary Cemetery.

DAVIS.On Thursday, Sept-mber 1«, 1929,Phoebe J., widow of James E. Davis'Funeral private.

DONOIU'E.On Friday. September 17. JohnA. Donohue beloved hx:sband of Mary EDonohue (nee Marsh) and son of Wini¬fred Donohue. F'-n-ral from his lateresidence. 103* East Fourteenth stBrooklyn, on Monday. September 20 at

£m ' wh<>^.a *Zu'm" requiem maaswill be ofrered for the repo_e of his soul.Interment Calvary Cemetery. Automobilecor'pge.

DRIPPS.At Hnstlngs-on-the.Hudson. Sep-ember 17 1920. Adeline, beloved dkugh-'"«'. J"h" Grlbben. of Crawfordborn*.County Down. Ireland Funeral serv¬ices from her fathers home. VilUrd av.

ZT^ny' - "clrk- ^ferment Mount"pleSÄpy ^ <^>»nd> paper,

E\.t?TAt_Xe*ra,,t- x J- o« Satur¬day September 18. 1920 Ella Corvwidow of William H. Evei-e« fnd moth,-r?,f, Caroline Evemt Morrison, wife of

.', -Morrison, of Jamaica, L. I,and Brooklyn. N. T. and Lynn Cory£_*__& uf _,Vr*rk' N. J. Funeral serv¬ice w4il be held at her home. 107 Courtber N2ÔW.%rk8 ""clock.^' ^"^ SePtem'

VOGARTY.Nelll« ,nee O'Sullivan). on

«-ntm_f.r./u7, 195¿' b«»°v«"» wife of Ser¬iff._frtthew K°ffart>' *«»d aiater of,vJV.., LennJ?n. Joseph and Dr. John J.O Sullivan Funeral from h-r late real-

t:%v *,81 T_,lr,t av .*«¦« tstSss city.on Tuesday, September 21. at »-.0 a inthence to the Church of Our Lady ofMount Carmel where solemn req.iemmass will be offered. Interment in Cal-

OILL.September 17. George W. «Ill

estWVT. BMton_;yBaîPtp"tmH"me- llf E"<

h«.b*nd of Mary Gylaen. Service. Son*day evening. S o'clock, at hia late real.

va?«*' *M We,t ,30tn ¦*¦ *«5wS_*ÄBALL.Oa Friday. September 17. 1920w**». T?ere_* JUl!_ «»««"ved wtf. ¿f JoUA

' Bur'e ÎÏÏ í*"«?*«' ,.» **»* late . ohSA^Burf and Ann Lovely Burr. FuneralWoTdhlVen*'? T1*!?"; "» M"" «woodha-en. I* I., Monday. September20 9 a. m.; thence to St. Thorna. . RCChurch. Int.rm.nt Holy croa* c'nUi.t-;

DEATHSHAMERSLEY.William Hamersley, Sep¬tember 17. .¦red 82. Fur<ral service*Trinity Church. Hartford. Monday. Sep¬tember 20. 2:30.

HEALY.On September 17. Mary E. (ne«'Carroll), widow of John Healy, native ofDublin. Ireland. Funeral from her latere»ldence, ISO East I05th st., Tuesday.September 21, 9 .',0 a. m.; then«-e toChurch of St. Cecelia, where a mass otrequiem will be celebrated. IntermentCalvary-

HOOFER.On Sundav. September 19. 1020.Mathew E«ime«i H.mper. In his 73d y«-ar.at his residerce. 11 South Portland av.,B-ooklyn. Notice of funeral later.

HOOPS.On Friday,»September 17. 192«.Ann Re-j-lna Hoops (nee Fol«-y), In h»r25th year Survived by her husban«l.Christorher; two children, i'atricla an«!Christopher; three brother«. Patrick.John and Thomas Foley sister. MuryFoley. Funeral Monday. September 20. 9a m. from her late residence. 3K,Bleecker »t.; thence to St. »ridiret'sChurch. Interment Calvary Cemetery

KAHN.At Larchmont. N. Y.. on Septem¬ber 19, 1120, Nan Flsh«>r. beloved wife o.

Eueene W. Kahn and mother of Hun«Derr. Funeral services at her home. 3«Larchmont ave Larchmont, Tu«-»day. »'.11 a. m. Interment private.

KE\TIN«0.sudderly, on Friday, Septem-ber 17. Taniila Serrano Keatlnic. youngerdaughter of Mrs. Mary J. Serrano, of21» \V«-st 69th r-t. Funeral services a'All Souls' (Unitarian) Church, 4th a\

and 20th st., Monday. September 20. a'11 a. m.With regret announcement Í9 n.ad«

of the death of Canilla Serrano Keating,on September 17. Members are re¬quested to attend funeral services a«11 o'clock. September 20, All Souls'Unitarian Chun h, 20th st. and 4th ¿i.

ST. CECILIA CLUB.LEITIÏ.Suddenly, on Thursday, Septem¬

ber 16. 1920. Alexander Lelth, of Wick.Scotland. Funeral service» at GraceChurch, White Plain«. N. Y., Monday.September 20, at 10 a. m.

MKÍROWITZ.Max. In his 57th year, be¬loved husband of Hattie (nee Weiss)and father of Dorothy Reiner. Servie«1««at Meyer's Funeral Parlors, 228 Lenoxav.. Monday, September 20, at 10 a. m.

MIBTHA-On Friday, September 17.Jos««ph J.. husband of Jenni» C. Weldor.Funeral Monday, September 20, from hi»late residence 459 1st St.. BrooklynKe«iui^m at Church of St. Franci-Xavler at 10 a. in. Funeral privat«.Kindly omit flowers.

O'NEILL,.On September 16. Edith E.O'Neill (nee Kelly), dearly beloved wifeof Thomas O'Neill Jr. Funeral fromher late . residence. 631 West 142d st.,Monday. September 20. at 9:30. tb««no-to St. Rose of Lima's Church, Westl«i5th at., where a high reqstiem nnuawin be suns. Interment Calvary.

ROWB.At the Conact Hospital. Boston,September 18. suddenly, of heart tellure.Anna Forrest, wife of William V. Rowe,of New York. Services at Mount Au¬burn Chapel. Cambridge, Mm»*, Tuae-day, September 21, at 3 p. to.

SHTJLTZ.Trances R.. in her 72d year.daughter of the late Charlea and Cath¬erine and sister of the late O-eorge S.and Charles A. Shulte. Services win beheld at Universal Funeral Parlors. S97Lexington av., corner S2d St.. on Tues¬day, September 21. at 10 a. m.

VAN Dl'SKK.At Englewood. N. J. Sat-urday. September iS, 1920. Ella, widowof the late S. M. Van Djs« n. of parieav., Englewood. Funeral service« at herlate residence. Park av., Eng.ewoud.Monday. September 20, at 3 p. m. In¬terment Brookside Cemetery. Engle¬wood.

»VEIL.Samuel, on September 16. in hisÍ7th year, at his residence. 601 W« st.113th st., belo ed father of Mrs. AdgarA. Solom-in and Marshall Weil. Funeralprivate.

WEIR..Hu«*denly, September 17. John Win h.s 27th year. The beloved s«;n ofThomas J. ami Eva Weir (nee B« n )an«! beloved brother of Thomas J.. Jr.Mary and Margaret Weir. Funeral fromhis late residenc««, 460 West 5Tth »'.. onMonday. September 20. at 9:30 * rn ,thence to the Paulist Fathers' Church!where a mass will be ofTered for th«repose of his soul Interment Calvary.

YARD«.September 17. Margaret L Ya«-«l(nee Barry), beloved wife of Harol«! «Yard. Funeral from her late résidence,60 Northern a*-T Monday. September 2010:30 a. m., »hence to Church of theIncarnation, 175th st. and at. Nicholasav.. where a solemn »equiem mass willbe celebrated. Automobile cortege.

Aarwaw«"Cai«pb*il S*rrka"

Calí "Colmas, «20<T-JgAgg F. CAMF-Bw-itTBt nSNOtAL CKU1CH" lac

(Noa-ac-ctJUMs)

Cwt^ti «Office 2M St. à Ct> A».w>« » "¦¦ aw iiii»»ii «aggssWssWi_

¦IBM W. By Hsris-i« Train and by Trettjy.irfSfta «f smau atsi tor ami« * .

- M Sa« IM ¦*, M. t» J