Newspaper Page Text
jpvto Pray
|?id Cheer on
1 Armistice Day
a, Awiivers?ary of World
Wir To-day Occasion for
j^ny Ceremonies and Cel
efcrst?on* by Legion Posts
Iggggiop Attacks Pacifists
% Manning Wams Trinity
Congregation Against R?>
foction m Army an? Navy
rs*t*f ?? Annistie? Day, the fourth
jttttxt&rj of tbe end of the World
2 ??is ?ay *??en a11 t,ie wor?d aban
WW? itself to rejoicing. Three y?ars
^Teoolid the fervor of that celebra?
nts, bat &? d*y slreRdy i8 set *P*rt
? tie me?cnf o? manll?'n<i for special
^rsftony. Bell^ous services, marked
,rttB pr?y?t? ?* reverent tribute to
to* desd, reo?*?* ??Tort? in behalf of
tie living rietlffl? ?f the war, renewed
?tt9TSiia?t??a t<> prevent futuro con
fljjfe tk<?? fc"*the5r T,art in tna ?ay'?
s?stmstes, as well as the mevrymak
UP?
Ike !??* ?f '**? war memorials ar<
i Hisr f*^ to-day. Many towm
'Ar??*5?1 the country will observ?
?j, {*? minutes of silent tribute a1
?j* ?Jiwath hour of th? eleventh day
?rtjidtft Harding and Secretaria
fttb and Denby will make a memori
i] p?friaiage to the grave of tho Un
teem Soldier at Arlington.
New York Celebrations
?fit York*? celebration' centerei
??j around the Victory Ball las
?jit tt the Waldorf-Astoria, und?
l?Mipices of the New York Count;
(?acutee of the American Legion.
?rumi?n of veterans of the 1st Di
?bawls held at the same time at th?
?3?! Astor under the auspices of Je!
M Post of the American Legion.
ft? young women members of th?
?trie?! Woman's Association hel?
?iir Armistice celebration last night
??,lathe Grand Central Palace, thi:
joying being selected because of thi
???r?es of war service which clin?
aft
Tips sounded against the gray pH
toind vaulted roof of Trinity Churcl
s taon yesterday while the servie?
?4 o? the church, containing thirty
ejM gold stars and 872 blue stars, wa
jsfired from tho south wall and car
n*i to the altar. Bishop William T
Hinting draped the flag around th
?far and Dr. Caleb R. Stetson, recto
?/Trinity Church received it, saying
"b the narre of God and in behal
?{Trinity parish, I-receive this flap
so*- to be laid upon God's altar as
iyabol of the devotion and ?sacrifice o
tie men ?hose names are represente
'ay thi stars upon it, and as a token o
? ?Mr loyalty and faithful service."
Warns Against Pacifists
Or. Manning, in his address, warne
ti? c?n?egstion not to be misled b
th? eoaasels of extreme pacifists whil
th? irotid ws still in an unstable con
i "lmiw?t pre sent conditions in th
i KurE?nta!i4?{lsewhere in the world,
S he itid, lit u beware how we involv
? ourwJrw ia the absurdity of callin
m -jpts wr/arciTimt'iit to abolish ou
KsiBfiaeutvy and at the same tim
? wywf ?or President to insist upo
? JBftic? j?J protection for the helples
?Arauiu? against the Turk.*'
? .Vu/meetings, parades and dedics
?:?ry ?m'es will be held throughoi
?fceilyfo-day by the American Legic
R*?tsaKi other patriotic organization
? lairiy-iive posts will unite in
?Had? in the Bronx, starting at 1:!
?:. is, at Tremont and Bathgato av?
is? and marching to a clubhouse i
S3 Bathgato Avenue. Brooklyn
eJesrstion will center in Wie para?.
!i presentation of tho Argonne Mer
riil Hall, at 478 Second Street. Tl
M Regiment Association will unve
?tablet at their armory, in Bedfoi
Attaue.
G?!d Star Mothers, whose sons we:
wabern of the Young Men's Hebre
iHwiation, Lexington Avenue ar
tatty-second Street, will be guests ?
?Mr at the Armistice Day cxercis?
if that organization, when the progra
M include reading of the address?
P President Harding and Gener,
anhing at Arlington last year.
The Citizens' Memorial Associatic
i? District 61, Brooklyn, will dedica
'monument in honor of war hero?
?"the neighborhood at Ocean Parkwj
?4 Fort Hamilton Parkway at 3:.'
t m,
flht loth Infantry Post of the Ame
2*i*pon will hold memorial servio
* * ?Woek in the Brick Presbyterii
^?h.wadBcted by tho Rev. Dr. Jo
eJ* p- ??was.
btntral Ptrthing will be among ti
r-iests of honor at a victory dinner ai
?we ai the Hotel Astor under tl
??pwe? of the New York Chapter i
n v17 0rder of the World Wa
m m York Chapter of the Bri
??warVeterans' Association will ho
V A?mistiee Day ball at the Hot
.?JS *
,. f y ''??b will have as speakers
hrrlv Armifti<^ dinner the Rev.
UinL raori ''?"dick, F. A. Wilson
EST? and Lieutenant Colonel
'??"? Parsons.
4!fny C of the 305th Infantry will
ifc* at Healy's at Sixty-sixth
'?it?*? Roadway. The Palmore
? ?0klyrilWU1 hav* a reception
! hit ^ }ho Brooklyn Academy
Wh iL- Co?Per Union there will
g Armistice Day talk on "Let Us
??s by Dr-Harry webb
^s Say* Planes Could
lraP Enemy at Montauk
||jy?; Force~of 500,000
2j Land Without Endan
P*m? American Defenses
W4jRR^L' N'ov. 10.-An enemy
mZ. m men could be landed
KE* P0int' Xew York' without!
'?Szthe American defense?if'
KwT namber of American air-!
tJ ., re m*?ntained, Admiral W. S.
?*ta?'.S' N" (retired), told guests
sSd".?^,on given him t0-day at th?
?^'*n Club.
w?den-cihas shown'" Admirai
^ t? or*Sf not war vesBel "HI ?e
Ism of? * within ? reasonable!
?irpUnL C0a^ within the range
"*es on ?t ?ovid.ed thc n?mber of :
5** of rLCO?St ls greater than the i
Aa e.!:n na'er be very great.
*?** foil.r0Rtauk Poin*. and the de
5?Kty ;h.en rcady. if they had su
>*rWvni?nrpHnC8' .thcy could
5?fe,S? out?01" the C08Bt ?nd
L??5?at?,lat Jn ? ,carria8e drawn
L**o?r,.?" UniverBity. whew
**af?rrsd upon him.
Honte With a New Sable Coat and Jewels
Mary Carien* Chicago Grand Opera star, arriving yesterday from Eu?
rope, aboard the steamship Aquitanta
Mary Garden Wants an Old Mam
With Brains?, butThey^reAUGone \
Diva, Back After Season's Rest Abroad, With New
Graces, Slender as a Girl and With Store of Vital?
ity, to Sing in Chicago Opera and Go on Tour
Years mean nothing to Mary Garden.
Under her cajoling influence Father
Time turns Santa Claus and leaves her
a wealth of new graces and a new/store
of vitality, instead of crow's feet. All
eyes in the lobby of the Hotel Ambas?
sador turned toward her as she entered
yesterday, wrapped in sables and slen?
der as a schoolgirl, after her season
of rest abroad.
Her red hair is still vivid, but It is
down to her shoulders now. She will
let it grow in, she explained, for she
bobbed it to overcomo the ravages of
the curling iron, ami not because of
fashion.
Mary Garden's likes and dislikes are
as pronounced as ever. "I loathe it"
or "I love it," she replies to every
question. She "loves" many things?
comfortably short skirts, chinchilla
wraps lined with ermine, murders and
old men with brains.
Adores a Real Fight
She loathes ears, and she keeps hers
well covered; also walking, for it gives
one big hips, and petty quarreling.
"I adore a real fight," she said, "but
not stupid bickering. That's why I
found managerial work such a bore.
Only silly little fights. Opera einger3
are all right on the stage. You sing
with them. You make love to k them
and smile to them, and that's ail, But
when you manage them!"
It was to recover from the strain of
her brief period as a manager for the
Chicago Opera Company that Miss
Garden went to Europe, and she evaded
anything that would remind her of
work, she said. She spent some time
at Monte Carlo in a villa she has
leased from a friend for nine years,
and two months in tho Alps. Swim?
ming, dancing, riding and tennis were
her recreations and the means foi
preserving the trim figure of which
she is proud. She wore a pleated
frock of tan camel's hair cloth mod
ishly shortened at the sides and not
more than eight inches from the
ground, a small hat of brown felt
trimmed with sable and brown ribbon,
and high fawn-colored gaiters that
emphasized the slimnesa of her ankles.
On her neck and from her ears buge
pearls hung. Her fingers glistened
almost barbarically with emeralds and
diamonds. ?
Plans Carmen Performance
Her plans for the immediate future
include a visit to Chicago, after she
leaves New York to-day, a performance
in "Carmen" with the Chicago Opera, a
concert tour and another opera engage?
ment in Chicago.
Of her perennially rumored intenj
tions to marry, Miss Garden said it
would be fun, though she has not found
a suitable candidate for a husband, lie
must be old, with lots of sense, a man
who could do things, who would allow
her to do the things sho believed in,
she enumerated, and in the same
breath she added dolefully that all
such men were married.
The singer passed lightly'and grace?
fully over Harold' McCormick and his
bride, Ganna Walaka, by recounting
her meeting in Paris with the Harvest?
er millionaire.
"I was in a cab with my sister and
there we saw him, a perfectly charming
and radiant young man, looking more
splendid than he ever had before. We
each popped out of our machines and
kissed right there in tho street. Mrs.
McCormick was not with him at tho
time. I aBked after her and he said
they were both wonderfully happy."
Will she sing in the Chicago Opera
Company? Miss Garden shook her head
as she smiled slightly. "I hardly think
so. Mrs. McCormick is married now
and I think she will prefer to settle
down rather than sing."
Harding Will
Pay Tribute to
Unknown Hero
(Continued from p?o? on?)
sion that it is destined to be one of
the notable anniversaries in our calen?
dar, and, indeed, it well deserves to
be all of that, for it marks the vic?
torious culmination of our nation's
most impressive participation in the
affairs of the world. We shall not go
amiss if we seek to make our ob?
servance of this anniversary, not only
this year but every year hereafter, an
occasion for appraisal of our relation?
ship to and participation in those
wider concerns which involve tho wel?
fare of all mankind.
"I think we have come to realize, as
a nation, that we cannot hope to avoid
obligations and responsibilities, often
arduous and burdensome, as part of the
price we must pay for our fortunate
relationship to the confraternity of the
nations. It will be greatly to the na?
tional benefit, I am sure, if those who
most intimately participate in the
events of the great world, and among
them I, of course, include particularly
the men of the overseas forces, shall |
always keep in mind the fact that their l
noble service to their country and civ- j
ilization has imposed upon us a duty j
to reco?nize that henceforward we j
must maintain a helpful and sustaining i
attitude in all the broader relation- j
ships that involve the nations. Our i
first duty will, indeed, be to our own,
but that duty cannot be adequately dis?
charged in narrowness and selfishness.
President Prays for Guidance
"That we may he guided to a just j
judgment of the time and occasion for
further proof of our inter?*st in the
common causa of humanity, and in
choosing the methods whereby to dis-?
charge the obligation thus created,
will be, I am sure, a fitting prayer for,
this armistice anniversary."
The visit of the President to Arling- ?
ton will be his first official act of the,
day. Attended by his military aides
and accompanied by two secretaries,
each attended by their aides, the j
President will leave the White House j
soon after 9 o'clock and, traversing!
the route over which the funeral pro- I
cession of the unknown soldier passed!
a year ago, will proceed to the na-j
tional cemetery. A cavalry escort will j
meet the party near the cemetery and ?
as it passes Fort Myer, near by, it I
will be accorded the Presidential
salute of twenty-one guns. ?
Reaching the amphitheater in Ar?
lington, only th. President and the two
Secretaries wK pass beyond an In- j
closure about the tomb of the Un- j
known loldier. Without ceremony the )
President will advance beyond the two |
Secretaries, and, stepping up to the j
tomb, lay the wreath upon it in behalf
of the American people. The entire ;
party will the? withdraw, concluding '
the official tribute to the nation's dead.
Many organizations and individuals,
however, are expected to make a visit
to the tomb a part of their observance
of the day.
Returning from Arlington, Mr. Hard?
ing will attend the funeral services in
St. Patrick's Church for J. Antonio
L. Gutierrez, Honduran Minister to
the United States, who died last week.
Either after the visit to Arlington or
after the funeral, the President will be
the target of a demonstration by mem?
bers of the Joint Amnesty Committee,
who have announced that they consid?
ered Armistico Day the proper time to
enter a vigorous protest against the
continued imprisonment of violators of
war laws.
Tho visit of citizens to the home of
fermer President Wilson has been
planned for the afternoon. The visitors
will gather informally about the Wilson
home, and upon the appearance of the
former President a short program will
be carried out. Singing of several
Southern songs will be followed by the
presentation of flowers. Virginia flow?
ers will by presented by Miss Helen
Sue Trinkle, six-year-old daughter of
Governor Trinkle of Virginia, Mr. Wil?
son's native state; New Jersey flowers
by Miss Edwards, daughter of Gov?
ernor Edwards of New Jersey, the
adopted state of Mr. Wilson, and Dis?
trict of Columbia flowers by Miss Olive
Chase, representing the District of
Columbia, Mr. Wilson's present home.
Henry Morgenthau, American Am?
bassador to Turkey under Mr. Wilson, !
then will give a brief address, to which \
the former President is expected to re
ply. !
Resolute to Dock To-day
Liner Carrying 933 Passengers
to Transfer to Panama Registry
The United American liner Resolute,
which will be transferred from Ameri?
can to Panamanian registry to avoid
compliance with the Daugherty liquor
ruling as it applies to American ships,
will arrive here to-day from Hamburg.
The vessel is expected to dock at her
pier, foot of West 'Forty-sixth Street,
at about 10 o'clock this morning, with
?)38 passengers.
Among the passengers will be Kurt
Tauscher, new tenor for Metropolitan
Opera Company; Gregory Mason, war
correspondent and lecturer, and Mrs.
Mason; F. Buchanan-Owen and wife,
of Cleveland; Horace P. Austin, wife
and son, of Philadelphia; August
Diener, German Consul at Nicaragua,
and family; D. Mugdan, German Con?
sul to San Salvador, and Mrs. Mugdan;
Mrs. Pauline Fleischmann and Misa
Jane Fleischmann; Mr. and Mrs. J. J.
Henriqnez, of Panama; Carl Neu and
family, of Seattle; Alfred Benheim and
Miss Benheim; James J. Shannon, of
Pittsburgh; Alfred G. Kramer and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wuest,
of Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. J. Ives
Plumb, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar N.
Doty, Mr. and Mrs. Ben L. Fleisch?
mann, Casper P. Mayer, of Pittsburgh,
and Otto Metzger, who has been in
Germany arranging for a to%r hers of
the German Opera Company of Berlin.
Rumanians Are
Here With Debt
Extension Plea
Will Ask Payment of $38,
000,000 Owed by Govern
ment Be Deferred; Claim
Insufficient Rehabilitation
Sir Eric Geddes Arrives
Many Notable Americans In?
cluded Among 488 Cabin
Passengers on Aquitania
The Cunard liner Aquitania, arriving
here yesterday from Southampton nnd
Cherbourg, brought two Rumanian
Jurists, who are going to Washington
to discuss with Secretary Hughes and
Secretary Mellon the payment of $38,
000,000 owed by their government to
the United States. They are Eftimic
Antoneseu, financier and one of the
Judges of the Superior Court in Ru?
mania, and Constantin Antonlades, Ru?
manian member of the International
Court of Arbitration sitting in Paris.
Shortly after the vesBel docked yes?
terday they departed for Washington.
It is understood that they will ask for
an extension of time for the payment
of tho loan, as Rumania has not yet
rehabilitated herself sufficiently from
?ui economic standpoint to meet the
debt at the present time. It is also
believed that while they aro in this
country they will seek to interest
American capital in Rumanian indus?
tries, which are showing indications
of beginning to thrive.
The delegates were met at the pier
by a delegation of Rumanians of this
city, including Tileaton Wells, consul
in New York.
Sir Eric Geddes, G. C. B., G. B. E.,
'England's Efficiency Man," also left
for Washington last night after his
arrival on the vessel to visit his
brother, Sir Auckland Geddes, British
Ambassador to the United States, and
Lady .Geddes. Sir Eric said he came
here primarily on business of a private
nature and declared that his mission
had no political significance, as he was
out of politics. He declined to make
any further comment. During the war
Sir Eric was First Lord of the Ad?
miralty and later he was placed at the
head of the Geddes committee, which
was appointed to revise the British
budget by cutting all appropriations
to a minimum.
Countess Szechenyi Arrives
Countess Laszlo Szechenyi, formerly
Gladys Vanderbilt, was also among the
assengers. She was accompanied by
er four daughters, the Countesses
Cornelia, Alice, Gladys and Sylvia.
They were met at the pier by members
of her family and went to the Vander?
bilt home here. The countess said that
her husband, the Hungarian Minister
to the United States, would leave the
Szechenyi castle, where they spent the
summer, in a few days and will ar?
rive in this country in about two or
three weeks.
That the milk trust in London is
worse than the one in this city before
reforms were instituted was the state?
ment made by Nathan Straus, philan?
thropist and champion of pure milk,
who returned from attending a confer?
ence on the subject, of which Lord
Astor was the president, in the English
capital. Mr. Straus said that some of
the plans adopted at the conference, he
believed, would result in reformation.
He was accompanied by Mrs. Straus
and Joseph Straus.
The department stores in Paris are
doing a fairly good business at pres?
ent, but the specialty shops are feeling
the effects of the unsettled economic
conditions in France, according to Ir?
ving I. Bloomingdale, of Bloomingdale
Brothers, who returned after a six
months' stay abroad with his wife and
their son, D. I. Bloomingdale. He said
he believed that the newly established
tariff in this country was one of the
contributing causes to the defeat of Re?
publicans here in the recent elections.
However, he predicted a big holiday
trade this season, but added that he
looked for a period of deprescion after
that.
Mrs. Katherine T. Force and her
daughter. Miss Katherine E. Force,
were also among the arrivals on the
Cunarder. The latter took occasion to
deny published reports that she would
soon announce her engagement. Dur?
ing the trip they lost their passports,
but they had no difficulty in establish?
ing their citizenship for the immigra?
tion authorities and were permitted to
land without the usual rod tape. They
were accompanied by a friend, Miss
Grace Heudrick.
Among the 488 cabin passengers on
the Aquitania were Mrs. William E.
Corey, formerly Miss Mabel Gilman,
who returned from her chateau outsido
of Paris, and was met at the pier by
Mr. Corey, steel magnate; Miss Emily
B. Grigsby, ward of the late Charles
T. Yerkes, Chicago railroad man, here
for a short stay; James C. Fargo, who
returned after three years in Paris,
and was met by his father at the pier;
tho Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava,
here for a visit; the Marquis and
Marquise de Pinar del Rio, Paul
Ludikar, basso from Prague, here with
his accompanist, Anton Bedna, for a
concert tour; \A. H. Benjamin, woolen
importer of this city, and Mrs. Ben?
jamin, and W. C. Gaunt, prominent
woolen merchant of England, who is in
this country to look over some of his
properties and will then go to Canada
to inspect the Guelph Mills, which he
owns.
?
.??????? 'I ?>??-?.
AJlies to Join Belgium
In Honoring Unknown
I Secretary Weeks and M. Deveze
Exchange Messages Recall?
ing Fraternity in Arms
BRUSSELS, Nov. 10 fBy The-Asso?
ciated PresB).-?-John W. Weeks, the
American Secretary of War, and M.
Deveze, Belgian Minister of National
Defense, to-day exchanged telegrams
in connection with the burial of Bel?
gian's unknown soldier to-morrow.
The ministers in their dispatches
each recalled the fraternity in arms of
the Belgian and American soldiers.
The bodies of five unidentified Bel?
gians who fell on the Oser battlefield,
reached Bruges this morning. From
these one body will be selected at
Bruges for entombment as representa?
tive of the nation's dead. This body
will arrive in Brussels by special train
to-morrow morning at 9:45 o'clock.
The train will be escorted by airplanes
from Bruges to the capital.
Arriving here the casket will be met
at the station by a guard of honor,
composed of detachments from all the
Allied and associated armies, including
a contingent from the American Rhine
land forces, headed by Major General
Allen, the commander in chief.
In the presence of King Albert and
representatives of the Allied armies
and governments and the entire diplo?
matic corps the body will be placed in
the tomb that has been prepared for it.
Prior to the entombment Major General
Allen will confer upon the unknown
soldier the United States Congressional
Medal of Honor and a representative
of the French army will decorate the
casket with tb? Legion ?f Honor.
Home From Europe
Nathan Straus, financier and
philanthropist, ?ho returned
yesterday on the steamship
Aquilania.
Many Notables
Sailing To-day
On 8 Liners
Those on Homeric Include
Sir Mortimer Davis, Dr.
S. S, Wheeler, Major H. E.
Lyons and C. B. Cochrane
{Lindsay Hall on Cretie
j Mrs. Richard Mansfield Pas
j senger on America; W. S.
Crichton on Carmania
Tho White Star liner Homeric, which
arrived hero late Thursday, sails again
at noon to-day for Cherbourg and
Southampton. The Homeric is one of a
fleet of eight trans-Atlantic liners de?
parting to-day for European ports. The
others are tho United States liner
America, for Bremen; the Holland
America liner Ryrdam, for Rotterdam;
the Cunard liner Carmania, for Liver?
pool; the Gothland, of the Red Star
Lire, for Antwerp; the Anchor liner
Columbia, for Glasgow; the White Star
liner Cretie, for Genoa, and the Na?
tional Greek liner King Alexander, for
Mediterranean ports.
Passengers booked to sail on the
Homeric include Sir Mortimer Davis,
I banker and president of tho Imperial
j Tobacco Company of Canada; Lieuten?
ant Colonel Henry Brock, president of
W. R. Brock & Co., Toronto Baron
Berni de Wulle.rstorff-Ubair, diplo?
mat; Alexander Smith, Chicago bank?
er; Henry W. Allen, manager of
1 the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Com?
pany; Major H. E. Lyons, New York
broker; Randolph Rose, former British
Charge d'Affaires at Santo Domingo;
i Maisie Gay, English actress; Max Para,
j attorney and founder of the School of
Journalism at the University of Notre
Dame; Professor and Mrs. S. Russ, of
London; J. W. Gardner, president of
the Gardner Governor Company, of
i Quincy; L. A. Huston, London corre?
spondent of the International News
: Service; F..J. Rider, of the Anglo-Mexi
; can Petroleum Company; Dr. Royal A.
? Baronides, Ernest Lux, C. B. Cochrane
! and Mrs. Catherine Hunt, of Washing?
ton, who was decorated for distin?
guished service as a nurse with a Ca?
nadian unit during the war.
Others on Homeric
Mrs. H. K. Knapp, Mrs. Franklin
. Frueauff, Misses Margaret and Elaine
, Frueauff, Albrecht Pagenstecher, Ru?
dolph Pagenstecher, Miss Alice Pres?
ton, Sam W. Richardson and Sinclair
Richardson.
Dr. Schuyler S. Wheeler also is
among tho Homeric'? passengers, sail?
ing to represent the American elec?
trical industry at the annual congress
of the International Electro-Technical
Commission, to be held in Geneva. Dr.
Wheeler formerly was president of the
American Institute of Electrical Engi?
neers.
Lindsay Hall and Walter H?user,
archeologists, are sailing on the Cretie
to rejoin the Metropolitan Museum's
expedition, which is engaged in excava?
tions at Luxor.
The America is taking Mrs. Richard.
| Mansfield, widow of the celebrated
i actor; Arthur Sommers Roche, Mrs.
Roche and their two children, who are
< going to Nice for the winter; Captain
1 Joseph Pedlow, who has charge of the
I Red Cross work in Hungary; E. E.
McNary, general passepger agent for
the United States Lines, and Mrs. Mc?
Nary; Mrs. E. V. Wiley, who is going
to visit her son, who is secretary of
the American Embassy in Madrid;
Richard Erental, president of the
Amalgamated Metals Company; Glen R.
Snider, counsel of the United States
Shipping Board in Washington; Oran
McCormick, publisher of "The Boston
Shoe and Leather Trade Magazine";
Mrs. Charles D. Westcott, wife of the
United States Consul in Paris, and
Mr. and Mrs. E. Rand Hollander.
On the Carmania
Among the Carmania's passengers
will be W. S. Crichton, C. J. France,
James Jordan, Mrs. C. E. Primrose
and the Misses G. and E. Weatberly.
The Columbia will have Mrs. Agnes
Lawson and the Misses Dorothy and
Grace Lawson, Hugh Waterson, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph McGregor, Miss Edith
Stark, the Rev. R. Mackenzie and Mrs.
H. L. Birrell.
Among the sea voyagers sailing on
the Ryndam are: Randolph F. Carroll,
American Vice-Consul at Rotterdam;
Mrs. Frances C. Allison, N. Jakobs,
Miss Stella K. Matthews, Mrs. Con?
stance E. Muilemelster and Master
Henry Mullemeister, Miss Caroline
Probst and Mr. and Mrs. I. Armida.
3 Named for Hudson Board
ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 10.?Three ap?
pointments to membership in th#
Board of the Hudson River Regulating
District were announced to-day by
Governor Miller. The men are Henry
M. Sage, of Albany, for the five-year
term; Erskine C. Rogers, of Hudson
Falls, for the four year term, and
Edgar H. Bette, of Troy, for the three
year term.
The general duties of the board con?
cern registration of the flow of the
Hudson River watershed.
Parley to Find
Allies United,
Says Poincare
Predicts Task at Lausanne
Will Be Easy and Favors
Participation by Both
Bulgaria and Russia
Defends Marshal Foch
Refers to Clemeuceau as
'That Great Patriot,' and
Smooths Over Criticism
Special Cable to TJ?e Tribune
Copyright, 192?. New York Tribuno Inc.
PARIS, Nov. 10.?Premier Poincare
affirmed in a speech in the Chamber ni
Deputies this afternoon that hereafter
Fiance's Near-Ea^t policy would be in
close agreement with our "allies." He
suggested that the work at the Lau?
sanne peace conference would be easy
because of the attitude of firm support
for the Entente on the part of Pre?
mier Bonar Law and Lord Curzon, the
British Foreign Minister.
On the eve of Georges Clemenceau's !
departure for the United States tho I
Premier took occasion to refer to him
ns "this great patriot," and Hicewise de?
fended Marshals Foch, Franchez and |
Desperey against the charges that they |
were mixing in politics through criti- I
cism of Clemenceau. Speaking on be?
half of Marshal Foch, the Premier said !
that the interview in which the m?r- '
ehal was quoted as saying that Clemen?
ceau had better stay homo was inexact.
Interrupted iiy a question as to
whether Foch had not proposed that
the negotiators of the Versailles Treaty
be tried before a high court of jus?
tice, the Premier's defense of the
marshal threatened to precipitate an
uproar. Many members jumped on
their seats, saying that it would be
extremely inappropriate to bring the
marshal into the debate on the eve
of the fourth anniversary of the armis?
tice.
After speaking at length of the In?
ternal policy of the government, Poin?
care recounted every phaso of the Near
East situation. He defended the with?
drawal of the French troops from
Chanak, which, he said, was done on
the advice of the highest military au?
thorities, but remarked that "our
troops remain in Gallipoli and will
remain there in support of our allies."
Poincare applauded tho eplrit of
Lord Curzon's negotiations with the
Allies in Paris, which, he'Said, made
possible the French efforts to main?
tain peace in the Near East. It was
a great success to bring the fighting
of the Turks and the Greeks to an
end, but he added significantly that an
early meeting of the Lausanne confer?
ence was necessary.
"Ou policy in the Near East is very
clear," said the Premier, "We have
the greatest interest in Asia Minor
and we will remain in close agreement
with our allies. We were worried to
provent war, and we were fortunate
enough to do it and at the same time
strengthen our alliance. France will
never taken the responsibility of
weakening an alliance which has not
only proved valuable for France and
England but for Europe and hu?
manity."
' Indications to-night are that while
Ismet Pasha with one section of the
Turkish delegation will arrive at Lau?
sanne on Sunday night, they will not
find the Allies ready to begin serious
work on Monday. The Allied delegates
will be ready to open tho confer?
ence as scheduled, but Paris learns
that Lord Curzon is firm against going
to Lausanne until a preliminary con?
ference has co-ordinated the Allied
program.
Premier Poincare, in the debate in
the Chamber this afternoon, said that
not only Russia, but Bulgaria should
be allowed to participate in the con?
ference on the Straits of the Dar?
danelles.
, ?
Steam Shovel Hits Auto?,
injuring 2 ; One May Die
Sussex, N. J., Innkeeper Loses
Control of Car as Scoop
Strike? Him
SUSSEX, N. J., Nov. 10.?-Theodore
Kimball, proprietor of the Gobel Inn
here, suffered a fractured skull, a brok?
en jaw and Internal injuries from
which he is not expected to recover in
an automobile accident on the Sussex
Unionville Road this afternoon. Both
of Mrs. Kimball's arms were broken.
Kimball lost control of his car when
he was knocked unconscious by the
scoop of & steam shovel ,which swung
down just in front of the machine,
caving in the top. The pilotless auto?
mobile ran down a steep embankment,
smashed up against a fruit tree and
overturned, pinning both occupants
under the wreckage. It was ten min?
utes before they could be extricated.
Laborers working the shovel told the
police that they had shouted a warning
to Kimball as he approached. They in?
timated that he was driving to*o fa3t
to hear their cries.
U. S. Jury to Investigate
Veteran's Death From Fall
Kingsbridge Hospital Patients
Hint Thomas Scott Case Was
Not an Accident
The Federal grand jury will investi?
gate the death of Thomas Scott, the
World War veteran who fell to his '
death at the Kingsbridge Hospital re- j
cently, it was announced yesterday by j
Assistant United States District Attor- j
ney Maxwell S. Mattuck.
Whilo climbing the steps to the fifth :
floor of the veterans* hospital Scott I
pitched over the banisters and was
found dying on the main floor. Affi?
davits of other patients in the hospital
sent by Congressman Albert B. Ross
dale to United States District Attorney
William Hayward hint that it was not
suicide or accident.
Bernard Goldstein and Martin H.
Snyder in their affidavits say they saw
Scott on the day of the tragedy and
that he was in good physical and
mental condition. These men declared
that since Scott's death a man, whose
name was given, remarked: "Scotty
deserved what he got because he was
no good."
Scott, who was a patient in the hos?
pital under an arrangement with the
British government as a Canadian war
veteran, had been playing cards a short
time before he was found dying at the
foot of the stairs. ?
Sleeper Freed, Owner Hetd
Hoboken Record?? Turns
Tables on Saloonkeeper
When Heniry Weillngs opened his
saloon at 213 Third Street, Hoboken,
yesterday he found Harold Roberts
sound asleep in a back room. Roberts
was arresten.
"Your Honor," he told Recorder
Carstens in the Hoboken police court,
"1 had two drinks there last night and
fell asleep in the back room, and they
forgot me and locked me in for the
night."
"Discharged," announced the re- ?
corder, "Weillngs, I am going to hold
you on & charge of violating the 'jtate .
prohibition act," declared the juda?, ?
pointing to the ?aie ownar.
Rich Rye Residen7Held\
Guilty of Hoarding Coal
J. M. Morehead, a wealthy res?
ident of Milton Point, Rye, has
been found guilty of violating
state fuel regulations by having
two carloads of coal placed in his j
cellar, enough for a full winter j
supply.
Arthur W. Lawrence, Fuel Ad?
ministrator for the 9th Judicial
District, said yesterday that Mr.
Morehead had been directed to j
remove all his cocl save a thirty
days' supply. The entire quan?
tity in tho bins aggregated sixty
tons, said Mr. Lawrence. The
New Rochelle Water Company
was also found guilty, it was an?
nounced, of violating fuel regu?
lations by allotting to forty-five
of its employees a full winter's
supply of anthracite.
?-1
Dr. Butler to Lecture
At British Universities
President of Columbia to Give
Eight Talks on Some
Founders of America
Nicholas Murray Butler, president
of Columbia University, wiw risit Eng?
land early next summer to deliver a
course of lectures at eight British uni?
versity centers upon some of the
founders of America, it was announced
yesterday. Preliminary arrangements
for the lecture tour have been virtually
completed.
The Anglo-American Society of Lon?
don, of which H. R, H., the Duke of
Connaught, uncle of King George V, is
honorary president, extended the in?
vitation to #r. Butler. The lectures
will constitute' the "Watson Chair"
course for tho year 1923. Lectures
will be given, It is believed, in London,
Manchester, Liverpool, Glasgow. St.
Andrews, Leeds, Oxford and Cam?
bridge. The Anglo-American Society
is affiliated with the Sulgrave Institu?
tion. The Watson chair was the first
chair of American Wstory founded in
the British Isles.
*
Religious Strife Carries
School Bill in Oregon
Supreme Court Likely to De
cide on Constitutionality of
Ku-Klux Klan Measure
Special Diepatch to The Tribune
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 10.?Mixtur?
of religious strife with partisan poli?
tics in Oregon carried tho so-calle<
compulsory 6chool attendance bill *<
acceptance at Tuesday's election. It ha
received a majority of more than 20,00(
votes.
' The success of the initiative bill r<
abolish private and parochial schools
was won only after u hectic campaiarr?
had caused a wide split among Masonic
lodges and destroyed harmony among
many Protestant churches, which ha?'
aligned with Catholics, Jews un.
other??, who stood for their rights und??/'
the Fedeial constitution and tho or
gaaic law of the state.
The bill, sponsored originally by t^o
Scottish Rite Mason??, was taken up by
th<? Ku-Klux Klan ar. its main issue.
Move than 200 Oregon lawyer? ha
joined in a written opinion that th.
bill is unconstitutional. The questio ,
will without doubt be carricj up ti?
the Supreme Court of the Unite!
State..
"Jivcnttf-five cents a bcvC'*
IN THE DESERT
| The human body is nearly
sixty per cent water and
cannot function long with?
out it;
In fact, in the desert under
a hot sun a man will starve
for water
In about one-tenth the time
that he would starve for
solid food. .
? The purest water in the
j world is found in the luscious
fruits served at CHILDS.
Swwet, htier araarM axe ??
????on now.
At Saks Todas
0
Sale of 6,000
IMPORTED
Silk Cravats
at i.55
Regular $3.50
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