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Howard-Kean Wedding Plans Are Completed Bride * Attendants Chosen for Ceremony on Oct. 18 at Old St. Mark's Church; Reception Will Follow Milled Rock Married Become? Mr*. F. C Strobcl; Winifred Bradcn Weds Henrv Clarence Breeden arrangements have been completed f0r the marriage of Miss Elizabeth Stuyvrsant Howard, daughter of Mrs. Thorns? H. Howard, of this city, and Hvde Park, N. Y., to Robert Winthrop Kcan, which will take place at 12:30 ?>. ro.'or. October 18 in Old St. Mark's Church, Second Avenue and Tenth Street. Miss Howard has chosen for h? sttendants Mrs. E. Powis Jones, Mrs. Harold '?'? Herrick, Miss Adelaide Lsndon and Miss Jeannette Oljphant. John K?ir! will be his brother's liest _- ?i,l fhe ushers will be Philin T.j'nppv.- usoorne, uonert i. mannen, Dsvid Rives Sigourney and William H. g reception will i be held at 23 East Sixty-fourth Street,' the house Mr?. Howard has taken for the '.Mr.'.or. 5!;ss Mil;. ? : N*. Rock, daughter of ' Mrs. Edwin M. Rock, of the iy and Seventy-ninth ' rried to Frank Charles Mrs Herman C. Strobel, . ?? 262 \V ? ' N . y fi rs1 Street, ?asi Crystal Room of the e R '.. Dr. Ra mond L Forman, pastor of St. Paul's Metho Avenue and Eighty-sixth Street, performed the ! ceremony. T i I , who was given by ho:- father, wore a gown of white satin i ml in ? c rystal :" duchess lat e waa held with orange blossoms. Mrs. Ernest F. Stick ? - was the matr lai Is were Miss trilla '? t ? . "?!.-?-? il lith i! f the bride ? ? ' G. -he... I and Ernest F. ' Menkin. A reception followed the ! ceremony. After'their wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Strobel will live ?t 215 West Ninety-tirRt Street. Miss Winifred Braden, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Eugene B. Braden, of | Helena, Mont., was married to Henry ' Clarence Breeden, of the Metropolitan t lub, yesterday afternoon in the Fifth I Avenue Baptist Church. The Rov. ; Eugene Carder, assistant pastor, per- j formed the ceremony in the presence of a few relatives and intimate friends, j The bride had no attendants. Roger ! Straus of this city, was best man. Following the ceremony a small recep-! tion v.as held at the Plaza. After their wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Breeden will live at the St. Regis. Mr. and Mrs. John Bradley Lord have closed their country place at Green-j wich. Conn., and have gone to the Vir- | ginia Hot Springs to remain until early j next, month, when they will return to their home at 270 Park Avenue. Mr. and Mr3. Chester J. Byrns have returned from Babylon, L. I., where they spent the summer, and are at 140 East Seventy-ninth Street for the win? ter. ?- i Miss Lydia Pratt Babbott. daughter j of Frank L. Babbott and granddaughter : of the late Charles Pratt, of Brooklyn, ? will be married to Dr. S. Emlen Stokes, of ?*lorristown, N. J., this afternoon at ? Dosoris, tier father's country place at! Cien Cove, L. I. Mrs. Percival S. Hill and her daugh? ter. Mis? Gertrude Hill, returned yes? terday from Bretton Woods, N. H., to their' home at 20 West Fifty-sixth ? Street. Mr. and Mrs. Cnarles Thaddeus Perty are entertaining informally this afternoon at their home, 59 East Eightieth Street, for Lord and Lady : Cave, of England. -? Miss Sarah Haas Married Becomes Bride of C R. Sadow? sky at r>elmonico,8 Miss Sarah Harriet Haas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Haas, of New York iind Tarrytown, and Carl Robert Sadowsky, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Sadowsky, of New York and Irvington cn-the-Hudson, were married last eve-; ning at Delmonico's. The Rev. Dr. .'?\. M. Kaplan, professor at the Theo? logical Seminary, performed the cere? mony. He was assisted by Cantor Josef Rosenblatt and a choir of twenty. Miss Haas was attended by her sister. Mrs. J. P. Sadowsky, as matron jf honor, and Miss Hetty Helene Sadowsky as maid of honor. The room's best mrn was J ck Phclps 1 Sadowskv, brother of Carl Robert. Colonel Roosevelt, ??S? "The soundest economic thinking in this country to-day is being done by Mr. Kahn." Mr. Kahn occupies an international position in the world of finan :e. He speaks with an authority that is based on broad pract rience. He deals with today, but he brings to his d thi vision of tomorrow. His book is one that evei in the working out of our great na ns should read. %s %J> torn \J ?W? I A8? CTHER ROB I F RUS 2 B ^ %? ?SS ?Saa ?raa ???tea <e?? By Otto H. Kann AT ALL BOOKSELLERS, Net, $4.00 GEORGE H. DORAN COMPAN J ?J'y?"? ?r4f.Byy.r-AA B P E C K w// m ? D F j? C K The Famous "Princess" Sheer Chiffon Stockings $5.85 THESE filmy, gossamer stockings are, we have no hesitancy in stating, the finest wearing sheer silk stockings that are being shown in New York, ["hough they are light as the proverbial breeze, the silk is so strong and the making so perfect that they wear exceedingly well for so sheer a stocking. They come in black, in white, in Boulevard grey, brown, taupe, s'.ate, flesh and silver. Mail orders filled promptly PECK&PECK 586 Fifth Avenue at 48th Street 501 Fifth Avenue az 42nd Street also at No. 4 Michigan Blvd., Chicago At Palm Beach in wir.-er, at Newport In summer ;v:> If?mrlJtx? ?Store lS6t> 1 AND 3 WEST 37TH ST. ONE DOOB FROM FIFTH AVENU? HANDKERCHIEFS Pure Linen Hemstitched?Specially Selected for Every Occasion. Sheer Linen Lawn for Ladies' use, with daintv Lace Edge or with Embroidered Corners, at INTERESTING PRICES. SPECIAL VALUES IN LUNCHEON SETS Attractive Scalloped Edge? in White or Blue other, with Fine Hand EmbroideredJDesigns, ALL OF PURE LINEN ADVANCE SELECTIONS FOR HOLIDAY GIVING We are equipped to give Special Attention to the Fmbroidering of Monogram? on your ?election?, ?tiius insuring Promptness and Accuracy. WOULD ADVISE PLACING ORDERS EARLY ?t<&?)bo a vsx &uali Electrical Show Solves Problems For Housekeepers More Than 151 Separate Ex? hibits Displayed on Three Floors; The Tribune In? stitute Is Represented The thirteenth nnnual New York electrical show opened at 7 o'clock j last night at the Grand Central Palace ! with a display of labor-saving and housekeeping devices on a scale far greater than ever shown there before. The display covers three floors and there are 151 separate exhibits. The \ show is to continue for ten days. The acute problem of the house ? servant has added new interest to this ! year's electrical show, for there are ? scores of electrical devices, aimed to i help the housewife do her own work, I and not only are these devices labor- j saving, but officials of the show say j they will -help materially to keep down ' tue cost of living. Many thousands aro expected to .attend the show from out of town. To demonstrate the possibilities of substituting electricity for human labor in the home, a model household has been set up in the main section of the show, and here may be found a large variety of machines in operation. -Among these exhibits are twenty-one types of washing machine, dishwashers that dry and polish the dishes automat- i ically and tireless cooking devices that | broil, boil or bake. There are things that appeal espe-? cially to the men. too. The electrical hair-cutting machine, for instance, or. the electrical vibratory razor. There ; is an electrical o>zs beater that may be I <' -x ? ? ?' cktail mix. r, if one has the ingredients with which to mix ' the cocktail. The array of electrical novelties, ! many of them brand new inventions, ! and the vast number of them useful and scientific, seems endless. Factory lighting systems are demonstrated, as! also ovens an.i furnace., industrial trucks, instrument for the uso of den-' tists and surgeons, sterilizing appa- ' ratus, electrical grass cutters, elec <c ?iy co itro led ta king machines,! window washers, vacuum cleaners in seventeen patterns, labor-saving ranges, occupying twelve separate exhibits: iceless iceboxes, ironing machines and a rug and carpet cleaner. Tne Tribune ??isii.ute is represented i on the main floor of the building with a booth in which el?ctrica: appliances < for household use are shown ami dis? cussed. These devices aro approved by the Institute, and questions as to their working are answered by the ex perts in attendance. Reports on spe? cial classes of the approved appliances ere distributed between 3 and 5 o'clock, and between 8 and 10 o'clock. Anne j Lewis Pierce, director of The Tribune ! Institute, is in charge of the booth. Only One Room on Liner Bismarck Was Burned Dispatch to Lloyds Contradicts EariifT Report of Destruction of World's Largest Ship LONDON', Oct. 6.?A dispatch to Lloyd's from Hamburg says that one - -, above the online storeroom on the great steamship Bismarck was de stroyed by the fire which broke out! on the vessel Tuesday. A previous dis-j patch to a Rerlin afternoon news? paper indicated that the steamer had be ?- burned at t%-' shipbuilding yards of Blohm & Voss, at Hamburg. PARIS, Oct. ''.--The Inter-Allied Commission in Berlin will be reqi ! ) investi ;ate the circumstances of. the j burning at Hamburg of the German steamship Bismarck which was build? ing ut a shipyard in the port of Ham ti "? an 1 was t i v.w ? b 'n delivered to the Allies under the terms of the ? eace treaty. Berlin dispatches on day announced the burning of the Bismarck, which was to have been a teamer of 5:'',000 gross tons, nearly 2,000 more than the tonnage of the Vaterland, now the Lev i at'nan, which would have made her the world's largest steamer. No expl i it.ion was -.'?ven in the Hamburg advices as to ?.he cause of the ii e. The Bismarck had been virtually completed and would have been sur? rendered to. the Inter-Alli id Naval Commission within a few weel s, ac? cording to the provisions of the Treaty .if Versailles. The French government also will ?;.;k Germany for explanations regard? ing the burning of the Bismarck, the Foreign Office stated to-day. Population of U. S. to Be Announced To-day WASHINGTON, Oct. 6.?The popu ? tion of the United States, exclusive of its outlying possessions, will be an unced to-morrow at 4 p. m., the Cen Bur au said to-day. The bureau announced that Alabama '?as a population of 2 345.295, an in? crease of 209,202, or 9.8 per cent, over . : o. South Carolina has 1,683,062, which is 168,262, or 11.1 per cent, greater than -, mil i : 1910 Wyoming, next to the least populous te, has 194,402, an increase of 48, -137, or 33.2 per cent. Nevada has 77,407, a decrease of 4,408, or 5.5 per cent. It is the least - pu'.ous state. The decrease was the state's third population decline. 1R90 having shewn a decrease of 23.9 per cent and 1900 a loss of 10.6. The state, however, more than made up its first two losses during the decade 1900-1910, when it increased 93.4 per cent. Saturday Fire Prevention Day ALBANY, Oct. 6.?Governor Smith, in ,. proclamation made public to-night, lie signated Saturday, October 9, as tire revention day. 1111111III 111 Uli HI 1 ! 1111 ! ?11II11111111111111111? Registration at THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH October 1st to 11th Courses in History, Economics Anthropology, Psychology Statistics, Government The purpose of the school is to develop a scientific attitude toward cur? rent political, social and economic problems through research, lectures and discussion. Exceptional opportunities for research by qualified students. I.ate afternoon and evening classes. For catalogue address the school 465-9 West 23rd St., New York iiiiiiiimiimiiimiiiiimmmimiiiiimii Wallstein Calls Budget Warning Just Sheer Rot Cry Raised to Prepare for Elim? ination of Tax Limit, He Says Leonard M. Wallstein, counsel to the Citizens Union, characterized as sheer rot yesterday a warning which Comp? troller Charlea L. Craig sent to the budget committee, of the Board of Es? timate and Approtionment declaring that estimates for the 1921 budget still were $25,000,000 more than the con? stitutional tax limit. Mr. Wallatein declared that the only purpose he could see in raising such n cry was to prepare the way for the elimination of the con? stitutional tax limit "In the first place," he said, "the ex? cess is not $25,000,000, as the following table shows: AFRfSHabl? real estate. JP.ROS.017.4fi7.00 Aaaesanble P'rsniial estatn 630,072,860.00 Assessable for franchisa taxes . 417.000,000.00 Total .J10.fi5fi,000,S17.f>0 Of wlijrh 2 per cent Is.. 213,101,SOG.34 To which Is to be added thn estimated reroipts of tho Rentrai fund.... 60,000.000.00 Total . $273,101,80S.34 "The estimates for city and county purposes, totaling 5285,703,058, are therefore not $26,000,000, hut about half that urn. 512,602,151.66, in excess of the yield of the constitutional tax m?ximum. .Secondly, the actual excess :md millions more can be taken out of the inflated estimates without the slightest difficulty or impairment of service.'' Col. Chadbourne Says Europe Wants Harding Elected Friend of Roosevelt, Home on Olympic, Tells Why Wilson Is So Unpopular; Thomas F. Rvan Returns Colonel William M. Chadbourne, who served with the chemical division dur? ing the World, War and who was a member of# the celebrated tennis cobinot of President Roosevelt, re? turned yesterday from Europe on the White Star liner Olympic. He said that Europeans are watching the po? litical contest here with the keenest interest. "Any one who has been abroad," he said, "cannot but be grateful for an overwhelming Republican victory. The i.'.tcr unpopularity of Wilson every? where on the continent is the direfct resi It of his failure to have the claims which he made over there backed up when he returned to his own country. Europeans are still a bit mystified about that. They do not seem to be able to understand why ratification of his treaty failed. "The Europeans are simply marking time until the new Administration I comes in. They feel that if Harding ! is elected, and they are very confident ! that he will be, he will gather abouti im the best talent which America can :T r." j Thomas Fortune Ryan, another of j the first cabin passengers, commented, laconically ?n the European situation: ? "Let Europe alone," he said, "she will j work out her own problems." (' arles H. Sabin, president of the! Guarantee Trust Company, was_ an? other of the country's financiers to] return. In company with Mrs. Sabin, ! : been broad for two months on! emi- :v'c;jil business. j Charles Steele, of the firm of J. P. \ Morgan & Co., returned with Mrs. Steele from a two months' vacation, He said that Mr. Morgan ind he were : shooting in Scotland when the news I of the Wall Street explosion reached em. He would not comment further m ti e explosion or its probable cause. Brigadier General Cornelius Van lerbilt, now on the reservo list of United States- Army oncers, returned from a trip be^un last May. Beyond reporting that the rapid improvement! in France since 1rs visit a year ago was startling, the General indae no ? comment. Among the many artists who re- ? turned on the White Star liner were! Mischa Ein .... violin virtuoso; Ricardo Martin, tenor of the Chicago Opera j ompany; Jules Kerekjarto, twenty-, year-old violin prodii"y; Lupino Lane' and Mile. Delysia, who is making her ! first trip to America. Win re's Hvlan Park ? Asks Mayor; Zip! Goes $4,0001 "Here is a request for $4,000 for im- ! proving Hylan Park in the Bronx," ! said Comptroller Charles L. Craig at ; the meeting of the budget committee of the Board of Estimate yesterday. "Hylan Park?" queried Mayor Hy? lan. "Where is that; I never heard of it?" "Oh, yes," said William J. Flynn, I Commissioner of Public.Works in the Bronx. "It is at 174th Street and i ?rn Boulevard, and there is a I :i in front of it inscribed "Vote I for Hylan-Pai k.' " "I move tiiat th" item be disal- i lowed," said the Mayor frowning, and the committee prom] tiy disallowed it. ! Plane Ablaze in Safety Test The spectacle'of an airplane bathed ; in shooting llames, yet unmarred and j ; undamaged, was witnessed by hundreds of spectators at Curtiss Field, Mine?la, ?ast r,i?:-ht. A giant plane of Jthe Brad ;.y Airplane Company, completely pro? tected from lire injury by chemically prepared felt and non-burnable p?int, asc? tided to a height of 1,000 feet. Sud? denly the pilot, Paul Collins, touched : off a score of rockets attached to the hull and tail of the plane and immedi . ately the ship resembled a fire-swept : shApting meteor. Later when the plane rested on the ; ground, to further prove its dislike for j fire, gasoline was freely sprinklej over the entire ship and a torch attached. For twenty minutes, seemingly, the : plane burned. When the fire went out of its own accord the plane was dis? covered to be unharmed, the paint cov? ering not even betng warm. Paris Fashions Nutnber Two on Trial as Anarchists Call Judge Prejudiced j Ferguson, Chicago Lawyer, j Defending Himself and ? C. E. Ruthenberg, Acenses Justice Bartow S. Weeks j ? Isaac B. Ferguson, a Chicago lawyer, | and Charles E. Ruthenberg, of Cleve- | land, indicted with James Larkin, Irish I agitator, were placed on trial yesterday before Justice Bartow S. Weeks in the j Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court j on charges of criminal anarchy. The j indictment charges that both were con- j cerned with the puolieation of the Com- I munist manifesto in the Revolutionary Age of July 5, 1919. Ferguson is defending himself and ! Ruthenberg. Assistant District Attor? ney Korke is in charge of the prosecu- | tion. During the examination of tales- j men Ferguson submitted an affidavit I in which he charges that Justice Weeks ' '.vas prejudiced against the defendants and that it was impossible for himself ' or his co-defendant to uDtain a fair and ! impartial trial before him. Tbe de- ; fendant-attorncy then offered a motion that the trial be set over to the next j criminal trial term of the Supremo I Court. The motion was denied by Justice Weeks, who said that the affidavit was j only the conclusions of Ferguson. The court held that there was no basis of ' fact in the allegations contained in the ! affidavit. The court also overruled Fer- ! guson's motion to dismiss the indict- : ment on the ground that the facts con- j taincd in it do not constitute a crime. , ? TheHighCoslof Strikes (Continued from preceding page.) ducing hours so that extra war work- ? ers who were not needed in the coal ! industry under normal conditions but i were vitally needed in other industries j should be artificially kept in the coal ' industry was one of the two most; prominent and undoubtedly the one i most vital question at issue. Fuel Administrator GarlielJ has definitely declared?and all other un? biased students of the coal industry! seem to agree with him?that the basis! of all the trouble in the coal industry : is the fact that there are far more ! men in it than the industry needs. The United States Senate reports ' show that for the year before the coa! ; strike the average miner received ' about $1,000 for about 200 days' work.: During this period it was shown, how- , ever, that because of the number of miners and because wages were such that the average miner could maintah his scale of living on much less than full time, it was the custom in the in? dustry?and this custom was main cained even during the war period when the demand for coal was great- ] est?to work less, often much less, than full time in order that there might be plenty of work for all the ? extra men in the industry. It was also1 shown by this same Senate report that ?lie nvner who worked all the time hr cc uld Instead of part time earned from $2 400 to $3,200 a year on the wage scale before the strike. With the war over, however, there was the obvious probability of a very much smaller demand for coal. Obvious.y and purely in order that all the men in the industry could be kept in the industry, and in the unions, and not be forced back into the other industries i where they were needed, the miners' officials demanded that wat;es be raised to a point where the average miner could maintain a full American scale of living by working three or four days a week. And in order to make this doubly sure, they further de? manded that the maximum week's work should be thirty hours, which is equal to exactly three and three-fourths eight-hour days a week. The miners leaders won only a partial victory, but this extravagantly inefficient condition still persists of a far greater number of men than the industry needs, each working part time>. Thus not only does the average coal buyer pay two men's wages instead of one man's wages on every ton of coal he buys, but there is a correspondingly lower production i and higher price due to labor shortage in each other industrj?particularly farming?from which these men came but to which they have not gone back. But this persistent determination of the unions to keep as many men as possible in the industries they domi? nate, or want to dominate, and so in the union to help in this domination, not only obviously adds immensely tc the cost of living, but it is part of a secret, sinister policy, to be discussed later, which will, in the long run, if it i.ucceeds. be far more costly yet to the whole American people. (To-morrow's article: "Strikes and the High Cost of Living."! ! World Financial Congress Agrees Upon Recommendations \ BRUSSELS, Oct. 6 (By The Asso i ciated Press).?-A unanimous agreement on recommendations has been reached . | by all four committees of the Inter national Financial Conference, Presi- \ : dent Ador informed The Associn'^d ; 1 Press to-day. Their proposals will m ! presented at a full session of the con- ' t'erence to-morrow or Friday. The secrecy concerning the commit- J | tee work is continued, but it was said : in the lobbies this evening that a rec- ? ' ornmendation for a sort of interna- I tional credit system without control ? of the League of Nations would be pro? posed. League control was opposed by | a number of delegations as iikely to I amount to interference ir the internal affairs of the various cnintri? - Francis Guerin Lloyd Dies on Way to Office | Served Many Years as President of the Clothing Firm of Brooks Brothers Francis Guerin Lloyd, president of the clothing tirm of Brooks Brothers, Madison Avenue and Forty-fourth Street, died unexpectedly yesterday morning on his way to the office. Mr. Lloyd was born in New Jersey. the son of the late Henry T. and Mar? garet lr. Lloyd. He entered the employ of Brooks Brothers when fourteen years old. In 1879 he was made a part? ner in the business, and in 1896, when John E. Brooks retired, became senior partner. When the partnership was changed into a corporation he was made its first president, and was active in this position up to the time of his death. Mr. Lloyd was a man of many inter? ests outside his business. He was a collector of works of art, and was actively intercsteel in outdoor sports. He was a member of the Veteran Corps of Artillery, and was commis? sioned captain in the 9th Coast Artil- j lery, X. <;. N. Y. Mr. Lloyd was president of the Scot? tish Terrier Club of America, a mem? ber of the Union League Club, the : Metropolitan Club, the Crolier Club; | the Riding Club, the Somerset Hiils ( mntrv Club, the Essex Fox Hounds, the Sons of the Revolution, the St. Nicholas Society and various other or? ganizations. He was a director of the Harriman National Bank and the Union Exchange National Rank, vice-presi? dent and trustee of the United States Savings Bank and a director in other . corporations. -.-? SELIG B. NEUBURGER Selig B. Neuburger. a member of the ' law firm of Jonas & Neuburger, with offices at 115 Broadway, and considered one of the best authorities on real cs- : t?te in the city, died unexpectedly on Tuesday while at work in his office. He formerly lived at 1027 Prospect Place, Brooklyn. , Mr. Neuburger was born in this city. ! He was one of the directors of the ? Jewish Hospital of Brooklyn, the Train- j ing School for Nurses of that institu- ; tion and the Brooklyn Federation of ; Jewish Charities. He was a member of | the Brooklyn Bar Association, the New ] York State Bar Association, the Unity ' Club of Brooklyn, the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce and the Brooklyn Insti- j tut of Arts and Sciences. GEORGE"c. MAIN MANCHESTER, N. H., Oct. 6 ? George C. Main, who was said to be the oldest living Odd Fellow, i? dead at the ' home of his daughter, Mrs. Walter S. Holt, in this city. He w is 101 years; old. Mr. 'Main was a member of White Mountain Ledge, I. O. 0. F., and of Pen- '?. acook Encampment, G. A. R. He was a \ member of the Unitarian Church and ; was the oldest member of the old-time i fire department of Concord, N. IL He is survived by three sons, a i daughter, ten grandchildren and five i great-grandchildren. THOMAS W. MEACHEN SYRACUSE, Oct. 6.? Thomas W. Meachem, manufacturer, brnker and Presidential elector on the Democratic : ticket, died suddenly last night at his j home here. Mr. Meachem had been '? prominent in Democratic councils and ; had been a delegate to the last two national conventions of his party. MIGUEL DE PALACIOS MADRID, Oct. 6.?Miguel de Palac ios, a famous author, is <'??':.] h re. He was born in Manila sixty years ago, j and during his career had published more than 200 works. JOHN H.'llEWITT WfLLIAMSTOWN, Muss.. Oct. 6.? John II. Hewitt for twenty-eight I years professor of Greek at William-, College, is dead at his home here. He i was eighty-five years old and retired | from the faculty' in 1909. Brother Seos MacSwiney New York Man Resents Story i Mayor Is Beinj: Fed LONDON, Oct. 6.?"I hurried over, here hopirg I would arrive in England in time to attend my brother's funeral, and ! m trvel ?*. the fact that he is still ? living, although there is no doubt that the end is near," said Peter MacSwiney, : . f 220 East Thirty-first Street, New : . recently arrive!, who visited his j brother, Lord Mayor MacSwiney, in Brixton Prison this morning. Peter MacSwiney vehemently de- ? nounced the reports that the prisoner was secretly receiving nourishment, de- ! daring these reports wer.- mainly due to "cleverly laid ge vernment plans." designed, through innuendo, to encour- j age the public's suspicions of the hun- ? ger striker's sincerity. ?'Even the government doctors say my brother is dying," said Peter. "He him elf is reconciled to that fate. He j expects death before many days. His ; faith would not permit him to face ; death with a lie on his lips." The Lord Mayor passed rather a bad j night. A physician is quoted as saying i MacSwiney's pulse rose a little. This: i the fifty-fifth day of his hunger i strike. Going On To-day ?j American Museum i f Natural Hls-ory. Ad- \ n free . Metropolitan Museum of Art. Admission' free. V rtl ncK Park Museum. Admission .v. ? ' : -: A Imlssion free. V.r., logical Park. Admission 25 c?nts. ;. mi ' .n of the Rotary Club, Hotel Me- ' i: 30 p. m. Address by Royal S. \ ::.'. on ?!.? "Health Service of thes I Ity Luncheon of the Rotary Club. Brooklyn. ' Hotel Bosaert, 12:30 p. m. Mi ting of the National Opera Club. Wal-; dorf-Astorla, 1 p. m. Meeting of the Legislative League, Wal- ? dorf-Astoria, - p. m Meeting of the Daughters of Nebraska, Hotel Astor, 2 ; m. Master Bakers. Hotel Pennsj '? vanla, a .1 day. B '? cal Show, Grand Central Pa'.ace, \ all da y. Convention of National Automobile f'ham bi r of Commerce, 366 Madison Avenue, 10 a. m, Conv ::?: ri of National Association of Box Manufacturers, H?te! '.:.:-. lore, a'.., ? Lecture by Alfred '?'.' Martin on duatrla! R I ? i 7 '?; and 1rs ! n fluenci on K.(.::-ji Thought,' Brooklyn fnst tute ? f A 'ta " I mees, Lecture Hai!. Academy of Music, 4 p.- m. NIGHT Meeting of the Young Folks Leag-ue, Hotel McAli in, B o'cl' ? Meeting of the ?on L. Wninan.? Post. American Leg n, Plymouth Inst lyn ' ? dock. Lecturf by Charles Wellington Purl rig on "i1, mal i and Its Hinterlands,") Brook!;, a Institute o? Arts ai Lecture Hal!, Academy of Music, 8 :15 o ' ' Meeting *' th? New Vor'.t Electrical So clpt; 23 at Th rty nini h tree! o'clock Add .'I a s ; ! urray on ' The Super) ? :.-.. :m." Meetl: : ol the New i.'orl< Academy of '.. ?. Strei , S '. 5 hw DREICER4C0 i Tearl? TPreeicu? <Jbone? * and (Jewel? FIFTH AVENUE at FORTY-SIXTH ? There's a Fortune in 6% Prudence-Bonds Wlien you get enough of them It is not a security with overnight possi? bilities of enhancement?or collapse. It is a security whose accumulation re? quires patience?and rewards it. It is backed by selected first-mortgages, it pays a consistent 6e?, it is as safe as the ground you walk on, and it is guaranteed as to interest and principal. We have prepared a booklet describing Prudence-Bonds in detail, which we will send without any obligation to you. We pay the 4% Normal Federal income Tai Ask for Booklet IS-74 "Realty Associates Investment Corporation 31 Nassau St..New York '-?'162 Remsen St.Brooklyn Guarantee Trust Company of New T ork. Trustee of Thi? Issue Three Lashed to Masts of Yacht All Night Saved Crew of Akista, New York to Florida, Rescued in Exhausted Condition by Jersey Skipper ATLANTIC CITY, Oct. 6.?Three men were refxucd in an exhausted condi? tion here to-day after spending the night lashed to the masts of the yacht Akista, bound from New York to Flor? ida. The craft encountered a gale off the New Jersey coast yesterday and. both her sails were blown away. There was an auxiliary engine aboard and this was employed to some advantage. Slow progress was made, however, and the sea swept over the boat, flooding her cabin. When Atlantic City hove in fight it was decided to put in here. In the dark last night the yacht grounded on the In:et bar in making the channel. The craft filled with water, nml to .-.. ?? themselves the men, whose identity has, not yet been learned, lashed themselves to the masts and hoisted a signal of distress. It wis not until daybreak that, their plight was discovered by Captain Henry Brown, skipper of a fishing craft, who immediately put out to the rescue. The men were brought ashore and revived. Birth, Engagement, Marriage, Death and In Memoriam Notice? may be telephoned to The Tribune an): time up to midnight jot insertion in the next day's paper. Telephone Bcckman 3000. ENGAGEMENTS MJrVOTT?KAIRO?Mr and Mrs. K'-n W. Balrd. of St. Martins, Ph. onnounce I ' . ?: ?' ? Miss ?.?-?' Joseph Albert Mini '. of Portland, Ore. rEARLMAN?BARKGX?Mr. and Mrs M. Barron, 105 Henry .-... ann mnce ' c agencent uf t ? .r laughter, Ada, I ? Mr Henry Pearlman, ? ??. U ston Road, ?:> October 7. MARE! AGES EXGELDON?HAnm\< HAM?At Dunel . >n X !.. .?. \Y ????:.'.? O ?? ?'?...- ?? .1920. bv 'he Ri v Gsbrge Alrl 'U. Ora -o Mari", daug-h er i-f Mr. and Mrs Walter R. H. Hardlngham, to Dr. Joseph E. EngHaon. eon o? the late Peter A. Kn gelson, of New York City. HEXKV?MERCK?On Tuesday, October 5, 1020 at Me? .?'.:- n Park, X. J., by tho }:? v. liai;.;- Pon? i . El ibeth, : ? of .Mr and >.'. : s. Uforee Merck, to .:.' <!i>n Henry, of Phllad Iph I i STEEN?FRIEDMAN?On Tuesday, 1 ? r 5, ! 20 by l he R v : >r. Nathan Ki PS, Horten; ? S. Friedman, daughter if Mr un.i .Mrs. Henry C Friedman, to I.en st-m. son of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ft"rn, .?:' Monti: ; . Ala. WILLIAMS?HARRIS- At the Chui the Transfig uration. Ne? ' >rkr ! ? i ictober 5, O lie Ma rg aret daugi t he late I 'harles Ro h nd u I Mi Harris t.. Mr. Thomas An? M V, . t Mr. Rnd Mrs. Hu?rh kVllltams . t Ottawa, Canada. DEATHS Ill.AVCII YKD? Enl red Into i ber 4, at summer : 1er. Mrs. \V Leo Ward, South Norwalk, e'.'i-.n, Virginia Withers, daughter of the late B. C Ce nt - and E. Mary Center Ludlow, and wife of th late Prank B. Blanchard. Funeral service ..t ( of St. Mary the Virgin, 4Gth b1 n .?: Broadway, on Thursday, O tober 7, at 10.3 0. lila (E?Suddenly, .it Yonkers, N. Y.. ?: jesday, . >ber 5, 1920, the Rev. Will? iam Patti rson Bruc I >. D . In his 6 : year. Funeral services at his late resi? dence, 15 Morris Crescent. Yonkers N Y. Thursday ev -:.'.:, Octobej Memorial service .-it the Park Hill Re? formed Church at a later date. BUTTS? Rev Henrv \nson, entered into rest, In his Bfitl' year, en October 6, at bla home, In Madison i Madison, N. J. Funeral servi ? ? will bo hel l In ! he chapel of Drew T Sen luary on Saturday, Octi ber ' . at i p. i:-... daylight suv::ib- I . CARROLL?Tuesday Ocl ber Carroll, beloved wife of .'? hn at : mother of Joseph, Pierre ( and Arthur Carroll, native of ? i . . Kilkenny, Ireland Funeral froin her .nt.- i esiden ?- V un! ? rs : la n Bri i k on Fridaj Octobei thci ? Chun h of St Mary ? : he Sea, City Islan ! Requl ::.:??:?;.. nt St Raj n .nd's CROXrN?On October ?:. Daniel, I husband of Mary Croi In (nee 3i.n and father of John, Matthew and Mar? garet, native of Llssyconer, Rat County Kerr--, Ireland. Funeral from his late residence, 383 i;. J . Brooklyn, Thursday, 9 a. rr . the St. Mary's K. C. Church, where .- ? mass ci requiem -wii! be celebrated In? terment Calvary Cemetery. Cl'NMNt.HAM?Suddenly, on Oct. ' - i '. 320, Nell ! Bister of I. and Mr . Ms ? ;; E M Vvoy. Fu rhursday, 9:30 a. '..... :': - be r la ? dence, M : Wc '. 162d ???, Si an 10 . . St L'ntharii : f. !d St. near -J ???-.- :':.. 11..-. mend's e mob,le ' iri. -'? . I) ^ :.v ? ? ... . - Y . Tue ?day, Oc: b 20. Ai aged 78 ye ara Intermei ! . . n pon n RS -At ? ' Mrs. V-'" ster Bead V.. on October : 1520 Esther Ruth De wnes, in the 94th year of/ her ago. Funeral services at Holy Trinity Westport, Conn., Friday. October S. at 3 p. rr.. DHY6DALE?Suddenly. October 4, ?320. v t he .. .me : her gra >n Harry e ' ..- .: lick, Eleonora J. Drysdale, ?n her ? ? ? - year. Funeral i at 4S8 Ea ? S-ith st., Bri oklyn, Th ira laj ,1:30 : I>i SEXHEBUY?Entered Pi radise te t.. r. '. 192C ?:--. Viande the late Corn I year of : K-,-3 at hi . S. ".'.'?? '? o'clock, laylts leaves Grand titra . -. art time. EVANS?-i -. Tues . low of the la Fu? st .--..- es at East 28:? s:.. on :,g. Oc? tober 7, at 8 o'clock. i..- lath i and trie nda invite a. FAl'LKS?On October 5. :. B . ifv. beloved husband of Jennie Bvqlai ... S3d ye? r. ?' xn . . from Metri list Epli ; bur 2:30 p. i Evergreen ( enveten Elizabeth, N. J GARVEV- -Or i :tob< - I, W nlfre I F. C ? . J and mo Ihr >r of John, . Joseph, Acna and ?' . Stevenson. I une ral f dente, 191 : Whit ? Pl i Bronx, on Thursday, October 7i at i m. Requiem ?.?as? at the at Our Lady of Solace. Interment St. Rayinon is Cemetery. HA>'AC?Nathaniel A., on October 4, l?:o, _DEATHS at Mont 'lair, N'. J., Emma F an Aus; n and K. :..:.:, ? :???-... ? i ? : . .t: ' , . - -, ' ? It. ', .it. - ' H-art. I N 5 D. L. . ;.- '? : i ..-..?? ? interment sn : : :. IIEWIT?At Conn., AVdnesdar, l ? ? ' ? M. D.. !n ?.'?.: .. JO?TVSON? John THE FUNERAL *'!' ': . . iway, fiCih bt . LA1YSOX?At her home. -6 Grove st., I wil A'lll .--; T La .1 - m Funei ? s ?t er lato ? ? Funeral Thursday morning at] LI ll'KK Mrs William M h: her lata i-.-. ' ? ?? i ' TNERAL ? ? ?v.,-. a n.l f 'hursday, I \ a . i . LLOYD?Su I . : N\w v ? ' n i ;u isband l.rbert 1 1 : ? ?? i: ??. and . . b ?-? I, ? LOWRY Su . In New . on October ? ? ?'..-? . : ? n ???""'?, ? N ? tntor ment at tin f the fa MALOY?i n Oct ber ? lie I. i- her !?? si - ,. - : : \ ' ? . ' : N Y. Pleas . ' :: MARRAN? ' s .... Paul's E] il irch. North w av, :.? . ? ? " : m !n tern cnt i?n MATTH1ESON tober 6, I?29, An . ?' Harry Matt . R ? I ' ibi r ' . - M'KMl.Hl ? ? - n av.. Mill- ? ' ??' . - < " - . K ??argent il o 1:55; Brooklyn Flat bui .i : ! ". NI-.'l'Bl BOER?Suddenly, on October 5. ? iL. year, Selig B. Neuburger. be ion ? f R\ a trger and bi ?? v-r <t ? >>?r 8, . - " P> spec 1 ; XCTT?At H . i '>b?r "?. Flti . i ! ? . ?. ' k . C ' ? .' ' . J * I nil Ha - ? ?. " .-.( IIM11 T?On r-tob?r Sophie ble and th? . i :.ur\ h of Oui ' Lourde?. : lu ?t., near ? '?,-.. ?? :.: ..-. BEWABD? : larma, wit? of Dr. ?v Seward, on IPa?lneaday, O^'ober eat 103d it. ;>?pe:? ? WOODltOM Wednesday, ?: Pomona. ? wlrluw of i!.it; ii ?er^ - Brooklyn, ; IN MEMORIAM l'v>\\ BK?1 ' ?or d Ing fat it- , Michl i erar You May B? ' keia^jctative C . "CoKtaAw 8200** i: C^i'PBPI.T. LAL CHlRCH'bc 19701'rosJwiT at 66tb S DcwKtanra Orf.?. 23d St ft SU A? THE H(l()I>I.\ftN ? KMF.TERV .'33 i St Bj Hai ens Train ?n4 by Trailer, Lots of small 'i'....' for s*:? Office, ?? i.*at 2*4 6t., N. I.