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Arcliibald I.ioc.c-.I And Sworn In as Mayor of Newark Five Con-n-iS-ionera Choose Demoerat for Chief: Ne.v Jersey City Official. Vl-n lake Oath* of Office tlexandei __c_i_ald, a Demoerat, ?*. cko-en Mayor ot Newark yesterday .ommission i-hiaa 1.. Raymond V, lliara .1 pr-nr.an. Fr. Breidenbach nnd ex-M_.o- i harles P, Gillen. Thc five ?ra were eleeted last Tues? day. ?vl*yor Arehibald was nominated by _]r. Raymer.d, who ran far ahead of .?andidat*. a irefore, en | -. ofB :e ??' Mayor. He signi tiod. heweve-. 'hat he did not want the office. _s did Commissioner Brennan, thc second high man on the ticket. Mayor Arehibald ran third. Mayor and commissiono rs were council chamber, with ?an l.OQO persons witnesaing the ceremony. Immedtateiy aft. r the oath had been sdministered to the ftve com ?ers Mr. Raymond placed the name or Mr. Arehibald in nomination fcr Mayor. It was aeeonded by Mr. Brennan and the election was unani Hieu?. Commiasioner P._ymonu refused the ' Mayor because of his desire to position as Director of ' Streets and Public Improvement*. Com ' irennan did not care to re rom the duties of Director of \. The office of Mayor car riea with it the direction of the De ent of Public Affairs. Ex-Mayor was as signed to the Department . ta and Public Buildings and the ? :" Director of Revenue andi ? hv Major Arch- I vas assigned to the new member >n, Frederick C. Brei denbach. A crowd that jammed the City Hall y Chamber witnessed yesterday the swearing in of Mayor Frank Hague and the reelected city commissioners of ; Jersey i __ eommissionerd were : escortcd by Police Chief Richard T. , iby as they entered the hall. John Bentley head* the Department of ; Safety. Michael I. Fagen the De-1 partment of Streets and Public Im-1 provements, James F. Gannon jr. the Department of Revenue and Finance Harry Moore that oi Parks and Buildings. Elaine van Dyke to Wed Briti. h \rmy Officer to Marry Noted Clergyman\?. Daughter PRINCETON, N. J., May 11 r, and Mrs. Henry van Dyke to- ! day announced thc engagtement of their daughter, Elainc. to Camain Cyril Prummond Le Gros Clark, of the Brit? ish army. \"o date is set for the wed- < ding. Captain Clark is now on duty in India. He is .he son of the Kev. E. Travers Clark, of Newton Abbott, j Devon, England. Miss van Dyke was in the service of { the Near East Faelief Committee during i .919 and 1920 at Constantinople. Bei rut and Aleppo. She met Captain Clark at Aleppo while be wa? serving there with the British army of occupa? tion. She rejurnerf to th, _?"?_.? i-ed three montiis. a-g-o. Captain Clark is of the 34th Poona Horse, _n Indian cavalry regiment. He active service with General Al lenby's army in Palestine. Replaees Star. Scores Hit Eve Hackett Sudden ly Called to Lead in "June Love" Owing to an operation on her throat, [ Else Adler, prima donna of "June j Love," the musical comedy at the j bocker Theater, could not ap- ! the cast last night. Eve Hackett, one of the understudies, as- I samed the title role and will continue in it unt 1 Miss Alder's recovery. Mi.s Hackett's performar.ee was an unex pected hit, as she wa? understudying _n entirely different part. "Word of Alder's illness was delayed in reaching the theater and the under atudy had a scant hour's notice. Misa Hackett is from Holton. Masa., where ahe sang in a church. Her en? gagement with "June Love" was her flrst on the stage. -. _ ?-. Tran.fu.ions Save Hughes Sh* Sam. With 40 Ounces of Student's Blood. Recovering -tM-U_ Pisbafch to Thr Tribun* .REAL, May 17.?General Sir - am Hughes, who trained ..75,000 Cana? dian soidie-s for war and who has been sertous'y il! for some time, is to-day well on the road to recovery as the re a_11 of two blood transfusion opera? tions. L. Robertson, a aenior medical stu il University, volunteered to give the blood. Twenty ounces were transferred to the patient on May 1 and a similar amount May 15. Yes? terday morning. ten hours after the on, Robertson was taking one ' _a! examinations at the univer parently none the worse for his ? ce. Mme. Curie to Use Gift Radium To Perfect Cancer Treatment Will Seek Method of Controlling Rays So Thal Only Diseased Tissues Will Be Destroyed, No Matter How Deep-Seated the [ttfection The control of rndium rays for CRn-< cer treatments is the problem to which Mme. Marie Curie will devote the gr*.m of radium which American women are j to present to her through President Harding on Friday at the White House. A method of control, so that deep-1 seated diseaaed tis.ues can be reached ! without destroying the health-, tissue, is the immediate problem of radium. - believes. was explained by her daughter and co-worker. Mile, Irene, yesterday, following a luncheon at the Waldorf Astoria, at which Mme. Curie was haited as the "queen of scientista" and "mother of radium" by scientista 6t many societies. Mme. Curie will study radium only hs a scientist, her daughter was careful to explain. She ia nol a physician and the ejcperiments she rnakes will he con cerned only with the action of radium rays in their purely scientiftc aspecta, but inasmuch aa she will be working inj cooperation with the physicians of the Pasteur (nstitute, Paris, she believea thai what she discovers can be applied to medical advantage. "The problem in connection with radium. rs 1 understand it." her daugh? ter aaid, "is now bo to control tha, radium rays that they will luirn away the bad tissues and not injure the good Even deep-seated cancel's, to i which the radium rays cannot be ap? plied directly, have been reached by applying the radium outside the body.j at the part directly above the cancer; and protecting the rest of tbe body with a lead sheet. Even when the can? cer is incurable, the suffevings of the patient may be made less by the radium '< treatment. "But I do not wish to say much on this question." she added with the: quick caution of the scientist, "for I am not a doctor and neither is my mother. The work done in her lahora tory wil' not, he medical, bui physical and chemical: that is. it, will be pure science. If what she does in her lab oratory helps applied science. then it will be good." "Do you believe that radium will erer be a complete cure for cancer?" she ! was asked. "Indeed 1 do." she responded warmly. "Again, T am not a doctor. but 1 do be? lieve, and so does my mother. that ifi cancer is treated as soon as the first ?\vmptoms are discovered and the case ' is properly diagnosed radium will ef cure." She added that the newest method of applying radium rays was in several small tubes, applied to various parts of | the cancerous growth, instead of in one . central tube. which sometimes burned the central parts too deeply and did not .each the. outer nortions. As many as twenty small tubes are now used in one ! cancer, she said. The debt of the whole world to Mnip. Curie was the theme of the luncheon at ? the Waldorf-AstoriR. at which five hun Auction of Hartlev Paintings Is Called Modernist Triumph All of Artist* s Work Put on Sale to Relieve His Need of Immediate Funds; lt Briugs Total of $4,913: Followers of modernist art crowded the Anderson Galleries last night and,' at the close of a sale of 122 paintings and pa.tels by Marsden Hartley. ac- . claimed it a triumph for the cause of modernist art in America. The Hartley canvases brought a total of $4,913.50, two of them bringing $200, and five . 100 or more. The sale was preceded by that of j seventy five examples of lithographs. paintings and pastels by James X. Rosenberg. which were sold for a total. of $1,046. The Hartley pictures were brought to sale, according to friends of the artist. through force of dire cir eumstanee invoiving a veritable strug- ! gle for existence on the part of the which had resolved itself into "the choice between bread and paint." It was also aaid to be the first sale of its kind invoiving the disposal at: public auction here of the entire col- , lection and the life endeavor of an American artist. The resulting suc 4c*im* ???** GLOVES MO-CO FABRIC and MILANESE SILK For Men and Women T_e Wori.'t Greatest Leather Store* .04 Flftb Ave.. N*w York. .53 Broadway K.Hlori?14,"> Tremont Street l.unUon?89 Ri>|,a?rit Street Deal?rs Throughout the World X" A Ledger Built for Service All-steel back?cylinder.lock?Russia and Corduroy cover?leather tabbed index--* Yorkshire ledger sheets. And only the special National flat key" will open this Royal Loose-Leaf Ledger. Choice of ten rulings. Ask your stationer to show you National Series 8100. Look for Thts Trmde Mark When Yoxi Buy Loose-Leaf and Bound Books 9-_-_-_t___ B.aA.VK BOOK COMr.OY. 25 RtT?-.__*, HOLTOKE. MASS. ^?*-__BB dre.d represontHtivee or scientific soci? eties rose and cheerad her for five min utea upon het* Mtranee, und then vied with one another in heaping words of pra ?-?? upon her. Fragile and pale, she snt si'.rntlv with bowed head through the ordeal of eulogy, and when it waa over she rose to her feet and murmured, "Thank you." Dr. Edgar F. Smith, president of the American t'hemical Society, presided at the luncheon. A reception in honor of Mme. Curie, attended by more than 1,500 persons, was given at the Museum of Natural History last night. Two honorarv memberships, one in the American Museum of Natural History and thfl other in the Xew York Mineralogical ( lub, were bestowed upon her, Dr. "Robert Abbe. a surgeon and a apeciahat, ln the cure of cancer, made the principal address. He paid high tribute to Mme. Curie for her dis covery of radium in relation to its uae as a curative of that disease. "lt would be impossible to say now whether radium is a certain cure for cancer." said Dr. Abbe. "We mus. wait. We know that it will reduce dis eased tissue, but whether it will reduce il permanently is another matter." He explained thal it is only ir. the tieatment of small growths that abso lute cures have been effected. ln the larger growths, he said. the treatment has not been so successful. "At. the time that Roentgen made hla first discoveries of radioactivity," he said. "the newspapers were prone to accepl these as the accomplishment of an absolute cure for cancer, and from year to .year the news has been given out too hopefully that at last an abso? lute cure has been found. But, for the last twenty years Mme. Curie has been the torchbearer of the world of science in a march toward this goal. She has held the baton of the musicians of sci ence. lt seems reasonable to believe that within the next few years. if she is properly equipped, she will be ablfe to reveal something new in this agent that will be a heaiing to humanity and especially to women, Then Dr. Abbe told of some of his more successful experiments to cure cancer with radium. One was that of a girl three years old who had a malignant growth on her tongue. lt was treated once with caustic and then operated on by knife. When both these attempts to r.move the tumor perma? nently had failed the mother was told " child's tongue would have to be cul ou' that life might be saved. *Ii was then that the child was taken to Dr. Abbe av.d two little tubes of radium w .^re laid against the tumor for minutes. In six weeks the child was cured. "1 saw her the oi hei aid Dr. Abbe. "She is now-a girl thlrl old, well and happy." Because her doctor has forbidden i; Mme. Curie was unabie to shake hand-: with the many guests who attended the ? ? cepl ton. ' was said, will have a marked effect in future in the sa.*" works of other artists. Alfred Stieglitz, known in the field of art and a friend of Hartlev, said: "To-night has proved a triumph for nrbdernist art in America. The sale was unprotected and its success was not alone due to the friends ..* the artist." The highest prices of the sa!e were paid for the oil "Autumn," a paint? ing of Maine iandscape done in 1908. and "Storm Clouds," another Maine subject: of the same year. O. D. Steiner gave $200 each for them. The Maine Iandscape "Desertion" was sold to th Daniel galleries for $120 and W. S. Williams bought. a late pastel lands cape of Xew Mexico for $105 James X. Rosenberg's pastel of Bethleheiu. Xew Hampshire," sold for $42.50 :,. Dr. C. L Henriquez; James R. Angeii bought: his "Beach, Far Rockaway." a pastel for $40 Additional paintings by Hartle; as follows: "Movement, Bermuda," paste! C. Barnes. $100; "Still Life." Paul Rosenfeld. $100: "Still Life" 0j] to Miss Florence Stetheim, $100 Borabing Attack Ls Made on Crown Forces al Belfast Moto. Load of Troops Afao Tired Upon From Am bush, One Soldier Being Killed; Students injured DUBLIN, Mav 17. a motor load of soldiers wa. _mbushed this morning near Inchioore, one soldier being killed .nnd one wounded. Tlie soldiers returned the fire. but the reSuits are ru)t known. While eoldiera were playing a foot ball match in Bandon, County Cork, yesterday, armed clviliana began firing with u machine g_n. Several of the specta'tora were wounded. A military patrol engaged the attacking force nnd covered the retreat of the football players to the barracka, where a fight that lasted half an hour enaued. It ed in one aoldier being killed and three of the attacking party wounded. Rombing Attack in Belfast BELFAST, Ma,- 17.- For the first | time a bombins attack on crown forces, so familiar in Dublin. occurred in Rel fast tornight, in the Fall.. district. The bomb? were unskillfully directed and | the po.ice fired on the attacking forces who fled. It is believed that several were hlt. I lose on this attack came a first at tempf. against the city barracks al-., n the Falls division, at Smithfield. Many er Bhots were tired through the windows, but before the surpidsed ?ar nson could dash out the assailants scurried away. . ige crowd of workers from the s.upyards headed by a hand nnd the ' n;on,'ai;k- seized Ulster Hall to-night and filled every seat. in anticipation ot an attemiu by the Sinn Feiners to hold a mcetinjr there. Three. Socialist Bgltators already had arrived. but not ing the state of affairs, .lipped quietlv away, and the loyalists held a counte'r ceting, Large forces of police and armored cars were present, but everything was good hnmored and orderlv. The Belfasl Corporation had refused permission to the Sinn Fein to use tho University Students Fired On CORK, Ireland, \Tay 17. Another incident. ,n the Whi-.untide reign of terror occurred last. evening when a party oi University students were re turning to this c After leaving the East ferry the students were ordered to halt their by unidentified persons ashore. who fired shots, wounding three women and one man. A naval v? i took th. d persons ab iard and landed them in Cork, where they reteived medical attention. Glynn Took Port in lrisli Peace Parley Abroad Former (Governor. However, Says Any Statement Might Prove Injnrioiis to the Cause ALBANY, May 17. Former Governor Martin 11. Glynn, who returned to his home i night from a trip to Ireland, England and France, admitted to-day that he had ha<t a part in peace negotiations be.tween Premier Lloyd George, of England. and leaders of the ause. "1 can ?: of this matter now." ,-,. said? "1 want to serve the cause of Ireland. and talk on my this time might destroy my ess and possibly cost the loss of confidence of peoptle who have placed trust in me. My sympathy for Ireland and for the Irish cause is well known. I can hest serve tha: cause al the present moment bj withholding any j defii statemei mblication. in view of what was printed in and London yesterday and in N'.-w Y'ork ' g much I think 1 am bound to say. It ia true r have been in touch with powerful people on the Irish side. It is true I had a long interview with Mr. Lloyd (ieoi-jre. It is true he cav. me a mes ' er to Mr. f)e Valera. For od of the cause it is nei that any fruther de.tails should come from Mr. Lloyd Georee and Mr. De \ alera i fo keep thi record utraight, however, and in order to pay honor where honor la due let, m. stiit. tl . _ry nympathi.er with the Irish cauae owea a debt of gratitude I to Archbishop Hayes, of Xew york. if happineta should coite to ireland in th.-- near future Archbishop H.-iv- can be -.Mitten down us one of its ; - onl nbulors." \ru Off vr to Do Valera Denied by Lloyd George LONDON, May 1?.?When Premier Llcyd George was invited to-day to say something concerning the statement s rinted in The Dublin Freeman'a Jour Ital Monday t? the eff.-ct that, he had offered to meet, Eamon De Valera or other 1,-ish leaders without conditions following statement was issued from the official residence of the Prime Min ister: "Mr. Lloyd George has made no ment on the subject of Mr. De Valera beyond what. he already has Btated n the House of Commons." Japan Contracts For 20,000-Tcm Supply Ship llne Chairman of tmperial Naval Comrnission Si-j-n*- Agree? ment With N. Y, Ship Buildinjr Co.. 120 B'way A naval contract for tbe construc? tion of an electrically driven supply ship. the first placed in many years by tho tmperial -Japanese government with an American shipyard, waa yesterday in the office of the Xew ".ork Shipbuilding Corporation, 120 Broadway. This announcement. Was made by Captain M. Yokura, 1. J. X, ' chairman of the [mperial Japanese Naval Comrnission visiting the United States. I'lie contract was .signed by Captain Yokura and Captain Goto, represtnting the tmperial Japanese Navy, and was accepted by Marvin Al Neeland, presi dent of the Xew York Shipbuilding Corporation. It calls for the construc? tion of a unique vessel, a combination coal anrl oil supply ship of 20,000 tons for ruelltng the various units of the Japanese Navj. The design of the vessel, which has been worked out, by the. Xew York Shipbuilding Corporation in accordance with the outlined requiremenl down hy the fmperial Japanese Naval Comrnission. calls for a length on the wate, line of 196 feet. with a beam of ? '.- The vessel will be elect driven, the equipment being o newest design, furnished by the Gen? eral Electric Company. She will have twin screws, which will gi' loaded, of 15 knots an I Captain Yokura said that it . evidence of the cordial feeling ; Japan has for the United State the contraci was placed here. Capti Yokura further said that thia was proof of Japan's desire to have only the mosl friendly commercial relations wit country. Sidney S, Breese Will Marry Dancer To-day Bride-to-Be Is Miss Paula \u irusia Matsner, of Vienna, \Vliom He Met in War Sydney S. Ri ? .e, son of James L, . will marry to-day Miss Paula Aygusta Matsner, a Viennese dancer, now living in Xew .'ork. The erigp.gement was hot announced until yesterday when Mr. Breese went to the Marriage License Bureau in the Municipal Building and obtained a li? cense. The fact that the marriage would be celebrated to-day was con lirmed by the bride-to-be's mother, ''-s. Augusta A. Matsner, of 125 West Twenty fourth Sti.t. She announced that her daughter had met Mr. Breese while he was in the sei'vice during the war. Mr. Breese ia a grandnephew of Bis? hop Potter on his mother'a side. He ia a graduate of Harvard, 1905. Miss er is the daughter of William X. Matsner and comes from a well-known imily. For several years her classic dancing has been a feature of society and artistic affairs of the city. & <s*__ MADISON AVENUE - FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street Navajo (All=wool) Rugs direct from the Imdiain Reservatioinis to B. Altmao <_& Co. are shown in a s.ngiuiHar.y attractive assortrnent {which incSindes a n_.__il.er of __n_-Si_a_ spedonens} at very reasonable prices Speclal for to=day (Wednesday) Navajo InidSain Rygs In sizes rsmging IFroirn 2x4 feet to 3J/2x5 feet at $ 112.50, II 7.5' _9fl_ (Fifth Floor) Defic'ifiH-y Bill 1^ Slaghed by House To $100,680,000 -ippropriation for [mprove tuent of (Jiiurunlinc Sla lion Here U Approved; Ship Board Hravily Cttl . May 17, Ailowances I00 to the Shipping Board, .1 >. '? th< Federal Boai onal Education, $8,71l Y*&v Risk Insurance Bureau, and .8,493.000 to the naval establiahment are chief items of the second deflciency bill reported to-day by the House Ap propriations Committee. lt iO.OOO approximately $120,000, 000 less than departmental estimates, tho e oi the '. ocational Board ai War Risk Bureau being. prai tical only ones not slashed by the comn '1 ii" Shipping Board was g 536,851,000, which oii.ni to meet defi s until July l, but of $134,000,000 additional for the com? ing fiscal year was cut to |25.00l navy provision inclu r fuel and $243,000 to co the Norfolk, Va.. drydock, Thi cut out $1,500,000 t'or improve !' navy yards and $800,000 for the Key West station. Items in the bill include $959,000 to the Public Health Service, $650,01 improvement at the Xew York and Bos? ton quarantine stations ;and $ for prevention of epidemic diseaaes; tment of Jusl ce $150,000, D ?'-??; ' of Agricultun $ 105,000, to indem nit'y owners of slaughtered tubercular cattle; Poi toffice $1,500,000, for vehicle allowances; Department of Commerce oi aid of State Department i00, for relief of American seamen abroad and contingenl expenses of for-, eign missions. Requests refused by the committee included $600,000 for a water system at Schofield barracks, Hawaii; '"' pas sport b ? ;aus al New Voi Francisco, Chicago, Seattle and New Orleans; $323,000 quarantine station at. Philadelphia, and $287,000 for the Baltimore station. Phone Company Earned Big Excess. City Insists Fertig Submits Figures to 1*111. lic Service Commission in Fight for Lower Rate The new Puh Iic Service Commission I yesterday continued its hearing on the question of whether the decision bf the ! previou ision allowing t he Vork Telephone Companj to increase j '?- 30 per cent should stand. contends that the im hould be rescinded. [n support ? motion M. IVf. . !' -? tig, \ i Corporation Co submitted a memorandum showing : the basi \ 3 no justificatioi crease. Th . s vvas ba if costs for 1921. The c'ity pre tation shov least $8,000,000 ought to be eliminated. The city c on the basis of t'ne company's own figures there -.s ? '?? total - - return earned during the period from 1915 to 1920 inc ? per cent of the value of the j claimed by the company, of ?7,847,363. lf necessary adjustments are made covering the 41. per cent and income taxes the totai ex returna during the. period i reaches the sum of $16,323,295, aceord- ' thc citys' contention. Milo R. e, former Public Service Com- I missioner, was the chief witnes the city. Mr. Fertig said it probably j would take tlie city four months to present its case. Stof) in atyour dealer's and get your Wahl Fountain Pen today The Wahl Fountain Pen is a good, sturdy writing instru ment, made by the makers of the famous Eversharp. It has a flexible gold nib that fairly skims over the paper as it records your thoughts. Own one of these pens and your writing troubles are ended. . For it does not sweat or blot or scratch. THE WAHL COMPANY, Chicago WAHL FOUNTAIN P?N Just Another Store In addition to our i i atore, we ai re in the trbockcr Building, Broadway _nd 4_n_ Street, to feature our own e ? rylcs in mcr's shoe*.. Lasts and Patterns exclusivety our own design. n The (Ll //vi>' 5SH0* Whitehouse & Hardy ?"10ADWAY ?, 40"*- STREET Hi-tic-outaj. 0?ta.. Man-,, ft..^. 144 K.*E_T4_"* -??,?? S..T.OIW. And then one day he woke up? He had purchased the last lot of cards for his card records at what seemed like a very low price. Being human, he rather prided himself on fmding a bargain. Until? One day he noticed that his cierk couldn't get through with the day's work. He asked?"Why?" "Fm working just as hard/' she said eamestly, "but I can't handle that last lot of cards very fast. They are uneven and they vary so in size that they aren't easily fingered. They are different weights, too, and stick to? gether?so I lose time.'*1 That was all there was to the conversation. But this man-lvho-thought-he-had-a-bargain did some thinking_ and concluded that what he had "saved" in price had cost him ten times as much in wasted minutes. The moral of the story is this:?Buy good cards_the cards best suited to your own particular purpose. L. B. 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