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Miss Pettis and Isaac L. Requa To Wed July 9 Ceremony in Christ Chnreh at Tarrytown To Be Fol? lowed by Reception at Home of Bride's Parents Gilbert-Dean Engagement \fr. and Mrs. John 0. Kerr Go to New Canaan, Conn. ; Miss Fairchihi Returns Kiss Elizabeth Pettis, daughter of I if ton Dane} Pettis, w;ll be married to Isaac Lav Church, Miss Cecilia M. Vroom ? maid of honor and the will be Mrs. Edward A. Lyon, who was Miss Elizabeth Whit? ing, of Chicago; Mrs. Harry EL Larsen. ?Irs. Stewart J. Bell and Miss Florence lillard. Arthur Mead will serve as Mr. Utequa''? best n-.i-.n and the ushers will I rtin W. Littleton jr., Emil W. A. ?chamal ? r Terrell and How I classmates of Mr. ton. The ceremony will be followed by a reception at Manor House, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Pettis at Tarrytown. Mr. and Mr?. William Beach Dean, of Larchmov:: Manor, announce the en? gagement or' their daughter, Miss to Clinton Gilbert jr., of this city, son of Clinton Gilbert and Mrs. Margaret Bacon Gilbert. No date has been set for the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Kerr, of 15 East Fifty-fourth Street, have gone to New Canaan, Conn., to remain until October Miss Frances Fairchiid. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Fairchiid, after an extended tour through England, France, Germany and Spain, returned on the Aquitania yesterday. Dt. William A. Chisholm, of 68 West Fifty-fifth Street, will leave town next week for his Country place at Cape George, on the Bay of St. George, Nova Scotia. Wiliiam Payne Thompson has re? turned from Canada and is at the Ritz-C arito n. Fairfield Osborns Jr. Arrive Home From Europe Mr. and Mrs. H. Fairfield Osborn Jr. have arrived from abroad and Ave gone to their summer home at Garrison-on-rhe-IIudson for the sea eon. On their return to town in the fall they will be at 40 East Sixty second Street. Lady Elizabeth Cochran and the Earl of Dundonald arrived from Er?/oy the * fioliaatf titiih GAIJVSHAfi $mmncmi Joseph C. Lincoln A romance of1 th? sunny s?de of* small "f?Wn lift Wttf) Uu??}5 galore. Af all Booksellers ?2* this ?9 em fippletor\ Bo?k* __ BOOKS TO BE READ IN BED Aa attractive booklet-catalogue with CB. vl. lists compiled by FRANK Christopher M o r 1 e y . SI 11 If if A Frederick Welcher, Ulli %a ctc"" 's a'rea<^y *n 't5 ||ll I j second edition. Drop ? la ? I U m an<^ ta'ce onc or BOOK SHOP ask US to Scnd y?U a 1 copy. 4 Christopher St. at 6th Ave. and 8th SL OPEX EVENINGS UNTIL 9 Know the Freedom of the Open Road Don't let this summer go by without taking that real vaca? tion that you have been planning for so long. Escape from the bondage of your daily tasks and the confining influ? ence of the -work-a-day world. Take the Trail to Happi? ness with an ADAMS Folding Motorhungalo "The Camp of Camps" I ihe modern, motorized traveling Camp de Luxe. Instantly attachable to any make of automobile. Trails perfectly, goes everywhere your car will. Equipped for ?t., four adults, two rooms; springs, mattresses, yft?s, closet, kitchenette, screens. Protection from /?/--_? -{r\ weather and insects. Small initial investment. L Lc '*?''?'S) Costs nothing to operate. Cozy, comfortable, JL_J^*? ^ 2 convenient. Makes you independent of hotels ^?S*ZZZ?f and train schedules. Ask for demonstration and full information. ADAM3 TRAILER CORPORATION Factory: Garden City. L- I., N. Y. Telephone: Garden City ! New York Representative: AUter Sawyer Co., 'th Floor, Grand Central Palace. Telephone: Vaaderbllt ?800. ba rented by ?ay, week or month. ? JUb^=--t? ?-?-mme? Milts Mary D. Landstreet Photographed at Southampton, Long- Island. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fairfax S. Landstreet, of 563 Park Avenue. _ Europe on the Adriatic and are at the Hotel Plaza. Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Jones o? 640 Park Avenue, who passed the .winter in California, have gone to Beechwood, Sayville, Long for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Gardner L. Gilsey, who are at Good Ground, Lone; Island, are being congratulated 0:1 the birth ; j of a son a few cays ago. Mrs. Gilsey ! was Miss Hilda Hiss, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Hiss, of New York. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Bache Pratt jhave gone to the Adirondacks for a \ short stay. They will return to their 1 cottage at Southampton at the end I of next week. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Webb Go to Locust Valley, L. i. Mr. and Mrs. F. Egerton Webb ha%*c gone to Locust Valley, L. I., to remain until September. Mrs. Edward N. Breitung will pass part of the summer with Mrs. Richard T. Wilson at her villa in Newport. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Cass Ledyard are at their place at Newport for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Devereux Milburn will sail from England for New York on July ?, and on their arrival here will go to Southampton for a short stay as guests of Mrs. Milburn's parents, ! Mr. and Mrs. Charles Steele. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Astor will take '< possession of Beechwood, their villa I at Newport, to-day. Mrs. Hamilton McK. Twombly, who 1 was a guest of her sister, Mrs. Henry White, at Lenox, has returned to her ; country place at Convent, N. J. Mr. and Mrs. Francis O. French are guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Lenox Banks at Pinard Cottage No. 1, New? port. Going On To-day; DAT American Museum, o? Natural History ; ad- ' mission free. Metropolitan Museum of Art; admlssio? fre?. Aquarium; admission free. New York Historical Society, 170 Central Park W^st ; admission freo. Van Cortlandt Park, Museum, admission free. Zoological Park, admission free. NIGHT Operatic concert at tho Straus Auditorium. Educational Alliance, 197 East Broad? way, S o'clock. 15 Winter Garden Girls Each Adopt a Foundling Foster Mothers Will Support Children in Salvation Army Home Babyhood, a farce, and Youth, a ! comedy, combined beautifully yestor- i day, when fifteen foundlings at the I Brooklyn Nursery and Infants' Ilospi- i tal, 396 Kerkimer Street, became inher- j itors of the stage and children of the | chorus of "The Whirl of New York." j At the Winter Garden fifteen girls ? portray Salvation Army lassies. This! recognition of the Church Militant was j the occasion of a special luncheon yes-1 terday, ;:t which the ladies of the en- j semble were guests of the Salvation ! Army at its Brooklyn nursery, the en- j iment being in charge of Major' Gerberich. ? luncheon there was an insnec-? tion of the nursery. It was like nutj sundaes to Girl Scouts. The children I an instant appeal to the chorusj girls, and, after consultation, : Gerberich was besoughs to allow each girl to adopt a foundling. The major took counsel of Army officials, and an nounced that the plan was heartily ap- j proved. Each girl then picked out ai child, and, draping the infant on her ! arms, became its sponsor in the pres? ence of Mrs. Hammond, superintendent of the hospital. Under the agreement each fester ' mother will turn over to the Salvation ] Army the sum of $240 a year, the cost | of the child's upkeep, until she is able to takj it into her home or find one for it. "Proving," said Edna Starck, one of the stage lassies, "that the business of women i3 to love children." The "Whirl's" Salvation Army las? sies are led by Nsncy Gibbs, who Bings the r?le of Violet Grey, and the others I are Edna and Louise Starck, Virginia Wilson, Maylan Yates, June and Anne Barry, Anne Buckley, Edna Richmond, Helene O'Brien, Margaret Menges, Louise and Irene McGovern, Olive Clark and Mary Preston. J-, 100 Ministers to Confer Nearly 100 applications for permis? sion to attend the churchmen's con? ference at Union Theological Seminary, in the second and third weeks in July, already have been received, it was an? nounced at the seminary yesterday. The conference, the first since the war at Union Theological Seminary, is de? signed to give the men in active min? istry an opportunity for contact with the latest theological thought and to confer on the practical issues before the Church to-day. The list of speak ! ers includes Professor B. W. Bacon, of ?Yale; Professor Henry Sloane Coffin, ! Professor Eugene William Lyman. Pro? fessor Fullerton, of the Oberlin School of Theology; Professor Daniel J. Flem? ing and Professor William Adams Brown. A feature of the conference will be series of visits to the social institu? tions of the city, probably including Ellis and Blackwell's islands. Navy Club Host to Sailors Provision for the sailors of the A.t : ?antic fleet units that returned to New ! York yesterday from the Southern drill . grounds has been made at the Navy I Club, 13 East Forty-first Street, where the enlisted men make their shore headquarters. The fleet will be in port until July 10, when some of the ships are to be transferred to the Pacitic. The Navy Club is the only institution in Manhattan maintained for the use of the enlisted men of the navy and ma? rine corps. Akeley Will Hunt Gorilla in African Wilds ! Scientist ami Trailer of Bi^ \ Came to Obtain Speei- ! mens of Fast Diminishing I Species for M u s e n m ! Will Lead Party of Five' Two Women and Girl of Six I Years to Go Overland, Cape Town to the Congo Carl E. Akeley, scientist, sculptor and big game hunter, has completed i plans for an expedition into the heart of Africa to study the gorilla and ob tain specimens of that fast diminishing species for the Museum of Natural His- ! tory. Ile will lead a party of five, two j of whom are women and one a six- j year-old girl. "The primary object of the exped?- - tion is one of immediate necessity," Mr. Akeley said, "as there exists a very i real danger that the gorilla will be- j come exterminated before we have any- ', thing like an adeqate life history of this most interesting of primates." The party will embark next month for the Congo via Cape Town and the ! "Cape to Cairo" route. The members! will travel inland entirely by foot with '? the assistance of a native safari, or i caravan. Mr. Akeley said that no pre? cise itinerary had been devised, but . that explorations covering a period of six months will be made and hundreds : of miles of territory traveled. The members are, besides Mr. Akeley, Miss Martha Akeley Miller, his secretary; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bradley, of Chi- : cago, the latter better known as Mary ? Hastings Bradley, the writer, and the Bradleys' daughter, Alice. To Decide Details En Route "We intend to go into Africa ? equipped with a delightful uncer- j tainty and we will decide the details of the route as we go," Mr. Akeley said. Behind this attitude lies a secondary ! object of the trip, which the famous j explorer and hunter declares he has long wanted to carry out. "The true story of Africa has been rarely told and more rarely listened to. The general conception of it to-day is largely base;', on the narrations of ; past heroes and would be heroes. They j are of interest to many only in so far j as they are full of adventure and dan- j ger. The story we intend to bring back is the story of healthy, beautiful re- I gions of interesting wild people and i wild animals, seen through the eyes of I a six-year-old child, an athletic young; woman and a writer with a keen sense j for the dramatic in her writings of j et smopolitan affairs. "The two or three gorillas that may! be killed," Mr. Akeley continued, "will j be utilized at the .Museum of Natural ; History to the fullest extent for study. ; All parts of their anatomy will be pre- : served for the use of specialists in the | various lines of research. We hope i to pet motion pictures of the gorillas ! i'i their* natural habitat, but wo realize j ? ily by very careful preparation j and special equipment will it become ? remotely possible." To Take Special Camera Mr. Akeley will take a camera of his >. own invention, designed expressly to j meet the difficulties of wild animal j photography. He said it is necessary I to have an instrument that can be used I in dark places, one which can "shoot" a panorama rapidly and will operate without noise. "Personally," said Mr. Akeley, "I be? lieve the gorilla is an amicable, decent chap who probably won't look for trouble, but would make a terrible ?ight ? for its life or family, if cornered. I don't consider that the party will be in any more danger on this excursion I than you or 1 are in our own door- I yards. "I wish emphatically to state, how- | ever, that we are not out to kill for the fun of killing. When an adventurer ! says that killing the gorilla is sport j he is as good as admitting that killing | his own human neighbor is good sport. That's how I consider the gorilla?so close is it related to the human species, and it is only for science and education that we intend to kill any." .-m-? Bonomi Chosen to Head New Itaiian Ministry j If He Declines Poet, King Is Ex? pected to Offer Premier? ship to Orlando HOME, July 1,?Kinp Victor Emmanuel late to-day intrusted Signor Bonomi with the task of forming a Cabinet to succeed the ministry of Premier Gio litti, which tendered its resignation! early in the week. Signor Bonomi was j Minister of the Treasury in the Giolitti i Cabinet, and previously had been Min-1 ister of War and Minister of Public | | Works. The designation of Signor Bonomi j j followed upon the declination of Enrico j | Denicola, president of the Chamber of I S Deputies, to form a ministry. Should ? Signor Enrico fail in the task, former' ! Premier Orlando will be invited, and if he should decline the King will ask Signor de Nava, former Minister of Commerce and Labor. Mrs. Whitney's Art Exhibit To Open in Paris Mondav PARIS, July 1.?FaintinA which will ! comprise an exhibition if American art opening in Paris on Monday have arrived here from London. The dis? play has been arranged by Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, of New York, with the purpose of familiarizing the French art world with the American school of art. President Millerand and many other officials and men and women prominent j in the artistic and social life af Paris [have been invited to attend the exhi? bition. ENCHANTING TEA. ROOMS ^ O, RESTAURANTS ]E&^ ?^p^pr AND COFFEE SHOPS ggglfe* CENTRAL BR?NSH Q?FETERIA k?D ST A LEXINGTON AVE. SUBWAT ' 4"D GOO? FOOO-MllCK SEKVICB OFEN TO MEN AND WOMK?i Sourt-7 if io 9"-.. njSD_t?_SiML S:?0 to T:3> r^wThe Ann Fulton Cafeteria?t 1 WPU?fr>2R 8PS??ALS MEW AMD WOMB? j SCOTCH TEA ROOM L^\lt Y. W. C. A. Cafeteria ?9 W. 36tl. St. Opon 10:30 A. M. 7:30 JT. M. Men ??ri Worn?? Served. v?e ??f??C?~ l>?1 Koo,u- !? ?. 3s st THt V??CI Breakfast. Luncheon" 6 ?c. ; Dinner. ?1. Strictly bom? j a?~?\IJ\ TEA R'-'011' 3- West ?Tth M ALUHA lunch 45c & ?JOc?11:45 to 2.30 Chicken Dlp.ner._85c?.'>:?? to.8j3U_p^ M. Mw. Beckwith ___?i ?S^TS" tl.ao, 6 to g P. M- Dinner ?en-td In the .Garden. Tfc? ?irt-sf-tss-aNlnu-y ?Ism* ?f Nw vor?. I wlitr-? unique ?imwphrrw and ?M? *?u;u." I :? varied tuttt iavit? tfct ?l_r/mn*tni. I I-,-,-,-,J ?ESTACARA NTS Washington Gardens 72 WASHINGTON 8QUARB Telephone?Spring 9474 Luncheon?Tea?Dinner Sunday?Breakfast, 10 to 12; Supper. 6 to 8. Special Curry Dinners Arranged, by Telephone THE ENGLISH TAVERN 41 West 39th St. LUNCHEON. SUMMER GARDEN. SHIP'S II "Com* Aboard!" 12 W. 30th ?t. INN. Ii Luncheon, 65c. Dinner, ?1.0?. Afternoon Tea. A'.eo a la cart? ?tr.-ic?. AnJp?An'? Gr??nwicl) Cor. Tth A?, h Hin S?. MilUrign S Villas* Open ; ?m. to MidiiijUt. Luncheon 50c. Dinner 76c, Southern Hot W????i ?S?.-v?J with AU Dlonsn. A?o ? La Cart?. Mari? Fath?r Reetanrant. 13 East S?th Si. mane _?uier L,iru,h(,on ?, i a carte D?n a*r. 6 to 8. W'holeao-.n? Horn? L'?aRtJ h"(nt?. r-;-'?-1-1-. ! The Tribune Fresh Air Fund Tin* Fund Has Its Biggest Day in Forty-four Years and 1,050 Children Are Started for Vacation in Country The la.sf of yesterday's 1.500 country , bound Tribun? "Fresh Airs" staggered aboard train under toads of baga and bundle?! last night at exactly raidnigh:, daylighr. saving time. Yesterday morning's foreca I was that 1,025 boy3 and trirls would, during the day, de? part t'rom the land of tenements for the land of trees and flowers, but twenty flve additional invitations were re? ceived by telegraph at noon and the guests to fill them prot on" with the rest. The number of children sent out to bc^in vacations wns the largest in s single day durinc the forty-four year? of the fund's history. Contributions i'our In Contributions kept pouring into the fund office all yesterday, so that when the City Hail clock struck noon the ?irat tenth of the summer's budget oJ $100,000 had been passed. The fund received durinjr the day four donations of $200 each to estab? lish four "Vacations? in Perpetuity" endowments. The first of these endowments was established by William P. Wainwrighi-, the second in memory of Victoria R. Iteid, the third by Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Hamlin and the fourth by a man whe :vsked that his name be not published in The Tribune. Including these twelve such endowments have bee.: established for the fund. Here's one of the anxious ones: "Dear Sir: 1 am eight years old, mj brother Stepent in seven we would lik< to go to the country because my eye: are not strong and 1 want to get stronj pi ase let us go v/eill be very goot childrin thank you very much. "Your friend, "NICHOLAS S-" 'Piease don't forget us. "Your best freind, "STEPENT & NICHOLAS." Have you a heart that reaches dow to your pocket, Mister or Missus? Le it pump at least $7?the price of on child's happiness?out of your pocke and into The Tribune Fresh Air Fun to-day. We've $90,000 still to eo. The Fond to Date Contributions to the Tribune Fresh A Fund : Previously acknowledged .$ 8,502.! Anonymous . lOO.i "William H. Plummer & Co. 10.1 Edward F. Caldweil . 5j John W. Dickinson. 20. A. K. DcGulscard . 10. B. M. B. 1. "She loved children!" . 10. Mr. Alfred M. Best . 10. Samuel Kline . 6. Mrs. Alexander L. Sopor . lu. Elizabeth Medellcott . 14. Henry Cahn . 2. From a reader who has a dollar t.. spare . 1. O. K. Fullagar . 14. Caroline Thomas . 1. Ellen 1". Themas . 14 <;. N. Cree. 10. A Friend. 15. The Sperry Gyroscope Co. 14. Francis L. Robbm.s, Jr. -0 V I !. .1 acksu n . ? John li. Morris, Jr. 7 Si rah E. Hatch . 5 Samuel Eckstein. G .V'?-:. I?aac be Roy Allrn . 7 Albert G. Milbank . 10 C?cile and William Stern . 7 Nellie M. Weed . 7 ?Sarah E. Luyder. 7 "Sonny" . 7 Mi . r.udlow Barker . 7 Dr. Emil Specht . IE Mr, and Mrs. A. H. Bull . "i (.'. M. Graham . 1 A. J. Contracting Co. 1C John W. Durkee, M. O. J< S. M. Stern . ?jiidlum and Carland . 1' Frank L. Hubbard . "A Friend". ? . si .... Abe Kablbble . C. O. B. . . 00 , ( ;???.. i loan I r . .( Howard iioi;M . 10.00 Prang/race . . . ?rheetwrlghi. 10.00 H T. <'o. T.00 !. tt. Fast. 7.00 Mrs. B. B. Lydia W. Kendall . 6.00 Mr?. David M. Look . 10.00 Anna Kamm . 7.00 James H. Ait.kin . : ?,:' George A. Martin .'. 2G 00 !.. BJ, L. 35.00 O. B. Cutler . Donald and Doris Townsend .... 28 00 H. P. B. T 00 Mrs. John Forsyth . > 4.00 .! W Gave? . Mrs Wm. M. Beard . B6.00 F. A. H. A. L. 11. 5.00 ;?' Fish, Inc. J. Insley Blair. 25.00 <:,. C. H. ? .\. i'avlor . 7.00 I Wish I <\>uld ?pare More. 1.00 Mr, E. B. Alloy. 14.00 Patterson and Starke. 5.00 Jacob Levanson . 10.on H. W. Woodbouse . Mrs. Raymond V. Uunker. 25.00 F. W. N. 10.00 Airs. C. W. Clark. 25.00 Hortense L Cooper . - 0(1 M B. P. 25 Ofl E. S. Preston . 7.?C Elroy Curtis . 21.01' H. F. E. 1.01 Edward Guckenheimer . 14.01 In Memory of Jeannette. ?. 4.s>? it. \V. KeUey . 25. 01 Thomas I. Cohen . 15.0< Ernest E. Smith . 7.01 Theo Foulk . 20.01 Emily II. Mlchell . 7.01 Mrs. Scott P.. Hayes. 7.01 Dr. M. ( : McNevin. TO Mrs. Margaret Robinson. 5.0 S. Goldsmith Co. Clement H. Bugham . a. M. Silvey . to Robert R. Sizer . TO Arthur C. Frazer. 26.0 A. W. Spence . 10.(i Miss S. i '. Thorburn. .' Mux Schmetterling . 2.0 In Memory of Isabel. 10 0 John A. Hellawell. ?.O 1. B. IT. >' I... M N. 2.0 Edgorton . 10. d Mrs. S. G. Mortimer . L0.0 Joseph B. Sheffield . 10.C Mrs. Lothalr P. Kohnstamm. Christina Muendel . M l Mr?. C. F. Gab.de. 5.1 .1 W. Willlama. 14.( Mrs. Martha B. Myers. l.( Mrs. E. T. W. GUlespie. George Stevenson. M. D. 10.1 Mrs. William G. Beckers. ' ! '. A. W. Hillebrand . 10.1 Henry H. Jacob3on . 10.' Bessie . Lester M. Weiler. 10. In Name of Company E, 12th Infantry, N. Y. 25. Souther &- Souther.'. 7. David J. Morton . 14. H. T. Parson . 14. Mrs. I. Steinfeld . 1. H W. Maxwell .. T. Wlliard A. Mitchell . 10. Mrs. Arthur ?radshaw. 5. The Gift of Nathalie Flower Kip. 11)0. Mrs. John Van Xostrand. 5 II. G. M. . 10. George F. Schmerhorn . 5. Esther McKilvy . 7. E. A. B. 5 B. M. S. 14 A. F. Jonea. 25 George and Leonard Hail. 15 II. and K. W. 10 M. II. G. 20 Robert Wesl . 5 Mortimer Stiefel . 7 Mrs, Roland S. Condit. 21 Walter M. Wechsler . Flora E. McKinney . .Margaret. K. Bonnell . 5 Lillie P. Gray . 3 In Memory of Little Frances. T Bright monej saved for Mary Faith William, eleven months.. 1 Julia Wheelock . ' Mrs. C. D. Clark. - Total July 1, 1121. $10.271 Contributions, preferably by cheel money order, .should be sent to Tribune Fresh Air Fund, The Tribu New York City. Musicians' Union Turns Down Stadium Concerts New Orchestra Is Recruited, Largely From Philadelphia, for Eight Weeks' Season According to an announcement made yesterday by Arthur Judson, manager of the Stadium concerts, which will begin a season of eight weeks next Thursday evening, the New York Musi? cians' Union has refused to permit its members to play at these concerts. This has necessitated the engaging of a new orchestra. Mr. Judson gave out the following statement yesterday: "Very much to our sui'prise we were j informed to-day that owing to some, fancied grievance against the National Symphony Orchestra members of the local New York union would not be permitted to play engagements at the Lewisohn Stadium this summer. "The union was informed that the organization giving the Stadium con? certs was in no way, directly or in? directly, affiliated with the National Symphony, but the powers that be in the local union have ruled otherwise. "We have therefore, taken the local union at its word and have engaged a new orchestra, recruited chiefly fron? the Philadelphia orchestra and from other first class organizations. The orchestra as so constituted, will in all respects be the equal of any simi? lar organization in the country. The same high standard of concerts as heretofore given will be maintained. "We arc in no way opposed to union? ism, as is exemplified by the fact that the musicians employed are all union men. We however, resent the high? handed action of the leaders of the local union and feel that we can no longer tolerate their unwarranted in? terference. "We sincerely regret the hardship which the ruling of the local union will cause to individual members of the orchestra, but see no other course to pursue. "We are sure the public will stand behind the number of well-known men and women who are endeavoring, in the face of great difficulties, to give New York really high-class music at prices ! within the reach of all." -. McKay-Wilson Nuptials To-day Michael Lambert Wilson will be mar? ried to-day to Miss Charity Elisabeth McKay, youngest daughter of Mrs. Don? ald McKay, of Port Colburne, Ont., the ceremony taking place at the home of the bride's parents. After spending a month in the Adirondacks the couple will go to their home at 10 Millard Ave? nue, Bronxville, N. Y. $EwELf?$ ?*m?mSSm*mm ?w m WW Neuf, pcLvJ^r ?? i iiiiin /<??i_-?M\M0? Cohan,Seeking New Field, Wants Major Ball Club Abandons Theatrical Business and Starts on Indefinite Vacation Trip George M. Cohan, having decided to j abandon the theatrical fielo, at least i temporarily, is endeavoring to buy a ? major league baseball club. Mr. Cohan said yesterday: "If I can't get the club I want I won't bother with the game, but if I can get it I'll jump into baseball with both feet. I want to own the club. I want it to be mv club. I don't want to j merely own some baseball club stock." i Mr. Cohan's indefinite vacation be- ' gins to-day, when he goes to Orange I County, N. Y., to visit his mother over I the Fourth of July. He expects to re- ? turn for two days next week and then j start West in a motor car for an open I road vacation that may last until Thanksgiving. When that day is scratched off the calender he hopes to be starting abroad. "I may go to the Coast," he said yes? terday, "but my present plan is to knock around the Middle West." The Stage Door Four theaters wiil close their doors after to-night's performances, which will end the runs of "Sun-Kist" at the Harria The? ater- "Peek-A-Boo" at the Columbia, "The Broken W?ng" at the Forty-eighth Street and "Ladies' Night" at the Eltinge. Returns of the fight will be read In all theaters to-dw at the matinees. Leo Beers terminates his American sea? son at the New Brighton Theater to-mor? row, and will sail at once for a lengthy engagement in London. Ned Wayburn has acquired the rights to a new musical play entitled "Love Knots." by Alonzo Price and George Parker, with the music written by Antonio Barunno. Mr. Wayburn will present the piece in October. "The Nightcap," by Max Marcin and Guy Bolton. will begin rehearsals July 5. Jerome Patrick and Flora Sheffield will have the leading parts. Vi< .?-Admiral Jones, commander of the Atlantic Fleet, and seventy-five officers of his staff, from the U. S. S. Pennsylvania, attended last night's performance of "The Queen of Sheba" at the Lyric Theater as guests of William Fox. Lizzie Evans, a veteran theatrical stnr, will return to the stage next season, after a retirement of more than twenty years, to play the leading role in one of "The Bat" companies Wagenhals & Kemper wl? send on tour. "The Mask of Hamlet," by Ario Flamma. which Is scheduled to open at the Princess Theater August "2, has been translated from the Italian by Miss M. E. HerricK. Miriam Battista, the child star of "Hu moresque," will recite a patriotic poem. "The Question of the Flag," at the Rivoli Theater next week. "The Ghost of John Barleycorn," a satire on prohibition, will be one of the features of the Program of Divertissements at the Capitol Theater next week. Flo Ziegfeld has put a ban on the m-mbers of hia "Sally" and "Follies" com I panies appearing in other entertainments and has had the attention at all the per? formers called to the fact that he has the exclusive right to their services. Representative Gould to Wed Mrs. Muilin To-day Special D-iepatch to The Trthune PHILADELPHIA, July 1.?Mrs. Anne B. Muilin, of this city, will be the j bride here to-morrow of Representative Norman J. Gould, of Seneca Falls, N. Y. Mr. Gould said to-night, when asked if he would continue to live in Seneca Falls, that he had resided there forty five years and certainly would not give it up now. He would not eay where he and hi? bride were going on their honeymoon or when they would return. Scientists to Dig Out Ancie?H Armageddon Rockefeller Gives $60,000 for! Expedition to Scene of Battle A, 100 Years Ago eiai Dispatch to The Tribune ' CHICAGO, July 1. The site of Ar? mageddon, in Palestine, is to be ex? cavated by an expedition from the l'ni - versity of Chicago. This has been made possible by John D. Rockefeller jr.,who has donated $60,000 to help defray the expenses. Unusual interest attaches to tl Lerpri3e. Armageddon, or Megiddo, is the site of the first battle of which history carries any details. The Book of Revelation calls it the world's last battle. Dr. George Allen, secretary of the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago, said to-day: "It was in 1479 B. C. that one of the king3 of Egypt, Thothmes III. sought to extend his domination over Pales? tine and Syria and to the Euphrates. For a hundred years his predf. had had a foothold there. The battle of Megiddo took place in the first cam? paign. Thothmes captured Megiddo, but it was twenty years before he com? pleted his conquest. "Some digging has already been done en the site of this battle by an Aus? trian, but much remains to be done. The Germans put in thirteen years' work on the site of Babylon, when they were stopped by the World War." -? Lient. Dewitt Coleman To Have Military Burial Body of Aviator D?coratif! by King of Italy Arrives in Englewood ENGLEWOOD, N. J., July 1. The body of Lieutenant Dewitt Coleman, an aviator who served with distinction under Major F. H. La Guardia on the Italian front, reached Englowood to? day. There will be a military funeral Sunday afternoon. The Dewitt Coleman Post, of Tenafiy, and En?rlewood Post. 78, of the Amer? ican Legion, will attend the services, as will a detachment of the 13th In? fantry and officers of the air service from Mitchel Field, L. T. Flowers will be dropped on his grave from an air? plane. Major La Guardia will speak. Lieutenant Coleman's airplane was shot down in the battle of Vatterio V?neto, October 27, 1918, after he had brought down two Austrian machines. He had been in forty-si* engagements and wa3 the only foreigner to receive the Gold Medal for Valor, the highest Italian war decoration, from the King of Italy. The medal was presented to his mother in 1019 by General Gug?el motti, who made a special trip to this (??untry for the purpose. . The body of Elmer M. Romaine, of ' Maywood, N. J., who was killed Sep? tember 25, 1918. in France, will be bur? ied in Maywood to-morrow with mili : tary honors. -. Gen. Edward Fielding, Aid to Booth, is Dead Helped to Organize Volunteers of America and Ranked Next to Leader Major General Edward Fielding, next : in authority to General Ballington I Booth in the Volunteers of America, j is dead in Chicago, according to advices I received at headquarters here yester | day. General Fielding, who was fifty-nine | years old, was born in New York and ; entered evangeiics.1 work at the age of ? twenty. He joined General Booth at the organization of the Volunteers of America and was generally considered his most able assistant. lie had been in charge of the Northwestern terri? tory with headquarters in Chicago, and his efforts have resulted in the estab? lishment of workers in virtually every town and village and in the founding of orphanages, homes for the aged and other charitable institutions. General Booth, Colonel J. W. Crafts, national reasurer, and Colonel W. J. Meredith, national secretary, have gone to Chicago to take charge of the funeral. Bishop Koudelka Is Buried in Cleveland CLEVELAND, July 1.?Funeral serv? ices for Bishop Joseph M. Koudelka, of the Catholic diocese of Superior, Wis., were held in St. Michael's Church here, where he had been pastor for more than twenty-five years, to-day. He was buried alongside his parents in a little cemetery nearby. A nephew and namesake, the Rev. Joseph Koudelka, pastor of a Cleveland Catholic parish, was celebrant of the solemn requiem mass. The absolution was given by the Rev. Joseph F. Mueller, of Superior, who with a num? ber of priests and laymen accompanied the body here Wednesday evening. Bishop Koudelka died in Superior last Friday. He planned and super? vised the construction of the church in which his funeral was held. Gen. Maurice-Camille Bailloud PARIS, July 1.?General Maurice Camille Bailloud, of the French army, died here to-day as a result of an acci? dent which occurred last Monday, when he fell from an airplane while on a trip to Strasbourg. The greater part j ox General Bailloud's career in the military was passed in Africa, mainly | in Algiers. During the great war he served conspicuously in the Near East ; operations, and in the Dardanelles campaign he took command of the I French forces during the fighting, re | placing General Gouraud when the ; latter was wounded. General Bailloud, who was seventy three years old, was a grand officer of the Legion of Honor. THOMAS H. LOWD?N PORT CHESTER, N. Y., July 1.? ; Thomas H. Lowden, seventy-eight years j old, ?? til the time of h;s death an ac? tive nember of Howard Hook and Lad? der Company, a volunteer fire organiza i tion, died to-day. He was a member of the company for forty-nine years, and during that time did not miss a single alarm to which the company re? sponded. He missed only two members regular meetings held by the members and was president of the board of works of the Fire Department when he died. During his early life he was a sailor. WALLACE ?. BALlTrD SOUTH BEND, Ind., July 1.?Wallace A. Bailard, fifty-eight years old, presi? dent of the New Jersey, Indiana & Illinois Railroad, died here last night after four weeks illness with perfor? ated gastric ulcer. Funeral will be held Saturday afternoon. Mr. Ballard had been connected with the railroad since its organization in 1905, starting as an engineer. DR. L, l! ST?T?N TARBORO, N. C, July 1.?Dr. L. L. i Staton, physician, banker and cotton j manufacturer of this city, died hereto day of heart disease. He was seventy j two years old and is sorvived by a ! daughter and two sons, one of whom is j Commander Adoiphus Staton, U. S. N., stationed at the War Colisa?. New? port, R. I. General Da^es a Composer Fritz Kreisler Playing Mclmly ?f I l][fating Bndget Chief <""H?C AGO.J ily L ? ' ,)awey, chairman of the board of the Centra1 Trost Company, a brig ..- eral in the A. E. F. und who is ncrw in Wash? ing-on -? rvernnenlP* budgi I system, appeared :n a ne to-day -that of a musical eomp' u the author of a ,y in A Mfl r being ? ? . knewn t ? -mpoti? to b? pub? lished. Birth, Engagement, Marriage. Death and In Mernorism Notice* may he telephoned to The Tribune any time ?? up to midnight f*r m icrtion m the next dav/r paper. Ta DEATHS BEK<> \\ ? ? | r.?:.-,v*i. late resi i?lKV. N ? ? n of .,,? an-: husbai BrBGGROF - it, C, servi ;n Sub i!av, ? : BY/BNS den i urna and mother Soi- ? f I.AR'-.E on JUI bUBi bar Emma and Elizabeth. - urday. J i the ELLIOTT [JH. fcp at Ih* ;? E. !.. l uoklyu, I on Tuesda p. m. ElilSOS-On Monday. Jui . at Catskil in hi r 201 h Herman an and sis !';i neral 491 4th st., Br . July 3, at Paul'? ELY?AI '.< : . Juno ?? _-y G.. beloved hua of Funny I st.. Saturday, July ?, at il a. r:i. In? terment at Bridgeport. JCREK ?- Herman. Campbell J Church, Bway, 66th ?t., KEATING?On June 29, Ellen, at her - n av? the Bronx. Funeral Sa I KEE1.V the hem? >f her sister, Mrs. ov ot Thomas Dim Rs quleni . hureh, Saturday, a. m. Pat papera pleas? copy. KILPATRI? K -AI v nt air, N. day, July ?. 1921, Anna Harris, ::. Kil . sir home, 63 Eagle Rock Way, Saturday. MILLS S ?. June 30. 1921, Virginia H. the ?air- John >'. Hart. Fu?era ? July '!. at 2 p. m. MORGAN?On .Tun on Morcan, gan. Bedford av., M N. J. Requii irch I, I urday, July 2, at 10 a. in. Interment Calvary !emi ery. O'BBIEX?At h~r residence, 44 Prospect st., White Plains. N. Y.. Jui Mrs. P. J. O'Brien, beloved wife of Patrick J. ani . garet M. .: nd m re quiein higrh mass Church of St John the :. Monday morn PAXSOX?A; Paxson urday afternoon ai - saving 1820 Chestnut sl ... ln . Tit private. SIMMONDS?On Wednesday Ju> 1921, at 1. av.. Sudlow ? P. ano his i 7 : h ;. ar STEVENS Sud ; ily I, Daa . 30 p. m. !?' Peeks kill. N Y., on - STRIKER?AI June Striker an.i Martha J. from her late ?e av., on Saturday, Ju :locli, day? light Bavins time. BTJOABMAN?Mino, beloved wife o? Joseph J.. mother of j ?? parted June 30. Fu Foly ?;. from bite residence. ... Newark. N. J. VICTORY George husband of residence, Count] cheater, Bronx, Solemn reqrj Church at 10 o'clock. In term* Raymond's VOGEL- On A., beloved moth in her ? are invite.i I . . :<> her late residei -, lyn, on ?Saturday, July . ..; tb?-n'.-e to Church of the st. and Marcy av, Interment Calvary Cemetery. WELLS ly. on June ? ving). Fu neral sen blast 3!>ti! Interment WILLIAMS N V Punerai service* ?- be held at .. Summit, X. t., on T^esdas. Jui WOR/THINiiToN Thurs? day .; a Fu nerul Saturdaj ?-,; ngt-.m, Vt. Interment Cal] Colarnbu? 8200 Coaipi?^e Funeral service m an atmosphere or rcfinrmrat " The best cos?* n*. m FRANK E. CAMPBELL "THE FUNERAL CHURCH" Inc. N M Broadway at 6*?th St. ????_??_???_? ?t Need, 2WU K?? INC rnctrrtukers. C_i (/ 207j ?Ummdi ?07th St & Amsterdaa Ar. Tae Cost of a Fanerai -,t br our borne m At tie Hoar ? Dears Call Circle 1-500 FIFTH AVENUE MEMORIAL Fane a! Pinwlor?* (Xon-S4K- tartan?. 40 Wut 57th St. vux woonu Mid 8u By Harlem Lots ot smkli