1
Newport Crowd At Casino to See Tennis Tourney *i Three Teams Euter in Mixed Doubles Matches, Which Will a^tart on Saturday: Yachting Parties Arrive Luncheons Feature Day yiv. and Mrs. Peter Roberts Give Dinner: Dr. and Mrs. Jacobs To Be Hosts To-day Special Dispatch to The Trio«««! KEWPORT. July 17..Three tennis toarosrn'rit^ with the ranking women piayert of the country entered were outstanding features in social circles it the Casino to-day. The contestants appeared before large galleries both morning and afternoon. Among those «ho watched the r'ay were Com¬ modore and Mrs. Arthur Curtiss James, yin. William K. Vanderbilt 2d. Mr. T. Safern Tailer. Mr. Robert Gould Shaw U. Mr» RIV' Mrs. Craig Biddle, Dr. and Mr». Hamilton Rice, former Ambas- tîdor James W. Gerard. Mrs. Ogden H. Hammond. Mrs. Forsythe Wickes, Mrs. William Goadby Loew, Mr. Thomas Ridgway. Mr. Lawrence W. Waterbury, Miel Maffraret Steward. Admiral Wins- low, Uti. Charles S. Whitman, Miss Murie! Vánderbilt, Miss Helen Moran, Mr. 1. Townsend Burden and Mr. Drexel Biddle. Mrs. Charles H. Baldwin and Mrs. John Aspfgrer, were luncheon hostesses to-day. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Roberts entertained at dinner this evening. Dr. aad Mrs. Henry Barton Jaeobs have a dinner planned for to-morrow. Mrs. Charles S. Whitman entertained Mr. »nd Mrs. Henry Seligman, of New York, at a small luncheon held at her Prices Nerk cottage to-day. Mrs. Frederick \\ inthrop Hamilton is the guest of Mrs. Nathaniel R. Thayer. Mrs. John R. Drexel jr.. Miss Mar- earet Stewart an Mr. Lawrence Water- bury have been week-end guests of former Governor Beekman. Mr. E. A. Walton 2d is staying with Mr. Loril- lard Spencer. Mrs. J. S. Cosden is be¬ ing entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Wil¬ liam Goadby Loew for a week. Mr. Ogden L. M ils has Mr. Lydig Hoyt as his guest, and Mr. and Mrs. William De Forest Manice, of Edge Hill, are the guests of Mr. E. Hayward Ferry. Three teams entered to-day for the mixed double:- handicap tournament that will be started Saturday. They are Mrs. Barger Wallach and Mr. Craig Biddle, Mrs. William Goadby Loew and Mr. J. Gordon Douglas, and Mr. Charles Moran and Miss Helen Moran. Several yachts arrived in the harbor to-day, including the steam yacht Cutherea. Mrs. Darkness; the Caroline, Mr. Lorlllard Spencer; the Adroit, Mr. Isaac Emerson, and the Narad, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Walters. Commodore Arthur Curtiss James left for New Y'ork this evening on board the Aloha. Many Here Entertain At Cafe Luncheons Mr». Moses Taylor is Hostess for Her Daughter, Fiancee of Mr. Langhorne Gibson Mrs. Moses Taylor gave a sma'l luncheon yesterday at Pierre's at which she entertained for her daughter, Miss Marian Taylor, whose engagement to Mr. Langhorne Gibson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson, was recent¬ ly announced. Among others who entertained friends at luncheon yesterday at Pierre's were Mrs. J. Alien Townsend, Mrs. Oliver W. Bind, »Mrs. Robert L. Stevens and Mrs, Adrian Iselin. Mr. an«! Mrs. Stephen Pell enter- tainsu a group of friends yesterday at luncheon in the Japanese Garden at the RiU-C'arlton. Among others who had guests there for luncheon were Mrs. J. D. Lyons, who entertained for her daughter, Mrs. Nelson Slater jr., who, with Mr. Slater, has just returned from a trip around the world; Mr. and Mm. Carrol L. Wainwright and Mr. »nd Mrs. Warren Kinney. Mrs. Hugh H Baxter, who returned last week irora Europe, was hostess at a luncheon yesterday at Delmonico's. Mr. and Mrs. James C. Parrish jr., whose wedding took place last week, ar« at the Ritz in Atlantic City. Mrs. Parriah, before her marriage, was Mrs. W. Burton Elkins. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Boyer, who hav» just arrived from Paris, where they have been making their home, are at the Hotel Ambassador. Mr». Boyer it th« daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Perci¬ ba! Hill, of Greenwich, Conn. Mrs. John Innes Kane, who has been «t the Hotel Ambassador since her re¬ turn from Europe, left yesterday to open her cottage at Bar Harbor, where she will be for the remainder of the season. Mrs. Arthur B. Twombly Is occupy¬ ing her cottage at the Profile House in the White »Mountains. Miss Margaret Perkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C Perkins, will leave for South America on Au- ifust 5 to attend the exposition at Rio de Janeiro. She will be accompanied h' Dr. and Mrs. Marius Johnston, of Pittsburgh. .Mr. p. H. B. Frelinghuysen, of Mor- nstown, N. J., has taken the Wood- cote cottage at Saranac Inn, and with nu famiiy will spend July and August m the Aairondacks. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Duell, who nave been at the Ritz since coming to New York from Newport, have gone to Boston îor a brief visit. Mr. and Mr?. Charles J. Coulter, who «re in New York from their home at Tuxedo, &re staying at the Vanderbilt. Mrs. Daniel P. Carr and Mrs. A. H. rarr' wnfj are in New York from Dur- .m, N. c, are at the Lorraine during their stay here. Senator Spencer Has Three Sons as Guests "».*. Helen Dortch hongstreet. Widow of Confederate Gen¬ eral, Plans Trip to Alaska From The Trtbunc's Washington Bureau Washington, July n. Senator ana «Mrs. Seiden P. Spencer are having * family reunion (.his week with their ."fee son*. Senator Spencer returned rnia morning from New York, where he *pent the week end, and was accom- hT'* in ^v- Louis, is their guest in r**»r apartment at the Brighton, as Î? their eldest son, Mr. Seiden P. »Percer jr. »rs. Helen Dortch Longstreet, widow Mrs. George Faber Downey Jr. She is the guest of her motlier, Mrs. Edward Van Ingen, at Southamp¬ ton, L. f., following her return last week front her honeymoon trip to Europe. of the Confederate general, who has been detained in Washington all sum¬ mer by the serious illness of her mother at a local sanitarium, expects to leave about th'.« middle of August for a trip to Alaska. Mrs. McCormick, wife t>f Senator Medill McCormick, went to New York to-day to remain for a few days before returning to her home, Rock View Farm, Byron, 111. Mrs. McCormick came to Washington last week, closed their house on F Street and established the Senutor in the small house overlooking Rock Creek Park which he has leased for the summer months. Lieutenant Colonel Wallace M. Craigie, U. S. A., retired, has with him as a guest at the Rochambeau his stepdaughter, Miss Jean Maverick, of San Antonio, who will spend part of I her school vacation here. Rear Admiral and Mrs. Cameron IiIcR. Winslow entertained a company ¡ informally at luncheon yesterday for their daughter, Miss Natalie Winslow, in their cottage at Newport. Mr. gnd Mrs. Frederick S. Stitt, of Chevy Chase, Md., announce the mar- riage of their daughter, Agnes Wood¬ ward, to Mr. F. Davis Little, on July 12, at Portland, Me. The bride is a popular member of, the younger group in the vicinity of Chevy Chase. Mrs. Hazel Rogers. Phillips and Miss Marion Milligan received at a tea in I Miss Milligan's apartment at the Port- ner, from 5 to 7 o'clock yesterday af¬ ternoon. They were assisted by Mrs. Carrie Foy. Included in the seventy- five guests wer« Major and Mrs. James F. Johnson, Major and Mrs. Thacker V. Walter and Major 0. H. B. Blood- worth jr. Women Golfers to Meet On Southampton Links Weekly Matches at Shinnecock Club To Be for 18 Holes; Will Give Medals to Winners Special Dispatch to The Tribune SOUTHAMPTON, N. Y., July 17.. ! The women's matches to be played every Thursday afternoon on the links of the Shinnecock Hills Golf Club will be for eighteen holes this week, medal play prizes being offered for the lowest net scores and for tho lowest gross scores. Mrs. Finley Peter Dunne la chairman of the committee, which in- eludes Mrs. Grosvenor Nicholas, Mrs, P. A. Valentine, Mrs. Lucien H. Tyng, Miss Estelle O'Brien, Mrs. Dudley 01- cott 2d and Mrs. Reginald Fincke. Mrs. Henry Chickering v/i'.l present the prizes for the golf matches this week. Twenty-four cotiples have en- tered for the mixed foursome, to be played every Sunday afternoon on the i links of the Shinnecock Hills Goli Club, different persons donating th« prizes for each day. I Mrs. David Holier is chairman oi tho committee arranging the music features of the East Hampton Greciar pageant, which vviil be given in tht Mfiidstor.e Club, July 21, for the bene* fit of St. Luke's Episcopal Church. Mrs. Ellery James and Mr. Robert Pell will sing a chant in the tableaux the accompaniment to be played bj Mrs. George Barton French. The open ing address will be made by Johr Drew. Assisting Mrs. HelUr will bt Miss Maude Bouvioi, Mrs. Michaeli-, Bouvior, Miss Margaret Taylor. Misi Margaret Hollister and Mrs. Chauncey Some of the patroneses of thi pageant at East Hampton are Mrs. Johi E. Berwind, Mrs. Edward deCliffon Chisholm, Mr3. Lucien Tyng, Mrs Moses Pyne, Mrs. Sidney W. Fish Mr. Samuel L. Parrish, Mrs. Georg. Barton French and Frank Wiborg. In the mixed foursomes played yes tordav afternoon on the links of th Shinnecock Club, Miss Florence Hin Johnson and Mr. Daniel Grant, Mis Clara Leo and her partner, Mr. Howar Elliott jr.; Miss Helen Lee and Mi Lawrence Van Ingen, all came in wit! a score of 93. In playing off the mate: Miss Johnson arc! Mr. Grant won th first prize. Second prize was won b Miss Clava Lee and Howard Elliot Mrs. P. A. Valentine was the dono of the Dri2es. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. William; 1125 Park Avenue, have opene their cottage in East Hampton i Apaguogue Road. Mr.-. Cornelia Bliss and Miss Lizzi Plummer Bliss are at their summe plnry in Wickapogue for the seasoj Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Clarke are ha*-, ing their summer home in South Mai Strec': opened to-day and will axriv from Philadelohin Friday. Mrs. Tcnbrocck M. Terhune will er tertain at luncheon at her sumnu home in Main Street Thursday aftei noon. Mrs. Florence Sehirmer and Mir Lousia S. Wilson, who came Friday t join a party at the summer home c Mr. Malcolm Meacham in Hill Street, will remain for several days. Mr. nnd Mrs. Bache Hamilton Brown, of Morristown, N. J., who have been visiting her mother, Mrs. Alexander Harvey Tiers, at her summer home in Meadow Lane, are receiving con¬ gratulations on the birth of a son born Saturday night. Mrs. Graham Williams and John Hollins are guests of Mr. and Mrs Arthur B. Claflin at their summer home in Shinnecock Hills. Mr. Daniel Grant is visiting at the home of Mrs. Edward Van Ingen for a few days. Miss Davies Entertains Garden Club at Lenox Floi*>er Culture Discussed From Standpoint of Personal Expe¬ rience; Other Social Activities Special Dispatch to The Tribune LENOX, Mass, July 17..Miss Marion Davies, sister of Bishop Thomas Fred- crick Davies, entertained the Lenox Garden Club Council at her Lenox villa this afternoon. Mrs. Carlos De Heredin read a paper on "A Sicilian Garden" and members related their personal experiences in flo-ccr culture. Mrs. Edwards Spencer was at the tea tables. Dr. and Mrs. Austen Fox Riggs, of Stockbridge, have gone to Islesboro, Me., Until September. Mrs. Churchill Satterlee is the guest of Mrs. Joseph S. Whistler at Plum- stead, in Lenox. Mr. and Mrs. Henry- White have Mrs. White's son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Henry Hammond, and Miss Emily S. Ham¬ mond and Miss Adele S. Hammond as guests at Elmcourt for two weeks. Dr. and Mrs. William Gilman Thomp¬ son had Dr. R. Foster Kennedy as a week end guest at Konkapot, in Stock- bridge. Mr. and Mrs. George Clarke Bryant, of Ansonia, Conn., have been making a tour through the Berkshire Hills by automobile. Mrs. Dorothea Robbins and Mr. William Landon, of New York, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Sedgwick. Mr. Bernhard Hoffman, who has been staying at Harrod's, in Stockbridge, since his return from Europe, left to¬ day for Santa Barbara, Cal. The Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes is fishing for salmon on the Little Casca- pedia River, Quebec. Arrivals at the Maplewood Hotel, in Pittsfield, include Mr. and Mrs. Har¬ rison K. Caner and Mr. and Mrs. Alex¬ ander G. Rea, of Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Parsons and her two sons, Herbert jr., and Mcllvaine Par- Bons, leave here to-morrow on a four weeks' trip to Colorado Springs and the Grand Canyon. Mr. John E. Parsons started to-day for Sómbrete, Mexico. .-..«.- Miss Caroline Marsh Weds Marríace to Mr. J. K. McCadden Takes Place Here The wedding of Miss Caroline Free¬ man Marsh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Allyn Marsh, and Mr. Joseph K. Mc- Fadden jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. McCadden, took place yesterday af- ternoon at the Church of the Trans¬ figuration. Mr. Donald Dixon was best man, and Miss Elsie Marsh, sister of the bride, was the maid of hpnor. Mr. McCadden is a graduate of Princeton and during the war served as a lieutenant in the 6th U. S. Cavalry. After a honeymoon trip in the White Mountains Mr. and Mrs. McFadden will make their home in New Yrork. » Miss Inez Coleman Bride Of Mr. James H. Noyes The marriage of Miss Inez Coleman, daughter of Mrs. Joseph G. Coleman, of Asbury Park, and Mr. Douglas K. Noyes, son of Mr. James H. Noyes, of Orange, was celebrated at Elizabeth, N. J. on Saturday. The ceremony was performed at the home of the bride'3' aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ry.no, by the Rev. Edwaj-d M. Noyes, of Newton Center, Mass, uncle of the bridegroom, and was witnessed by a largo number of friends and l-elatives. Mrs. John Harris, of Trenton, N. J., was matron of honor, and Mr. Herbert M. Noyes served as best man. The future home of Mr. Noyes and his bride wilt be in Melrose Place, South Orange. Mr. Noyes is a graduate of Yale. 1907, and is connected with the National City Bank. a, Miss Marie L. Meyer to Wed The engagement has been announced of Miss Marie Louise Meyer, daughter of. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Henry Meyer, of New York, and Mr. John Kenneth Porter, son of Mrs. Thomas Porter, of Scranton, Pa. The wedding will tak* place in September. Elopers Tell and Belated Wedding Presents Pour In Miss O'Loughlin and C. K. Robinson, Football Star, Slip Away From Jersey Party in Borrowed Car A belated shower of wedding gifts descended on the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. O'Loughlin in East Orange, N. J., yesterday following announce- ment of the elopement and marriage Saturday night, of Miss Géraldine O Loughlin and Charles Knox Robin- son, of Avon-by-the-Sea. Thev stole a march on relative» and friend's during a Saturday night party at the O'Lough- un home, The marriage took place in Hanover Presbyterian Church at Hanover,-N. J. While fifty guests were being enter- tamed by the O'LougHlins Robinson borrowed the O'Loughlin car to take his finncre for a rid'.*." Once away from the house he informed her that he hnd obtained a marriage license and urged her consent to an immediate wedding. The Rev. E. R. Barnard, pastor of the Hanover Presbyterian Church, was supervising choir practice when re¬ quested by Robinson to officiate. Ho consented, and fifteen minutes later Mr. and Mrs. Robinson departed to the music of a full choir. The bride and bridegroom returned to the O'Loughlin home and no an- nouncement was mode of the event until yesterday when Mrs. Robinson confided in her mother. News of the marriage wna iss-.ied by Mrs. O'Lough- lin, who added that the elopers had been forgiven. The marriage resulted from a ro- mentir attachment formed in the autumn of 1910 at a football prnme between Blfiir Institute, of Blairs- town, N. J., and Peddie Institute, of Hightstown, N. J. Robinson wan half¬ back on the Blair team. He became engaged to Miss O'Loughlin two years ago and announcement, was made re- cently that they would be married next year. Both families are wealthy. Monk Enters Monastery To Kill Love for Siren Father Mortillac' Heartbroken After Futile Attempt to Save Mata Hari From ExeVution PARIS, July 17 (By The Associated Press)..Father Mortillac, the French, monk reputed to have been the last admirer of Mata Hari, the celebrated Dutch dancer who was executed by the French near the end of the war as a Gorman spy, has been located in the Carthusian Monastery at Cartuja de Mirafloros, Spain. Mortillac disappeared after a vain effort to save the woman about whom Vicente Blasco Ibanez wove his war romance, "Mare Nostrum." While leading Carthusians deny that the monk has entered the order, it is affirmed in authoritative quarters that he is in the monastery attempt¬ ing to bury h¡3 sorrow for his lost love. The woman was known also as Marguerite Zeil. Mortillac~is said to have been heart¬ broken when he discovered thai. Mata Hari was a German spy. Afterward he learned that she had a husband, a Scottish officer, who married her in Java, taking her from a Buddhist tem¬ ple, where she was a dancer, and that he died of grief in Scotland after he had discovered her in Paris and was unable to persuade her to leave a Ger¬ man to whom she had become attached. -»- Annual Report for U. S. On All Mandated Areas Correspondence With Japan Over Yap Situation Made Public by Hughes From The Tribune's Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, July 17..The Amer¬ ican government is to be fully advised every year on the administration of all mandated territory, it was disclosed to-day by the State Department in mak¬ ing public the exchange of notes be¬ tween the United States and Japan re¬ garding the mandate for the island of Yap. The correspondence also dis¬ closes that should the United States in the future desire to make commercial treaties applicable to Australia and New Zealand., it will reek to obtain an extension of such treaties to the man¬ dated islands south of the equator. Japan also agrees that "the usual com¬ ity will be extended to nationals and vessels of the United States in visit¬ ing the harbors and waters of islands under Japanese mandate." The treaty between the United States and Japan covering the island of Yap was signed at Washington Feb¬ ruary 11, ratified by the two govern¬ ments in June and the exchange of rat¬ ifications was effected here July 13. Aid for Destitute Family _ge» Touched by Tribune Story, Woman Sends Check A check for $5 made out to the order of Kaiman Fuchs by Cornelia Cooke, of Milford, Pa., was received yesterday bv The Tribune. Fuchs, who lives at 107* Lewis Street, was held about a week ago by Magistrate Oberwager on a charge of failure to próvido for his children in the Hebrew Orphan Asy¬ lum. In default of bail, he was Bent to the Tombs and while there news¬ paper investigation disclosed the fact that, his wife had been kept locked in her rom for seven months because, as Fuchs said, "she was not right in the head." It was a story in The Tribune of last Wednesday telling the conditions ex¬ isting in Fuchs's home which prompted Miss Cooke to send the check. On the 3ame day Justices Freschi, Healy and Yoorhees in Special Sessions placed Fucha on probation in order that he might return home to care for his wife. The check was sent in care of Magis¬ trate Oberwager. who yesterday turned it over to The Tribune. .¦¦ Berengaria Makes Fast Trip; Averages 23.21 Knots Cables advices received yesterday by the Cunard Line reporting the arrival of the steamship Berengaria at the Cherbourg breakwater said she had made the run across the Atlantic in five days, nineteen hours and thirty- one minutes at an average speed of 23.21 knots. Captain Smith reported he "let her out" on the last-thirty-four miles and averaged 25.18 knot« for that distance. -,..-r.- Going On To-day DAY American Museum of Natural History; ad- mission free. Metropolitan Museum of Art; admission free. j Now York Historical Society; admission free. Aquarium; admission free. Brooklyn Museum; admission 25 cent«. Van Cortlandt Park Museum; admission free. Zooiocles! Park; admission free. Luncheon or the Merrhants' Association. Hotel Riltmore. 1 o'clock, Lecture by S. L. Strivings on "The New York State Farmers' Problems In l**ood Troduetion." Teachers College, 5*;5 West 120th Street, 2:"0 o'clock. NIGHT Meeting of the Orand Street Boys, Hotel Pennsylvania, i o'clock. I-__.-,-, The Tribune Fresh Air Fund They're Off! 892 Assorted "Fresh Airs" Starting for Country To-day to Put Roses in Cheeks; City Folks Fail to Keep Fund Up to Mark How many Fresh Airs to-day? t Eight hundred and ninety-two. And every one of them goes to n pri- vate home -a home whose owners have their hospitality all tuned up and the'ri hearts all aglow with kindness to give! their expected guests the best possible vacations. Here's the day's Fresh Air work¬ sheet: I.pnvlng Number time. Pr>st!nnt|o.i. children 8:40 au m.Moutpeller, \'t. D4 8.-to a. m .-rialnfieli.1. N. H. 1) 9:10 a., m..Miliord, N. J. 10 9:50 a.m..Geneva, N. V. 11 "> 10:03 a. m..nurllnn-tnn, Vt. 3 49 11:00 a. m..Elmlra, tar. T. 254 il.no a. m..Springfield, Mae». S2 11 00 a. m,.Northampton, Mads... 52 11:00 a. m..Keene, N. H. 24 1:06 p.m..Athens, Ta. .62 3 00 p.m..Stockton, N. J. 10 S .-30 p. m..Norfolk, Conn. 24 4:21 p m .Califon, N\ J. 7 Six states are represented in the list of Fresh Air hosts. At 9 o'clock last night everything was -set for a perfect score for the day. Every place in the long host list had been filled in accordance with specifications. "Fresh Airs" a la Carte Oh. yes, there are specifications to be met. The hosts have varying tastes as to the sort of children they would like to entertain. One of yesterday's list wanted "two little colored girls, not too dark." Another wanted "a curly-haired French Catholic," another "hoy twins not over five years old," rt;ll another "dark complecr.ioned eirl thirteen years old with bobbed hair," and yet another "a nine-year-old Prot¬ estant with a txqod disposition." But the sticker among the specifica¬ tions wa3 one caiîing f»r "two German Jews.be careful about this." There didn't seem to be anything in that to worry about when the Fund started out to select the children, hut if the Fund were an ordinary human it would have lost ton pounds and had gray hair be¬ fore the battle was won. Nobody knew any utile German Jews who were poor and needed the country. One worker to whom the request was referred had "two very nice little Spanish Jews" that she was sure would do; another had "two dear little Portu¬ guese Jewish girls," and a third had two Austrian Jews. But out of the twenty workers in different sections ol the city not one had the thing that th« Fund was warned to "be very carefu nboulf," and finally at 4 o'clock the ef fort to find them was given up. Three Cheers! They're Found "Too bad," everybody said, "there is every sort of child in the city in neec of Fresh Air and there must be Germar Jews, but where, whore, where?" Then at 6 o'clock the telephone ranf and there came along the wire an ex ulimit "I've got 'em!" So they, too will get going this morning. All day long, from 9 in the morninj till 9 at night, the. Fund's medical ex aminer3 hustled from station to sta tion throughout the city, meeting thi children selected to fill the places, ex amining them, passing them, rejectini them. And when the last happenei there was the work to do all ove again.the Methodist, the Catholic, th bobbed-haired girl, the twins or wha not had to be hunted and found one more. But it was dime, and the scor stands for a perfect game, unless som youngster puts a black mark in th error column this morning by failin to appear at the train. Lots of work at this end of the va cation line, but no more.probably no so much.as at the other. For week past the committees in the communi ties which are to entertain the chil dren have been hustling. On them fe' the burden of arousing interest in th Fresh Air campaign, of persuadin their friends and neighbors to ope their homes to the Fund's little pre teges. But again it was done, an gladly. Club Members Hustle In Elmira, N. Y., it was done by th members of the Kiwanis Club, done t the tune of 254 invitations for chi dren. In Geneva, N. Y., it was don for the second time by the Rotar Club members for a total of 115 inv tations. In Northampton the Elks ca: riec! the campaign through, and i Burlington, Vt. the same organizatic had a hand in the result, though the did not head the committee. In the other places the committei that did the work were simply grou] of kind-hearted residents of the coc munltics. In Athens, Pa., and Norfolk, Conn., the committees were old ones that have done the same work for many | years. In Montpclier, Plainfield, Mil- ford, Springfield, Keene and Stockton the committees were mnking their first experiment as Fresh Air Hosts. Butr--a big but -while the Fund and its country friends and co-operators were putting In the busiest day cf the summer, the city friends of the chil- ! dren let down. The day's receipt through contributions were less than $1,000, the smallest amount received since the active season opened. Against this $1,000 the Fund had to set yesterday a bill for railroad tickets of approximately (4,000, cash down. Buy §7 Wort:« of Happiness With th'j country folks doing so well, won't you city friend3 of Fresh Air "fellers" help out? Seven dollar« sent fis a contribution to the Fund will make a "feiler" happy for two weeks. and make you happy, too. Try it. Contributions to The Tribune Fresh Air Fund: Previously acknowledged.$33,754.1)9 Money saved by Miss Dorothy Wilson . 1.34 ,T. W. Latimer. 10*10 In loving memory of my husband, Oeotgo H. Miller. 10.00 Two Sisters . 5.00 Mrs H. L. R. Edgar. 6.00 Anonymous . 2.00 Samuel Brodlo . 2.i*>0 Friend . 2.00 Genevlve . 1 "0 Louis Friedman . 100 Fresh Air Committee, Dansville. N. Y. 61.00 Frederick K. Gaston. 10.00 O, W. Stewart. S.00 E. S. Peck. 7.00 M. A. Wells. 5.00 l.^e s Burnham. 5.oo Edith Ck Walter. 10.00 Hubert C. Muir. 10.00 Mrs L. C. Boulee. 5.00 Colonel Andrew Hero jr. 0.00 Elizabeth H. Jackson.,. 25.00 In loving memory of L. 10.00 A. M. Selling. 10.00 Mr. and Mrs. 55. T. Dugan. 7.00 In memory of my dear children, Ruth and George. 10.00 W. L. Bradley. 14.00 Elizabeth W. Clements. 6.00 John W. McKee. 5.00 Nolan R. Best. 10.00 R. L. C. 7.00 A. G. Zimmerman. 10.00 Conseil Genest 305. 5.00 E. A. A. 15.00 Katherine D. B. and Carolyn D. B. 10.00 In memory of H. W. 7.00 Eleanor Hvtner . 14 On Peter Iselin . 25.00 In memory of Walter. 10.00 Mtb. I. H. Polhemus. 7.00 A. Van Home Stuyvesant Jr... 60 00 A. P. L. 7 00 M. F. C. 10.00 Mr. and Mrs. J. O. K. 15 00 Two old friends of Rev. Willard Parsons . 10.00 Mrs. F. Bogemeistor. 7.00 J. J. W. E. 7.00 Miss Josephine C. Smith. 10.00 Daniel P. Morse. 25.00 Miriam Werner . 2.00 Edward H. Wilson. 6.00 Harold Frank S. 7.00 H. L. 1. 15.00 Augusto L. Saltzman. 15 00 Fred L. Stellwag*>n. 6.00 Cllnor and Marjory Best. 2.50 Marguerite and Emily R. H- 5 00 Florence E. Wtlley. 7.00 Ruth H. Smith. 7.00 A Friend . 7.00 B. F. Jackman. 5.00 Mrs. Payson Merrill. 25.00 K L. G. 7.00 Willis F. Hobbs.". . 1600 Anna H. Quennard. 2.00 Mrs. R. Reutler. 2.00 Mrs. C. II. M. sr. »25.00 Jacques S. Dalrd-. 2.00 C. B. R. 10.00 William H. Nichols. 25.00 Billy Taller . 7.00 Lucy A. Weaver. 6.00 Anne Lann Warren. 7.00 Morris W. Haft ft Broa., Ine. 7.00 Florence Baylls Morris. 10.00 H. M. E. 7.00 Vera F. Stell wagen. 5.00 Louise H. Kelsoy. 7.00 Célente S. Russell. 7.00 Mrs. Delia E. Dalrymple. 35.00 Mrs. B. M. Beach. 6.00 Bettv and Billy Beach. 5.00 Thomas W. Davis. 10.00 Mrs. E. W. Plttman. 7.00 Miss Karolyn W. Ba3sett. 6.00 Mrs. Ivy L. Leo. 10.00 Mrs. Charlea I. Berg. 6.00 E. N. F. 7.00 Mrs. Henry W. Foreman.,. 6.00 C. N. M. 10.00 J. F. D. 7.00 Mrs. R. P. W. 7.00 A. S. L. 2.00 Mrs. Walter B. James. 10.00 Marlon A. Keith. 14.00 Grace, Theodore 3d and Cornelius Roosevelt . 7.00 Mrs. T. Radley. 6.00 Glen M. Porter. 7.00 Alfred J. La Vlgne. 14.00 E. B. 25.00 Anonmymous . 7.00 Ellen Dudley MonelW. 6.00 Total, July 17, 1922.$39,739.43 Contributions,, preferably "by check or money order, should be sent to the Tribune Fresh Air Fund, The Tribune, New York City. a Newspaper Club Joins In Mitchel Memorial President Hambidge Heads the Committee to Attend Cere¬ mony To-morrow Charles G. Hambidge, president of the Newspaper Club, will head a com¬ mittee of newspaper men to attend the memorial exercises for the late Mayor John Purroy Mitchel. to be heM at the Mitchel grave. Woodlawn Ceme¬ tery, to-morrow afternoon at 5:15 o'clock. Tho committee comprises President Hambidge, Harold A. Vivian, first vice- president; Harry D. Kingsbury, second vice-president; Irving Pinover, Daniel A. Breen, William P. Beazell, James A. Hagerty, Frank Hopkins, Walter Mil¬ ler, Reggie Wilson, Alfred Pierce, Wel¬ lington Wright, Fred H. Adams, Charles S. Hand, S. Stewart Crawford, Thoreau Cronyn and James V. Gwynn. A committee from the foreign born citizens, of which Nathaniel Phillips is president, representatives of America's allies in the war, and members of Cor¬ rigan Council, Knighta of Columbus, also will attend, the latter unofficially. The prayer at the grave will be said by the Rev. Father A. M. Arcibal( a chaptain with the French army during the war. Dr. E. J. Wheeler Is Buried Bishop McDowell Officiates at Services for Editor Funeral services were held yester¬ day in the Madison Avenue Episcopal Church for Br.|Edward|Jewett Wheeler, who was the»editor of "Current Opin¬ ion." Bishop William F. McDowell, a classmate of. Dr. Wheeler at the Ohio Wesleyan Methodist School, officiated. The pallbearers were: John G. Agar, Dr. John H. Finley, Miles M. Dawson, Francis H. Sisson, William B. Randall, Robert J. Cuddihy, William H. Wise, Dr. Frank Crane, Willis 0. Robb, Charles McCloud and William Griffith. PAINTINGS We Will Buy Paintings by INNES*. WYANT, >3LAKELOf*K, MARTIN, HOMER. FULLER. WEIR, TWACHTMAN, RYDER, MURPHY. REMINGTON, DUVENECK and other American artists. AINSLIE GALLERIES Tel. Plaza 6886. 677 Fifth Avenue Dine In ^ Cool Comfort For luncheoa^tea or dinner. it's always delightfully cool and comfortable in" The Italian Garden A summer restaurant where seashore coolness is maintained by refreshing breezes of refrigerated air. Park Avenue and Fifty-first Street THE AMBASSADOR HOTELS SYSTEM The Ambassador. New York City The Ambassador, Loe Angeles The Ambassador, Atlantic Cltr The Alexandria, Los Angeles Hylan Heads Host Of City Officials At Cahill Funeral Business at City Hal! Vir¬ tually Suspended During the Rites for Borough President of Richmond - Business in City Hall virtually was | suspended yesterday at the hour of the funernl of Matthew Cahill, Borough | President of Richmond. The body iay in state in the local board room in Richmond Borough Hall. City officials from Manhattan, Richmond and Brook¬ lyn were in the thousands who filed in and out. The casket was banked high with floral tributes from resi¬ dents of Stater. Island and public offi¬ cials throughout the city. There were two lines of people stretching from the Borough Hall en¬ trance, along Richmond Terrace to Nicholas Street, New Brighton, wait- ing to view the hody when the casket closed at 10:30 o'clock. Led by mounted! police and the Police and Fire Depart- m'jnt bands the funeral cortege went to St, Peter's Roman Catholic Church, at Mew Brighton, where a solemn mass of requiem was celebrated by Mon- signor Charles A. Cassidy. Mayor Hylan, Grover «\. Whalen, Commissioner of Plant and Structures; Fire Commissioner Drennan and the entire Board of Estimate, with other city officials, arrived on the municipal ferryboat. President Roosevelt. The delegation went at once to the Borough Hall and later to the church. Mayor Hylan and the Boird of Estimate com¬ prised the honorary pallbearers. Business in the Borough Hall had been stilled for the day and employees escorted the body to St. Peter's. The uniformed escort, in addition to dele¬ gations from the Police and Fire de¬ partments, included the color guard of the Staten Island Council, Knights of Columbus; representatives of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and Amer¬ ican Legion. The active pallbearers consisted of three uniformed police¬ men and a similar number of firemen. Floral tributes filled ten large open cars which followed the hearse from the church to the cemetery. More than 9,000 persons walked in the procession. Included in this number were Calvin Van Name, Mr. Cahill's immediate pre¬ decessor, and George Cromwell, Rich¬ mond's first Borough President. Patrolman *F. S. Mondo Buried! Motorcycle Patrolman Frank S. Mondo, of Traffic Sqr<u 2. Brooklyn, who died Thursday in Norwegian Hos- pital from injuries suffered while pur¬ suing a speeding automobile several weeks ago, was buried yesterday from St. Athanasius Church, Brooklyn. The Police Glee Club sang and a police band led the procession. WILLIAM A. FISCHER William A. Fischer, secretary of the People's Trust Company, Brooklyn, died Sunday night in the Huntington Bay Club, Long Island, of heart dis- ease. He was with his wife and four children, and had just finished dinner when, ho collapsed. Mr. Fischer entered the employ of the People's Trust Company thirty years ago. He was made secretary two years ago. He was also vice- president and director of «the Bay Ridge Savings Bank and was a mem¬ ber of the Hamilton Club, Brooklyn. MRS. CAROLINE HERSH Mrs. Caroline He'rsh, ninety-six years old, a well-known resident of Elizabeth, N. J., mother of three sons and a daughter and grandmother of nine, died yesterday at her summer home at Asbury Park. Mrs. Hersh was born in Bohemia on February G, 1826. A granddaughter is the wife of R. L. Goldberg, the cartoonist. GENERAL GEORGE PAUL HARRISON OPELIKA, Ala., July 17. General George Paul Harrison, eighty-one years old, former commander in chief of the Confederate Veterans and the youngest brigadier general ever com¬ missioned by the Confederate States, died at his home here to-day. He occupied a seat in the lower house of Congress from 1894 to 1897 and was a state Senator for twelve years. LEWIS A*. DELONE HARRISBURG, Pa., July 17..Lewis A. Delone, president of the Lykens Valley Railroad and one of the found¬ ers of the Merchants' National Bank and Central Trust Company in this city, died at his home to-day. Mr. Delone held prominent positions in Catholic charitable institutions. He was eig'ity-seven years old. Birth, Engagement, Marriage, Death and In Memoriam Notice» man telephoned to The Tribun* an\j time up to midnight for in- tertion in the next day/1 s paper. Telephone Beekman 3000. DEATHS ANGELO.On Sunday, July 1«, Kate, be¬ loved wife of Harry Angelo. Funeral services Tuesday at 2 o'clock at her late residence, i Bryant av., White Plains, N. r. BERMIIVGH.4M.Br. Edward John Ber- mlngham, at his residence. 227 East B7th »t., on July 16. Funeral services at the Church of the Divine Paternity, Central Paru West at TGth at., Tuesday at t p. m BOX-UTO.On July IB, Thomas Boland, beloved husband or «Tulla Boland (nee Gibbons), native of Knock, County Mayo. Irelnnd. Funeral from his late residence, 8 9th av., Astoria, L. I., on Tuesday at 9:30 a. m.; thence to St. Patrick's Church, In Academy st., where requiem mass will be offered for the re¬ poso of his soul. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Funeral director, Thomas F. Farley. BIRKE.On July. 15 at his residence. 421 Itogera av., Brooklyn, Michael F. Burke, late of the 7th Ward. New York, beloved uncle of Mary A. McGHl. Solemn re¬ quiem mass on July 18 at 10 a. m. sharp at the Church of St. Francis of AhsIsbI. Flatbush. Funeral private. In¬ terment Calvary Cemetery. CLARK.John King, husband of Alida Senior Clark, father of Mildred Clark Johnston and Helen King Clark. Sunday morning, July 16, 1322, In his 60th year, nfler a long Illness. Funeral service at his late residence, 17 Landscape av., Yonkers, N. Y., Tuesday evening, at 8 o'clock. Interment private. Newark, N. J., and Itockland County, N. Y., papers please copy. CONI«©*»*.On July 15. 1922. John Conlon. native of I-ackagh. County Kildare. Ire¬ land. Funeral from Joseph L Quinn Parlors. H5th st. and College av., Bronx. Tuesday, July 18. at 2 p. n_ Interment St. Raymond's Cemetery. CROOKS.On July 15, at her residence, 75 Baust 3 27th st., Mj-ry (nee Hlgglns), beloved wife of William Crook*. Funeral Tuesday at S:30 a. m. Solemn high icnul.m mass at St. Aloysius Church, 7th av. and 132d st., 10 o'clock. Inter. maint Calvary Cemetery. Automobile cortege. EAGLE.Jack. July 16. 1922, in Balti¬ more, Md., age 38 years, beloved hus¬ band of Harriet Eagle. Fun*ral from Meyer Funeral Parlors. 228 Lenox av., on Tuesday, July 18. at 2 p. m. GAYNOR.Ou Ju3y 16, 1922, Patrick Gay- nor, born In County Carlo, Ireland, and came to this country about forty years ago; beloved father of Mrs. Katie Marlon. Mrs. Mary Marshall, Mr». Theresa Cot¬ ter. Mr». Martha Savage and Cornelius, Dominlck and Louis Oaynor. Funeral from th.- residence aif hi* daughter, Mrs. M Marshall, 124 Second Place, Brook¬ lyn. Wednesday, July-'!», at 9:30 a. m. Solemn requiem maai aSJjR. C. Church of St. Mary Star of the Seáí Court and L,u- quer its., Brooklyn, at 10 a. m. Inter¬ ment Calvary Cemetery, ^friends and relatives cordially Invited tV attend. DEATHS EAI.LON Or-, July 1«. 1922, M**ry A. Fal¬ lón, beloved aunt of Michael J\, Jam"». Margaret and May Joyce and Mrs. £». Burke. Funeral Wednesday »t B;.tO a m from her r»sldence. 149 W««*t 117th «' Solemn requiem mas* »t Church of St Thorna» *th»> Apoatie. Interment Cal¬ vary Cemetery. GORDON.On July IS, 1122. Thomas J. Gordon. fo'hT of Catherine Conway snd Alle» McGrath. Funer**.l Tu»**l«v. July 1?. at t;M p. m.. from Universal <*hapel. a¡.\ »t and Lexington «v. Interment St. John's Cemetery HANRAFIW On Ji.-ly 14. Nora Kelly, beloved wife of Patrick Hsnrahsn and nafivr. nf gprl.lgfleld. County Galway. Tr.-land. Föderal from her 1st« resi¬ dence. 71 East 85th st.. TuesJay. July IS; thence, io Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, where «OleTin requ!«m mass wilt bo celabrat id st 10 a. m. Interment Calvary '">:ne(ery. IIARISON.At her r-siden-e. 1ST Franklin, st. Astoria. L, I. Julv ¡7. 1922, C-sr- trude, widow of Richard Mortey Harl- son and daughter of the late Ri*-h*rd H. and Elizabeth Schnyler Ogden. Funeral service will he held at Trinity Church, Broadway, opposite Wall St., New Tosfc City. Wednesday, July 19. st 2:30 p. m. nON ECKER-On Saturday. July IS. 1922. at the age of 45 years, after a short nine»». Jrhn E Hon'eker, be- loveri husband of Helen E. snd beloved rfather of John J. and Helen Heneeker. Funeral from his late residence. 98S Fresh Pond Roio, Ridge wood, on Wednesday, July 19. at 9 30 a. m.; thenco to St. Mathias R C. Church. In¬ terment St. John's Cemetery. Friends and relatives invited .TAMES.Mrs. Dora, beloved wife of Emile James. July ¡5. 1922. Funeral servle.es Tuesday. 2 p. m., her lata residence, '37 West. 13th. Jl'DSON- 'in Monday, July 17. 1S22. at Eaathampton. N. T., Marie Charles, wife of W.lliam David Judson. Notice of fu¬ neral hereafter. LAI Kit.On -tunda-/, Tmy 1«. 1922. Will¬ iam P. Lauer, dearly beloved son of Katherine Lsuer and -rother of <"*harte.s La aer end fiance of Elizabeth GumMn- ger. in his 30th year. Funeral serv¬ ices Tuesday evening at 5 o'clock at hi,« late residence. 1316 Boston Road. near tsnth st . which relatives anl friends ar« kindly Invited to attend. Funeral Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock In Lutheran Cemetery. I-îlndly omit Rower», LEE.On Sunday, July IS, 1922. Andrew P. L»e, in his 87th year. Funeral serv¬ ice at his late hone, 1*3 Olenwood a«.-.. East Orang-». N. J , on Tuosday. Juty is, at 3 o'clock. Interment at Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Newark. LEONARD--At Montclalr. N. J.. Sunday. July 16. 1922. Sarah E. Leonard, wife of the late Thomas W. Leonard. In her 62d year Funeral services will be held at the, home of her daughter. Mrs. George G. Gl»ason. 226 Walnut st.. Montclalr. Tuesday, at 11:45 a. m. D.. I,. £.- W. train leaves IToboker. at 10.52. daylight saving. LEVI.Leonora. on July 1*. beloved daughter of Philip and Emily and de¬ voted sletor of Hattle Alter. Gertrud« and Bessie Levl. Funeral from her lata r"í«l lence, 1S87 62d st., Brooklyn, on Tuesday. July 18. 2 30 p. m. LOVEI.Í,.On Sunday, July 1«, '.122 Xtmrf 1-k. B. Lovell. at the home of h«ff brother. 5 Par'-: av. Ja:iiaicva, .%'. i'.. daughter of the late A!»n»n!T and Snlly W. Lovell. Funeral services at Lefferts Place Chap»!, 86 Lefïerts place. near G-and av., Brooklyn, on Tuesday. July IS, at 11 a. m. Interment Green¬ wood. MAC LAY.At Mlllbrook. N. Y. Sunday. July 10, 1922. Georgiana Barmore, widow of the late Robert Ma'-lay. Fun-ral services at her late residence. 50 West 67th st.. New York, Wednesday, July 19. at 10 o'clock a. m. McCALL.On July 16. 1922. Edwsrd. be¬ loved husband of Augusta McCall inea Drltchel) and father of Augusta and Edna McCall, brother of Theresa Grub« and Catherine McCall. Funeral from his late residence. 460 W. 55th st.. Wednesday afternoon, at 1 p. m. In¬ terment Holy Cross Cemetery. Mcf'LELLAN. Louis S.. on -July 17. In ht« 61st year. Beloved husband of Emma Kelly MoClellan, brother of K. B. Mc- Clel.an and Mrs. John Latta Service« will be held at the FUNERAL CHURCH, Broadway at 66th St.. Wednesday. July 19. at 11 A. M. St. Louis and Loulsvill« and Kansas City papers please copy. MpSWEKXKY-On July 17. 1PÎ2. Wini¬ fred McSweeney (nee Cassldyl. beloved wife of Gerald M. at 61 Adrian av, Marble Hill. Funeral notice later. Schenectady papers please copy. J Ml'XZER.Eug-ne I., on July 16. beloved I husband of P.-gina. Funeral services at 10 a. m Tuesday, July 18. at his late residence, 14 Amherst av., Jamaica, L L MIRDOCK.On Saturday. July 16, 1322. at lit.« residence, at Peacock Point. Locust Valley. L. !.. Harvey Murdock In his 65th year. Funeral services will be held a: Lattintown Cbapei. Locust Valley. L. I., on Tuesday, July 18, 1922, at 2 o^cloclC p. m. OGBORN.Emlen C. CAMPBELL FU¬ NERAL CHURCH. Tuesday, 3 p. m. ORMONDE.At Saratoga Springs. July 1*. Eugene Ormonde, after a brief illness. Funeral from his late residence, Sara¬ toga Springs. N. Y., on Wednesday morn¬ ing, at 11 o'clock. PAGE.On Monday. July 17, 1J22. Anna H. Page tn the 6Sth year of her age. Funeral services at ber residence. 711 Monrue st.. Brooklyn, on Thursday, July 20, at 12 o'clock. PENXINGTOX.On July 16. 1922, Joh» Pc r.nlngton. beloved husband of Maud Armstrong Pennlngton. Funeral services at his late residence. 148 Mldwood St.. Brooklyn, N. Y., Tuesday. July 18. at 8:30 p. m. Interment privat«. FERNTZ Leopold. CAMPBELL FU¬ NERAL CHURCH. Wednesday. PIERCE.Franklin X. Pierce, beloved son of the late Franklin and Jane Pierrj» (nee McGlnnise). and brother of Jenr.i* Stuke, Sarah Rogers, Ellen and Augustus F. Pierce. Funeral from Joseph V. Klernan's Parlors, 3i? First av.. Tue«- day, at 9:30 a. m. ; thenco to Bplphanv Church, where a solemn high mass w .1 be offered for the repose of his s-jul. Interment Calvary Cemetery. RADIOAN.On July 16, Thomas B., be¬ loved husband of the late Catherin*» Redigan (nee Boyle!, and the father of; Mre. William F. Butier. Funeral from ¡¦la late residence, tti West gist st : the*aco to Church of St. Eraseis Xav.er. Wednesday, July 19, at 10 a, m. Inter¬ ment Calvary. ROWS.Suddenly, en Monday. July IT, 1921, -at his résidence, 161 Henry st . Brooklyn, Reginald P., aged 7», husband ! of Jane Munn Howe and son of the lata- Re v. and Mrs. Thomas Row», of Barba¬ dos, B. W. I. Funeral services at St. Luka's Church, Clinton Avenue, near* Fulton st.. Brooklyn, on Wednesday. July 19, at 3 p. m. Interment private. Boston and Philadelphia papers pleas« copy. SAND.Geneviève Helen, Infant daughter of Harold Garcia Sand snd Louise Butler, Sand, on Sunday, after a brief Illne.-w. Funeral from her late residence, 4024, 6th av., Brooklyn, on Tuesday itlpm. Intermerit Greenwood Cemetery. Chi¬ cago. Philadelphia and Richmond. Va*. papers please copy. SHEDD.William W., on Sunday, July 16» j 1922. Funeral services at Methodist Church, Leonla, N. J., Tuesday evening. July 18, 8 o'clock. Interment at conveni¬ ence of family. Kindly omit flower». .SIMPSON-.On July 18. 1922, Robert H., husband of Isabella Llpplncott. Funeral services at his late residence. 106 W. 84th st., on Tuesday, July 18. at 8 p. rru STOTT.On July 15, 19Ï2. at Hudeon. K. Y., Julia, daughter of the late Charles H. and Catharine Oakley Stott. Funeral at St. Barnabas Church, Stottvills. tt. X-» on Tuesday, July 18. at 2 p. m. VOX DEB ROSCH.At Peekakil!. N. Y.» Sunday. July 16, 1922, Katherine M.. wife of Oscar Von der Bosch. Funeral Wednesday, July 19, at 2 o'clock p. m. (daylight saving time), from her Ute« residence. 830 South st., Peeksklll. N. Y. New York, Long Island and Florid--» papers please copy. WALKER.Suddenly, at his residence, S8» 2d st., Brooklyn. Friday. July 1Í« Charles, beloved ton of the late Msrjr Walker, brother of Robert, Mary. Mra. J. J. Sullivan and uncle of Edward«. Requiem mass Tuesday, July 18. 10 m., St. Francis Xavier's Church, 4t&' ov. and Carroll st. Automobile cortea*« WHITE.Chatham. N. Y. Jufy IT. 19S2, Louise M.. wife of Edward C. White» Funerat services Wednesday, July IS, m o'clock, standard time. »VOOI.DItlDOE.Suddenly, on July IS. at Lakewood, N. J.. Joseph D. Wooldridg», retired lieutenant New York Poîfîe De« partment. beloved husband of Kathryn A. Wooldrldge. Funeral on Wednesday. July 19, at 9:30 a. m. from parlors, 291 Ashland Piece. Brooklyn. Solemn re* «¡ultm mass at St. James Pro Cathedral» Interment Calvary Cemetery- AutomtX bile cortege. Omit flowers. UNDERTAKERS THEFUNH^CHtlRCH SbMsipMMnuHuritxl Custom* Call Columbus S2W FRANKE.CAMPBEU. "'Jho'Juneral Church"]»». (HSMS- MMtSI Broad«>/a«! ar66fî.Sr. CEMETERIES THE WOODLAWN CEMETERY 2S3d St. Jerome or Lexington Subway. Book of Views or Representative. Telephone Wooaiawn 114«.

NewportCrowd Mrs. George Tell Hylan Heads Host At See The ...€¦ · NewportCrowd AtCasinotoSee TennisTourney *i ThreeTeamsEuterin Mixed Doubles Matches, Which Will a^tart on Saturday:

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Page 1: NewportCrowd Mrs. George Tell Hylan Heads Host At See The ...€¦ · NewportCrowd AtCasinotoSee TennisTourney *i ThreeTeamsEuterin Mixed Doubles Matches, Which Will a^tart on Saturday:

NewportCrowdAt Casino to SeeTennisTourney

*i

Three Teams Euter in MixedDoubles Matches, WhichWill a^tart on Saturday:Yachting Parties Arrive

Luncheons Feature Dayyiv. and Mrs. Peter RobertsGive Dinner: Dr. and Mrs.Jacobs To Be Hosts To-day

Special Dispatch to The Trio«««!KEWPORT. July 17..Three tennis

toarosrn'rit^ with the ranking women

piayert of the country entered were

outstanding features in social circlesit the Casino to-day. The contestantsappeared before large galleries bothmorning and afternoon. Among those«ho watched the r'ay were Com¬modore and Mrs. Arthur Curtiss James,yin. William K. Vanderbilt 2d. Mr. T.Safern Tailer. Mr. Robert Gould ShawU. Mr» RIV' Mrs. Craig Biddle, Dr. andMr». Hamilton Rice, former Ambas-tîdor James W. Gerard. Mrs. Ogden H.Hammond. Mrs. Forsythe Wickes, Mrs.William Goadby Loew, Mr. ThomasRidgway. Mr. Lawrence W. Waterbury,Miel Maffraret Steward. Admiral Wins-low, Uti. Charles S. Whitman, MissMurie! Vánderbilt, Miss Helen Moran,Mr. 1. Townsend Burden and Mr.Drexel Biddle.Mrs. Charles H. Baldwin and Mrs.

John Aspfgrer, were luncheon hostessesto-day. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Robertsentertained at dinner this evening. Dr.aad Mrs. Henry Barton Jaeobs have adinner planned for to-morrow. Mrs.Charles S. Whitman entertained Mr.»nd Mrs. Henry Seligman, of NewYork, at a small luncheon held at herPrices Nerk cottage to-day.Mrs. Frederick \\ inthrop Hamilton is

the guest of Mrs. Nathaniel R. Thayer.Mrs. John R. Drexel jr.. Miss Mar-earet Stewart an Mr. Lawrence Water-bury have been week-end guests offormer Governor Beekman. Mr. E. A.Walton 2d is staying with Mr. Loril-lard Spencer. Mrs. J. S. Cosden is be¬ing entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Wil¬liam Goadby Loew for a week. Mr.Ogden L. M ils has Mr. Lydig Hoyt ashis guest, and Mr. and Mrs. WilliamDe Forest Manice, of Edge Hill, arethe guests of Mr. E. Hayward Ferry.Three teams entered to-day for the

mixed double:- handicap tournamentthat will be started Saturday. Theyare Mrs. Barger Wallach and Mr. CraigBiddle, Mrs. William Goadby Loew andMr. J. Gordon Douglas, and Mr. CharlesMoran and Miss Helen Moran.Several yachts arrived in the harbor

to-day, including the steam yachtCutherea. Mrs. Darkness; the Caroline,Mr. Lorlllard Spencer; the Adroit, Mr.Isaac Emerson, and the Narad, Mr. andMrs. Henry Walters. CommodoreArthur Curtiss James left for NewY'ork this evening on board the Aloha.

Many Here EntertainAt Cafe Luncheons

Mr». Moses Taylor is Hostessfor Her Daughter, Fianceeof Mr. Langhorne Gibson

Mrs. Moses Taylor gave a sma'lluncheon yesterday at Pierre's at whichshe entertained for her daughter, MissMarian Taylor, whose engagement toMr. Langhorne Gibson, son of Mr. andMrs. Charles Dana Gibson, was recent¬ly announced.

Among others who entertainedfriends at luncheon yesterday atPierre's were Mrs. J. Alien Townsend,Mrs. Oliver W. Bind, »Mrs. Robert L.Stevens and Mrs, Adrian Iselin.

Mr. an«! Mrs. Stephen Pell enter-tainsu a group of friends yesterday atluncheon in the Japanese Garden atthe RiU-C'arlton. Among others whohad guests there for luncheon wereMrs. J. D. Lyons, who entertained forher daughter, Mrs. Nelson Slater jr.,who, with Mr. Slater, has just returnedfrom a trip around the world; Mr. andMm. Carrol L. Wainwright and Mr.»nd Mrs. Warren Kinney.Mrs. Hugh H Baxter, who returnedlast week irora Europe, was hostess at

a luncheon yesterday at Delmonico's.Mr. and Mrs. James C. Parrish jr.,whose wedding took place last week,

ar« at the Ritz in Atlantic City. Mrs.Parriah, before her marriage, was Mrs.W. Burton Elkins.Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Boyer, whohav» just arrived from Paris, wherethey have been making their home, are

at the Hotel Ambassador. Mr». Boyerit th« daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Perci¬ba! Hill, of Greenwich, Conn.

Mrs. John Innes Kane, who has been«t the Hotel Ambassador since her re¬turn from Europe, left yesterday toopen her cottage at Bar Harbor, whereshe will be for the remainder of theseason.

Mrs. Arthur B. Twombly Is occupy¬ing her cottage at the Profile House inthe White »Mountains.Miss Margaret Perkins, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C Perkins,will leave for South America on Au-ifust 5 to attend the exposition at Riode Janeiro. She will be accompaniedh' Dr. and Mrs. Marius Johnston, ofPittsburgh..Mr. p. H. B. Frelinghuysen, of Mor-nstown, N. J., has taken the Wood-cote cottage at Saranac Inn, and withnu famiiy will spend July and Augustm the Aairondacks.Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Duell, who

nave been at the Ritz since comingto New York from Newport, have goneto Boston îor a brief visit.Mr. and Mr?. Charles J. Coulter, who«re in New York from their home at

Tuxedo, &re staying at the Vanderbilt.Mrs. Daniel P. Carr and Mrs. A. H.

rarr' wnfj are in New York from Dur-.m, N. c, are at the Lorraine duringtheir stay here.

Senator Spencer HasThree Sons as Guests

"».*. Helen Dortch hongstreet.Widow of Confederate Gen¬eral, Plans Trip to Alaska

From The Trtbunc's Washington BureauWashington, July n. Senatorana «Mrs. Seiden P. Spencer are having* family reunion (.his week with their

."fee son*. Senator Spencer returnedrnia morning from New York, where he*pent the week end, and was accom-

hT'* in ^v- Louis, is their guest inr**»r apartment at the Brighton, asÎ? their eldest son, Mr. Seiden P.»Percer jr.»rs. Helen Dortch Longstreet, widow

Mrs. George Faber Downey Jr.

She is the guest of her motlier, Mrs. Edward Van Ingen, at Southamp¬ton, L. f., following her return last week front her honeymoon trip to

Europe.of the Confederate general, who hasbeen detained in Washington all sum¬mer by the serious illness of hermother at a local sanitarium, expectsto leave about th'.« middle of Augustfor a trip to Alaska.

Mrs. McCormick, wife t>f SenatorMedill McCormick, went to New Yorkto-day to remain for a few days beforereturning to her home, Rock View Farm,Byron, 111. Mrs. McCormick came toWashington last week, closed theirhouse on F Street and established theSenutor in the small house overlookingRock Creek Park which he has leasedfor the summer months.Lieutenant Colonel Wallace M.

Craigie, U. S. A., retired, has with himas a guest at the Rochambeau hisstepdaughter, Miss Jean Maverick, ofSan Antonio, who will spend part of

I her school vacation here.Rear Admiral and Mrs. Cameron

IiIcR. Winslow entertained a company¡ informally at luncheon yesterday fortheir daughter, Miss Natalie Winslow,in their cottage at Newport.Mr. gnd Mrs. Frederick S. Stitt, of

Chevy Chase, Md., announce the mar-riage of their daughter, Agnes Wood¬ward, to Mr. F. Davis Little, on July 12,at Portland, Me. The bride is a popularmember of, the younger group in thevicinity of Chevy Chase.

Mrs. Hazel Rogers. Phillips and MissMarion Milligan received at a tea inI Miss Milligan's apartment at the Port-ner, from 5 to 7 o'clock yesterday af¬ternoon. They were assisted by Mrs.Carrie Foy. Included in the seventy-five guests wer« Major and Mrs. JamesF. Johnson, Major and Mrs. Thacker V.Walter and Major 0. H. B. Blood-worth jr.

Women Golfers to MeetOn Southampton Links

Weekly Matches at ShinnecockClub To Be for 18 Holes;Will Give Medals to Winners

Special Dispatch to The TribuneSOUTHAMPTON, N. Y., July 17..

! The women's matches to be playedevery Thursday afternoon on the linksof the Shinnecock Hills Golf Club willbe for eighteen holes this week, medalplay prizes being offered for the lowestnet scores and for tho lowest grossscores. Mrs. Finley Peter Dunne lachairman of the committee, which in-eludes Mrs. Grosvenor Nicholas, Mrs,P. A. Valentine, Mrs. Lucien H. Tyng,Miss Estelle O'Brien, Mrs. Dudley 01-cott 2d and Mrs. Reginald Fincke.

Mrs. Henry Chickering v/i'.l presentthe prizes for the golf matches thisweek. Twenty-four cotiples have en-tered for the mixed foursome, to beplayed every Sunday afternoon on the

i links of the Shinnecock Hills GoliClub, different persons donating th«prizes for each day.I Mrs. David Holier is chairman oitho committee arranging the musicfeatures of the East Hampton Greciarpageant, which vviil be given in thtMfiidstor.e Club, July 21, for the bene*fit of St. Luke's Episcopal Church.

Mrs. Ellery James and Mr. RobertPell will sing a chant in the tableauxthe accompaniment to be played bjMrs. George Barton French. The opening address will be made by JohrDrew. Assisting Mrs. HelUr will btMiss Maude Bouvioi, Mrs. Michaeli-,Bouvior, Miss Margaret Taylor. MisiMargaret Hollister and Mrs. ChaunceySome of the patroneses of thi

pageant at East Hampton are Mrs. JohiE. Berwind, Mrs. Edward deCliffonChisholm, Mr3. Lucien Tyng, MrsMoses Pyne, Mrs. Sidney W. FishMr. Samuel L. Parrish, Mrs. Georg.Barton French and Frank Wiborg.

In the mixed foursomes played yestordav afternoon on the links of thShinnecock Club, Miss Florence HinJohnson and Mr. Daniel Grant, MisClara Leo and her partner, Mr. HowarElliott jr.; Miss Helen Lee and MiLawrence Van Ingen, all came in wit!a score of 93. In playing off the mate:Miss Johnson arc! Mr. Grant won thfirst prize. Second prize was won bMiss Clava Lee and Howard ElliotMrs. P. A. Valentine was the donoof the Dri2es.Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. William;

oí 1125 Park Avenue, have openetheir cottage in East Hampton iApaguogue Road.

Mr.-. Cornelia Bliss and Miss LizziPlummer Bliss are at their summe

plnry in Wickapogue for the seasojMr. and Mrs. Joseph Clarke are ha*-,

ing their summer home in South MaiStrec': opened to-day and will axrivfrom Philadelohin Friday.Mrs. Tcnbrocck M. Terhune will er

tertain at luncheon at her sumnuhome in Main Street Thursday afteinoon.

Mrs. Florence Sehirmer and MirLousia S. Wilson, who came Friday tjoin a party at the summer home c

Mr. Malcolm Meacham in Hill Street,will remain for several days.Mr. nnd Mrs. Bache Hamilton Brown,of Morristown, N. J., who have been

visiting her mother, Mrs. AlexanderHarvey Tiers, at her summer homein Meadow Lane, are receiving con¬gratulations on the birth of a sonborn Saturday night.

Mrs. Graham Williams and JohnHollins are guests of Mr. and MrsArthur B. Claflin at their summerhome in Shinnecock Hills.Mr. Daniel Grant is visiting at the

home of Mrs. Edward Van Ingen for afew days.

Miss Davies EntertainsGarden Club at Lenox

Floi*>er Culture Discussed FromStandpoint of Personal Expe¬rience; Other Social Activities

Special Dispatch to The TribuneLENOX, Mass, July 17..Miss Marion

Davies, sister of Bishop Thomas Fred-crick Davies, entertained the LenoxGarden Club Council at her Lenoxvilla this afternoon. Mrs. Carlos DeHeredin read a paper on "A SicilianGarden" and members related theirpersonal experiences in flo-ccr culture.Mrs. Edwards Spencer was at the teatables.

Dr. and Mrs. Austen Fox Riggs, ofStockbridge, have gone to Islesboro,Me., Until September.

Mrs. Churchill Satterlee is the guestof Mrs. Joseph S. Whistler at Plum-stead, in Lenox. Mr. and Mrs. Henry-White have Mrs. White's son-in-lawand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John HenryHammond, and Miss Emily S. Ham¬mond and Miss Adele S. Hammond as

guests at Elmcourt for two weeks.Dr. and Mrs. William Gilman Thomp¬

son had Dr. R. Foster Kennedy as aweek end guest at Konkapot, in Stock-bridge.Mr. and Mrs. George Clarke Bryant,

of Ansonia, Conn., have been makinga tour through the Berkshire Hills byautomobile. Mrs. Dorothea Robbinsand Mr. William Landon, of New York,are guests of Mr. and Mrs. AlexanderSedgwick.

Mr. Bernhard Hoffman, who has beenstaying at Harrod's, in Stockbridge,since his return from Europe, left to¬day for Santa Barbara, Cal.The Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes is

fishing for salmon on the Little Casca-pedia River, Quebec.

Arrivals at the Maplewood Hotel, inPittsfield, include Mr. and Mrs. Har¬rison K. Caner and Mr. and Mrs. Alex¬ander G. Rea, of Philadelphia. Mr.and Mrs. Herbert Parsons and her twosons, Herbert jr., and Mcllvaine Par-Bons, leave here to-morrow on a fourweeks' trip to Colorado Springs and theGrand Canyon. Mr. John E. Parsonsstarted to-day for Sómbrete, Mexico.

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Miss Caroline Marsh WedsMarríace to Mr. J. K. McCadden

Takes Place HereThe wedding of Miss Caroline Free¬

man Marsh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.R. Allyn Marsh, and Mr. Joseph K. Mc-Fadden jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. JosephK. McCadden, took place yesterday af-ternoon at the Church of the Trans¬figuration.Mr. Donald Dixon was best man, and

Miss Elsie Marsh, sister of the bride,was the maid of hpnor.

Mr. McCadden is a graduate ofPrinceton and during the war servedas a lieutenant in the 6th U. S. Cavalry.After a honeymoon trip in the White

Mountains Mr. and Mrs. McFadden willmake their home in New Yrork.

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Miss Inez Coleman BrideOf Mr. James H. Noyes

The marriage of Miss Inez Coleman,daughter of Mrs. Joseph G. Coleman,of Asbury Park, and Mr. Douglas K.Noyes, son of Mr. James H. Noyes, ofOrange, was celebrated at Elizabeth,N. J. on Saturday. The ceremony was

performed at the home of the bride'3'aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. WilliamH. Ry.no, by the Rev. Edwaj-d M. Noyes,of Newton Center, Mass, uncle of thebridegroom, and was witnessed by a

largo number of friends and l-elatives.Mrs. John Harris, of Trenton, N. J.,

was matron of honor, and Mr. HerbertM. Noyes served as best man. Thefuture home of Mr. Noyes and hisbride wilt be in Melrose Place, SouthOrange. Mr. Noyes is a graduate ofYale. 1907, and is connected with theNational City Bank.

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Miss Marie L. Meyer to WedThe engagement has been announced

of Miss Marie Louise Meyer, daughterof. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick HenryMeyer, of New York, and Mr. JohnKenneth Porter, son of Mrs. ThomasPorter, of Scranton, Pa. The weddingwill tak* place in September.

Elopers Tell andBelated WeddingPresents Pour In

Miss O'Loughlin and C. K.Robinson, Football Star,Slip Away From JerseyParty in Borrowed Car

A belated shower of wedding giftsdescended on the home of Mr. andMrs. C. S. O'Loughlin in East Orange,N. J., yesterday following announce-ment of the elopement and marriageSaturday night, of Miss GéraldineO Loughlin and Charles Knox Robin-son, of Avon-by-the-Sea. Thev stole amarch on relative» and friend's duringa Saturday night party at the O'Lough-un home,The marriage took place in Hanover

Presbyterian Church at Hanover,-N. J.While fifty guests were being enter-tamed by the O'LougHlins Robinsonborrowed the O'Loughlin car to takehis finncre for a rid'.*." Once away fromthe house he informed her that he hndobtained a marriage license and urgedher consent to an immediate wedding.The Rev. E. R. Barnard, pastor ofthe Hanover Presbyterian Church, wassupervising choir practice when re¬quested by Robinson to officiate. Hoconsented, and fifteen minutes laterMr. and Mrs. Robinson departed to themusic of a full choir.The bride and bridegroom returned

to the O'Loughlin home and no an-nouncement was mode of the eventuntil yesterday when Mrs. Robinsonconfided in her mother. News of themarriage wna iss-.ied by Mrs. O'Lough-lin, who added that the elopers hadbeen forgiven.The marriage resulted from a ro-

mentir attachment formed in theautumn of 1910 at a football prnmebetween Blfiir Institute, of Blairs-town, N. J., and Peddie Institute, ofHightstown, N. J. Robinson wan half¬back on the Blair team. He becameengaged to Miss O'Loughlin two yearsago and announcement, was made re-cently that they would be married nextyear. Both families are wealthy.

Monk Enters MonasteryTo Kill Love for Siren

Father Mortillac' HeartbrokenAfter Futile Attempt to SaveMata Hari From ExeVutionPARIS, July 17 (By The Associated

Press)..Father Mortillac, the French,monk reputed to have been the lastadmirer of Mata Hari, the celebratedDutch dancer who was executed by theFrench near the end of the war as aGorman spy, has been located in theCarthusian Monastery at Cartuja deMirafloros, Spain.

Mortillac disappeared after a vaineffort to save the woman about whomVicente Blasco Ibanez wove his war

romance, "Mare Nostrum."While leading Carthusians deny

that the monk has entered the order,it is affirmed in authoritative quartersthat he is in the monastery attempt¬ing to bury h¡3 sorrow for his lostlove. The woman was known also as

Marguerite Zeil.Mortillac~is said to have been heart¬

broken when he discovered thai. MataHari was a German spy. Afterwardhe learned that she had a husband, a

Scottish officer, who married her inJava, taking her from a Buddhist tem¬ple, where she was a dancer, and thathe died of grief in Scotland after hehad discovered her in Paris and was

unable to persuade her to leave a Ger¬man to whom she had become attached.-»-

Annual Report for U. S.On All Mandated Areas

Correspondence With JapanOver Yap Situation Made

Public by HughesFrom The Tribune's Washington BureauWASHINGTON, July 17..The Amer¬

ican government is to be fully advisedevery year on the administration ofall mandated territory, it was disclosedto-day by the State Department in mak¬ing public the exchange of notes be¬tween the United States and Japan re¬

garding the mandate for the island ofYap. The correspondence also dis¬closes that should the United States inthe future desire to make commercialtreaties applicable to Australia andNew Zealand., it will reek to obtain an

extension of such treaties to the man¬dated islands south of the equator.Japan also agrees that "the usual com¬

ity will be extended to nationals andvessels of the United States in visit¬ing the harbors and waters of islandsunder Japanese mandate."The treaty between the United

States and Japan covering the islandof Yap was signed at Washington Feb¬ruary 11, ratified by the two govern¬ments in June and the exchange of rat¬ifications was effected here July 13.

Aid for Destitute Family_ge»

Touched by Tribune Story,Woman Sends Check

A check for $5 made out to the orderof Kaiman Fuchs by Cornelia Cooke, ofMilford, Pa., was received yesterday bvThe Tribune. Fuchs, who lives at 107*Lewis Street, was held about a weekago by Magistrate Oberwager on a

charge of failure to próvido for hischildren in the Hebrew Orphan Asy¬lum. In default of bail, he was Bentto the Tombs and while there news¬

paper investigation disclosed the factthat, his wife had been kept locked inher rom for seven months because, as

Fuchs said, "she was not right in thehead."

It was a story in The Tribune of lastWednesday telling the conditions ex¬

isting in Fuchs's home which promptedMiss Cooke to send the check. On the3ame day Justices Freschi, Healy andYoorhees in Special Sessions placedFucha on probation in order that hemight return home to care for hiswife.The check was sent in care of Magis¬

trate Oberwager. who yesterday turnedit over to The Tribune.

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Berengaria Makes Fast Trip;Averages 23.21 Knots

Cables advices received yesterday bythe Cunard Line reporting the arrivalof the steamship Berengaria at theCherbourg breakwater said she hadmade the run across the Atlantic infive days, nineteen hours and thirty-one minutes at an average speed of23.21 knots. Captain Smith reported he"let her out" on the last-thirty-fourmiles and averaged 25.18 knot« for thatdistance.

-,..-r.-

Going On To-dayDAY

American Museum of Natural History; ad-mission free.

Metropolitan Museum of Art; admissionfree.

j Now York Historical Society; admissionfree.

Aquarium; admission free.Brooklyn Museum; admission 25 cent«.Van Cortlandt Park Museum; admission

free.Zooiocles! Park; admission free.Luncheon or the Merrhants' Association.Hotel Riltmore. 1 o'clock,

Lecture by S. L. Strivings on "The NewYork State Farmers' Problems In l**oodTroduetion." Teachers College, 5*;5 West120th Street, 2:"0 o'clock.

NIGHTMeeting of the Orand Street Boys, HotelPennsylvania, i o'clock.

I-__.-,-,The Tribune Fresh Air Fund

They're Off! 892 Assorted "Fresh Airs" Starting forCountry To-day to Put Roses in Cheeks; CityFolks Fail to Keep Fund Up to Mark

How many Fresh Airs to-day? tEight hundred and ninety-two.And every one of them goes to n pri-

vate home -a home whose owners havetheir hospitality all tuned up and the'rihearts all aglow with kindness to give!their expected guests the best possiblevacations.

Here's the day's Fresh Air work¬sheet:I.pnvlng Number

time. Pr>st!nnt|o.i. children8:40 au m.Moutpeller, \'t. D48.-to a. m .-rialnfieli.1. N. H. 1)9:10 a., m..Miliord, N. J. 109:50 a.m..Geneva, N. V. 11 ">

10:03 a. m..nurllnn-tnn, Vt. 3 4911:00 a. m..Elmlra, tar. T. 254il.no a. m..Springfield, Mae». S211 00 a. m,.Northampton, Mads... 5211:00 a. m..Keene, N. H. 241:06 p.m..Athens, Ta. .623 00 p.m..Stockton, N. J. 10S .-30 p. m..Norfolk, Conn. 244:21 p m .Califon, N\ J. 7Six states are represented in the list

of Fresh Air hosts.At 9 o'clock last night everything

was -set for a perfect score for theday. Every place in the long host listhad been filled in accordance withspecifications.

"Fresh Airs" a la CarteOh. yes, there are specifications to

be met. The hosts have varying tastesas to the sort of children they wouldlike to entertain. One of yesterday'slist wanted "two little colored girls,not too dark." Another wanted "acurly-haired French Catholic," another"hoy twins not over five years old,"rt;ll another "dark complecr.ioned eirlthirteen years old with bobbed hair,"and yet another "a nine-year-old Prot¬estant with a txqod disposition."But the sticker among the specifica¬tions wa3 one caiîing f»r "two GermanJews.be careful about this." Theredidn't seem to be anything in that toworry about when the Fund started outto select the children, hut if the Fundwere an ordinary human it would havelost ton pounds and had gray hair be¬fore the battle was won. Nobody knewany utile German Jews who were poorand needed the country.One worker to whom the request was

referred had "two very nice littleSpanish Jews" that she was sure woulddo; another had "two dear little Portu¬guese Jewish girls," and a third hadtwo Austrian Jews. But out of thetwenty workers in different sections olthe city not one had the thing that th«Fund was warned to "be very carefunboulf," and finally at 4 o'clock the effort to find them was given up.

Three Cheers! They're Found"Too bad," everybody said, "there is

every sort of child in the city in neecof Fresh Air and there must be GermarJews, but where, whore, where?"Then at 6 o'clock the telephone ranfand there came along the wire an ex

ulimit "I've got 'em!" So they, toowill get going this morning.All day long, from 9 in the morninjtill 9 at night, the. Fund's medical examiner3 hustled from station to station throughout the city, meeting thichildren selected to fill the places, examining them, passing them, rejectinithem. And when the last happeneithere was the work to do all oveagain.the Methodist, the Catholic, thbobbed-haired girl, the twins or whanot had to be hunted and found onemore. But it was dime, and the scorstands for a perfect game, unless somyoungster puts a black mark in therror column this morning by failinto appear at the train.

Lots of work at this end of the vacation line, but no more.probably noso much.as at the other. For weekpast the committees in the communities which are to entertain the children have been hustling. On them fe'the burden of arousing interest in thFresh Air campaign, of persuadintheir friends and neighbors to opetheir homes to the Fund's little preteges. But again it was done, angladly.

Club Members HustleIn Elmira, N. Y., it was done by th

members of the Kiwanis Club, done tthe tune of 254 invitations for chidren. In Geneva, N. Y., it was donfor the second time by the RotarClub members for a total of 115 invtations. In Northampton the Elks ca:riec! the campaign through, and iBurlington, Vt. the same organizatichad a hand in the result, though thedid not head the committee.

In the other places the committeithat did the work were simply grou]of kind-hearted residents of the coc

munltics. In Athens, Pa., and Norfolk,Conn., the committees were old onesthat have done the same work for many |years. In Montpclier, Plainfield, Mil-ford, Springfield, Keene and Stocktonthe committees were mnking their firstexperiment as Fresh Air Hosts.

Butr--a big but -while the Fund andits country friends and co-operatorswere putting In the busiest day cf thesummer, the city friends of the chil- !dren let down. The day's receiptthrough contributions were less than$1,000, the smallest amount receivedsince the active season opened.Against this $1,000 the Fund had toset yesterday a bill for railroad ticketsof approximately (4,000, cash down.

Buy §7 Wort:« of HappinessWith th'j country folks doing so well,

won't you city friend3 of Fresh Air"fellers" help out? Seven dollar« sentfis a contribution to the Fund willmake a "feiler" happy for two weeks.and make you happy, too. Try it.

Contributions to The Tribune FreshAir Fund:Previously acknowledged.$33,754.1)9Money saved by Miss Dorothy

Wilson . 1.34,T. W. Latimer. 10*10In loving memory of my husband,Oeotgo H. Miller. 10.00

Two Sisters . 5.00Mrs H. L. R. Edgar. 6.00Anonymous . 2.00Samuel Brodlo . 2.i*>0Friend . 2.00Genevlve . 1 "0Louis Friedman . 100Fresh Air Committee, Dansville.

N. Y. 61.00Frederick K. Gaston. 10.00O, W. Stewart. S.00E. S. Peck. 7.00M. A. Wells. 5.00l.^e s Burnham. 5.ooEdith Ck Walter. 10.00Hubert C. Muir. 10.00Mrs L. C. Boulee. 5.00Colonel Andrew Hero jr. 0.00Elizabeth H. Jackson.,. 25.00In loving memory of L. 10.00A. M. Selling. 10.00Mr. and Mrs. 55. T. Dugan. 7.00In memory of my dear children,Ruth and George. 10.00

W. L. Bradley. 14.00Elizabeth W. Clements. 6.00John W. McKee. 5.00Nolan R. Best. 10.00R. L. C. 7.00A. G. Zimmerman. 10.00Conseil Genest 305. 5.00E. A. A. 15.00Katherine D. B. and Carolyn

D. B. 10.00In memory of H. W. 7.00Eleanor Hvtner . 14 OnPeter Iselin . 25.00In memory of Walter. 10.00Mtb. I. H. Polhemus. 7.00A. Van Home Stuyvesant Jr... 60 00A. P. L. 7 00M. F. C. 10.00Mr. and Mrs. J. O. K. 15 00Two old friends of Rev. Willard

Parsons . 10.00Mrs. F. Bogemeistor. 7.00J. J. W. E. 7.00Miss Josephine C. Smith. 10.00Daniel P. Morse. 25.00Miriam Werner . 2.00Edward H. Wilson. 6.00Harold Frank S. 7.00H. L. 1. 15.00Augusto L. Saltzman. 15 00Fred L. Stellwag*>n. 6.00Cllnor and Marjory Best. 2.50Marguerite and Emily R. H- 5 00Florence E. Wtlley. 7.00Ruth H. Smith. 7.00A Friend . 7.00B. F. Jackman. 5.00Mrs. Payson Merrill. 25.00K L. G. 7.00Willis F. Hobbs.". . 1600Anna H. Quennard. 2.00Mrs. R. Reutler. 2.00Mrs. C. II. M. sr. »25.00Jacques S. Dalrd-.2.00C. B. R. 10.00William H. Nichols. 25.00Billy Taller . 7.00Lucy A. Weaver. 6.00Anne Lann Warren. 7.00Morris W. Haft ft Broa., Ine. 7.00Florence Baylls Morris. 10.00H. M. E. 7.00Vera F. Stell wagen. 5.00Louise H. Kelsoy. 7.00Célente S. Russell. 7.00Mrs. Delia E. Dalrymple. 35.00Mrs. B. M. Beach. 6.00Bettv and Billy Beach. 5.00Thomas W. Davis. 10.00Mrs. E. W. Plttman. 7.00Miss Karolyn W. Ba3sett. 6.00Mrs. Ivy L. Leo. 10.00Mrs. Charlea I. Berg. 6.00E. N. F. 7.00Mrs. Henry W. Foreman.,. 6.00C. N. M. 10.00J. F. D. 7.00Mrs. R. P. W. 7.00A. S. L. 2.00Mrs. Walter B. James. 10.00Marlon A. Keith. 14.00Grace, Theodore 3d and CorneliusRoosevelt . 7.00

Mrs. T. Radley. 6.00Glen M. Porter. 7.00Alfred J. La Vlgne. 14.00

E. B. 25.00Anonmymous . 7.00Ellen Dudley MonelW. 6.00

Total, July 17, 1922.$39,739.43Contributions,, preferably "by check

or money order, should be sent to theTribune Fresh Air Fund, The Tribune,New York City.

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Newspaper Club JoinsIn Mitchel Memorial

President Hambidge Heads theCommittee to Attend Cere¬

mony To-morrowCharles G. Hambidge, president of

the Newspaper Club, will head a com¬mittee of newspaper men to attend thememorial exercises for the late MayorJohn Purroy Mitchel. to be heM atthe Mitchel grave. Woodlawn Ceme¬tery, to-morrow afternoon at 5:15o'clock.Tho committee comprises President

Hambidge, Harold A. Vivian, first vice-president; Harry D. Kingsbury, secondvice-president; Irving Pinover, DanielA. Breen, William P. Beazell, James A.Hagerty, Frank Hopkins, Walter Mil¬ler, Reggie Wilson, Alfred Pierce, Wel¬lington Wright, Fred H. Adams,Charles S. Hand, S. Stewart Crawford,Thoreau Cronyn and James V. Gwynn.A committee from the foreign born

citizens, of which Nathaniel Phillips ispresident, representatives of America'sallies in the war, and members of Cor¬rigan Council, Knighta of Columbus,also will attend, the latter unofficially.The prayer at the grave will be said

by the Rev. Father A. M. Arcibal( a

chaptain with the French army duringthe war.

Dr. E. J. Wheeler Is BuriedBishop McDowell Officiates at

Services for EditorFuneral services were held yester¬

day in the Madison Avenue EpiscopalChurch for Br.|Edward|Jewett Wheeler,who was the»editor of "Current Opin¬ion." Bishop William F. McDowell, aclassmate of. Dr. Wheeler at the OhioWesleyan Methodist School, officiated.The pallbearers were: John G. Agar,

Dr. John H. Finley, Miles M. Dawson,Francis H. Sisson, William B. Randall,Robert J. Cuddihy, William H. Wise,Dr. Frank Crane, Willis 0. Robb,Charles McCloud and William Griffith.

PAINTINGSWe Will Buy Paintings byINNES*. WYANT, >3LAKELOf*K,MARTIN, HOMER. FULLER. WEIR,TWACHTMAN, RYDER, MURPHY.

REMINGTON, DUVENECKand other American artists.

AINSLIE GALLERIESTel. Plaza 6886. 677 Fifth Avenue

Dine In ^Cool Comfort

For luncheoa^tea or dinner.it's always delightfully cool andcomfortable in"

The Italian GardenA summer restaurant where seashorecoolness is maintained by refreshingbreezes of refrigerated air.

Park Avenue and Fifty-first StreetTHE AMBASSADOR HOTELS SYSTEM

The Ambassador. New York City The Ambassador, Loe AngelesThe Ambassador, Atlantic Cltr The Alexandria, Los Angeles

Hylan Heads HostOf City OfficialsAt Cahill Funeral

Business at City Hal! Vir¬tually Suspended Duringthe Rites for BoroughPresident of Richmond-

Business in City Hall virtually was |suspended yesterday at the hour of thefunernl of Matthew Cahill, Borough |President of Richmond. The body iayin state in the local board room inRichmond Borough Hall. City officialsfrom Manhattan, Richmond and Brook¬lyn were in the thousands who filedin and out. The casket was bankedhigh with floral tributes from resi¬dents of Stater. Island and public offi¬cials throughout the city.There were two lines of people

stretching from the Borough Hall en¬

trance, along Richmond Terrace toNicholas Street, New Brighton, wait-ing to view the hody when the casketclosed at 10:30 o'clock. Led by mounted!police and the Police and Fire Depart-m'jnt bands the funeral cortege went toSt, Peter's Roman Catholic Church, atMew Brighton, where a solemn massof requiem was celebrated by Mon-signor Charles A. Cassidy.Mayor Hylan, Grover «\. Whalen,

Commissioner of Plant and Structures;Fire Commissioner Drennan and theentire Board of Estimate, with othercity officials, arrived on the municipalferryboat. President Roosevelt. Thedelegation went at once to the BoroughHall and later to the church. MayorHylan and the Boird of Estimate com¬prised the honorary pallbearers.Business in the Borough Hall had

been stilled for the day and employeesescorted the body to St. Peter's. Theuniformed escort, in addition to dele¬gations from the Police and Fire de¬partments, included the color guardof the Staten Island Council, Knightsof Columbus; representatives of theVeterans of Foreign Wars and Amer¬ican Legion. The active pallbearersconsisted of three uniformed police¬men and a similar number of firemen.

Floral tributes filled ten large opencars which followed the hearse fromthe church to the cemetery. More than9,000 persons walked in the procession.Included in this number were CalvinVan Name, Mr. Cahill's immediate pre¬decessor, and George Cromwell, Rich¬mond's first Borough President.

Patrolman *F. S. Mondo Buried!Motorcycle Patrolman Frank S.

Mondo, of Traffic Sqr<u 2. Brooklyn,who died Thursday in Norwegian Hos-pital from injuries suffered while pur¬suing a speeding automobile severalweeks ago, was buried yesterday fromSt. Athanasius Church, Brooklyn. ThePolice Glee Club sang and a policeband led the procession.

WILLIAM A. FISCHERWilliam A. Fischer, secretary of the

People's Trust Company, Brooklyn,died Sunday night in the HuntingtonBay Club, Long Island, of heart dis-ease. He was with his wife and fourchildren, and had just finished dinnerwhen, ho collapsed.Mr. Fischer entered the employ of

the People's Trust Company thirtyyears ago. He was made secretarytwo years ago. He was also vice-president and director of «the BayRidge Savings Bank and was a mem¬ber of the Hamilton Club, Brooklyn.

MRS. CAROLINE HERSHMrs. Caroline He'rsh, ninety-six

years old, a well-known resident ofElizabeth, N. J., mother of three sonsand a daughter and grandmother ofnine, died yesterday at her summerhome at Asbury Park.

Mrs. Hersh was born in Bohemiaon February G, 1826. A granddaughteris the wife of R. L. Goldberg, thecartoonist.

GENERAL GEORGE PAUL HARRISONOPELIKA, Ala., July 17. General

George Paul Harrison, eighty-oneyears old, former commander in chiefof the Confederate Veterans and theyoungest brigadier general ever com¬missioned by the Confederate States,died at his home here to-day. Heoccupied a seat in the lower house ofCongress from 1894 to 1897 and was astate Senator for twelve years.

LEWIS A*. DELONEHARRISBURG, Pa., July 17..Lewis

A. Delone, president of the LykensValley Railroad and one of the found¬ers of the Merchants' National Bankand Central Trust Company in thiscity, died at his home to-day. Mr.Delone held prominent positions inCatholic charitable institutions. Hewas eig'ity-seven years old.

Birth, Engagement, Marriage,Death and In MemoriamNotice»man &« telephoned to The Tribun*an\j time up to midnight for in-tertion in the next day/1s paper.Telephone Beekman 3000.

DEATHSANGELO.On Sunday, July 1«, Kate, be¬loved wife of Harry Angelo. Funeralservices Tuesday at 2 o'clock at her lateresidence, i Bryant av., White Plains,N. r.BERMIIVGH.4M.Br. Edward John Ber-mlngham, at his residence. 227 EastB7th »t., on July 16. Funeral services atthe Church of the Divine Paternity,Central Paru West at TGth at., Tuesdayat t p. m

BOX-UTO.On July IB, Thomas Boland,beloved husband or «Tulla Boland (neeGibbons), native of Knock, CountyMayo. Irelnnd. Funeral from his lateresidence, 8 9th av., Astoria, L. I., onTuesday at 9:30 a. m.; thence to St.Patrick's Church, In Academy st., whererequiem mass will be offered for the re¬poso of his soul. Interment CalvaryCemetery. Funeral director, Thomas F.Farley.

BIRKE.On July. 15 at his residence. 421Itogera av., Brooklyn, Michael F. Burke,late of the 7th Ward. New York, beloveduncle of Mary A. McGHl. Solemn re¬quiem mass on July 18 at 10 a. m.sharp at the Church of St. Francis ofAhsIsbI. Flatbush. Funeral private. In¬terment Calvary Cemetery.

CLARK.John King, husband of AlidaSenior Clark, father of Mildred ClarkJohnston and Helen King Clark. Sundaymorning, July 16, 1322, In his 60th year,nfler a long Illness. Funeral service athis late residence, 17 Landscape av.,Yonkers, N. Y., Tuesday evening, at 8o'clock. Interment private. Newark,N. J., and Itockland County, N. Y.,papers please copy.

CONI«©*»*.On July 15. 1922. John Conlon.native of I-ackagh. County Kildare. Ire¬land. Funeral from Joseph L QuinnParlors. H5th st. and College av., Bronx.Tuesday, July 18. at 2 p. n_ IntermentSt. Raymond's Cemetery.

CROOKS.On July 15, at her residence,75 Baust 3 27th st., Mj-ry (nee Hlgglns),beloved wife of William Crook*. FuneralTuesday at S:30 a. m. Solemn highicnul.m mass at St. Aloysius Church,7th av. and 132d st., 10 o'clock. Inter.maint Calvary Cemetery. Automobilecortege.

EAGLE.Jack. July 16. 1922, in Balti¬more, Md., age 38 years, beloved hus¬band of Harriet Eagle. Fun*ral fromMeyer Funeral Parlors. 228 Lenox av.,on Tuesday, July 18. at 2 p. m.

GAYNOR.Ou Ju3y 16, 1922, Patrick Gay-nor, born In County Carlo, Ireland, andcame to this country about forty yearsago; beloved father of Mrs. Katie Marlon.Mrs. Mary Marshall, Mr». Theresa Cot¬ter. Mr». Martha Savage and Cornelius,Dominlck and Louis Oaynor. Funeralfrom th.- residence aif hi* daughter, Mrs.M Marshall, 124 Second Place, Brook¬lyn. Wednesday, July-'!», at 9:30 a. m.Solemn requiem maai aSJjR. C. Church ofSt. Mary Star of the Seáí Court and L,u-quer its., Brooklyn, at 10 a. m. Inter¬ment Calvary Cemetery, ^friends andrelatives cordially Invited tV attend.

DEATHSEAI.LON Or-, July 1«. 1922, M**ry A. Fal¬

lón, beloved aunt of Michael J\, Jam"».Margaret and May Joyce and Mrs. £».Burke. Funeral Wednesday »t B;.tOa m from her r»sldence. 149 W««*t 117th«' Solemn requiem mas* »t Church ofSt Thorna» *th»> Apoatie. Interment Cal¬vary Cemetery.

GORDON.On July IS, 1122. Thomas J.Gordon. fo'hT of Catherine Conwaysnd Alle» McGrath. Funer**.l Tu»**l«v.July 1?. at t;M p. m.. from Universal<*hapel. a¡.\ »t and Lexington «v.Interment St. John's Cemetery

HANRAFIW On Ji.-ly 14. Nora Kelly,beloved wife of Patrick Hsnrahsn andnafivr. nf gprl.lgfleld. County Galway.Tr.-land. Föderal from her 1st« resi¬dence. 71 East 85th st.. TuesJay. JulyIS; thence, io Church of St. IgnatiusLoyola, where «OleTin requ!«m mass wiltbo celabrat id st 10 a. m. IntermentCalvary '">:ne(ery.IIARISON.At her r-siden-e. 1ST Franklin,st. Astoria. L, I. Julv ¡7. 1922, C-sr-trude, widow of Richard Mortey Harl-son and daughter of the late Ri*-h*rd H.and Elizabeth Schnyler Ogden. Funeralservice will he held at Trinity Church,Broadway, opposite Wall St., New TosfcCity. Wednesday, July 19. st 2:30 p. m.nONECKER-On Saturday. July IS. 1922.at the age of 45 years, after ashort nine»». Jrhn E Hon'eker, be-loveri husband of Helen E. snd belovedrfather of John J. and Helen Heneeker.Funeral from his late residence. 98SFresh Pond Roio, Ridgewood, onWednesday, July 19. at 9 30 a. m.;thenco to St. Mathias R C. Church. In¬terment St. John's Cemetery. Friendsand relatives invited.TAMES.Mrs. Dora, beloved wife of EmileJames. July ¡5. 1922. Funeral servle.esTuesday. 2 p. m., her lata residence, '37West. 13th.Jl'DSON- 'in Monday, July 17. 1S22. atEaathampton. N. T., Marie Charles, wifeof W.lliam David Judson. Notice of fu¬neral hereafter.LAI Kit.On -tunda-/, Tmy 1«. 1922. Will¬iam P. Lauer, dearly beloved son ofKatherine Lsuer and -rother of <"*harte.sLa aer end fiance of Elizabeth GumMn-

ger. in his 30th year. Funeral serv¬ices Tuesday evening at 5 o'clock athi,« late residence. 1316 Boston Road.near tsnth st . which relatives anlfriends ar« kindly Invited to attend.Funeral Wednesday morning at 10o'clock In Lutheran Cemetery. I-îlndlyomit Rower»,LEE.On Sunday, July IS, 1922. AndrewP. L»e, in his 87th year. Funeral serv¬ice at his late hone, 1*3 Olenwood a«.-..East Orang-». N. J , on Tuosday. Jutyis, at 3 o'clock. Interment at MountPleasant Cemetery. Newark.LEONARD--At Montclalr. N. J.. Sunday.July 16. 1922. Sarah E. Leonard, wifeof the late Thomas W. Leonard. In her62d year Funeral services will be heldat the, home of her daughter. Mrs.George G. Gl»ason. 226 Walnut st..Montclalr. Tuesday, at 11:45 a. m. D..I,. £.- W. train leaves IToboker. at 10.52.daylight saving.LEVI.Leonora. on July 1*. beloveddaughter of Philip and Emily and de¬voted sletor of Hattle Alter. Gertrud«and Bessie Levl. Funeral from her latar"í«l lence, 1S87 62d st., Brooklyn, onTuesday. July 18. 2 30 p. m.LOVEI.Í,.On Sunday, July 1«, '.122 Xtmrf1-k. B. Lovell. at the home of h«ffbrother. 5 Par'-: av. Ja:iiaicva, .%'. i'..daughter of the late A!»n»n!T andSnlly W. Lovell. Funeral services atLefferts Place Chap»!, 86 Lefïerts place.near G-and av., Brooklyn, on Tuesday.July IS, at 11 a. m. Interment Green¬wood.

MAC LAY.At Mlllbrook. N. Y. Sunday.July 10, 1922. Georgiana Barmore, widowof the late Robert Ma'-lay. Fun-ralservices at her late residence. 50 West67th st.. New York, Wednesday, July 19.at 10 o'clock a. m.

McCALL.On July 16. 1922. Edwsrd. be¬loved husband of Augusta McCall ineaDrltchel) and father of Augusta andEdna McCall, brother of Theresa Grub«and Catherine McCall. Funeral fromhis late residence. 460 W. 55th st..Wednesday afternoon, at 1 p. m. In¬terment Holy Cross Cemetery.

Mcf'LELLAN.Louis S.. on -July 17. In ht«61st year. Beloved husband of EmmaKelly MoClellan, brother of K. B. Mc-Clel.an and Mrs. John Latta Service«will be held at the FUNERAL CHURCH,Broadway at 66th St.. Wednesday. July19. at 11 A. M. St. Louis and Loulsvill«and Kansas City papers please copy.MpSWEKXKY-On July 17. 1PÎ2. Wini¬fred McSweeney (nee Cassldyl. belovedwife of Gerald M. at 61 Adrian av,Marble Hill. Funeral notice later.Schenectady papers please copy. JMl'XZER.Eug-ne I., on July 16. beloved Ihusband of P.-gina. Funeral services at10 a. m Tuesday, July 18. at his lateresidence, 14 Amherst av., Jamaica, L LMIRDOCK.On Saturday. July 16, 1322. atlit.« residence, at Peacock Point. LocustValley. L. !.. Harvey Murdock In his65th year. Funeral services will be helda: Lattintown Cbapei. Locust Valley. L.I., on Tuesday, July 18, 1922, at 2 o^cloclC

p. m.

OGBORN.Emlen C. CAMPBELL FU¬NERAL CHURCH. Tuesday, 3 p. m.ORMONDE.At Saratoga Springs. July 1*.Eugene Ormonde, after a brief illness.Funeral from his late residence, Sara¬

toga Springs. N. Y., on Wednesday morn¬ing, at 11 o'clock.PAGE.On Monday. July 17, 1J22. AnnaH. Page tn the 6Sth year of her age.Funeral services at ber residence. 711Monrue st.. Brooklyn, on Thursday, July20, at 12 o'clock.PENXINGTOX.On July 16. 1922, Joh»Pc r.nlngton. beloved husband of MaudArmstrong Pennlngton. Funeral servicesat his late residence. 148 Mldwood St..Brooklyn, N. Y., Tuesday. July 18. at8:30 p. m. Interment privat«.FERNTZ Leopold. CAMPBELL FU¬NERAL CHURCH. Wednesday.PIERCE.Franklin X. Pierce, beloved sonof the late Franklin and Jane Pierrj»(nee McGlnnise). and brother of Jenr.i*Stuke, Sarah Rogers, Ellen and AugustusF. Pierce. Funeral from Joseph V.Klernan's Parlors, 3i? First av.. Tue«-day, at 9:30 a. m. ; thenco to BplphanvChurch, where a solemn high mass w .1be offered for the repose of his s-jul.Interment Calvary Cemetery.RADIOAN.On July 16, Thomas B., be¬loved husband of the late Catherin*»Redigan (nee Boyle!, and the father of;Mre. William F. Butier. Funeral from¡¦la late residence, tti West gist st :the*aco to Church of St. Eraseis Xav.er.Wednesday, July 19, at 10 a, m. Inter¬ment Calvary.ROWS.Suddenly, en Monday. July IT,1921, -at his résidence, 161 Henry st .Brooklyn, Reginald P., aged 7», husband !of Jane Munn Howe and son of the lata-Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Row», of Barba¬

dos, B. W. I. Funeral services at St.Luka's Church, Clinton Avenue, near*Fulton st.. Brooklyn, on Wednesday.July 19, at 3 p. m. Interment private.Boston and Philadelphia papers pleas«copy.

SAND.Geneviève Helen, Infant daughterof Harold Garcia Sand snd Louise Butler,Sand, on Sunday, after a brief Illne.-w.Funeral from her late residence, 4024,6th av., Brooklyn, on Tuesday itlpm.Intermerit Greenwood Cemetery. Chi¬cago. Philadelphia and Richmond. Va*.papers please copy.

SHEDD.William W., on Sunday, July 16» j1922. Funeral services at MethodistChurch, Leonla, N. J., Tuesday evening.July 18, 8 o'clock. Interment at conveni¬ence of family. Kindly omit flower».

.SIMPSON-.On July 18. 1922, Robert H.,husband of Isabella Llpplncott. Funeralservices at his late residence. 106 W.84th st., on Tuesday, July 18. at 8 p. rru

STOTT.On July 15, 19Ï2. at Hudeon. K.Y., Julia, daughter of the late CharlesH. and Catharine Oakley Stott. Funeralat St. Barnabas Church, Stottvills. tt. X-»on Tuesday, July 18. at 2 p. m.

VOX DEB ROSCH.At Peekakil!. N. Y.»Sunday. July 16, 1922, Katherine M..wife of Oscar Von der Bosch. FuneralWednesday, July 19, at 2 o'clock p. m.(daylight saving time), from her Ute«residence. 830 South st., Peeksklll. N. Y.New York, Long Island and Florid--»papers please copy.

WALKER.Suddenly, at his residence, S8»2d st., Brooklyn. Friday. July 1Í«Charles, beloved ton of the late MsrjrWalker, brother of Robert, Mary. Mra.J. J. Sullivan and uncle of Edward«.Requiem mass Tuesday, July 18. 10 a«m., St. Francis Xavier's Church, 4t&'ov. and Carroll st. Automobile cortea*«

WHITE.Chatham. N. Y. Jufy IT. 19S2,Louise M.. wife of Edward C. White»Funerat services Wednesday, July IS, mo'clock, standard time.»VOOI.DItlDOE.Suddenly, on July IS. atLakewood, N. J.. Joseph D. Wooldridg»,retired lieutenant New York Poîfîe De«partment. beloved husband of KathrynA. Wooldrldge. Funeral on Wednesday.July 19, at 9:30 a. m. from parlors, 291Ashland Piece. Brooklyn. Solemn re*«¡ultm mass at St. James Pro Cathedral»Interment Calvary Cemetery- AutomtXbile cortege. Omit flowers.

UNDERTAKERS

THEFUNH^CHtlRCHSbMsipMMnuHuritxl Custom*

Call Columbus S2WFRANKE.CAMPBEU."'Jho'Juneral Church"]»».

(HSMS-MMtSIBroad«>/a«! ar66fî.Sr.

CEMETERIESTHE WOODLAWN CEMETERY

2S3d St. Jerome or Lexington Subway.Book of Views or Representative.Telephone Wooaiawn 114«.