Hfiss Carroll's j Redding Plans Xre Completed jjrs, B. J. Carroll Jr. To Be Matron of Honor Wheii| Sister - in - Law Becomes Mrs. M. W. Littleton Jr. Miss Thurston Engaged fo Marry Arthur Siirkamp ; John^on-Graik Marriage «Off; Horse Show To-day plans have been completed for the tredding of Miss Marion Carroll. d*ngb¡;er of Mr. and Mrs. Bradish Johnson Carroll, of 10 East Eighty- ./-,. Street, and Martin W. Littleton ; son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin W. Littleton, of 118 Fast Fifty-seventh itreet and Plandome, Long Island. The ceremony will bo performed Wednes¬ day, August .>¦ «r 3:30 o'clock by the jkV. Dr. Ernest M. Stf-os, of St. Thorn»*'* Church, this city, ' in the röiscopal Church at Greenwich, Conn. A reception will follow at The Maples. Mrs. Bradish Johnson Carroll jr. will k. the matron of honor and Miss fie»nor Franckc the maid of honor. -". bridesmaids will be Miss Barbara Brawn, » cousin of the bride; Miss «jry Panforth Strtuige, Miss Virginia iterrv Miss Margaret Wallace, Miss JosêoVTie Flood and Miss Helen John- iex. Bátele? Calibash will' serve as Mr. Littleton's best man and the ushers will be Bradish Johnson Carroll jr., Armar Cater, Henry Clay Irons jr.. W Trimbull Thomas. Frank S. Gran¬ an Gordon MeCulloh, William Gray gnd' Worthir.gton Miner. Mr. Littleton will give his farewell bachelor dinner July 81. j{is«j Carroll is at present a guest of Mr and Mrs. Bradish Johnson Carroll ir. in Garden City, Long Island. Mr and Mrs. Henry W. Thurston. of Jiontclair. N. -L. announce the engage¬ ment of their daughter, Miss Charlotte Howe Thurston, to Arthur Surkamp, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Surkamp, of S»n Antonio. Tex The wedding will ¿ke place late in September. Arthur Surkamp is connected with the United States Rubber Plantations Company. The engagement of Miss Evangeline Brewster Johnson to Douglas Elliott Cralk, of London, has been broken. It .»as announced in June by her brother, Robert Wood Johnson. Miss Johnson, .irho lives at 270 Park" Avenue, went abroad with Miss Alice A. De Lámar early last spring. She is a daughter of the late Robert Wood Johnson, of Kew York and New Brunswick. Some time after his death Mrs. Johnson mar¬ ried John W. Dennis, of London. Mr. Cralk is a son of John Craik, of 18 Netherhall Gardens, London. Miss Gretchen Blaine Damrosch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dam¬ rosch, will be married to Thomas K. Finletter, son of Judge and Mrs. Thomas D. Finletter, to-day in Paris. Only relatives and a few intimate : rienda will attend the ceremony. The marriage of Miss Grace Helen Meston, of 57 West Fifty-seventh Street, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin M. Meston, of Detroit, wd Frederick Leonard Laurence, of Manila, P. I., will take place at noon !o-day in St. James's Church, Madison Avenue and Seventy-first Street. The Ton«? Island set will be largely represented to-day at the horse show 'eld under the auspices of the Islip Polo Club at Oakwood Park, near Islip. Among those who will have house partie? over the week-end in connection with the affair are Mr. and Mrs. Will¬ iam K. Dick, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Havemeyer, Mr. and Mrs. Bradish G. 'ohnson and Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Peters. Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Henderson, vhb are at their country place at Ros- rjrn, L I., will sail for Europe, August 4. They will stay a short time in London and Paris and then make a motor trip on the Continent. Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Tallmadgc ¡¦ave closed their apartment at the Plaza and have pone to Hot Springs, \a., to remain until Labor Day. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee will leave their country place at High- .and Fails next week and go to Bar Harbor, Dr. and Mrs. Her.ry Barton Jacobs nave left their villa at Newport and nave gone to the White Mountains. .-?.-... Curti- Buys Hazelhurst Will Move Plant From Buffalo to Long M and Aero Field. The Curtis: Airplane and Motor Oor- pcr-mon, of which John N. Willys is it, has purchased Hazelhurst Id from the Hempstead Plains Company, it was announced yes¬ terday. 1 he government formerly had a lease on the held, and used it during the war as a training ground for avia-, tors. The field comprises 135 acres, and *he purchase included the hangars and buildings. The Curtiss company will use the '¦a-¡á temporarily for experimental and manufacturing purposes. The Buffalo piant will be ab;mdoned, it is said, and Hazelhurst Field, which will be known ¡..s Curtiss Field, will be the main head¬ quarters of the company. UNDER TWO FLAGS" LUNCH ROOM 16 East 39th St. A Is Carte.Hens Ceskiaj.Prssipt Service Mtttioa »ictur«s «f Franc« sh«WB. fours 11.30 to 2.30. ron TMC BtNirrr sr mi <vMllW».N tOMMlTTIIIWk ¦«VMTATI» MMftl , n. $e ©lie Cngltöi) Coffee f|ouße-i4 e 44tb*i. <f»rn-»rly 3S West «Srd 8t.).. Afternoon T«a, Hot Waffles. 2:30 to S P. M. Special Foaturo Dinner Daily.5:30 to IP. M. ookine.Constant Chang« la Menu.A La Cert« AU Day H«m« Cooking.Constant Chang« MRS. COPELAND OFFERS REAL lireak flint Foao AT Luccheon 16 E*»t 43rd Str.t Next f Hotel M*.rfhatt*m A FIXED PRICE Dinner 61STEK8 TIIIIEK TEA 8H0F New K<k'Ii<-11© Branch 733 ivil.am Road Open DecoraMon Day ? « r r t hing home cooked a 1» carte. ¦7 \î nui; , Kast 5'4il Street, on« «¦« ROOM. INC. door from Fifth Avenue l.'.T.oheon ami Afternoon Tea ALOHA.Whin home cooking 1» at Its best TEA ROOM Luncheon. 46 to 80c. 32 W. 4Tth St. Dinner, 75c to 81. THE PIROUETTE <¡, w. 46 n. uaañt en«. Luncheon. Te«. Special Dinner $1.00. The ou-.of-tke-ojdnury pisces of New York, where unique atmosphere «nd food peculiar to varied ta.tes invite the discrimina .íbe, will appear un,- "Enchantinf- Tes Rocks" In The Tribune each Monday, Miss Vera Morgan Her marriage to Thomas Chandler Thacher jr. will take place to-day at Cement Island, Clayton, N. Y., the summer home of her mother, Mrs. William Curzon Taylor, of New York. Tildsley Sent to Bushwick High as Excess Principal Action Taken to Keep Him ou School Pay Roll Till He Gets Commerce Post; Ryan Answers Critics Dr. William L. Ettinger, superin¬ tendent of schools, yesterday appointed Dr. John L. Tildsley principal in excess of the Bushwick High School. The position is temporary. This morning the Board of Superintendents will vote Dr. Tildsley in as principal of the High School of Commerce. He was defeated in the the Board of Education for re-election as Associate Superin- tendent of Schools. It is understood that Dr. Tildsley was appointed principal in excess of the Bushwick High School in order that he might continue on the department's payroll until September 8, when, offi¬ cials of the Department of Education said yesterday, he will assume the du¬ ties of principal of the High School of Commerce. Bushwick High has not had a permanent principal since the death of Dr. Frank Rollins. The Board of Education has the power to reject Dr. Tildsley for the permanent assignment to Commerce. The members are required to pass upon such nomination of the Board of Super¬ intendents. Dr. Edgar Dubs Shimer assumed his post yesterday as associate super¬ intendent in charge of high schools. The effect of the temporary appoint¬ ment of the ousted school official is that he will receive virtually the same salary he has been drawing as asso¬ ciate superintendent. The pay of the associate superintendent will be in- creased probably next month. Under the Lockwood-Donahue law an asso- ciate superintendent is to receive $7,500 a year. George J. Ryan, member of the Board of Education, who nominated Dr. Shimer to succeed Dr. Tildsley, re- plied vigorously last night to the criti- cisms that have been made of the ac¬ tion of the board. He declared there was no politics in the selection of the new associate superintendent, and dc- clared also that he was influenced to vote for Dr. Shimer because he was a resident of Queens, and his election would probably end the domination of the Borough of Manhattan in school affairs. "In voting for Dr. Shimer for this position," said Mr. Ryan, "I felt that it was high time that Queens, which is increasing in importance as a part "of the city, should be represented on the Buard of City Superintendents, which in a large measure is the executive staff of the city school. Heretofore Brooklyn and Manhattan have always controlled this bpard. These boroughs have been in this position too long, and I think that it is fortunate that we could have Dr. Shimer to accept this position." Heir to $5,000,000 Wins Family Name .After 36 Years Robert Edward Ridgely, Cor¬ nell Graduate, Had Been Denied Heritage for Fear of Creating a Scandal ¡Special Dispatch to The Tribune CHICAGO, July 16..After thirty- six years Robert Edward Ridgely has won his heritage.his family name. which had been denied him for fear of creating a scandal. With the entry of a decree to-day by Judge Denis E. Sullivan, in the Superior Court, the young man legally assumed his place as "one of the Ridgelys of Spring- field," one of the leading families of the Illinois capital. As "Robert Edwards," the name by which he has been known since birth, he appeared in court with Attorney David B. W'oodworth and obtained per- mission to change his name. Later the attorney made known the reason for the court action. "Young Ridgely is a son of Edward R. Ridgely, a National Bank examiner under President McKinley, who died a few days ago," said' the attorney, "He also is a nephew of the late Wiiliam Barrett Ridgely, who was Comptroller of the Currency from 1901 to 1908 and who died a few weeks ago, and a nephew of Mrs. William A. Vincent, widow of Judge Vincent. "Attached to the petition for a change of name is a certified 'copy of a marriage license issued in Little Rock, Ark., in October, 1883, to Edward Ridgely and Miss Fannie Clark. Ac- cording to the young man's petition, he is a son of that union, having been born in St. Louis. "After the civil marriage in Arkan¬ sas there was a fashionable church wedding in Springfield, after the birth of the boy Robert. The boy's father and mother hid his existence from friends of the family in Springfield. "Robert was sent East to school and later was graduated from Cornell Uni- versity. He was kept in ignorance of his real name, his father telling him when he went to visit him he was a son of a very dear friend. "It was not until a few years ago, j when Robert's presence was necessary in a contest over the will of his grand- father, Charles Ridgely, that Robert learned his real identity. Then his father and Judge Vincent produced him in court as one of the heirs of the elder Ridgely's $5,000,000 estate. Eventually he will receive a portion of j that estate," Wounded Italian War Veteran Arrives Here Wealthy San Francisco Mer¬ chant, in Roller Chair, on Way to Western Home Marco Staci, of San Francisco, who served in the Italian army during the war as a Lientenant, arrived in New York yesterday. Because of his wounds, he was in a roller chair. He wore his uniform, with star and cross of honor decorations gleaming from his sleeve and breast. Staci was» a wealthy merchant in San Francisco when the war broke out, but he has- tened to join his country's army in j 1915. When the Italians massed along the banks of the Piave and stopped the invasion of their »country by the Aus- trians, Staci was in the thickest of the fighting. In those engagements he was wounded. He will go immedi- ately to his Western home. B. & O. Ends Excursions Road to Devote Facilities to Regular Business Special Dispatoh to The Tribune BALTIMORE, July 16..The Balti¬ more & Ohio Railroad to-day issued an order cancelling all excursion busi¬ ness. This step was taken for the purpose of utilizing all of. the road's facilities in handling general freight and pas¬ senger business. The order, the most sweeping of its kind which has gone forth from general headquarters for some time, applies to the entire sys¬ tem. The excursions which have al¬ ready been contracted for will be run. Railroad men, in' this action of imn Baltimore & Ohio management, see a determined policy on the part of President Willard and other officials to remove all obstacles to the move- ment of ordinary freight and passen- ger business. Select Employment Agencies use The Trib¬ uno to roach wide «wake employees and EMCuesfful buslnt-i. concerns..Advt. The Tribune Fresh Air Fund Another $200 la Contributed in Memory of Winifred Ledyard Heath The world's total of everlasting hap- piness was added to again yesterday, Another Friend of Children sent $200 to'be added to tho Vacations in Per¬ petuity fund "In Memory of Winifred Ledyard Heath." As the result of this from now on every year a child will get a fortnight vacation în the country.two weeks of happiness.as long as Invested money yields income. Who'll be the next to add to the world's permanent store of happiness in this way? There's no trouble, no worry involved for the donor. Just send $200 in cash, or securities, to The Tribune Fresh Air Fund and the job is done, the world and its children made happier and better. The Tribune Fund set .s its aim this summer 13,000 vacntions. During the week ended to-day 1,286 of these va¬ cations were begun by happy boys and girls. If this average can be main¬ tained for the rest of the season the fund's aim will be attained .gloriously by the time school begins again in the fall. . If invitations from country hosts continue to pour in as they have dur¬ ing the present week the average will be maintained without doubt. And there is no indication that the tide has reached flood yet. In fact it is known that the largest parties of the season are still to be called for. Nine communities are listed to re¬ ceive Fresh Air guests in parties o) varying sizes next week. These art Westerly, R. I., and Mystic and Ston ington, Conn., along the Sound shore: Glens Falls, Warrensburg and Fort Ed ward, N. Y., in the 'beautiful Laki George region; Utica, N. Y., and Bristo and Forrestville, neighboring Connec ticut towns. Utica's party is the second for thi summer and puts the number of guest for Oneida County farms above th 100 mark. To-day the fund is departing fror its usual custom and sending out party of children for a clay's outinf Fifty boys and girls go to Mamaronecl N. Y., early this morning to be entei tained for the day by the Methodis Episcopal church of that place. Th church entertained a similar part last year. The total number of youngsters er joying vacations in the country t( day as guests of the fund, excludin the day party just mentioned, is we over 1,750. Approximately 1,000 < these are in Fresh Air homes an camps. The remainder are guests i private families in New York, Peni sylvania. Vermont, Massachusetts ar Connecticut. This morning the total of contr butions for the season falls on Ç157.68 short of one-third the enti amount needed for carrying throuf the summer's campaign as originally planned, contributions for yesterday totaling $1,363.26, and the Frsh Air season is less than one-quarter past. With the same average maintained the whole budget will be reached easily. Send YOUR contribution to the chil¬ dren's happiness fund, the Tribune Fresh Air Fund, to-day. Contributions to the Tribune Fresh Air Fund Previously acknowledged .f28.4S9.0G In Memory of Elinor. 5.00 In Memory of Ruth Eleeta. 6.00 A. I. Al. 1.00 G. Marvin . 5,00 Cash . i 00 H W. Slbley_. 60.00 Arthur C. Busch. 7.00 In Memory of Caro P. Dickson... 60.00 W. A. Sherry . 7.00 Mrs. Lucius Stanley. 10.00 From a Friend . 200.00 Myra G. D. Mead. 20.00 Mrs. Richard S. Satterlee. 10.00 In Memory of M. D. B. 5.00 Montrose (Pa.) Fresh Air Com¬ mute? . 128.91 Miss Carrie Englehart'a Sunday school class, through Montrose (Pa.) Fresh Air Committee.... 26.75 Brooklyn (Pa.) Fresh Air Com¬ mittee . 26.00 Leeds Johnson . 100.00 Anonymous. 7.00 Mrs. A. L. Haves. 10.00 Maria Stuart Durand. 7.00 Mr. N. C. Nelson . 10.00 5 C'a . 115.00 In Memory of My Little Son, W. T. S. 7.00 Thomas Clyde Smith, two years.. 7.00 Julia V. Kinley . 1.00 Mrs. O. B. J. 7.00 In Memory of Harrie A. Freeman 10.00 Granville (N. Y.) Fresh Air Com¬ mittee . 15.00 Minnewaska Mountain Houses... 8.00 Mrs. Vanderbilt . 100.00 Richard B. Domlnlck. 21.00 Mrs. William Wise . MOO Daddle, Monle, Helen Margaret, Joan Penfold and Billy Lusk. 25.00 Marie J. Ferguson. 14.00 Or. and Mrs. M. A. White. 7.00 Mr. and Mrs. William Ives WaRh- burn . 25.00 Mrs. Louise M. Miller. ' 7.00 Mrs. Howard F. Whiting. 100.00 Mrs. M. L. Patterson. 1.00 Mrs. R, Romeyn.... 7.00 p. M. W. 10.01 In Memory of Mother. 5.00 S. Aren . L00 ¡Mrs. Augustine Parkett. 20.no Amenia South Sunday School.... 7.10 Russell J. Perrine. 10.on Seventeen Battery Place. 100.no III. W. Hamlyn. 5.00 Marguerite Ridgely . 5.00 Mrs. E. W. Clark . 3.00 F. W. Owen . :!-0« Joseph Seeman . 10.0(1 Fred. W. Gaston. 7.0(1 Branch P. Kerfoot.>. 10.0C Mary G. Boland and Eva M. Boyle . 4.Of Ralph and Alice Rosenbaum. 21.if Francis J. Danforth. 1 0. Or Mrs. Kate Moore . 7.0C Edward T. Stanford. 3.0( H H. P/eiffer. 10.0C Total July 16, 1920.$29.842.:'.'. Contributions, preferably by check ni money order, should be sent to th« Tribune Fresh Air Fund, The Tribune New York City. German Ships Allotted U. S. Due Here Aug. 3 All Five to Undergo Two Weeks' Inspection at This Port, Then Go to Norfolk WASHINGTON, July 16..The five German surface warships allocated to the United States sailed from Brest on July 13 and are d«e to arrive at New York on August 3, it was an- nounced to-day at the Navy Depart- ment. The 22,00Û-ton dreadnought Ost- friesland is proceeding under her own power, but the armored cruiser Frank- furt and three destroyers are under tow by thé transport Hancock and three American mine sweepers. These four ships were incapable of self- propuision, the Frankfurt's machinery having been irreparably damaged, while the desoroyers were amone the German vessels submerged at Scapa Flow. , | It is planned to open the vessels for inspection, it was said, shortly after their arrival at New York. After remaining there two weeks, the destroyers will be towed to Norfolk. Whether the vessels will be r.ent to other ports for inspection had not been determined. The Ostfriesland may be, a3 she is able to proceed under her own power. Naval officials said to-day that while the vessels would be carefully examined by experts, it was doubtful whether much important information would be gleaned. Under a clause of the peace treaty the German craft must be destroyed within a year after their arrival in this country. Daniels and Roosevelt to 1 Ignore Decker's Attack Admiral's Criticism "Not Worth Bothering About," Says Assistant Secretary WASHINGTON, July 16..Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt an¬ nounced to-day that Rear Admiral Benton C. Decker's recent attack on Secretary Daniels and himself proba- bly would be passed over as "not worth bothering about," and no disciplinary action taken. Mr. Roosevelt said that both Ad¬ miral Coontz, chief of the Bureau of Operations, and Admiral Washington, chief of the Bureau of Navigation, had recommended to Secretary Daniels that Admiral Decker be detached from duty at once. The Assistant Secretary said that he and Mr. Daniels agreed at a conference in San Francisco that it would be best to permit Admiral Deck¬ er's charges to pass «annoticed. "We felt that the entire service knew Admiral Decker." Mr. Roosevelt said, "and that nothing would be gained by making a martyr of him. The matter probably will be be overlooked as not worth bothering about, although it is. of course, a direct violation of regula¬ tions.'' Admiral Decker in recently published letters to Chairman Hale of the Sen¬ ate naval investigating committee, charged Secretary Daniels with having "deliberately and intentionally" misrep¬ resented certain facts in his testimony before the committee. He' also alleged that Assistant Secretary Roosevelt had introduced the element of political, ex¬ pediency into the naval administration and was sacrificing the good of the navy to such ends. Duchess of Oporto Sails for A Month's Sojourn in U. S. LISBON, July 16..The Duchess of Oporto departed for New York to-day on board of the steamer Brittania. She will spend a month in the United States, returning thence to Naples, Her visit to Italy is to arrange for bringing the body of the late Duke, who died in Naples early this year, to *he Pantheon of Portuguese Kings in Lisbon next autumn. The Duke was a brother of the late King Carlos of Portugal. m Going On To-day DAY American Museum o£ Natural History; admission free. Metropolitan Museum of Art: admission free. Zoological Park; admission free. Aquarium; admission free. Van Cortlandt Park Museum; admission free. __ : International yacht race«, ¡sandy Hook. NIGHT Entertainment of twenty-five officers of the Japanese warship Kaauga, Winter Garden, 7;30 p.Ku. Expert Says Prehistoric Cannibals Roamed Texas - Differed From Indian Found by First White Men, Professor of Anthropology Asserts AUSTIN, Tex., July 16..Evidence that Texas was inhabited by a prehis¬ toric people different from the Indian who roamed the plains when the first white men came has been unearthed by Jamos E. Pearce, professor of anthropology of the University of Toxas. The early inhabitants, he said, lived a nomad-like existence, roaming from one part of tho wilderness to another and killing, with rude stone weapons, animals and even humana for food. In cooperation with the Smithsonian Institution bureau of ethnology, Pro¬ fessor Pearce has been investigating certain mounds for more than a year, he reported. "The life history of these people has been read from the records they left in their burned-rock mounds or kitchen middens," the professor said. "These mounds are piles of broken and charred bits of limestone three or four feet high and sometimes as long as 100 feet. They are made up of the kitchen refuse of these prehistoric peoples, who h»d regular camp sites at frequent intervals along the Edwards Plateau, extending from Austin west¬ ward to New Mexico. "These people evidently were ad¬ vanced to the stage of paleolithic cul¬ ture, an earlier age than the period of neolithic culture to which most of the American Indians belonged. These early Texas inhabitants had arrows and spears tipped with flint points, chipped but not polished. They did not polish their stone weapons, nor did they engage in any form of agri- culture. They were, however, skillful skin dressers, for we have found skin scraping tools made of flint." -o- Seven Major Generals, 22 Brigadiers Named WASHINGTON, July 16..Appoint- ment by the President of seven major generals and twenty-two brigadiers under the new army reorganization bill was announced to-day by the War De- partaient. Those appointed major generals were: Brigadier" Generals Adelbert Cronk- hite, William B. Haan, Charles T. Menoher, Charles H. Muir, William H. Wright, Omar Bundy, and George W. Read. Those named brigadier generals are: Colonels George B. Duncan, Jesse Mel. Carter, William Lassiter, William R. Smith, Robert L. Howze, Grote Hutches on, Ernest Hinds, Dwight L. Aulteman, Fox Conner, Johnson Ha- good, Hanson E. Ely, Walter H. Gor- den, Mark L. Hersey, Ulysses G. Mc- Alexander, Fred W. Slayden, Harry H. Bandholtz, Dennis E. Nolan, W. D. Connor, Robert C. Davis, and Malin Craig; Lieutenant Colonels Hugh A. Drum and George Vanhorn Moseley. Assignments announced to-day in- eluded Colonel Willard A. Hoibrook, to be chief of cavalry with rank of major general; Colonel Charles S. Farnsworth, chief of infantry with rank of major general; Major General Frank W. Coe, chief of coast artillery; Major General Charles T. Menoher, chief of the air service; Brigadier General Herbert M. Lord, chief of finance, and Colonel Ames A. Fries, chief of chemical war- fare service. Americans in London Attend Westminster Abbey Service LONDON, July 16. Westminster Abbey was packed to-day for a service nf thanksgiving in connection with the Society for the Propagation of the Gos- pel/ at which the Right. Rev. Thomas Gailor, Episcopal Bishop of Tennessee, preached the sermon. The service was arranged for Americans, resident of and visiting London, on the occasion of the sixth Lambeth Conference. The Dean of Westminster Abbey officiated, read the lesson and pronounced the blessing after a procession in which lifty robed bishops participated. -, .-i- Miss Stimson Army Nurse Chief WASHINGTON, July 16..Miss Julia L. Stimson, of New York, was appoint- ed to-day by Secretary Baker as super- intendent of ths army nurse corps with the relative rank of major. She re- ceived the D. S. M. and the R. R. C. j for services in the nurse corp3 during the war. a H. De Courcey Forbes, Horseman, Dies in Paris Was Son of Late Paul Forbes. Prominent in New York Society Circles H. De Courcey Forbes, a prominent sportsman and clubman of this city, died recently at the home of his brother, Paul R. Forbes, 37 Avenue do l'Alma, Paris, France. Mr. Forbes, son of the late Paul Forbes, whose house on lower Fifth Avenue was one of the social land¬ marks of New York, lived at the Knick¬ erbocker Club in this city. He was well known as a patron of the turf, as well as of music and art. Paul R. Forbes married a Miss De¬ lano, of Newburgh, N. Y.. and his sis¬ ter Lida married the Duc de Croiseul et Praslin. De Courcey Forbes was a mem¬ ber of the New York Jockey Club, which governed racing at old Morris Park and which is still well remembered jn racing circles- In racing events his colors usually were carried by a small string, which included the fillies Pantoufle and Cor¬ uscate. He was prominent among the governors and protectors of racing in the time of Pierre Lorillard and James R. Keene. Father Malloy's Funeral The Rev. Michael Henry Malloy, for twenty-five years attached to parishes in Brooklyn, who died on Wednesday after a long illness at the Mount Calvary Hospital in the Bronx, will be buried to-day after a requiem mass at the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes, Broadway and Aberdeen Street. Father Malloy, who was sixty-four years old, was born in Newark, N. J. He studied for the priesthood at the College of the Sacred Heart at Vine- land, N. J., where he was ordained thirty-three years ago. He is survived by one brother, John Malloy, of Newark. »- DR. M. ANNETTE PELHAM Dr. M. Annette Pelham, one of the best known woman physicians in New York, died yesterday at her home, 45 Riverside Drive, after a long illness. She was the wife of Alphonzo E. Pel- ham, president of the A. E. Pelham Operating Company, building con¬ tractors, With offices at 416 West Twen¬ ty-sixth Street. Dr. Pelham was born in this city in 1863. After receiving her early edu¬ ction, she studied medicine at the Now York Medical College and Hos¬ pital for Women at West 109th Street. She was graduated from that institu¬ tion in 1900, and since that time had been engaged in medical and philan¬ thropic work. She was a member of the New York Medical College and Hospital for Women Alumna? Association, the Homeopathic Society of New York City, County and State and the Ameri¬ can Homeopathic Institute, and was also a member of the board of censors of the New York State Homeopathic Society. Dr. Po'ham is survived by her hus¬ band and two sons, Alphonzo and Eugene T. EUSTACE JACQUES LENOX, Mass., July 16..Eustace Jacques, sportsman, formerly promi¬ nent in society circles^ here, died in London on Wednesday, «according to a cable message received here to-day. He was about fifty-eight years old. For many years Mr. Jacques was an official of the Lenox Horse Show. He had lived here until seven years ago, when he went abroad. In 1902, with his brother, Dr. Henry P. Jacques, he bought several farms on Richmond Mountain Road, which they incorpo- rated into a single estate. In 1913 they sold the property to William A. Slater, of Washington. Mr. Jacques was a member of the Lenox, Golf and Lake Mahkeena clubs of Lenox, and the Tavern Club of Bos¬ ton. He was unmarried. RALPH WILCOX BOOTH Ralph Wilcox Booth, seventy-two years old, a retired manufacturer and hardware merchant known throughout the United States, died Wednesday of heart disease at his home, 170 New York Avenue, Brooklyn. Mr. Booth was born in Cincinnati. At an early age he was associated with his father in the ownership of a chain of hardware stores in some of the larger cities. Later he became presi¬ dent of the Consolidated Fruit Jar Company of New Brunswick, N. J. He is survived by a son, a brother and four sisters. His wife died about a year ago. HARRIS N. BROWN CONSTANTINOPLE, July 16..Har¬ ris N. Brown, a jeweller of Washing¬ ton, D. C, died here on Wednesday of smallpox. BISHOP ALBERT PASCAL MONTREAL, July 16..The death in Aix-en-Provence, France, of Bishop Albert Pascal of Prince Albert, was reported here to-day. Bishop Pase\*l left here for a visit to France and iVime Italy, last fall. Bishop Pascal was born in Langue¬ doc, France, in 1848. He served as In¬ dian missionary in the Northwest from 1874 to 18§1, and in the latter year became Bishop of Mosynopolis and Vicar Apostolic of Saskatchewan. THE REV. R. H. McKIM WASHINGTON, July 16. .The Rev. Dr. Randolph H. McKim, pastor of the Church of the Epiphany here for thirty-two years, and one of the best i;ncwn Episcopal clergymen in the United States, died unexpectedly yes¬ terday nt Bedford Springs, Pa., while playing golf. He was stricken with apoplexy. FREDERICK W. LOHR Frederick W. Lohr, secretary of Ilardman, Peck & Co., manufacturers of pianos, died on Thursday at his home, 44JL Riverside Drive. He was sixty-six ''¡fears old. Mr. Lohr had been identified with Ilardman, Peck & Co. for thirty-six years and since its incorporation in 1905 had been its secretary. FREDERICK F. CUTLER BOSTON, July 16..Frederick F. Cut¬ ler, publisher of "The Shoe and Leather Reporter" and "The Shoe Re¬ tailer," died to-day at his home in Newton Center. LOUIS FALLER Louis Faller, a retired Jersey City business man and vice-president of the Roosevelt Theatrical Company, of West Hoboken, N. J., is dead at his home, 38 Troy Street, Jersey City Heights. He is survived by his wife, four daughters and a son. EDWARD SCHENCK Edward Schenck, a veteran of the Civil War and for many years con¬ nected with the United States Cus¬ toms Service, died Thursday at the Brooklyn Hospital after an illness of four weeks. He was seventy-eight. He is survived by his wife, who is ill at the Brooklyn Hospital. ZELIA MARION Zelia Marion,, sixty years old, an actress, of 262 West Thirty-eighth Street, died in Bellevue Hospital last night, shortly after being taken uncon- scious from her home, suffering from apoplexy. WALTER DELMORE Walter Delmore, fifty-six, a well known Harlem politician who lived at the Amsterdam Inn, 464 West 155th Street, dropped lead last night at the nej-dquarters of the J. J. McCormick Association, 1941 Amsterdam Avenue. He was seated in a chair talking to several members of the organization, when he suddenly fell forward. He was dead when Dr. White, of the St. Lawrence Hospital, arrived. Death was attributed to heart disease. Mr. Delmore had been a clerk in the ! Surrogate's Gourt. He was a nephew of Larry Delmore, who formerly was one of Richard Croker's chief lieuten¬ ants. WARREN M. SCOTT Warren M. Scott, an executive of the Simons Manufacturing Company, died yesterday at his home, 313 Locust Ave- nue, Port Chester, N. Y. He was forty- one years old. Mr. Scott was born in South Beach,; Conn., but had liv%d in Port Chester for twenty-five years. Pie is survived by his mother, four sisters and a brother. Naval Officers Entertain Newport Colony at Dance Torpedo Station Boathouse Is Scene of Biggest Event So Far This Season Special Dispatch to Tlie Tribune NEWPORT, July 16..Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fitzsimmons departed to-day for their home in New Hampshire for aj brief stay. They will return soon to j their Newport cottage, Harbourview. Members of the army and navy and summer colonies gathered at the naval torpedo station boathouse last evening,; where a dance was given by the of- ficers of the station. It was the largest affair of the kind given so far this season. Mrs. Alexander Hamilton Rice gave a luncheon at Miramar this afteanoon. Governor R. Livingston Beeckman and Mrs. Barger Wallach are respec- tively chairman and vice-chairman of the tennis tournr* ent committee at the' Newport Casino this summer. Aside from the big invitation meet there are eleven events scheduled, including singles and doubles for men and wom¬ en and mixed doubles. The Casino is offering prizes. Prince Casimir Lubomirsky, the Po* lish Minister, and Francis Pulaski, the counsellor of the legation, are in Wash¬ ington, for a short stay. '" "i mkWs«\m«\%wmÊÊa«i«mym«mW*\v«wmsMt\sw^ One pound of %Eggs will buy 9 pounds of Milk NEVER thought of that, did you? Nine average eggs weigh one pound. At present prices the nine would cost 50 cents. At the Sheffield stores you could get 9 Milk will pounds (4 quarts and a pint) of milk for 50 save you cents. You think of eggs as solid food, of money if milk as a liquid. Eggs contain 73% water, you'll give milk 88%. In other words, your egg food milk a costs about 5 times as much as your milk chance food. Nottvithstanding the fact that milk is the most difficult to handle of all our foods, it has remained the cheapest. It is a com¬ plete food and only one for which no substitute has been found. Sheffield Farms Co., Inc. New York Southampton Colony Gay With Dinners and Dances Ferdinand J. Jelke and the Theron Strongs Among Latest Entertainers Special Dispatch to The Tribune SOUTHAMPTON, L. I., July 16.. Ferdinand J. Jelke, staying at the Shin- necock Hills Golf Club for the re¬ mainder of the summer, gave a dinner and dance last night. Major and Mrs. Theron Strong will have a dinner for b few of their friend ; to-morrow at the Meadow Club before the Saturday evening hop. Mr. and Mrs. Orson D. Munn, with their two daughters, have arrived at Southampton for the season. Mrs. George Leary and her son have arrived at the Irving Hotel. Mr. Leary will soon join her here. Mr. and Mrs. Leary will soon move into their resi¬ dence, which is rapidly nearing cöm- »pletion. Clarence H. Mackay, his daughters and John W. Mackay will arrive next week to open the Douglas cottage for the remainder of the season. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Sabin have been entertaining Senator William M. Calder, of BrookNn». and his daughter at their home, Bayberry Land. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ogden Bacon, of New York, with their son, Robert Ogden Bacon jr., have arrived at the Irving to stay for the season. Peter Cocper Bryce is also at the Irving. Francis Watts Stevens is at the Meadow Club. Miss Martha McCook, of Tuxedo Park, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Win- throp Waldrich. Mrs. George E. Dad- mun and Miss Dadmun have arrived for the remainder of the season. Belgium Honors Whitlock BRUSSELS, July 16.. Brand Whit- lock, American Ambassador to Belgium, was to-day presented by the Belgian Parliament" with a white Italian marble bust of himself, in appreciation of the services rendered to ^Belgium by Mr. Whitlock A replica }oi the bust will be placed in the Belgian Parliament Building. Birth, Engagement, Marriage, Death and In Memoríam Notice» may be telephoned to The Tribune any time up to midnight for insertion in the next day's paper. Telephone Beeffman 3000. DEATHS " I BERSHABDT-On July IF.. 1920, John,: beloved husband of Rose Bernhardt. Funeral from hi» late residence, 683 Am- sterdam ave,, Sunday, July 18, 1 p. m. BERRY.On 'July 14. Annie Berry, wife of Thomas Berry (nee Higgins), native of Cootehill, County Cavan. Ireland. Funeral from her late residence, SOI West 134th st., Saturday morning. Re¬ quiem mass at'St. Aloysius Church, 10 a. m. CLARKE.At Whltinsvllle, July 15, Annie Louise Clarke, daughter of the late Rowb« Reynolds Clark«, M. D. Funeral services at the residí rice of Arthur F. Whitin at 4 p. m-, Monday. July 19. Relatives and friends invited. Kindly omit flowers. DANFORTH.At Pasadena. Calif., on Wednesday. July 14, Kate Black, widow of the Hon. Albert Danforth. Funeral private. PEKNATEL. Elizabeth C, widow of the late Thierry Dcknate!. on Thursday. July 15. Funeral services at her late residence, 678 Lafayette ave., Brooklyn, 2 p. m.. Saturday, July 17. Interment private. FENNELLY.Louise E. (nee Steigier), on July 15, 1320, in her 35th year, at her residence, 1114 Ave. P. Requiem, mass at St. -Brendan's R. C. Church on Sat¬ urday, at t»:30 a. m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. GREENTHAL. Max, beloved brother of Eliza Kent and the late Mrs. Leopold Haas, after a short illness, on July 14, in his 73d year. Funeral private. HALPIN.On July 15, 1020, Margaret, be¬ loved wife of James Halpin and daugh¬ ter of the late Michael Clayton and Ellen Doran, formerly of Kingsbrldge. Funeral from his late residence, Rose- dale, L. I., Saturday, July 17, S:30 a. m. ; thence to St. Mary's R. C. Church, Valley Stream, L. I., where a solemn requiem mass will be oqered for the happy repose of her soul. Interment St. Raymond's Cemetery. HESS.Samuel. THE FUNERAL CHURCH, Broadway, 66th St., Sunday, 10 a. m. HOBBY.On July 16, 1920, Blanche Bar¬ rett, wife of J. Oakley Hobby Jr., at her residence, 41 Prospect st.. White Plains, N. Y. Funeral private. Intermeut at Peekskill, N. Y. HONEY.-On July 16, 1920, Arthur C. Honey, in his 60th year. Services will be held at his late residence, 240 East Tremont ave.. Sunday, July 38, at 4 p. m. Interment _>>'crth\voad Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pa. HOOPER.At Rutherford. N, J., on July 14, 1820, Minnie, wife of the late Dr Henry M. Hooper. Funeral services al Presbyterian Church Saturday afternoor at 3 o'clock. Interment Hillside Ceme¬ tery. ISAACS.On Thursday, July 15. Eetiu-: Isaacs, in her 8 3d year, beloved wife oi Woolf and devoted mother of Richard Morris, Julia, Rebecca and Eva. Fuñera from her late residence, 624 West 162c st., Sunday. July 18, at 2 p. m. JAQUES.In London, England, July H Eustace Jaques, formerly of Boston an. Lenox. Mass. JUDGE . Michael. THE FUNERAl CHURCH. Broadway, 66th st., Saturday 2 p. m. Auspice» Actors' Fund. LINK . Josephine. THE FUNERAl CHURCH, Broadway. 66tb st., Sunday 2 p. m. LOHR.Thursday, July 15. Fred W. Lohi Services at his home, 145 Riversid Drive, Saturday, at 1:30 p. m. Inter ment private. LYDEN.Daniel F.. July " 14, 1920. «ud denly, at his residence, 601 Rldgewoi» ave., Brooklyn, beloved husband of Mai garet (nee Cannon) and father of Wll Ham, Daniel, Susan Canavan, Florcnc De Leon. Funeral from his lato res dence, Saturday, July 17. Requiem ma: at the Church of the Blessed Sacramen Pine and Fulton sts., Brooklyn. 9 a- m. M'CANN.Suddenly, on July 13, Thomas 1 McCann, brother of the Rev. Christoph. H., William, and nephew of the Ia> Bishop Cusack. Funeral from his lai residence. 422 East 50th st on Saturda 9:30; thence to the Church of St. Joh the Evangelist, where a solemn requie: mass will b<; offered for the repose hi» soul. Funeral private. !ttILLF,R.On July 14, Clara Miller (n. Grossman), beloved wife of John I Miller. Funeral from her late residenc 308 East 125th »t.. on Sunday, 2 p. r Interment Lutheran Cemetery. MOI.LOY.On Wednesday. July 14, the Re Michael H. Molloy. Requiem mass 10 a. isi.. Saturday, July 17, at Our Ltu if lourdes Church. Aberdeen st.. Broi/ lyii. Interment, in church crypt. DEATHS JULRKANY.Wednesday, July 14. 192«\ John, beloved husband of Margaret J. Ward M u Ire any. Fun«»ral from his lato residence, 383 2d st.. Brooklyn, Satur¬ day. July 17, at 2:30 p. m. Interment Greenwood. NEWMAN.on July 15, 1920. William M. ¦beloved husband of Martha Kauffman Newman and father of Montrose K Royal H. and William jr., In his 84th year. Interment private. Detroit and Chicago papers please copy. NORTON.John Joseph, son of Julia and the ¡ate John Norton, at his resldeno 266 St. Nicholas ave.. Brooklyn.« Re¬ quiem mass Saturday, 9:30 a. m., St. Erigfd's Church. Interment St. John i Cemetery. PELHAM.M. Annette. Members of the Homoeopathic Medical Society of the State of New York are requested to .< tend the funeral services of our la;. member, M. Annette Pelham, M. D., at her late residence, 45 Riverside Drive, on Sunday, July IS. at 8 p. m. Arthur !.. Grant. M. D., President. PERSON.On Thursday, July 16, I9Í0, Arziila, beloved wife of David Persijn, aged 61. years. Funeral private. Sut.- day. July 18, 1920. Interment Bv, green». RKIOY.On Wednesday. July 14. ! John J. Reidy, beloved son of M Reldy and the late Catherine Swei and brother of Elizabeth and Mai« Beldy. Funeral from his late residents 260 Vi Water st., Sunday, 2 p. m. Rl Til VEN.Suddenly, at Madison, N. J .July 15, 1920. James Ruthven.. Funeral services will be held at his late rts.- dence, 176 Kings Road, Madison, N. J,. on Saturday. July 17, at 4 o'clock. SANDS.Suddsnly. William H.. son of the. late Samuel S. and Mary Emily San'it« SCTLLION . On Wednesday, July 11. James H. J. Scullion. In hi» 68th year. Funeral from his late residence, 301 West L-d st., on Saturday morning at 10 o'clock; thence to St. Colombo's, 25th st., fcth and 'Jth aves. Interment Cal¬ vary. SEARING.In Brooklyn, NT. T., Juty 15, ll«20, George W. Searing. Funeral «serv¬ ice« will be held on July 18, at 11 a, m., at his iate residence, 1818 70th st . Brooklyn. Interment Ridgewood, N. 3- STANDKX.At W<-st New York. N. J.. July 14. 1920, Henry Standen, beloved husband of Josephine Standen (nee Don¬ ovan), aged 70 year«. Relatives and friends, also Charles Dickens Lodge Ho. 45, of New York, are respectfully In¬ vited to attend funeral on Saturday, July 17, at 1 p. m., from his late resi¬ dence, 422 13th st.. West New York. Interment Evergreen Cemetery-- Auto¬ mobile cortege. TERRY.On Wednesday. July 1«, 192«-«. Mary Emma Corwin, wife of James Ed¬ ward Terry, aged 76, at her home, loi Berkeley Place, Brooklyn. Service« at Riverhead, L. L, Saturday, July IT, at 1:30 p. m. VANDEBPOEL.-At Watch Hill. R. I., on Wednesday. July 14, 1920. Minnie Buck. master, wife of the late Isaac Vander- poel. of Albany, N. Y. Funeral service« private. VAN LOAN.Henry Fairbank, «on of th» late Isaac N. and Sarah A. Van Loan, entered into rest at Babylon, L. I.. Jttfy 14. Funeral services at the residence of his brother in Babylon, 11 a. nv, Satur¬ day. Interment at Woodlawn, 2 p. m. WALKER.On Thursday. July 16, at her home, 65 Clifton Plac?. Brooklyn. Marth* Holmes. beloved wife of Frederic}! Wa!k«^r. Funeral service« at the Church cf the Measlah. Greene and Cl^rrnimt aves., Brooklyn, on Sunday. Juiy 18, 192", at 3 p. m. WATERS.On July 14, 1920, Catherine A. Waters, beloved wife of the late Ben¬ jamin Waters. Funeral from «90 Tintai» ave.. Saturday, July 17, 9:Î0 a. m . thence to St. Anaelro's Church, Tint« rv ave. and 155th «t. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Call "Columbus 8200" Any Hour, Day or Night FRANK E. CAMPBELL THE FUNERAL CHURCH be. (Non-Sectarian) 1970 Broadway at 66th St. Downtown Ofllee, 23d St. 4 8th Av. THE WOODLAWN < EMETERY 233d tít. By Harlem Train and by Trolley« Lots of small size for sale Office. 20 lias«. ZZd t><., x. x.