The evening world. Newspaper, April 27, 1908, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD. CARPENTER SHOP TO. FINE CATHEDRAL | + Rev. J. Talbot Smith Reviews for The Evening World the Church’s History in New York, and Tells Why This Week’s Celebration Is Held. Rev. J. Talbot Smith, whose articles descriptive of the growth | of the diocese of New York since tts estadlishment, one hundred gears ago, will appear in The Evening Worid datly during the cen- temary week, ts President of the Catholic Summer School i at Plattsburg, and a writer of distinction upon Cathobic subjects. Archbishop Farley recognizes hig history of the New York: diocese as the oficial publication. Father Smith's articles twill treat the subject from a new point ELIZABETH SETON Jegally established on the 10th of June, 178. He became the president of tie Tooard of trustees, whose other | bers were a Portuguese merchant Ruiz Sylva, James Steward and Henry | Duffin. Five lots on Barclay street were bought on lease from the Trinity corporation, and the cornerstone of the ew church was laid on October 5, 17: Charles IV., King of Spain, con- tributed $1,000 to its construction. of view in tracing the close association of the growth of the church asa religious organization with the development of the people as a community. They will prove of interest to Catholics and non- Catholics alike. Catholic Church History in New York. Written Especially tor The Evening World BY KEV. J. TALBOT SMITH. ARTICLE No. 1, NE of the best friends that the immortal George Washington had King of France was asked to aid, but did not respond, He had his own finan- cial troubles at that time. By November of the next year the y ready for servic in the War of the Revolution | Rg oseain oe was the famous Charles Car-| most unusual ees roll of Carrollton, a wealthy native eee Seeiael a an Spun f Mary land, who signed the Dec- Ambassador. wit suite and the iration of Independence and used Hcaene napeniieaer sak tevaltenae the elite th his wealth and influence to) ¥i#! and political lite were the 1 oe ee 2 a part of the congregation English rule in the Colonies, sass was celesrates. wit was to make known to all men Seer en ae his share in the revolution that he lains of the French and tlons as assistants. Later meniiie pry i ve | dor entertained at his el residence as well as his Srestaent ot Ganarasalancuiig 2to the Declaration. Some one house id. the baths fe WE of Congress. and the members It was a great do had properly and triumplantly rese: the refusal of the Common Counei! and raised himself to a still more prominent position. He returned to France in his last years and dled at an advanced age mong the signers said, as they were affixing their names: “It will go hard with us if we fail for here are our names to a document; but there are so many Carrolis and that you, Carroll, may escape proscription.” farmer. It was t Ia the words, “of Carrollton,” so that Founder of Sisters of Charity Con- Neither f could help knowing just which Carroll signed worted There: From that date to the year 1808 the church In Barclay street provided the Cathoiles of > York with all they needed of religion. It was improved from time to time, and an Archbishop the document. r in the future of the voung Re- e his taith in Washington as the providen- public, and nothing could s! tial leader to direg}. the f > of the army first and the nation after-| of Mexico sent tt gifts of money and < Peilethemnin i Westors We 3} . | Ornaments use {te pastor for i wards. [n all the int el at Washington, either to remove him| Sears, Rev. Willlam O’Brien, had been from the y or to hamper his administration of the government, | his sch ifeliow. It was a fashionable Charles tood by h Ann G@onTe’ Bs Fes Tey say ’\ church for a long time, owing to the Charles ( tood by hi Congress, kept him rmed of the] patronage of tue King of Spain and and schemers, t of othe stubly secret sche into the s { refused to be coaxed, tricked or bullied | ihe nietanae In an alt su the jeepney and Spanish embassies, whose Ambas- MOSS areas . |sadors cut a great swath in the social recalling at this moment, for Charles! lif* of the dav spor can. 79 0) heneat 5 PL ATT 4s 6 | It provided at least one sensation Carroll : en, and So. remained all his life, the most| when in 186 Mrs. Elisaheth Bayley powerful, w ent Catholic layman of his e. | Seton, member of a meted family and BS xen CUIGRATG: ; , . | widew of a Seton, became a convert to His cousin, Rey. John Carroll, w ho had long seived the Church in| the Catholic faith and founded the arylind, become t oman Cat ishoy Inited | famous religious community which to- Maryland, become the firs! R Catholic Bishop in the United | tates 1 he ve 2 sare. Pata ate ah ~ . | day manages St. Vincent's Hospital and States. In Ke year 17 ere were very few Catholics in the Colonies—| orner remarkable institutions, the Sis- perhaps in all 25,000- st of them lived in Maryland. They were} ters of Charity er the spirit ani i s aS “| he sost n ted Catholle In comm >r- under the s ral juris hop of London. When the| cial tire at that time was Dominick war bezan with England sume impossiMe for the Bishop of London | L¥8¢!: thd the most notable of his put le performances was his share in the address of felicitation to President Washington, on behalf of the Catholic body tn the Republic. It was signed by Rishop Carroll, of Baltimore, his br ther Daniel, who helped to frame the new constitution and to elect Wash- ington; his cousin, Carroll of Carrolte Thomas Fitzsimons, of Pennsylvania, signer of the Declaration of Inas- pendence, and Dominick Lynch, of New to exercise any direc quently, the Pope appoi Apostoli AMEL As soo tion, and 1783 and 17: rity over his American flock, and, conse- » John Corroll in 1784 to act as Vicar- perior, of the Amevican mission, S FILST CA? HOLIC BISHOP, | as Wa on was elected President under a new constitu- 2 firmer method of governing than had prevailed between », Pope Pius VI. n d Father Carroll Bishop of Baltimore, with jurisdiction ove on State: York daa t the thiricen States, As these documents are rarely met Probatly no & wit! In ordinary history. and ee they he hi C eyes Feast had so extensive a diocese, but as ed tribute to the Catholic i had few and travel was difficult, most of his time was spent | powers whose money, fleets end armies 2H 1 Baltimore, which thus became the premier diocese of eantied pwasbing S34 oxscthran atts the Catholics and the reply of Wash- pene began ble episcopal the oMce of French Consul, | ton are Werth quoting, so they are Angton b Pr 1 Hector Bt; Jonn\ de) Crave: Heese ete Neal tin Quebec under | Catholic Address to Washington. Dacome ta the li fn Now York. game gPloneer | ugir—-We have long been impatient to Baltimore and losses during the: War of ‘ering many our Joy and unbounded conf- in the United In hfs anert hrvat eden e Revolu- in ycur belng called, by an unani- writings, and cven in his porn aianranawana aes rance on 2! mous vote, to the first station of a there exists a striking resemin ol, attniney ween these Wrote | Country in which that una. y could Washington, for whom he had the | + ELWraROera nie ie been obtained without the same admiration shown by his cousin, | 1:, views and opinions 6 Me Carroll of Carrollton. Aas more q freethinker thee | of nent wisdom and unblemished In the Hine of duty he visited various bat they we, Papi: e Catholic. | virrue. Our congratulations have not pasts of his divers, amon t | i did nit prove Pinions of | reaches you sooner because eur scat- city of New York. which had be 3 ee van. Dim wet: | cored situation prevented our communi. *he seat of rover n tts Catholle PAS Hoa i cation aud the collection of those sen haw “sen to co rclal eminen When he arrived in Atertea he te + | timents hn d every breast. well. He found few Cat for the frst tine that hie ois wrned | rit the delay has furnished us with the there, and the: did. no: Impress ‘died, his farm in Penusr vente ug, opportunity not merely of presaging favorably, althous: socialiy many Of | been devastated and burned be the et | tie happiness to be expected under | them heta vers t postions. They laiane and bis ohitteer Guaiiinoere your administration, but of bearing tes a@chureh in r i ty. < a mT ee t which w te; ley Fie para jtiyty, He finally recovered nis chii- [essen to that which We experience al and the Spanish Ambassador laid the | His poiigious opintons ald Aish } “It {s your peculiar talent, tn way cornerstone. him, from taking a live! tess and in peace, to afford security to | ;, Ueed Carpenter Shop as a Church. (the affairs of the chureh in New Yor oomunit ir protection Into | At this tine the Catholics were hold- |He took the ‘lead in organizing tiie Wn san suielas chem ing divine service in a carpenter shop, | members of the falth. aud applied to masa poat|lity which stood on the ground at present |the Common Counc! for permission to B rousoacablian nubile trpogy occupied by St. 's Chureh, It was |hold service on Sundays in the Ex ries det pekand uncesrstien,| not not a pleasant place for worship, and |change, a vacan: butlding on Broad W this fact urged the people to heroic | street. Permission was denied, and 8! efforts to socie a decent churen prop; |John cok the refusal as an tnsult, | I citenlericate erty. The Founding of St. Peter’s Church, You encourage respect for reileton, One pt notable New Yorkers of | He assembled the Catholics at once | tucyleri uy toabibathan intaaventeceaneacaaee and founded @ corporation which wag pric: eo vn words and actions mem- | Jose | ‘The with a fine reputation as an American| MONDAY, APRIL 27 ,1908.! Pa a of the w duct of men. “Your exalted maxims a moral and phy: | provement of our country he duced already the happiest Under your administration animated with zeal for the and encouragement of pro. effects. America is attainment ul terature W She ves her agriculture, extends her cc ce and ac jeign nations a dignity u before, Their Title to Equa! Rights, ‘From these happy events, in wh none can feel a warmer interest t curselves, we derive ajditiona ure by recoliecting that vou, sir, lood spilt under your eyes, common exertions for her de der your auspicious conduct 1 of every right ren- nJoy ‘s more Gear to us by the remem- | 1nd enil brance of former hardships i! “When we pray for preservation, ‘arch 12 1 ; of them, where they have been gt and expect the full exte on of th: om the Justice of those 8 which, stl restrict them—wa. solicit. the protection of heaven ov. 2 commo: country, we neltli nor can omit, a n he reoomimending your preservation to the Divin: singular care of because we co; means are so ayal welfare of the U: H your ne persuasive eloquence of your virtues.” s aryl Shi el op. The address was not merely a telict- Wrecked) Ship tation, it was also : ae I now recetve wiih mi! at F. 1ish expected panish vey om 0 oh, al\ be a brig or a wind-Jamme. BARCLAY STREET aan kind il be more e whe conduc embers of the Itied to the | of if temporal . and that all the e the exertions of all good \ and secure the happi- ry in the permanent dum and independ WASITINGTON. , ONIGNS STREWN | = ALONG THE COAST, POLICEMEN STAAS prolongation of your hea! ‘ ife Save e- in which are included t Long Island Life wanes BE example, the lom of lieve They Came From a be- This Week’s MOST-PEV.JOHNCARROM HECHBISHOP-OF BALTIMORE” _ 'HOKE NIPPERS, BUT IS CAUGHT AFTER HOT CHASE Detectives Afraid to Fire on Swiss Assassin in Crowded Street. Jost Sattler, wanted in St. Gall, Swit, zerland, on a charge of ‘highway rob- bery and attempted murder, had a lively battle with Detective Dieteah, of Bureau, to-day, within a stone's throw of Jefferson Market Court. He broke the “nippers”’ the Central when with which be was linked to Dietseh and bolted west on Tenth street for Nberty. Sattler, according to @ olrcular re- ce ved by the Swiss Consulate in this (ity, robbed a man near St. Gall. Ho | was arrested, but broke his chains and jescaped from the two gendarmes who had him tn charge, seriously injuring both of them When the Swiss Consulate notified Police Headquartes & couple of weeks Ago about Sattler, Detectives Dietson and Lorouix were assigned to the oase. » finally landed the man Saturday afternoon in a saloon at One Hundred aud him and landt Fitty-seventh avenue und Court- to head- street tok eexterous move he broke the “steel ) he was affixed to arn, With whi arding west Ww D halt, he zig- roux and crowd i f large crowd wa Leen the pr: nt to ; a A Litical situa n ty pro- uspect of national prosperity . for your ly pleasing to us on anothe thy Ife and acoount; because, whilst our coun ub i st preserves her freedom and indepen- ne: favorabie | ts eae pancallonecrny dence, we # have a well-founded are ple toll ewinen CUBIIETeRae ityeaircaeatets title to claim £ tice, the equa And may the jty prosecute. Magistrate. Bar! old rights of citizenwhip, as the price of our Sattler in $5 ull for forty-eight loos from Switzer- ‘lan er the nearly half an hour By his pocke been taken small was some a key could be found that e officer from his prisoner ee away by a time. hefore would free AT ACCOUNT |AIRL Advance Guard of One Hun- dred Bluecoat Witnesses . An appeal for an ese ceeien of tolerances form Washin has been a strong smell of} aera ra mat A moment when tie big mPa (ho FG IER Tes (oll Take the Stand. threatenen to forget the eminent ser cime in early this mornin —_—— Vioes of Ca df vigo Nperoescatiol in 40 vigor tng testimony of Janitor Richard with his usu 1 he Ute: Me night 0 the Staten Island Bank at Staplete 1 ealy, quantt of HER) pantot boxes wert sin the Unica wreeks ge nrly al! erates and por geiq 8, * Hamilton an of the vad boon turown Up! tPeur wotere ed the proot Was a cop, but * pald tue | wite BRIDE ($ BACK: CUT SNAPPING DOG | CAUSES A WILD | HOMEHAUGH SHORT | Mrs. Roberta Menges-Corwin- | Hil! Returns from Eng- ee pune MaRS land Alone. | Bites a Boy and Jumps at a! Sheeps! 1 iting to-day 4 . lover the # n return of Mrs. Roberta Score of Men and Women | Menges-Corwin-riill, who left tor re ‘ J e ahaa 3 . alone, her < ey moon AS ‘ rthur Hill, remain= They Flee. He thot hat she home of Six Persons in Harlem Bitten by Another Animal, Which Was Afterward Shot, A dig brindled mongrel terrified a |section of the Bronx to-day in the nelgiborhood of Westchester avenue and the Subway extension, and before |the animal was finally ghot tt had bit-| 1, | Skirts and trousers of scores of women and men who fled before it. ‘There have been several mad dox scares {n the Bronx and Hartem lately, and all of ‘he animals killed by the police are now being examined at the Boasd of Health to discover whether or not they had rabies. | ‘The Gog that cawand the scare in the | Bronx to-day was first seen at West- chester and St. Ann's avenue, where he attacked twelve-year-old Emil Kroon, of No, 63 St. Ann's avenue, biting kim |on the hand, legs and face, Mother Rescues Boy. The boy's mother beat off the dog and carried the boy to the Lebanon Hospital, where his wounds were cau- teriaed. Mennwhile the dog ocomtinued There are two great advantages in buying from a manufacturer who deals exclusively in floor coverings. One is an actual saving of money by obtaining factory prices. The other is an opportunity to select from the newest and freshest patterns di- rect from the mills. Here are some special offerings which strikingly illustrate these advan- tages: RUGS—Sarak Wiltons, 9x12, wov- en in one piece; reg- ularly sold at $40.00, Hows etease Neen $26.50 Handsome Wilton Velvet Rugs, exceptionally good col- orings, 9x12, were $23.50, now ....... $18.50 ite yelping. snapping course down Body Brussels Rugs; the best Weatchester avenue, all the shop- made, 9x12, were keepers along the thoroughtare tele- CAA GT ao enn $23.50 phoning frantically to the police. Patrolman Plsea, the oradk shot of the Morrisania station, cornered the dog at Bergen and Westchester avenues where he shot tt to death The police say they have been hunting for the | animal sinoe yesterday, when it bit sev- eral children in another neighborhood lof the Bronx, among them four-year old Agnes McCawley, of No, 66 Bast One Hundred am! Fortieth street, and Max Appel, aix years old, of No. 006 Fast One Hundred ang Fortieth street. ‘They were both treated in the Lénovin |Hospiial. | An examination tp betrig made to ¢e- | termine whether a dog that bit stx par- | sons in Harlem yesterday had rabies, A |eroup waiting at Amsterdam avenue |and Manhattan street for a oar was the first to see the yelping mongrel, and all esoaped except Ole Cleveland, ten years old, of No. 28 Manhattan wtreet, who was bitten on the leg. Bit Five Others. Ruaning with men and boys tn pur- suit, the dog, at Broadway and Man- hattan street, bit Herman Wogan, thirty, of No. 140 Amsteriam avenue. twice In the right leg. At One Hun- Grea and Thirty-sixth street and Broad- | way it bit nine-year-old George Spooner on the ohin as the boy tried | to escape and fell, and at One Hun- rad and Forty-neoond street It bit Faward R. Buvart, of No. 880 St. Nioh- olag avenue, on the right I Py thie time a great uproar had re- jsulted along the Ine of flight, and |scores of stroliers fled tn all directions, leaving a clear path for the animal and | }rapidly swelling crowd in pursuit | A woman wh name was not learned Royal Wilton Rugs at a sav- ing of $10.00; regularly sold Wet sess $29.50 Rugs made from remnants less than cost, in all grades: sizes to fit any room; bring measurements. CARPETrS—Tapestry Brussels, hest 10-wire weaving, were $1.00, this week. 2214 Worsted Wilton Velvets, sultable for parlor, hall and tairs; were Sissnow., 75¢ to 95¢ Axminsters in attractive de- signs, suitable for any room; were $1.75, now PlelS Others, mene $125.97 we 9. 1th St. & Dobson’s fiiti ave. Makers of Carpets for 50 Year.., Clothing Co. 3 Stores, New York and Brooklya. Eredié Enables Men and Women was bitten at One [lundred and Forty- Ing into the vest! w dwellings, No. | gz next bit W! on the hand, and) Broadway, the 4 Davis, a haliboy, | was penned tn a corner by Poilceman to Dress in the Finest of Spriag Conneally and shot. All those bitten were treated at the J. Hood Wright Hospital. Clothing require no references or Se- curit ake no investigations— or deliveries. Make your purchase and take the goods with you We To Good Wives and Mothers | Do you know that the health of your We lare the only concern’ in’ the family can be easily protected by | country that extends credit to every- ple rujes of sanitation? . n our liberal ay—cash price d ment 17 | Do you know that cleanliness means \ tion? | ust a little CN Disinfectant (non.poi- }sonous) added to your cleaning water | 2736th Ay, near 17th sch 9974 3dAv..nr124th Sts, 1 used everywhere about the house it clean and healthful. It will ts and bugs away even nths. wait until one of your dear en sick before you get a disin’ Keep sickness away by using one Toall Cleaning Water add rug WES? DISINFECTING CO. (Inc.) ON Stores | iw At 4 Our Kegular Prices One Doz. Best $3 Cabinets .) For an Even Dollar psaliteor blind ness. XamMined: On ait kibed tye Doctor enue | 1 Beoodway | i ee ; ; 2iy'Heovtway | Q*Neill-Adams Co., Astor House Block. Near, 223 beth Ave., Near 15th St, | Studios, Adams Bldg, 6th Ay, & 21st St, Ann St. | Rugs |

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