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FAR AONE OL NE EH URE cm RN em Ve members of the eat xlume Soctety, the Spalding IAterary \Unton\yand the Tem- perance uid, whey form od & procession | to escort tt to the diuro.b on Columbus “Father Doyle was atyoat Hent pmed, of *amperance and for wrehy sears vas one of the efficers a1 mont sotive | sworkera in the Total Abeil adtice taton of America He dounded tig Rauliet Apoe- | tolle Oflasion Towne wt dD. C., and wae rector “s time af die cardinal. Afdons wan LA have at Boer the funeral, but wat! evented |trom doing ao, fle ment ntdeages of condolence to the Paultnd Seat praixing Father Doyle's fife 4 the aheat terme, Fi eterno | wore numerous and very beal¥\tul. POLICEMAN HARRY’, “THE INDIAN,” GETS A NOTABLES AT THE FUNERAL OF FATHER DOYLE sine Cardinal Farley * the Benediction After the 1 institution Pronounces Solemn Service. BODY PL ACED IN VAULT. Paulist Priest Had Died in Cali- fornia, Where He had Gone for Rest. , Cardin&l Farley and @ rcore of dis- “tinguished prelates attended to-day “the funeral of the Very Rev. Alex- jander P. Doyle at the Church of at wal the Apostle, at Sixtieth atrest Diamond Pointed Revol- ver at ‘Him. 4 Columbus avenue, The great burch was crowded by those wno Knew and loved the dead priest This afternoon the body wane buried fm the vault of the church with other Meaders of the Paulist Fathers. Before the services began, shortly ter 10.80 o'clock, several thousane Persone viewed the body, which lay before the altar. At the solemn requiem high mass the Rev. Father John J. Hughes was celebrant, the Rev. Thomas Daly @eacon and the Rev. Thomas Cullen deacon. The Rev. Father Walter MBit preached the sermon, and Car- @inal Farley pronounced the oc. a." the conclusion of the interment was in private, after kag? distinguished assemblage of nota- Dies who attended the public ser. vices had loftthe church. Mather Hughes, focal euperior of the order, had change ) of the interment. NOTABLE CLERGYMEN WHO AT- ; TENDED THE SERVICE. , Besides Cardinal Farley, the (ollowing prelates and priests were present at the| * Juneral: ‘The Rev. Henry Cullen, Supertor-Gen- bar hy Fairclaugh vas rushing the eral of the order of Paulist Fathers In| pone! trolman Joseph Priebel came Callfornia; the Rev. P. J. Hayes.| agshing up. He arrived in time to re- Cardinal Farley's gocretary; Bishop M.| ceive u brick intended for “the Indian.” Harkins of Providence, Bishop Coulter|y_ struck his left hand. He changed of Buffalo, Bishop D. 1, O'Conneh of} tne crowd while Fairelangh grabbed i street police station, luggedt into:the tion at an early hour thia man giving the name ef Har twenty-nine years of age, by occupation. According to the etery of he vryscoas, merning « ‘Tdiamond, @ tatler he had to be an Indian to get away with a gang which was deing a enn dance on the corner of Second avenue and One Hundred ana Twenty-seventh Mrect, The wetrd molses of the bymch made it an easy matter for the scout to find and follow thetr trail. mond, with the alr of @ frontiersman, he declared, pulled @ fevolver on @im, and while it was pointed vgs dts bosom, the man, he the trigger. Fairclaugh was too quiche with read bends! he declared, and from $ Richmond, Va.; Bishop W. A. Jones of| piamond. Priebel ran for the man who Porto Rico, Bishop O'Connor of Newark,| threw tho brick but the latter disap j Mgr, Machin of Washington, Mgr. ¥. ~ KB [Wall of New York, Mer, J. Ho] swallowed up in one of the areawaya, Rev.| Diamond put up a fight but was soon C,H, and taken to the station where ify the further, information that peared in @ tenement house and was aa O'Rour aes OG ©. Piece hueifin b at No, 39 East One Hundred Waldoon, or ithe Rev, J. MH. Rook | ang porbelft first charg J. PB. Chidwick, former] carrying a concealed wei chaplain of the Maine; the Rev. J.J Lynch, ©. 8. 8. Ri: the Re: *Bhott, ©. S. 8. @t: the Re Murphy, O. 8. A: the TR | Robinson, O. MM; the Rutter, Rev. A. Letellier, 8. 8. 8; the G Rev. A. cow, 8. 8 Bopler, 8. P.M; the y Rev, \. Dougherty, vice-chancellor of the Mtholic University; the Rev. John A. cholas, 0. P.; the Rey. Daniel Wy tke, the Rev, EK. G. Dohan, the ey. Father Thomas, C. R.; the Rev. len ry Woods, 8. J., of California; the Ve J. F. Fenlon of the Catholic Uni- yerst ty, the Rev. J. R. Matthews of Wash ington, the Kev. J. H. Dooley, gre tev. kT. Reilly and the Rev. Bohn | A. Ferry of Fort Leavenworth, a \ehaplain of the arQy post; the fev, VVilligm A. Cashin, chaplain of Bing Aing prison; the Rey, J. Mae Bvire, 4 he Rey, Charles FE. Boone of Baltimg re, the Rey, John A. Walsh of Bawtho ne, N. Y., and many others, ipopy BROUGHT HERE FROM CALIFORNIA. } Father \Cullen of Californto accompa- the fody of Father Doyle from San olscoh Where the beloved priest died g few days ago. Father Doyle's death gi attributed by chose who know him Ubest to overwork, He was untiring in Ibis labors \and exceedingly zealous for Focus your attention on the Optical House le H. Harrie—you who are eye glass wearers, or who ought to be, We make no bones about it —-we are after your patron- age; we give you honest yee ae i erat service and EE of absolute ‘station Harris Glasses cost $2.00 or more, depending upon the quality of the frame you select and the kind of lenses your eyes require. TU Sons 54 East 23rd St., near Fourth Ave, 27 West 34th St., bet. Sth and 6th Aves, 54 West 125th St., near Lenox Ave, 442 Columbus Ave,, 81st ne 8¥nd Sts, 70 Nassau St. John St. 009 Broadway, near Willo'by, Bklyn iso Fulton SY opps Au te 8 Bulges 507 Broad St,, near Hahne's, Newark «100 wer. 18 West tthe cause \to which he had given bis ite, He mffored a nervous breakdown and went to Callfornia early in Aug: =. Hoping that the change would re store him to healt). Thirvy-six hours jute: bis anrival at his destination he diet. } when the body reached Jersey City [yesteriay it was met by the Color Guan of the Knights of Columbus, ™ CREDIT +] TERMS 1965 wort, 34-48 a Week; \. fem bination d-Piece Mahogany Parlor or Librer Sulte, polished seats, vith hose bis Ms ‘OF sik plushs like cut; value $38" panes #e8'% $19.98 ed w (ouTFiTS REDUCED DURING THIS SALE ONLY. Sy 09" | 4 Ee 19" Completely Furnished SCALP IN WAR DARE: ny Follows Up Gang and Says| Sat be Ree beara te nA RNIN = Ee eNO AE eR Qgeenee eas EVENING “wornp, MONDAY, “Aveust 19, 1914.- SHERMAN GETS READY OR HIS. NOTIFICATION; ISIIN FAIR HEALTH \Vice-President Preparing Speech | Which He ‘Will Deliver in Utica—Breakdown Denied. (Apertal to (The: @rening World.) \UTDOA, N. Y., Aug. 19,—A weil ctrou- ce in POTATOES 5 = 95 Selected fe ments 26° Lar; eal; By the te Peck . inka SALMON Alaa A&PSALADOIL, abot. 18¢| | DEL MONTE a Roastor Corned Beetle! 5c .SPARAGUS TIPS, can am my of at STAMPS 10.2-AC Stamps Stuer 20 “ait 1 can SULTANA PEPPER... . H SULTANA COFFEE, 8¢¢ with 11h, TEA, 60¢ with — Ma Cakes A&P Tauedry Soap, 25c ne. Atlantic & Pacific 400 Stores in the U.S. These prices for the Metrepelitan District enly 19° a¢ STAMPS U, SuSchoolehip Beye, LISBON, Portugal, 19 —~The 164 States ars here to-day. A saat of er. ee Merfange or, the ‘bere Sk It makes little difference what you need—a World “Want” will ge get it. deen @ their stay here. THE! NEW STORE FOR MEN has somethinz more of interest to say to men who work too hard for their money to spend it carelessly. Tomorrow, Tuesday, 563 Men’ s $18 to $25 Suits ~» at $11.50 each 413 are three-piece Suits, fancy fabrics, good worsteds, cheviots and cassimeres, in light and dark patterns—some blues. ood for wear into winter. 15Q are silk-lined two-piece suits. Tis is a clean-up of all the higher priced suits in the New Store. It amounts practically to a choice of any fancy suit om tho tables or in the cases, at $11.50. We have tested every piece of cloth, in every suit. We aang it to be all-wool. P ¢ have seen to it that the workmanship is honest; the trimmings of the substantial, wearable kind; the style, that ‘desired by the average man. It is a good opportunity to maké a big, real saving. We Shall Also Sell 303 Men’s $15 to $18 Suits at $8.75 Three-piece and two-piece suits and a few Norfolk jackets in fancy patterns; a few blue serge in large sizes. These suits are part of our Anniversary Offering of last week, which bronght us the biggest buSiness the New Store has known. Broadway, corner Eighth 8t., Main fioor, JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street. The Entire Main Aisle Becomes Tomorrow The Most Curious Jewelry Shop in All the World ft will be here only two days. It will be here only one day, if the readers of this announce/nent appreciate the news that we are about to tell. Seven different manufacturers have a in the sale. ‘Seven different lots are included in the offer. All of the jewelry is worth more than we ask you to pay for it; much of it is worth double the peices that are marked; some of it is really sensationaln price. In the center of the Main Aisle is grouped the 10-kanat gold jewelry. Each piece is etamped and guaranteed W-karat. All yu need to do with this is to pick out the pattern you like, for the value is ai te, And each piece of this ae jewelry costs only §2.25, no matter what its regular selling price ia. Flanking this gold jewelry, at either end of the aisle, Novelty Jewelry (not gold)—usually called ‘French Jewelry, is frankly bought and worn for what it ie—but ati lower passer 9 My can buy the same kind anywhere ny A plain statement of these seven psfolléwss 10-K Gold Jewelry 3,436 Rings of 10-Karat Gold (Stamped and Guanan- teed), Each More than 1,000 of the rings are worth $6 and more. A are worth only $2.50; some are worth as much as $8 and $10. “T will sell you more gold rings than the Jargext retail store ever carries in its entire stock,” said the manufacturer. ‘‘All are 10-karat gold, some are set with diamond chips, real pearls, opals, amethyst or doublets (imitation stones). Nearly all are women'’s rings, some are small enough for young girls, about 10% are for men. If you will take this whole overproduction you can have the ringu at a.price that will eell them GROUP 2 1,668 10-Karat Gold Brooches (Stamped and Guaranteed), $2.25 Each 1265 styles of these brooches and they ordinarily sell for-$3 to $8, GROUP 3 ! 387 Pendants of 10-Karat Gold. (Stamped and Guaranteed), $2.25 Each These pendants are of ddleate workmanshtp:and-ordinarily would sell at $3 to $5. Novelty Jewelry [Group 4) Two Importers’ Sample Lines of this Autumn's Novelty Jewelry, 50c for 75c to $3.50 Grades The prettiest lot of sample jewelry we can recall.’ Every piece ts of foreign workmarhip, in beautiful designs and colors, fashionable for Autumn. The agents take orders from out-of-town stores. Their Autumn business is already completed. As usual they turn over all their samples to us—this time 2,880 pieces. Lavallieres with platinoid chains set with imitation aquamirines, amethyste, topazes, pearls, some with mosaic; silver and gilt bead necklaces; bar pins set with rhinestones and other reproduction gems; lorgnette chains set with stones or in the bayadere effect and a few novelties, such as vanity cases, pursea,, GROUP 5 Charming Hat Pins, 50c Instead of 75c: to $2 Cut crystal, tiny balls of rhinestones, pearls with enamul effects— some of sterling silver. GROUP 6 French Jet Jewelry, 50c and $1 for $1 and $4 Grades Importer's sample line for Spring, including samibite barretics, hairpins, necklaces, lavallieres, — hes and penda: |GROUP 7| Imported Novelty Jewelry, in Boxes, 50c and $1 for $1 to $3 Grades From Austria; artistic and effective; each piece in a satin ,lined box. A manufacturer’s over-production. Take your time in making selections; and be sure that you get just what you want; for there will be nothing to ex- change for them after these pieces are gone. Main Aisle, Main‘ Floor, Old Building, JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street makes more “Offers ot Positions” than any other two mediums in the universe. The Sunday World's ™ Want Directory