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TOCAB STRNE HALTS AL CRS OFS. MOTOR Chauffeurs Return Cars to Garage and Then Quit Work. OTHERS MAY = JOIN Seventy-five Cabs Are Now Involved in Effort to Get Better Terms Chauffeurs employed by the United States Motor Can ¢ mpany to the Bumber of seventy-five wre on strike @-day. They turned in 0 cabs at Midnight at the garage at No tT Weat Forty-seventh street and Jo @eph Giynn, Vresident of local Ne 7 of the Internation — Brother @f Teameters, is trying to persuade the Mason, Keaman Transportation Company chauffeurs to join in the figbt The United States Motor Company went temporarily of business When the strike wan declared No @ttempt will be made to run the cabs! t present “We called a strike against th United States Company,” explained Glyno to-day, “when woe fount that President Duell is only a dgurenead @nd we couldn't bank on what he said ‘The real power in this company is William H. Barnard, who also con trols the Mason-Seaman Company Which in turn controls the yellow taxicabs. “The United States chauffeurs are 6 union men, Tue Mason-Seaman e@bauffeurs are not, but they have Iected a committee! which has be Hegotiating for some time with Bar. Bard. They want an increase in pay id shorter hours, “We couldn't get anywhere with Barnard’s man, Duell, so we called @ut tho United States chauffeurs. We @re to meet a committee of the Mason-Seaman Company chauffeurs ‘this evening and talk over the ques- tion of a strike in that organization. ‘While the Mason-Seaman chauffeurs @re not unionized they are united in the belief that they are uot getting a@ufficient pay.” Mr. Duell in a statement issued to- @ay said that the men demanded a Paise of 25 cents a day, from $2.50 to $2.75, and that to grant the de- Mand would put the company out of business He said it costs $4.34 a day , to operate @ taxicab, and the average Gaily receipts do not come to more than $8.25, Glynn says that Mr. Duell's state- ment is foolish. He points to the fact that independent owners, on avorage receipts of $8 a day per taxi- cab, are supporting families and buying new cabs. Glynn says that the New Auto Company, the River- ide Auto Company, the Broadway Auto Company, the Renault Auto Company and the Columbia Auto Company, small but growing con- cerns, have all agreed to the union demands. oe POLICEMAN HELD FOR TRIAL. Hettrick, Who Disturbed Fire » Does Not Remember E en's « » the patrolman as earl, Thursday morning at the ball of t Firemen's Band at Terrace Gneden after he struck @ woman and fought firemon and policemen, was arraigned before Magistrat MeQuade in Yorkville Court to-day. He was charged with aulting Patrolman Edward Kelly, who said Hettrick had Kicked hin when Kelly was urging him to go home. “LT have no recollection of what happened,” Hettrick told the Magles trate. "f know I was pretty. badly beaten up and in my drunken condie tion I thought the” patrolinen ¢ @lso going to beat me and I fought” y MeQua r eerk g po vacuse for Hettrick’s offense, He held him in $500 ball for trial in the Court of Special Sessions. Hettrick as been suspended from the Police department and is to be tried on charges bad complexion If you, too, are embarrassed by a pimply, blotchy, unsightly complex: jon, nine chances out of ten Resinol Soap will clear it Just try Resinol Soap for a week anid see if it does not make a blessed difference in your skin, It also helpsto make red, rough hands and arms soft and white. In sever should be a! stubborn cases, A bya little Resi trial free, Baltifnore, Ma, French Fashions Are Made for America, j | ] *- caearen Pasmion © Great Artists There Study | American Model, De-| clares Mme. Fernandez, | Who Brings 100 “‘Crea-| tions” Here for the| Fashion Fete. ! |Woman to Be Well Dressed Must Consider | Time and Place and Her | Own Type, and Not Blindly Follow Fashion. | Love Creates Fashion, | | She Believes, but Styles| | Must Be Adapted to the| | Needs of Individual. | | | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Copyright, 1915, by the Press Publiabin Co, (The New York Evening World). Mme. Ramon Fernandes has been called the best-dressed woman in Paris, which means, of course, that in respect to clothes she is a world champion, | HME. RAMOND FERNANDEZ. Owteersey A 4 Well, Mme. Fernandez ts here in New York and I have seen her, and she 18 a world champion. That un- doubtedly is why she was asked to be the ambassador of French industry to the women of the United States. For with M. Philippe Oritz and M. Roger Boutet de Monvel she has come to New York to direct the gigantic fashion festival which will be held during the week beginning Noy. 22 for the benefit of French war orphans. Mme. Fernandez, who {8 a society woman and the widow of a Mexican diplomat, was requested by the great French dressmakers to accompany 100 model gowns which they have designed for the fashion fete and act for them ‘as the interpreter of French taste to American women. She accepted the |task, which is, needless to , purely a labor of love undertaken“from | motives of patriotism, “IT cannot reveal anything aboat@—————————____ the models until after they have beet | needs of the individual. The potnt is exhibited,” she told me, “Until Nov. that each woman must study herself, find out the colors, the lines, the coif- fure, which are becoming to her type, and keep them in mind even when the fashions change.” SHE COMBATS THE THEORY OF A DEVIL-CREATED LOVE, “I have just had an interesting tale with M, de Monvel, who i 2 they must remain a mystery.” THE AMBASSADRESS IS ANGEL WITH A COLD.” Mme. Fernandez was the living em- bodiment of the word she spoke. Mystery Is written in her great eyes, wound In the colls of her chestnut hair, stamped upon the fine, Irregular r profile that seems tO shift; “AN line of created in the fashion fete, with every moment like a war fron-|"“He told me that the devil tier. Her face has depth and power. faenion and that fashion created Her voice is the throaty French con-| 1’ think rather that love created which makes you think of an/ fashion," Mine, Fern replied. “A woman dresses uc state of her heart,” a! { do not want to speak of love in France, We think only of this ter- rible war. And if | discuss fashion— if I have brought fashions to this it i# only that our industries will live with the help of America. In Paris we are obliged to buy gowns, to maintain our luxury, in order that our commerce shall not be paralyzed, And so we buy and buy—brocades, laces, jewels—and we wear them over breaking hearte, “But we will win—France will ange! with a slight cold, Her clothes ~of course you have been waiting for t to her clothes—bave sim- authority and restraint, Shej yesterday a tallored sult of} black veivet—the coat short and rip: pling, Without any fur around the bottom; the skirt plain and full, A collar of sable bound her neck. Alto- her, she looked as if she had just d out of the pages of de Mau- wt (the perfectly correct pages, ne to plict wore i this war,” and the sudden mar} uf course) note in her volee touched the beau “L hope,” Mme, Fernandes told me, tiful ambassador of fashion with th ‘ 6 Man hion “featinn ill be a spirit of the most gallant army in the that the fashion festival will be ® word. "T have been at the front aid great success, In France we bavel View tt youhad seen Pare non ard that German propaganda has n carried to such an extent in this ountry that your weaithy women are, saying their clothes of the Germans— ‘an it be truc’’* AMERICANS BUY THEIR STYLES) IN GERMANY? NO. 1 sald tt could not be; that there are depths to which even strict neu- that first day of August and on the later days when it was thought our capital was lost, you would not doubt it. Taubes hovered over the ‘bombs rained upon us from aeré Planes, and mothers and little chil dren looked up into the sky and smiled. Perhaps to the forelgner there is inuch in the French character which seems futile, irresponsible, but you do not | know us, French women a: mir able, The have courage, simplicity, re allt nance waxkaen straint, and they are great mothers. ralty, TORY) BOL Gasoends, end) thal ATs faother, lending @ lithe-onia even our hyphenated citizens must | jooky up into ‘the sky from which draw the line at German fashions.|bombs may fall and amiles—a faint amile of courage, of serenity, of irony, of curiosity, at the enemy overhead— | that smile typifies the spirit of France —the spirit which is never beaten! “It is this spirit which made us know, even when the Germans seemed to be upon Varia, that they would be turned back, France believes in her (And 1 thought of Bismarck's reply to the Kalser when he was reproached for refusing German champagne: My stomach Js not patriotic,") “I am glad if it is not true,” Mme, Fernandez sald, “After all, there is only one good taste in drees| destiny, She has never lost conf -that of France,” dence. She owes much to her brave Will yuu lve Gefaition /a!#« the English, How calm those = = = : are, how splendid!" of a well dressed woman?” I asked! "remarked at this point that there the best dressed woman in Parts, was nothing at all the matter with 'o be well ¢ is to be dressed according to the time, the place and your own type," she replied, “Women the English heroes except that there were not enough of them, “But that is becaus have not conseription, Ver who follow fashions blindly ave not|nandez replied, "Yet they have well dressed, The woman who Is tall | raised 2,000,000 men. Hach nation," she added philosophically, “must tight with the defects of its qualities.” "And must dress with the defects of its qualities,” I interrupted, for it seomed time to bring the Ambassa. dress of fashion back from the war gone to the zone of Venus os,” Mme. Fernandes agreed, “every woman who Wishes to be well dressed must study her qualiti seek to enhance them, must recognize ties of Wa eau, and they are charm-|her defects and minimize them as ing, much a8 possible, You women of “Any fashion can be adapted to the America are so splendid physically and slender may wear what {s for- bidden the well developed type, The slender, mysterious midnight beauty —the brunette—must not appear in clothes adapted to the Inughing blonde with the retrousse nose, | do not say that the stout woman should hot wear tho short skirt of the pres~ ent fushion—because such short, full skirts are ahown on the plump beau- Says the Best-Dressed Woman in Paris 0 Hocate the d and| that you need only to give your time to enhancing your beauty, The great | dressmakers of France have studied the American woman. In the models I bave brought with me they ha’ created their masterpieces for her. All they ask is that she will wear pee #o that our industries may not dle” sacnsaciditpesemiinianss NEWSPAPER WORKERS’ BALL, Many Will Gather at the Frolic of the Evening Mail A: All roads will load to Webster Hall to-morrow night, when the annual re- ception and ball of the Evening Mail Circtilation Department Employees’ Association will be bold. ‘This affair has been looked upon by the wholesale newspaper delivery men, circulatora and the mechanical forces in the varlous newspaper offices as the annual get-together event where for the time all cares of the great newspaper delivery game are put in storage and all taboo all shop talk. The officers who have charge of the coming event are Anthony Gerard, President; Harry Feldman, Vice Pres- elation, ident; Joseph Esposito, Treasurer; Frank Pettrizzo, retary; Samuel £. Lewis, Recording Secretary. Trus- | tees, Louls Lavy, Gre FIRST TRIP AS DRIVER, HAD JOY RIDE, ARRESTED Nineteen-Year-Old Chaffeur Used Martin Steintual’s Limousine for His Outing, er C, Danby, vin Wienetr® Cone eT Otaw Oreman James Murphy, nineteen, yearned to be a chauffour, For months he bad importuned proprietors of a west ride, garage, where he was employed as a washer, to promote him, Lust night | \ey consented, | “[lere’s your chance, now," they said, “Go over to Martin Stetnthal's home, at No, 123 East Ninety-first | Street, and bring back his big $3,000, jectric Iimousine, He just telephoned | ne was through with it.” Early this morning detectives found | he car standing, unoccupied, in front | ¢ of a cafe at Porty-eighth Street and| wighth Avenue, and later Murphy was | arrested at his home, No, 132 We, sixty-second, charged with grand lur- ceny. | ‘i'm sorry, but I couldn't help it,"| he is said to have told the police, ‘I've been so crasy to be a chauffeur that when I finally got in that hand- | some car alone I just had to go for 1 joy ride, Yes, I took a couple of | friends along, so I could show off to them.” pe rE “FLY” POOLROOM LOCATED. | Detectives Have Long J Search of 7 ey in| tne Gambtens | One of the “fy poolrooms fre- quented by the Luban crowd, followers of Jake Laban, wan caught on the wing! yosterday by Detectives Jones and Gle son of Inspector Dwyer's ataff, and to- day David Rothbard, thirty-two yours old, of No. 42 Avenue 'D, was held tn $000 | ball by Magistrate Deuol in. Jefferson | Market Court for further examination | on a charge of having conducted. It Forty-five -men who were In the placd when the detectives called uniformed men tn were allowed to wo after thelr hates had been taken, Tho detectives bh travellin t been trying to if Kamblers, but each | an Y | Ww plac jason Went Lo A restau- Uighth Street, and rear saw & crowd of men about | bard. Thera were racing charts on a| table in front of him. ‘They cummoned help with thelr police whist and oor a the crow "A Tee wae ay ALB WIENER DS; WON WEALTH INRALWAY DEALS Philadelphia Multi-Millionaire and Associates Controlled Lines in Four Cities. PHILADELPHIA, Nov, 6.—P. A. B. Widener died this morning at his home, Lynnewood Hall, in Elkins ‘ark. He wi ighty-two ye old and had been in poor health a long time, Peter A. Rrown Widenor, famous as one of the greatest capitalists in the world, was born in Philadelphia in 1833. He was educated fn the public shools of that clty and while a half ‘sown boy was appreuticed to a butcher in the old Spring Garden Market, He worked hard and saved every penny he could, It was not until he was well past fifty years of age that Mr. Widener began to demonstrate his ability as a big financier, Before that time he had made many private investments. He became elated in the early with the late William = L, a trader in oil; William C. Whitney, New York lawyer and wizard in street railway organization, and Anthony N, Brady of Albany. This group got control of the stock of the Continental Street Passenger Railway Company of Philadelphia, To this they added one company aftor another until they became owners of ail the public transportation Ines in Philadelphia, ‘This group, with Thomas Fortune anand Thomas Dolan of Philadel. phia, bought the Broadway line and other roads in New York City a few years later, and organized the Metro- politan Street Railway Company, which hag since been merged into the | Railways Company, which ‘* nearly all the lines of street anaportation in the city, Mr. Widener and his associates went to Chicago tn 1899 and bought out the Yerkes street railway lines, They also bought the street railways of Pittsburgh, These enterprises were only the beginning of the Widener fortune, He held w large vluck of Standard Oll Company stock, he was President of the United Gas linprovement Company, out of which he made millions, and he was one of tie organizers of the United steel orporation. Hs fortune ls estima- 1 at $60,000,000. ir, Widener never aspired to be- a8 prominent in society. His sons, George D. and Joseph BE. Widenet ere actly clally. Mrs, Widener died suddenly of heart trouble tn 1899 on board the y t Josephine, named in he honor, orge =D. Widener perished on the Titanio, Mr, Widener retired from business not long afterward, He-spent $11,000,- oO in building and endowing a public library to perpetuate his wife's name. Ho gave to the city of Philadelphia his stately home, Ashbourne, in. the suburbs, together with paintings worth $2,600,000 by ancient and mod- ern masters, He established the Widener Industrial Home for Crip. pled Children and many ot} . ong. b soma of the most renowned of art in this country, ——<- works orn. Joneph P, Caloaterra, the patrolman arrested In the Greenwich Street Po- lice Station yesterday after he had fired @ shot at another officer, was ar- ralgned to-day {n the Centre Street Court before Magiatrat. obb charged with folonious assault. At his re- quest the hearing was adjourned until next Tuesday, Lawyer Furstenberg on behalf of Calcaterra asked that » be paroled Until the hearing and sald that bis shooting at Patrolman Francis J, Dougherty was an accl- dent. The Magistrate, however, fixed ball at $1,000 and @ bond was ftur- blab THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 19:5. HEAVEN HELP THOSE WALLOPERS, FORFORO,, WONT SSS what's a Walloper? Well, to \ Tell You Now Would j Spoil the Story ASK THE JUDGE AND RUN He's a Spoil-Sport in the Grizzly Infested Rockies, That's What He Is. | Juation John Ford of the #upreme Court regards himectf as a fair and impartial Judge conscious that he has ever d personal considerations to incting him toward & decision, But he hopes, fervently, that no walloper ever comes before If ever « watloper clerk cries, “Pay him for judgment. ree nin when the draw near and you shall be may th lord have y on hin soul, for Ford, J. will not. Justice Ford never hoard of @ wal- | loper until this fall, And every night | » he wets up from his prayers and climbs into his bed he fervently praye he may never hear of them | main, The Justice discovered the |#pecies on his recent hunting trip in | the Wyoming Rocky Mountains, | It was a great (rip as planned, and waa every bit as good as planned; but if it hadn't ben for the wallopers it would have fo immeasurably ter, Justice Ford would have brought home an enormous grisly bear, head and pelt. It j# more than two months since the wallopers spoiled the ¢ © to get the bear, and Justice Ford has to count a hundred yet before saying anything about them for publication. Justice Ford is an unbyphenated American, He carried his prejudice for unhyphenation *) a point where he determined that he was going to have an utterly unhyphenated hunt, For the firat time he was to hunt big game in American territory; he se- lected a thoroughly American guo and he engaged an American guide. Readers of The Evening World may remember the jurist'’s experience with the noble red man as a guide in British Columbia two years ago, when said noble red man took to the tallest branches of the tall timber and left him in danger of his life, This year the Jud “went in" from Cody, Wyo. after propitiating the natives by telling stories of how he served aa a supe in a Buffalo Bin show when be was too young to know any better, That w before C Cody died, according to the legend, and was stuffed and sewed into the saddle of his white charger for exhi- bition purposes, In a wild mountain automobile Jus- tice Ford went from Cody, twenty- five miles, through roads hub deep in mud and water, to the Frost and Mitchell ranch, where Fred Frost, who was to be his guide, outfitted the expedition, Besid the Justice and Frost there were a cook and nine horses. IT'S A LONG, LONG STORY, BUT WORTH WHILE. Any afternoon when you want to hear the Justice tell how he killed the first elk, which was so far away that Fred thought it was too amail to kill and was only @ “six-pointer,” when it Was really a tremendous beast and @ full “seven-pointer”—any afternoont you want to hear tha |yarn; and it is worth hearing—you will have to g@t him to adjourn court jearly or elxe iiss his dinner, But tt is enough here to say that with his latest model, star gauged Springfield rifle chambered out jcurry a 172-grain soft nosed bullet, with a muzale velocity of 3,000 feet per second, set at 650 yards, he brought down the first bull, And the Justice, with the least encourage ment, will spend another half bour in Jexplaining to you why the modern United States Springfield rife is the most serviceable and reliable gun in the whole world. The head of the elk, the hams and shoulders and the tenderloins were packed back to camp the next day Three days later Justice Ford and Fred went back to find If there were any more big bulls in the herd. The herd had moved. But near the car cash of the dead elk were tracks of an enormous grigely bear, We took to cover and made a care- ful survey, but could not see him. stalked on his trail and fost it "nh we cautlously climbed to. a ridge overlooking the carcass, far enough away so the bear could not get wind of us. Trees hid the carcass, and Fred went down and dragged it into plain sight from the look-out, “It was our bear. There couidn't be any doubt of it, He had gorged him- f, but there could be nothing more scientifically certain than that would come back for more wi three days, There wasn't a chanc the world that would stay a We went on pic day there began a rifle fire In the val- ley that sounded as though the Euro- pean war had been transferred to Wyoming. ‘Hang! Bang!’ they went, and ‘Bang! Bang!’ all over the place for half an hour. LOSES BEAR, BUT LEARNS A LOT ABOUT SWEARING, “When It comes to the language of wrath and Indiqnation, your Western mountaineer knows things which are misty beyond the dawn of the wildest m of a New York truck lsatd things which I nover know i | back ail ‘Along about dusk of the second! driver, | DANIELS'S NEWSPAPER | PLANT AGAIN BURNED Hefiding in Raleigh, N. ¢ by Navy Secretary, Wiped Ow Second Time ANON, NO, Rew bth oo. ot belting of the News one Oberre, owned by the Bere of the Navy, Josephus Daniele, Geetropet ty fre ane ehorlly before oe cole ie more. ioe as cot utiah meet of Musee * sino & Com pee ai! ores were either pletely de etroyed WH Hagiey, cusiness man oo the ne Paper, was inured by & Pnil- ine { machinery while atvempt- lng to get books out of the bulidi: The lone te eatimated at $360,000. fi the excond ume the N and | Observer bad been burned Seoretary Daniels has been at the head of the Navy Department, the fret Are having ooourred April 34, iv The fire started in the Uasell and Company and since, | ———— |Asks Why His Priendship Should Be Doubted, Because He Differs With President. AGAIN HITS AT POLICY. ays Executive Will Not Com- plain Because His Request for Criticism Is Met, ‘co anh | WARHINGTON, Nov. 6—Pormer Tee fre mon woge lajured, | Secretary of ®tate Bryan to-day tasued mporary offices of the News an ‘established in the |*2other statement in which he renewed ih Times and the ed 46 usual bo- rrow morning. Secretary Daniele * notified by telephone and imme- diately left Washington FIVE BULLETS FIRED INTO CROWDED CAFE David Schwartz, Ex-Conviet, Serl- ously Wounded by Man Who Shoots From Door. le Abraham — orehtkot's rea | taurant at No. 262 Broome Street was crowded at 6 o'clock last night five men suddenly appeared outaide the (rance, Three stood guard, driving who approached, another Mung open the restaura the Hfth man Ured ive | room. Ono bullet tore through the left lung of David Schwarts of No, 610 |in-law of Gerchikof; another struck Schwartz in the right hip. The third jand fourth bullets «mashed mirrora jon the walle and the Qtth crashed through the cigar case, narrowly missing Miss Florence Kodiakin of No, 322 Sutter Street, Brooklyn, Frank George, No, 186 Biartawe Street, was arrested on suspicion. Gerchikof became proprietor of the restaurant only about five weeks ago. Prior to that, the police say, It was a rendezvous for characters known to the detectiven, Schwarts himself has only been out of Sing Sing a short time, ————— NEVADA IS SUCCESS IN 12-HOUR RUN IN GALE Oil Burning Engines Again Prove Efficiency During Sustained Speed Test. BOSTON, Nov. 6.—The super- dreadnought Nevada, testing her ef- Nelency before the Naval Trial Board yesterday, plunged for twelve houraat top speed through the waters of Mas- sachusetts Bay and finshed in a gaio off Cape Cod last night. A message to her builders said that her perturmanc was successful, It was added she would be subjected to an o} hauling at Provincetown to-day, in- aed of resuming her trials imme diately, The Nevada's of! burning bollers pushed her at an average speed of 20.64 Knots during the tweive hours, ‘This was in excess of the contract specifications of 20% knots, In. th test of economy of fuel consumption the battleship was found to be up - the requirements notwithstanding stress of weather, out hunting without any knowledge of the country or game or the lore of the hunter and under an incompetent «uide, Ho may be farmer or miner or an Eastern business m: But he is the most hateful pest which can some into a buntiug ground, These fellows were a bunch of abandoned wretches from over vackson’s Hole way who had heard of the big herds of elk back of the Rampart, and had come trooptng over to make a picnic of a sertous Job, They all lost each other and were firing Kur in a panic to get together again. Of course every head of game in twenty miles galloped out of the illey--my bear included. Oh, when I think of those Wallopera—one, two, three, four, five, six—tet’s talk ‘about something else.” Justice Ford killed one other elk with a wonderfully proportioned head and seven points on each aide, which js being mounted for the Elks’ Club, Fred got another with a fifty-four inch spread of horns; each has its story. No mountain sheep were sighted. On the way out, at Cody, during @ #ix-hour wait for the train; Justice Ford silenced a railroad man's boast as to the superiority of the German Lueger automatic by unpack- ing his bag, getting out his army pat tern U A. Colt automatic and knocking a tomato can off a stake at fifty yards In seven shots, while the man with the hyphenated weapon never touched It, formerly of Lowell, y years ago under ‘ot its name) first t Father Joh Prescribed for the Rey, Pather Jobn could be expressed In the English lan- gauge, Some of ther I didn't under- stand, Hut every littl while he set- tled to a system. dissection of o entage and des of all Wallopers “& Walloper ls & person who goes vation hereafter | speclalist in 1855 | Father John rec ‘and in this w Father John’ mmended this me known as Fa | Lavonia Street, Brooklyn, a brother. | be: CHOIR LEADER STATES HE TOOK ~ FATHER JOHN’S MEDICINE UPON ADVICE OF FR. JOHN HIMSELF 's Medicine ts a physictan prescription to his ther John's Medici Medicine is recommended for coughs, colds and throat lung troubles and to make flesh and strength, bie assurances of friendship for Pres- ident Wilson. Bryan's statement follows: “I have no plane formulated. I am doing what I belleve to be the @uty of every citizen to do. How can the Pres ident know wh the people think um- \ individuale express themasives? “Those who approve of hie plan do not hesitate to express theniselves. Why should those who differ be at- lent? The editors of metropolitan newapapera, who daily @ing ineense before the special interests, de not heattate to express an opinion am to what the country needs “Why should a country editor Mike myself be denied the privilege? "And why should a Democrat's friendship for the President be ques- toned when he differs with the Prest- dent on an tasue itke this, which has nothing im the history of the country or the party to commend KM? The Prosident’s appeal was not to mem- of his party, but to the people of ‘all shades of opinion.’ “When did it become unpatriotic gor a citizen to differ from @ President? When did become disloyal for a Democrat to differ from a Demeoratic President on an issue which the President declared to be nonpartisan? “Tho President said be would ask those who differed from him to ex- Press their opinion. He certaiity will be the last to complain because bis request is complied with. A great many people—no one can definitely state the number, but they are quite & multitude—believe that we cannot insure the nation against war by adopting the very policy which Europe into war. “ S “It ‘9 more reasonable to assume that peace can be promoted between nations by the same philosophy which prumotes peace between individuals in communities. We are now \- ing $260,000,000 a year for prepared- ness, A greot many think that this 1s enough and are opposed to any in- crease at the present. “The burden of proof is on those who say the increase is necessary, and it will be hard to prove this, in view of the President's statement that we are not threatened from any quarter, but our relations with all nations are friendly; that everybody knows of our capacity for defense and that there is no fear among us.” It was stated at the White House again to-day that the President wilt make no reply whatever to Bryan's statements, (ee PAPAL GIFT TO WILSON. ROME, Nov. 6—The Pope ts re- ported to-day to plan sending @ spe- cial representative with an autograph letter and a gift to attend the wed- a of President Wilson and Mrs, Norman Galt His Holiness is believed to bi a pression, however, thi 1 @ slate ceremony, d thal possibility is sumggeste t he will abandon the Idea of the special rep- resentative when advised the wedding will be private. WILSON A TARGET FOR BOYS. He Smiles as B Opened WASHINGTON, Nov. of small boys untoosened a bean shooter sal President Wilson as he turned 4 corner noar the home of Mrs, Gali‘ they recognized their A Instead of running lied and flourtshed is the first he has Washington | stree! dis be a gift from hi BELL-ANS Absolutely ‘Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists, nm Shooters Are ” who was choir director in St, Patrick's ‘ather John O'Brien (from whom Father John's »k the medicine upon the advice of the pastor ‘ir. Tyrell says ho “is continually chanting the praises of this old Father John’s Medicine Was So Named By The People preser| ption, O'Brien of Lowell, Maas, by an eminent poriehlonens and friends It is not a patent does not contain alcohol or poisonous drugs. It bas been jn use over 50 years, Advi.