The evening world. Newspaper, August 26, 1916, Page 3

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i ee THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AVOUST 3 GAVE LIFE T0 SAVE Municipa 11 Marriage Bureau Urged BOY ALREADY DEA) 70 Solve Problems of Matrimony BY ELECTRIC WIRE ©A”d Build Up Real Homes in Big City 5 ee ee ied Would Empty the Lonely Trying to Rescue Victim, Trol- 'WORTHS14,000,000 WAGE EARNERS BUY HUGHES AFTER 100 ONCE, PAT CALHOUN AUTOS INSTEAD OF SPEECHES TAKES A HAS ONLY $5 NOW HOMES SUBURBS THREESAY REST Story of Fall of Western) Realty Exchanges Show Alarm His Dash Through Thirteen ~ mare come | Die Views on prc hibithom- being & pertioulerty eevte that @ public teteee x years bas kept hie | SONOS eee HEHEHE TT Tee eee on audtr Hall Bedrooms of Boys ley Inspector Is Hurled to and Girle Who Flock Ground and Killed, Here and Have No Chance of Meeting Clean, Congenial Com- panions of the Oppo- site Sex Whom They Might Marry. TRAGEDY FATAL TO 3, Boys Returning From Swim- ming Run Foul of Feed Wire, A widow and « Marguerite Mooers Marshall, Municipal matr DMidren, th Hal bureaus are 8 of whom ie only fifteen, foun Wittle conavlation to-day the fact ‘8% Mewest solution of the marriage that Jon Fulton, torty-eient years YY It is put forward by no leas oi, & Union Railway tnapector, of “8 SYthority than Bugene Hriews, | Me, 626 Kast One Hundred and SMUMRUahed dramatiot, sociotogtat Rightioth street, died a hero, Mis and mber of fe was an itive, the Frenet Acad Dut he wave it up promptly in an ef omy, He has fort to wave a boy he did not ke “reed the estab was dead, vent of such The tragedy, which cost the lives bureaus through of the nh and two boys, and out France, wu fured two other boys, occur the directs Yesterday at One Hundred and the Mayors of Beventy-seventh and Bronx cities, towns and Park Avent Fulton, the dead are George Kobel, ¢ — al rege 2070 Vyne Avenue, Bronx, WIM MADINA ters whould be outed, and Donato Larus kept at all May. No, 159 Hryant Avenue, wh ors’ offices,” he says, “whe five hours later from shocks and Claible young person can sign burns. ber namo and give his or her ago and The two boys injured are ¢ Profession, so that any one desiring and Ernest Lehman, ten and nine, to marry can find @ life companion No, 1025 st One Hundred and Without diticulty, Since we agree Rightieth Street. They are in bam Hospital, painfully, but not mor. tally burned and cut. day that the is the gr preservation of the ra est and most sacred duty, it Is necessary to give all help to Four freight cars wore set on those tneiined to build new homes.” Gre, and nearly all the 6 to 6 o'clock = Now M. Brieux Is thinking of luburban trattic on the New Haven) France's need for repopulation after 4 was held up an hour, tho war, But) Maria Thompson The boys had been swimming tn the Bronx River and were on their way home across the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad tracks when they began playing on top of freight cars. Daviess, author of “The Daredevil,” 1@ Melting of Molly” and several other sunny and successful tales of young love, is thinking of the need for repopulating the American Ar- ‘ ; ; } ; ; : ooo ee en sebeee supports of saloons and street corners instead of familie In the small community things are different. Girls and boys Ko to school towether. Aa they grow older there are all sorts of simple, normal con- Down South, where I live, eet KOINK LO the post in ‘est Helds, on the front steps in ngs. They marry early on corn bread and kisses, have lots of] pables And love each other devotedly 1t ia the elty Which overturns thi sumo social relationships, and the fore T think the city ought to solve the problem it has created, More- cver, I believe that matrimonial bu- | i | ice, | Cady, the happy land of romance out. side which so many young New Yorkers of either sex are condemned to wander restiessly, That's the real reason why Miss Daviess believes that New York and other towns and In dodging another lad, George Robel grabbed a cable and swung. It carried a 11,000 volt current and broke. Donato Laruso @truck by the ble and ki unconsciouse on the roof of the mext r, just out of its twisting golls, The Lehman lads were burned | citles in this country need matri- nocked to the ground, onial bure seas 4 OFfulton was standing at West Farms | monial bureaus every bit as much as Bquare, 400 fet away, when he saw France needs them; although ene also the flash. He jumped on a Tremont points out that something must be Avenue car, ding toward th ail- done if we wish to preserve our old Foad cut. When it reachod the mid-! native stock, Ge of the bridge, Fulton vaulted the fron fence and dropped a dozen feet to the top of tho nearest freight car ‘Then he ran to the next car, where th Robel boy lay grasping the cable. The inspector pla OUTY OF FATHER KNICKER. BOCKER AS A PARENT. “If he lived up to his parental duties, Knickerbocker der Robel’s shoulders to jerk him! quickly from t " As he touched | married,” tho boy the powerful curront struck | ought to be a bureau in this city Rm, and he was hurled clear of the) where every young person who ie car and to the ground, landing upon his head and breaking his neck. matrimonially inclined may reg- ister the important personal facts about himself or I education, profe >URCEFU i ion, RESOURCEFUL, | ind 0 o But mi » Atlantic City girl bathers now | the city should rangements to chai ing of its young citizens. ought to be a municipal ing place where, under the supor- vision of tactful, warm-hearted women—themselves successfully married—girls and young men might be introduced to each other paint their legs to dodge the | ordinance requiring that stock ings be worn with bathing suits. | POLICE CAPTAINS SHIFTED. a Se Following | and might get acquainted. paowes 1 aii MRA inan co whem mentioned’ the cays 't Patice. dea of a munictpal matrimonial bu- ee int Peon toa cups, Teaw asked if the elty parks did not | agp dad RAR ad od tA ri e the purpose of one. taincy, Comnilssioncr Woods to-day RRR chat thee. co neke Ordered the fo exclaimed, “If you walk opt. De through Riverside Park In the eve- Avenue 5: ning, you'll see an occasional white iP rae i dress and dark sheltering arm in a Y Sixty-eighth Bt comfortable corner, But for one such 1; Capt, John Kelly, couple you'll observe benches and benches filled with four or six young girls sitting bolt upright, while only 4 short distance away are rows of young men equally stiff and uncom- Bushwick fror Panioned, It's at once pathetic and infuriating. I always long to step in and mix them up,” the blue-eyed, vnd= romance-loving Southern woman ed impulsively, “LT have conducted a number of dia- cussions of the ideal mate,” I told her, “and so many letters have come |to me from young men and young women voicing the same plea, ‘What reaus under city direction would be patronized by the rich as well as the poor, One hears much Ht the working girl's difficulties in tinting a Wate, yet the rich girl often has no choice but between fortune hunters. 'f there were big parlors or halls, sAunicipally supervised, whera young men and women of every class might meet, T think it would be a splendid thing for all, and directly in line with American democracy. “I'm a Wellesley woman," added ss Davies, “but one reason why I ad against woman's colleges they shut girls up with at the most {mpressionable period of the girls’ lives, when they should be moeting members of the opposite sex continually, learning to tolerate their little weaknesses and getting ready to marry them. LET THE STATE AUCTION OFF THE ELIGIBLE. “As | see it, there is just one logical alternative to the munici- pal matrimonial bureau, where, @s a part of the civic plan, young people are encouraged to meet freely and openly, to fall in lo and to marry the ma‘ choice. The other pro | women, worst sufferer from our present acheme of hit-or-mise— increasingly miss—matrimony, “The disappearance of our native American stock is a matter of com- mon knowledge, One reason for it is the fact that in the artificial lite of our large communities young men jand women are socially separated at j the ages when It is caslest for them }to fall in love. What M. Brieux saya about the preservation of the race being the greatest and t sacred duty, 18 as true of America as of France, and it is time we bestirred ourselves ‘to give all help to those inclined to build new homgs.’* ——_. — | | ELEVATOR KILLS BOY. Started Car 'p Shaft in Game of de and Seek, Thirteen-year-old Barney Ikeman of No. 2472 Second Avenue told companions with whom he was playing hide-and- good does it do us to think about the man or woman we'd like to marry We never meet anybody who is mar- | riageable; we have no Way of getting inted with nice girls or nfe " think,” Miss Daviess sub- joined, “of the hundreds and thou- sands of little girls all over this clty, who have come here as strangers, who work hard all day, Who at night must shut themselves up tn their little hall bedrooms and stay there until they i G been warned oO to sleep. y hav MM against chance-met acquaintances, o \ $5.5 mas yt Ma and what opportunity have they to HEALS: CAPREVENTS’ mect, conventionally, young men u Paap thelr own age?’ thought of an inimitable phase from The Tinder Box,” one of Miss | Daviess's novels, “the longing, miser- | | able, wait - until-he-comes-and-why- | doesn’t - he - hurry - or - T'll-take-the- wrong-man-attitude of women in| general.” Meanwhile, she continued earnestly: WHY THE SPRINGS OF ROMANCE DRY UP, “Oh. it's pitiful! The weak ones yield to temptation and go under— from sheer lack of a normal social life, and not because they want to be bad, The strong ones, the girls who ought to marry and rear splendid, fine chil- dren, bury themselves in their work and let all their springs of romance dry up, “And young men in a large city need a municipal m SKIN SORENES S" ONE BOX PROVES TTC2S¢> BELL-ANS . Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25cat all druggists, lost or fonnd arilcten ed Serused in The World will bo Usted at Lhe World's Informs fon Bureau, Pulltrer Building re eee rerk How, works {| fe Uptown Office, northwest core {h The, latter are better protesteg ec Sth St. ane Broadway, Woman oan mal at hama evan i ee cut of @ hall bedroom, A man eat aoe ape Wastirge || can't. And honest, clean boys TD eee wear 0 dane from the country come to a big eite the priniigs ob abe city like New York, are prac- Awd Ls tically isolated from the nice young women they ought to mar- ty—and would like to marry— and @ oeneequ are the, seek last night he was going to “hide kood he'd bet they'd never find him." then the boy got In a freight elevator ‘8 Storage Warehouse, No. 235 ast One Hundred and ‘Twenty-tifth Street, and started tt George Layman, dent, who guid he found night superinten- did not hear a cry, minutes later | 4 arker pital Mand a broken tured sku at 9.45, chickens, Bayonne coop. | were gone, JOCKO, pet F | | figures show, there Diindness, please, til Judge heard of whole railroad at cou Jeaty branch in jungle killed himself by asphy LAST FOURTH OF JULY country's sanest, official MARRIAGE CERE instead of © bridegrooms have fleeced the DOG won maste staying at patrol box wher SWARM OF BE) : "MARIA A f THOMPSON ‘i Daviess. - » Ormere Oavis ane ance PPPOE EE eee PPPOE ee SPN GO0-MILE RIDE IS TASK OF MOUNTED POLICE Squad Will Camp on Way to and From Fair, Where Exhibi- tions Will Be Given, Thirty-four mounted policemen, with four Lieutenants and four Sergeants, will ride away from Central Park West and Sixty-sixth Street at 6.30 o'clock to-morrow morning, headed for Syracuse, They will take ten or twelve days getting there and then will give demonstrations for a week at the blate Fair, beginning Sept. 11, after which they will ride back home, | Lieut. Michael F, Walsh will be in command, John A. Park, George 8. Woods and David Murphy, The mgunted patrol- men have been chosen from all the precincts which use horsemen, In making the announcement at Headquarters last evening, Commis- sioner Woods sald the men would make their own camp eacn night and would receive practical instructions in putting up tents, cooking and car- ing for their animals, It is expected they will average twenty-five or thir- The distance by road ont 300 miles, ASPHYXIATED IN FIT. a Turned On, nty-elght years old, of No, 95 East Fifteenth Street, Brooklyn, was found dead in the bath-| room of her home at 11.15 last night by | her husband, Harry ¥. Carson, sanitary engineer for the Central Foundry Con pany, No, 90 West Street, Manhattan, | Death was due to accidental asphyxia | tloh, | Mra, Carson was su’ to epileptic fits, and it 1s believed : kas Jet while suffering from an att Dr. Jennings of the Kings County Ho: pital worked over the bedy half an hour, | The dead woman was a xraduate of | the University of Ilinots. year-old daughter. plc LASS CHURCH ORGAN SILENT. ltt ly jand’s Musical Instrament “Doctor” Died at His Task, W. Fletcher Weir had been a doctor of musical instruments the greater part ce in Tot- For the last twenty years nin St. Stephen's © in good repair. started to tune the instrument a week ago and ysterday as he completed his task, he died of old ag | of his seventy years’ reside 8.1 tenville Another organ will be played during b urch services to-morrow, the big ument silent as oa tri to the n f Welr, who will uried fron Rorke Dead, TON, Now Zealand, Aug. 2 Sir George Maurice O'Rorke, Speake of the New Zealand House of Represen- tatives, ts dead. He was etght 4 Speaker of the H New and Ministry Legislative uncil, News Oddiliecs TO TRAP THIEVES making nightly raids on his of his working man borrowed bulldox and tied it to Next morning rest of chickens and the dog also aronx monkey, using andelier as broke gus connection and nearly not belag & singe case of Jockjaw or MONIES in Queens now begin ing that way, because so many Deputy City Clerk, dom in Camden (N. J.), by patrol wagon got man, un- used prisoner 's fi it and re S$ settled on switchbox and tled up Mount Vernon, Ill, MBIA RIVER BOATMAN who lost $60 barrel of bluing before Europ wold it Lor $1,600 becuse of advance in price of chemicals, , @reat country,” n War started, has raised it and POs SPEER EEE SE Cee ee ee ee Eee E Reet eee EE te Re eee eee Street Car Magnate Told in Court Here FOUGHT LABOR UNIONS, End Came When He Was In- dicted for "Graft" —Wife Supports Him Now, Althoug years ay worth $14,000,000 five Patrick Cath: grandson and one of ountry's er railway mage natew a fow years ago, is broke, He adini(ted his nancial distress when, 4 1m supplementary he expressed his sorrow Ving only 5 in his pockets That Amount of cash, he said, represented | bis only tangible asset mt came to ight through the Ming of an application in the Supreme Court for the appoint ment of @ receiver for all his prop. Mra. ily J. De Forest and others who brought suit against Cal- houn for unpaid office rental sought the recet edings, Calhoun, member of one of the South's most famous families, was a towering glant tn the fnanctal world when he took hold of the bloody street [car strike in San Francisco in 1906 }and br the Carmen's Union, @ branch of the same organtzation which is now seeking to untontze the traction lines of New York City, In the realm of capital he at once became a herg and when other strikes followed in other Aties he was galled upon by financiers for advice to ald capital in its struggle against organized labor, While in the midst of bis) fight against the v Jhoun was plas- tered with jetments in the famous graft upheaval, Hoe was tried numer- ous times for bribery, but when Fran. cls J. ney, famous prosecutor, and his party were defeated in the elec- ons, Calhoun succeeded in having all the indictments dismissed. EARTHQUAKE AND FIRE, PRE- CEDED BY STRIKE, ENDS HIM. It was his troubles in San Francisco With him will be Lieuta,|—all having occurred just after the | big earthquake and fire—that brought him financial ruin, so he declared on the witness stand in supplementary proceedings. With financial ruin, he testified, his family, long leaders in} society in the West end Cleveland, gave up thelr social prestige, When the San Francisco strike came on, it developed in his teati- mony, Calhoun insured his life for $500,000, Open threats against his life had been made, but in spite of them he dashed through mobs of trikers during the bloodiest stage of trouble, All of the life insurance, save $150,000 which is pledged for a loan of $100,000, has been defaulted, according to his testimony. He had autos, many of them, but not one now remains in his posses- sion, “For two years past," said Calhoun, I regret very much to say that I have not beon able to contribute one cent to the running exper home, I have no bank ne | no safe deposit vault The Caihdun home in Euclid She leaves a Heiizhts, Cleveland, ts one of the show, places of the Ohio city, ave you received any money from any one?" the financier was asked, “Mrs. Calhoun bas helped me in the last few yours. Her estate is sep- arate from mine,” he replied, Mrs, Calhoun has been paying the exp of the family and advanc- ing me money from ume to time have been trying to save her prop- erty-the remnants-—but cently ne Jost her house. All her @leveland property has been lost. If I am thrown into bankruptey now I sball always mas ao Oehe Mrs, ‘al~ boun's rights. “How muca cash have you on your person at the present moment?” he was asked TANGIBLE ASSETS NOW ONLY $4.55 IN LOOSE CHANGE, Calhoun dug into his trousers’ pockets and pulled out some simall change. dip cuunled about $4.bo, “1 ve tL to say,” he added, 1 have than $5 right now, tg about uli L Lave, too," At the time of the e rthquake and fire, he related, he estimated his eg. that tt tate at $4,000,000 With $5,000,000 Has bilities, In reality, he declared, the then market value of his property Was about $14,000,000, ‘The earth- quake and he sald, wiped out $2,500,000 worth of bis property. The tremendous decline in securities, he explained, took a 4 large part capital and left him amount of property have dared to hold with a larger chan he would with his estate Calhoun was I Investments ( any, control of some of th railway systems in th ‘All my railway stoc nt of the United at one time in largest street United Stat * he testifies “was pledged to cover a $3,000,000 de- ficiency in California, but they (the San Francisco prosecutors) kept me tied up there for four years and moro, though I made repeated applications to try and force & trial, Binally it came to trial in 1909. The tnal, in my opinion, was a perfect mockery, but It lasted from January until July, As @ result 1 was withdrawn from my business, and it was next to Impossible for me to look after my affairs for nearly four yoars, If | had known what would be the result I would of course have taken steps accordingly, but I never would have believed that any private c could have been de itigen, ,| years old, was rescued, badly burned wWt with so iu thie z Over the Rapid Decrease of Ownership States in West Makes Him Confident of Success, MORTGAGES INCREASE. IN GOOD PHYSICA = ble trip heroic work keeping th physioe pe, an day he would let the (be . eit from Kanna: « he dowan roat ep have Thoft Campaign ts Urged To His Doctor Will I eave Him at Save City Masses From | Kansas City, Where Mrs, " . | 7 Absolute Fenantry, | Hughes Will Assume Charge, Is the automobile w ning over the) Ef. DENVER 36 With three] | Orer creasing raplafy, while the automo. | gen Vomines Len toes aad [laws John Vital, in the thigh to-day Dile owners are teasing by th ~ \ Ja od Metavia Streets, Jin a row wands Old-time “Own Your Own|*** te leave to-night for @ throw |over the amount Vitalt allowed for the Home” legends are disappearing trom oe. i tres ae public places to make way for auto, day the Repubite Vital sald he ha rey éeeieutinns didate haw camppiened — through a TR, hie money in the ” nt the reat, (hirteen States, being almoct contt what Sly In what have been declared by Btatiation ent xchange ompleted by thin week a! Auto-buying has taken the place of Heal leaders to be Republioan State home buytng on a large scale, Fam Hfornta and tt Hiew of the saving clase that have) He has made more than a hur Dought homes in heavy volume dur- and arrived at Denver to- ee Comminsioner Woods received ine pant rm are putting thelr day very tired physteally, alth jexram to-day from the Coroner of money into automobiles, As they! well and exceedingly anxious for a NY, asking him to loeat wo sisters completo reat in the seclusion of the! drowned. th mountains, He is very sanguine of | Utne from this alt hy stine sates success when the ballots will be oth shaven and with dark by the people whom he h Adronned eau of Unidentified E ‘ “We have had a remarkable trip acrons the continent," was the way hes described hin journey #o far John afford both homes and autos, al estate market ts feeling the This is making New York one vaat unity of renters, Of itn 6,000, 000 people, more than 3,000,000 live in flats, according to the Auguat r port of Tenement House Commia- sioner John J. Murphy, and of tha| op q very deep interest in the innues Femalning §,000,000, or 760,000 fam-| oF hig campatan, I do not attribute ilies, lexw than 75,000 families live in town houses and only 18,000 are| this to my personal relation to the ortwage. That this campaign, but to the deep interest far out of line with conditions in the that ia taken by the American peo- on eee itch rexotta| ple In the great questions involved. 20,000,000 “families occupying dwell | As I go through the country T am Ings, 9,000,000 of whom live tn their own houses, with 6,000,000 free from mortgage, OWNERS MORTGAGE HOMES OR BECOME TENANTS. The bulletin of the Real Estate Board announced yesterday that i ownership in the city ts dis- appearing fast and tenancy ja be. coming the universal rule. Mortgage records show that home: are encumbered faster than old liens are pald off., The bulletin saya, | “there are more homes mortgaged in ® given period than there are, homes purchased. The encumbered homes are Increasing at the expense of the free homes, whose owners are xradually either perenne them or ing the tenant class.’ Jofuilding records show that barely 100 in every 1,000 new dwellings bullt are owned by the builders for oecu- The others are for rent or constantly impressed with the ox- traordinary resources that,we have for our development and for our permanent prosperity. Best of all is the fine manhood and womanhood that is utilising these resources. Every day on this trip is the best day. “I have been several times across the continent and 1 know something of the various cominunities compos ing our country, but to go through in this rapid way, receiving gener- ous welcomes, makes an appeal to tho heart of 4 man.” Throughout the trip to date, Mr. Hughes has steadfastly maintained his position of aloofness from State Kale. And of the 100 home builders silica = =IN The World Magazine TO-MORROW Applying Business Principles in a Hunt for a Wife The story of the matter-of-fact man who went phaut seeking a wife just as he would plan a 8s venture, is certainly worth reading, It isn’t mushy, and he satisfied himself that there are many fine young women in New York was 42, During the phat decade, als who are deserving of good husbands. th h the number of homes tn. creased over 41 per cent, the tree! OF Al Things! A Vacation in a Min view of the drift away tom! Sey bmarine—Well, Well! hone ownership, the exchanges are | OU8 arin er ° en, (Hah ee ely AG EEE Imagine going on vacation in a houseboat to earners that the safest place for anv. which is attached a tube connecting with a [ings ts the home and to warn them submarine, into which one may retire when he wants a change of scene! That is the idea of an inventor, well known in New York, and his duplex boat is in course of construction. against investments which tend to Why Do Girls Blush? preciate or totally wipe out their cap. ftal. That Sounds Like a Poser A distinguished student of the origin and nature of emotions has analyzed such out- bursts as laughter, anger and blushing, and his explanations are most informative. only ten own their houses free of mortgage. ‘This compares with 290! home owners in every 1,000 house builders In Chicago, 327 in St. Louis, $12 in Cleveland, 451 in Philadelphia, 584 in Spokane. Of new homes free from mortgage, Philadelphia butides 95 in 1,000, Cleveland 112, Chicago 126, St. Louls 178, Spokane 283, PLAN THRIFT CAMPAIGN TO START HOME BUYING. In Manhattan private dwellings are torn down at the rate of 600 a year to make sites for big apartments or buat. n structures, Practically the only new ones built are in the exclusive | millionaire sections, The entire island has less than 24,000 private dwellings, with comparatively few owned by the occupants and still less free from mortgage. Throughout the Greater city barely 20 per cent. of the homes owned by occupants are free from mortgage. In 1910 the percent was 30, in 1900 it | ——- FELL ASLEEP AT ALTAR IN BEDROOM, BURNED TODEATH Policeman Had to Batter a Door to Rescue Aged Wom. in Brooklyn Apartment. Mrs, Bridget Ahearn, seventy-four | and nearly suffocated, early to-day|Graqvure Pictures from her room on the seco floor of shee re) No, 161 Penn Street, Brooklyn, where What strikingly realistic documents these sho lives with her daughter, Mra, gtavure reproductions are. One whole page is devoted to showing how children are bei safeguarded while travelling between States, Every picture has a special interest. The German Crown Prince Minnie Urutschuh, She died later in the Eastern District Hospital, Ahearn had a small altar yn her dresser, and is believed fallen asleep while kneeling It late last night, a lighted | candle falling to her bed, The daugh- | ter, In another room, smelled smoke, Yui could not get into her mothers Qn@ His Staff room b suse the aged woman always This exclusive photograph, taken near Vere dun, shows the Crown Prince, a cigareti: be- tween his fingers, standing at the edge of ‘ wood, with the seventeen aides gathered about him. A page of new war pictures besides. , e And a Newspaper Complete in every detail—two pages of sports ——two pages of Summer Resort news, the lat- Section est foreign cables, special Brooklyn and New Jersey news, locks the door at night. Policeman Burkhard of the Clymer Street Station broke the door and found Mrs, Ahearn unconscious and burned all over the body, The fire was confined to the bedding In her room, pelicsaash-Sahy ARCHBISHOP SPALDING DIES, PEORIA, DL, Aug. ~The Most! Rev. John Lancaster Spalding, Arch- bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of | bras stroke in 1906, ‘Of un old Amortcan family, he,was @ nephew of the late Archbishop’ M. J. Spalding of Balttmoi wrote He 2 | t anthracite coal strike of w Assistant priest of St s Church, New York City, for years, and while there was made Peoria Leave your order with your newsdealer to-day for ie ‘TO-MORROW’S SUNDAY WORLD fe ‘ Fe ‘ dango

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