The evening world. Newspaper, April 9, 1917, Page 3

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j Evangelist Stirs His Patriotic Fer tween Red Crd: Billy Sunday, with flag in his hand, is at in New York to, defeat ‘adjectives of vehemence gether like a twenty-mule haggbeen trying to get here of rs, he says, and ni own vernacular, “it's wu York. cept a dollar for his serv: himself to divide between can Red Cross and the f tributed to him. been estimated as high as Billy made his bow—it more of « wave of the hi SAYSBLY SUNDAY ASHE WAVES FLAG Tw Audiences in Tabernacle by TO WORK WITHOUT PAY Will Divide His “Offeri and Y. M. C, A. Army Workers. the American and all his metropolitan works, That \ the olty is in dire need of his min- \tstrations he has emphasised with Furthermore, he has declined to ac- y. ged in field work with and navy whatever sum mo And this sum has o Great vor. Tryin yng the Ehousands heat ring” Be-| last here the devil strung to- team. He for a sore ow, in his p to New| tified themselves with his efforts. The crowd, a representative Ne York gathering, watched the evang pledging | the Ameri- | could win them. And batted the ball over the fence for home run he did it yesterda: $100,000. was rather and and a Perkins, Mre, John R. Drexel and | wv. Fellowes Morgan—who have iden- n list with the eye of interest rather M. C) As| than of appraisal, It was clearly the army evident that those thousands had | be con- come there ready to be won {f Billy if Billy ever | In the two sermons of yesterday THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 9, 1917, w | if he'd fight these mectings. “They've followed me for twenty | years, trying to get something on mé | and can't do it. They say I want grin in the familiat Sunday manner—| Billy gave to his audiences a very falr | oney. wn ee) was o ered a milton oe ‘ a iistts o put my mug in the movies an yesterday at two sessions in the great | sample of his evangelistic repertolre. | refused it. I was offered $3,000 for # wooden tabernac t One Hundred | He used a great ny expressions of | twenty-four-minute address in @ talk- and Sixth-eighth Street and Broad-| the red-shirt-hair-on-the-chest type!" machine and refused it. I don't way. Both times he packed the build- | which make bim virile to his hearers, wane your money, and I'll tell you age : I'm going to do. I'm going to? ing to the side aisies. And, barring | and was well applauded for them. He| divide whatever free-will ‘ofertas 1| Mondays, when there are no meetings, |employed a large share of the gesticu-| et here between the Y. M. C. A. and| he hopes to do this every day for/lations and muscular mannerisms | the American Red Cross, I don't pro- three months. | Which drive home his periods and dis- | Pose that any gang of degenerates ‘Ther i. be no doubt Billy Sun- play a rugged grace which cannot be | shall spit on me and rub dt in!” here can be no doub overlooked, He played upon all the| giv ° $ — day completely captured his two au-| stops of patriotism, particularly in his GIVES NEW VERSION OF 8A diences of yesterday. He had heard|night sermon, and as a climax, LOME’S DANCE. New York would be cold t he stood precious little making here the success marked his campaigns elsewhere, ‘o him, that chance of that has} But American flag in his hand brought a vast audience to its feet in ja roar of acclaim when he leaped to the top of his reading desk with an | BILLY PLAYS ON THE PATRIOT- At the afternoon session Billy as- sured his hearers: “I bring you nothing new. I'm an_ old-time preacher bringing an old-time Gos- pel,” Hut it is doubtful if many of the he gave no inkling he belteved it. | 18M OF HIS HEARERS. thousands who listened had ever be- There was no nervousness, No appre- | ‘This was not at all a part of the! kg ere ye haga sedig erator hension in his manner when he first | sermon aa outlined in the notebook | josat nuve bec eehllarted ae ay fter he de o ic e1 ; came to the platform in the ufter poe Mian dis Parnas auld a eal version of the Salome incident which noon, His sharp eyes roved over the [10th Gime oe nological moment. and | 2¢,rectted to the night congregation: palm ai Well, they built it and fill wouldn't have done that if want me and need me.” was never, @ hyde,” there was iWproari ment. twioe filled his tabernaci his sermons. And by no will when you These bargains rent, cash sal A variety of stylish g , Stout an if he had said to himself: them, and from that moment there telling point which bath tm carbolic acid and formalde- It wae a great day for Billy, for he least Interested in his discourses were | CASTORIA + Infants and Children Come in and see for yourself the elegant styles at such astonishingly low prices made possible by economical management, and direct maker to wearer selling ¥ audience, when he suddenly turn led it; they toward Homer Rodeheaver, his choi they didn’t} and grasped that stood at R up the American odey’s hand ed again sidewalk machines at Coney Island. jous agree-| waving the wide arc Stars and Stripes above him, the t in le to over- means the) FOR HIMSELF. several of the prominent persons of | ment the announcement that Billy re- the city—Jphn D. Rockefeller $r., Mr. and Mre. Finley J. Shepard, Genre fused to accept one penny for h services here in New York, in this city,” ho sald, “but I monk to win out, worth . is the worst crowd of thugs th » of the penitentiary, you needn't buy, but most likely you low to ask for the ‘‘Lower Stor rments—made exclusively by Lane Bryant for d Hard to Fit Figures Coats 11,95 to 24.75 1.25 to Blouses Lane Bryant Sizes 36 to 58 Suits 17.95 to 36.75 Skirts 3.95 to 14,59 Dresses 5.95 to 42.75 Lower Store 21-23 W. 38th St. 6.95 master, sitting a few feet behind him, flag collar wilted, his face all aglow, turn So, with Billy on the reading desk, ousands at his feet thundering out the inapir- tng hymn to the rhythm of two pl- anos, his first evening servi flowing and held every auditor In the |to an end J ot came spell of his earnestness throughout| HE REFUSES NEW YORK MONEY The audience received with amaze- “T've got {t on good authority that $509,000 has been collected to oppose The whiskey gang, that ['ve put out of nearly $200,000,000 of business in the last twenty And I say to thousands who sat in silence before je made the most of it, He had been | ar ony Het dad, & soused bunch him, awaiting his word, the largest talking about the inhumanities of| round him. | They were having a ver addres Vrussian milltarism; of the starving|R&rty once when Herodlas shoved congregation he had ever addresse : Hee eee targus | Salome out before the bunch and said and just as appraisingly roved over | Women in the red wake of the Ger- iy her, ‘Now, go like a twin-six!’ man army; of ravaged Belgium; of| Salome, y. now, a the construction work of the taber-/the dead children flung up on the| Wome you know, didn't have enough pendent electric lights. Once he Help! Help!” tinging from tortured her foot out at a quarter to twelve, smiled and rubbed his chin in his Beonant pret sen applaAnes ied the and the old King just rolled over with |de¥ght. He said to her, ‘Sis, you're a | peach. You're certainly the Hmit. You can have anything I've got up to the half of my kingdom.’ Salome didn't know just what FIRST UTTERANCE. ers she cried, and in twd Well, John the Baptist had shot a His first utterance to the crowd,|ing’the Aug above hia hewg. The auale | UMferful Into that old adulteress, He'd “1¢ looks like ,the same old bunch,” |ence rose with the quick, rustiing| fel “4 hipe he hadn't any right to seemed as much intended to voice his sound th at SOmRSAOG tho: awit Vien | wanted to get square with him. So assurance as to convey his confidence the anthem. Nor was this enough, | 22° 8#id to Salome, ‘Ask him for the in the allent thousands. It delighted) Hill’, glistening with perspiration, his| Pe’? of John the Baptist on a charger.’ “As the King had given his word he couldn't back down, so at the next falled of, applause, never a reverent) ))0" ine atte Hymn of the Re-| panquet the bloody head of John the wort that was not received with an!" Rogey, trombone in hand, sprang| Baptist was served up “Amen,” that ran like a sigh through to Billy's side. | ,,The audience applauded thie vooit. the great structure. Get out your handkerchiefs,” Na Petes onrrainiy eget babes And even when Billy arraigned the cried to the assemblage, Cand give ®/ other chord, and a deeper one, with un-Christian In the city, saying: “An|" There was cheer after cheer as the| D8 Story of little Billy, the lame boy angel from heaven couldn't come to handkerchieta were fung up, and) filly wan talking about loyalty, He New York and train around with|from the platform the effect of the|naq told his hearers that in. these some of the people you know and (erty ei ir up of popcorn inthe | daa they must be either patriots oF | then go back to heaven without a le of loyalty | traitors, and as an examp he had recited the narrative of the Oregon's historic voyage around Cape Horn during the Spanish War, ‘Dhen, as if having chosen another them he began to talk of a waste place tn Indiana whieh had come with a great steel plint built about It BILLY'S PARABLE OF THE BRAVE GARY NEWSBOY. ttle newsboy went on, his usu- d, “who was used to go up a and a city “There was a there in Gary,” he ally sharp tones softe lame tn one leg, 80 hi and down street with a click. MJ click, click of his crutches, One day he read in a paper that there was @ little girl in Chicago who had been terribly injured, but could get well if the hospit | could get skin enough to Ov nt weasel = ok he graft_on her wounds, In Use r'or Over 30 Years that a Pade peek maaries. “Billy thought tt over and after Always bears ready for you!’ 2 EM] white he went to a doctor ry the y, Dr, Haldeman last night and | &"d J to him: My leg s y Signature of a sum to make him rich | & 1 want to send it ue little Well, they t lex ey cut” ft , wrapped it up. in ant went it to Chicago—and the little tid well, But, with little Bil nurse sald to him, ‘Billy, you're not NEw ey going to get well And the little kid looke up at he id replie ‘Any ower Store a a a ae “So Billy died, and when his funeral was held there wasn't a whe tha turned in Gary that hour The wis wing of whiatles, only, mourn nae thousands of people ped in Gary that day And now when visttors go there they | aren't shown the hundred-milllon errs A pparel dolar steel plant, they're shown lit \tle Billy's grave, for it's the sign and Every one is talking about the wonderful PF ine we're offering at || S¥mbol of the town a: our new economy lower store in high cli Lane Bryant apparel. For just one instant Billy Sunday “MOTHER DOESN'T HAVE TO CALL US TWICE SINCE 4 WE STARTED TO HAVE POST TOASTIES FOR BREAKFAST” to be Gary, | out | ' Where to Enlist East Side— 131 Park Row, 80 Delancey Street, 16 Bowery. 25 Third Avenue, 142 East Fourteenth Street 119 East Twenty-third Street, 609 Third Avenue. st Fifty-ninth Street st Eighty-sixth Street. Sast One Hundred and ‘Twenty-fifth Street. 406 East One Hundred and 1 Forty-ninth Street ” Brooklyn— 361 Fulton Street 142 tbush Avenue. Broadway 2 Manhattan Avenu eB 2306 Klghth Avenue. 162 Newark Avenue 212 Washington Street, ‘UP TO NEW YORK, Great Tabernacle Twice Crowded to Greet Billy Sunday As He Hh Le His Fight Against ‘‘the Devil in New York’’ few Tmitations, RICHARD ATTH ‘Was Attorn Secretary BOSTON, Ap Secretary General under | died suddenly | Fenway, last ni two years old. \ for several dition did not in U. S. Army West Side— Whitehall Street, keen Interest in uation, It is warmly approv Jorsey— O. Building, Jersey City | | quent proclama = si — DIES SUDDENLY Grover Cleveland. of State and son's address to Congress and subse- Just a Touch of Ice-Mint. Presto’ CORNS WITHER AND LIFT OUT. IT'S MAGIC, “Rody with tts ship-horn Corn sufferers gather round: get right UP close and itsten—here’s good news for ow The real dyad-tn. the wool Corn ‘'Kitler* S here at inet, No humbug, Toe-mint, the new discovery made from « Japanese product, {# said to surely ana quiekly end ail foot misery. Think of ft; omly « {auch oF two of that cooling, soothing mint and real foot joy le youre. pain, not a bit of applying it even trritate the skin, Tt jum maken a pair of tired, ewotten, aching, barning feet glow with cooling comfort | | Hard corns, eott corns or corns betwean the toes, also togghened callouses, Just anrink right up and lift off #0 easy. Ite wondertul Fever mutt. treatment Ike Who wear high heel shoes. Try It. Juwt ask in any @rug store for Tce-mint and learn for yourwelt it eolld t comfort reaily i There in nothing tke 1t.——Advt ARE YOUR Nostrils Clogged? FACTS ABOUT MY LOW FEES When the first cut-rate drug store was opened the other dru tried to con vince the people that the cut-rate inferior drugs, and warned t No soreness, either when or afterward, and it dosen't fo apprectat) eclally women * teamwork ltlon. His) ability and energy in the discharge of his public | duties soon won him wide attention, his demand that the Federal courts enjoin organized labor from obstruct- tremendous the high prt cut-rate ate befor 1 th OLNEY \ing the public mails and Interstate the fact, commerce during the famous Debs | ?!h™ hen ae pian railroad strtke—an injunction that | peop! being tr | was granted and sustained by the ind th United States Supreme Court—making | him the storm centre of that stirring Mh pricod sve industrial conflict. Labor leaders de-| imakes {t possible for me t they were fust as loud in their praise | time, when it takes two dolimrs to ers the purpose of one dollar before the grea of him when he voluntarily intervened pod war bega Jin behalf of the discontented em- pines a ployees of the Philadelphia and Read- ey General and} ing Ratiroad, declaring that “the ARE YOU mass of wage earners can no longor be dealt with by capital as so many |isolated units,” an announcement | which gives an {dea of the man’s far- sightednens lat he served one year and nine months «as Secretary of Sta in President Clevetand, | (tovetand’s Cabinet, winning his most at his home, No. 56) tasting triumph tn this short time by He was cighty-| ity masterful handling of the bound ary diapute between Great Britain and Veneauela. Mr, Olney's name was presented to of State Under GOING DEAF? M. somcialty ia treet obstructed nowtrils, thew pisos amet Trait Dave auent tit rit —Richard Olney, Attorney- ght Mr, Olney had been weeks, but his con- become serious until Clogged Nostril Dropping in Throat, Deafness 110 West Street. late yesterday afternoon, Mrs. Olney the Democratig convention In 1904 as O. Bullding, Park Row and Broad- J] 84 thelr daughter, Mra, George) candidate for the Presidential and Head Noises Minot of this city, were with him Mr. Robert “Allen rewides at No, Si Thaw! nomination, He received thirty- em York Wren vimalen me when the end came, Another daugh-| ly inelin rhea ha fers Twenty-third Street. ter, Mrs. C. H, Abbot, 1s residing tem- . ree bed 1, onuh Mr. Olney resisted all efforts to ’ Sixth Avenue, pani th. Panis title. le ie nh . 7 - draw him back to public life, de werttled i ¥ * year ago 614 Pighth Avenue. Though unable to leave his bed | “i! x Baten = woke, drop | clining President Wilson's offer ot 931 Broadway. recently, Mr, Olney maintained his the Ambassadorship to Great Britato and a subsequent offer to head the Federal Reserve Board, Mr. Olney's public utterances always commanded great respect, His defense of Pres! the International sit- understood that he od of President Wil- | tlon of war, 262 Broadway Hoboken x dent Wilson and arraignment ot For more than a quarter of a cen-|00M" stn Sa es dee ten - ~ tury Mr. Olney was one of the leading | © beg a ae Arsh Foal armas and volo and cried statesmen and lawyers of this coun- -_— Ps : ae ar the Presidential “Are you going to be any less loyal try. He was born in Oxford, Masa, | Chie fo ss than that boy, now that your coun in 1885, the son of @ textile manufac > try is calling for you | jturer and banker, His English an- STRIKES THE PATRIOTIC NOTE) cestors settled in Salem two hundred | THANKS KING GEORGE. | AGAIN AND AGAIN. | ara earlier, Mr. Olney was edu Abaseel | Another whirlwind of applause 1 ted in Brown Univeralty and Har | cated apiring Wo: }answer to the question, and Billy iia ¢ + ml My ie Aa |eatching the mood of his audience, its | vad Law School, graduating from the| 1.0 Gy, Apri 9.—Thanks to King DR. J. C. McCOY |rlse to his patriotic suggestion, struck | latter inatitution in 1868, Almont trom | george, tor nis “inviting words" In] 24 Flatiron Building again and again the note he had set ‘the outset he won distinction In hiv greeting Amorica’s entry into the war | vibrating, me ffi Laer profession, being regarded as an @U-!way expressed by President Wilson in Breadway and 38d St New York never did say tha n \thority on probate, trust and corpora-|¢he following message received by the] ain re and Mata should be blotted out,” he cried, "bUt] A pee os fie , Pa Nad oy aad JT did say that German imperiatism | Traffic Lines in th Troue and |tion law, He served one term in the | King to-day 0 . Jought to be blotted from the face of halt Veet | Massachusetts House of Representa-| Your eloquent message comes to me the earth. I've got the greatest love Walking Difficult, but [tives in 1875, this being hie flrat ap- [at this critical moment in our nationat UA a lis ee rooney Bell It Won't Last. pearance as a public official, Hie 96 pont ES re | Coburg, and [ belleve you'll find no! ——_— | it was not until elghteen years | world, now to defend hei ore lo! reople e Unite ates ath tered the | Ideals, bleswings of na Bee eae eee Garmen bleed in thein| Probably it's on account of the war. jlater, in 1898, hy he earned eeu inde and uphold the German people are being blindly led) the wari lay of any April since | tivity, going to Washingto eoePt | ang ‘the nt to which t 5 to the doctrine that might is right.! the Weather Bureau began, this firat|the post of Attorney General in Preal- | for guidance, | thank you for Foomans ' vatic e un pi lent Cleveland's second adm apiring words It's the salvation of th man p Ne Mee arcu ercn easter | “leveland nd wdeniniaty rt 4 LAS POWDER: ple t we've entered into this con RORTD OF F sry od a flict. We want to see them free from Monday a blowy, moist, sticky, alip- For 30 years women who care for militariam! pery, slushy snowstorm, “J 7 jaliy hove bognd po beter then WOEa isk cape tiun amine OF Ta |S antes heoan “tailing apauti el <omcom After-Easter Sale iret” Cel dan, dam oe coe and Beatty, the Germans would! ocieck jas and by daylight | s for free sample {now be pounding at our doors. New ¥ i e rd ¢ }4 The Freeman Perfume Co. York would be a heap of ruins from. the precipita stimated at ap- Dept. 90 ‘Cinctnnati, Obes the Batte Fourteenth « proximate ree nehes, The ele- g | goin | man milit | We're going to help put a tombstone Mlover it marked ‘Here lies Prussia militarism, It died in 117 the eyes of nd the guns o' Y righteous nation’ We r the Stars and pes f t the world It was here that grabbed up the flag and leaped to his desk, An endured, Billy dropped back to. the platform and said in a voice tha few heard, "Never mind, Woodrow we're coming, Good night.” oe GIRL IN AUTO AIDS NAVY. Minn Helps | Miss Sylvia Loines of No. 3 Prosper | Place, Columbia Heights, I n young daughter of a wealthy martne sure and driver of he ruiting OMve at No. 115 Flatbush A ' wain's Mate arles BLE retired, In charge of fice, sent t out with Chief M. Ke to br enlist examin Dut nt to.) (Ba wet ha ns H nen to the Newp ation. OF 114 wpplying 4 ri H 4 Joet and ud Tiny enlisted at once. 8 operated with diMculty, trains this @ acore of | horses were fright- | arks from the vated line and morning ru ned by tructure f attended by the ement was when ne falling yverhead tn eh aways out their to A.M nt York's first snow sako there wa rw on Baster Quickstep Order Largely Increased at Assortments FURNITURE CREDIT TERMS $3-° Down on $50-0 | 5.00 75-0 $19 tay is clear Many of the exclusive “Bedell- 2 “4s 100-0 : omperature | Paris" Spring models to-morrow 10. « «* 150-00 ge - will be found in this tremendous 15-0 «« 200-00 val beaver te Bena, | collection. 25.0 «6 as 390.00 Ge Coriaile aad ah the Youthful Serges Apa of Roven & Norfolk Sport Models | FREE BRASS Ha ot New ¥ ; New Poplin “ An Ot and Burella Weaves York wventy<s to th weure check TH ‘The NURSING MOTHER Needs Strength To Properly Care for Baby JOHANN HOFF’S MALT . XT RACT et grays. At t e Livery where. Drugeiow ‘ chartreuse, Four Nineteen West 34th * Brooklyn Ww 460-462 Fulton St, , 14-16 West 14th St. , yee ssic plaited effects, adding e trim slenderness of the WEEK r Velours and velour OPENS s, gabardines and twills ‘AM new coyert tans, browns, Oxfords and silver ACCOUNT APARTMENTS FURNISHED COMPLETE FROM $e TO $500 Open Monday and Saturday Evenings 104 ST. L STATION AT CORNER NAFISHER BROS COLUMBUS AVE BET. 103 &104 ST. Alterations Without Charge 2 he Fashion Shops ) Street Newark Broad & Park Sts, gs MiP WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS, Downtown: 4 =

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