The evening world. Newspaper, April 21, 1917, Page 4

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‘ONGOING TO HELL YOU DO YOUR OWN VOTING,’ SAYS BILLY bina “Faith, Like Muscles, Don’t | Grow It,” Declares Sunday. “Don't go to hell because you don't understand all there Is in the Hinle pleaded Billy Sunday in the course of his serr “Paith the mus “If you exer of the body,” he cine it, it will grow; if you don't, It will not; if you exercise it, it will) make more muscles, more blood, more nerves; it is like reading a physical culture book; if you just sit still and read it, it will not do you any good. “I don't see why so many people are begging crumbs from God's table when He would rather give them a| whole bakeshop. | “The marriage system is built on faith, You had faith that that man/ ‘would be true to you or you wouldn't have said ‘yes.’ He had faith that You would be true to him, or you bet he wouldn't have said ‘yes! Without faith In the family the family goes to pieces. “When you sit down and eat you don't understand how the food is go- | ing to assimilate through your body. Don't be a fool. You do multitudes | of things every day and you don't know why you do them, “God's blessings follows obedience. If you pray for a blessing when you are not willing to obey you never will be blessed, You got the thing wrong. “But If you expect God to keep a promise that is conditional, if you do not fulfill the condition, then with each recurring disappointment you will be led to disbelieve in the ver- acity and promise of God. “Now, many of you do not know what I mean by an absolute promise or @ conditional promise, ‘Whoever shall call on Me in the name of the lord, he shall be saved.’ Supposing he doesn't call, Well, he won't be waved; he will go to hell, “Come unto Me, ail ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.’ If you want rest, you must came; if you don't come, don't ex- ‘pect rest. Lots of prayers are rig- ynarole; yo ugo through the motion of prayer. You have not God in your mind when you pray. “Wendell Phillips, the great Uni- tarian preacher, was preaching in Boston once and a Boston newspaper said of his sermon that tt was one of the most eloquent prayers ever of- fered to a Boston audience. “That is the trouble—too much is #iven to the audience and not enough to the Lord. You show me a worldly eburch and I will show you a church that does not believe in God Almighty. I wonder that God ts wili-| ing to do anything. "For 430 years the Jews had been in bondage; ever since Joseph's brethren had lied about him to Jacob. There had been a famine and God had sent Moses to load them out of bondage and he took them to the promised land, but instead of enter- ing the promised land they came to the City of Kadesh Barnea. ‘There they stopped, and then they pointed a committee—appointed a committee. Yes, and the devil has been at that job in some respects | ever since, “Every age has got to recast Its vo- cabulary to preach the Gospel to the | people, I am preaching for the age | tions of the Ti in which I live. Suppose Joshua had | Hill, authorizing the eo uction used some of the phrases that I do_— | new State Normal School in Weaste ‘Go to It," ‘he made food,’ ‘up against | it! I will preach the Gospel in the | language of to-day, “God despises a trimmer; that ts the reason #0 many people fall to- day; they are trimming their sails to catch & passing breeze of popular- ity; they are afraid ‘of that old Unless You Exercise | joined his ship. pennies, afra devil out 1 of that old er keep God busy answer- You never mise @ i never miss any to pr There are Jers, preachers and n the same condition tor of a church and an indicator to ching and 50 100 and preaching be able to pray ne His ¥ pra great r Ty 1 ) for pre prayer 4 rather prayer 1 1 1 I w and pre bieg the ur prayer meeting. ‘The h member prays about day and the preacher The chureh average ¢ Pai the he- of which y can't ree t but leve. Itt motive not end, the uh looking int been cover » the the future that Experience light of @ train, It ground that belief build# 4 wall between you 1. Unbelief stops your com ating with God, and God ec municating with cribes some dof Almighty foreordanied t heaven if you repent dained that you go to hell if you don't; #0 do your own voting. "The church of God to-day ought to hang Sts head in shame and disgrace to think that there is so little faith in God, Jesus Christ and the Bible.” a HER HUSBAND ON WARSHIP, WIFE, 16, SEEKS FREEDOM Eloped at 14 Because Price Was So Handsome In Uniform, She Says, Asking Annulment. Powel Woodward Price was not in court to-day when his romance came to an end. He was “Somewhere, aboard the U. 8, 8, New Jersey,” and it was impossible for him to put in a defense to the sult brought by his sixteen-year-old wife, Adaline Fenner Price, to annul their runaway riage. Supreme Court Justice Lehman declined to let one witness tell where the New Jersey, on which he had spoken to Price recently, was located, Young Mrs, Price, whose brown hair was still in braids, told of her mar- riage. “We went to Bridgeport, Conn., she sald. “Mr. Price wore his navy uni- form and he looked fine and handsome, That's why I married him in such a hurry. When we got the license I said 1 was eighteen, though I was only fourteen. After the wedding I went to my mother's house and Mr. Price 1 haven't #een him but ‘a few times since.” Justice Lehman reserved decision. ee POLICEMEN SAVE GAS VICTIM. pre After Applying Artifictal Respiration for Half Hour. Jacob Jaeger, a master gardener, whos No. 248 Fulton Street, took a room at the Cortlandt Hotel, No. 73 Cortlandt Street, last night and did not answer when the clerk rapped at his door to-day. There was a smell of gas in the hall. Policemen Skelly and Breitenbach scaled the fire escape and entered the room, They found Jaeger unconscious and worked over him for half an hour, applying artificial respiration. When Dr. Trimble arrived from Hudson Street Hospital he found the policemen's first aid work had saved Jacger’s life. They were no @xha by their work that they had to report back to the station house for a rest. 2 - WHITMAN SIGNS THREE BILLS One Permits Bantpp’ y Towne » April 21.—The Sia authorizing any county, city, town or village to provide military equip: for one or more military organizations within it# boundaries was signed by Goy. Whitman to-day. The Governor also signed tie Crom- well Bill, approprinting $150,000 to pro. vide towing faciliti rear t over the u. Unbellef as+ in God when the vt you go to He has fore- County, —___ ‘Heavy Firing Of Const! Was ¢ Blasting. BOSTON, April 21.—The “heavy fir mM “off the coast” a few days turned out to be blasting in ass. A than named er money bags over there in the pew, afread they will lose a few of the 1 to Capt. Robert chief Jay that he had done muen t few days, H weak, the liver inacti affected. and by HOSTE Stomach Causes Many Digestive Troubles When the stomach becomes the bowels constipated, your general health is quickly Help is Needed ance at the first sign of any stomach or liver trouble you may prevent much suffering. Under such conditions you should TRY Stomach H ve and giving prompt assist- TTER’ er enema - mar- | t| yourselves zealously without holding READY WANTED Eesti a8 EVENING WUKLY, BALUBRUVAX, AMAL 41, LY¥l’ rotic 1g women who will en- to obtain five recruits each for the army or navy. coupon when filled out to The Evening World, TO ENLIST .|Name . CATHOLIG WOMEN OF N.Y. ALL READY 10°00 THER BI Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Remembering the clean-cut in- dorsement Mer. Lavelle gave to them Yosterday, he boasted that “there are no slackers. among the women of America,” — hun dreds of Catholic women are reg- ' istering for pa- triotic service ‘ this morning at q ‘ the headquarters ap of the League of fee” Cathollo Women for Civic and Social Reform, No. 154 Past Thirty-eighth Street. This ts the home of Mra, P. J. Gallagher, and has been open for the recruiting of women since early jn February, being the first heddquarters donated for pa- | triotie purposes. But the work of the |loague was given a tremendous im- petus when thousands of Catholic women met in @ great patriotic rally at the Shubert Theatre yesterday af- ternoon. Thore was only one rift in the music of applause that greeted the speakers on patriotism, When Miss Elisabeth |Marbury spoke of former differences with England, and then added sig- nificantly, “This 1s the time when we should forget those differences,” faint handclapping was interrupted by cries of “No! No!" that were decided~ ly not faint, “Are you willing to help your coun- try?” was the appeal made to tho women. “An effort is belng made to secure the names of all Catholic women who will volunteer their services for when time of need. ‘This 1s war time! Aro you willing to help your country and do your share of work? Wor God—for country—and for home.” “We are ready for your co-opera- to: Miss Grace Humphreys, Exec- utive Secretary of the National League for Women's Service, told the Catholic women, “Go to your head- quarters and find out how you can help, Go and learn that patriotism has no age, that you cannot be too old or too young to serve, If you are teachers, leaders of children, find how dest you may lead them. And if you that wonderful thing—a born cook—be sure there will be a place for you.” “Go to the base hospital, if neces- sary; go to the fleld ambulances, Offer are back," adjured the Rev. John EB. Burke of the Paulist Church, “If you have ground raise vege- table pleaded Miss Teresa R. O'Donohue, President of the League of Catholic Women, “One hour's work a day will raise enough vegetables on & plot 20x80 for a family of six, If you have money give it to us for mus- lin and gauze to make bandages.” Then Mme, Eleonora de Cisneros, red of hair, white of skin, blue of frock, sang “The Star Spangled Ban ner.” To-day many women are entering the leagne’s classes tn canteen cook- Ing, surgical dressing, hospital sup plies and soctal and welfare work, ‘There 1s @ west side branch at No, 25 West Sixty-ninth Street. Mrs, Ed- ward H, Hawke jr is Chairman of Registration, Miss Marbury, Mrs, Al- fred C, Chapin, Mrs, F, Burrall Hoft- Mrs. Nicholas F, Brady are Presidents, Mrs, Michael Gavin is Secretary, Mrs, A, McC. Beard ts ‘Treasurer, When mother makes munitions who's going to take care of the baby? | That important question seems in a fair way of settlement to-day with the announcement that the Nattonal) League for Woman‘a Service is to co- operate with the New York Centre of Day Nursery Aasoctations and Day Nurseries in increasing the supply of | women trained to take care of small children while their mothers are at work, “You'd better help us," laughingly warned Miss Gertrude Robinson- | Smith, State Chairman of the leaguo, | in an address to the Day Nursery women at the Cosmopolitan Club, “because we shall open extra y nurseries when the munition factorics | call the women, and—if we don't| know our job-—we shall kill the chil THE MIGRATORY SEASON en “Birds Migrate, Your Coin Migrates, Everything Migrates Except Your Debts’—‘The Slacker Bird Migrated Here to Escape the European War, Then the War Mi- grated”—“It’s Queer How Your Coin Migrates”— “They Say Money Has Wings, but Some of It Must Have Two Sets.” (Copyright, 1917, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). By Arthur (‘Bugs’’) Baer. This is the migratory section of the year, Birds migrate, Your coin migrates. Everything migrates except your debta, Tho birds migrate toward the north. Your ambition doesn't migrate in any special] direction. It Just kinda ehrapnels. There t# nothing in the rules to indicate why the birds are touring north. Probably to get away from that Southern cooking. Possibly be- cause the travelling. salesmen are scooting south, Anyway, just about the time the drummers are skidding South the birds flap North. You never hear of a bird skidding East or West. They are always either buzzing North or South. Some birds who don't migrate It's time the Blue Laws of 1887 were changed. are the Broadway Flock. There are all kinds of birds in this flock. There is the film flapper, the free ‘lunch hawk, the tango buzzard, the matinee sparrow and the eun dodger. tango buzzard is least but not last. one foot to the other, Mostly out. Most of the Broadway birds fly The He never migrates any place but from The lunch hawk migrates in and out of buffets. so high that the Woolworth Building looks like a bungalow to ‘em. The most famous of this flock is the Bright | Light Swallow. There are several kinds of swallows. They say one swallow doesn't make a summer, popular. nine will make @ fall. The chorus cuckoo is another Broadway bird. stage doors, This curious fow! has have very long bills, which are mostly unpaid. Tho stage starling is a Broadway bird, It longs to flutter in the glare of the footlights, This bird migrates from South Bend, or Wheeling, to It soon discovers that while fine feathers make fine birds, they don't make the soup taste any better. Broadway. However, all the migrating tsn't done by Broadway Birds, ‘The slacker bird is a foreign bird who migrated here to escape the European war. The war migrated right after him, Now there is only one place where he can migrate to escape the war, We can't mention it because the children might got hold of this paper. ‘Then we have the domestic slacker bird who tried to escape eouscription by getting mated. He not only got mated, but checkmated, Congress has this bird all tagged and crated. It's queer how your coin migrates. They say money has wings, but some of it must have two sets. The oddest thing of all is how your nerve mi- grates when you amble up to the boss to inquire why he doesn't mi- grate your salary a trifle to the north- ward. You migrate out of the door 4 minute afterward, Your goat is another migrative bird who changes its habitat very rapidly. Your nanny probably migrates more than any other migrationist In the First it 1s with you ond then it migrates all around the works. There should be an alien goat law prohibiting your goat from migrating. It seems impossible to get your goat housebroken, It insists on wandering. league, needed, and appointed a committee of nursery workers—four from New Jersey, four from Connecticut, four from up-State New York and two from New York City—to promote day nurseries In the neighborhood of mu- nition factories, Adjutant General Louls W. Stotes- bury has nded highly the ef forts of the National League fe Woman's Service, particularly in te matter of the military census, for the work of which 150,000 women have volunteered. He also advises othe women's organizations to use the league as a clearing house, This is what he says 1, The Resource Mobilization Bureau, through the division standards and methods, acknow- ledges the tender of assistance made the National League for Woman's Service, and assures the league that this bureau welcomes and will use the league's servtces to the fullest possible extent 2. It ig noted that the league has directed ita first efforts in co-op- erating with this bureau to assist- ing in the taking of the military census, Since this is the most im- mediate work before the bureau, y especially commend the league's efforts in this direction +3. Many organizations through- out the State have much to con- dren! Lots of us, strangely enough are fond of children u must not put @ damper on our energy. Please} help us to give instructions to women who want to be assistants in day nursertes, who will bear the same re-| lation to the matrons as the women studying with the Red Cross bear to} the trair nurses, ‘Thousands of women will be forced into industry as} the war comes nearer to us, and there| must be more nurseries and attend ants to take care of the bables, Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge, President of the conference, announced that tif teen or gixteen nurseries In New York would give instruction to volunteer workers, and tthat a centrally lo cated training school would be opened for them shortly She asked the County Chairmen of the League for Woman's Bervice to co-operate tn | Qnding where new day nurseries are tribute to the State's resources in defense, It will greatly assist tho work of this bureau if the league, which now clears for a number of other women's organizations, will continue to do ao. The Division of Standards and Methods will be the official clearing house through which the civilian ¢ izations of the State may more readily trans- mit their servic But the volun- teer co-ordination of work by which many organizations clear to certain lar ations, as in the case of the League for Wom- ervice and its affiliated so- tes, cannot but facilitate the mobilization the State. of the resources of Champagne iy very But eight or He migrates between very fine feathers. These birds also Nothing migrates more rapiily than nickels in an automat. They go 80 rapidly you think they must evapo- rate. The bird who tries to get a meal in an automat with less than a scowload of nickels 1s a life member of the Hick Club with all his dues paid up. As we mumbled before, the birds haven't got the monopoly on migrat- ing. Hubby is quite a migrator when has has his migrators on, When there house he migrates faster than Ger- many’s chances in the war, Ha hobbles to the club and wifey can't get him back without a migration subpoena, Incidentally, the wife can do a little keen migrating herself when it is in the direction of a bargain counter. She generally migrates back home with a bevel edged, handpainted, em- bossed, double action bonnet that contains a bird whose last migration sets hubby back $67.70. In spite of thelr efforts, the Audubon Society is responsible for most of our divorces. They should keep birds from migrat+ ing on to hats, One of the most difficult migrations is gyrating back to the old homestead in time to hurdle four bottles of milk. Migrating to work in the morning ts also an exceedingly tough pilgrimage. | Migrating home ain't #0 hard to take. No migrating season for insurance collectors, ‘Their migrators are busted. ‘Troubles only migrate in one direc- tion and that's towards you. ‘T. R. ts anxtous to migrate to Eu- | rope with 600,000 expert accountants | to count them as he knocks ‘em over, There's only one thing left to do. Migrate. ‘A LINIMENT Prepared for Family Use You Can Rub It In Radways | eady elief For Seventy Years All Drugglsts Tried and Troe STOPS Pal ack for Betati is any work to be done around the! . CON SOLIERS' LES BY AL COMPANE Extra Premiums of $100 on Each $1,000 From Na- tion’s Fighters. Every young man who volunteers or who is drafted to fight for Uncle Sam and happens to be assigned to the battle jine in France or to duty on a battleship in the war gone will have to pay most of the big insur- ance compantes of this country an extra premium of $100 for every $1,000 worth of insurance he may wish to take out. In normal times a young man of twenty-one, the average age of 500,000 or more to be called into service immediately, can obtain in- surance for about $20 a thousand. The war clause now Inserted in all policies means that those of our boys who go to the actual fighting line will have to dig up $600 before they can insure thelr lives for $5,000, the aver- ago int of life insurance asked for by young men for the benefit of those they leave behind them, As the class of youths from which the bulk of these soldiers and sailors will be drawn are just leaving school or tak- ing up business careers it will be next to impossible for them to produce $500 premium demanded, which puts insurance in the prohibitive class so far as they are concerned, The extra |Premium also applies to women who wish to engage in Red Cross work. While the big companies maiatain there was no concerted action looking to such @ tremendous increase in pre- miums, and that the whole war situa- tion was only discussed in an infor- of the As- ociation of Life Insy Presidents held about two weeks ago, investiga- tion discloses that the companies are in agreement as to the size of the extra premium that must be paid Some of the companies have adopte | ed five-year war clauses, others two, while @ number of the co ] have not yet formulated a form of in- surance contract to cover the period of the war. opted war clauses stipulate that no tra premium will be asked from soldiers or sailors assigned to duty within the continental limits of the United States, Panama being except- ed from this provision. In other words the companies are not taking chances insuring the men who will be assigned to duty at the most im- portant points UNNECESSARY AND UNPATRI- OTIC, SAY CRITICS, Tho action of the aroused some criticiem, not a Ittle of it fro mpractical insurance men, who assert that It ts not going to etimpulate enlistment to any notice- eames a appendicitis, intestinal chronic constipation, drug remedies, ive means of relievin, It keeps the intestina mucous membranes an Beas ao Such compantes as have | coupled with the pill and laxative , is the chief reason wh suffer even more than men from con- stipation and intestinal sta: Laxatives and cathartivs are without exception irritants which whip the bowels into action and over-stimulate the intestinal nerve-centers, vians recognize that their habitual use brings serious consequences, such as Hence physicians nowadays avoid the Nujol, an intestinal lubricant, is a far safer and more effect- soothes and lubricates the irritated able extent. Some of there critics go| Polley-holders will have enough of far as to charge the Insurance say will not bear analysis, of those who criticize the oxtra nium plan say it would have ber ssible for the companies to Isau icles to the young men at th ordinary rate, protecting themselves by reducing the annual dividends re-| Officials of the compan t acterize this suggestion « | unsafe for the companies, but to their policyholders, The I s pr r ot only « un-| | ju ray) there is no justice in ining | }that the 20,000,000 odd r riders | in this country should bear bur- den of insuring the youngsters who | will be calléd to the colors; that the| jextra expense should be borne by the uninsured as well as the insured In support ‘of thelr attitude com- | any officials seen yesterday pointed to the experience of British and Can- adian compantes since the bexinning of the war. t the outbreak of hostill- ties the Canadian companies decided that men going into the service should pay_an extra premium of $ on $1,000. When the death list be! growing this was increased to $70. For a short time policies were issued jon this basis, but finally, after one- third of the annual losses of one com- pany proved to be war claims, the rate was increased to $150 on $1,000, an extra premium of 15 per cent., five more than United States companies fre asking. Tritish compantes now | demand an extra premium of $150 fore insuring men going into the ser- Mutual Life Insurance Com- ern with more than 500,000 rs, plans to refund, after the war, any part of the extra pre- mium not required to cover the ¢ gency, and it Is understood that the other companies have a similar plan in contemplation. “The refund plan worked out nicely following the Spanish - American war,” eaid Willian A. Hutcheson, actuary of the Mutual Life. “We charged the $100 extra premium to men entering the service at the time. | As it turned out, the mortality rate of the war enabled us to refund $83.53 of each $100." Five years is the length of the war clayse in the policies being issued to soldiers and sailors by the Equitable Life Assurance Soclety, those taking part in the conflict outside the United States proper within that period be- ing compelled to pay tho extra 10 Per cent. premium. Insurance in this class of policy is limited to $5,000, a separate polley being required. for anything in excess of that amount Not more than $10,000 insurance will | be issued by the company to civilians whose business may require travel | outside the United States during tne war. | E. Rittenhouse, Conservation Commissioner with ‘the Equitable, said the extra promium was the only sound solution of the question. He defended the action of the companies in adopting the plan Perey C. H. Papps, actuary of the | Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Com- | pany of Newark, sald his company had adopted the $100 extra premiuin |for policies Issued to soldiers and | sailors called to duty outside the country, limiting the amount to $5,000. He sald he had heard the in- surance companies charged with lack of patriotism because of thelr action, “Preset polley-holders should not companies has! be asked to reduce their dividends in| order to carry the men who go into | service,” he declared. “Why doesn't |the city or State pay the extra pre- the burden without loading any more on them. The New York Tife Insurance Com- pany’s war clause, now tn course of Preparation, it is understood will fol- low the lines of the other companies, The Northwestern Mutual Life Insut- ance Company's war clause rune for two years. LK. Passmore, Vice President of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Com- ny of Philadelphia, has notified seenral agents that the company is at work on.a war clause, In the m time agents are directed to limit th in sing men of twenty- five and under, not members of the N. urd, army or navy, to ; id rt or single men, irre. spective of if members of ser. vice organizations, are not to be given any additional insurance in the company, EEE] | TO REMOVE DANDRUFF ) Get a 25-cent bottle of Danderine at any drug store, pour a little into your hand and rub well into the seal with the finger tips. By mornin poo 4 if not all, of this awful scurf will have disappeared, Two or three applies tions will destroy every bit of dan- druff, stop scalp itching and falling hair.—Advt. AT ONCE STOPS STOMACH MISERY “AND INDIGESTION “Pape’s Diapepsin” makes sick, sour, gassy Stom- achs feel fine. Do some foods you eat hit back taste good, but work iadly; ferment into acid@ and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. and Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape’s Dia- pepsin helps neutralize the excessive acids in the stomach so your food won't sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, 59 certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is upset you usually get happy relief in five min- utes, but what pleases you most is that it helps to regulate your stom- Jnch so you can eat your favorite |foods without fear. Most remedies give you relief some- |times—they are slow, but not sure. Pape's Diapepsin” is positive in neu- |tralizing the acidity, so the won't come back very quickly. You feel different as soon as “Pape's Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach—distress just van- iches—your stomach gets sweet, no ses, no belching, no eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. Go now, make the best investment }you ever made, by getting a ta |fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia pd from any drug store. realize in You five minutes how needless it is to suf- | fer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any stomach order due to acid fer- |mium for these young men? The INERTIA women ues or physic: dr by cant, it do Physit The Standard sources in toxaemia and reputation constipation, bottles filled contents soft, d helps to re- (NewJoner) — New Jersey mentation.— Advt. store normal bowel activity, Unlike 8 Nujol is not absorbed e system, and does not form a habit, As Nujol is not a physio but a lubrj- 1 not gripe or upset the system, Being tasteless, it is not un- pleasant to take, Oil Company (New Jersey) has used its world-wide re- ducing Nujol and its behind the product, Nujol is the only remedy Sor constipation we manufacture, iy pist bottles bearing Nujol trade-mark. The genuine sold only at our Nujol plant, ab- solutely modern and sanitary, Write today for an instructive book- Jet on Nujol and its uses, STANDARD OIL COMPANY Bayoane

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