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ek -~— @orn, bvangelist Declares Hall of os 6 the Church Members Have re ae Never Been Converted ‘ Wughing and reatiowanese of m : . A opt and ate Mity Munda ° ° mee thie afternoon da hie wer | wine f ; f men on “Compeenon | eweryt ‘ wing tnt One Rid, enceping an WAWAICMTU ie Kingdom of (on parent, trotted down an aisie Jenun Cheiet saved wit norte and m1 heap the children from | conditions; He saved the publionne, pigying in (he atelee” Bly & \ a ee te os piadibered Weary, “WU they oe ha infidels W aren't yer hem hack of the plat oro : he tabernacie entirely If you are not moved, gat doen o1 There were ahout 4.000 persone ir wr and ae fraud the tabernacia this afternoon—the | og vel gin emafiest Aiturday eathering the cam eye eee tee ee en paign has yet attracted Delegations | hut took haw the devil hae marred of women came from Hoboken, Weat| some of you You can ase it in the Mew York, White Piaina, Coronn,|ATenhope, the red-light Atstricts, the Lawrence, Brooklyn and from aevern||imbling dens, everywhere nee the Manhattan churches and funday| Mare the devil haw placed on man schools, For their edification Hodey Jomus Chrint maw limitationn of the people beenune of win, ‘That's tha rer son nome of you haven't got a better job; limited by ain ‘What we nee dependn point of vision. You can't eit around Departing from hie regular nermon|and play cards and then weep be Mitty said: “The war raging in| cause New York is going to hell, You Rurope has brought the challenge} can't wit down and drink beer, wine hat war te the failure of Christianity |or champagne and look at God 1 @ay it is not the faflure of Christ-| through the bottom of @ glass and janity, Dut the failure of a clvilisa-| then weep because New York in going tion, that ts not Christian.” hell, Get on your knees and nee Billy said the church was getting| the sinner through the word of God too far ahead of the Lord nowadays. | and then weep He declared some people seemed tol “Jesus Christ was not looking at think that after Jesus Christ left the that crowd through opera glasses that with @ trombone, and Mr Fay, # trumpeter, played a duet and Willian Kirby Davies, a Wolsh boy singer from Wilkesbarre, sang «# Pweeter an the Years Go Hy nolo. upon our v ~ {4s incomparably delicious. SEALED PACKETS ONLY. 10+, 18* 4 35* Bend for elegant booklet. SALADA, 100 Hudson St., New York, Beside her was a small satchel and a bundle done up in a piece of checked She sat very still but seemed, at the same time, “Bending the old lady away?” I asked the super- intendent (of the London camp for Belgian refugees). “No,” he replied, “she is going away. She has been going away every day now for two years. She is waiting for the boat to Belgium, and she doesn’t intend —Eleanor Franklin Egan in The Sunday World Magazine To-Morrow HERE IS REAL, Flesh-and-Blood Drama UNDER THE TITLE “The Most Tragic Incident I Saw in the War.” Told by Famous War Correspondents Eleanor Franklin Egan Arthur Ruhl William G. Shepherd Herbert Bayard Swope Look for These Wartime Masterpieces + 1NG The Sunday World Magazine TO-MORROW N. £.—Your Newsdealer’s Worlds Are Always Sold Out Early; and, Furthermore, the Edition Js Limited, denver WANTED READY ; . * won ie eetne “ knew ow om pace * the heart aahew, and tears over anothers © have aon How Anew w crawl ithe tite affent 7 How do some of you tellew With the hoe Fribbens feet eit | Mow many of you come here beonuse | Want to wet front row mente? 1d the to ane sone of you hand le wa. tf you would direct » of your therught toward Ohe erowd bn @ Way tliat would let the Crowd know | what vou were thinking about, rou OWN Wives wouldn't Know you If you jhedy wat and | God if “One nicht « friend and I wong int Me nin wixty-two mip We hed nt found smeninat become neparated and en erying bitter! Wh the matter? Lanked, OF weld, “Hill, 1 think you and me are the only two men in Chicago trying for Jenus Chriat to save the thousands from going to hell! “1 don't think anything bas ever affected me like that did. And right athe way wan @ theatre, crowded than half the were professing to itm doors, and more people in Chrigtians. When you sea the multitudes with out God in New York it ought to put ym on y there ur knees. ‘Then you'd real power, If you are right in H show it on the outside ‘or the orowda- Jesus hover did that. He said, ‘I pray for them that shall believe on me through Thy word.’ “I don't believe in church unity. I believe the different churches are of God and represent different stratas of Christian life; different stratas of Intellect and temperament and waye of serving God “It your compassion ts big enough You needn't worry about church de- hominations. "I can tell in a minute whether a for Jemus Chrixt or whether he ir-flusher# Get out among the Maybe you can get into @ Christ crowd food scrap. “IT believe that Able to aerap as well as he can pray. & man should be 1am ready to do either, Evidently God wants us to pray, but I also be- lieve He wants us to be able to fight for Him. I'll take my chance with Jomus Chriat any day of nignt “You say you don’t want any ex- cltement; that a revival ix injurious to a community, You'ro tho biggest liar on earth “If Jeaus Christ would walk into the church to-day, He'd aay, ‘Get out of you old lobsters, you o flushers; i've been making house a clearing house for world! and you're only a pawn on the di chess board,’ “Let ua all live for Christ. Let us all realize our responstbilities, and none of us will dodge the the firing line for th ee FLAG PRESENTED TO MASONS Rew and Sent to wity. At @ regular communteation of Ortent Chapter No. 138, Roynl Arch Masons, held at their Tabernacle, Lafayette and Claremont Avenues, Inst night, on, nd members prévented the Chapter, through their High Priest, Joseph ‘Tib- hails, with a beautiful slik American flag. A resolution was sent to President Wil- fon pledging their loyalty and undivided VICTORY FOR Boston Man Tells His Experience with “Fruit-a-tives"’—Now Made in U. S. A. Central Wharf, Boston, Mass, April @6th, 1014, “For three years I was troubled with Constipation, At the attacks would be very severe, accompanied by Dissiness and Violent Headaches, 1 took medicine and laxatives the whoie time, but as soon as I discontinued the treatment my bowels would refuse to move. Last October I went to Montrael and there heard of ‘Fruit-a-tives.’ I used one box and the rpoults were 80 pronounced that I bought two dozen boxes, J continued using ‘Fruit-a-tives’ Jand notloed a decided improvement, 1 aradually reduced the dose from three « day to one tablet every three or four days until the twenty-four boxes were finished, when my | was perfect.” JAS. J, ROYALL, | 60c, a box, 6 for 88.50, trial nize &5e. At all dealers or sent by Fruit-a-tives, Limited, Ogdensburg, New York. Advt times physical condition yithe muppori in ail nis actions Aurine (he war. | 1 45 9, THE CANADIANS One thenreen’ rateiatie whe wilt on. Mall thee corepam when out to The Wold, TO ENLIST “TOF PLAYGROUND [Proposition to Trade Plot in Workd's Most Crowded Sec- | tion Stirs Protest | of the olty adnitnintra- | The plar tion to trade, with other properties, | s plot of ground in Bawex Btrect, neas| Grand Mtreet, Kreund pupome wmed for play for « tenet of land on| [Inwood Hii at the northern tip of Manhattan Island, haw aroused tn tonne antagoniam on the east side Under the direction of I. M. Levy Comminsioner of Education, and other | of east side tnprovement movements, an agitation was #tarted to-day whieh promisem to develop into an overwhelming protest when the matter comes up for conaWeration before the Board of Batimate next lenders day. On Its tace the idea is amasing. B contemplates turning over to private Interests vacant land used for recre ation and breathing #pace purposes in the heart of the most densely pop- wlated section of the United states |This plot of ground is in the rear of Public School No, 187, one of the largest in the city an@ the only school that has no outdoor play- ground, The vacant plot, leas than & block in extent, serves, therefore, not only a® a public recreation ground, but as a playground for the school, Playground facilities on the East Side are limited, The population per square block in the vicinity of the Wasex Street plot is the highest in the world for a similar area. The nearest playground is Seward Park, three blocks away on the other side of busy Grand Street, a small open space always jammed with people. ‘Tho next nearest recreation ground ‘9 Hamilton Fish Park, more than half a mile awa; The Board of Estimate’s Committee on Education, the Park Department, | Recreation Committes of tho! Hoard of Batimate, the Educational | Alliance, the Local School Board, tho! the} principals of all the schools in the district, the District Superintendent of Schools, the University Settloment, | Beth Israel Hospital and every East Sire uplift and betterment organiza- tion have asked the recreation ground in Essex Street be retained by the city It is meagrely equipped as yet for | recreation purposes, as it is kept up by voluntary subscription, but it can| be enlarged by taking in Essex Mar- Ket Place, which {# now closed to traMe and those who are sustaining the plot now will willingly continue East Side residents and institutions opposing the trade have no objections to the acquirement by the city of the broad, tree-shaded, grassy stretches | of Inwood Hill, which Is remote from any means of transportation and in A district where there are fewer resi- dents to a square mile than the East Side counts in a square block. This Inwood Hill deal ts part of the bar- gain between the New York Central and the city, But, the East Side does mphatically protest against the dimunition of playground space, which i# already Inadequate, New York City was ma.y years in coming to the realization of the phys: teal and moral benefit of public rec- reation grounds in crowded districts, very foot of playground on the east side has been won for the people only after long, persistent and sometimes, heartbreaking endeavor. To thuse who have devoted the greater part of their time to the extension of play- ground centres the idea that a public benefit, however small, should be sac- riflced by the city in pursuance of a real estate deal ix inconceivable. The matter came up before tho Hoard of Estimate yesterday and was briefly discussed by Mr. Levy, An adjournment of the hefring for one week was taken, In the meantime the board, through a conduct an investipatt The Kast Side protestants againat the plan point out that the city owns n tracts of unproductive property might better be traded for In d TH than the Essex Street plot The plan to sacrifice the little breath- ing place is all the more objection able since it will certainly, in private hands, be covered with towering tene- ment houses, Thus eventually if the plan goes through, it will mean not only the elimination of a recreation ground, but the establishment thereon of the residences of thousands of ad- ditional persons im a@ district already overcrowded, Among those trying to prevent the sacrifice, besides Mr. Levy, are Robert A. Crosby and Jacob S. Elsinger of | the University Settlement; Ray Perl- |man of the Recreation Settlement; I B, Schober, a trustee of the Madison mittee, will | Swift stream two feet deep at sixth With net changes from previous closing, Net Migr. Low. , Allle-Chatmers an Sey Hit oe Am, Hert mug? we— 3 Am: Cae a Pos, a a dm Cin 4 4 Ain: hon iy =| im. Hide te Le pf ¢ Ain: Linmeed bt} < ‘Am. Malt.) iin 8 Malt pit: w* ag fa Male pi) 8 =] Am. Wooten Co $0 ‘Am. Vine to ‘Anaconda’ Mialig fe Se ‘Amociated Olle: 8 Aes & r f Ai il ae We laltwin Layconmo tiv Ih Ohio: po | tee! pot ulte “& stipeiioe | nira), Laster | bacith 4 ‘oie } ett j 6 Copp. Poel & Trin 3 * i “EAST IDEINARMS GEYSER IN STREET. QVERPLAN TO ROB. FLOODS 2 BLOCKS; DAMAGE HEAVY Main Bursts Opposite Public Library and Water Sweeps to New Subway | | ‘The breaking of a tour-foot main Opponite the Public LAbenry on Forti. oth Mtreat early to-day did thousands of doliarw damage For four hours a geyser of water spouted from the broken main, I ing the asphalt undulated, uprooting tree on the Bryant Park side of the street, filing cellars with five inehe to ten feet of water, and forming a torrent that exterided am far a» Hroad way, Where It poured into the new subway excavation The Water Department finally to- cated the water gate at Madison | Avenue, and succeeded in shutting off the flow, but not until hundreds of men of the Water, Hullding, Police and Fire Departments, as well as| employees of the Edison and Tele- phone Companies had tried Ineffectu- ally to cope With the situation. ‘The twolve-story building of the En-| Kinoers’ Club at Nos, 32-34 West Fx tleth treet was left in darkness and without elevator service when the water drowned the electric plants. The cellar of the Cafe des Beaux Arts was flooded; nearly a foot of water stood in the cellar of the Central Re- publican Club and servants {n'a dozen, dwellings worked assiduously with buckets trying to bail out their watery basements. Among the residence with as much as four feot of water in thelr basements were those of Dr.¥ Jasper Garmany, at No. 40, and Dr. J. Stedman Converse at No. 42. Laborers at work in the new sub- way on Broadway built dams to check the torrent. The conduits of both the Telephone and Edison Com- pany were flooded. There was a Avenue, -__—— CLOSING QUOTATIONS. 6 Sugar Del & Hudew zg rhe Gen. Sioiorw Go yoodrich Co,, Bi Gt Now. pf ¥ jt sod Interhinro {yiertore, On, Rare a ne sees see Bees Serres. ++ Valley Motor # pf, 1% 19 8 Tenneylvenia Bt % fant eosit oh % fee ow i Raclair O} pacar oh « 4 4 4 C4 f= 8 4 Bk= fh et $ ies x Hy 4% Thy = 4 S48 s 8 Wi- & 4 2 — 8 An Appeal To Reason Play Fair With Your Stomach Houne; Cecil A. Kidd, District Super |intendent of Schools; Miss Fielde principal of P. 8. 187; Jacob Holzman, | secretary of Local Parents Associa |tion; Joseph B. Kaufman of the Guild Civio Union; Mra, F. Robertson Jones of the Women's Muntcipal League. and Cabot Ward, Parl Commis- qioner. | When It Needs Help—TRY | HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters Woman’s Service League Seeks Fund of $100,000 in A Two Weeks’ Campaign Nobody Can Dodge Deter- mined Collectors of War- time Cash. STAGE WOMEN FARMERS They're Turning Over Pine Country Places to Aid hood Situation Marquerite Mooers Marshall, An army may t ot an ita aman meniaation war relief travels on ita treamury, in the opin “| Laamue for Wer The women of the La Finance Comimnitios have been of tha N Morvicg “ea on if they were trying ‘0! r ‘ “" tow ' ‘ ‘ ‘ t* ‘ ‘ wwe, and *! ’ ‘ . ¢ ar) ‘ qetanion raided by The tage W a Warf ¢ ie "ne ® firet Che pire f “ ' of | Two niente f ‘ ‘ ‘ | War Heer wilt be held at the W in addition to thone ' arrange tor = 97,000,000 war hudant ( Auriog the first two daya of the twola s A wooks they have set thomaciven for | ' collecting $100,000 iM / ‘ Mra 4 Mtanwood Mencken, New! , Heael tnt York Chairman of the Fund Commit: | Maria Doro, ¢ tee, captured ‘Theodore Moonavalt aa! dine fa " de he waa about to atop aboard the train | (0! bis ay PP ns H for Chloago and garnered hin conte | ey egy Myce bution of 01 ally, ite a @reat ywe, Margaret Mayo, thing, this getting all the women pre- | ier Ket! won Nenbit pared for war duty and I'm for ity!) i "ys 1 . said Mr, Roosevelt. “I'm guing to tell | Adeje ttowiand, brnily M the people in Chic ail about what | Winche mit Laure Tay! r ou women are doin Helen Weatle Anna Wheaton, Mire. : 1 ‘ a ” r naa Whiffen, Peasy Wood, Oliv Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge, Presidemt of | windham, Rida Johneon Young the National Anti-Suffrage Associa gba tion, will captain @ team of 10 wom: | Martha 1, Miller, a graduate pledging herself to rnise $1,000 of nell and aw trained gardener fund, Mra, Henry Clark Coo will | t rleultural @x reanize the Women of the Itifle Clubs for the Ravonal Mpecial Did jca to help toward the raising ih hes i beg gg at daughter of ad gardens in New York City, The # F and sister of} ciety was sent post cards to hun is appropriately tho treas.|Clety was nent post cu of the Campaign Fund Com: | re on cow en aid a | carr th through nex The National League for We SO aa (he guacnue Service is now housed at Nos, 2 Bes bigeye 259 Madison Avenue, In quarters Of fifteen or tw given to the women by Jamen Speyer, | i"cle Of Aiiwen ort aa The women moved themselves, val | ye ty eet Departin of the jantly carrying across the city baskets| ee lal Ald. Mo aa hetrat of office and desk supplies and stacks of camp chairs, Each department brought ite working equipment into| & the new headquarters, dumped said equipment into a corner and startod working again without loss of time As in wartime England, it was a case of “business as usual.’ “From the footlights to the farm!” fg the new war cry of the Women’s War Relief, Its Agricultural Committee, under of Kathryn Kidder Anspacher, ts pledging every woman of the theatre who owns a bit of ground to plant It Many well known actresses have charming country homes in New Je z£ the chairmanship} who will show the plant. Mra, Miller has who will test the soll of different lots, in order to find out what vegetables grow best in the The work of the agricultura art. ment is under general direction of tor will be #e }tion of tho first anniversary Plainfield, N. J. Chapter of the tional Special Aid — Soctety chapter alone has 1,000 men {a conducting classes In and economic cooking, emergency care of the of the Na- This era and teen diet first aid, wounde ‘|. Pimp! Mrs. Charles F. Hoffman, the Vice President of the society. Suburban preparedness gots a spe- | cit! send-off to-day with the celebra home care of the gam, mater ropeire werden ae vaitting and sty Minow GareW 8 ifn wre making - U. $. FLAG ON SEIZED LINER, - ‘| (TEMS FOR INVESTORS, oie th UN 8 . ar’ 1 Com ot New , is oy Maren ‘Cuticura Soap Healed Disfiguring Pimples “One day | awoke and saw some red pimples on my face. Later on they be- came bigger and hard, and were seat. tered allover my face, They itched and burned, causing me to scratch oo the | my face was disfigured, The | lasted two or hi weeks. sea ties was treated but the pimples came still bigger and at hight woud | begin to bite, causing me to sl a | [heard of a triend who had used Cull- cura Soap and Ointment, and I sent for afree sample. I felt better, so 1 more, and two boxes of Caticura - ment and one cake of Caticura healed me altogether.” (Signed) Siegel, 190 E. ard St, New York City, Gept. 18, 1916, round and red with black- imple acne), pimples small, | fiery, red and painful (acne rosacea pim;iles red, itchy and watery (ecte: are successfully treated in most cases by Cuticura Soap and light touches of Ointment. They might have been | prevented by use of Cuticura Soap for every-day toilet purposes. For mple Bach by Retara Mail, address post-card: “Cutieura, Dept. H, Boston.’’ Sold everywhere, heads ( , | ade, Do Yours Look Like These? Brown-faced, vigorous oungsters—sicknes roubles them. Do yours look Ike Or does constipation, the chief childhood hand- make them the foe to a health: icap them an prey of the many sturdy little folk are heir toP Nujol is particularly valuable for relieving constipation in children, healthy » Mever As Nujol is not a physic but a lubricant, it does not gripe or upset the system. Being tasteless, theseP Jersey) has ills that less product, Nujol is the Stipation we it is not unpleasant to take, The Standard Oil Company (New used its world-wide resources in producing Nujol and its reputation is behind the only remedy for con- manufacture. The as well as in grown-ups because it panne sold only in pint bottles doesn’t upset the stomach, cause diarrhoea or formahabit. It acts as a simple internal lubricant, encouraging and facilitating the natural activity of the pn earing Nujol trad bottles filled at our Nujol plant, absolutely modern and sanitary, Write today for an instructive booklet on Nujol and its uses, mark, All STANDARD OIL COMPANY Beyonoe (ew Seren) New Jersey