The evening world. Newspaper, May 17, 1917, Page 3

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od ~ RRMENCANLOAN -U.:$190,900,00 Brotherhood Chief Urges Aid| +! From Employers in Buy- ing War Bonds. i rren 8, Stone, Grand Chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive En- ®ineers and a member of the Labor Committee of the Council of National Defense at Washington, said to-day tho believed the railroads of the coun- try ought to assist railroad employees 4n subscribing for the Liberty Loan. This follows a suggestion made by the Evening World. “More than a million and a half men are employed in the transporta- tion industry,” sald Mr, Stone, “and thei? wage earnings are close to $1,- 600,000,000 a year, or $4,000,000 a day. The mere statement of these wage figures shows at once what an op- portunity yresents itself to enlist the savings of railroad workers in the defense of liberty and democracy. “{ belleve that the cost of the war ought to met largely from our future — production and earnings, hiker than from our saved-up capi- tal from the past. The economist annual earnings of the people of this country are We to $50,000,000,000 a year. This means that every two weeks we pro- duce the $2,000,000,000 needed for the first Liberty Loan. The wage-earn- ers of the nation have very little yed-up capital that they can lend | the Government. Their savings are | in their homes and their insuranc be tells us that the all the war sufferers. Lady and a little nest egg for a rainy day. ‘the Right Rev. Charles H. Brent, At the chancel rail, which was) But they can lay astde a part of | 4% # practical means of doing her|last April and has been active iN Rishop of the Philippines, the Rev,| banked with flowers and potted thelr future wages, week by week | Dt Lady Colebrook, wife of Baron|many war relief undertakings. Once Leighton Parks, the rector, and the| Plants, was placed an orchestra of ¢ and month by month, to buy Gov-|24ward Arthur Colebrook, bas be-| she put on overalls and showed how Rey, George Merrill, rector of the| forty-five pieces, e to harp and ernment onde. |come 4 saleswoman in a costumer's she and other Englishwomen made jittle church at Stockbridge where | ° e hours a day and h git She was Miss Alexandra “a - men in the train service, are keen ho. jatcheon with the other shop.| tlet Paget, and ls a granddaughter of| There Was no Cotte in 4 * Many of our men on the Canadian 3 ; S° 1°) Arthur Paget is her sister-in-law, and choir of fifty men and women ac- 100 roads have already gone to France| America and have given their lives in this war | Colebrook came to i Lady Colebrook a Saleswoman HE EVENING WORLD, T a HURSDAY, MAY LADY COLEBROOKE In Gown Shop for War Sufferers IN UST TRBUTE TOOSEPHCHOAT her son, Guy, is an oificer on H. M. 8. Tiger, Sir David Beatty's flagship. Throngs, Unable to Enter Church, Stand in Streets :| Through Funeral Service. | Outside St. Bartholomew's Church at Madison Avenue and Forty-fourth , Street to-day at half past nine o'clock | stood a great silent throng, gathered to do honor to the memory of Joseph H. Choate, for most of his eighty-| five years a lending figure in the af-) fairs of his city, State and Nation. | Those who stood in the street knew they would not gain admission to the church, but were content to pay! thetr tribute by standing in the open. | The seats within were limited to a few hundred persons to whom cards |had been tssued—intimate associates jof Mr. Choate tn his home, in his profession and in the many patriotic, artistic and professional orraniza- tions in which he was active, In |many cases a delegation of from two [to three members of such societies |was all for whom room could be found in the church. More than a hundred policemen | Were occupled in preventing confusion {in the neighborhood of the church |and facilitating the arrival and de- | parture of those who held cards, The services at St. Bartholomew's, |which are to be followed by a burial service at Stockbridge, Mr. Choate’s summer home, late this afternoon, | followed the ancient rite of the Epis- copal Church and were conducted by companied the prayers and sentences \of ritual with music which was the for world democarcy, We are paying moro impressive for its simplicity— | The flag w ' 17, 1917, THOUSANDS JOIN “Fag and War Sermon REDMOND REJECT Mark Ascension Day Exercises at Trinity } | i Military Aspect of Ecclesiastical Procession Up Church Aisle Emphasized by the Rev. Dr. Manning’s Appeal to Every Man to ‘‘Do His Bit.” An American flag, its staff tipped with @ gold spread eagie, was for the first time carried up the le of ‘Trinity Church to-day in the ecclesi- astical procession whith was part of thy annus! celebration of Ascensica Dey. Also the day was the seventy- first anniversary of the consecration of the existing edifice. not the only military symbol in the procession, for just be- fore the flag, in the ranks of the clergy, marched First Sergeant Ed- ward William O'Keefe of E Company of the Twenty-second Regiment, with four war medals on his breast and five, enlistment stripes, representing the men of tho garrison on Governor's Island. And the sermon, too, by the Rev. Dr. Manning, Trinity's rector, was militant, dealing for the greater part with the war and closing with an earnest appeal to every one to “do his bit.” Trinity was not only crowded as to every , but extra benches were put in and extra camp chairs to ac- commodate the congregation, The services were stated to begin at 11 o'clock, but half an hour before that time the church was practically filled and people were etlll streaming in through the main portal over which were entwined the flags of America, Great Britain and France. kettle drums, The service was begun with the playing of Guilmant’s cele- brated First Sonata on the grent or- gan, and no sooner was it ended than the orchestra crashed out with the Crusaders’ March as the ecclesiasti- cal procession moved forth from the choir entrance on the gouth side of the edifice. Foremost in the proces- sion, flanked by lighted candles, came @ tall gold cross and directly behind it the Stars and Stripes. Leading the column of the clergy were the vicars of the several Trinity Chapels, the Rev. Dre. Geer, Bellinger, Gates, Schlueter and Smith of the Governor's Island Chapel. After them came the under clergy and then the choir. In the rear of the latter were Dr. Manning, Sexton Boyd ahd Mr. Riper, the celebrant. In his sermon, following the singing of Gounod’s Solemn Mass, Dr. Man- ning said in part: “We can all do these things now, either go into the ranks or encourage others to go; give time, strength and money to the world-wide battle of the truths of Jesus Christ and stand close together. We are called as Christians as well as Americans to give our whole life and strength to this struggle. We are fighting with our allies with the avowed purpose of making wars hereafter unlikely, Not one of the nations with which we are allled wanted this war, certainly we did not, The message on our ban- ners to the bleeding and suffering na- tions of Europe is: ‘Look up, for your redemption draweth nigh.’ ” Ex-German Officer, Arrested as Spy, Confesses Plot to | doath benefits every month to the] |is at present efficiency supervisor for the prelude, Handel's Largo and WaT ot Gises wie, Ana Okan Gu | the contracting firm of John T. Reethoven's Funeral March, the pro- | cafl comes from Washington you witt | ) |Brady & Co, Capt, Hogan has no- /cessional, “O God, Our Help in Axes #in@ no ten more ready to serve the | (ied him to o Past,” the psalm, “Lord, Thou Hast Viton tan Che: Amerloan. deinGked H. G, Lambert, who says he ts Been My Refuge,” the hymns “The of the brotherhoods. | NEEDED FOR SIATH twenty-nine years old and served at and King of Love My Sheperd | p> | Plattsburg last year, was another ap- | "God Moves in a Mysterious Way, ‘But, however sanxidys sour men} |plicant, Ha is general purchasing and the recessional, “Rise Crowned or be to go to the front, it is plain ‘ agent for Tower Brothers, one of the | with Light." The last hymn 1s set wat the Government will need the largest wholesale stationery estab- to the music of the Russian national @reat majority of hem her o operate lishments in the city, anthem. the raflroads—an indispensablo arm| The Engineering Corps almost en-| The honorary pallbearers were: #% of the national defense. Our men anes rolled one of their much desired cooks | Mayor John Purroy Mitchel, A. ‘Who must serve the country on this to-d: y when Fran nis Erocerd of No. Lawrence Lowell, President of Har- side of t} Atlantic want to do more| First Engineers to Take Along vost T third Stree y Gian their bit. ‘They want to heip a | t 5 e' t e | West Twenty-third Street put in! vara University; Robert W. de For- men wh 7“ i 200 Old Steam Locomo- un appearance, Francois, however, | est, George L. Ingraham, Charles pees by 0 are a ted or 6 to the ; ted 0 } Was sadly tho worse for wear and! panier, Lewis Cass Ledyard, J. P. mt by subscribing to the Liberty| 25 se x tear. 6 had re he 1 | id dase * ¢ bes 4 nid Bg Ra es Al tives Used on “L. nh " had ' aa that the Engi-| Morgan, John G, Milburn, Frank K, Dy laying aside a oortain nimeuntt nee headquarters was at No. 190 gturgis, Francis Lynde — Stetson, SYayy pay ie y out of their wag It was announced at Division Head-| Third Avenue, According to his re- | Charley H, Tweed, Henry White and the railroad companies will pro Sree A yeas : ‘ ila tha. wnchiners ce Sue j] Quarters of National Guard to- pt. Hogan, ho made Nis | assistant Secretary of State William know that our men will provide the day that 10,000 recrutts will be necded| gress, and New. York Washington iW et Xe, Ste Ba man club at that ad- W. Phillips. Vente heater ( money. The men I directly represent, ‘ nd: on asking to be enlisted Among those who were recognized a ppcemodys engineers, number to bring the Sixth Division up to wan in the Un ted States service, several! entering the chureh under the great mabont Gono. At every engineer took| strength, The moment word comos| Varieties of trouble resulted, which | trmited States flag which hung over 000,000. If the 50,000 conductors took {from Washington that the troops from [eft him with « highly decorated | tng pronze doors were R. U. John $500 bonds there would be (0001 this State are necded, every member |CURtenance. Having no teeth to| son, Jacob H. Schiff, Austen G. Fox, tral NEP tere ehti iit] of the present division, w speak - ¥ through—Francols Was’ py ‘Lyman Abbott, 8. Stanwood Men- ston would be $36,000,000, ‘This | Pes 17,000 men, will constitute him. | Teneted. : ; : ken, Willlam Rand jr, William i be a total for the train service] se a verulting office igures 4 he Engineers Corps Church Osborn, (¢ ton Liebert, the of $90,000,000, ‘Then there are a mil-| A member of Major Gen, O'Ryan's “ROW that 568 men have been en-! prenen Consul; M. Hovalaque of the thet train service. TE every one toes | staff extimated that under this plan | 1°00 oat ae ae ae |rench War Commission, James W fa $100 bond on this easy payment] it would not take more than ten days p » hoy t another Gerard, Paul D. Cravath, De Lancey plan, with the co-operation of the|to bring the division up to its full|'@cord would be piled up for to-day, | nico, Martin W. Littleton, I. N, S« railroat officials, there would be! war quota, Among the applicants to-day at! iigman, Borough Presidents Pounds $100,000,000 more, making $190,000.00“ mhe full strongth of the National|" the recruiting headanarters at No.) and Marks, Justice J. W. Goff, Dr “Wo may not be able to raise as| Guard all told ts 26,000 men, Of this = st Twenty-third Street, was | prederick Kunz, Oscar 8. Straus, John much as this, but if We raised oniy| number 8,000 are outside the division | Theodore Roonevelt Koehne of No. 288] p Crimmins, B. H. Outerbridge, I Aicit, there would be close to $100,000,-! that went to the Texas border, | Prospect Avenue, Jamaica, Ho was|T, gatteriee, August Belmont, George Bye Ws She Kervice OF the nation, | Two hundred of the old elevated |#¢cePted provisionally T, Wilson, James Speyer, George F. | system Jocomotives, many of which| Tleut. Daniel M Gardner jr, one of| Raker, Commander Guy Gaunt of the | are doing service on plantations and | Pt. Evans's chief aides in Marine} pritisn Navy. Scores of others as PREPARE YOUR CHILDREN |!» construction work in South and) Peerulting, has returned from « three-| prominent were present. Elihu Root for the TOOTH BRUSH DRILL |) Central America, wil acc uny t lays’ trip through Long Island drum- | wiltam H. Taft and Theodore Roose Help the instructors of the First Reserve Engineers (New York ing by cede ahitia an was accom it were not able to attend, school by teaching ‘your children to || P!vision) to the front. John P. jee ag, hy Sergts, Miller and Klein, The flowers sent to the ehurel brush their teeth morning and} Hogan said to-day that he had’ ar-|No attempt was made actually to) were massed until they nearly fill Maght with BORINE Tooth Paste] | ranged for these little “steam jack.|°nroll recruits, but literature and ad-|the chancel. A great cross of lilles or BORINE Tooth Powder. Then || rabbits" to be supplied. He has the|‘ertising matter were distributed. ang purple callas in the centre near rinse their mouths and throats |) co-operation of the Interborongh|M?: Gardner sald that 1 found! the front was the tribute of Arthur with Company jthe heartiest sort of co-operation al-| y, patfour of the British Commission, BO RIN E It 1s figured by Lieut. Col, McKin- | ost everywhere on his tri At the entrance of the chancel stood liquid that if men of the corps aro| | DARA ae aah Non one ive] great white shield bearing a crim The New York Board of Health {I ted tov a at once oa the platy eeeeoe es culeiaieN ofthe Ma | son cross in carnations from the Hed says INFANTILE P. LYSIS] comotives, they can be put in shape ‘ u oss 0 erica, der the pulp the Fis aed RS ENEIE for effective work within two weeks, | °Proliment corps, sw le-cars at-| was a sheaf of fleur-de-lys from throut. Use BORINE and avoid The appeal of the Yingineering |t#ehed to the main machines, There! coi, Roosevelt and near it anot! this disease. The antiseptic and J) Cory issued The Evening | ™ ne alx of th irs, They will] great bunch of the suine flowers from germicidal properties of BORINE |. World, for skilled efficien 8 lve driven throw stern D are yecognized by the best doctors || , a sergeant I nt ae and dentist As a precautionary Po cise ak 1 1 re measure, make the children begin : . e using BORINE to-day, Buy N ne he : 4 Am BORINE to-day. At ‘all drug tors ” ts ut stores.-Advt | afterno aener k 1 white roses and MoNamara ie plan whereby the me ze & of zn yu roses Weatern { ei ad ‘ he Ce u, u. dy 6 & je city There were hu 4 EWS ITEM FROM : Il ope ment of others from men and women ‘ N.Y TIMES MAY’ 10 alpha VSIILAEE Ul nes are kn rom one end ¢ AU CAPRICE IN BANKRUPTCY psig nat ms , ly men of the family and TO PAY WAR peal tabla ite hriving services at 8 ae ~_ xtleth Mtreot, Willcox, President of the Board of - htary petition Education, memorial references wer er atau Conimittes Reports Measure i . against, made to Mr. Cho: In the publi WHOLESALE PRICES and Estimates it Will Naise A tts Court. | sehools of the city this morn uvew FOU ailers’ profil $1.810,420,000. ot tablish’, Especial emphasis was laid on COFFEE, 5 ibs $4.25 nuintrigt Gr | gage that before. Afr” Choate went oh a ak ‘ 0 R corne Harvard he completed the courae of tracts, "Gilve Gal snd "tice i Me 1 1 the public schools of Salen, Mass tren Delt rt ater Ni You © n * ‘ +4 and Jacq _> v : Paths ein TN ; W. §, Coffey Gets State Jon ; : 1 awye ALBANY, May 17.—The appoint a GILLIES COFFEE C0. i sred in An | Of Assembly William barclas lustrint D cen rani Henry member of nounced to-day | Maped trom the A the A | Federal Attorney. | SAN FRANCISCO, May 17. | many planned not only to raid Pacific merce from a submarine base in | Ger- | | co | Mexico: but with Zeppelins, according to @ state-| ment to-day of Lieut. Frank Wolf ‘of the German army, alleged German spy, made to Federal District Attor- ney Preston. After making the statement Wolf collapsed, and physicians are trying to determine ff be attempted to pol- son himself, He said ermany planned to ship submarines and Zeppelins to a base in Mexico and operate from there. His statement will be forwarded to Wash- ington, —»——— CHARGES GREAT PLOT | TO STOP WAR WORK LONDON, May 17.—The Daily Ex- fh says: t hus now become obvious that |there is a vast and organized effort to cause a stoppage of all Important war work, Happily the conspiracy, which is organized by pro-Germans, pacifists, Anarchists and extremis.s f all kinds, has no chance of succe he Chathain dockyard men have, been approached by agitators and have returned a reply which 1s @ call to every patriotic worker In the coun- | try eeaadet iNi | ELEVATOR DROPS 8 FLOORS. Three Men and Woman Safety Device Stops F ajar ng eables of loft building at Twenty-sixth Street sipped the roof at noon to-day and the car, in which were seven women an elevator ve-story 14-40 West of the drum and four men, including the operator Kugene Fuller of No, 292 West Twenty eventh Street, dropped from the tenth floo scond floor where a safety levice stopped tt . amuel Bickerman of No. 622 Bast One Hundred and Thirty-sixth Street tie Bronx; Herman Lehatz of No, 868% Penth Str Brooklyn; Samuel ‘i 7 West One Hundred rh treet, and Sarah M ‘ot No, Suffol reel, paswen nth slightly’ injured. | r cupants af the ele pant> in with clot think a NO BROOKLYN HEALTH HEAD. Mayor approves Bill oviding 4 Separate Com Ma reday di 4 separate Ieaith Brooklyn and Queens ation to the Leg t y f Justification for th 1 BIL by the Lexislatu ie sentimental desires ‘ 1 n n citizens 1h dda that the change sux Ke id result in ‘waste H nd e lyn Department to a this ¢ Crimi Jividual syste at { gambling la ere were to ected, to terrorize this coast | po, $550 FOR OPENING A GRAVE. Who Thought a Been Removed, A Jury in Justice Gavegan’s court to: day awarded $500 to Alphonse Charanto- novitch, father-of an eight-year-old girl, whose body was buried in Mount Olivet Cometery at Maspeth, L. 1 The jJudg- thelr approval of the. r 4 tion plan, cfitting off aioe te ern counties. They predicted, ever, that any plan for a general THE GOVERNMENT ~ HOME RULE PLA Ister Approves Partition Idea of the Home Rule question but ac- cepted the proposat for the Immediate calling of a convention to decide on & government for Ireland, Mr. Redmond tn a letter to Premier Lioyd George epts on behalf of tho Irish Party tho proposal of pro- ducing a scheme of Irish self-govern- ment, “on condition that the basis on which the convention is to be called is such as to ensure that {t ts fully and fairly representative of Irishmen of all creeds, interests and parties, and secondly that the convention be summoned without delay.” Mr. Redmond later said Premier Lloyd's proposal for an Trish Govern- ment would in the opinion of the members of the Irish Party find no support In Ireland. ‘They, therefore were irreconeilably opposed to it and} aby measure based on that proposal would meet with their vigorous op- position. He said he and his col- leagues would place no obstacle in the way of @ constitutional convention and are prepared to recommend the Proposal most strongly to their coun. | trymen. | This announcement @ meeting of the N bers. | Dublin despatches |tho Freeman's Jouri ite) as predicting r {partition proposals by the National- lats, but urged that all Irishmon give serious consideration to the counter- Proposition advanced by the Govern- ment. This was for a ¢onstituttonal convention of Irishmen. BELMAST, Ireland, ac was made after tlonalist mem- to-day quoted 1 (Redmona- tlon of the May 17.-=It Unionists were unanimous in constitutional convention would fizzle. * eee WHITMAN PLAN GIVES T, BIG TITLE ANDLITTLE As a Major General the Colonéh Would Only Have Command:; would, at the very best, have nothing: more formidavle than a rigade “to command. The very idea of a Major Ge. at commanding a brigade, it was sald, is about as ridiculous, from @ military standpoint, as assigning « Colonel to lead a company. Of the 26,000 National Guardsmen in service here, 17,000 are comprised in what is known as the Sixth Division, which is federalized and therefore be+ yond the supervision of Governor Whitman, The remaining troops would make a very poorly equipped brigade, Even if Roosevelt ts given command of the brigade not yet Federalized, he would have to recetve the sane tion of the General Staff at Wash- ington, before he could accompany the brigade to Europe, HOW I DARKENED MY GRAY HAIR | Lady Gives Simple Home Recipe That She Used to Darken Her Gray Hai For yearw I tried to restore my hair to its natural color with the pre- pared dyes and stains, but none of them gave satisfaction and they were all expenaive. 1 finally ran onto a simple recipe which I mixed at home that gives wonderful results. I gave the recipe, which is as follows, teva number of my friends, and they are all delighted with it. To 7 ozs. of water add a small box of Barbo Com- pound, 1 oa. of bay rum and \% os. of glycerine. These ingredients can See et ne RYendlce ius: rests. with the Irish Nattonaliat | be bought at any drug store at ¥ ian Orthodox Church, for ordering the | whether Premier Lloyd Goorge's at- | little cost. Use every other day un- opening of the child's grave, Tho Jury | ¢¢, a acl | til the hair becomes the required chao fund the eemetery indebted to|tempt at # settlement of the Irish | Sh 0° tt’ wil not only darkes the the father $50 for digging up the grave. | question Is successful, according to + The evidence did not warrant @ re-| niversal sentiment here to-day. pay hate, es make sé cory snd Ceram the body had been taken from |" ~ , pteeeads it is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off.—Advt. THERE ARE IMPORTED FABRICS IN Franklin Simon & Co.’s HAND-TAILORED Suits for Men Ready- for-Service such as have never before been seen ina ready-/or- ervic e shop ) are talking of purely custom fabrics, such ag are loomed Custo exclusively in hundred dollar clothes usually confined to the Upper Crust that it would be a desecration to run through a s the soft, unfinished luxuries of the loom, machine and laid aside for few m Shops a Fifth Avenue the kind of tabries that are used the breed of woolens the sort of stuffs wing- We bought them ourselves in London and the time we've had getting them over here reads lik qne of Phillips of their c ( cal processes. f Oppenheim’s novels ! A Separate Shop on the Street Level Furnishings FIFTH AVENUE a chapter from And, of course, we have tailored them in models worthy igin, featuring the new straight fronts and slight] longer coat, in two-button effects, with the choice of several distinctive lapels, and small patch, flap or welt pockets, urments of singular beauty, strictly Hand-'Tailored, furnishing a refreshing contrast to clothes made by mechani- These Imported Fabric Suits begin at °35 and range to $50 HAND -THILORE: atthe, paige those ph al Men's Clothing Shop —8 West 38th Street franklin Simon & Co Men’s Clothing Shoes | —Says Convention Will Over a Brigade. Stalah : 400% Be a Fizzle, If Governor Whitman makes Cole- nel Roosevelt © Major General of the : New Yo.k State National Guard he LONDON, May 17, 4.61 P. M—Jobn| will hand him a military gold Telia Redmond, leader of tho trish Na-| according to authorities qualified to tlonallsta in the House of Commons, | (*Pres® -. opinion. It will meas » although €.1, Roosevelt would to-day rejected the proposal of Pre. | 2at @ if the high-soundi mier Lioyd George for a settlement penn? whe Coty bert, have Se ¥

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