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iat T GOD'SSIDE OF THE SHIP IF YOU “WOULD HAVE LUGK' Billy Sunday Says Says Trouble Js “We Aren’t Doing Things in God’s Way.” “Fishing on the wrong side” was the subject of Billy Sunday's sermon this afternoon. He declared the trouble with most poople was they were trying to do things in their own ‘Way instead of in God's way. Speaking of Peter's fisting expedl- tions the evangelist said: “1 cannot recall anything that Peter ever did which was prompted by cool, level-headed judgment. In the first place, his hair was the wrong color to make him a man of deliberate ac- tion, [t is said that his hair was red. He was big-hearted, impulsive and had the courage of a lion, But what he did was decided by the mood he wes in, “He was a good friend but a bad enemy, controlied more by heart than | his head. He scorched down hill Without putting on the brakes. “If he felt like doing a thing he aid it, and he did it with all his might. He wasn't like his brother Andrew, cool, level-headed. Pete: heart had always been about three laps ahead of his brain. Andrew Jooked at the coming out place before he leaped, but Peter would jump and then look to see whore he would land. “True to nature, Peter said: ‘I'm @oing fishing’ Half a dozen aay ‘TH go, too,” The man who decides to do a thing never moves off alone, Somebody does the same thing be- canee ho does. “You read of one fellow committing @uicide in some new way, and the firet thing you know the papers are full of fellows committing suictle just like that fellow did, which shows that the world is full of people who Jot others do their thinking for them, “It takes some people a long time to take the hint that God ts against them. You can see them stretching THE CHIEF CHARM OF LOVELY WOMAN Seft Clear, Smooth Skin Comes with ‘The Use of “FRUIT-A-TIVES,” NORAH WATSON. 86 Drayton Ave., Toronto. Nov. 10th, 1915, A beautiful complexion is « handsome woman's chief glory and the envy of her leas fortunate rivals, Yet # soft, clear skin—glowing with health—is only the natural result of pure Blood, “I was troubled for a considerable time with a very unpleasant, disfiguring Rash, which covered my face and for which 1 used applications and remedies without relief, After using “Fruit-a- tives” for one w the rash is com- pletely gone. 1 am deeply thankful for the relief aud in the future 1 will not be without “Fruit-a-tives NOKAH WATSON 50c, a box, 6 for $2.50; trial size, @5c At ers or sent by Fruit-a-tives, Limited, Ogdewsburg, New York Advt. Sandy Hook | Route North. Jersey Coast Resorts’ Spring schedule takes effect Sunday May 27th. \aM. 1PM Cedar Street, t 4 waht "| Pollceman is George J. Stivers, nine- necks over the side of the boat hy looking at the empty nets. In epite of long, pereletent, efforts they have ci ught nothing, he whole trouble Is they are not ‘fishing on the Lord's side of the sh De No fish worth stealing waa over caught on the wrong side of the ship. There's a right side and a wrong side of the ship to every life, There's as much difference between God'a sido and our side as thore ia between day and night, he sooner you find out and cast your net on the right side | the bettor off you'll be, | tf will never meet success tinioss rt efforts are in harmony with God. Is as wild, Insane folly to think you can bulld a house in deflance of Boars ‘Inw of Gravitation as to put |Your hand on a@ livo wire and not reosive a shook, | "Ged never works without @ pian. Everything in nature shows, that, ‘When he created the universe he had ® plan for every star. He made each of us for something. “God never planted nubbine or small potatoes, Our most important business, therefore, te to find God's will and follow it, We will never drop our nets on the right side of the ship until we do, until we find out what God wants us to be, what he wants us to do, The real big man or woman te the one who does this, Ho's the one out of whom God can make a jewel. “Han everything been going wrong fm your life? Stop fishing in your way and try. t down Your net on God’a side of th { GIRL, BANK CLERK AND SOLDIERLINKED IN AUTO 10 SHOOT Romantic ew Revealed After Arrest of Two—Police Hunt Wounded Guardsman, Following tho arrest early to-day of Walter A. Hayes, twenty years old, a clerk in the National City Bank, who \lves at No, 127 Post Avenue, Inwood, jand the previous arrest of Maybelle Van Siokler, thirteen years old, tho atory of events that led to the shoot- |ing of Bicycle Policeman Samuel Cun- ningham in @ duel with an auto thief came out. The man charged with shooting the teen years old, a momber of the, Twenty-second Engineers, He is wounded jg the back, and his cap- ture ls bélloved to be a matter of only @ few hours, According to the pollee, the gir, who lives at One Hundred and Sev- enty-ninth Street and Broadway, ran away soveral days ago with Stivers, who took a new automobile belong- ing to his father, They toured Jer. sey for several days, sleeping in the car. On Thursday the machine was wrecked in Paterson and they camo to New York. Thursday night Stivers decided he would have to have another automo. bije, He tried several he found stand- ing on the streets before he found one he could run. This was the prop- erty of Nathan Kaan of No, 42 West Seventy-second Street and was taken from in front of No, 805 West Ninety- eighth Street, Stivers took the girl to upper Man- hattan and they made the rounds of cafes for several hours, They were leaving one place when the gin saw | |Policeman Cunningham approaching | |and warned her companion, He and the policeman exchanged shots and Stivers managed to get away, but wrecked tho car against a subway | pillar at Two Hundred and Fifth Btreet, ‘The couple escaped and went to the home of Hayes, nearby, according to, the latter, Stivers was wounded and | asked for ald, The police say Hayes admits he and his mother dressed Stivers’s wound, gave him and the girl breakfast, furnished Stivers with a suit of clothes and gave him money The couple went to Brooklyn on the subway and Stivers left the girl there, The police traced her through an address in a Bible left in the wrecked automobile, and #he ts now in charge of the New York Children’s Society jcharged with Juvenile delinquency, The police say Stivers went to the border with the En) but is now a member of the regi-| ment. The coat and the two revolvers were stolen from the armory at One| Hundred and Siaty-fitth Strect, left the revolvers with young May. who to-day turned them over to the police Policeman Cunningham, it was sald nt the Bt, Lawrence Hos nay lose his left leg as a r his wounds, He 1s also shot arn ee | John Monks, aged eighty-threo, former Dock Comanissioner and Pres ident of the Volunteer Firemen’s As }and Crippled Aviator Ready to Fly From Sheepshead Bay to Wheeling Oh POMOC HOE aabeaveesscereaauaaeeaee BOSD Ss-RRMDE + 4 | ; — ° POLES9H9-000-6-04096 DD? about 600 miles, provement in weather to begin th hopes to make without a stop. man bullots. Capt. Kelly as a passenger, Tho « POPDLHD6DHDILDD 94D 900 O9009-90O5009 With conditions for flying showing hourly tmprovement, Capt. ward A. Kelly of the Royal British Flying Corpse expected that late this afternoon he would be able to start his fight from Speod- way Park, Sheepshead Bay, to Wheeling, W. Va, a distance of For three days he has been waiting for an im- ne seven-hour journey, which he ‘apt. Kelly, a native of Butte, Mont, who Is home on @ six months’ furlough recovering from wounds received tn France, said he could pperate the 1,800-pound military tractor biplane ho will use, crutches, Throe times Capt. Kelly has been brought down by Ger- Louis Benpett jr a Wheeling millionaire, will go with despite the fact that he ts on Captain is to act as instructor to American aviation students at Wheoling. GERMAN FOOD SUPPLY WILL LAST COUNTRY UNTIL NEW HARVEST _— (Continued from F mal-nutrition among the masses un- dermining strength of the nation be- hind the lines are other elements that cannot be aenurately estimated from the outside on with a consider ablo quantity of harvest during tho | summer and autumn, the stamina of the German pec will be consider ably undermined by the strain and suffering of the past winter, They at lower ebb than the previous year, Under these conditions the problem of the Aliles ts to maintain nnd tight- en the present blockade, both of food and those raw materials that many lacks, and to drive abead with ever Increasing weight of men and munitions The present pr ure on the Min denburg line in France and tue A pine jines on the Italian £ is to be con Unued without rellef and the ham mering kept up day and night. AMERICA RUSHES PREPARA- TIONS TO AID THE ALLIES, a Meantime tho ernment \ is ‘proparing military Above both in piles, but Ni The plans « Admin and munition sup. in food for Prosid the | Mt ox” Hoover sociation, 1" dead at No, 241 West One Hundred and Thirty-eighth Street. John J, Thompson, former Shoriff of Monmouth County J. is dead at No. 233 Dean Stret, Hrooklyn, Janes P, Rechil, Chet Inspector of Bulldings for the New York Fire De- ment, {a dead No. #2 India Street, Brooklyn, aged fifty-seven, hen Biscoe Cassin jr. aged son of Dr, Stephen B, Cas sterday at the home of his 268 West Kighty-fourth He had ben ill about six wooks, and the end was not unexpect | ed. Dr, Cassin ts a well known dental | specialist ent will take place in Mount ¢ Cemetery to-mors to States Navy. 8 Odenwald and re Juan, Porto Ri Navy man stean selzed at | for navel use. nt have , Ba) Departinent | |more vast ¢ Jay, spreading out to encompass conditions and demands such as this country Dever before con templated Production ts the loudest rallying | ery of the day to agriculture, This seems strange to a nation that alw had had an overabundancé of things | to eat and is was & envugh each year to feed @ fair sized Europ The latest campalyn proclamation wa ued by the Department of Agri culture to-day, It ts a’ large adver. tising poster printed in colors witt etriking headlin “HELP FEED YOURSELF, | Make back yards and vacant lots productive, Work a garden. Raise | chickens, Somebody has to } raise or pack everything you eat. Do your share. jar | help feed your Damon Make | saving rather than spending your ovial standard.” | The object of Make every family. strate thrift in your home will enter neat winter unquestionably | lie the military campaign of the com- tn | ans iy a iy N nis Insisteace ts that | “ nk suinmer falls to subdue the Get and the other winter, the MISS MARY F. GILaeRT TO BE BRIDE AT CHURCH WEDDING ON JUNE 2 EON 10 STOP RISING RENTS | | FOR FLAT MASSES Founders of Model Homes i Syndicate Show Cost Reduc- tion From Co-operation. Landlords of flats and apartments are meeting opposition in thelr own ranks to plans for @ genera! rise in rents next fall, While the Upper Manhattan Prop- erty Owners’ Association, controlling North Harlem and Washington | Heights, ts !oading the movement not > only to establish @ 10 per cent, In- crease but also’ to incorporate in all leases a series of clauses releasing landlords from furnishing the legal quota of heat and hot water, asse ing upon tenants the extra costs for securing an adequate supply of coal, y various large investment interests say the expenses of operating such houses might be reduced greatly by actentific economy, Savings possible are enough to balance tho war in- flation in the essentials for running the propertics, thus leaving no rea- sonable excise for adding to rentals, Foremost among advocates of @co- nomical measures for solving the ‘The wedding of Miss Mary Frances Gilbert, daughter of Mrs, Riley Miles Gilbert of No, 568 Park Avenue, and Edwin Norman Hickman will take Problem 1s the Clty and Suburban Place the afternon of June 2 in St Homes Company, backed by R, Ful- Thomas's Church. Miss Anne Gilbert ton Cutting, Adrian Iselin jr,, Sen-| Will be her sister's maid of honor and ator Oxden Mills, Isanc N. Sollgman,| tho bridesmaida will bo Mise Laila Commodore Frederick Gilbert Bourne, | Lancashire and Miss Hivelyn Scott. A Alfred T, White, Joseph 8, Auerbach Sill recption eremony. babeasad and others interested in raleing the haracter of tenement homes, In the company’s big model houses on the |central it wide and west side are over 11,000 tenants, one structure | being @ hotel for working girls with 576 gu At Homewood, in Brook- lyn, it runs @ suburban community of 250 dwellings, HOLD RENTS DOWN BY ECON. OMY IN OPERATION, “The burdens of ownership of Im- proved realty during the past year have been greater than in any other jeimilar period for many years,” said President Allan Robinson of the com. pany to-day, “yet through our efforts to develop resources and eliminate waste in management the excess net] A jury before Justice Ford in the earnings over dividend requirements | Supreme Court yesterday rendered a are three times larger than in 1916.| verdict in favor of the Press Pub- This 1s the result of centraliaing all| lishing Company (The World) tn an REAL ESTATE MAN LOSES SUIT BROUGHT AGAINST THE WORLD Story About Land Finnish Girls Invested In Not Libel- ous, Jury Finds, oo oo 0-0-9 war goes on Into an- Allles will be fed by America and tho conflict will be de- | administrative functions so that the President can keep in close touch with the operation of all the houses, thus effecting savings in the pur- chase of supplies, coal consumption, water charges, mobilization of me- | chanica and agents, “By combining the operation of many houses, a centralized system of purchasing saves @ largo percentage, Our company spends $40,000 a year | for supplies and materials exclusive of coal and food, I discovered that | wo had been buying through middle- men, when we ought to have bought direct from the manufacturers, This | reform was effected and In one in- stance alone—that of paint—the sav- | ing was over $1,000 a year. In four Jed before the first of neat April by | other items $1,200 more was saved xd Instead of by bullets, Then an additional saving was ef- | fected by systematto oversight of the _ use made by tho company’s em- CLOSING QUOTATIONS. | ployeca of the various supplies and With net changes from previous High, 40 mi, ‘Tel, de Te mm, Willan Co. “ha Merine pe Tea , sresees Willys Overland ‘Go: Sha Total wok males 8044 materials, Standardisation has done its share, as has also tho breaking up of the old system*of conducting each building as a reparate unit. By putting all mechanics {n one depart- ment and all rent collecting under one head, We have been able to re- duce the number of persons employed without diminishing the amount or & |quality of repairs and service, In- |come has been increased, again, by the gale of Junk and waste paper from | the houses—this netting $1,045 a year —and by cutting down summer va- cancles {n our apartmenta” RISE WOULD COST POORER TEN- ANTS $24,000,000 A YEAR, All garbage in the company’s houses | flats which rent for $25 a month or Jess, and that one alm of the organ- igers * company has been F show landlords in general that such |reaity investments when properly safeguarded aro much better than| | those returning a larger income, not so well safeguarded, They be- |ileve that the moral and_ physical well-being of tenants is an Important Jelvio consideration, and that tene- ments for the masses should be oper- jated under & semi-public supervision which would make the operation a| practical contribution to social life format FS oe Action on rent-ratsing taken by tho Washington faxpayers Association, Har- lem Property Owners’ Association or the score of bodies affillated with the United Real Extate Owners’ Associa tion, although informally the mem- bers are making new rentals at a 10 to 15 per cent. advance, Rents of old tenants are not raised unless they de- mand many repairs. A straight 10 per cent, raiso on all of the city's tenants paying $25 a month or leas would amount to $24,000,000 a year, As money is very plentiful and In- terest rates are 1 to 2 per cent Bal PRE re than in normal time thus enabling owners to finance their holdings at low cost, the larger and more con sorvative realty interesta ara main. taining that an increase of ren this time for tho flat-dwelling manses 1s not justified and would take the form of extortion various landlords’ associations to une re rt ny. dertake a plan of systematic erative economy similar to that City and Suburban Homes Comy we at et Room, Refining that be canning 6 Suge to-day heavy whi pita, « » has bee twenty years to| only verdlot y but] to bring tho city's! J They will unge the | open ils reserve re action for libel brought by Werner G, Freeland. The suit was based on an article published in The Evening World of Jan, 80, 1914, which told of the conviction in the United States District Court of a Finnish servant girl accused of sending an improper letter through the mails to Hilda Saari, another Finnish girl, who was employed as @ stenographer by Froe- land, The matter which Freeland com- Plained of as libellous was the re- port of a plea for clemency, made by| Tolvo H. Nokton, attorney, on be- half of the accused. In this plea| Nekton stated that been prompted to write the objec-| tionabdle letter by the fact that Free- land and his stenographer had in- his client had) TIC LEAGUE CHARTS CHEER sacslipcsoni Oscar Straus Tells New Organ- “We'll Minister to Chil ization Why He Is Belligerent | Whether City Likes It —Democracy at Stake. Not,” Says Mgr. Hayes: The Patriotic Service League of tho! Attended by more than 3,000 Nineteenth Congressional district , oar held its first mass-meeting lant evgn- “™ ONE Whom were many men ing and filled to overfiowing the !% Public life, the funeral of Sister Horace Mann auditorium at One Hun. Teresa Vincent, for forty-seven yeare dred vies’ on Street and Broad- Mother Superior of the New Terk way, on aitman Oscar B. 4p, | Birt Straus made his appearance the 1,000) owns a Pau’ ben feats wore filled, three or four hun- "'~ " eocort, newateee dred men and women were packed 1 *20P J: ls McCort, nephew of along the walls, and fully 1,500 had oCcaeed sister and Auxillary, boon teiaed “ant. of Philadelphia, was the ook The aim of the Patriotic Service th* solemn requiem mass. Rev. League te to form in every Congr eho herr Y stonal district an organization to M atouse, co-ordinate and direct the pa- | th® Rev. James F, 4 oc HAY trlotio efforts of all eitizena of both) “20” sexes and of every age on the non-| The honorary palt = military side to bring about an early Henry Helde, Paul G. Thebaud, and successful termination of the war, | V: Bouvier, Col. Louls D. Contey, Fabian Frankiin called the meeting min R. Lummis, Joba @. Ame to order, and, after Isanc Rovendlatt John Kelly. had led tn singing the Star Spangled Bishop Patrick J, Mayes, tm @a- Banner, introduced Chairman Straus, |!vering the eulogy, said; Who congratulated Prof, Ellery C,' “In case some cold hearted ofiieiet Stowell on helping to organize the should try to take the credit nation for the “greatest cause that the work Sister Vincent @id ever appealed to a people.” jher yeare at the Foundling “We were,” said Mr. Straus, “a na- let mo quote some statistics, Im tion of pacifiats, I confess I belonged years 66,000 persons passed under to the extreme wing, but since this eye and impress, 20,000 were war began I have become 4 most in happy homes. 10,000 children belligerent pacifist, There wore two returned to their mothers wh alternatives—Utopia or Hell. Most were able to care for them, of us Ohose Utopia, We did not re- these boys are now Vice vd of banks and United 81 | Aliae, however, that to reach Utopia ‘Catholic charities in th |we had to march through the jaws been unjustly accused, The of Hell, The issues of this war have light of adverse publicity has been made clear to every one except thrown upon them In order to ertaih to thoae unfortunate people who have the ends desired been hypnotized by the Treitschkes said at times threatened to and the Bernardis to believe that this own people believe that # warld is to be ruled by might and not | AS were described ao unfalrty weir by righteousness, We are in this war | “Sister Vincent started yeare : 4} not to protect our sotl, but to protect [establish the founding hyspite al our soul, the soul of democracy) the blessings of her Mother Ghiodatioat Pha wonla” anda fives dollar’ bill In hers . , A prominent Frenchman told Mr.| Mone, Undaunted, she b Straus the other day, he said, that/ weapon was her faith in God and even the people of France did not pesca J of the Saviour—‘faith, hope and ariwe at once to the importance of | © ety an ceuttons Wis this war. In the outer provinces they! ministering unto little ig were very slow to appreciate its | whether the City of New Yo “Germany has been forty years vinteat mcerment waa | making ready for this war,” sald Mr. Straus, “but | think we will show her before we get through that our men North tn Te: and women are as ready, and more| ATLANTA, Ga, May 26.—Fifty thous ready, to make every sacrifice the |#And negroes have left Georgie tor the direst war can demand of them than North during the past ten montha, @o- t ent le any people brought up under a mon- spring Htan Sta Ey eee \ 4 50,000 Negroes Le: archical system. We kaow what Commerce an freedom ts, and wo know how to make ‘reyiminture to give tie, fone t r ther control over employ: He game Ye ee and to raise the tax on HY from $00 a year to $800 a day, sacrifices to hand children’s children,” Prof. Ellery C. Stowell, who has done much of the work of organiza- | jtlon, told about it briefly after the thunders of applause that followed |Mr. Straua’s appeal had subsided. Henry R, Barrett, Secretary of the Westchester Commission of Safety, | j told of similar work being done jn ALMOST INSANE FROM PIMPLES ° duced her to Invest $300 of her sav-| ings in real estate at Speonk, L. L, and later to lend Freeland $300 more, for which he gave a chattel! mort- | gage on his furniture as security. Mr. Nekton, the article further stated, told the court that Freeland had persuaded many other Finnish ser- vant girls to invest thoir savings in the Speonk property. The World placed on the witness stand several of the girls, who testi- fled to investments they had mace on Freeland’s representations. Rensselaer B, Dayton, @ real estate owner of Speonk, testified that the property which Freeland had sold for as high as $150 a lot was worth about $25 an acre, and that one sore would make about sixteen lots. The jury took less than five minutes to bring in a verdict The World waa represented in the trial by its general counsel, Howard Taylor and Charles B. Brophy, Free- land waa represented by M. Martin Delphin, In denying the latter's mo- tion to set aside the verdict, Justice 1 said to the jury: “Gentiomen, you have reached the 1 could properly reach here, in my Opinton am compelled to make this remark that the plaintiff is a bit audacious a case of this kind in this I think the exigencies of the that remark from the ‘id is collected and @estroyed each day on + the premises, and close watch Is kept| for The World. § of sanitary conditions, for experience has shown that there {8 profit In keep- ing the structures clean and the ten- jants in good health, President Robin- 4 son sald there are over 2,868,@00 per- wons in Greater New rk living in on the eviden 1 court, caso merit court.” OSCAR OUT OF BANKRUPTCY. we Mayer Discharges Hammer- atelm—Liabilities Were 8280,000, Judge Mayer, in the United States District Court, to-day granted a dis charge in bankruptcy to Oscar Hamrner- atein Mr, Hammerstein was engaged in the real estate business and also in theatri eal productions, He filed an involun- tary, petition in bankruptoy adn. 4, 116 His Uabliities were more than $480/000, Delicious! “SAL OUYLON THA is unique in flavour, quality and richness of infusion, in | HEVER SOLD IN BULK—Salada Toa Co.,100 Hudaon St., New York that county, Representative Walter M. Chandler | of the Nineteenth District began by telling the audience that he voted Against the Revenue Bill “because it | is the most abominable moasure, the rottenest measure, that ever came out | of the Ways and Means Committee, heed York should not be called upon | to bear the burden of carrying on the ‘alnst the Imperial Government rmany.” Mr. Chandler waa telling a great deal about himself when a volco cried, | “We didn’t coma hero to listen to a political speech,” and he got back to ia subject, He said that Adjutant General Mo@ain told him the Gov- | ernment will get all the men and all) the money it wants to carry on ths war to victory, but that the Patriotic Which Covered Face, Tried All Kindas, of Remedies Without Reese Spread Over Body, Then Trled Cuticura and Was Healed, anal face was covered with blotches caused by a at it hited all kinds of remedies foaulte and the pimples valve Ther and almost soreed over my were hard and of various po i oe with red heads and others ey cota ers very itchy and ann not sleep nights... Almost bo “T had lost all hope when recommended Cuticura ment. It only took about four peaeaet Service League can help greatly by, Cuticura Ointment with the C stimulating enthusiasm, Soap to heal me.’* (Signed) iin Bo “We have,” he conciuded, “a pos-| Kontrowits, Centerville Station, N, sible power of 40.000,000 men and City, Sept. 11, 1916, money power of $250,000,000,000, and ¢ before we'll consent to the humiliation | Gea? do4pe, harsh eoe boy j and disgrace of defeat we'll spend frrya?y mecgaren sonpe are in the every dollar and send every man to, Thee make litte irritations Ee These officers wore elected: Presi. | ones. Stop the use of all dou! dent, Lionel Sutro; Vice Presidents, Use Cuticura, and no other soap, Mrs. Nicholas Murray Butler, Dr, Bey- toilet purposes. Help it wih wecbbe te erly B. Allen, William P. Chapman Cuticura alot and Waldemar A. Chadbourne; § For Free Sample Each by Return Wier, airing cua | Mail aiteee pe postcard: , and letters shoukl be sent to the Sec-; Dept. H, Bost Sold everywhere. retary, at No. 485 Riverside Drive, | _ | German Singers to Be Penalized) | if They Sing Here, TODAY, AMSTERDAM, lay 6.—erman inesiea will tw eacluded fom ail wes Procrastination is the thief of man opera, rendered in German theatres Aealth: Keep pec ynd wall Wy toa “resolution which Borlin despatenes the timely use and to-day said would he adopted by the Hierlin ‘Actors’ Assuciation conference in June. The resolution ta fostered by Count Seebach, manager of the Royal Theatre of Dresden BEECHAM'S. PILLS Sele of of Ace “sti ADA": 8th Bt, World's Mark West 125th 6t., Brooklya Office, 203 .) mM, Pigehiew, for LM following the ting of SR 4 ” > i cat » i yr