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Decoration Day Mass. SWISBILY SUNDAY “If City Would Pray a Whole Night It Would See Won- derful Results.” | “Let's find out,” said Billy Sunday in his sermon this afternoon, “whether jit pays to pray. If it doesn’t let's not | do it. It pays to eat and that's why we eat.” | Billy asked his audience to help him, as he was so tired he could hardly breathe. He referred to the coughing. | He said he was going to talk larcely from his own experience. “f pity any one,” he aaid, “who thinks he can get along without God. Why not make a drive for Christ? You can't get the Church to do tt ‘The last thing at night and the first in| “This country ie making a drive for the morning, smear the face gently with | the Liberty Loan. It's going to get the Ointment on end of the finger and | what it wants, because it’s making a bathe freely with Cuticura Soap and hot | drive for it. And Iam glad that the water, using plenty of Soap, best ap- | country is making a drive for these plied with the hands which it softens. | fellows who are trying to interfere with A clear skin, good hair and soft white | registration. I hope the jails will be hands usually follow daily use of Cuth | 50 packed with them that their feet perend and Sia anailia poerentar will stick out of the windows. re-sale idendlhyy Acne i | “lf I were President of the United “Cuticura, 1G, Boston."” Soid | states for forty-eight hours, you bet throughout the world. T'd take care of them. If this country is good enough to live in and give a |man all the comforts and luxuries of \iife, it’s good enough to fight for, ‘The men who not only refuse to do jthat, but attempt to prevent others from doing thelr duty—well, wo know what ought to be done with them.” Billy said he believed people should enjoy themselves; that God intended they should do #0, He wished every one who heard him had an automibile, It furnished the finest kind of pleas- ‘ure ever evolved in the brain of man, Billy has @ very fine automobile himeelf. ‘The sermon was from the text, James V.; 10: “The effectual and fervent prayer of 4 righteous man avall< eth much.” Billy and the devil had no monopoly on enthusiasm, The church needs a baptism of enthusiasm, he declared. “If the people of New York would spend a whole night in prayer they'd see wonderful results,” said Billy. “The trouble with people to-day Is that you are not willing to make the sacrifice for God. Let the church of God stop grumbling and quit petty strife, and fall on her knees for a day and a night, and you will rewrite the history of the United States, “Pray! When you get up from your knees you are not likely to look at the world as you would through Zor Improve YourSkin With Cuticura Tt is easy, convenient and ine: fs absolutely essential to health. The stomach is the distributing point of the human body. From its action on the se ve eat, ” pet our Vaan oe stret , hence it is importan' eep it nee condition. It is not what fs eaten but digested that counts. wat bo Pure Malt misry assists digestion because It stimulates the mucous surfaces and little glands of the stomach to healthy action. By alding the essential functions of di- gestion it enables you to obtain better assimilation and thereby the body ts furnished all the nutriment the food contains, consequently strength and vigor. Many former sufferers from stomach disorders have been benefited by the eos use Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey. “Get bog AF and Keep At most family fine stores, SAYS THE DRUG 18 AN ETHER COMPOUND Just a few drops loosen any corn so it lifts out with- out pain. You simply say to the drug store man, “Give me a quarter of an ounce of freezone.” This will cost very little | but is sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn from one's feet. A few drops applied directly upon a tender, aching corn should relieve the sorencss instantly, and soon the entire corn, root and all, can be lifted out with the fingers without pain. This new drug called freezone is an ether compound discovered by a Cin- cinnatl man, who that while frees- one is sti it dries in a moment, and simply shrivels up the corn without inflaming or even Irritating the sur renading Haus or 6kin. Don't let father die of infection or lockjaw from whittling at his corns, bat Sut tile out and make him try it, Adv 71-0 DOWN $1.0 WEEKLY Will Bring to Your Home This $50 CORTOFONE Talking Muchine oft or betweer be lifted out ea Sopiing. icecmint or and $9.00 Goven't irritate Worth Callow ore. tire Double Faced for "pou Records fm any (24 Belections) never s59 WORTHE 4 ().00 Special at Made in Mahogany and Golden Oak COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS $1.00 Down—$1.00 Weekly BABY CARIIAGES % factory tm Mam | haitan (F4 yen Bane he orice ah Cort Sales Co., Inc. 593 3p Ave. 330 SIXTH AVENUE NEAR 207 STREET, NEW YORK, Phone 2890 Murray HA, Holiday Tomorrow! Take home a bottle of Club Cocktails and celebrate at one time the day and your | own good taste. tion this Summe: your favorite paper mailed to | you every day. Evening World, 12¢ per week Daily World, 12¢ per week Sunday World, 6¢ per Sunday feng tu hange your widiens as often ae Jou de ect to Cashier ork er Building, New York City, oo THE EVENING WORLD, the bottom of a beor glass. “You can't pray ‘Thy Kingdom Come,’ and then do everything in your power to prevent it from coming. whenever you offer that prayer it’s @ lie if you don't mean it, “It 1s so with your prayer list, You can't honestly pray for the salvation of your husband and friends and not turn every etone to lead them to Christ. Your prayers are worth no more than you are willing to redeem in work, A “Prayer leads to activity. You can’t honestly pray, ‘Save my boy,’ and then not do anything in your power to further that end. There are men) and women looking in my face who are not trying to get their prayers answered. “Mothers, hold on and pray. He'll come, And God will send you out after the one you're praying for. “If God won't disappoint a bird, dee or a squirrel, He will grant your | request when you ask Him, “We get by giving, ‘That's farmer sows seed, Thi have gymnasiums; give a strength and get much, “I am descended from a consump- tive family, When I was @ boy every little cold affected my lungs. When FROM SAME MOTIVE ASUNTED STATES Says His Country Is Prepared to Fight to the End. WASHINGTON, May 29.—Italy fighting her last war of independence, focls that all questions must be sub- ordinated to the one great problem of a general allied victory. Francisco Saverio Nitti, former Minister of Agriculture and Industry and commerce, and economic head of the Italian War Mission, sald to-day a , that the Mission had come, not to to"tne best inetrustora Ya the gym: (seek anything for Italy specifically, ashame, 1 developed my physique, but to draw more closely together until now, tc a the two great nations now allied. sare of iny Usly.. thats the ressen| "are edeolutely esocasary to victory care ' |we have the schools; we give = fow| There te pe pA ryeencrgd bday snd |hours’ time and get it back in educa~ Sa ee sy day, and that is whether German mili- “The reason some of you get so|tarism or Allied democracy ghall eur- Ulttle is because you give so little to| vive, Both cannot. Anything which confuses this issue ie hostile, If Ger- many wins this war, her oligarchy God, All you amount to is to count jone more when the preacher goes to will destroy the world, the United States included, conference or the synod, or whatever “We cannot continue to ive with it may be. One-half of the church members could die and the world not lose anything in spiritual force. "1 believe in experimental religion, Halt of the people don’t know what| Prussian militarism, ‘This does not it ts 2 be converted. an they know | mean the crushing of the German na- about prayerthey read in a book. ‘tion, but rather such a military de- “Tho devil {s working just as hard to damn New York as Jesus Christ 1s|*°8t 48 to discredit absolutely Ger- working to save her, many’s military caste, Italy did not enter this war for any Particular interest, She easily could have stayed out on the basis of her treaty with Germany, The threat of world combination under the menace “The devil never takes a vacation. While you pray for a brother or his of the mailed fist made such @ course impossible, band the devil is working just as hard This ig Italy's last war of indepen- to keep him away, All the devils hell can spare are turned loose in New York for these dence, It gives her opportunity to rectify her boundaries and to win back her lost provinces, It gives her iittle Nitti, Head of Mission Here,|Slain as He Resists Orders meetings. I think they must have Opportunity also to undo that Aus- abandoned some towns and turned the whole shooting match loose here. trian diplomacy which in 1856 left her ‘a country without a boundary.” Our “There 1s nothing too hard for God if the church will get on her face and pray. “Are you a praying Christian or @ nominal church member? You go to mission here is essentially political, We wish to cement the alliance be- clubs, lodges or anything else; but I Sets oe oar when they push od |tween the two countries and make into the background, and I've got a/Plain to the American people that right to, God isn't dead.” Italy entered the war for the same church and sing “Jesus, Lover of My Soul.’ You lie! He is not a lover of your soul, but @ mere acquaintance you bow to when you enter the church doo: aan as you did, We are glad to COLLEGE UNITS ORDERED —|otcoa'than wan expected" we : TO CAMP FOR TRAINING} presen. noting peculiasiy Teattan to 4,000 Men Will Be Enrolled for Ser- vice Abroad With the Army Medical Corps, f. “I don't knock society, women's ask, We wish only to discuss the general allied effectiveness as con- cerned in the particularly Italian aspect. The weakening of one ally means the weakening of all, and we wish to avoid anything of that sort. WASHINGTON, May 2%, —Stu-] “U0 dents from universities and colleges peso rad oe erates know they Ahroughout the country, picked ~ ne ope is in the submarine, or in dissension among the Allies. She is using both to the full Umit, It is essential for us all to hold together in the common cause.” Mr. Nittl declared Italy's general economic situation splendid and that he expected her to emerge from the war one of the strongest industrial nations of the world, ‘The great in dustrial transformation made nece: |Sary by war needs has not been de jeated only to war materials.” he sald, “but already was being made ready to enter the world's competition afterward. Italy's enormous water power, with mobilized manhood dis- ciplined and made strong in war, will make a new nation of her,” The financial situation, Mr, Nittl said, was very good and Italy is the through the Intercollegiate Intelll- «ence Bureau for service abroad with the United States Medical Corps, have been ordered to assemble for training before being sent to France. The organization comprises 1,500 men formed in units of thirty-sx and they have been assured of seeing service at an early ate, The total number to be enrolled will be 4,000 and all will be members of the Med- foal Enlisted Reserve Corps, Among the colleges that have con- tributed one or more units are: Pennsylvania, Yale, Harvard, Prince- ton, Dartmouth, Williams, Johns Hop- kins, Pittsburgh, Virginia, Iowa State College, University of Jowa, Hamlin, | only other nation besides England Lafayette, Purdue, Arizona, Indiana, | that bas paid her war interest out of Northwestern, Amherst, Tennessee, | t@xation . : South Carolina, Florida, Washington | Headed by the Prince of Udine, the and Lee, George Washington, Oberlin, | Mission visited the Capitol to-day, Pennsylvania State, Leland Stanford, | Was recelved by Vice President Mar. | oMficials and it w Ilinols, Michigan, Swarthmore, | hall and other as a | arranged to have the Prince address fica, OSes mia and University of| to senate Thursday to deliver King Victor Emmanuel’s message to the American people. GREEK DIPLOMAT HERE QUITS KING CONSTANTINE Legation Attache Resigns and An- nounces Allegiance to Premier Venizelos. WASHINGTON, May 29.—8S, X. Con- Can Enlist Without Lo = United States Grazing Rights, WASHINGTO! May 29.—Stock growers having national forest grazing privileges will be permitted, if they en- list in the army or navy, to retain their privilege without use of the range dur- ing the period of enlistment. ‘This rul- | ing was made to-day by the United States Forest Service in an effort to stantinidd, first secretary of the Greek | *mulate recruiting, Legation here, to-day presented his papers of resignation to the State De- | partment and announced his allegiance |to the forces of Venta His action bocause of his long connection with tho Greek Foreign Office, gave the diplomatic corps a shock. | Mr. Constantinid! declared he had] been discontented with being connected with King Constantine's Government ever since the United States declared| § war “As I seo it,” he said, “it is the duty . % of every humane and honest man to Th e Kind You Hav: arraign himself on the side of America tay noe n ip anwars Hes and the Entente. The whole terrible personas supervision for over 30 years, situation has narrowed down to a sim- © deceive you in this, ple question of humanity and etviliza ** Just-as-good v 4 w tion against German barbarity and | bealth of Children—Experience against Experiment. bestiality of @ type almost beyvnd A sem oh | What is Cc “When King Constantine arratgned Castor a harmless su himself on the side of German. bar ore Deape and Roothlns Syraps, y ‘elt th e ‘y {varity end infamy, 3 Sele thes the tame, more than thirty years it has been in constant use forthe to dissociate myself from his Govern relief of Constipation. Flatulency, nt had cor id 1 have resigned | Diarrhoea} allayini Ane Octered bia, mer ylone to toe Aree and. by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the as- judgment no greater statesman lives similation of Food; givin to-day, He is fighting ly for the The Children’s Panacea—Thi same things that President Wilson #0 wisely and graphically outlined in his war address. po > Hear Mountain Seryiee, The McAllister Steamboat Company will operate the Highlander to Bear Mountain on Decoration Day and Sun day, June 3, leaving the Battery pier at 9.30, West One Hundred and Thirty second Street at 10 and from Yonkers at 10.30 A. M. On Sunday, June 10, the steamer will begin her dally trips to this resort, which ts located about \forty-five miles up the Hudson River, Children Cry for Fletcher’s | Counterfeits, Imitations and are but experiments, and endanger the Feverishness arising therefrom, The Kind You Have Always Bought ALG #- | ° G In Use For Over 30 Years TUESDAY, MAY 29, 191 ITALY ENTERED WAR |BOAT CAPTAIN SHOT DEAD BY SENTRY IN FIGHT ON HS RAT With Iron Bar in Hand— Guardsman Arrested, Private Herbert Taylor is under ar- rest In the armory of the Forty-sev- enth Regiment, N. G. N. Y., in Brook- lyn, for killing K, P, Bingaham, cap- tain of the canal boat Fred, at the Nichols Copper Company’s factory, Laurel Hill, L. I, He will be tried by ®& court martial. Detective Caputo haa reported to the police what he learned about the killing, Bingaham and Henry Salois, sktp- per of another boat, returned late last night from an evening ashore, ‘They went aboard the Fred, sat out on the deck and began a boisterous argument. Sergt. William Kaiser and Privates Taylor, Frank Stuart and John Morgan of the Forty-sev- enth Regiment were on guard on the pier. Acoording to the police, a private soldier shouted: “Get into your cabins and go to bed.” Bingaham replied: “I'm fifty-nine years old, and no kid can tell me when to go to bed.” Then a private soldier threatened: “If you don’t go to bed, we'll shoot.” Whereupon Bingaham replied: “Well, if you can shoot I guess I can shoot too.” Bingaham went into his cabin, and the four militiamen went aboard the Fred, Taylor in the lead. As they ap- proached the cabin Bingaham walked out, holding an iron capstan bar in his right hand behind his back. He started toward Taylor, who hit him on the back with the flat of his bayonet, and then stepped out of the way. Bingaham turned and started again for Taylor, who backed off about ten feet and fired one shot. The bullet plerced Bingaham’s heart, killing him instantly, Capt. George A. Wilson of Company K ordered Taylor under ar- rest and held Salois as a witness. The Forty-seventh Regiment was mustered into the regular army six weeks ago. Gov. Whitman had ac- cepted the resignation of Col. Ernest Jannicke, but he was in command when the regiment entered the Fed- eral service and is till at the head of the regiment. REAPPORTIONMENT BILL IS VETOED BY MITGHEL Omission in The Bronx and Over- lapping in Brooklyn Given as the Reasons, Mayor Mitchel to-day vetoed a bill providing for a reapportionment of| the Aldermanic Districts of Greater New York on the grounds that through a mistake six blocks are left without Aldermanic representation in the Bronx, whereas in Brooklyn there is a section where voters would have the right to cast ballots for two Aldermen because of overlapping. ‘The vetoed bill would have reduced the Aldermanic Board from seventy- three to sixty members. It was a Republican measure and was garded as a gerrymander by many Democrats. In his veto the Mayor says: “I regret that the drafters of the bill have left out two seotions of three blocks each in the Bronx in the reapportionment division. ‘This amounts to a practical disonfran- chisement of these two sections, “The opposite situation occurs in Brooklyn. Part of the description of| the Fortieth Assembly District shouid | stop at Jefferson Avenue, whereas it runs to Jefferson Street.” This error projects part of the Fortleth Alder- manic District into the Thirty-ninth and overlaps the Thirty-ninth in this regard.” re- ht has borne the signa- a8 been made under his Allow no one RIA tute for Castor Oil, Pare- It contains neither tic substance. For Wind Colie and | healthy and_natural sleep, © Mother’s Friend, tried to build up in neutrality.” “The American diplomacy in Get many was characterized as “shit sleeve” diplomacy, and, they little stock in it COL. M. L. EHLERS DIES AT 77.] SECRET TREATIES SCORED ‘Was tor 36 Years Gri Secretary BY STRAUS AT CONFERENCE of Masons State. As Result of Them International Col, M. L. Ehlers, Civil War veteran, for thirty-six years Grand Secretary of Spies Were Able to Work Here, He Declares, the Grand Lodge of Masons of New York In opening the National Conference State, and known in Masonic circles the on Foreign Relations at North Beach world over, is dead at the home of his son, Dr, Edward C. Ehlers, No. 23 West to-day Oscar 8, Straus, the presiding cificer, declared: Ninety-fourth Street. He was seventy “The world can never be safe for seven years old. democracy as long as there are secret and the “y Monroe Doctrine, believe that Col, Ehlers was born in Denmark. At the outbreak of the Civil War he volun- teered and rose through successive ranks, until on March 13, 1865, he was given the brevet rank of Colonel. He fought at Antictam and Fredericksburg treaties. While the country was do- r countries, He said that in faa Sean “S Bres Hawn te Moses ing its utmost to control neutrality|the next Peace Conference there years, Funeral services will be held In the Grand Lodge Room, Masonic Hall, No, 46 West Twenty-fourth Street, to- morrow evening. secret sples or international spies, as the result of secret treaties, tore down what President Wilson had would be enacte aside petty ambitions, OUR ARMY of Telephone Workers AN ARMY of 17,000 workers is required to furnish New York City the telephone service so essential in its commercial life and in the National Defense. | It is a Picked Army. From the highest in command to | the lowest in rank each employee is selected with the purpose of bringing into the telephone business only those who are capable of doing the best work in the service of the public. | . : It is a Trained Army. Each employee is fitted for his or her task in our telephone schools, where the proper founda- tion is laid for future efficiency and where the true spirit of service is taught. It is a Skilled Army. The high order of workmanship displayed in the building of lines, in the installation of switchboards and telephones and in the systematic handling of calls is evidence of this practical training. It is a Loyal Army. Day or night, in sunshine or bliz- zard, in fire or in flood, the call of the service is ever uppermost in the minds of the Bell Army. It never fails to respond in any emergency calling for prompt an effective work. Your Bell Army is in fighting trim now, alert, watchful, depend- able, prepared to furnish the best possible service under all conditions, Cooperation with the operator and care of your telephone equipment to prevent damage will help us to furnish you the high quality of service so essential at the present time. NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY Mushrooms in _ ‘Chafing Dish as served by a Noted Chef ANY a hostess is making a reputation for her delightful little suppers and the tastiness of her dishes, through the use of Mazola, the new and better oil for santé- ing, deep frying and salad dressings. Coming from the heart of sorn—an edible vegetable source — Mazola overcomes all the objections so often raised to the ordinary frying and shortening fats and oils, Mazola can be used without smoking up rooms. It can be used over and over again, It is a cooking medium as pure, sweet and whole- some as the most delicate food cooked in it. Recipe by Helen M. Story Sauté the Mushrooms @ nice brown in Mazola, Squeeze im the juice of a lemon, a dash of Cayenne, Serve very het en buttered toast, This is a@ delicious way to serve the excellent tinsed msde rooms to be found in all goed grocery and delicatessen shopte Simple directions for using given in the Mazola Book of Recipes, to be had free at your grocer’s or delicatessen dealer’s—or write us direct. Mazola in pint and quart cans and 15c bottles—keeps perfectly under all conditions. Corn Products Refining Co. New York A MAZOL John Hayes’e idea of diplomacy was the Golden Rule President Wilson hit the nail on the head In trying t® form a copartnership with the peo- ple, thus meeting the idea of démoe» assador Domiclo da Gama of Brazil, sald that diplomats did not truly represent the common people a code of honor, and an effort would be made to lay