The evening world. Newspaper, April 16, 1918, Page 3

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and Special Correspondents. 1OQIRISH PARISHES DENOUNCE. D247 RECRUITING BOOMS mms wi Pr ide, No Lamentations, Over This Boy Protests Pour In From Public Bodies and Sinn Feiners Are Active LONDON, April 16.—Me t protest against conseription were held Monday in 100 pa n Ire participating, says a d 1 from Dublin to th n The clerey ook @ leading part ingall the mee ings. Resolutions of prote are pouring in from publie be und Sinn F lds, * tN sist Ireland ts very yuntry ha all sonst fon and ha gotten, 1 Home Rule, the ‘ ountry of contradictior owev tor 'n Dublin and som vt towns voluntary uitin. i) 1 narkably int , 2 sas The com w LEFT To RIGHT— of the draft of an 1 <Jom MRS. MINNIE: HARMAN Rule bill, say« rime 6 “RSE + LEODERSOOREF bbe dll ap MISS CLARA LEUDERSDORF J. Austen Cha IN FRONT=MISS EDNALEUDERSDORFC Hl etary for Indi i i} a ta ata : Father and Mother of Alfred of the War Cab: Leudersdorff Find No Cause The samo paper for Grief in Fact Their Sori, | Seat cat tamed ; With Pershing, Was Hurt on ment ur he duction of a measure of H R Battle Front—Father, Born “as generous as evised in Denmark, Has Taught 17 the light of ncu: wae Children Country Has Right of the Irish ¢ 1 1 in hi ; : ie an ‘the ate goal of fe to Their Services—Mother, eral devolution r peal 4 With Yearning Heart, Says “I signed by Laurer H 1 Want to Know How He a; bat Mason, Arthur Shirley Lenn, George Nat HR. Lane Fox, Leslie O, Wilson and Oh, I Am Proud of Him! sGeorge Ll eee an Tho I © Minister t Cabinet, Mi 2 an foterview , premier Lioya “£@ rguerite Mooers Marshall George last WANT so much to know just net . Premier to gri w he is—but, oh, Iam proud Ireland on the bas , report of the Iris Emanuel Leu conscription is put { dersdorff, mother It is understood and patriot, ree had satisfactory re elved the news of will not Cabinet « wounding of Arthur Hender her son Alfred, ber of the War Cabin who was with the “L have tried to a 1gsth Regiment om ent out of one of th 1 he firing line im 1 & France. The War rn f it a Department has listen to the suggestions made, an | oy ansint just advised Mr, has declined to give any u 1 Mrs, Leuders. to pos 7 dorff at r home, No. 59 Palmetto the H b Street, Brooklyn, that the nh was Should t ned MAN ly wounded on March Law be pr will ¢ en-| Even Jin th days of ardent ser- danger the interests of untry | y 1 remarkable Sone te MRT” aah nent’n! TE idersdorff family course {s not cc 1 to or to, ¢ first place, thera the Radicals, extand 1 tar t iving children—Alfred, British m . a they! 4 (Mr My er), David, helieve Ireland should be pted, | yy (Mr elter), Este are convinced the Governn 80 Moe, Minnie Gis Harman), ng about | a fatal y You Need Music | in Your Home In these times music is needed more than ever before. Every home needs music —your home nee ods it. Music with its wonderful power to heal and soothe is more necessary now than ever before. JISUIN No Needles to Change Plays All Records Come to the Edison Shop to morrow and hear the New Edison; the instrument which the great inve Dst ¢ his life perfectin: instrument that CREATES music Money and in Only $8.00 a Month Make a sm make your first pa graph in 30 days. The Edis son Sh The Phonogray 473 Fifth Ave paym: f Manhattan pposite the ws Pa slic Library MANUEL LEUDERSDORF ‘Theodore, Florence, Irwin, ella, Alice, Leo, Clara Alt who is twenty-three years old, volunteered without ing for the draft. Leo is with the 304th Fieid Artillery at Camp Upton. Moe is a member of the Home Defense League. Malvina’a husband ts . the United tes service David Sam both ved their terms’with he National Guard, from which they hold honorable discharges. ND there isn’t a finer patriot in |A the ‘family than the bearded, brilliant-eyed father, Emanuel was born in Denmark, but has spent most of his life in ‘New York City, wher his children were born and J edu 1, He has been superintend- Jent of a mship li and even! now he prot vehemently against being called “retired,” I found him yesterday afternoon woated bi je the open window of his living room, his gray eyes shin- | « of what my ‘ged him to “y lorft man American so quietly nd) must and fi sont Wounded in France Fighting for U. S.; He’s One of Family of 19 Americans face when I|I have ht ir. Leuders- and sober! SMILES MAKE POOR | GIRL ADAUGHTER OF LONELY RICH MAN —— Importer of 62 Adopts Sunny Dispositioned Secretary From the Bronx. A fairy tale with {ts attendant moral was written tn reat life this week |when twenty-three-year-old rene | MeManus's efficieney, trustworthiness and sunny jositin ston: rapher and « tary won her a pla in the Wh of her wealthy em Ployer, Sho is now Trane von Pt the adopted daughter, with Surr Cohalan's consent, of Cart von Pu tau, an importer, living at the Hotet | Chelsea and with offices at No. | Street. And with her en trance into the Von Pustau hotisehold she has assumed a daug | the business and fortune of the fam- fly Mr. von Fustau, who ja sixty-two | years old. 1a bright and father! smile for every one who entered bis office to-day, and he was willing to explain tha the wo w that he had a direct tle with its brixe ido. “T have moat remarkable oung women in the world for Jone it. I have flown the daughter," hy declared. She has ry tone! : pe unt re cnipeereae worked a le my desk for several ethat Abiosent fan years and i has 7 ved herself the A str When pe) most efficient, loyal and even dis ‘ ust summer be! positioned person of my acquain } | wake up until one of bis comrades to take entire charge of my business | roused him. I feel sure that he will) When it is necessary and so great bs recover from his wound, Inany case,{my faith In her that she is now |e have no right to think that my| really the treasurer of the firn | that wounds, even death, were part Since the death of my wife last year een the loneliest inan in tt | have wanted to open my home again, but it would be the luneliest place I could go to if no one were with me.| that words were a confession of faith. ‘To prove it, | have insulted {Irene was an orphan and there some of my best friends in this |seemed no wiser and better choice room. T w pinot call them pros |than to make her my child, Germans, but they were very much | utp not rett ‘om th Jown on the war. 8 i that there] eee Wie) Bet: setlny trom) fhe are things to criticise, things one ° She is too interested in does not like. Nevertheless, there | it, But we shall take up our rest a be Dee the tority, ‘whom | dence presently at Deer Park, my all will obey, and the wise way 1s to | er home near Orange forget the mistakes, the things we|*¥mmer home near Oran # w 1d work all | Later I shall -show Irene all the won- on ad for the | derful things I have s¢ the country that belor Hl of us and | years I spent as a world traveller in needs eS of my son HOLD-UP IN BROADWAY BRINGS ARREST OF TWO uritle He) Doorman of Th re, of Which Was Robbed, On the theatre The Harry man oi No, 1 worker Cronin been a ing with honest pride as he spoke of Alfred to his callers. There was! | nothing the least bit doleful about | the household, Mrs. Leudersdortt had gone off to mar instead of weeping an darke room, A asant looking married sister, Mrs Be ee Myer, was siniling over snap: jshots of Alfred t » la eurnmer Jat ¢ Mills. “How do you feel | t having a brother wounded in I usked the schoolgirl | lieve . Isabel. "I'm proud,” she re torted, her black eyes flashing. And | ‘andchild or two stood about, |" erly savoring a domestic Event, “ Y son wrote that when he got | M into 1t there'd be ‘sométhing | fathe Joing," ¢ r told me with a smile, “He was ¢ to pass out | of the train pe ind do actual | tiehtin T ha been @ com- blair u hii sin sailed, and bis leters have been fine, although, ef cour Mdn't write as fully lL poy. never not ch rt his d cour T havea c in the H Le 1 f . v 1 member of fa any time t “yyy service flag house” {| I I 1 boast a boys iuietly, "A fighting to put out a & ems tor Just a i and so Lt stole uceording to t May 10 { the th un 44 West the Treas' Thi 1© manager of the Avenue, de 1 Frank Smith SWISS INTERN AMERIGAN WHO ESCAPED GERMANY SUNN SEORETHN S. Soldier t t Repor Ne 16.—7 dat NEW IMPORT RESTRICTIONS TO HIT AMERICAN HOMES t for First lands of the Far East. Showing them > her will be Ike living over again my first acquaintance with them," Miss von Pustau ts still 1 with her brothers and sist. 397 Willis Avenue, the FOUR SEPARATE RESCUES WIN CONVICT A PARDON et Governor Frees Jack Who Saved Two Guards and Pris- oner and Put Out Fire. ALBANY, N. Y¥., April 16—The prison record of James Jackson, con vieted of burglary in New York City in the fall of 91% Ito a term of thirty-dne yeu arned him a pardon fror WHO HAS BEEN ADOPTED BY HER RICH EMPLOYER ' THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 19T8, : ‘ Mrs ‘ + ROHUGH KNY VET eee eS eee Serr ey eon Gloried in Being Soldier's Wife Even Under Supreme Sac- rifice and Now a Widow. T couldn't marry any one but a Girls in Austraita all feel that, soldier, Nike and they do not worry about the at PASSAIC, N. J., selfishly possibility of death or igurement for the swiped a motor cycle on men they lo I believe in war | Avenue, Clifton, N. J. The weddings and in accepting bravely | Wa# Joseph Mulder of No. 361 Street, Passaic. T what after, I wish my | anthony, of 4 Fourth husband might get well enough | Hassale, and J Garfleld © go bac can't bear to think | suffering f to go back. I can't bear to thin! ucering trom. of anything more happening to | with a ald running. alc r boys still are | the automobile the motore him, and yet ot over there, Anyway, I ain proud pants to the tot Her's wife Jont the men in th That is what the beautiful young wife of Capt. Ro Hugh Knyvett, ANNULS ELOPERS’ MARRIAGE. | Anzac hero and author of “Over There With the Australians" told | Gem, Wife Under The Evening World three weeks ago. | at Now she has had to put her faith} Juatlee E ne Court | ot Brookly i to the test, A bride of three months, | °F itooky she watched beside her husband's) ferty Its deathbed last night Miss Alston's M House for Private Patients, No. ixhter of Willla F living at No. West 6ist Knyvett | Mathush osis, following twenty |the plea that died of tubercul following twen' Wiis Bien tee ae nds which he from ‘al? jerman was scouting |t inside the Ge ut Bapaume |! after three ontinuous war Vt Gallipoli and on the west- w shell wher years of tm ttaly ervier ern front } Capt. Knyvett was planning to go} ack to the theatre of war this spring, | Although the doctors warned him that his lungs were atte wrlously he worked making sat patriotic rallies until a few days be tora hin death. His wife travetied | vd ot Cyril Maude, the | native of New South | | HUSBAND'S ILL TREATMENT RUINED VOICE, SAYS SINGER 4 *» in Underhill Asks Speedy Trial ~ Suit for $250,006 Against Flavoring Extract Maker f Lillian A. Ur mt & ) k singer w marriage to W ton Burton, flavoring extract nut i 1 H t ‘ { 1 K tria $ Mien Uniert , r e =. A by r husband’ { r 4d to po} hi vin Sale al | 1 a heavy] a Four fF baianae sa a Brooktyn: ‘ Let 160-462 Fulton St, 5 “AUTO AND MOTOR CYCLE Ii GRASH KILLS 1; HURTS 2 Passaic N. J., Occup ints of Side Car Attachment Thrown Out When Machine Sideswipes Vehicle, April 16.—One man was killed and two sertously injured eurly to-day when an automobile side- Lexington THE EVENING WORLD in Reporting the War Has the News Service of the Associated Press, the United Press No Other Evening Paper in New York Has a News Service So Complete Bride of C of Capt. nt. Knyvett Put to Test Of Brave Words by War Hero’sDeath Poe re ee ee ee ers » hold Hohonectath yther thirt® |aix cities are third-class, includin | Amsterdam, Auburn, Batavia, Beacug. | Canandaigua, Corning, Cortland, BE mit neva, Glens 4 Glovi Hornell, ithoes, Jame town, Johnstown, Kingston, * wann Fail | dletow Sm—DRAI Naw I when SOCITIESINSTATE: VOTING ON LIQUOR; — WOMEN TAKE PART “Drys” Claim Victory in Thirty Places Where Two Days’ Election Is On. ALBANY, N.Y April 14.—Thirty- citles of the State voted to-day on the liquor question under a special act pas the Legistature last week voting will continue until 4 P.M, to-morrow. This extensign of time was necessitated by a vir- tual doubling of the registered voters over last due chiefly to the fe- cent enfranchisement of the women. In Syracuse the women voters aw numbered the men, and it was be- Heved that similar conditions extatéa in other tions of the State, Che weather was clear and promiagd to bring out a tre endous vote by the women on the occasion of thelr first opportunity to exercise the right Ot | suffrage equally with the men. 4 The voters must express thelr pret on four p ions name. whether lqu nail be sold tobe drunk on the premises, whether it sold in bottle and not eam 1 the premises, whether je Md by pharmacists on’, preseription and whether he thirey of the sey Norwich Inelda, Oneoty ta, Ose Port Jervag nawanda atid i Lae 4 Mustard lasts | 2 } longer than | " any other = condiment, And when you ask for Gulden's Mustard you are sure to get the best. |GULDEN'S roux MUSTARD TO USE Nature's own pra- make that sulden flavor, Jw American Stander) Popular Since 1867 JA rr 25€ «/BEAHS: FHUIL HAST SEAS of early beg yards of he ALY Wednesday Specials Ag& New Stile Suits Hundreds in Brilliant Assembly Nineteen West 34th Street Down 1416 We LAE SE Specially Priced $ . An extraordit offering the assortment being speciatly ‘\ augmented by 1 model ~ affording unusual opport t in desable, high eb tailleurs for to-morroy Siricily Toilored 4. é Semi-Tailored 2M, Bolero and Ves tailored —fl 1 Ik linings Men's Wete I'weed T wills, Chee Trecos, J Oxfords 4 Navy. Rookie, Gray, ete 7 No Charge for Alterations Fashion Shops Newark: Broad ~ W. Park \ town:

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