The evening world. Newspaper, September 18, 1918, Page 1

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“ff Ie Happens In New York lé’s.In The Evening World’’ Copyright, 1018, by The Press Co, (rhe New York World), NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 18, 1918. ‘CARDINAL FARLEY’ BODY IN CHAPEL AS GITY MOURNS fiensiljeani j Requiem Mass Said This Morn- ing by Bishop Hayes and Re- "4, peated by Others. FUNERAL NEXT TUESDAY | Prelate Will Be Removed from) Summer Home to St. Pat- rick’s Cathedral To-morrow. | The body of John Cardinal Farley, | Archbishop of the Roman Catholic | Diocese of New York, dressed in the robes of his high ecclesiastic rank, | was placed at 6 o'clock this morning | fm the chapel of the summer home, | ' Green Acres, Orienta Point, whero he | dled at 9.17 o'clock last night, ‘This was the beginning of the cere- monial prorramme of mourning which | -wHl last until next Tuesday morning, Programme in which the highest taries of the church will particl- pate, from Rome to the humblest ‘parish in the New York Diocese, } Tbrough the night there were con- stant prayers for the repose of the | Cardinal's soul, and this morning after the body had been placed in the ‘ chapel Bishop Patrick J. Hayes, chap- Jain of the Catholics in the army and avy, said a requiem mass, which ‘was repeated by Mgr. Joseph F. "¥ Mooney, Mer. Thomas Carroll and ‘the Rev. John H. Farley, nephew of {the dead Cardinal. + Mhe body will rest at the chapel all day, and priests and personal friends of the Cardinal will pray there con- stantly. All services ut Green Acres to-day are to be private. To-morrow the body will be brought to New York to lie in state. Com plete plans for the series of services twill be announced later to-day. ‘The journey to New York will begin about noon. Leaving Orienta Point, the cor- tege will go to Boston Road, through » Larchmont to New Rochelle, thence ‘to Pelham, to Mount Vernon, along Third Avenue to Fifth Street, to White Plains Avenue, through Will- jamsbridge to Gun Hill Road, to the Concourse, to the 149th Street bridge, to 145th Street and Seventh Avenue, along Seventh Avenue to 110th Street, to Fifth Avenue and down to st pPatrick’s Cathedral. Automobiles will @ad the mourners. convey the body The Kuights of St (Continued on Eighth Page.) HOW GITY WILL PAY TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF ITS DEAD GARDINAL ILLOWING is the tentative Programme for the cere- monies incident to the fu- eral of Cardinal Farley: TO.DAY—Cardinal Farley’s body prepared for the last rites and placed in the chapel. WHURSDAY—Automobile cortege from Mamaroneck to St. Pat- rick's Cathedral. Vespers for the dead, body then removed to Cardinal's house. RIDAY—In afternoon body will fe taken back to Cathedral for i clergy’s service for the dead. SATURDAY — Solemn requiem service for children of arch- diocese at 1p A. M. SUNDAY—-Body to lie in state; no special services, MONDAY—Solemn Pontifical ser- vice at 10 A. M,, especially for religious orders of diocese; 4 or 8 P, M, Matins and Lauds to | _ be recited. SUESDAY—The funeral proper f the Cardinal will be held at le WOMAN WHOSE ARREST HERE IN SPY HUNT LED TO CAPTURE OF BROTHER ARREST OF WOMAN “TERE REVEALS SPY -TRAL 10 TO GHICAGO Brother of Wanda ‘Wanda Kruetzinget, Traced by Evening Worid, Is Taken There, |operator in the office of the Postal | Telegraph Company, was arrested re- cently, charged with furnishing Amer- ican military information to Germany, correspondent to question her brother, who was known to live in that city |The interview, as printed in Chicago, started the United Statts Secret Ser- vice men on an investigation of Leo Kreutsinger, the brother. ‘They arrested him yesterday and dug up the flooring of the machine shop and garage he genducted at No. 4877 North Hermitage’ Avenue, Chi- cago. They found there, secretly and carefully wrapped, a bundle of letters, telegrams and other papers that led them to lodge a charge of violation of the Espionage Act against Kreutz- PORT CHESTER HAIR GUT GOSTS NEW YORKER $25 5. sossstamsion nes een et Nema had tended to other members of the | | Kreutzinger family, Leo's son, Syd- ney, a drafted man at Camp Grant, was sent to the Leavenworth prison Couldn't Get Kind He Liked Here, Met Old Friends, Took Some Drinks and Was Arrested. yesterday to serve ten years for re- Tt was an expensive haircut that Dr.|fusing to drill and for saying he George Nelson Dolbeck, 50, of No. 111| would be satisfied should Germany Last Twenty-eighth street, Chester |N, Y., yesterday He wad arraigned before Police Judge Merritt to-day on a charge of public | 5° got In Port | win the war. In the papers brought up from their ret hiding place the officials sought intoxication and disorderly conduct.|a connection between Kreutzinger's Hoe sald he could not find a barber in| recent caustic comments about Amer- New York who could cut his halir to | joa's Allies, his unannounced visits to suit him, so he went to Port Chester, his sister Wanda, a tour of Germany. where he used to live, every two or in 1916 and such connection as she three weeks for “a trim. : : s He met some friends after he left |™ay have had with the German For- the barber shop yesterday, he said, and | clgn Office. drank too much. He was fined $2. Miss Kreutsinger was operating a key used solely for the transmission of Government messages at the time of her arrest. She confessed that she had been acting in behalf of Ger- many and had obtained information regarding important American war movements, It is believed the new developments will reveal further links in the chain of German activities in this country, ‘The Federal agents refused to give detailed information regarding the papers found at Kreutzinger’s place, but no sooner had they finished go- ing through them than they asked United States Commissioner Mason for a bond sufficient to prevent Kreutzinger gaining his liberty, The bond was fixed at $10,000, and Kreutzinger is to have a hearing to- day, The selzed papers, it is said, may destroy Kréutzinger's natural- ization and cause his interment for the duration of the war. He was born in Germany, as was his sister Wanda. Federal agents for some time had been investigating the reasons be- hind Miss Kreutzinger’s resignation from a g00d Chicago position, her trip to Germany and her arrival in New York where a position in a tel- egraph office seemed to bo waiting for her. Kreutzinger has three military service of the and at least one FROM LEPER COLONY Flees to Brothe?’s Home in North Carolina and Says He'll Not Return. John R. Barly, the leper who for three years has been confined in the leper colony in the District of Columbia, has escaped again. He arrived at his brother's home in Tryon, N. C., last night and is now under surveillance there. He says he will resist any efforts to take him back to Washington. arly has been a national character many years. In 1908, when he lived In Washington, D. C,, the Federal Govern- ment declared him a leper. He with his wife and three children left the Capital and tried to find residence in many cities, among them New York, but, though many physicians of high stand- ing declared he was not a lepér, he was everywhere made to “move on.” In 1912 he settled on a ranch near Tacoma, Wash., but was soon confined in @ leper colony on Puget Sound. Two years later he eseaped and turned up at an exclusive hotel in Washington, D. ©, Then he was sent to the District leper colony. BEST BEER AFTER OCT. 1. sons in the United States is reported to be in Hoover Holds Out Some Hope to the France, A son-in-law has been . cine erate | drafted. Ww gett kan Sept 18.—While ——— —_ beer manufacturing stops entirely on Dec, 1, under Presidentiat proctamation, | NO NEW STRAW HAT STYLES, Food ‘Administrator Hoover says that a betwee Oct, 1 and Dec. 1 the best beer| Restrictions On Crown, We and Brim Ordered, WASHINGTON, Sept. 18 ever made in America will be brewed, An order specifies that brewers must cease to use anything other than pure malt and pure barley on the first of the coming month. Mr. Hoover figures tha: the brewers will brew all they can trom these materials during the remaining days and that probably a supply to cover ¢our or five months will be pro- auced, |, Men's Industries Board's latest conservation order. Manufacturers were ordered to- day to introduce no new styler next wea- fon, to turn out no more than enough to meet the estimated demand and to restrict the height of crown, weight, aud triacs. When Miss Wanda Kreutzinger, an} The Evening World wired its Chicago | straw hats are the subject of the War| REDFIELD FAVORS “US. OWNED DEEP SEALEVEL CANALS — Recommends a System From Massachusetts to South Atlantic States, WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—A system of Government owned deep sea level canals extending from Massachusetts to the South Atlantic States is recom- | mended in a report submitted to tho Senate to-day by Secretary Redfield {in response to a resolution adopted last May. Such action would not only be of wide commercial value, but would be of great military value as well, said Secretary Redfield in a letter accom- panying the report. *In the opinion of the Department, the time for ac- tion has como,” he added.” Permanent acquisition by the Fed- eral Government of Cape Cod and the Chesapeake and Delaware Canals and their prompt improvement, as well an the early construction across New Jer- sey of a sea level canal having « minimum depth of twenty-five feet is recommended, The Cape Cod Canal is being operated now by the Railroad Administration. “It has been found,” Secretary Red- field reported, “that the Cape Cod Canal is modern and efficient, and that with a moderate widening and deepening it weuld accommodate practically all the coastwise traffic now going around Cape Cod, Simil- arly, the location of the present Chesapeake and Delaware Canal has been found to be the best suited for the construction of a deep sea level canal, Only in the case of the canal across New Jorsey would an entirely new route be required for the present and prospective needs of the coun- try's commerce “These canals would provide the only connections that are needed to make a practically continuous system of deep intracoastal waterways ex- tending from Boston to Norfolk, with extensions to Beaufort, N. C., and via the New York State Barge Canal to the Great Lakes. This system of waterways would serve the most pop- ulous and highly developed industrial sections of the country and would add what our railroads do not now, and cannot commercially provide, a con- tinuous and efficient through highway ot transportation extending from England to the South At- States, “The direct saving in the cost of transportation would doubtless be greater than the costs of construction and operation and the country would benefit directly or indirectly as a re- sult of the coseqyent reduction in the cost of manufactured goods. The military and naval value of the canals would seem of itself to warrant th expenditure required for their con- struction.” ne DROVE AUTO ON SUNDAY ANO DIDN'T HAVE LIGERSE Man Fined in Brooklyn Was Sar- jing, but was arre at the New York end. of the Willinmabrid:te Bridge. ke cording to Sadlo, he said to Reanick “What are you using #as for to-day? "To hell with gaa. Til use it when | want. 1 will not pay a fine in court |Regnick is said to have replied ——— THE WORLD TRAVEL BURFAU, Arete. Pulituer (World) Rutiding. 48 Park Row, N.Y. City, ‘Teletbone Beskman 4000 Chast roam far Sagmage ond parsie soe tae and uarelien’ castic About the Gasless Order. On charges of disorderly conduct and |* [failing to have an automobile oper ator’s license, Max Reanick, twenty |four years old of No. 17 Johnson Ave nue, Brooklyn, was fined $2) in the Bridge Plaza Court, Brooklyn, to-day He was operating his car Sunday when | Patrolman Frank Sadlo ordered him to stop. Resnick failed to heed the warn BELGIUM SPURNS OFFER OF PEACE. MADE BY GERMANY Decision Reached After Con- sultation With Allies—Pro- posal Sent Through Prince. PARIS, Sept. 18,—Belgium, after consultation with the Allies, has de- cided to reject absolutely Germany's offer of a separate peace, the Petit Parisien announced to-day, AMSTERDAM, Sept. 18.—The Ger- man offer of peace to Belgium, it wag learned. here to-day, was trans- mitted to King Albert through a German prince who is a relative of Queen Elizabeth of Belgium, King Albert immediately transmitted the Proposal to the Allies. The German press, throwing off its first official restraint, is now openly jadmitting that the Austrian peace note was the result of lengthy Aus- tro-German negotiations, | The Budapest correspondent of the Berlin Tageblatt says the step was agreed upon by Baron Burlan, the Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister, jand Admiral von Hintze, the German Foreign Secretary, during the latter's visit to Vienna, The German Centrists bave ex- Pressed dissatisfaction with Chancel- |lor von Heriling necausw they were not informed of the Austrian peace move, following Hertling’s statement that Germany was fully aware of the Move, the Mittage Zeltung declares, Competent German official circi#s declare they have no knowledge of any special peace proposal to Belgium, a Berlin despatch said to- day. ROMB, Sept. 18.—Tha Chancellory had not received ¢the Austrian note to the Pope up to a late hour last night. It was consid- ered possible that the message was sent directly to tha Pope, not pass- ing through the Chancellory, “We hope jife Entente’s answer to Austria will be prompt, precise and effective,” the Corriere della Sera said. “They know whgt is behind jthe action of Vienna, Let them re- |Spond immediately, Delays are too dangerous.” 'U. S. SOON MAY RECOGNIZE AUSTRIAN JUGO-SLAVS WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—Recogni tion of the Jugo-Slavs in Austria will be President Wilson's next thrust at the enemy, according to diplomatic officials here to-day Outright recognition of the indepen dence of more than 6,900,000 Jugo |Siavs in Austria-Hungary will follow the blunt dismissal of the Austrian Vatican Jattempt to entice the Allies into a cret peace conferen Jugo-Slavs Jin the United States, formerly Aus |trlan subjects, have shown their loyalty to the Allie by defeat Jing an alleged trian-Socla coalition which attempted t Croatian Society now meeting in Ch cago, At the re t of Secretary Lansing, officials are at work on * briefs setting forth grounds on which they will ask recognition, Military ald to the Allies as well as political organization toward independence are |the grounds on which the Jugo-Slavs | will present their case In the reorganized Serbian army, which has made advances in Ma @onia this week, are 30,000 Jugo- Slay: formerly Austrian subjects, |NEW AMBASSADOR TO ENGLAND, NAMED TO-DAY BY PRESIDENT LOOKED ODY TSO EVEDDLED deeeeroooos: Sho be-bs Sad WILSON NAMES JOHN W. DAVIS AS ENVOY 10 BRITAIN Solicitor General of U. S. Chosen as Successor to Walter Hines. Page. WASHINGTON, Sept Davis of West Virginia, General of the United States, hes been selected by President Wilson to suc- ceed Walter Hines Page as Ambanaa- dor to Great Britain, 18.—John W. now Solicitor The announcament of Mr. Davis's selection disclosed that he had arrived safely in Switzerland, where he is to head the American delegation at the Berne conferenca between the Ameri- can and German Missions on the treat- ment and exchange of pfisoners of war Since he came to Washington seven years ago as a member of Congress from the Firat Weat Vir ginia District, Mr, Davis has been an active figure in the capital. He was elected to succeed himself in the House, but had hardly begun his second term when President Wilson appointed him Solicitor General in August, 1913 In addition the duties of his office, he acted asx coun sellor of the Amer n Red Cross, to His name hard) had been men |tioned in connection with the Am | base radorwhip, although it way knowr that he had the confidence of the President, and was a close friend of retary Lansing, Col, House and 1 ding, British Ambarsador | the United State Mr. Davin in forty-five years old weminning lite «lawyer in his} home town ef Clarksburg, W. Va.| After graduati ai the Wa | and Lee University and the Ut sity of Virginia becam on nent in Demorratie pot rved n the West Virginia Legislature be fore coming to Congress, and was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention of 19%. ‘The decision of Ambassador Page to resign on account of All health was| @oncunced three weeks ago, U.S.TROOPS HALT ATTACK ON METZ FI RONT; HAIG CIRCLING ST.QUENTIN ON 14-MILE LINE FRENCH GAINING NEAR VERDUN; ____ SMASH ATTACK ABOVE SOISSONS French Advance Is Northeast of Verdun and German Correspon- dents Forecast Great Battle on That Front—Prisoners in Bal- kans Increased to 4,000. WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN LORRAINE, Sept, 18 (Associated Press).—German infantry attempted to attack the American lines west of the Moselle Tuesday evening, but the enemy troops were driven back by the fire of the American ar- tillery. When observers reported that a light line of German infan- trymen was approaching the American big guns threw a terrific barrage into that area. There were no further movements by the enemy. _ Observers reported this morning that there were no living Germans in the region where they were sighted last night. Quite a number of dead were seen. American aviators report that on Tuesday American gunners scored a direct hit on a big German gun in the region of Lachaussee, destroying the gun, Other hits near by destroyed a number of gun emplacements and one shell struck the dugouts where the German gunners had taken cover, German aviation machine gunners and bombers attacked what they supposed to be the American positions in the region to the west of Van- dieres last night. The mist and low clouds prevented the Germans from finding their targets. The Germans themselves were located and driven back by anti-aircraft fire. Owing to the effectiveness of the American and French anti-aircraft fire, a number of the German machines were hit, the observers reported. When last seen the crippled planes were returning hastily to their own lines. FRENCH ALSO REPULSE ATTACKS. PARIS, Sept. 18.—German troops last night launched violent counter attacks against the French positions on the plateau northeast of Sancy, seven miles northeast of Soissons, The French War Office statement issued to-day says that the German attacks were unsuccessful and that the French troops maintained their gains. American forces, striking northeastward along the valley of the Rupt de Mad, in the direction of Gorze and Chambley, have captured a series of important fortified positions, La Liberte announced to-day, (Gorze is seven miles southwest of Metz and a mile within the German frontier, Chambley ts five miles west of Gorze.) At the same time the French, operating in the Woevre, advanced from a mile and a quarter to a mile and three-quarters on a front of more than eleven miles. They reached a line cast of Watronville, Hautecourt, Dieppe and Moranville, it was reported, (Dieppe is six miles northeast of Verdun. Hautecourt is three miles southeast of Dieppe. Moranville is a mile south of Hautecourt. Watronville is three miles south of Moranville.) AMSTERDAM, Sept. 18.—German war correspondents predict that activity soon will be revived on the Verdun front, where a great battle said to be likely. e icentnseaeaant HAIG WITH VETERAN TROOPS STRIKES ABOVE ST. QUENTIN; FRENCH ADVANCE FROM SOUTH Progress Is Made on Both Fronts, Although the Germans, Expecting Attack, Had Been Fortifying Line. BRITISH ARMIES IN FRANCE, Sept. 18 (Associated Press).— Field Marshal Halg's forces this morning attacked the German posi- tions on a considerable front northwest of St. Quentin, Simultaneously French troops carried out an operation on the right. Successful progress was made on both fronts, The attack was begun at 5.20 o'clock after a brief, bombardment. Coupled with the news of the success of the Allied forces in the early Alages of the operations came reports tint haan gts had developed. re bad] . -~ ~ ” }

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