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_ WAME AMBASSADOR SOON. TD President Considering Many tor London Post. WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—President ‘Wilson is looking for a man of great bility to succeed Walter Hines Pago 8 Ambassador to Great Britain, He @esires « statesman of culture, learning and keen business sense. A business man of high character is sought Among those considered are Chief J tice White, Secretary Houston, Charie: BR. Crane and Henry P. Davison. Chief Justice White ts being urged by those who think that he is most fit for the important work to be done, The only objection advanced against him is that he is not a man of wealth. An announcement from the White House on this subject is looked for in the near future. Lane Bryant h 3-—Scientificall, nate alterations, teration, as our sizes are Made of All Wool Velour | Cheviot y, kb Oxford gra i tan, belted model, the other is | Sizes up are Very warm and ser-| Ha rae Value 835. Skirts, $5.50 to $9.95. 219, 221, 223, 225, 227 Grand Street Cor, Driggs Av: y fine patterns,” Very reasonable AM periods and all wices You can THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1918," ALL CITY MOURNS CARDINAL FARLEY | the short comings of others, but in- | sistent upon the rights of his church HIS LOYAL WORK FOR NATION IN WAR CLIMAX OF CAREER ness of View Marked Ac tivities in Church and Civic Affairs for 48 Years. the greatest the United States in this crisis, simply | s of his influence beyond the borders of America, volce wes one in the councils of swerving allegiance to. the Govern- American and alive to the issues of were matters of church or s# recognition of » America by the heads of » was a digni- , cultured gentleman, keen in ob- the Catholic 6 ol rel bro i the oburch abr or for winning the war, He hoped al-! ways for peace, but not for peace at | any price, He said in this regard arbitration and diplomacy. It seems, can be hoped for except through defeat of German arms in the fi Women Who Are Satished With Nothing But the Best in style and quality, but at the same time desire to economize should shop at selves, Criticism of he Government of treason.” Sominary, Troy, and later at the American College, Rome. It was in OWER STOR [A BARGAIN BASEMENT] Here you will always find merchandise of pallty marked q dained a priest in June, 1870. standard qu at G INE BARGAIN How We Do It Lowest rent, being on a side street and basement floor. facturing and designing proportioned sizes climi- 4—Casn sales and no approvals. New Fall and Winter Fashions The garments being shown here now are smart, tiful. Newest materials. Newest trimming. lish and beau- I popular colors. Sizes 36 to 56 Bust We fit all figures, short or tall, practically without al- ntifically proportioned. Bargains for To-morrows Coats, 24: vie ar Bad Two very smart aegles| Fine quality |braces Manhattan, the ‘Bronx and| Patrick | Dresses, All Wool French . One tailored model trimmed with and All Wool Gabardine. | With black velvet. ally — designed graceful long lines, black and navy One is.a | beeo sto ytout figures ‘ joth are special igned to become full Black and navy. straight hanging. Both) Navy, black or Oxford viceable Novelty "in- Value Lower store, 4-75 | 435. Lower price... {Store price |in learning and catering to the needs jof the polyglot nationalities in the iain $1.25 to $8.50. The material for these garments was bought before the present high prices were in effect. why we can sell them at such low prices 23 W. 38th St. Lane aut 23 W. 38th St. any months ago ‘hat is one reason |Farley found time to write the life jot Cardinal M loskey and also to Brooklyn’s Biggest Credit House 168 and 170 Smith Street Cor. Wyckoff St. ‘|§100 WORTH OF FURNITURE, $1 WEEKLY Bring This Advertisement With You and Get Your TEN Per Cent iscount Off Your dit Purchase When Opening a New Account Clothing tor Your Whole penty on Easy Terms gy Library Tables {appointment as Cardinal by Pope * | Plus X. and was invested with the |AVenue, where it will lie until Friday on Nov, 28 of that year, On|afternoon, It will then be taken back | Will then adjourn to the late to the Cathedral and a service for | Hal's resid: clergy will be held opened and read Saturday at 10 A, M. there will be} With the BROOKLYN | 500 Weekly Mattresses |Fine € tion Wk ude tA sbee Face ty sera, od New York Cardinal Who Died After a Prolonged Illness and the people for whom it stood But when this country declared itself into the war, Cardinal Farley was one of the first to declare the church subservant to country. A tholle, he said, coukg not be other than a good American. “It waa on the eve of the Knights of Columbus drive early this year to provide funds for the war activities of the organization that the head of the church in New York declared himself. He welcomed @ii religious denominations In the par tieipation of the drive for, he said, | the activities of the Knights were to| know no creed or class; they were to help Jew and Gentile, Protestant, Catholic or Chinese, He said at the time: “The Catholic Church has put all the power of its great organization at the service of because we Catholics are citizens of the United States, No man can be a good Catholic and be lax in his obe. dience to the civil authoritic As Catholics in America we owe un- ment of America, and it is our sacred @uty to answer with alacrity every mand our country makes upon our loyalty and devotion.” In every Red Cross drive and tho’ for ‘the Liberty Loan he tnvoked the aid of the priests and their parishion- ers, and higeself subscribed to funds and loans, He indorsed the work of the Y. M. C. A., the ¥, W. C. A,, the Hebrew Welfare—every movement which had for Its object the better- ing of the lot of our boys “over ther “I would that peace could come by | however, that no permanent pe the repudiation of the Prussian a racy by the German people them- irritates me. I consider it little short The dead prelate was seventy-six years old and had been in this coun try since he was eighteen years old | He was born in Newtown-Hamilton, County Armagh, Ireland, on April 1842. He was educated at MeMarten’s College, Monaghan; St, John's Col lege, Fordham, N. Y.; St. Joseph's] the historic Church of St, John , Lateran in Rome that he was or- © +9 rarevinv. Returning immediately to this country, he was made an assistant rector at St, Peter's Church, New| ’ Brighton, 8. 1, For two years he re- mained there, popular with people of all clases, and especially with the youth. He organized a body of cadets in connection with the church and the organization flourished. His work , attracted the attention of Cardinal McCloskey, who made him his secre- ’ tury in 1872. He hold that position for twelve years, but while acquiriity a knowledge of ecclesiastical states- work, In his capacity as rector for many years of the Church of St. Gabriel he came in dally contact with|Gregory and the Cardinal's Com- the Roman Catholics, an experience | joc, a which wag invaluable to him in after|Moner A deté years, Regiment Armory will be the military Father Farley was made a Mon-| escort Rignor in 1884, Seven years later he “The end came Was appointed Vioar General of the beautifull Archdiocese of New York, which em- ty cefully ght pes aid the Richmond Boroughs. and the Coun-|of the dioces ties of Dutchess, Orange, Put Cardina uilivan, Ulster and Westcheste ty the Bahama Islands. In 1492 he was] Dad s¢ | created a Domestic Prelate to the} afternoon and each left him weaker, Pope and made Prothonotary Apos-| Several times we felt certain the end | can ¢ tolic threo years later. In 1895 he was|had come, but he rallied, We were | One consecrated an Auxiliary Bishop with 7 the title of Zeugma, and in 1902 he succeeded Archbishop Corrikan Archdloceso of New York, with 1 covery.” Aves: in, announcing the] jor th m *'The Cardinal ha prepared, bec 000 Catholics and 1,260 priests in his] MESSAGE FROM POPE CHEERED) Priests from this dio Jurisdiction, Two years later he was throne. The Cardinal had be: One of the first things His Grace| his last illness by m College, at Gist Street and Madison Avenue, where young men «ight ; study for the priesthood, apart from | 84s had been sent to the Vatican in- other s#tudenta in Catholic institu-| forming the Pope that the sacrament | located dir jon had been ad-|tar, Prof. J. ministered. They were read to Car-|charge of the singing of thg mass. diocese, but like the big, broad man |4inal Farley during a period of con-| Directly after the solemn Pontifical | and he rallied ana | ™ass the Cathedral will sage of thanks be |and the sent to the Pope. metallic dinal’s death Jast night| Priests, prelates, Bishops and Arch- Cardinals Gibbons O'Connell of Boston, | tions, He had a big task before him] of the extreme unc that he was, he accepted the task | sclousness Monday And finished it. Between‘ 1900 and| directed that a me 1910 the city churches were increased from 111 to 147, the chapels from 154 to 193, the priests from 676 to 929, The Ca In addition, His Grace had seen the |came so quietly that not even Mgr, | Pishops, _ Hayes and others at his beside were | Baltimore ans, who | Will march |liquidation of the debt on St Pet. | had been trying to cause his heart tojonce. After this ceremony the body placed in the crypt |the last dollar of indebtedness, the | away. The dodies now lying in the sacred, ‘number of homes, asy nd re- formatories multiply, en, one of} hiv greatest achievenents was the| aware of it until the physic rick's Cathedral, On the ment of | Pally, informed them he had passed | will be fapratate’ carmen wih most) ane death certificate filed at Ma-| Crypt standing his busy career, Archbishop |™Maroneck to-day gave the causes of| Hughes, as chronic myocarditis and publish a work on the taxation of| I thrombosta chureh property. of) When the nal’s body arrives While he was Arohbishop, he visl- ;@t the Cathedral there will be vei ted his old home in County Armagh | pi as the guest of Cardinal Logue, On| Oct, 31, 1911, he received news of his | | cerebr » the Cardinal's | t and Madison | “W4y sealed, then be taken House, 60th Str on, in accordance with took titular possession of one of churches of Rome. Hi church wag the Sancta Maria Sop | Minerva, from which came the firs |Catholle Bishop of New York he home of the Cardinal was th larehiepiscopal mansion {n Madison | Avenue Ttis life was @ busy and) Sun simple one, He owned no fine equi- |and the page. He walked mostly, But he was Mar. Jo }a solmen requiem service attended by the children of the city and dlo- cose the body will He in state, |* ¢ will be no special » diocese of the vices, a charming homt and has entertained | Monday at 10 A. M. ther will be a | street ne many distinguish personages in |S0lemn pontifical service, at which a | iy seventy y @nd out of the church, ‘Bishop of the Province will oMfeciate,/of prothonotory \Va sous 1k attacks all classes, regardless of| Haarlem Oil Capsules diately, The Age, sex oF conditions, A majority of the| soothing, healing oll stimulates the kid People to-day can Lo traced |noys, relieves inflammation 6 atroys cack the kidney trouble, the ma which have caused tt Do no The kidneys are the most Important or-| walt untl to-morrow, Go to your drugeist | Chan ter Vicars body, They he filterers,|to-day and in » his eupplying you! J, Dunn blood. If the poisons! with a box GOLD MEDAL Haarlem! Mgrs, Ja the tinmues by ele In twenty-four houra yo 1 pinated through the hid- | shi ealth and vigor returning and | \ oP, - one form or another will| will bless the day you first beard of GOLD | Drs. Dorning, MeParlan and Fabne- ock, ‘@ victim | MEDAL Hnariem O11 \s usually indi After ¥ I that you hi difficulty when uri 8, pain in loins and | tion and ard off the danger of other these derangements are mature’s al bre tnwe o warm you that Kidneys weed! funded ic thoy dy oat be ) bedside were his sister-in-law, Mrs. ‘ ward Farley; his nieces, Mrs.|than ever } Man spy activities are expected from | | bomb plotter, who is now in the Lud- low Street JaJil awaiting transportation wr the Atianta peniemcary. wvere | “The Secret of its coaity is the su of the leaf which yields so generously in the tea-pot. And, then, it’s always alike and go deligigus! Japprehended by United States Secret | reporters. Mr. ,De Woody refused to permit this. Fe ee manship he found time for parish (Continued from First Page.) ‘This mass will be expressly for the ar eaeaaaees religious orders of the diocese, | Monday at 4 or § P the needs of the poorer classes of} mittee of Laymen will be a guard of | P® Announced shment from the 69th | ds of the Office of the Dead will |be recited, Tuesday and | Proper will take | will be placed in the the funeral place, and the body vault under the Hayes, auxiliary Bishop | Cathedral ceremony the red hat signity- ‘a\ing the rank of a Cardin ‘al sinking spells during the | ung above the altar, r ardinal McCloskey, the first Ameri- whom Cardinal Farley served use the physicians had| The solemn pontifical mass on Tues- told us there was no hope for re-| day will 1,000 or more ese, there will ; be many outside Bishops and Arch- Made assistant at the Pontifical] CARDINAL IN LAST Mehdi a | bishops a the other two American | ges from | Cardinals present. did was to establish the Cathedral] pope Benedict XV. tWo of which| One hundred and fifty men's and were received after an official mes- | boys’ voices will compose the cholr, | which in this particular case will be ctly back of the high al-| Ungerer will have placed in a} A procession of} | Archbishop Corrigan was the last to be laid away, having died in 1902, A Bishop wiil be appointed to give olution for the late Card al, after which the body will be laid hermetically | The high Catholic s for the dead, and the body will | the final abs his will will be | death of Cardinal Farley, | . Mooney automatically administrator diocese of New York becomes and is pastor an. Cardinal Farley's official fam IT’S NOT YOUR HEART; Sea suttered a relapse | He had gone to his kened ammer home in a IT’S YOUR KIDNEYS) 1223550068 ious his seventy ently was on when his heart failed him Kidney disease ie no respecter of per. (help. You should use GOLD MEDAL! ‘Those who went to the bedside yes- y were six years he to recovery Archdiocese Consumers ean and James 204. the two sisters of charity who ve cured your-; Were nurses and Bishop Hayes and weariness eas, nervous |self, continue to take one or two capsules| Mgr. Carroll were at the bedside at apondensy, stomach each day, 60 as to keep in first claes condi-|the moment of death. Mgr. Carroll bad been in constant attendance. isp] Cardinal Farley had, been uncon ong. Spiemnel imperies, Goin, threa hours when he died. Charles Custer and Mrs, Catherine McGuire, and his nephew, Father John Farley, a Jesu Robert Fay, former German officer anit | will finish his eight year term of im- prisonment. | Fay was convicted in 1915 of plotting to biow up allied ships at sea by plac- ing bombs in their holds, He escaped from Atlanta to Mexico and then to Spain, After a two year search he was Service agents and brought back t New York aboard an American cruiser. Me was questioned by Division Super: intendent De Woody, of the Department of Justice. What he disclosed has not been made putdlic. “It seems like old times,” eaid Fay as he entered De Woody's office, and he seemed willing to talk at lengt! ee NEW CABLE CENSORSHIP. WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—The Fed eral Censorship Board to-day announced the following rulings concerning cable messages: H “On and after Oct. 1, 1918, no con- firmation of @ cablegram shall be lowed to leave the Unit ates, its| territories »ssessions unless it be in plain langu In and after Nov. 1, 1918, on of a cable ter the no con d that code confirma- | tions will not be passed by postal cen- | sorship even when purporta to be or actually is @ transla- tion thereof.” Free Catalog COMRADE CLUB IS OPENED. | . Girls and Sailors. Soldiers and sailors visitini New York have tioned in inrade Club at Kast teered and will act as ‘ FAY IS EXPECTED 10 BARE "<cfset GERMAN SPY ACTIVITIES a u Authorities. Hope Bomb Plotter, Captured in’ Spain After Escape, | Will Tell of Conspiracies. Important disclosures concerning Ger seventh of thi Shoes A Broader Variety of Fall Styles will be dif and complete a stock as we carry ahead buying, which in these times also me Men’s shoes from $5.50 to $12 Women’s boots from $6 to $12 Women’s low shoes from $4 to $8 Children’s shoes, $3 to $7 All of the substantial Alexander quality. || Sixth Avenue at 19th St. ult to find, demands far- — Don’t Just Admire These Pretty Pictures Let your curiosity take you two blocks below 34th Street and see if you can’t save at least $5 on your new suit or dress. We now occupy the whole building at 307 Fifth Avenue— A direct indorsement of our claim to save you at least $ Thousands of garments in stock, Over 100 different stylesin Serge Dresses alone. newest HAMILTON GARMENT CO, bet Sse 307 FIFTH AVENUE Bet. 31st and 324 Streets ~NEW YORK