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' "The Germans, he adds, are placing numerous batteries in St. Quentin. A SR en FA AE RT te ce nett a ge tt $I ee tng tt en Nr tiem i aatetalitte 18, 000 TURKS vil bcerres on Tuesday. Their post was in the northern part of the fage and they held it for two days during the German occupation, in flicting losses on the enemy. When the village #0 party rejoined its unit without loss. FIRES SEEN IN ST. QUENTIN. PARIS, Sept. 21.—The Germans appear t> be hastening the removal of the civil population of St. Quentin and fires have been observed in 7 different paris of the city, says Marcel Hutin in the Echo de Parts CARDINAI retaken the entire ee ee eeeene In their drive for the outflanking of St. Quentin on the south, the French last night captured the town of Benay and made progress nor! of that place, says to-day’s War Office announcement At Castres, where the French are but slightly more than two miles from St. Quentin, a German counter-attack was repulsed. The most stubborn fighting seen in weeks is taking place in the regions of Cambrai, St. Quentin and Soissons, where the armies of Gens. Ryng, Rawlinson, Debeney and Mangin are battering against the very gates of Germany. With a desperation bordering on panic Crown Prince Ruprecht, Gen, von Bodhn and the German Crown Prince are throwing troops into the melee with orders to hold or die, retakeor be killed. Field Marshal von Hindenburg realizes the menace to his far-flung fortress, behind which lies the German frontier, and is thus attacking. The wallies are meeting the attacking Prussians in mid-field in some of tie wildest, fiercest, grapples of the war. The Allies are now up against a line of Hindenburg giving the latter a big advantage. 4,439 GERMAN GRAVBS FOUND. In the Lys sector, 4,439 German graves were found in one cemetery.! The earlicsi date was April 17, the latest was Aug. 26, revealing the wear and tear on the German army in the last four months on a small and comparatively quiet portion of the line. The British, in their advance in the north, are finding many populous cemeteries beyond the Hindenburg line. ALLIES REGAIN 10 MORE TOWNS IN ONWARD DRIVE IN BALKANS Advance of Nine Miles Made in One Day— Serbians Only Eight Miles From Strategic Highway, With Prisoners Pouring In. eres vee own choosing, inal is Austria Must as Well LONDON, Sept. 31.—Allied troopm,| Cera we have taken the ele round ear ‘ i duchan offensive, ad-| Godiyak Aviators continuously | | S118 he : . bombed the retreating troops and at the Inte Senator Tillman Vanced nine miles yesterday, occupy-| "eth machine guns |that President Wilson send ing ten villages, according to the Serbian War Office report received here to-day. ‘The Serbian troops are now Jess than eight miles from the main highway connecting the Vardar River. A great number of privoners have peen captured and the Allies have “We have taken a great number of | big prisoners, including a Lieutenant Col onel. Several guns are reported to have been captured, but the numt has not been ascertained owing to the speed of our advance. “The population is welcoming th arrival of our troops with enthusiasm The soldiers of New + been forced to enlist in the Bulgarian Americar ly was rec with much gratification, 1 of all, as terpreted, first growing Interest toward [ty fuller appre Jar situ Ttaly's Caporetta Prilep with bia who had | sympath riea “In the Tonale TTALY WELCOMES AMERICAN TRoOPs | PROPOSAL 10 SEND | AMERICAN ARMY as Germany Allied Help Is Needed. ation of Ialy’s Si : __THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, ¥, SEPTEMBER 21, 191 SOR ARE REPORTED SURROU?/ DED IN ALESTIN E f FARLEY LYING IN STATE AT THE CATHEDRAL LIREDS MASSACRE enfor The t } 1 tak vening Worla by a stat f er | eee errr rerenn ros ose. s) : A a b 3 i 3 pines 22 DO2oe Aer ABROAD NOW PASS | Fa0,000 MARK es eof Fixed WITH THE AMERICANS ON METZ FRONT. ( inned I ) Lancante o. ht vi thr German he —_-> ‘ , | American. tine , the 90th Diviston, kas and Ok i i H ‘ Beaten pene suasncr ating: nd Okie | ip behind him ved, | Will Be Given to All Firms] . He was in the act irrende a mr 76 ", and = | Vos while the ind| when all three handed” him. theie| Showing 75 .Per Cent. of | Oklahoma National Guar guns : 20 » Subscribe Rea HAIR ace eH Nan Sier menos ecu inets Employees Have Subscribed. No commander has yet | they vaid ish =a new d for the 18th ré jon,| From Pont-a-Moussor Jay. it WAS! 21,--Indus ‘ , ro i tals. ou) Bains |e oh iy field glasses to see \trial honor pennants, a new develop- 0 1 Naw fe 114th | traine and trap movements in. Mc to Italy a Er neers, of the 39th Division, A mans can be «cen AUPEARINARIG ment in Liberty Loan campaigning, eived here | National a eer pt and pau outworks and American guns oc- | Will be awarded to all establishments t was in- |landed in France, sdaceed | ey idiocy a nee ng the city which show that seventy-five per | American aviators are constantly hovering over Meta cent. of their employees have sub- uly and PLENTY OF AMMUNITION seers jscrtbed to the Fourth Liberty Loan, part ‘LIEUT, KISSEL KILLED This recognition of patriotism, it his ca FOR U. S, ARMY IN FRANCE, popubar her ; Americans Have Month’s Supply Sectece se THREE GERMANS GIVE UP GUNS TO ONE DOUGHBOY Wanted to Be Capt 1 About to Su Bayonet FLYING OVER FOE’S LINES render in awarding the honor ff fere with t and Sella regions "It is olsar inet the price set for tb —— pepated to ‘The Evening - ear ia not high enou to rT the (Queen ne message LO the bo} aad on ine Pave ita ronnie. [Pita hese felt”; SUCCEEDS GALLINGER, | ou the message (0 the boy ing parties brought back material. Aj wheat nest year,” said the letter Ail — COPENHAGEN Sep 1 The hostile airplane was brought down, | {hat price the farmers jwin Roumanian ¢ nee vas ¢ea SOLDIERS KILLED BY BLAST “In Albania, weat of Teeri, in the| several hundred | Se from Rouma ritory and ar Janica Valley, there were patrol en- _ ~ | WA sived in C wording. to the | Mem Sark in counters in whioh we took prison-| BRITISH MONITOR SUNK, |{"°°:, 4 by Ukrainian Krewskaia |) Vatltoral i Pe ih aoa _MONITOI |r, iran | UREA | hs ANCL Tw ote | ther prepay, Internal Explosion Kills Twenty Nutor — — Oe ene oy eenee I'LL BE ON FIRING LINE SOON’ Injures Pitty-Heven, fe RAT A oH TIME TABLES COMBINED, hited and three oiners were injured, ° — LONDON, Sept 21.—A British mont-| 1 to the vacancy ont nity or! eee OMe Newark Man, tor was sunk in & Narbor Monday mittee caused by Benator Galli | ay " OF wosaurd tne bile “ the result of an internal explosion, the|‘"™" cane Re ah Seana g dar ep ac ER Th “Don't worry, mother; 1 shall be on| Admiralty announced to-d. Tw Noel tice Glas the oie ee © ant * i a, enty Htaly's Shi ding FY i ult several tit The n of mes - tbe Aring line axatn aon," recently | Persons were Killed and AltY-neven are ee eee eR MAton ciieiran | AUMIISGANIGn Gad iosued eons Injured Were WUEbNelde © wy Srrote Corp, Jeave W. Post to his mother, “ppp aah Ice al Lialk naw oak TNieEAln) ibd dime tknarahowINE All inet trate ag . hips, totalling 170,60 ons, are un-|yvania, th tend iT ye al, wn ne rage by mi Fis in named in, to-date casualty lisi| AMSTERDAM. Rept. 21.— A violent ‘Ger’ Cinatructian Most ‘of Ynewe wii | he Mialtimore & Oh‘ 1. mnd oot. a5, 1916, left an estate of $60,525 eel ie northwestern yria was not be comp d this year b | eket be Philadel ph: a aw 04 id +4 Ape army seven yours, now being in the reported in Gempaiches recnived| here Italyis, 1818" construction Wil’ dtl | eee, Peter ogmnuiacetonts, and Hie will Requencns, O50F te bie widow, [Grete be afantry to-day, 126,000 tons, are already interchangeable, of his eight children, mig oa * INDUSTRIAL HONOR ~ PENNANTS IN NEW “sw UBERTY LOAN DRWE was announced to-day, taken Godiyels) west of the Cerna and| Army are throwing away their arma! SCuse and onduct mwer |} and Production Is Going On at Morristown Aviator Shot Down alae exceeding their tas, The fifteen miles southeast of Prijep. The] and passing to our side.” a ee aac aera al Good $ Told Serving With British—Brother- [District will be conducted under: the i c tut ve task did not end @here a aad OW bd a3 . : bse oree URS e statement reads UKrnyovo Is nine miles southwest of| BU the lank avlabaaur eas ative heel pst learn in-Law Also Sla rules preseribed by the Liberty Loan “Our indefatigable troops continued | Domirkapu, the nearest point on the | '*? ™ = orevely teen : ar ‘ auien tox , Tsesitiva Ghimwlites ce the aiecial to advance and have fought north-| Vardan River and the Uskub-Salon- | {TO ! ss the Rave : col nbabloaee | Hdeut. Gustav Kissel of Morristown, “ane & . but that was only a beginning, They | the American army In France were aet|N. J.. was killed in April while flying! The National Loan Organisation ‘ward in one day more than nine miles. |ica Railroad from the advancing Ser- |?" lat reat to-day by War Department ofl: lover the German lines sith the Brien counts strongly on the. plane for| ‘The infantry has passed the line| pian line, Should the raijroad be/ "20" asigalghe dlc ileal - Kl cals, members of the Ate Military | Royal Air Fores, an official eabhearem awarding honor pennants to individ Krnyov0-Btrigovo-DrogoslsPoloshko.| reached here, the Bulgaria@ fighting | Arving the enemy from invaded | Aruing ¢ iitee waid, following their reported to-day. He had been listed as wal business establishments or other ‘The cavalry is north of this line. {the British and Greeks around Lake | PTOYINCe® weekly ference | missir pr t 1 pe A Never has the @pirit of the army nator Chambert t | ‘ganizations to swell the loan total More than ten villages were liber-| Dorian would be cut off from thel: | mberlain presented a Lieut. Kissel was a son of Rudolph and the number of aubscribers, inas- Sr in cae Gay, 16 the Lénd OC Ciel bene of eupglion aud reinforcements.) | "ee" © TED: Never as the contin | tor in which it was reported the Kissel of Kissel, Kinnicutt & Co, W nuch as it will pr ‘ : tion of the country, though hard-|for the three-inch guns were nearly | Street bankers, He enlisted in the Brit Se Rec idle ag tried by all possible sacrifices, suf-|¢Xhauated, while no adequate supply |ish forces early in the war winia pial units than entire com- fering and privations, been so strong or New, |, Hist brother-in-law, Major James E Nise LATEST OFFICIAL REPORTS. and unanimous | seat | Miller, was killed jast March while serv Stores, factories or organizations Yet one must not forget two things union, |ing in the American flying service, Will be given cardboard emblems for First, that of all the A now fight neh | Rudolph Kiskel Jr, is an ensign in the| Window display when per cent. or : inst, that of all the es Now fights) ay | Naval Reserves hore of thelr emola: FRENCH. BRITISH. ng the Italians are the weake a hiptiey ee eee tate crm, OF SHembaee : —- | subscribe, and this will be exchanged PARIS, Sept. 21.—Following is tho] LONDON, Sept. 21.—The following ond, that they are faced by @ still t uch ‘more | c j ends ie for a pennant after the campaign ts report issued to-day by the French | statement was issued to-day by tho|¥ery powerful and |finished and the final percentage ia fer Ortio Was Gttige: \ seh) aided ita nascar URS OL BELt SHORTAGE | SOLDIERS’ CHRISTMAS GIFTS | “ts anewe usily understand — the ce ; “During the night French troops| “Yesterday afternoon fresh attacks Jontoy crocecs will ba fe big ws pes In answer to queries from flag captured Benay and made progress | Moouvres were repulsed. In the eve-| support from the Allies. But as the] iE Laat, All Packages for Army in France) ty orig pps aides . | | q the originator's design for the honor north of that village. A counter-at-|ning the enemy heavily bombarded sriieh and Fronch are kept buay on! Baruch Shows by Figures the im- | Must Be Mailed by pennant has been assigned to the Sec- hek by the enemy upca Castres was| cur positions in the welenborhood of|th® Wester frunt, to whom should] Ci Neat oF reve Nov. 15, retary of the Treasury and conse- repulsed. l@anshe Wood) Under cover of thse. er Roy ee. Ainevionns ay ret DRE OU IG le cer NGRON, RAGE TELE |quently the pennants may be made whose armies are big, fresh an¢ the , x aT Sept. 21.—Christmas | y fal or “There was activity by our own and|pmbardment they succeeded fn presa-|avatable tor all purposes? ne All Other Builting peas fOh the. 9880,000 Or moral he ee cee orien the enemy's artillery in the region of pos ‘ WASHINGTON, Sept. 21.—A shortage |.Anerican soldiers who will be in France HY ye i back slight one o pl dlvance i ie 801 taal: eloome: td Ls seeped Be cts cute ce the aloes ing ba a ehtly one of our advanced) ‘This la Maly weleomes| of 4,000,000 tons in steel nneded by tue (ring the holiday weaaon thin year, wil LUMBER WORK ESSENTIAL. Rye rer geting pte by the | Past#. North of the wood, through. | the suxgestion the Senator] United States and Alles war be delivered unsab cntarranmaant with bE a _ hatena nadie sone ~~ tee the Blah, German infantry made | Tilo it work was d ed day by a the Red Cross, announeed today by ina | Necessary Kmployes te fe Freed en court and Ancervillers (northeast or| repeated determined attempts with | whiy ved by President Wilson] to the Sena vB Baruch, Chair-|War Department. All packa must or trial Ge Te cvillcs, were without reauil® flammenwerfers and bombs (o drive|and the American people nan of the War, Inu Bi el Nh aa el la RE, WASHINGTON, Sept 2——The Pi | f in our pasitions in this locality. All| Sine © Proaident has plec hig] Baruch was replying to the Calder! In order to control th 1 of ites] OT ties Commissioner of the War In attacks were repulsed after hard) country to free branches of the] Tesetution, asking for what reanon the lthat otherwise would 1 ike the hand-|uatries Board has addresned a cir AMERICAN. fantine country to tree aii ranches of thelpan on building, except for war perl {ine of thom imere athe and: | Cuter letter to labor advisers. af th WASHINGTON, Sept. 21—Gen.| “During the night our lino was ad articulncty; “he haa recognined| ate hatin necaraat ye {MONE NAW deotded that one parcel will {iinber snguatry and District Bxamp- Pershing’s report, given out last night, | Yanced slightly northwest of Bellen-|the National Crecho-sloval Dun t ix Unitec | peepted for each ma Gen, Pershing | exemption on industrial grounds in eaye: |qlise, This morning fighting recom-|he is logically bound to fight Austria] {NM Allies needed 21.000 at |i forward apons ng the name |SHX Work should be Kranted to neces , Renewed attempts of the enemy jme noed east of Bpeby jand infowee his policy by the sword by ha addr f each mom of the ex-] Lumber firms will be ranked on the to raid our lines at four points in © improved our positions] , President Wilson said rlahtly in his] | jt conser neditionary force, to be distributed to] breterence Hat according to the the Woevre and in the Voages | Slightly last night west of Messines,| June 14 th ay Victory | Hal to war work s Liat kal ateanal supply the vernment were repulsed, capturing a German strong point, with | will peace Jeved. But it must be |, COnRUMPLtION of 20,000,000 tons af coa 4 by 3 ine Leespagyees.. ache ‘Aside from artillery activity in | #everal prisoners. Some progress waa| 4 victory over Austria ns well as Ger- [ty ey of 2s per cent tamne ii ME betlon HAVRE DE GRACE ENTRIES. the Woevre and in Alsace, there | #180 made southeast of Ypres.” j many Mana gpa «such mm % iste dy fe nothing to report. [gaye Cee Theme Mahe BAPE . TRACK HAVRE DE GRAC ae. DESIRE HIGHER WHEAT CAPTURED BAKU ON FIRE. |"'% aecinrca tie nutnority to jane tno MUCTOR RATNER, COME HOME’) hes cuitien tov hon ITALIAN. Pea rere einer t ead selnais Casnian | Yee Father Sends Message to I Who e oun Aske ie has — ROME, Sept. 21—Looal fighting on cauiadan Meine a hen City Vaken by Turks, - Left After school Patlare, the Italian and Ibanian fronts was! WASHINGTON, Sept er uoting | AMSTHRDAM, Sept. 21 plosion Wey: CROWN PRINCE Vietor Ratner:—Come home, Your Baisee. | reported by the Italian War Office| Department of Agriculture figures on |* wap mother Ie il Wecauae of your absence | “In the Ledro Valley an enemy ob-| Growers’ Assvclation to-day wre ; he forexolrs message is from Vic ing dead and prisoners in our hands,” r his decision fixing the price of is iF; Follows Report of Outbreak | years old and ron away fro} me be- es # wheat at the same price 4% last you! ; F x wuse he falled to pass exa the statement said 230 a bushel. r | Against Germans Led #y the Clinton High Scho RACE will not inter- plan heretofore of 8 to all com- | sian Duma and the Russian Imperial AMERICAN CITIZENS AT GERMAN ORDERS Petrograd Scene of nase nate Slaughter of Allied Na- tionals by Bolsheviki. | LONDON, A number of Sept. 21. Americans were among the slain in ® will be performed. wholesale re of foreign resl- dents of Petrograd, according to re- | ports to-day from Stockholm, which say the rabble attacked the dwellings ma: of foreign residents, burning, looting and killing, a | Russia has absolute anarchy,” ac- gording to a British clyil engineer, | who is among 450 fugitives who suc- ceeded in getting to Christiania from loscow and the Russian Interior. The most vicious elements of the Rolsheviki, encouraged and aided by German agents, organized a series of meetings in Petrograd last Saturday, according to refugees. ‘The infuriated masses were in- lelted by demands that war be de- clared against the Allies, and that | soldiers be sent to the Murman coast to fight the advance of Allied for Particular hatred was shown toward | Americans in the orgy of murder | and arson that followed. ! No Americans are reported among the 450 fugitives in Christinia. or | them 380 are Italians and the ethers | French and British, These refugees say the British are particularly hated by the Bolshevik! in Moscow and the | interior, It is belleved the detention of all the British between eighteqm and forty-five means their wholesale’ ex- | ecution, by the Bolsheviki, The Ger- | mans, fugitives report, go anywhere unmolested. AMSTERDAM, Sept. 21.—At a re- cent meeting of members of the Rus- Council at Kiev it was resolved, saya| a telegram from that city, to appeal to the public opinion of Europe and all Governments to put an end to “the Bolshevist terror.” The Ukrainian Couneil, the de- spatch adds, will protest to all coun- tries against the arrest and shooting of Ukrainian subjects, The Ukrainian Government also has decided to ask Germany to undertake the protection | of Ukrainian Russia. The recent Bolshevik defeat on the northern front is attributed to a mutiny of Lettish regiments, accord- ing to a Petrograd telegram to the| North German Gazette of Essen. The| telegram says the Letts, who hitherto have been faithful allies of the Soviet | Government, refused to fight against the British. — LITTLE ODDS IF SPAIN | FIGHTS US, SAYS BERLI Germany Refuses Spain’s Proposal to Replace Torpedoed Ships With Interned Vessels. LONDON, Sept. flatly rejected Spain’ fiscation of interned 21.—Germany has proposal tor con-| German ships to} torpedoed Sp: vessels, ac-| cording to the San Sebastian correspon- lent of the Times. The correspondent reported that the erman ambassador, in a conversation, We will never consent to allow our ships to be taken. After all, if tne} worst happens, and another country is agains us, it’ makes little difference. ‘The Courlere d'italia of Rome pub-| lishes an interview with Don Gabriel Palmer, King Alfonso’s chaplain, in which he is quoted as saying Spanish cabinet has fully de- ermined on @ course of action, In which | they Will insist on our rights. Spain! desires to remain neutral, but is afraid | at no country RETIREMENT OF GAPELLE | BY BERLIN IS CONFIRMED Behncke, Said to Be Against Ruth-| less Warfare, Now Acting Head | of German Navy. AMSTERDAM, Sept. 21— Reporte | that Vice Admiral von Capelle, Min- iste: of the German Navy, has been | retired seem to be confirmed by tele- | grams from Berlin announcing that Vice Admiral Behncke has ‘been ire) Hos: | 16. ave o ‘oneelation i ipwant: one mle Bs | A Clalthing 1a quarter ~ 7 Greet ines vou 0; Kginont,” 107 ¢ claimed Dal Rose Weather clear, appointed to represent Admiral von , who is on leave. Tageblatt of Berlin decalls | that Admiral Bebneke, when Deputy Chief of the Admiralty Staff, told the American Naval Attache at ° lin that, although the Staff was con- vinced the employment of U boats would greatly influence the rapid conclusion of peace, regard must be paid neutral ships and buman life aboard all mercant vessels, | whether under neutral or enemy | flags. He is quoted as having sald that the German Admiralty Staff did not jwish to employ submarines in de- | fiance of Internatio pA AIRCRAFT REQUEST PARED. House Committer F' in ‘Two WASHINGTON How Appropriat Sept 21 ms Committee t day made the first eut in the $7,000, 000,000 war deficiency estimate wh it pared the '$177,000,000 aircraft st $1,000,000 Thig 14 not a denial of funds, Chair man Sherley explained, but Was due the fact that the #ame item was found in both the air and quarter master estimates, |dinal Farley might be removed from | metal | dinal | ‘bishopric, ‘SCHOOL CHILDREN PAY TRBUTE. AT BIER OF CARDINAL Am (Continued from Firgt Page.) body. ‘To-night and Monday night * there will be vespers, as there was Jast night, and Monday rning there will be a mass for the members of the various religious orders of the’ ~ city and its environs. To-morrow the regular services of the church though, of course, there will be added prayers for the repose of the Cardinal Yesterday afternoon, in a downpour cf rein, the body was conducted from the Archiepiscopal desidence at 50th Street and Madison Avenue to the front door of the Cathedral and thence up the middle ai: tar, PRAYERS FOR THE DEAD AND THE ROSARY RECITED. Three acolytes, the centre one bearing a gold cross and the other two lighted candies, headed the pro.» cession, Behind them marched 2 to the al- ocker altar boys in black cassocks aud wite surplices. Next came the Monsignori of the Archdiocese in their purplish-red robe & ingle priest=just ahead of tho metal coffin rying the gold cro- sier, or shepherd's crook, which was the insignia of office of Cardinal Fare ley as Archbishop of New York. The and Gnally Fev. Bather George J. Waring bose the crozier As the body entered the portal of* the Cathedral it was blessed by Mgr. Lavelle. The other Monsignori who! © took part in the procession were the Right Revs. Carroll, Mooney, Dunn, Chidwick, Edwards and Kenny. With them was Bishop Hayes, who had as aids Father Joseph P, Dineen, Chap. lain Major of the 69th Infantry, and Father William Hughes, also an army aplain, While the coffin was being carried slowly up the centre chanted dead, in Latin, Then the Rev, Ber- nard J. McQuade took the pulpit and led the recitation of the rosary, in English. This was an extremely im- pressive ceremony, Father MoQuade chanted the “Hail, Mary," and the congregation, which filled the Ca- thedral to the doors and included hundreds of soldiers and sailors in‘ uniform, responded with the “Holy! Mary” part of the prayer. At the! conclusion of the rosary, Father Me- Quade offered the prayers for the dead and the congregation voiced the responses, again in English, For @ brief time then the Cathedral ‘was emptied, so that the body of Car-) choir the praye the coffin and placed upon the cata- falque. As this was done the Angelus was rung. ALL SCHOOL FLAGS AT HALF MAST TUESDAY. In the coffin of the Cardinal, before it is placed in the crypt of the chureh ‘ jnext Tuesday morning, will be laid a | parchment inctosed {na silver tube, giving a brief history of his career as a churchman and American. There also will be a tablet placed upon the coffin, this having been pre- sented yesterday by Tiffany's and Ul |cepted by the Monsignori of the Arch- ‘diocese, setting forth Car- wis the fourth Archbishop of New York, held that office between 1902 and 1918, and giving the date of his death and entombment To-day again the previous days since the demise of the Car- dinal, many tributes were paid to him by individuals and organizations in this city. One of the movt {mportan: was by the Board of Education, whieh voted to bave the flags of ull public schols placed at half mast Tuesday. , The board also voted a resolution stating that “the death of Cardinal: Archbishop Farley has removed from ( our civic life a man whose love for fellow, zeal for righteousness, devo- tion to the welfare of our city and sterling patriotism made bim ea. teemed by the citizens of all creeds and nationalities Hayes and 4 ead Iked of as f Arena Appolntinent of a successor to Car- |dinal Farley Arghbishop of New York, the world's greatest Catholic diocese, is regarded in ecclesiastical |cirete one of the most problems awaiting Persons in close olic affairs sp Hayes as one chosen for important uetion at Roma touch with Cath~ eak of Auxiliary Bishop prelate who might be elevation to the Arch- un the Pope and’ bis advisors should decide to bring back to the metropolis Archbishop Munde- lein. of Chicag ner Auxiliary Bishop of Brooklyn. Both men, it 1s pointed ot ossess the youth and vigor said in Rome to be essential, Bishop Hayes is only fifty Well informed Catholics do not look for the appointment of another American Cardinal at this time. —_—— ee OIeo. PARLEY, JOHN CARDEN AL, ndned al Ansa deed to. be «fu y wil with he WOT aoe THOMAS HO KE LY JELD.-EDITH BLASHPTE 4 at CAMPRELL PUB CHURCH Broadway, 66th st wey wg \goutn MRT MRS ett wedibn Satta “Uymodsina of Paletion ALL AME WEL ot me Wen