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WILSON Geavor to win him over to the League of Nations plan WILL APPEAL TO GOVERNORS AND LABOR. At the session of Governors and labor leaders, summoned by Bec tary of Labor Wilson’ to meet in Washington M 3 and 4, to con sider the serious Jabor situation brought about by readjustment of business after th» war, the Presideat may speak on March 8, dealing p cullarly with the League of Nations from an industrial standpoint There is a possibility that the President may algo address the Na- tional Press Club here sume day this week, but that Is problematical Tae President is willing to fight for the League of Nations, and should ne faii te win the opposing Senators to bis viewpuint, he Intends to go ov their heads and appeal directly to the people of their States for thelr sup port, which he believes be will win. HUGHES MAY SUPPORT LEAGUE OF NATIONS. Charles Evans Hughes, a former Republican candidate for the Pres dency, expected to join former President Taft in domanding Repul ean support for the League. Will- iam R. Wilcox, who managed Hughes’ campaign, has already no- tified the White House that he, per- sonally, favors the League. Theadore E. Burton, ex+Republican Senator from Ohio and President of the League of Nations Union, has wired the President his belief the League plan will win. Senators Borah, Reef and Thomas ire scheduled to make their arguments in opposition to the league in New York on March 6 and various Cabinet Members and Senators and Represen- etatives will cover the country in ad- “vocacy of the pian, so that by the time the League of Nations is embodied in the Peace Treaty, ready for sub- mission to the Senate for ratification, everything for and against wil! be perfectly familiar to the people of America. On their verdict the Presl- dent is satisOed to let the fate of the League of Nations depend. He feels that the response will be so conslusive that the Senate cannot stand up against it, regardless of present senti- | . ments. ' a KING AND QUEEN ENTERTAIN | | | 5 i FOR PRINCESS PATRICIA says the Times, “that the pre | and Long Island—Clearing ' peerage roar ppt Lace AS Ae | i Yards at Hackensack. ' Many Additional Wedding Gifts| united forces of the civilized world.” DIVINITY ‘STUDENT | j many Add at , PARIN Yo. The Keke attilee | — ——— ght tunnels linking up Manhat- Exhibited + at Party in of the-tinited States ate ntite ab Gur | the Drocene. ste, succeed the Rev cre, amma tan, New Jersey and Long Island and St. James's Palace. business," doclared the Temps, in| Gral College was opened: made nim | (Continued from Finst Page.» @ joint railroad yard on the Hacken- © LONDON, Feb. 26.—King George ofa Mscussing President Wilson's Boston | ity first President, In vhese two c- sack Adeadows for All (be 16kds Ihut . <j “ * address, | pacition, Mgr. Hayes won the deep af- . pirat : ' a rd ele a hole aris! “We will not try to know If the| fection ‘of every ane with yom, he than 1,000 of eet Be Hit BATHE aE Leen Tork were, unwed (o-day , nt tl ok ne! came in contact. He was called “the; to tell you that the 27th did not get 1" , Oy t approaching marriage of Princess campaign in the United States against! fittle Chancellor,” and knew. every | one Fepinebeaahe fowl (he (ime It by Theodore P. Shonis, President of Patricia of Connaught and Commander the League of Nations is really aimed] one of the more than 1.300 priests of the Interboroagh Rapid Transit Com- | | : went into action in that fight until Alexander R, M. Ramsey, R. N. As against the covenant, or if it is only) the diocese by name, we returned on Nov. 1 to our reat PAny, as a means of doveloping port their Majesties were in mourning for! the pretext for a fight between politi- | FARLEY TELLS HOW HAYES BE-| *° Hobe r Meer tnellities here. Mr. Shonta spoke at a Prince John, they did not attend the|cal parties. Let us simply be al-| CAME A BISHOP. aren at Anilens tuhiar iki Hue Yom: Mahe part in person, but other royalties were 1Wed to observe that, xeon from this} Wen Archbishop Farley was made| _“E have been transferred to the 421 Meeting of the Now York Board o bag \ a Pda Ne taiaht as oa a4 son | Cardinal. he asked Mer, Hayes to| Division and am to go to Camp Mc Trade nd ‘Transportation were exhibited: including a magcidesnt |fiicts in the future, the league ap-|Monsignse wan made a, Hishep tel siege et rennet oPROrtUnItY 7 tlaralvadvantenes, New York in not t-pointed diamond star from the | Pears to be & necessity against whic! \y914, and. disignated. a» Auxiliary) %08!! go to Washington and ask to vantages, ra of the Guards’ Brigade, and an|no consideration of party could pre be specially honored by being per taking advantage of its great oppor- | ostrich feather fam from Gen. Louis ‘ ” The “Supremacy Tet ? —The unique tést about which all New York is talking? Never before has there been offered by any phono- graph manutacturer an opportunity to hear all the leading phonographs played under exactly the same acou: tic goncitions, iT is WELL KNOWN that there is one position in a room ¢ more favorable I’ than others to a |Cardinal John rley elevates to the musicalginstrument | head of the greatest and richest an - ile iat Wag diocese in the world a man who wi TO OVERCOME | born in the community in which he any possible advan. [holds the highest ecclesiasticul post-| tage of position we |“on. He has always lived in and have placed ‘The New |™0rked in Manhattan and is an en- ; sn. | ChUstaatic lover of his native city, At| « ed res Meets Fl iim | the age of 52 he holda in the hierarchy | which turns as cach instrument is |f the United States the third posi- played. You hear each from pre- | tion of importance and honor. Rank- cisely the vame position |{8K him are only Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore and Cardinal O'Connell of| THE INSPECTION le: tthe” dha a idaaeuiins Archbishop Hayes was born close of these instruments is |t0 the City Hall, He was reared in constantly invited to St. Andrew's parish and was bay make sure they are [tized in the famous old chureh in ne evel per(tste fh scipre: |Duane Street, buck of the Muntelpal ow wy Building. His early knowledge was | your request. Ask for it gained in St. Andrew's Parochial Bebook His mother died in his ehild- le | hood, and he was reared by an aunt, | SHOP Opposite Public Library TS Fifth ae? Also East Orange and Newark | | | CHURCH, Broadway, 60th st } FOUNE RAND. REWARDS. bet, B6th and gi of ME: Mewands ToL . |About the time he finished his school- | La Salle THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1919, LONDON PAPERS | PRAISE WILSON'S LEAGUE FIGHT Says He tas a Gra a Grand | and Preaches It Grandly. LONDON, 1 sidont Wil Comment « Pp n on speceh takes first place on the editorial pages this morning's London newsp: | They unite in expressing the hope! hat the President's appeal for sup: Port of the Lengue of Nations will! meet with af response in the United States | “We can be ay confident as Presi-| dent Wilson is,” svye the Daily Mail, that their generous j:npuloe, disinter- | ested aid and guidance will not fail] [bis pe now, but rather ga strength and permanonee, ax the need for it was never gre States is in the ater war; United must be in| ahe the peace.” | ‘President Wilson,” says the Daily | News, "knows that America has only begun its task and that the breach with Washington's policy is final do not think that the appeal will be vain, for the President has a grand gospel and knows how to preach it wrandly.” | ence Con- ference saya the “eon atitute a signal to the world that it is} at the croseroads in its destiny. The President is not wrong in assuming | that Burope looks toward the people of the United States with new con fidence.” : he Daily Chr le says that if} Prestient Wilson “succeeds in carry- | ing his people with him in this new crusade he will have succeeded jrendering a second service to a kind as great as that in bringing in| the United States to finish the war.” “Few will question the stateme in| vail. We wish, American the league” NEW ARCHBISHOP ANEW YORKER AND A PURE AMERICAN (Continued from First Page.) for | ratify | and confidently wait, miblic opinion to ing in St. Andrew's, his aunt moved jinto St. Brigid's parish, He served! there as altar boy and aided in every chureh m From St vement Andrew's he Institute, Manhattan ich he was He then entered St went to De Col sraduated Joseph's lege in 1888, from wi Seminary at Troy for this final train- = ing fr the priesthood, He was or DIED. |dained before the completion of his GATTESCHI—RICCARDO GATTESCHI, | COUrse in order that be might enter ee CAMPBELL FUNRRAL|the Catholic University for « post- QHURCH, Broadway, b st, Thurs. | SPaduate course in 1492, Finished | Seah, Brel | there, he returned to New York and ft | became an assistant at St, Gabriel's ORLANDO.—MARION ORLANDO |Chureh as one of the assistants to fervices CAMPBELL VYUNERAL/ the then Mgr. Farley, who was iis CHURCH, Broadway, 66th ot, Wednes- |TCLOr, i ase Po Mgr. Farley was immediately won i by the piety, earnestness and ty OLLRICH.—JACOB ULLRICH; lying in of his young assistant, and made him| sate, his secretary, 4 from that day Bervices = CAMPBELL © FUNERAL | Until he was made Auxiliary Bishop | of New York he lived with Mons Arghbishop and Caniinal Farley When the latter succeeded to the] Ardhbishoprie of New York on the| death of Archbishop Corrigan, ho made Father Hayev, now riven to the dignity of @ Monsignor, i an ot / nor, | Head of t he Richest Archbishopric in the World Pictured at Various Stages of His Career AS a Rishop of Now York, Cardinal Farley thus wrote, telling how it came ano ‘When kneeling at the fect of the late Pope Pius X. in rendering! an ac [count of my stewardship last spring, |] presented to him my request for an other assistant Hishop because of the |mreat growth of the diocese, T ox- | plained to the Sovereign Pontiff that there was need for more than two Bishops in New York in order that I might give myself more entirely to duties of administration, “Then, at the request of the Moly Father, I presented to him Mgr. Hayes. Pope Pius X, laid his hands on the head of Mgr. Hayes and blessed him as Jacob did his son Jo- seph. The Holy Father prayed that the new Auxillary Bishop might lv long and that his episcopate might be a great blessing.” As every Hishop must have a sve, Bishop Hayes was made titular head the of ee of Tagaste, “in partiby Infidelium.” ‘Tagamte is in the hear of Africa and Bishop Hayes could not fo there without the permission of the Pope under penalty of excommu- nication. Afier his consecration as Bishop, jhe was appointed by the Cardinal Archbishop as Irremovable rector of St. Stephen's Church, in Bast 29th Street, and for the first time in his priesthood was separated from the Cardinal. AM during bis term as Chancellor he had lived with him in the Archepiscopal residence, just as e had lived with him before tn the rectory of St. Gabrtel's, ALWAYS THE PATRIOTIC AMER- ICAN AND FOE OF AUTOCRACY. He was intensely patriotic, and when the United States went to war, he assumed the task of gathering a }force of chaplains for military ser. vice, and mobilized some $00 priests in the United States who entered the service, elther as commissioned off cers of the army or navy, or Knights of Columbus volunteers, With this task completed he was mado Bishop over all the chaplains in the American service. He made a tour of inspection of all the cam 4 cantonments in this country last win ter and was to have gone to Europe as Field Bishop, when the fetal ili- ness of Cardinal Farley halted the plan “ORYS” WILL FIGHT WADSWORTH NEXT TIME ALBANY. Feb. 26 son, intendent w the loonists, announced that United States Senator H. Ander- Anti-Sa- of Wadsworth would be oppoged by the league if he sought re-nomina- | tion next year, enator Wadsworth, istently opposed f woman suffrage, We now that since Senator has opened things up ii we are prepared to m We accept the challenge Barnes and former Senator he said, “has hibition and this manner et the issue. William Blon R. Brown and the other politicians of the wet school,” A mitted to march with the 27¢h in its parade in New York “You people don't reatize that those boys went up against PRIEST “ONE BRIGADE OF 27TH HAD 4,200 CASUALTIES the They > BISHOP 7, PATRICK J. HAYES $——$5$S um ‘FREIGHT TUNNELS - FOR PORT RELIEF, URGED BY DY SHONTS Would Link 5 Mathaltes jiay tunities as a world port of the archaic and costly port faciti- ties here, he said, trade normally be longing to this port is being diverted As a result foo were the pick of the German Army, '© Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Or- and mighty seldom did a German !408. Montreal and other ports, and| machine gunner surrender, Nearly ‘htt American firma in many lines | seen any German women “I don't know,” he said, we heard of those things. to have alongside a machine gun. the gun SPEEDED UP. Plans for welcoming and e fox the 27th Division of te York Guardsmen under O'Ryan were From this {t is believed the whole division, through ship movement, by the end of next all of them were killed at their guns.” en, Blanding was asked if he had operating the machine guns and said he had not “although The Division, which fought with us, is said found the body of a wonan sixty years old and had been operating PLANS TO WELCOME DIVISION nte mer } Major Gen, speeded up to-day, fol- reach New York Monday or Tuesday. poss! un may be in New ¥ week, cartier than had been expected. was believed until Mr. nouncement that the sion, has been established Saturday officers’ committee preparing is goin) accommodations city the at Camp Mills. jficers of the division iw e 27th OF so WASHINGTON, Feb. |shing notified the War day that the complete 37th (Ohio and West — Virginia Guard) had be early convoy home. Green's an- 27th would not get under way before March 4 or 5. No definite time for the arrival of the Rochambeau, which has on board the first contingent of the 27th Divi- The 9 for boys in the various armories in the Accommodations for those on Rochambeau are being prepa These comprise 69 in addition | 1,100 officers and men of the 1024 En-| under Manhattan and to Long Island, jon to Come Home 26.—Gen. Department to- | Diy National laced on priority for among the soldiers and refugees in be given Port of Embarkation has her scheduled for norning, but Col, Kincai ahead which seek to compete with foreign markets arc out of the race from the start, “it primarily Warehousing problem," said Mr. Shonts. “If ocean going vossels are to find berths the river must be froed of tugs, floats and lighters, ‘The number of tugs and lighters now in this port is more than the vessels in all the navies in the world. And three quarters of them are being un- economically used, bringing to or taking away from Manhattan things that are not destined for or do not origl- nate in Manhattan and should be | kept out of Manhattan, Clearly it 1s no solution to have deep ocean chan- a railroad aud xovh was ew lowing ‘Tho Evening World's ex-| nos a vast harbor and great ships |at this season in many yeara, Much clusive announcement from Martin! > ¢y sy cannot be used or {f it costs |damage was wrought in consequence | Green, its staff correspondent, that! 4.6 io handle cargoes than |t® the potato and onion crops, and it ia jen. O'Ryan and 9,000 men of tho rere. ie ‘feared that all the Easter lilies, in- 10Bth, 106th and 107th Infantry haa! e* |tended for New York, have been de- sailed on the Leviathan and should, 72° Tallroads must be co-ordin- | groyeq, On Saturday at midnight the ated through the establishment of connecting roads or belt lines and of a common yard with switching and arehouse facilities to handle, clas- ble ted rk much! Sify and assemble freight. This is 1t| Impousible on the water front. Na. ture offers a suitable site on the Hackensack Meadows, This should be the common clearing ground, not only for New York and New Eng- land, but for all ocean gaing cargoes.” Shonts sald point also it should be a eandinal to keep out of Man- +,|hattan ag much as possible of tho |freight, the ultimate destination of which is not New York or which does not originate here, The best way to do this, he declared, as well as to | handle the distribution of freight tn f-|the city, would be to build tunnels to] between New Jersey and Manhattan, the Kineers, formerly the 224 New York. | ‘The tunnels would be built in vari | Rodman Wanamaker, Chairman of | ous sones from Canal Street to up. | £png be extablished to prevent possible the Reevptian Committee he|town points, ending much up and |hatons. id ileleidined parers Commition 9 Weleonw,| downtown trucking and providing | —_>—— | out, Col, Kineuid, t. Slarr,| direct deliveries to business houses, | Grover Whalen and’ Sheriff David | he said, GOMPERS APPEALS FOR IDLE. | H, Knott, met to-day and talked ove Mr. Shonts declared the tunnels —-- arrangements to house and feed the | would bé cheaper to build and more men in the various armories when | effective than a bridge over the Hud- the division come in fram Camp] son, which has b proposed, , ” Merritt and Camp Mills for the pw se al os | PARIS. Tuesday, Fob. ! rade, which, it 18 expected, will take Serbia Honors American, [Gompers. Prosident ef the American | place « few days after March 17 SALONICA, Feb, 26—-Major Daniel Federation of Labor, in behaif of the seb Ruste erie uae aniel American Labor Delegation has Davenport, Ia, @ | member of tho American Red Cross | Miasion to Serbia, bas received the | highest decoration awarded by tho Serbian Government. The decoration was given for his medical work Per- Serbia, CUMMINS ASSAILS LEAGUE CHARTER: Connecticut Man Is Made Chairman) D. S.C. Awarded for Capturing y to Succeed Vance Five Machine Guns—Won Freneh McCormick. Cross for Aiding Wounded. ASHINGTON, Feb, %—The Demo Lieut. Frank Brady of Yonkers, #on eratic National Commit o-day | of Police Capt. Hugh Brady, who lef jelected Hic S$. Cummings of ‘olumbia University in April, WZ, to necticut as ‘Chairman succeed Vance | enter Mlattsburg, is now we two MeCormick, Metormick's e at . ‘oration r for bravery ¢ he ‘Towa Senator Sees Danger to tenicred wien he went to. as|fleld of battle. eas ad o th Amerie deley 0 he last » oe ¢ Amterican Sovereignty i |the Prace Conterence, wus acrepted (o"| for his work on Oct, 12 Paris Draft. | Bomminie. it 1920 tured five ‘machine gun jtories and for reciprocal meal guarantees. In presenting definite proposals vor a league which he declared could be | formed without any surrender of American Sovereigniy, Senator Cum- | | ining said Firat, we ought to agree, und ail] other nations ought to agree, that! justiolable disputes should be settled | cither by arbitration or adjudication; | land we onght to agree, and all other| | nations ought to agree, without equiv- | ocation or reserve that We witl abide) and perform the award or judg-! abit: ! econd, we ought to agree, and all other nations ought to agree, that with respect to other international | disputes war shall not be made until | |eome permanent, regulas, interns | tional body shall have a fair oppor- | tunity to discuss and examine it. | “Third, if any nation should refuse to submit a proper controversy judgment, or refuse to perform th Judgment when renderei, or refuse {to delay war, I am willing to agree that racism 5 be the penalty inflicted. “Fourth, os! the compact should con- ltain a programme of disarmament, jand after all, in disarmament lies the i hope of permanent peace. The con- | stitution proposed is most disappoin } ing in this regard, for a careful study gives us little rieht to believe thi there will be disarmament among t! | strong powers.” Referring td recent statements on ‘the League by former President | Taft, the Senator sald Mr. Taft had been “conspicuously unfair and un- candid." caliente ‘EASTER LILIES SUFFER | IN B0-MILE HURRICANE | | Fifteen Craft Piled Up on the Rocks | in Bermuda When Storm Cuts Loose. | A hurricane racing at 80 miles an! hour swept the harbor of Hamilton, Rermuda, on Feb, 15 and piled 15 sail- ving and fishing boats up on the rocks, besides doing considerable damage to the crops, according to the story, brought here this morning by the Ber- | mudian Line steamer Charybdis. | ‘The liner experienced the heavicst weather known on the Yermudian coast Charybd!s caught an 8. O. 8. from the | American merchantman Roman, which was out of fuel, with her cargo shifted nd with a dangerous list to port, wal- |}owing in the sea, Another wireless was |picked up which said that the naval |atation &{ Hamilton had send two war- ships to the reacu: Fs taco YEE CZECHS EVACUATE TESCHEN. Withéraw Mission (o Poland, WARSAW, Tuesday, Feb. 25 (Associ- |S ated Presa).—Under the auspices of the Inter-Allied Mission to Poland, the Crech troops bean to-day evacuating \the Teschen mining Gistricts which are in dispute between Poland and Czecho- | Slovakia, the Czechs withdrawing to the |Ijne fixed by the Paris agreement of eb. 8 Col Snedderek, commanding Crech troops in Silesia, the who was sent by President Masaryk to represent him, | fered to consent that a further neutral cabled President Wilson expressing ap proval of the Kenyon Bil) appropriating $100,000.00 for the co-operation of the ‘al Government with the States in | relieving unemploym: He urges that public bullding work be resumed immediately, that assistance r.vate construction work and iiding be continued. hat shi TO SPEAK FOR LEAGUE IN NEW YORK ON MARCI 4 campaign under way 1 —_ QHOCOLATE COV To- cae uw carmel. are produced fron cholrest and Vor exact location The wpecificd Weight includes the container, Save your Wednesday, Feb. 26th, Last Day of Our Mid- HOMER S, , CUMMINGS HEADS |ueur, BRADY OF YONKERS DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEE WEARS 2 WAR | DEGORATIONS touring the en WASHINGTON Wile d® tire country for confere with Stat ed Gwar claring his fall sympathy with the leaders, The determination the he life t International Democrats to make a most vigord o2hed Puyaeee ve 10run en SES on ee Gain In the Middle West and We from the -Amertean Peace Tribunal, Senator Cummins of 1 tion of 3 jo n ddres Mont., and} thes m ia the lows in an address to the Sen ei tont gan lition to these medals th day, declared that he was oppos nen. | and army f the proposed Cénstitution of the 1G. Hoffman. Fort Ways call it sautacned to *h League of Natons because he beleved foyson city. a nitive, Gears is twenty-three oid. A some of its provisions would strike at W. D. J henandoah ia he wae at | fhe American sovereignty rector ve J Presonting the outline of agrec-| remain a and ments he would favor, Senate he | AU eevien or Gu mmntrad jo | Contition Government Now Assared ming said the league draft, as pre-\ known to-day, was at the : 3 In Austria, k sented at Paris, would form a world | quest of President Wi el Ni . b. 26-4 Con ton oe nation with “polyglot and incoherent “a Gan ia pa from Vienna stated tovay. 1 power,” which would submerge the} |..08 ie Was dald that the ial Democrat r ‘ « a large ma he recent Oe ne ae | 1a Touraine of the French bir to the "National Awsembly The Jowa Senator expressed @P-| sailed to-day for Havre. She alao|have agreed to erate with thy nroval of many of the provisions of arried several thousand bags of m Christian Socialists on the sondition j Proval y of Pp {much of it for American soidiers in| that the latter will not oppose the the tentative charter of the world | the army of occupation union with Germany |league, Those he attacked deat wita| P | submiasion of national questions, dis- | ' | re ‘armament and provision for manda- | ——— SEEN PACKED A CENTURY OF LIFE info O62 YEARS He did not waste either his fime or his pony a success let W.S.S. BE A SUCCESS GOVERNMENT LOAN ORGANIZATION d@ Federal Reserve District War Savings Committee, 120 B'way, New York fime- | ‘ ED EN SURPRISE tet down to xp rove delieitial ve ‘andy treasure will of frugrant, velvety Chocolate, A POU p LAST I lent an York, Remerk: telephone wee bmg Week Special A ‘collect o COOL ATE COVERED EN SURPIISE—A ‘collection of Chocolate Covered criptions. Kvery piece in the assortment will for there Is no telling what toothsome ind those rich Jacket a mond Is Voted. (he tan ecific des~ x ZC