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* goréd all THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, |, 1922. EN TIRE PERI OD OF POPE BENEDICT’S R ULE DEVOTED TO PEACE jal bed Bicin: was received questions as to the Ponfiff's state. Most of them simply signified with their hands that the condition of Holiness was precarious, their solemn faces additionally testifying to the gravity of the Pontiff's case, Obtsidé the Vatican, a crowd lin- t before the huge bronze gate leading from the square of Bt. Peter's, every one endeavoring to gather from the persons going in and eoutlof the Vatican whether His Holj- mesa was faring well or ill. of the intercated watchers & position near the Egyptian column ip the centre to see if from the light in the Pontiff’s room they coulé gain any inkling of what was going on. Then as daylight broke, the forms of the Cardinals could be geen passing from the adjoining rooms. na DINALS READY SAIL FOR ROME} (Coticlave to Elect Successor Meets Ton Days After + Death of a Pope. | WASHINGTON, Jan, 21,—Anxious Inquiries regarding the Pope's condi- tion are being received by Mgr. Bon- Yeno, the Papa) Delegate to Washing- | fon, from al) over the United States, Jn many of the dirceses, Archbishore and Bishops have ordered prayers for the recovery of the Pontiff. 4$ is customary when the death of Pope is expected, Cardinals iu part of the world must keep to go to Rome to participate in eonglave for the election of a sugcessor, That is the highest func- fioh of a member of the Sacred Col- bege. America has two princes of the eich, Cardinal William O'Connell, Archbishop of Boston, and Cardinal | Dougherty, Archtishop of Philadel-| Phia, Although these conclaves gen- erally do not meet for ten or eleven Ways after the death of a Pope, it ix mot always easy for the Cardinals who livé far away te reach Rome to time flor the selection of the new head of the Catholic Church. At the last con- clave after the death of Pius X., the American Cardinals arrived shortly | ‘after his euccessor had been chosen, ryan {CATHOLICS OF CITY ‘PRAY FOR PONTIFF Bervices Are Held in Churches and ! Sghools on Instruction of Arch- ! bishop Hayes. @ ail Catholia churches and parochial schools, prayers for the re- feevery of Pope Benedict or for his from the world in the hap- of complete absolution from its ime were continued to-day by direc- Rien ef Archbishop Patrick J, Hayes, Rev. Father Donohue, secretary the Archbishop, said that no mes- had come to the arch-episcopal ‘wesidence during the night to change Eee icon et emt 29/0), ne siaray erro were held continuously in Bt’ Patrick's Cathedral and in the Old Mt. Patrick’s at Mulberry and Prince throughout the city, was said at the home of the Arch- birhop, thought already had been given to the programme to be fol- | low din the churches of the diocese | when it was announced, The Knights of Columbus held ser- vioes all over the city too, The order for these services was issued by 8u- preme Knight James A. Flaherty from his home in Philadelphia as soon aa he had been apprised of the serious turn the Pope's iliness had — oe, GASPARRI NAMED | AS MOST LIKELY | TO BECOME POPE Rome Newspapers Say Cardinal Would Have Support of | Italian Governm. it LONDON, Jan. 21.—‘/i10 Rome newspapers, according tu @ des- patch to the Central News, ex- press @®o opinion that in the event ef the death of Pope Bene- dict his successor will be Cardinal Gasparri, Papul Secretary of State, His election, it 1s added, would have the support of the Italian Government. nies WIRELESS SEARCH |MADE FOR CARDINAL Fail Thus Far to Reach Dougherty in Carrib- bean, PHILAD,%LPHIA, Jan. 21,—Bfforts Jare being made by wireless to no- | uty Cardinal Dougherty, who is on a tour of the Caribbean, of the illness of the Pope. The Rev. Joseph A. Whitaker, secretary to the Chancellor of the diocese, sent wireless messages out in hopes of reaching his ship, the Fort St. Ceorge. There has been no indication that the massages has reached their destination. Cardinal Dougherty left New York Jan. 4. He is due back on Jan. a ONLY 7 OF FIFTEEN BENEDICTS WERE POPE OVER 7 YEARS Efforts Four Occupied Papal Throne Longer Than the Latest | Incumbent. None of the fifteen Popes of the Roman Catholic Church who have taken the name of Benedict have occupied the Papal throne for any great length of time. Following are the periods of their incum- Btreats, as well as in other churches bency: Benedict I 8 years Benedict If 1 year Benedict I 3 years Benedict IV 8% years Benedict V1 year Benedict VI 2 years Benedict VII 9 years Benedict VIII 12 years Renedict IX ‘%6 years Benedict x 1 year Benedict XI 1 year Benedict XII 8 years Benedict XIII 7 years Benedict XV 8 years * Deposed, reinstated 8 months more, ALL CREEDS IN NEW YORK JOIN IN EXPRESSING REGRET OVER DEATH OF THE POPE ‘Public Officials, Churchmen and Laymen Unite in Voicing Condolence at World's Loss in Passing of the Pontiff. ‘Upon receipt in thin country of) of ‘mews announcing the death of Pope ‘Benedict, expressions of capdolence lwere voiced om al! sides by officials lot the city, State and nation and by \prominent individuals. Mayor Hylan said: ‘The death of Pope Benedict is a wevere loss to religion and one that (will be universally lamented. “He wes an eminent egciesiastio jand's pontiff who sought to create a Fea} brotherhood of man, 1 feel a keen and deep personal jpeewow tm his death, for his utterances \hewe beon a never ending source of \inaptration to me. YHis memory will ever be cherished, met only at the altars of his own j@murgh but in the heart of every man Ger. Wéwards of New Jersey anid: passing ts @ great loss to the His advice and counsel were tm the present unsettied con- of the world. However, there im the thought that an- of great capacity will be im."* Fathers held a the Pope to-dey at Lady of Perpetual and Fifth Avenue, Jom O'leery was ly members of the Redemptionist Fathers service William T. Manning, Biabop of New York said death of his Holiness, Pope jm AV, ie @ matter of concern whole Christian world, Aji will feet deep sympathy he Bishop's clensy aad people rf | i il i i g g Ha the Roman Catholic the’ great loss.” Mey. Dr. Caleb R. Stetson, Rector of Trinity Church sald: ‘The whole Christian world is touched by the death of the Pope, for he in at the head of the largest ody of Christian people in the world “Benedict XV. has been known throughout his life as a man devoted to the service of his chureh, and whone interests in latter years as chief pastor of the Roman communion have extended to all parts of the world, “Hits Interest in this country was marked and his expressions of friend- ship were warm, My sympathy mi: out to the great body of Christian people who looked to him for spiritual guidance." — BROOKLYN GROCERY HELD UP; $800 STOLEN Force futo Rear Room— Bandit Waits om Customer. ‘Three men who entered the Thomas Roulston grocery store at No. 18 Bed- ford Avenue, Brooklyn, last night at closing time and Inslsted on purchasing some sugar and butter held up Bernard McNabb, the manager, as he was going to the refrigerator for the butter. They forced him into a rear room and took from him $800 in store reowints One of the bandits remained in the store and waited on customers while McNabb was being robbed. He served one customer. ‘The bandits escaped an automobile. An automobile wi found later at South Second Btreet rr Church in the police tified as stolen Mousette of No. 195 Chaunoe: Street. Brooklyn, in Hillwide Avenue, Jamaica, yesterday afternoon Jacob Schwartz, & huberdastielr, of No, 994 Washington Avenue, disdgvered this moruing that bars on a vem win dow had been sawed and $1,000 in stock hed been removed ever night. Peceeatetns | that the end was Inevitably near, it) Pore, SeneoicT i ale sSTODY @Oxevstong View to America to Pope Benedict XV., the 259th suc- cessor of St. Peter, assumed the du- ties of his office soon after the bu- ginning of the World War, aud no Pontiff of the Roman Catholit Chureh ever reigned through a pe- riod so calculated to distress the rep resentative on earth of the Prince of | Peace, The outstanding features of his pontificate were his eondistent re- fusul to be influenced into an expres- sion of opinion as to the merits of the contention of the warring European nations—although he did protest to} Germany against the invasion of Be!- gium and the bombardment of Pari. and condemned the sinking of the Lusitaniu—his frequent diplomatic | efforts te end the war and his official indorsement of and unofficial partici- pation in the effort still under way to solve the international problems which the war left as a heritage to the people of the earth. The war wave, kindled by the in vasion of Belgium, had swept across Europe when the Sacred College met in Rome, late in August, 1914, to clect @ successor to Pope Plux X. Con- ditions called for a Pope who would be capable of dealing with questions of diplomacy and statesmanship, aside from those of a strictly religions nature on matters of faith und morals. A slight, nervous, almost diffident member of the College of Cardinals, Giacome della Chiesa, whe had been made @ Cardinal only a little more than three months before, was the ohoice, A genius for diplomac: long training in the Vatican, an inti- mate knowledge of the governinents and condition of the nations of the world were the qualifications he pos- sessed which led to his selection PONTIFF TOOK UP HIS TASK RELUCTANTLY, Reluctantly he took up the isk of serving as the spiritual head of 400,000,000 Roman Catholic people, hundreds of thousands of whom were in armed conflict with oo-religionists on the eastern and western battle- fronts. On the day of his selection, Sept 8, ho expressed the hope that pence gould be brought about. One of the first of his offictal acts was the issu ance of an encyclical to the episco. pacy of the world in which rulers were implored to “enter into a coun cll of peace with all speed." This plea met with no response. In nowise discouraged, the Pope set about @ plan to persuade tho powers to agree to a truce during the Christ mas holidays of 1914. His idea was | that with the guns silenced the| armies and the peoples at war wor have a chance to think outside th influence of combat and that, out o: consideration of the situation, « manent truce might be reached. BENEDICT XV. FIRST TO STRIVE TO BRING NATIONS TOGETHER AND FORCE END OF WORLD WAR From Day of Election to Pontificate He Did] in. vatican His Utmost by Appeals to Belligerents and Bring Peace. other angle. In obedience to a Papal | decree issued on Jan. 18, 1915, Roman | Catholic clergy and laity throughout the world united in services and prity- ers for the restoration of untyersal 00d will. ISSUED PEACE PLEA To HEADS OF ALL NATIONS. On July 28, 1915, the first annivers- ary of the declaration of war, the Pope issued an appeal to the leads of all the nations at war in which Nh. sald: Blessed is he who first, extends the olive branch and tenders his hand to the enemy in offering his reasonable conditions of peace. Late in 1915 and early in 1916 the Pope conducted diplomatic exchanges with William I, Emperor of Ger- many, and the late Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria, relative to ending the gonfliet. He appealed directly to Wrancis Joseph, a Catholic sovereign to “shorten the war." Despairing at last of accomplish- ment by direct appeal in Europe, the Pope turned his attention to the United States, and in May, 1916, he directed Mgr. Bonzano, the Papal delegate to Washington, to intimate to President Wilson a hope that this country might see its way clear to act as mediator. It so happened that the United States has at that time almost at a diplomatic erisis with Germany, and, although Presifent Wilson replied to the message of the Pope, there was no acknowledgement of the suggestion of American peace ful intervention. Again, on Jan. 16, 1917, the Pope sent @ message to the White House approving the President's peace note. ‘Dhe Vatican aaw in this evidence that the United States might consent to attempt to bring the belligerents to- gether, but by that time this country was practically committed to en- trance Into the war and three months efter the peace note was promulgated the United States declared war on Germany. August, 1917, saw the beginning of the darkest period of the war. Pope Renedict, fearing the wreckage of re- ligion in the cataclysm that appeared to impend, wrote with lis own hand an appeal for peace for the sake of humanity, HI8 PEACE TERMS ADOPTED IN PART BY ALLIES. In this message he outlined peace conditions which, to a considerable extent, were considered and to a smaller degree adopted by the Ve sailles Conference. One of the Pope's suggestions was this: As to the damages to be re- paired and to the war expenses, We see no other means of solving the question than by submitting as a general principle complete and reciprocal condemnation which would be just) more- over, by the immense benefit to derived from disarmament, so much so that no one will under take the continuation of a similar carnage solely for reasons of an eoonemid order. The suggestion of the Pope ex- pressed his bellef that the nations in Op Dec. 14 the Vatican announced | tlet the plan for a Christmas truce was blocked by “the opposition of a| certain power.” Russia and Turkey it was reported, had absolutely fused to enter into the agreement |the other nations had not been on }thusiastic during the course the negotiations. Military activities wore wt thelr height during the « | holidays of the first of the Pon Uflcate of Benedict XV Not discouraged, the Pope ap proaohed the peace project from an | their and | arations. the war should forgive each other war debts and require no rep: ‘This, he believed, would abrogate the maintenance of war din fo lebts and Nations to prov industrial immediately for the of th machin: ing the collee enable with the vould la reparation The Pope's appeal was diplomati- | sully ered, In September, 1918, necessity | Pope Benedict XV. at Work in His Office, Busy on Schedule of His Daily Routine). teat tte ca recogniaed religious sealed by the canoniratl announced It would launch no more efforts to bring about peace unless invited to do so by | both groups of belligerents. The war ended with the signing of the armis- | Uee less than two months later. Pope Benedict was intensely inter- ested in the peace conference, but held himself sedulously aloof from| any appearance of actual participa- j tion or from appearance of desire to suggest terms or agreements. He) |had already, during ‘the war, made | known his belief in the policy of self- ‘determination for small nations. He repeated this in a letter to President Wilson tn December, 1918, | he | Church to “do all in its power to sup- port the decisions of the delegates at, | Versailles.’ | VISITED BY WILSON ON EVE OF | CONFERENCE. President Wilson visited the Pope at the Vatican on Jan, 4, 1919, prior, to the opening of the Peace Confer- ence, The question of peace was, of course, discussed, as the views of the Pope and the President of the United | States were well known and on many points were in agreement. The Kaster rebellion Dublin in 1916 depressed the Holy Father and | cdded to his mental burden. While he sympathized with the aspirations of | the Irish people for freedom, he Je- plored the extension of warfare to rin. frequently he was asked to inter- vene in behalf of the Irish Republican movement, H2 held to the doctrine that it was no part of his functions to interfere with the internal politica uffairs of any ration, but, following a policy pf neutrality, he conden | crime in Ireland by either the Irish ot |the English and repeatedly appested | directly and through the Irish and English hierarchy, to both sides to abandon violence. He proposed that the Irish question be settled by a body selected by the Irish nation, The Downing Street treaty bad his approval. and one of| his last official kets before stricken with his final {Illness was the despatch treaty which made Ireland a Free State. Inasmuch as religion was more or less in eclipse during the war, the Pope was not called upon to promul- gate any strictly dogmatic decrees in the first four years of his (Pontificate, In 1919, @ group of Protestant-Hpis- copaiian Bishops in the United States proposed that the Roman Catholic Church participate in a world conference of religions to con- sider spiritual rehabilitation. Through Cardinal Gasparri, the Pope declined invitation and manifested a gentle sense of humor by the state- ment that “rather than a reunion of the Christian churches, the Holy Bee aims at the unity of the church which in the opinion of Rome can only le Chureh.” FREQUENTLY DISCOURSED ON WOMEN'S DREGS. The Pope often requested clergy throughout the world to com bat vigorously the theories of Sociul- ism. He discoursed frequently on the subject of immodesty in women's dress sud condemned = aodera fashions. In an address io the Sacred College, he declared the word was afflicted with five great plagues, to wit; the negation of authority, j hatred umong brothers, thirst for pleasure, Jislike fer work and forget- fulness of the supernatural obliga tions of fife | “gope Benedict xv th wa a which led to the resump jtion of diplomatic relations hetweey ‘Rome and Germany and France Ft influence was felt in the healing of in which | commitied the Roman Catholic} to the Dail Eireann of a message of | felicitation over the adoption of the} oocur by all returning to the Catho-| the | brrdbesrey --oreangytnry gen Hl aa tate tn Framce, and tho reinstate- - F ve in the work of for war prischers. After the the Pontiff was instrumental in taisigg a buge sum for the work of relief among the starving children of Central Europe and the starving in Russia, His personat benefactions were large and continuons, The Pope in a letter to Prestaont | Harding warmly indorsed the Wash- ington Conference on the Limitation of Armaments, hopes of good to result from it. MGR. RAMPOLLA HIS PATRON FROM HI8 YOUTH. Giacomo della Chiesa was born at | Pegi, Italy, on Nov. 21, 1864. His| father was the Marcheso della Chiesa | (pronounced Keeaza). He received his | education at the Capronican College, and later attended the Academy of Eecclesiastics. Ordained in 1878, he at- tracted the attention of Cardinal Hampolla, who, under Pope Leo XIIL., _was Papal Secretary of State. He accompanied Rampolla to Madrid in 1883, when his patron was Nuncio, remaining there until 1887, when he returned to Rome upon the elevation of Rampolla to the Cardinalate. In 1901, after having served four years as Secretary of the Nunciature in Spain, he was appointed Secretary of the Cypher. This position gave its incumbent considerable authority, and |the same year Mgr. della Chiesa was it¢ |named as Consultor of the Holy | Office. On Dee, 16,,1907, Pope Phis X. ap- | pointed delia Chiesa Archbishop of } the important See of Bologna, to suc ceed the late Cardinal Svampa. His consecration as an Archbishop was | performed by Pius himself in the Sis tine Chapel, an unasual honor. | Archbishop della Chiesa was made a Cardinal in May, 1914, less than six months before mounting the throne | of St. Peter. | He took his ecclestastical title ‘rom | Pope Benedict XIV., one of the ablest Pontiffs of the church, who was born in Bologna on March 81, 1675, and | died on May 3, 1758. Benedict XV.'s appearance has been described as follows: ‘“‘A man | physically {1!-favored, but gifted with | great intelligence; short of stature, ascetically thin, with the = right |shoulder raised abowe the left, and eiving one the Impression of extreme | nervousness and weakness. But when he raised his hend the visitors in- stinctively felt that they were iu the | presence of a man equipped wit ex- ceptional intellectual powers and en- ergy. He reminded one of the noted poet, Leopardi. With an athple brow, surrounded by coal black hair, black eyes, lively and penctrating, a iarg. mouth with thin lips full of expres- ‘sion, the Pope conveyed the impre: sion of a man of few friendships, but these most sincere, devoted and last- ing.” Always ‘‘a friend in need,"’ as a | prelate of his chureh once said of him, Benedict demonstrated his :ead- |iness to avert hardship to poor peo- ple by advancing $1,000,000 to save a financial institution of Rome from bankruptcy in the spring of 1918. This was in keeping with his repu- tation from the time he was ordained & priest in 1878 to the day of his death. ‘RICKARD ARRESTED ON CHARGES OF 15-YEAR-OLD GIRL (Continued From First Page.) he could help them to get out. It was on account of Rickard's reported ex- pression of interest in the two girls that Elvira Renzio was held." Immediately after the court pro- ‘ceedings Alice Ruck, accompanied by Supt. Pisarra and Detectives McGann |and Flaherty of the West 47th Street Station, who had formally arrested Rickard, was taken to the house at No, 20 West 47th Street. The four went inside and remained there for some time, while the other two girls, Anna Hess and Elvira Renzie, paced up and down outside, in care of Ma- tron Mary Coleman of the Children’s Society. Upon leaving the house Supt. Pi- | sarra said: ‘*Alice Ruck has identified |the house and the apartment wherein ‘the alleged acts were committed, I told that the alleged relationship existing between Rickard and this girl had its beginning in the tawer of Madison Square Garden during the swimming season last summer. The West 47th Street building has a tea room on the ground floor, with a tatlor shop over that, and the two upper floors arranged as studio apart- | ments, Notice of this action against Rick- ard was given to him at Madison Square Garden last night, He prom- ised to be in court this morning. ‘There were several men well known in the world of sport in the jcourtroom when Richard was ar- raigned. One of them was Billy Gibson, with whom Rickard was re- centiy réported to be at odds. | Rickard was asked his name he gave |tt, George L. Rickard, and his ad- dress as No, 80 Madison Avenue. After the arraignment he did his [best to hide his face from a battery of newapaper photographers, even holding an Umbrella over bis hqyd as a screen. He got into a taxt¢ab with Gibson and another friend and drove quickly away. SENATE BALKING MORE AND MORE ON ARMS TREATIES atenttpiaieies Washington Fears That Again Will a President Be Repudiated, By David Lawrence, Raseain Correspondent of The Eve- ning World.) | WASHINGTON, Jan. 81 (Copy- right, 1922).—Can the Untted States ed participate in international action? This question is being seriously dis- | | cussed in official quarters as a direct consequence of the very evident oppo- | | sition whieh is brewing in the United States Senate toward the treaties ne- gotiated by the executive branch of the Government at the Arms Confer- ence, but It has a relation also to whether the United States will bé represented at the economic confer- ence at Genoa, Remembering that the Senate re {used to ratify the Treaty of Versailles and the diminished diplomatic influ- ence of the executive branch of the American Government, the fear is ex- pressed that perhaps the Senate will again repudiate t': executive and demonstrate that *,.Wiher the Admin- ; istration be Republican or Demo- cratic, the legislative branch of the Government is the final Veecestiund in} America on foreign a ‘The Harding Aduntuipersiion, tak- ing {ts lesson from the experience of its predecessor which negotiated the ‘Treaty of Versailles covering as many as 200 subjects, outlined a simple programme for the present conference —Ver Eastern affairs and reduction of armament, The land armament prob- lem was abandoned and the pro- gramme was still further narrowed down, Now it looks as if those two items would cause such disagreements as to | endanger the ratification of the prin-| cipal treaties. What use, therefore, is it for the} executive branch of the Government | to think about more international conferences, as for example the one | at Genoa? A Huropean Government which is represented in the negot tions by a Minfstry can commit its Parliament to approval or it promptly shows the negotiators that the Minis- try is wrong by overthrowing it, The | action 1s quick and decisive, If a| Ministry is overthrown, a group fails. | If the executive branch of the Govern- ment is repudiated in America, the Zeadlock cannot be Immediately broken | by the substitution of the policy advocated by the opponents of the [executive. Too mueh time tered. International action under such circumstances is almost impos: sible These views are not merely | ernment but practical questions which | are being raised every day In the dis- feussions concerning future policy in official qyarters, Before the Fyro- | pean war, the question never arose, Not until the Senate repudiated Versailles Treaty did the problem} vrow complex, and it is only wow, when the full effects of that action | jare bring quietly admitted by Repub- |Hieans im positions of responsibility |that apprehensions about future inter national co-operation are expressed. ‘To mention politieal conference of | international character ts to seare| away any chanee of American pa ielpation. Were it not for the preas-) ing necessity of helping in the econo- | mic restoration of the world, the Harding Cabinet would pursue a polt- cy of political isolation altogether, but | every day the Buropean economic problem grows more dangerous to America's economic status and the Government here is loath to turn its back on the Genea Conference if that meeting should offer even the slightest chance of economic recovery for the} European Continent. But the programme of the Genoa Conference includes German repara- tions and the French Premier says he willnotdiscuss that, It Includes discus- sion of the status of Russia and there is opposition everywhere in the recog- nition of the Soviet Government on political ground: Unti] the political and economic phases of the Genoa Programme are dissociated, Amer- ica’a participation may be considered as very doubtful. But until the con- clusions of the present Arms. Confer- ence are reached and it is apparent whether the United States Senate ‘6 again to repudiate the Executive, the chances are the President and Sec- retary of State will not enter into more international conferences, the eral OME CROWDS WATCH THROUGHOUT NIGHT FOR DEATH OF POPE (Continued From First Page.) early three degrees during the night. Frof. Battistini, the Pope's physician, |left the palace at 2, returning at 7. Telephones rang ceasclessty all night, chiefly inspired by Inquiries | from the Diplomatic Corps attached to the Holy See. The King and Queen Mother also asked every hour oe news of the Pontiff’s condition Premier Bonomi was kept i ea | informed, All religious houses were offering prayers for his recovery, which wer Ho entertained high | “Government as at present constitut- | echoed by thousands of the faithful in the city’s churches, schools and con- vents. Minister of Public Works de Micheli, one of the leaders of the Catholic Party, spent the afternoon in the Pauline Chapel of St. Peter's praying for the Pope, while the enor- | mous basilica echoed with the prayers of hosts of priests, monks, nuns, scholars and laymen. Those in touch with the sick room s9y Pope Benedict's mind is far easi now that a postponement of the visit of King Albert of Belgium has been arranged. ‘This visit was fixed for Jan, 29, and one reason the Pope re- fuseil to take to his bed earlier wax thet he hoped to overcome his indls- position and receive the Belgian {cing by that time. The message request- ingthe postponement was transmitted | by Cardinal Vannutelli, Dean of the Sacred College and King Albert's god- father, King Albert also sent a mes- sage of sympathy, and requested his Minister at the Vatican to keep him Informed hourly of the Pope's von- | dition, The room in which is situated in the front of the palace, overlooking the square, where the crowds gathered during the night. It is spacious but adorned only with rica rugs, the furniture other than the »cd consisting of a cupboard, two arm chairs and a dresser, all of artistic- ally carved wainut. When well Pope Benedict never en- ters it during the day, going from it to the adjoining chapel a few minutes after rising and returning only to retire, eS LIED TO BE CITIZENS OF U. S., IS CHARGE dea Alleged Naturalization the Pope lies Frauds v Brooklyn to-day handed up nine indictments for | Meged fraud in obtaining naturalice- tion papers, In most instances falen testimony as to the length of time in this country is alleged. The tndict ments are grounded on perjury and subornation of perjury. Other indict- ments are expected David Smith, No. 730 Pvergreen Ave- nue, Brooklyn, 4 principal, and Julius Simon, No. 284 14th Street, Brooklyn, | his witness, pleaded guilty and were sentenced to three days in the County Jail by Judge Garvin. Meler Borkow sky, No. Bushwick Avenue, » prin must | cipal, pleaded not guilty and was held elapse before changes can be regis-| in $500 bail for trial RECEIVES $3,78 786, 881 FOR ARMY BASE LAND academic theories by students of Goy- Meported Decision tn Langley Sutt on Bay Ridge Property. WF. Circuit Court of Appeuls in Man- Pattan, it is reported, han affirmed the | @eciston of Federal Judeciston of Med- Judge Garvin in Brooklyn award ing $2,439,496 additional to the restate o* William Clangley for property take: over for war purposes on which the Army Base in Bay Ridge was located The award is in addition to the pre ‘liminary payment of $1,347,995, or 36 or cent. of the or’ 1 claim which, under the law, the estate was per- mitted to accept without prejudice {sreEn—rne tat Infantry, Ny. NG announces that the funeral of CORPOR ROBERT STEED, 105th Infantry 8. A. (Company B, 71st Infantry * symbolize the 186 dead of the {lst Infantry in the World War, will be held at the Armory at 1.30 P, 22, 1922 An Invitation is extended to al) who desire (o honor those of the reginont whe M. Bunday, Jan made the great sacrifice in the World War. J, Hollis Wells, Colonel, Park and 34th FUNERAL DIRECTORS. ‘When Death Call “Columbus (FRANK £. CAMPBELL. “Dhe Funeral Church” INe., LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. Tow, Pureday, a0 7.90 POM taxioad « dath st. ube 33d. pleniceN catate “AMERICA’S MAKING” AT CENTURY THEATRE | ‘The Century Theatre was crowded to-| & |day with tie 2,700 pupils of Public | | School Districts Nos. 4 and 6, en the lower east side, all of whom took part tn | the pageant “America’s Making” at oe) ‘Mth Regiment Armory on Nov. 7, to oit- | tion of @upt. H.W. @uict, ‘There was! singing by 8 ¢tee ch® of 400 pupils and music by an orchestra of 100 of them. Algo there were folk dances, historteal loaux and a drill by 200 boys Among the singers and stage peop!> who vohumesred were Adelaide Zardo Alexander Carr, Maroslia Johnson, Ver non Dathart, Alfred Tatel!, Blete Vokes lend Leone la Mar PERSONALS, GHARLES, fee re ape: yoo 4 ot your das @ to | home "You. m write Sritngut fe P creedain se freedoin sou ire, hough fTand need you. viry other her ae te ‘Lest and Found Bureau.” Room 208 Werld Buliding, wilt be listed for thirty Geys, These Hets ca he jo The Werlt Breokien Office, 4100 Main.