The Sun. (New York, NY) 1913-04-08 [p 11]. · 2017. 12. 16. · MOVE STRONG FOR NEW CHURCH NAME...

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MOVE STRONG FOR NEW CHURCH NAME Weiulil nf I'mfcM 'I'm ken it liiM'nunition !' It In'iiulli. 31 V III'. A I.OXO CONTKST j j (iioiimN of Ohjccfions to (lie of W.niN "Pinit'sninf mill i I'. In K pIMMIptl I . , a inline of ii protect signed liy . l nu i IiTg.Vlllcu nf New York , il.ng Khllop nf tile Chill eh I , (' .M'lV lit st'I'llloll'. Voicing oh- - .lulu Mlnii.M not only of the' , - i l1'!' proposed elllltlglllg of f the I'rotostant Kplscopal , also nl the strength of the j In i v. n. hi f"f nih il a change. ! , ,i lonirovcrsy that has been ,, . I !n- annual Church convention. In . a. '.irn. but the near victory nf , mtiiii; a change In the enliven- -' j ear anil the early dale at , campaign ha been lnaiigu--- j I '' - .ve.it" suggest that the isuo is ill , ., : ii;it out lln.illy when the Church ,.rv.- - .it. vis convene In New York In next ' '" r. I r ,.. .. r.il weeks Church publications ,, - ii pii scntln the arguments pro ..r.,1 They involve milch ot Church rv. :.u. men nuu ...r w. i. , n ..rt.un cnnsiuerauon. oi pres. j in. leiu y niui. in.coiu.im io iinisc i!d Uti'uv, ere nut to h, enn-- i .i tl .T movi inenl which linn mr 1 return t riote.si.int Kpl-- - .. r tulil of the lluinan c'.itli-,'- . n V'i' n it was sium'sted to . inn ill yrye-ila- y that the . aaiiii hetokened mull J move-- n ::.',n i.iti d a l.iutcn of a !. wli. f.iid: ti.kh t'.Jin oil Mutid-- i tor nnn-',- t ilU'-ai- " i wi.i favor the thanco. nr. as thi - i . the ' inrrectliu,, ' In the i . ih.it the present i.'hnrili l. fhurili whi dt Chrli't 'hit this 1'lMirih has p.issed .i mpnr.'irv taces nf mllitnncy thr a .me Protestant 1'pisoopal . . ,ed in it ill one of these staKes. nt.nti.'ti w that the name is not -- i i.iresi nt.itive of the history or the . . ni ihaiacter of the Church and i .s a name that had only a tctn-- , inrv !..Kni!kance. T proponents of the change point x ; an in the Act nf the Apnstlcs are . .h f" iial the cli.iriictori.atlnns of the 'j, I'l irdi, such indexes of its ch.ir-i- i r unity, sanctity, catlmllcity r j ,it)i..t.illctty. The.--e marks nf the rue Clnirih. they say. have In en pc-...nc- il in the phraseology of the Apo-r- s' Treed and the Nicene I'reed, the .rmer uslni: the word "holy" and a l'jllc" and the latter acknowledging .e Ohurcli us "oiip. cathollu and apos- - ,.c The slcnitlcancp nf the word " afinlic" 1. hire of course "all the "every creature." "all natlnns," . rm other such words used by Christ. ' Is set forth a thu semrlc name ot he Church. Ii 1. therefore arsued by some of n'c favorinu a change that the name e American Catholic Church" would more representative of the branch ' i,p churcli in this country than a' y which it now la known. A further arpument is that the word rr ,tf i.int" lias lot its slcmtlcanee: a " applleil only to a particular time, i -- si nted only a phase of the activity true church In seekinK to re- - -- h itself aecordlni; to the stand-- f :t Founder and is now a hln-- .' i. ' missionary work. A cleriry- - .1 ited yesterday tho remark of ' Brent of the Philippine Islands . ' word Protestant in the title r 'lurch is a complete barrier to i s- - The presence or absence of - urd mean. the difference between i - and failure." sjo marked ha. h. opposition to it that It has ' (n eliminated from the title ; prayer books used in our Span-- e where the church is u i .'livert.. , v d with the desire to eliminate wjrd. or as a matter of fact one )f ' f ''indatlonal ai Kiunents aualnst i intention that the present - .i Kpiscopal Churcli is not a i.f t!n.--e who are protesting; 'in i.riKinal tenets of the ) it that it. .succession from r b founded by Christ is clear i , - i.lable; that It Is the true ' ."d that the use nf the word ' .' puts it in a false liKlit i. wm Id. It Is arcued that she i her unity, that she was in nto the world to protest, u nd. d that the Church of Knu-,-- r r ' did protest, that she merely It"tnan church from an i pisitmn and that In America o. in i hurch wa. the first on the n I w th her own native episcopate, "'lect.iin m the use of the word "1. "pal ' is that it emphasizes too s'- 'he polity nf tin; church. It . - tu. form of tlm church's snv- - Tl" II' and :t Is arsucu that it is a 31 - to take any element of tho constitution other than those ! h she Is described in the. oriu-i- r rred arid to fix It upon her aa a tar f 7 American Cntlmlki, one of the f '0 papers which have been urs.na t. nance. say.. t' oar present title is misleading ' i it now commonly accepted sense, i.nc!f 'wd by us as a body. Is char '0 ni.e who has a knowledge of tho ' The movement for brliiBins our ' . tesal title into closer agreement v,th 01, r standards of faith and to make cjr name a good omen significant of our i'i I'laition In Christendom has come ' -- xisuncc, Is fiourlshitiK and Is ceneral among our clergy and rop " Thn Rov. Dr. Arthur Iowndcs, au- thor of "Vindication of Anglican Or- ders'' and 11 liturgical scholar of note, -- i.dd vestcrdny uftornoon that tho pres-'- 1' ' tie of tho church xvuh In his opln- - m neatly unsuitable. The term I'r..i slant, ho nald, was tinhlstorlcal be cauyij the Kpiscopal Church held In her ntllcc. of institution that her ministers were, of apostolical descent and that therefore she was In existence for cen- turies before tho term Protestant ciime Into existence. The term RplHcopal Is nlisurd, Dr. I.tiwndcs said, because there can no no church nf apostolic descent without bishops. Whllii he considered the pres- ent name, was unsuitable ho did not think that the time wan ripe for tho nloptlon of any nnmes yet suggested. Kor the present ho would ho satisfied wdh tho elimination from tha title page "f tho Hook of Common Prnycr of tho words 'TrntcHtitnt Kpiscopal." That there Is no unanimity ns to vhiti the now name should be was the 0 I answer nf a number nf clergymen who 'mi' interested In having the change liiuile. Also there was n disposition nn their imri iml in In- - quoted mi tin mut- ter at this (line. None nf them Is cor-- , tulit Unit the iiucstioii will tic Mettled next October, hut It I tho Intention tol make n ilctoriiilticd light fur the change. Annum the hotter known clergymen wlin have nniiiiiinci'd themselves in favor nf ii change nil' tin- - Hov. Or. U'llllntn T. Manning, rector of Trltiltv ('lunch, the I lev. nr. .1. (I. II. Itarry of tin- - Chinch of St. Maty t lie Vlrttln, the r.i-v- . Iir. ticorgo i'. Houghton of tho Chinch of the Tiittisllgimitlon, tin- - Hov. I'r. Arllinr llltchle of SI. Ignatius "liurcti. tho llov. Uivvtonoo Carter Hleh Cm pit Clitlstl Church, tin- - Hov. Dr. M. I'li'tiilcnnln of St. Holer's Church Westchester avenue nml Hie Hew Henry C. Iiyor of the eiiureli of tlie Ho- -. ileemer. ORIENTAL ART DISPLAYED, Mr. Clilrhtue'x Ti'miiil (lathered lit Clilnn nml .Inimn, 'I III1 tnii cllnncoii ollei tloli of I .it t II II i po'i chillis, print hihI cnilo now nn view the vtidornn miction room ha inanv points of InteteM Tip i ollei tlnn of tea putt, which wore gathered nmnv jonr nun china and lup.in hv stimrt riitrldgo, l. miMt i ninpnliinl, II I odd tn ilnd a I'lllleitnr kdIiib In evelnxhely for tenpotR, hilt nine laiilli'lieil ill the purxiiit nl them Mr I'lilriilue mint have Itidefiitlit.ihle the M'liri'h. Ill Krniip i 'Mnlnli i nntnln nmnv mnre "kiinwn vaiie'li'"" than are iniiniifai'tiired tho Orient ut ptcvenl and ran ire thnniBh eerv Htjle, lioih barmine and I'linwlp some are iir.ullrnl ten pot In v tii. hnnilnnht eMe'l.'iil leu rail and Mill ulill he brewed. and nth.'iK .ire iii'tnen-- " in d'e of the kind ,ha, nr lr(M , Jh ,., ()f , llo ,,4l4hkn. lie ini.4 nr.. ,m iia i.,,nl ...I elenniit. ni'etlnie fnn'nu'lc nnd nroti.ee. ll"P' lite learml shared III P ''ed.'lll I llairs. like bollle. Ill e blnl. beat mid cMpj Hue nl the best dUii led te.'lnm nf all I apo.ireii'lv a statcette In porcelain of a boy lioldlnir a puppy 'I lie slat eite I not onl.x est client as a H'ntiptte liu' the tea that an be undo In it can be poured out tliroimti the puppj ' nin'ilh In clnldren and een tn ndclU whn liae a simple nature thi method of lea mnkUii; unnld lime a lertaln harm I'here is lunch blue and white in the collection. Closeli allied to the teapots are n eiimber of ancient wine hies. n old S,itnnin wine pot ha uraiefnl lines nnd a ch.irmini; cream lolored ul.iye The handle twine about the neck of the pot and then branch" out to entwine the sKnit nother old pot has two tine k'l.ies a jellow and creen ot the kind the Koreans so frequently iiie Tlie pictnn's and .liip.inese print. come ft urn si'M-r.i- l owner The paintings In- clude an interetltik' etmnple nf the work ot the inerican William Morri Hunt 'I he subject l one thai I alway attrai the to artist, a fors-- e with two blacksmiths at work I he canva is sombre, but the iiuiiliiv nf the man who studied palatini; with .1 I" Millet is there notli"r mertran. Ilollon Colt Urown. shows the s,'itnmlt oi Mount Kim!." treated deioniteh. almost in a .l.ipatiese manner, with ll.it tone anil out line iliappHrini( in the cloud occasionally. There is a deioritlM" landscape by I'ran Herman Mans of llshernien in boats selninc in a river that Mow s by the walls of a tine castle. Mid there are a number of old canvases by unknown artists that are iiu.iintly iuter-estim- ; CERAMIC SHOW. Chances In Cushion Amonu the ( h I ii n I'lilnters. 'IH'cinl exhiliitiun of leranur is now on view in the rooms ol the soi lety nf i rRfis-ine- ll Kust Nineteenth street sorts of bowls, pots, platters and plates Imve been contributed bv the member, decorated In a manner that now seems completely wphiipiI awav from the old time processes of decalcomiinla lhe inodeni erudition in these matters compels the decorator of porcelains lo cunie up to the standard established by Ihe Chinese, 1'erslnn and I other primitives, nnd so becinnlnc with I the work of the president. Miss Maud .M. Mason, we find nil the members of the society boldly ch,illeni;im; this ( omparisoti Mis .Mason's display lontains some novel nnd attractive lustre, which show she ha been a student of the (sj 'Ihe dciuns are llowiiu; and Well adapted to the shapes they decorate and of course the metallic paints have been applied and ' llrcd ' skiltully Miss Dorothy Warren d'llaru exhibit some well deco- rated jur and plates done in enamel Other llitcrestiui; pleies are muiicd liy Miss C ( arroll. .Miss Nita siinoiid and Miss II. I. let. an, and th cluss of the oun Women's Christian Association show soinn Incised pottery I redetlck Hurteii Uhead of rnlilnv, (al, is represented by many impression of ancient coins niiidn into colored porielinn buttons MISS KELLER AT FLOWER SHOW. llnnert tn Touch find Milcll fllns-MU- M She Cnnnnt Srr, csteid.iy was rose ila at the newdrand Central Palace, vihern the International Mower Show Is held Over lO.Ono roses were added 10 the llower aliendy on evliibition Of Ihesi! 2,iini were Aniericnn lleautie Miss Helen Kellpr visited the show soon after the door nere opened nl II o clock. 'Die nile of tliee.xhlliltlon netn temporarily suspended nnd Miss Keller wns allowed to touch the llower. She readily Identified most of them by touch Htid smell 'thousands of vlaltors attended the show nnd the crowds Increased steadily until at .', o'clock the aisles nnd alleries wero jammed. There were almost ns many men ns women .Small boys dressed ns Hutch gardenots moven among me crowns nn- - noimclng over the music 01 inn orcnesira that a "freo moving picture show was going on up stairs " The movies were very popular Instead of Wild West scenes they threw on the screen pictures of flowers and plants 111 dlllerent stages of growth, 'I here wa onesenes entitled A '1 rip Around the World," which dlsplaved garden scenes In l.ngland, Holland, (iermnny, Japan and other countries, '1 he biggest crowds of all were banked around an exhibit which disclosed the newest and most fashionable ways of deco- rating tho dinner table. On the tables were different arrangements of flower centre pieces. The one which caused the most admlrntlon showed a basket of red roses upset In the middle of the table with the flowers spilling out like hubs of a wheel nnd winding In and out among the plates and glasses. Alfonso Urcoratrs Arthur Williams. Arthur Williams, president of the Ameri can Museum of Safety, has Just received notification that Klne Alfonso of Spain has honored him with tne decoration 01 nnigm nf th lloval Order of Isabella the Catholic. Tho ordor was founded In 1817 by Ferdinand VJ1. of Spain. The Xeaaroert, Sailing y by the Hollcnd-Amerlc- a liner Noordatn for Boulogne sur Mer and Rotterdam: Karl S. ('lurk Mr- - and lira. A. (1. Mrs rilntoii C.iKhlna- Dodger Norton Kllpatrlck MIm .Natalie M. Hod Mr. and Mrs. V. I'. Mc- - arrs KlbDrn John A. notlgrrs Swift & Company's sales of Fresh Best In New York City for the week ending. Haiurday, Ar. 6, averaged 12,10 cents per pound. tai. THE SUN, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1913. 11 1 'We CONCERT AIDS WOMEN'S CLUB. Mnslplnn nt 'Irs. John llrnry II 11 in- -, mnnil'l lloiiar llnisr ll.r,oll, An interestmi; nnd successful cciueri J fur the benellt of the rt Worker Club' fur Women was kIvpii vesteiday after- - noon at the hiu-- e of Mrs .lohu Henry Hammond, u Past Mnety-tlr- l street. I nettlm: fl.Sno 'll.e artists were Mrs Henry Hay Dennis, contralto Kr.inrl itocers. barytone, and l.niet holiellinit. plnnlst Unino Huhn wnsat the piano Anion those present were Mrs. Cornelia" C cuyler. Mrs l iattk s Witheibee.xMr llenjamin C Porter. Mr Charle H Alex- ander. Ml- - Hurls Irntirklyn. Mr and Mr. Adam (Jordan Itorrie. Miss Dehon. Mr .Iteph Palmer Ktiapp. Mr Samuel I'literinyer .Ml Nora (.odwiu. Mrs .1 Ittissell Soley. Mrs llenrv S lledmolid, Mrs. ( buries M Connfelt. Mrs Hnr.tld de Mis I ridliiKliiiysen. Mr. Hniyton lve. Mr Walter I". Mnvnnrd, Mr. William Pollock. Mr William ll.uard Kleld. Mrs. Dn Witt I linton Kail. Mr W II 1 leld. Mis t rnet schellins. Mrs M Lawrence Keetie, Knslun Ijiwrem-- '1 own-en- d. Jr . I S N , Mr CMter-lver- r. Mrs 1 rancl itoifer. Miss ( onstance Curtis., I'lis Mrv Par'olis. Mrs llolwrt S llrew- - ster. Mrs llowe, Mis liporKlana Howland nnd Mlsl,ydla Kleld I'tnniet FOLK DANCES AT BENEFIT. inl.ilnir Will ln He for nle t Hie Astor To-nln- n entertainment of folk ilnnre nnd other diversions will l given In the ballrunm of the Hotel Astor for the lnellt ot St Mark's llo-pit- al 111 Second avenue Ml Anna Constable Inn ar- ranged seveiat interesting feature for amateur-- , and Mi-- s lliirchenal will direct the dance, for which the au- dience will be seated around a stage placed In the centre of the ballroom floor Painting given by Arthur Haltiil and other artist will ! on sale nnd nlo pro- - ..f 11 iiteri.ilnmplit. .the lover of which ha U'cn designed by Mrs Newell W liltou Mnong those to take part ill the folk dance are Mr Harry W. McV ckur. Mr Archlbnld M llrc.wn Ml- - Juliana Cutting. Mis Huth llun henal and a number of the debutante of the winter 'I here Willi be general dancing at the end of tho tegular j programme . JVeThiilrt-Yi.rnn- ll Knungcmral. PniMPM.l'UM. April T Mr and Mrs ( harlton nrn.ill announced the engagement of their daughter. Mis Mnr-gnr- nmall. to Arthur llmlen Kewbold, Jr. sou of Mr. nnd Mrs. vrthnr hmlen Newbold of l.averorl. Chestnut Hill Mr Newbold I the grent-grnndo- of the late r.nnm M Dallas, one time minister to riihhIr. HI mother wns Harriet Dallas pixon. Notes nf Ihe Social World. Mr and Mrs Henry l. Kterbrook and Col. Hobert c dowry are nl tne ria?a Mrs. August Belmont will give a mtisleale at her hoiibu, ii Last Thirty-fourt- h street. , Mrs. Kdwant l. .xtontagpe ana .mss Dolly Madison Lu Montague have returned from Nassau to IM Kast rortieth street. Mrs. noylston Adum Real and Mrs Jamea II. Heal of Boston and Mrs. nnd Mr Robert U, Pruyn of Mount Klsco, .. ., arc at the Oothara. The second auction nnd euchre for the benefit of the work carried on in the Children's Court by the Society of Cat ho In Women will bo held this arternoon at the house of Mrs. Herman Bidder, 21 Went Seventy-fourt- h street. Hobert li. Bacon, who will marry Miss Virginia Murray on Monday In St. George's Chanel. Stuvvesant Hiiuare, will have his brother. (Iupar (1. Bacon, as heat man, HlgffliiKon. J. Walson Welili, l.llot covyuui 2d. Henry A. Murray. Jr., unit (leorge lilt -- ney of this oily: Francis W. Sargent. Jr . Alexander (1. (Irani and Bobert Winsor, Jr.. of Boston. Mis Josephine. Ostium, who was expected to act as one of I he brides- maids, will be unable, tn do so owing to the recent death of a relative Mis (Uadya Close McAlpln. a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William W. MoAlpln, will be married to William Fletcher Irwlu on the afternoon of April 30 In the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Churnh. Her bridal attend ants will be Mis Harriett!' .vio.xipin a sister! Miss Gladys Bobbins and Mis Bowmann of this city; Mls Louise Vanderhilt of South Orange and Miss Mi- ldred Kddy of Morrlstown, N. J, John K. Irwin will act as his brother's best man. A reception will follow at 11 East .Ninetieth street. Temperatnrr at Atlantic City, Ati-anti- o Citt, April 7. The tempera- ture was 40 degreea at noon here Have With Us To-da- v 'PRESIDENT'S DAUGHTER TO AUDIENCE OF WOMEN A(llrcMs 1,000 nt Politic-i- l Kriiicntioii Leiiiriii' l.lllll'llfMHl. One of the largest women's, lunch- eons ever held In New York took place yesterday In the grand ballroom of the Astor. when 1.000 members of the League for Political Education sat down incether. l'lfteen or tvventv men weip present. liluin It. 1.. liniild presided. .M- l- Margaret Vo,lrow Wilson was , the llrst speaker. She congratulated the league on the number present, and said she felt honored nt being asked tn speak, but could not do the occasion Justice. She wore a gray hat with tightly culled gray plumes, a blue chif- fon gown with Bulgarian trimming and a white lace collar. Miss Helen Keller followed, speaking from Isdilnd a bank nf American Heauty roses which had taken the prize at the flower show In the morning and had been presented to her. Miss Keller spoke In the peculiar deep voice which years of practice has evolved, telling of the light that was overcoming the dark places of ignorance and making them as bright as the room with lis red shaded candles. Her teacher, Mrs. Rverett Macy, stood up to be greeted with prolonged applause. She translated all the rest of the speeches tn her blind and deaf pupil with rapid mutiuns nf her hand. Miss Julia Ivthrop, head of thr new Children's Hurcati, said that the func- tion of the bureau was merely to gather up and tabulate the wnrk nf nthrr or- - gantzatlons She said they hnd con- - nuclei! trus year a special inquiry as to the deaths nf little children in smaller places, where neither badness nor good- ness was so spectacular as In lhe cit- ies. Andrew Carneglp's inscription of her as u "flnn Scotch girl" served to In- - troducc Miss Spenc'p, who spoko on the education of women, which sho said must be not an nrtltlcial process, hut nn Inner spiritual growth. Hubert Krsklnc F,ly spoke of Hip for 11 building where all women's clubs could meet, and Alfred Noyes read one of his poems. . Among those present were Mrs. Her- bert Carpenter. Mrs. Walston Hill Hrown, Mrs. Thomas A. Edison, Mrs. Charlotte Perkins C.llman. Miss Wini- fred Holt, Clarence A, Terry, Mrs. William Jay Kchleffelln, Mrs. Klranor Gates Tully and Mrs. Virginia T. Van de Wuter. M. JEAN ERNEST C0NSTANS. Former French Premier and Ambus- - ndnr to Turkey. f Sptcinl Cable Dttpttch to Tsi Sr. Pari. April 7. M, Jean Ernest Con-stan- s, formerly Premier of France and Ambassador to Turkey, died y after short lllne. M, Constans was In his eightieth year. For the last forty years he was a consplcu-u- s figure In French puhllo life. He became a lawyer nnd was professor nf Ftomnn law at Toulouse when tho Commune broke to surrender when they had taken possession of tho capital and when flvo minutes were left to them to mako up their minds to give in or faco a heavy artillery Are which would have destroyed thnm. This brought him Into the public eye and shortly afterward he was appointed Town Councillor. In ls7 ns a Hepubllcan he wns sent to the Chamber of Deputies, In IS70 he wn appointed Under Secretary of State. In IMS he became Minister Extraordinary toChhia. As such he concluded the Franco-Chines- e commercial treaty. He remained thare until May, IMS. It was about tuW tlmn that he rid France of Oon. Boulanger under thrent of prosecution, Ho then bn. came Minister nf the Interior, INW-int- :; Senator, I mi, nml Ambassador to Turkey, a post which ho held until May, 1000. Just before he was withdrawn from Constanti nople a olrMlar sent out by the Young Turks ad that an Atubns,nlnr had nrenpted a larce bribe for nbialulnk' certain coal con- cessions Cnii-Mt- is felt t tin t he wa ine.'iiit. He demanded nnd received mi 0ftlci.1l apotoiry fter he returned to Paris a story Kalned Ircillntlou that he had re- ceived lor many months tlu.oini a mouth trom Abdul Humid, the deposed Sultan. John II, Minll, Jr. John 11 Shillt. Jr . 011 nt the late John II shiilts, died oil Sunday at his home In Pelhain, N .Mr sluilts wns uected with the Shults llrend Company, vvhlih has bakeries in llrooklvn He wns 41 ve.-i- r old, w.i born In Brooklyn and inherited n large fortune frim hi fattier, w ho wa also In the bakery bii'lness. lie wh n memlier ot the 'landein Chili, "n(," owned S11110I. holoer of tintliiis- - repoid lie married Mis .Hnly Heard, daughter of the late William H Aeaid she obtained divorce and the custody of th(,r , ,,'hilir,)n. j,"r hnlu Hfter. ward married Miss Jrannette Mlllei of st i.Ollls Philip II. lllehl. F.I.IZASKTH, N. .1. April T Philip 11 niehl. elpctrlcnl engineer and Inventor and founder of the Plehl Manufactutlng Company, died here y at his home. 52 Morris avenue He placed the Hrst electric fan on the market. The Dlehl company ha a Virgo plant here and em- ploy" about a thou-an- d hand". Mi Dlehl was born in D.ilsheln, (lermany. In 1SI7. He came to the 1'nlted States In 1 vit. He located In New Voik nnd d the employ of the Singer compativ when It was on Mott treet. that city He I surxlvAtl by his wife, a daughter and threo grandchildren. Mrs. rtelle C11IIL. YoNKt-RS- , April 7 Mrs. Helle K, Cul-ll- s, nn artist who was the widow of John Marshall Cullls. died last night at her home. ii04 Warburton avenue. She was born in HutTalo forty-si- x years ngn and had lived In Yonkers eleven years. She was active In charitable wnik and had been president of the Terrace City Sun- shine Society for the past four vear. She I survived by h son, rjporge Dark Cullls. John l Inn, John F. Ryan, an actor whoe last ap- pearance was In "Cnder Southern Skies" four years ago, died on Sutidiy 011 Black-viei- r Island, lie had been an Inmate of the almshouse there for a year. He was Ca years old. It yah played a quarter of a century ago In Hartley CimpheH's "White Slave." He married Mabel l.mnatil. who was a well known -- nctre.-- m hei d.ij. She died when her son, Itlch.ilil I.. Hy.ili. whs born twenty year ago. The Acton Fund ofllctal are ttylns to locate the sou Mr. Mary Wnrrlnartnn Wnlklns. Mrs. Mary Warrington Watklns, wife of the Hpv Tr. S. c. O Watklns of Trinity Prr shyterMn Church of Montelalr, died vestrrday at her home, IS North Fullertoti nvenue, Montelalr. Mrs. Wat- klns was the daughter of the late Philip and IlPster Ann Doremus nf Montelalr. She wns born sixty ear ago. ShP Is survived by her husband, a son, Iiw-renc- e ' and a daughter Anne V. ficorgr fi. Howland. Georg" O. Rowland, member of the Jersey City Board of Aldermen from the Ninth ward and former member of the Hoard of Freeholders, died at his home, 108 Van Iteypen street, Jersey City, on Sunday. He wns fit years old, a book- keeper for a lumber firm nnd a bachelor. .ladarr It. II. n. Maraham. Special Cable Detratrh to Tar Sc London, April 7. The death occurred y of Judge Hobert H. B Marshain, who had prolded over the Bow street police court for the lat thirty-fou- r year Judge OLD COLUMBIA TRUSTEE QUITS. I.rnnoa "mllh HralRna After Thirty Years nt Service. Lennox Smith, for thirty year a trustee of Columbia I'nlvprslty, resigned frnru the board at Its regular meeting In the library yesterday because of ill health. .Mr. Smith was graduated from Columbia In the class of I Hits and next tn Gen, 11, W. Carpentier wa tho oldest man on the board. In point of service he was actually the oldest The death of J. l'ler-pe- nt Morgan has also caused a vaeancv In the Columbia board. His successor will be appointed shortly nlo. Gifts amounting to 17,750 were received In the month. Including ivnoo from Hobert Bacon, former Ambassador to Franoe, for the Mnlson Francahw, 17,500 from an unknown lver. WOMEN LIKE TIGHT GOWNS, SAYS WORTH (iiil Will llnvc TIiciii: 'I'licir .Miuiiliins Must, Is (lie Purls Vcnlicl. FONTS OF INSPIRATION 'I - . rl'PSl'Ill Stvlt'. S(t CIllC. So Sllllnv So Clinirinsr, Will Lnsl tl Loiio- - Time. At. .I.itciues Worth, who hrouvlit the liood blouse ft mil Sulla to Alx, Inld nf his art to fiOa yniini; women nnd two ' most unfortunate youni; men nt Teach- ers tolletse yesterday nfternoun. Hue of the yottiiK men Imil n tienv ttius-tnch- c, u Tchntnldja walstcoal .mil u Utllu HurKiis tie. The other wr-- n com- mon reporter whose shoes siticuked. The ."0(1 yoiitiK women were there for '"""" I, . .. .1 '.i. . W . ti one mr i is iNipei. in.- - .... .. iihii,,,,,,. MU, itmimHilld. puslilent nf the avenue in rr,-in- ii i,-- i e Ilai' you ever walked down the centre aisle of n lecture room containing r.oo yotini; women with your shoes squeak-In- and nur ears llnpplni; ros, ate" utie who tins done that can plvo Henri lieiK son nf the same country iir M. Worth's new Ideas as to the psychology of humb- ler, particularly the psychology of femi nine kIkkIcs. Utters) and what Is known In eveiV boardltiK school ns ood old "hlsh strikes." liefore .M. Worth stepped to the pint-fot- with his iiiessime a tlee'.lnj; ullmpse aioiinil an imroarlous loom bum- - one the Implesslon that evciybody is wcar-- I inc those coat sweatets with laru'e white 'buttons, such as adorned th" Hunt nf Chuck Conner., and hair ribbons, pink 'or blue, nccordinu' to taste. Take that 'for laiiKhlni;' The present fashion are to last a lotus, lont; time, saya .M. Alortli. And wh '.' b. cause they aie so lin-- , pie! ah! so simple. It is B. ttlni; so that In the modern Kwn .Mtiauy neeii not bnthef ilre.Hlli fintll 10 111 the moriilni; until her ploimliiuan home-war- d plod. bis weary way. The motor, ihe shopping trip, the tea one dre j xv III do for nil of these Anil It I for tills i ,.n.,ui Hint tlie colors lire so ll lllll. so unobtrusive, that one meeting .Ml- -j lady the next day 111 the Mime dress will not say "Volla, she wore that yi-t- er- .. I 'And then again the present fashions i will last, because outh demands. ti, voting, the nil. sn pretty, so chic. wntild not mantle her chic, her oh, o J prettlness. her youthful lines, with too' much m intlp. So come the clinging, the emlirnclng, the snug In dtei-s- . Hu. I what nt the very old. the woman of .10: iiUs SI. Wwrth tn n chorus nf snllfs. She come to the dress shop, and tlmre shown to her the clinging, the mug. the embracing, (if whnt does she Im mediately think'.' Ah, M. .lacnucs, one. cannot here set down of what she Im- mediately think.. "Hut, madame. the Oriental Is the rage. Mile. Soando has Just bought this." Forthwith the decrepit damn of 30 totters out with the demmd that In- stantly she should hnve one. Ami then M. .lactiues told of the fonts of his Inspiration how one day two little apprentice girls playing on the stairs of his shop caught hi eye nnd how he asked one where she got the pretty waist. Out of her little old last year's waist, she tells M .tai'iiues. Thi twist to the collar, this snip of lace, thi tuck, this here now, bla hemming, and lo. M. .Inrciun dashes to the tie. signing room' A new waist appears on the boulevard. And then again In the museum? M Jacques sends his desjgnera there, note- book In hind. "Cop." he command, "something from the court drcs of Bloody Mary " V)elgners fly to tho museum Uphold t ho court dre o' Hlnody Mary, called by the stlbtlj M. Jacques "Idyll Sauvaga." But alas. America can never hope to seize snrtorial laurels from the fair orovv nf Paris these many years! Mete wo have not the atmosphere, the Inspira- tion. We send our girl. to schools to lenrn to mako dresses. One cannot make dresses In si'hools. One must have the genius of the brocade, the fine frenzy of the crepe voile, the afflatus of the mustard ratine. Wo can buy her pictures, her chateux, but never, never can wo buy from Franco the brains that gnve the world the bobble, tho pannier, the supreme Dl- - rectolrel Is It not sad? WEDDINGS. A very M nitre. Manasqvan, April 7. In the First Presbyterian Church Miss lilariys Louisa ' Ma gee, daughter of Mrs. Morgan Magee of this place, and Stephen Hillings Aver.v of CllfTwood were mar- -' rleil hj tlie Itev. Walter W. Kdge. the p.lstor. ' Miss Magee was given nny by her I mother. Tho matron of honor wns Mis. Carl H. Wynkoop of Philadelphia anil ' Mannsqunn nnd the best man was Frank j M Daln of Peeksklll, n cousin of the bridgegroom. Miss Abble X' Strickland and Miss Avery were the bridesmaid. The ushers wpre Hoscr Magee, a brother of the bride, William J Duncan of Mata-wa- I.eon Sehancft of Keyport and ltos M. Fountain ot Matawan. After a honeymoon In Itennuda th couple will live In CllfTwood, where Mr Avery Is the nssistant trensurpr of the Cllffwood Brick Ciinipan.v. Raymond Conk. Mo.ntci.air, April 7 Ml l.onip Cook ond Kveritt llaymond of Chatham, N . were married this evening nt s oVlock at the home of tho bride's father, C Alexander Cook, too Park street, thu llev Dr Orvllle Beed, pastor of Trinity Presbyterian ('hurry officiating The maid of honor was Mls llelon Cook, a sister of the bride, and the best man was Merritt Budd of Chatham, a cousin of the bridegroom. The usher were Dwlght Budd, Ivan Budd of Chatham, cousins of the bridegroom; C Alexander Cook, Jr , n brother of the bride, nnd Samuel Wheeler After the ceremony there wa a reception nt the Cook house. Mr and Mrs. Itaymonci will sail on the Orotavn for Bermuda. They will live in Chatham rorrn Mai II araai, Nkw BociiM.t.t:, April 7 - William Lemuel Brown of '.'.Mi Circuit road and Mr. Anna J Cowles Miilllneanx of Colignl avenue, New llochelle, were married yesterday by tho Itev, Tillman 11, Johnson at the parson- age of Halem Baptist Church, Now Rochelle. The bride's first husband was J. Kdward Cowles, an Alderman of New Bochelle, who was killed by a train at the New Bochelle station In 1905. Her second husband was Klnhard Hudson IMullineaiu. whom she divorced nt' Heno InlllOlo, Mr Brown I connected with S, H. Pomeroy A Co., New York, manufacturers of metal window frames. In inoa he towed on the New York Atnietlo ciuu eight cur crew, which won tho national clianiplqnslilp CLERK MARRYINO MILLIONS. ( Hiindliui on Way Here In Wrri Mr,?? Si Ornhnm nhcocU. ll iMvvti.'v, who up tu S.iliud.iy notlit wa a clerk In his fathet's stole at llrock llle, ilntiiilo. left their esteilay for New Vmk lie will m.ury Mts. iJlali.un I". H.ibcoi'k, who has A for-t- "tlttinli'd nt fiotn $,'i uno.ooft tn tL'll.MIHI.lllMI The in.llll.llte will be celebrated III Ten-i- i 11 . X. .1. wliiie .Mis ll.ilxock has h ciiiintiv linme They win s.ill for llurnpe .iftil Hie ei n lliiil) nml then no to tlie lioUNind Islands, ivhi'ie Mi ionn.v (list met Mis Hiibioelt In the sumtnci of 1M? llei fathei wn Mi Myets of Ml. l,oiil of Hie ill iii of t.hrui'tt Myets. tiilmcio. ,liil of hei eslate was lift her by her Iltst husband, whn died live seats into WILLS AND APPRAISALS. Itl.NMMiN !' llTTl.tMirii seiolid will or ll.'iij.itnln Ilttllmier, who died .Inly '.'II. I!MI, was ninl for probate .Mstenlay The III t will was dated .Inly L'7, I All The new Will le.'IM'S one-tllll- il of tile i. tnte to ilatiuhti't's, i'm Ilia and I'orothy, but Klies ii itlilm; to the widow "for lea-S"i- is sitlsfintii to ni.M'i'lf " The reslil-ii'- il i Mate Is left to a "dear friend," Miss Minnie Council. The estate Is npr Hie nrst will left all to n hi other, .losi ih r.ltlltmrr Wiii.ism Wkikpi An iierotintlnR of the state of William Welsel says that the lefiitict l eileral Hank. conerted assets or $!'il.nfiil beloiiKltiK to the estate. Tho loss w.is pilil later by the iidinlnl-- , tr.itor's siiretv. the Hunkers Surety I'otn-- 1 I'.itH. Tl stilt" iituntiuti'd to $17r,,!il nnd ha Inrie.ised liy f23,0iin. The ex-- ! eetitors hae pulil $1 10.000 to IcKiitpps. Siiimcmi lUt'sr.n, who controlled thu' Star I'lidi iwear Comiiatiy, and died on Apt II 'JT, pi 2, left $32,h23 to his widow, Delia Iblllier CTlli:itiK II Oti.nnnT. who died Ausii't tl last, left J2l.i'i2 to two son mid two ihumhtei-s- . llKNIIV P tH'S'llAM Stilt to th- -' will of I lent j Polllott nuiiham w as llled In the SiirrnKate's olflre ,eterd.iy by hi widow. Hntlii I'" IhinliHtii Men, who hu ben ri'Miarilnl since her hustmnd' dentil on October I last, and by Cleorgft I,. Duty of ItliUewiiod, N. .1. Jt'oth dcn; that Diinhain was a lesldetit of New" York when he made a will lenvlntr tilt bulk of his estate to Henrietta VlrKlnla Carll If the will Is reji'cteii the wldmv will Bet the entile estate under the New .lrey law, while .h.. would net onl.v' half if her husband I held to have been a lesldent of New York when he died I'luscis I. Kamkh, a member of th New York Stock I'.xchnnKc, who died at' his home, 12.1 Henisen street, Hroiildyn.' on November Hi Inst, lelt $6f.r..M4.ns. i:th"l Kami's Sanderson, daUKhtiT, geU ail "7r. i.. '" I.. Tn.. Week.. Iteginnld De Knven, who cirTPred a prize of f 1,11(111 over six month ago for the nccei.tnble llbietto for a light opera, i il ast night that the decision Llim e made In about two weeks. About 4l, ui0t,,is ,.rt, nuhniltted In Xrw York Tn-cln- j-. Association of Catholic Chnritle. Ladle.- - id ( h.iilty of St Vincent de Paul, ronfer- - t etiee, Dellnotiico' A P M. New ork Peace Society, lecture hy Alfred Noyes, Hotel Aslor, 4 P. M American (ieographlcal Society, meeting, Pnglneerllig Societies Building, in West 'Ihlrlv-iilntl- i street, :.w P. M. Hobeit Collyer Men- - Club, Church of the Melnh, Park avenue and Thirty-lourt- h street, . I.'. P. M. Kqual franchUe meeting, lecture 011 Colonial government, s Kast Thirty-se- v enth street, t P. M. Sphinx Club, "old guard" nluht, Wal-dor- l- storla ( ol 11 11 ii 111.- Iloapitil, dinner, ;;o West I'm 11 s, ,10111 street, 7 P. M lower Sho.v, Nw Grand Central Pnlaee. Stage Children'. Fund, meeting. Hotel Aslor. 2 to P M Government Club, meeting, Hntpl !or. lo .hi A M l'reh Mr Fund, meeting. Hotel Astor, ? P M I he'itr" Club. Ine . incline, Hole! xstor, ? I' M Mithor. ''hilt, 'iieetin-- . Ilo'el tor, .10 P M DIED. ALLAN K III .krn.ick. N .1 . nn April f. 111.1 Miry VetlllPll, lietuv tl wife Of John A tlnn. ageil fi., y jr.. I'uiirrHl peri Ices icr lut ri'ltlrnfi'. 1R7A Cnlon .iirrct, Hftckencnrk, nn TupsilHy, Aiirll 11. .it v 20 1' .VI Train leaves Krl tullon via N. V .N .1 It It for On. 'r.il avenue sliitlun. or vl.i N V i.nL VVetrii H It fnr .Mln sired ftatlon Itileriusin prlvats L)AltC'V.-..Si.l'l- nle. ni hl resldsnee, 12) l'utn.i'ii iftiui llrnoklyn Siimlny, April 11, 1013. William c Dircv. Kuni-ra- .rrvlro it the rcvltlrnce nf hit brelloT. .I.'imr S Ii.ircy. 2(6 I'utnnm airnue, Tuesday, A lull S. 7.30 P .VI DIEIII. At I'll, iliilh. N J. .Xtnmlnv, April 7, IS13. I lllllp nii-lll- , iiKtil 1.6 1'MM Kuilfr.ll sell tie at III lite reflili'me, S3 4 Murrt MVenue. Kllxaheth. N. J . Weilnes-ili- v evening. April '.1. '. loik Inter-- .' nii'iit prlvntp Thurs.lnj, lu .10 A ,M , rni.l.OW'i;. Krncft Tliomni, at tln real-- , ilcncu of hl daughter, Mrs More.in Hos Ilne. 31 W'i't Sevriity-tlfi- h meet, on Sunday, April 6. In . lie venty-flr- t jur of liN line. Funeral private. Interment al Rnalewood, N J Mi liiiVVAN Th" American Irish lll'tnrlral Sn'leiv aliunume lite ile.ith nf Its ptei I'trnt general, linn. Palriik K Mellnwan, and leuuentK the nieuiliers tn attend, the fuiieinl at ,t Anns c'liurrh. 11; F.nn Twelfth Hlreoi. mi Wednei-da- April 9, 11)13. at 10 , M ' O'COS.NOn. KIIVVAItl) II IlALT, Secretar ileneral, QCIN.N On suvlaj, April 1;. I'JU, Charles .1 rjulnti. Inotlirr of .Marlha and, I) W. Quhin r ' Funeral from hi" late residence, 301 St, Mrlmlns atelllie, Tueedai. Apt 11 . at 5 30 A M . ilieiue to st .Imepir church, ljjth etieet and .MnraliiK'Ide avenue, wheie a niai1 nf requiem win be ntTereii fnr the iep,tie nf hlii enul al 11 , M, Interment Kenslcn remelerj. It VAN. Jnlin. aetn'r. liemaliin lying In mate thi: FFNniiAi. I'licnc'it." :u pl Twenty-thir- d stiirt (Frank K Campbell llulldlnci. Time funeral latir SKAHHOOKi: -AI ChUngn. April 3. Thomn' QulBley HiMhrooke, aged 62. helmed hui-han- d .V1ar Martini Keabrnnke Hemalnii lying hi slate "THU FV.NBHAI, CIIl'ltCH." 241 Went Twenty-thir- d ttreet (Frank lv Campbell ullitlng) Servlres W'eilnesilay morning. 10 o'clock, above aililress TBUHbOW Al WeMhamptsT) Iteachi t, I, on .Sunday. April (, Xlliabeth KldJtr,,. wife of John Trmlnr, "fn the leventy-eight- h eur of her age. -- Inteyment private, WATKINH At Montelalr. Tf. J , n April T, 1913, Mary Varrl.igtnn, wife nf Iir S, C, il Watklns and daughter nf the lst Phillip and Hester Ann Doremous Funeral torvlies at her lata resident:. 16 North Fullertnn avenue, Montelalr,, N. J on Wednesday, April 9, at 3 P. M Wit.WS On April 6, 1913, Gordon Willis, on ot the late General Kir Frederic Ar- - thur Willis, K. C, il, and l.iilv Willis. Funeral services at th Church ot th'' Transfiguration, Bast Twenty-nint- h street, Tuesday morning, April I, at 11 o'clock. Interment private, i UNIHCsVrAKEKS. AMBULANCES (tiSSSl) tf.V SleU. L'rrled: Itata fta.oo CAMMELL, TtSS .c

Transcript of The Sun. (New York, NY) 1913-04-08 [p 11]. · 2017. 12. 16. · MOVE STRONG FOR NEW CHURCH NAME...

Page 1: The Sun. (New York, NY) 1913-04-08 [p 11]. · 2017. 12. 16. · MOVE STRONG FOR NEW CHURCH NAME Weiulil nf I'mfcM 'I'mken it liiM'nunition!' It In'iiulli. 31 V III'. A I.OXO CONTKST

MOVE STRONG FOR

NEW CHURCH NAME

Weiulil nf I'mfcM 'I'm ken it

liiM'nunition !' It

In'iiulli.

31 V III'. A I.OXO CONTKST

j

j

(iioiimN of Ohjccfions to (lie of

W.niN "Pinit'sninf mill i I'.In

K pIMMIptl I .

, a inline of ii protect signed liy. l nu i IiTg.Vlllcu nf New York

, il.ng Khllop nf tile Chill ehI , (' .M'lV lit st'I'llloll'. Voicing oh- -

.lulu Mlnii.M not only of the', - i l1'!' proposed elllltlglllg of

f the I'rotostant Kplscopal, also nl the strength of the j Ini v. n. hi f"f nih il a change. !

, ,i lonirovcrsy that has been,, . I !n- annual Church convention. In

. a. '.irn. but the near victory nf, mtiiii; a change In the enliven- -'

j ear anil the early dale at, campaign ha been lnaiigu--- j

I '' - .ve.it" suggest that the isuo is ill, ., : ii;it out lln.illy when the Church,.rv.- - .it. vis convene In New York

Innext ' '" r.

I r ,.. .. r.il weeks Church publications,, - ii pii scntln the arguments pro

..r.,1 They involve milch ot Churchrv. :.u. men nuu ...r w. i., n ..rt.un cnnsiuerauon. oi pres. j

in. leiu y niui. in.coiu.im io iinisci!d Uti'uv, ere nut to h, enn-- i

.i tl .T movi inenl which linn mr 1return t riote.si.int Kpl-- -

.. r tulil of the lluinan c'.itli-,'- .n V'i' n it was sium'sted to

. inn ill yrye-ila- y that the. aaiiii hetokened mull J move-- n

::.',n i.iti d a l.iutcn of a!. wli. f.iid:

ti.kh t'.Jin oil Mutid-- i tor nnn-',- tilU'-ai- "

iwi.i favor the thanco. nr. as

thi - i . the ' inrrectliu,, ' In thei . ih.it the present i.'hnrili l.

fhurili whi dt Chrli't'hit this 1'lMirih has p.issed

.i mpnr.'irv taces nf mllitnncythr a .me Protestant 1'pisoopal

. . ,ed in it ill one of these staKes.nt.nti.'ti w that the name is not

--i i.iresi nt.itive of the history or the. . ni ihaiacter of the Church and

i .s a name that had only a tctn-- ,

inrv !..Kni!kance.T proponents of the change point

x ; an in the Act nf the Apnstlcs are. .h f" iial the cli.iriictori.atlnns of the'j, I'l irdi, such indexes of its ch.ir-i- i

r unity, sanctity, catlmllcityr j ,it)i..t.illctty. The.--e marks nf therue Clnirih. they say. have In en pc-...nc- il

in the phraseology of the Apo-r- s'

Treed and the Nicene I'reed, the.rmer uslni: the word "holy" anda l'jllc" and the latter acknowledging.e Ohurcli us "oiip. cathollu and apos- -

,.c The slcnitlcancp nf the word" afinlic" 1. hire of course "all the

"every creature." "all natlnns,". rm other such words used by Christ.' Is set forth a thu semrlc nameot he Church.

Ii 1. therefore arsued by some of

n'c favorinu a change that the namee American Catholic Church" wouldmore representative of the branch

' i,p churcli in this country thana' y which it now la known.A further arpument is that the word

rr ,tf i.int" lias lot its slcmtlcanee:a " applleil only to a particular time,i -- si nted only a phase of the activity

true church In seekinK to re- --- h itself aecordlni; to the stand-- f

:t Founder and is now a hln-- .'

i. ' missionary work. A cleriry- -

.1 ited yesterday tho remark of' Brent of the Philippine Islands

. ' word Protestant in the titler 'lurch is a complete barrier to

i s- - The presence or absence of- urd mean. the difference between

i - and failure." sjo marked ha.h. opposition to it that It has

' (n eliminated from the title; prayer books used in our Span-- e

where the church isu i .'livert..

, v d with the desire to eliminatewjrd. or as a matter of fact one

)f ' f ''indatlonal ai Kiunents aualnsti intention that the present

- .i Kpiscopal Churcli is not ai.f t!n.--e who are protesting;'in i.riKinal tenets of the

) it that it. .succession fromr b founded by Christ is clear

i , - i.lable; that It Is the true' ."d that the use nf the word

' .' puts it in a false liKliti. wm Id. It Is arcued that she

i her unity, that she wasin nto the world to protest, u

nd. d that the Church of Knu-,-- rr ' did protest, that she merely

It"tnan church from ani pisitmn and that In America

o. in i hurch wa. the first on then I w th her own native episcopate,

"'lect.iin m the use of the word"1. "pal ' is that it emphasizes too

s'- 'he polity nf tin; church. It. - tu. form of tlm church's snv- -

Tl" II' and :t Is arsucu that it is a31 - to take any element of tho

constitution other than those! h she Is described in the. oriu-i- r

rred arid to fix It upon her aa atar f

7 American Cntlmlki, one of thef '0 papers which have been urs.nat. nance. say..

t' oar present title is misleading' i it now commonly accepted sense,

i.nc!f 'wd by us as a body. Is char'0 ni.e who has a knowledge of tho

' The movement for brliiBins our' . tesal title into closer agreementv,th 01, r standards of faith and to makecjr name a good omen significant of ouri'i I'laition In Christendom has come

' -- xisuncc, Is fiourlshitiK and Isceneral among our clergy and

rop "Thn Rov. Dr. Arthur Iowndcs, au-

thor of "Vindication of Anglican Or-ders'' and 11 liturgical scholar of note,

--i.dd vestcrdny uftornoon that tho pres-'- 1'

' tie of tho church xvuh In his opln- -m neatly unsuitable. The term

I'r..i slant, ho nald, was tinhlstorlcal becauyij the Kpiscopal Church held In herntllcc. of institution that her ministerswere, of apostolical descent and thattherefore she was In existence for cen-turies before tho term Protestant ciimeInto existence.

The term RplHcopal Is nlisurd, Dr.I.tiwndcs said, because there can no nochurch nf apostolic descent withoutbishops. Whllii he considered the pres-ent name, was unsuitable ho did notthink that the time wan ripe for thonloptlon of any nnmes yet suggested.Kor the present ho would ho satisfiedwdh tho elimination from tha title page"f tho Hook of Common Prnycr of thowords 'TrntcHtitnt Kpiscopal."

That there Is no unanimity ns tovhiti the now name should be was the

0

I answer nf a number nf clergymen who'mi' interested In having the change

liiuile. Also there was n disposition nntheir imri iml in In- - quoted mi tin mut-ter at this (line. None nf them Is cor-- ,tulit Unit the iiucstioii will tic Mettlednext October, hut It I tho Intention tolmake n ilctoriiilticd light fur the change.

Annum the hotter known clergymenwlin have nniiiiiinci'd themselves infavor nf ii change nil' tin- - Hov. Or.U'llllntn T. Manning, rector of Trltiltv('lunch, the I lev. nr. .1. (I. II. Itarry oftin- - Chinch of St. Maty t lie Vlrttln, ther.i-v- . Iir. ticorgo i'. Houghton of thoChinch of the Tiittisllgimitlon, tin- - Hov.I'r. Arllinr llltchle of SI. Ignatius"liurcti. tho llov. Uivvtonoo Carter Hleh

Cm pit Clitlstl Church, tin- - Hov. Dr.M. I'li'tiilcnnln of St. Holer's ChurchWestchester avenue nml Hie Hew

Henry C. Iiyor of the eiiureli of tlie Ho- -.

ileemer.

ORIENTAL ART DISPLAYED,

Mr. Clilrhtue'x Ti'miiil (lathered litClilnn nml .Inimn,

'I III1 tnii cllnncoii ollei tloli of I .it t II II ipo'i chillis, print hihI cnilo now nn view

the vtidornn miction room ha inanvpoints of InteteM Tip i ollei tlnn of teaputt, which wore gathered nmnv jonr nun

china and lup.in hv stimrt riitrldgo, l.miMt i ninpnliinl, II I odd tn ilnd aI'lllleitnr kdIiib In evelnxhely for tenpotR,hilt nine laiilli'lieil ill the purxiiit nl themMr I'lilriilue mint have Itidefiitlit.ihle

the M'liri'h.Ill Krniip i 'Mnlnli i nntnln nmnv mnre

"kiinwn vaiie'li'"" than are iniiniifai'tiiredtho Orient ut ptcvenl and ran ire thnniBh

eerv Htjle, lioih barmine and I'linwlpsome are iir.ullrnl ten pot In v tii. hnnilnnhteMe'l.'iil leu rail and Mill ulill he brewed.and nth.'iK .ire iii'tnen-- " in d'e of the kind,ha, nr lr(M , Jh ,., ()f ,llo ,,4l4hkn.

lie ini.4 nr.. ,m iia i.,,nl ...Ielenniit. ni'etlnie fnn'nu'lc nnd nroti.ee.

ll"P' lite learml shared III P ''ed.'lll I llairs.like bollle. Ill e blnl. beat mid cMpjHue nl the best dUii led te.'lnm nf all I

apo.ireii'lv a statcette In porcelain of a boylioldlnir a puppy 'I lie slat eite I not onl.xest client as a H'ntiptte liu' the tea that

an be undo In it can be poured out tliroimtithe puppj ' nin'ilh In clnldren and eentn ndclU whn liae a simple nature thimethod of lea mnkUii; unnld lime a lertalnharm I'here is lunch blue and white

in the collection.Closeli allied to the teapots are n eiimber

of ancient wine hies. n old S,itnninwine pot ha uraiefnl lines nnd a ch.irmini;cream lolored ul.iye The handle twineabout the neck of the pot and then branch"out to entwine the sKnit nother oldpot has two tine k'l.ies a jellow and creenot the kind the Koreans so frequently iiie

Tlie pictnn's and .liip.inese print. comeft urn si'M-r.i- l owner The paintings In-

clude an interetltik' etmnple nf the workot the inerican William Morri Hunt'I he subject l one thai I alway attrai theto artist, a fors--e with two blacksmiths atwork I he canva is sombre, but theiiuiiliiv nf the man who studied palatini;with .1 I" Millet is there

notli"r mertran. Ilollon Colt Urown.shows the s,'itnmlt oi Mount Kim!." treateddeioniteh. almost in a .l.ipatiese manner,with ll.it tone anil out line iliappHrini(in the cloud occasionally. There is adeioritlM" landscape by I'ran HermanMans of llshernien in boats selninc in ariver that Mow s by the walls of a tine castle.Mid there are a number of old canvases byunknown artists that are iiu.iintly iuter-estim- ;

CERAMIC SHOW.

Chances In Cushion Amonu the( h I ii n I'lilnters.

'IH'cinl exhiliitiun of leranur is nowon view in the rooms ol the soi lety nf i rRfis-ine-

ll Kust Nineteenth street sortsof bowls, pots, platters and plates Imve beencontributed bv the member, decorated Ina manner that now seems completelywphiipiI awav from the old time processesof decalcomiinla lhe inodeni eruditionin these matters compels the decorator ofporcelains lo cunie up to the standardestablished by Ihe Chinese, 1'erslnn and

I

other primitives, nnd so becinnlnc withI

the work of the president. Miss Maud .M.

Mason, we find nil the members of thesociety boldly ch,illeni;im; this ( omparisoti

Mis .Mason's display lontains somenovel nnd attractive lustre, which showshe ha been a student of the (sj

'Ihe dciuns are llowiiu; andWell adapted to the shapes they decorateand of course the metallic paints have beenapplied and ' llrcd ' skiltully Miss DorothyWarren d'llaru exhibit some well deco-rated jur and plates done in enamelOther llitcrestiui; pleies are muiicd liy MissC ( arroll. .Miss Nita siinoiid and MissII. I. let. an, and th cluss of the ounWomen's Christian Association show soinnIncised pottery I redetlck Hurteii Uheadof rnlilnv, (al, is represented by manyimpression of ancient coins niiidn intocolored porielinn buttons

MISS KELLER AT FLOWER SHOW.

llnnert tn Touch find Milcll fllns-MU- M

She Cnnnnt Srr,csteid.iy was rose ila at the newdrand

Central Palace, vihern the InternationalMower Show Is held Over lO.Onoroses were added 10 the llower aliendy onevliibition Of Ihesi! 2,iini were Aniericnnlleautie

Miss Helen Kellpr visited the show soonafter the door nere opened nl II o clock.'Die nile of tliee.xhlliltlon netn temporarilysuspended nnd Miss Keller wns allowed totouch the llower. She readily Identifiedmost of them by touch Htid smell

'thousands of vlaltors attended the shownnd the crowds Increased steadily until at.', o'clock the aisles nnd alleries werojammed. There were almost ns many menns women .Small boys dressed ns Hutchgardenots moven among me crowns nn- -

noimclng over the music 01 inn orcnesirathat a "freo moving picture show wasgoing on up stairs " The movies were verypopular Instead of Wild West scenes theythrew on the screen pictures of flowers andplants 111 dlllerent stages of growth, 'I herewa onesenes entitled A '1 rip Around theWorld," which dlsplaved garden scenes Inl.ngland, Holland, (iermnny, Japan and othercountries,

'1 he biggest crowds of all were bankedaround an exhibit which disclosed thenewest and most fashionable ways of deco-rating tho dinner table. On the tableswere different arrangements of flowercentre pieces. The one which caused themost admlrntlon showed a basket of redroses upset In the middle of the table withthe flowers spilling out like hubs of a wheelnnd winding In and out among the plates andglasses.

Alfonso Urcoratrs Arthur Williams.Arthur Williams, president of the Ameri

can Museum of Safety, has Just receivednotification that Klne Alfonso of Spain hashonored him with tne decoration 01 nnigmnf th lloval Order of Isabella the Catholic.Tho ordor was founded In 1817 by FerdinandVJ1. of Spain.

The Xeaaroert,Sailing y by the Hollcnd-Amerlc- a

liner Noordatn for Boulogne sur Mer andRotterdam:Karl S. ('lurk Mr- - and lira. A. (1.

Mrs rilntoii C.iKhlna- DodgerNorton Kllpatrlck MIm .Natalie M. HodMr. and Mrs. V. I'. Mc- - arrs

KlbDrn John A. notlgrrs

Swift & Company's sales of Fresh Best In NewYork City for the week ending. Haiurday, Ar. 6,averaged 12,10 cents per pound. tai.

THE SUN, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1913. 11 1

'We

CONCERT AIDS WOMEN'S CLUB.

Mnslplnn nt 'Irs. John llrnry II 11 in- -,

mnnil'l lloiiar llnisr ll.r,oll,An interestmi; nnd successful cciueri J

fur the benellt of the rt Worker Club'fur Women was kIvpii vesteiday after- -

noon at the hiu-- e of Mrs .lohu HenryHammond, u Past Mnety-tlr- l street. I

nettlm: fl.Sno 'll.e artists were MrsHenry Hay Dennis, contralto Kr.inrlitocers. barytone, and l.niet holiellinit.plnnlst Unino Huhn wnsat the piano

Anion those present were Mrs. Cornelia"C cuyler. Mrs l iattk s Witheibee.xMrllenjamin C Porter. Mr Charle H Alex-

ander. Ml- - Hurls Irntirklyn. Mr andMr. Adam (Jordan Itorrie. Miss Dehon.Mr .Iteph Palmer Ktiapp. Mr SamuelI'literinyer .Ml Nora (.odwiu. Mrs .1

Ittissell Soley. Mrs llenrv S lledmolid,Mrs. ( buries M Connfelt. Mrs Hnr.tldde Mis I ridliiKliiiysen. Mr.Hniyton lve. Mr Walter I". Mnvnnrd,Mr. William Pollock. Mr William ll.uardKleld. Mrs. Dn Witt I linton Kail. MrW II 1 leld. Mis t rnet schellins.Mrs M Lawrence Keetie, Knslun Ijiwrem--'1 own-en- d. Jr . I S N , Mr CMter-lver- r.

Mrs 1 rancl itoifer. Miss ( onstance Curtis.,I'lis Mrv Par'olis. Mrs llolwrt S llrew- -

ster. Mrs llowe, Mis liporKlana Howlandnnd Mlsl,ydla Kleld I'tnniet

FOLK DANCES AT BENEFIT.

inl.ilnir Will ln He for nle tHie Astor To-nln-

n entertainment of folk ilnnre nndother diversions will l givenIn the ballrunm of the Hotel Astor for thelnellt ot St Mark's llo-pit- al 111 Secondavenue Ml Anna Constable Inn ar-

ranged seveiat interesting feature foramateur-- , and Mi-- s lliirchenalwill direct the dance, for which the au-

dience will be seated around a stageplaced In the centre of the ballroom floor

Painting given by Arthur Haltiil andother artist will ! on sale nnd nlo pro- -

..f 11 iiteri.ilnmplit. .the loverof which ha U'cn designed by Mrs Newell

W liltouMnong those to take part ill the folk

dance are Mr Harry W. McV ckur. Mr

Archlbnld M llrc.wn Ml- - Juliana Cutting.Mis Huth llun henal and a number of thedebutante of the winter 'I here Willi

be general dancing at the end of tho tegular j

programme .

JVeThiilrt-Yi.rnn- ll Knungcmral.PniMPM.l'UM. April T Mr and Mrs

( harlton nrn.ill announced theengagement of their daughter. Mis Mnr-gnr-

nmall. to Arthur llmlen Kewbold,

Jr. sou of Mr. nnd Mrs. vrthnr hmlenNewbold of l.averorl. Chestnut Hill MrNewbold I the grent-grnndo- of the later.nnm M Dallas, one time minister toriihhIr. HI mother wns Harriet Dallaspixon.

Notes nf Ihe Social World.

Mr and Mrs Henry l. Kterbrook andCol. Hobert c dowry are nl tne ria?a

Mrs. August Belmont will give a mtislealeat her hoiibu, ii Last Thirty-fourt- h

street. ,Mrs. Kdwant l. .xtontagpe ana .mss

Dolly Madison Lu Montague have returnedfrom Nassau to IM Kast rortieth street.

Mrs. noylston Adum Real and Mrs JameaII. Heal of Boston and Mrs. nnd Mr RobertU, Pruyn of Mount Klsco, .. ., arc at theOothara.

The second auction nnd euchre for thebenefit of the work carried on in theChildren's Court by the Society of Cat ho InWomen will bo held this arternoon at thehouse of Mrs. Herman Bidder, 21 WentSeventy-fourt- h street.

Hobert li. Bacon, who will marry MissVirginia Murray on Monday In St. George'sChanel. Stuvvesant Hiiuare, will have hisbrother. (Iupar (1. Bacon, as heat man,

HlgffliiKon. J. Walson Welili, l.llot covyuui2d. Henry A. Murray. Jr., unit (leorge lilt --

ney of this oily: Francis W. Sargent. Jr .

Alexander (1. (Irani and Bobert Winsor, Jr..of Boston. Mis Josephine. Ostium, whowas expected to act as one of I he brides-maids, will be unable, tn do so owing to therecent death of a relative

Mis (Uadya Close McAlpln. a daughter ofMr. and Mrs. William W. MoAlpln, will bemarried to William Fletcher Irwlu on theafternoon of April 30 In the Fifth AvenuePresbyterian Churnh. Her bridal attendants will be Mis Harriett!' .vio.xipina sister! Miss Gladys Bobbins and Mis

Bowmann of this city; Mls LouiseVanderhilt of South Orange and Miss Mi-ldred Kddy of Morrlstown, N. J, John K.Irwin will act as his brother's best man. A

reception will follow at 11 East .Ninetiethstreet.

Temperatnrr at Atlantic City,Ati-anti- o Citt, April 7. The tempera-

ture was 40 degreea at noon here

Have With Us To-da- v

'PRESIDENT'S DAUGHTER

TO AUDIENCE OF WOMEN

A(llrcMs 1,000 nt Politic-i- l

Kriiicntioii Leiiiriii'l.lllll'llfMHl.

One of the largest women's, lunch-eons ever held In New York took placeyesterday In the grand ballroom of theAstor. when 1.000 members of theLeague for Political Education sat downincether. l'lfteen or tvventv men weippresent. liluin It. 1.. liniild presided.

.M- l- Margaret Vo,lrow Wilson was ,

the llrst speaker. She congratulatedthe league on the number present, andsaid she felt honored nt being asked tnspeak, but could not do the occasionJustice. She wore a gray hat withtightly culled gray plumes, a blue chif-fon gown with Bulgarian trimming anda white lace collar.

Miss Helen Keller followed, speakingfrom Isdilnd a bank nf American Heautyroses which had taken the prize at theflower show In the morning and hadbeen presented to her. Miss Kellerspoke In the peculiar deep voice whichyears of practice has evolved, tellingof the light that was overcoming thedark places of ignorance and makingthem as bright as the room with lisred shaded candles.

Her teacher, Mrs. Rverett Macy,stood up to be greeted with prolongedapplause. She translated all the rest ofthe speeches tn her blind and deaf pupilwith rapid mutiuns nf her hand.

Miss Julia Ivthrop, head of thr newChildren's Hurcati, said that the func-tion of the bureau was merely to gatherup and tabulate the wnrk nf nthrr or- -gantzatlons She said they hnd con- -

nuclei! trus year a special inquiry asto the deaths nf little children in smallerplaces, where neither badness nor good-ness was so spectacular as In lhe cit-ies.

Andrew Carneglp's inscription of heras u "flnn Scotch girl" served to In- -

troducc Miss Spenc'p, who spoko on theeducation of women, which sho saidmust be not an nrtltlcial process, hutnn Inner spiritual growth.

Hubert Krsklnc F,ly spoke of Hipfor 11 building where all women's

clubs could meet, and Alfred Noyes readone of his poems. .

Among those present were Mrs. Her-bert Carpenter. Mrs. Walston HillHrown, Mrs. Thomas A. Edison, Mrs.Charlotte Perkins C.llman. Miss Wini-fred Holt, Clarence A, Terry, Mrs.William Jay Kchleffelln, Mrs. KlranorGates Tully and Mrs. Virginia T. Vande Wuter.

M. JEAN ERNEST C0NSTANS.

Former French Premier and Ambus- -

ndnr to Turkey. fSptcinl Cable Dttpttch to Tsi Sr.

Pari. April 7. M, Jean Ernest Con-stan- s,

formerly Premier of France andAmbassador to Turkey, died y after

short lllne.M, Constans was In his eightieth year.

For the last forty years he was a consplcu-u- sfigure In French puhllo life. He became

a lawyer nnd was professor nf Ftomnn lawat Toulouse when tho Commune broke

to surrender when they had taken possessionof tho capital and when flvo minutes wereleft to them to mako up their minds to givein or faco a heavy artillery Are which wouldhave destroyed thnm.

This brought him Into the public eye andshortly afterward he was appointed TownCouncillor. In ls7 ns a Hepubllcan hewns sent to the Chamber of Deputies, InIS70 he wn appointed Under Secretary ofState.

In IMS he became Minister ExtraordinarytoChhia. As such he concluded the Franco-Chines- e

commercial treaty. He remainedthare until May, IMS. It was about tuWtlmn that he rid France of Oon. Boulangerunder thrent of prosecution, Ho then bn.came Minister nf the Interior, INW-int- :;

Senator, I mi, nml Ambassador to Turkey,a post which ho held until May, 1000. Justbefore he was withdrawn from Constantinople a olrMlar sent out by the Young

Turks ad that an Atubns,nlnr had nrenpteda larce bribe for nbialulnk' certain coal con-cessions Cnii-Mt- is felt t tin t he wa ine.'iiit.He demanded nnd received mi 0ftlci.1lapotoiry fter he returned to Paris astory Kalned Ircillntlou that he had re-

ceived lor many months tlu.oini a mouthtrom Abdul Humid, the deposed Sultan.

John II, Minll, Jr.John 11 Shillt. Jr . 011 nt the late John

II shiilts, died oil Sunday at his homeIn Pelhain, N .Mr sluilts wnsuected with the Shults llrend Company,vvhlih has bakeries in llrooklvn Hewns 41 ve.-i- r old, w.i born In Brooklynand inherited n large fortune frim hifattier, w ho wa also In the bakery bii'lness.lie wh n memlier ot the 'landein Chili,

"n(," owned S11110I. holoer of tintliiis--

repoid lie married Mis .Hnly Heard,daughter of the late William H Aeaidshe obtained divorce and the custodyof th(,r , ,,'hilir,)n. j,"r hnlu Hfter.ward married Miss Jrannette Mlllei ofst i.Ollls

Philip II. lllehl.F.I.IZASKTH, N. .1. April T Philip 11

niehl. elpctrlcnl engineer and Inventorand founder of the Plehl ManufactutlngCompany, died here y at his home.52 Morris avenue He placed the Hrstelectric fan on the market. The Dlehlcompany ha a Virgo plant here and em-ploy" about a thou-an- d hand". MiDlehl was born in D.ilsheln, (lermany. In1SI7. He came to the 1'nlted States In1 vit. He located In New Voik nnd d

the employ of the Singer compativwhen It was on Mott treet. that city HeI surxlvAtl by his wife, a daughter andthreo grandchildren.

Mrs. rtelle C11IIL.YoNKt-RS-

, April 7 Mrs. Helle K, Cul-ll- s,

nn artist who was the widow of JohnMarshall Cullls. died last night at herhome. ii04 Warburton avenue. She wasborn in HutTalo forty-si- x years ngn andhad lived In Yonkers eleven years. Shewas active In charitable wnik and hadbeen president of the Terrace City Sun-shine Society for the past four vear.She I survived by h son, rjporge DarkCullls.

John l Inn,John F. Ryan, an actor whoe last ap-

pearance was In "Cnder Southern Skies"four years ago, died on Sutidiy 011 Black-viei- r

Island, lie had been an Inmate ofthe almshouse there for a year. He wasCa years old. It yah played a quarter of acentury ago In Hartley CimpheH's "WhiteSlave." He married Mabel l.mnatil. whowas a well known --nctre.-- m hei d.ij.She died when her son, Itlch.ilil I.. Hy.ili.whs born twenty year ago. The ActonFund ofllctal are ttylns to locate the sou

Mr. Mary Wnrrlnartnn Wnlklns.Mrs. Mary Warrington Watklns, wife

of the Hpv Tr. S. c. O Watklns ofTrinity Prr shyterMn Church of Montelalr,died vestrrday at her home, IS NorthFullertoti nvenue, Montelalr. Mrs. Wat-klns was the daughter of the late Philipand IlPster Ann Doremus nf Montelalr.She wns born sixty ear ago. ShP Issurvived by her husband, a son, Iiw-renc- e

' and a daughter Anne V.

ficorgr fi. Howland.Georg" O. Rowland, member of the

Jersey City Board of Aldermen from theNinth ward and former member of theHoard of Freeholders, died at his home,108 Van Iteypen street, Jersey City, onSunday. He wns fit years old, a book-keeper for a lumber firm nnd a bachelor.

.ladarr It. II. n. Maraham.Special Cable Detratrh to Tar Sc

London, April 7. The death occurredy of Judge Hobert H. B Marshain,

who had prolded over the Bow street policecourt for the lat thirty-fou- r year Judge

OLD COLUMBIA TRUSTEE QUITS.

I.rnnoa "mllh HralRna After ThirtyYears nt Service.

Lennox Smith, for thirty year a trusteeof Columbia I'nlvprslty, resigned frnruthe board at Its regular meeting In the

library yesterday because of illhealth. .Mr. Smith was graduated fromColumbia In the class of I Hits and next tnGen, 11, W. Carpentier wa tho oldest manon the board. In point of service he wasactually the oldest The death of J. l'ler-pe- nt

Morgan has also caused a vaeancvIn the Columbia board. His successor willbe appointed shortly nlo.

Gifts amounting to 17,750 were receivedIn the month. Including ivnoo from HobertBacon, former Ambassador to Franoe,for the Mnlson Francahw, 17,500 from anunknown lver.

WOMEN LIKE TIGHT

GOWNS, SAYS WORTH

(iiil Will llnvc TIiciii: 'I'licir.Miuiiliins Must, Is (lie

Purls Vcnlicl.

FONTS OF INSPIRATION 'I

- .

rl'PSl'Ill Stvlt'. S(t CIllC. So Sllllnv

So Clinirinsr, Will Lnsl

tl Loiio- - Time.

At. .I.itciues Worth, who hrouvlit theliood blouse ft mil Sulla to Alx, Inld nfhis art to fiOa yniini; women nnd two '

most unfortunate youni; men nt Teach-ers tolletse yesterday nfternoun. Hueof the yottiiK men Imil n tienv ttius-tnch- c,

u Tchntnldja walstcoal .mil u

Utllu HurKiis tie. The other wr-- n com-

mon reporter whose shoes siticuked.The ."0(1 yoiitiK women were there for'"""" I, . .. .1 '.i. . W . tione mr i is iNipei. in.- - .... .. iihii,,,,,,. MU, itmimHilld. puslilent nf theavenue in rr,-in- ii i,-- i e

Ilai' you ever walked down the centreaisle of n lecture room containing r.oo

yotini; women with your shoes squeak-In-

and nur ears llnpplni; ros, ate" utiewho tins done that can plvo Henri lieiKson nf the same country iir M. Worth'snew Ideas as to the psychology of humb-ler, particularly the psychology of feminine kIkkIcs. Utters) and what Is knownIn eveiV boardltiK school ns ood old

"hlsh strikes."liefore .M. Worth stepped to the pint-fot-

with his iiiessime a tlee'.lnj; ullmpseaioiinil an imroarlous loom bum- - onethe Implesslon that evciybody is wcar-- I

inc those coat sweatets with laru'e white'buttons, such as adorned th" Hunt nfChuck Conner., and hair ribbons, pink

'or blue, nccordinu' to taste. Take that'for laiiKhlni;'

The present fashion are to last alotus, lont; time, saya .M. Alortli. Andwh '.' b. cause they aie so lin-- ,

pie! ah! so simple. It is B. ttlni; sothat In the modern Kwn .Mtiauy neeiinot bnthef ilre.Hlli fintll 10 111 themoriilni; until her ploimliiuan home-war- d

plod. bis weary way. The motor,ihe shopping trip, the tea one dre

j xv III do for nil of these Anil It I fortills i ,.n.,ui Hint tlie colors lire so ll lllll.so unobtrusive, that one meeting .Ml- -j

lady the next day 111 the Mime dress willnot say "Volla, she wore that yi-t- er-

.. I

'And then again the present fashions i

will last, because outh demands. ti,voting, the nil. sn pretty, so chic.wntild not mantle her chic, her oh, o J

prettlness. her youthful lines, with too'much m intlp. So come the clinging,the emlirnclng, the snug In dtei-s- . Hu. I

what nt the very old. the woman of .10:

iiUs SI. Wwrth tn n chorus nf snllfs.She come to the dress shop, and tlmre

shown to her the clinging, the mug.the embracing, (if whnt does she Immediately think'.' Ah, M. .lacnucs, one.

cannot here set down of what she Im-

mediately think.."Hut, madame. the Oriental Is the

rage. Mile. Soando has Just boughtthis." Forthwith the decrepit damn of30 totters out with the demmd that In-

stantly she should hnve one.Ami then M. .lactiues told of the fonts

of his Inspiration how one day twolittle apprentice girls playing on thestairs of his shop caught hi eye nndhow he asked one where she got thepretty waist. Out of her little old lastyear's waist, she tells M .tai'iiues. Thitwist to the collar, this snip of lace,thi tuck, this here now, bla hemming,and lo. M. .Inrciun dashes to the tie.signing room' A new waist appearson the boulevard.

And then again In the museum? M

Jacques sends his desjgnera there, note-book In hind. "Cop." he command,"something from the court drcs ofBloody Mary " V)elgners fly to thomuseum Uphold t ho court dre o'Hlnody Mary, called by the stlbtlj M.Jacques "Idyll Sauvaga."

But alas. America can never hope toseize snrtorial laurels from the fair orovvnf Paris these many years! Mete wohave not the atmosphere, the Inspira-tion. We send our girl. to schools tolenrn to mako dresses. One cannotmake dresses In si'hools. One musthave the genius of the brocade, thefine frenzy of the crepe voile, the

afflatus of the mustard ratine. Wocan buy her pictures, her chateux, butnever, never can wo buy from Francothe brains that gnve the world thebobble, tho pannier, the supreme Dl- -

rectolrel Is It not sad?

WEDDINGS.

A very M nitre.Manasqvan, April 7. In the First

Presbyterian Church Miss lilariys Louisa' Ma gee, daughter of Mrs. Morgan

Magee of this place, and StephenHillings Aver.v of CllfTwood were mar- -'

rleil hj tlie Itev. Walter W.Kdge. the p.lstor.

' Miss Magee was given nny by herI mother. Tho matron of honor wns Mis.Carl H. Wynkoop of Philadelphia anil

' Mannsqunn nnd the best man was Frankj M Daln of Peeksklll, n cousin of thebridgegroom. Miss Abble X' Strickland andMiss Avery were the bridesmaid. Theushers wpre Hoscr Magee, a brother ofthe bride, William J Duncan of Mata-wa-

I.eon Sehancft of Keyport and ltosM. Fountain ot Matawan.

After a honeymoon In Itennuda thcouple will live In CllfTwood, where MrAvery Is the nssistant trensurpr of theCllffwood Brick Ciinipan.v.

Raymond Conk.Mo.ntci.air, April 7 Ml l.onip Cook

ond Kveritt llaymond of Chatham, N .

were married this evening nt s oVlock atthe home of tho bride's father, C AlexanderCook, too Park street, thu llev Dr OrvllleBeed, pastor of Trinity Presbyterian ('hurryofficiating

The maid of honor was Mls llelon Cook,a sister of the bride, and the best man wasMerritt Budd of Chatham, a cousin of thebridegroom. The usher were DwlghtBudd, Ivan Budd of Chatham, cousins ofthe bridegroom; C Alexander Cook, Jr ,n brother of the bride, nnd Samuel Wheeler

After the ceremony there wa a receptionnt the Cook house. Mr and Mrs. Itaymonciwill sail on the Orotavn forBermuda. They will live in Chatham

rorrn Mai II araai,Nkw BociiM.t.t:, April 7 - William Lemuel

Brown of '.'.Mi Circuit road and Mr. AnnaJ Cowles Miilllneanx of Colignl avenue,New llochelle, were married yesterday bytho Itev, Tillman 11, Johnson at the parson-age of Halem Baptist Church, Now Rochelle.The bride's first husband was J. KdwardCowles, an Alderman of New Bochelle, whowas killed by a train at the New Bochellestation In 1905. Her second husband wasKlnhard Hudson IMullineaiu. whom shedivorced nt' Heno InlllOlo, Mr Brown I

connected with S, H. Pomeroy A Co., NewYork, manufacturers of metal windowframes. In inoa he towed on the New YorkAtnietlo ciuu eight cur crew, which won thonational clianiplqnslilp

CLERK MARRYINO MILLIONS.

( Hiindliui on Way Here In Wrri Mr,??SiOrnhnm nhcocU.

ll iMvvti.'v, who up tu S.iliud.iy notlitwa a clerk In his fathet's stole at llrock

llle, ilntiiilo. left their esteilay for NewVmk lie will m.ury Mts.iJlali.un I". H.ibcoi'k, who has A for-t-

"tlttinli'd nt fiotn $,'i uno.ooft tntL'll.MIHI.lllMI

The in.llll.llte will be celebrated III Ten-i- i11 . X. .1. wliiie .Mis ll.ilxock has h

ciiiintiv linme They win s.ill for llurnpe.iftil Hie ei n lliiil) nml then no to tlie

lioUNind Islands, ivhi'ie Mi ionn.v (listmet Mis Hiibioelt In the sumtnci of 1M?

llei fathei wn Mi Myets of Ml. l,oiilof Hie ill iii of t.hrui'tt Myets. tiilmcio.,liil of hei eslate was lift her by herIltst husband, whn died live seats into

WILLS AND APPRAISALS.

Itl.NMMiN !' llTTl.tMirii seiolid willor ll.'iij.itnln Ilttllmier, who died .Inly

'.'II. I!MI, was ninl for probate .MstenlayThe III t will was dated .Inly L'7, I AllThe new Will le.'IM'S one-tllll- il of tile i.tnte to ilatiuhti't's, i'm Ilia and I'orothy,but Klies ii itlilm; to the widow "for lea-S"i- is

sitlsfintii to ni.M'i'lf " The reslil-ii'- il

i Mate Is left to a "dear friend,"Miss Minnie Council. The estate Is npr

Hie nrst will left all to nhi other, .losi ih r.ltlltmrr

Wiii.ism Wkikpi An iierotintlnR of thestate of William Welsel says that the

lefiitict l eileral Hank. conerted assetsor $!'il.nfiil beloiiKltiK to the estate. Tholoss w.is pilil later by the iidinlnl-- ,tr.itor's siiretv. the Hunkers Surety I'otn-- 1

I'.itH. Tl stilt" iituntiuti'd to $17r,,!ilnnd ha Inrie.ised liy f23,0iin. The ex-- !eetitors hae pulil $1 10.000 to IcKiitpps.

Siiimcmi lUt'sr.n, who controlled thu'Star I'lidi iwear Comiiatiy, and died onApt II 'JT, pi 2, left $32,h23 to his widow,Delia Iblllier

CTlli:itiK II Oti.nnnT. who died Ausii'ttl last, left J2l.i'i2 to two son mid twoihumhtei-s- .

llKNIIV P tH'S'llAM Stilt to th- -'

will of I lent j Polllott nuiiham w as llled Inthe SiirrnKate's olflre ,eterd.iy by hiwidow. Hntlii I'" IhinliHtii Men, whohu ben ri'Miarilnl since her hustmnd'dentil on October I last, and by CleorgftI,. Duty of ItliUewiiod, N. .1. Jt'oth dcn;that Diinhain was a lesldetit of New"

York when he made a will lenvlntr tiltbulk of his estate to Henrietta VlrKlnlaCarll If the will Is reji'cteii the wldmvwill Bet the entile estate under the New.lrey law, while .h.. would net onl.v'half if her husband I held to have beena lesldent of New York when he died

I'luscis I. Kamkh, a member of thNew York Stock I'.xchnnKc, who died at'his home, 12.1 Henisen street, Hroiildyn.'on November Hi Inst, lelt $6f.r..M4.ns.i:th"l Kami's Sanderson, daUKhtiT, geU

ail

"7r. i..'" I.. Tn.. Week..Iteginnld De Knven, who cirTPred a

prize of f 1,11(111 over six month ago for thenccei.tnble llbietto for a light opera,

i il ast night that the decisionLlim e made In about two weeks. About4l, ui0t,,is ,.rt, nuhniltted

In Xrw York Tn-cln- j-.

Association of Catholic Chnritle. Ladle.- -id ( h.iilty of St Vincent de Paul, ronfer- - tetiee, Dellnotiico' A P M.

New ork Peace Society, lecture hyAlfred Noyes, Hotel Aslor, 4 P. M

American (ieographlcal Society, meeting,Pnglneerllig Societies Building, in West

'Ihlrlv-iilntl- i street, :.w P. M.Hobeit Collyer Men-

- Club, Church ofthe Melnh, Park avenue and Thirty-lourt- h

street, . I.'. P. M.Kqual franchUe meeting, lecture 011

Colonial government, s Kast Thirty-se- v

enth street, t P. M.Sphinx Club, "old guard" nluht, Wal-dor- l-

storla( ol 11 11 ii 111.- Iloapitil, dinner, ;;o West

I'm 11 s, ,10111 street, 7 P. Mlower Sho.v, Nw Grand Central Pnlaee.

Stage Children'. Fund, meeting. HotelAslor. 2 to P M

Government Club, meeting, Hntpl !or.lo .hi A M

l'reh Mr Fund, meeting. Hotel Astor,? P M

I he'itr" Club. Ine . incline, Hole! xstor,? I' M

Mithor. ''hilt, 'iieetin-- . Ilo'el tor,.10 P M

DIED.ALLAN K III .krn.ick. N .1 . nn April f.

111.1 Miry VetlllPll, lietuv tl wife OfJohn A tlnn. ageil fi., y jr..

I'uiirrHl peri Ices icr lut ri'ltlrnfi'. 1R7ACnlon .iirrct, Hftckencnrk, nn TupsilHy,Aiirll 11. .it v 20 1' .VI Train leaves Krltullon via N. V .N .1 It It for On.

'r.il avenue sliitlun. or vl.i N V

i.nL VVetrii H It fnr .Mlnsired ftatlon Itileriusin prlvats

L)AltC'V.-..Si.l'l- nle. ni hl resldsnee, 12)l'utn.i'ii iftiui llrnoklyn Siimlny, April

11, 1013. William c Dircv.Kuni-ra- .rrvlro it the rcvltlrnce nf hit

brelloT. .I.'imr S Ii.ircy. 2(6 I'utnnmairnue, Tuesday, A lull S. 7.30 P .VI

DIEIII. At I'll, iliilh. N J. .Xtnmlnv, April7, IS13. I lllllp nii-lll- , iiKtil 1.6 1'MM

Kuilfr.ll sell tie at III lite reflili'me, S3 4

Murrt MVenue. Kllxaheth. N. J . Weilnes-ili- v

evening. April '.1. '. loik Inter-- .'

nii'iit prlvntp Thurs.lnj, lu .10 A ,M ,rni.l.OW'i;. Krncft Tliomni, at tln real-- ,

ilcncu of hl daughter, Mrs More.in HosIlne. 31 W'i't Sevriity-tlfi- h meet, onSunday, April 6. In . lie venty-flr- t

jur of liN line.Funeral private. Interment al Rnalewood,

N JMi liiiVVAN Th" American Irish lll'tnrlral

Sn'leiv aliunume lite ile.ith nf Its pteiI'trnt general, linn. Palriik K Mellnwan,and leuuentK the nieuiliers tn attend, thefuiieinl at ,t Anns c'liurrh. 11; F.nnTwelfth Hlreoi. mi Wednei-da- April 9,11)13. at 10 , M

' O'COS.NOn.

KIIVVAItl) II IlALT,Secretar ileneral,

QCIN.N On suvlaj, April 1;. I'JU, Charles.1 rjulnti. Inotlirr of .Marlha and, I) W.Quhin r '

Funeral from hi" late residence, 301 St,Mrlmlns atelllie, Tueedai. Apt 11 . at5 30 A M . ilieiue to st .Imepir church,ljjth etieet and .MnraliiK'Ide avenue,wheie a niai1 nf requiem win be ntTereiifnr the iep,tie nf hlii enul al 11 , M,Interment Kenslcn remelerj.

It VAN. Jnlin. aetn'r. liemaliin lying In matethi: FFNniiAi. I'licnc'it." :u pl

Twenty-thir- d stiirt (Frank K Campbellllulldlnci. Time funeral latir

SKAHHOOKi: -AI ChUngn. April 3. Thomn'QulBley HiMhrooke, aged 62. helmed hui-han- d

.V1ar Martini Keabrnnke Hemalniilying hi slate "THU FV.NBHAI,CIIl'ltCH." 241 Went Twenty-thir- d ttreet(Frank lv Campbell ullitlng)

Servlres W'eilnesilay morning. 10 o'clock,above aililress

TBUHbOW Al WeMhamptsT) Iteachi t, I,on .Sunday. April (, Xlliabeth KldJtr,,.wife of John Trmlnr, "fn the leventy-eight- h

eur of her age. --

Inteyment private,WATKINH At Montelalr. Tf. J , n April T,

1913, Mary Varrl.igtnn, wife nf Iir S, C,il Watklns and daughter nf the lstPhillip and Hester Ann Doremous

Funeral torvlies at her lata resident:.16 North Fullertnn avenue, Montelalr,,N. J on Wednesday, April 9, at 3 P. M

Wit.WS On April 6, 1913, Gordon Willis,on ot the late General Kir Frederic Ar- -

thur Willis, K. C, il, and l.iilv Willis.Funeral services at th Church ot th''Transfiguration, Bast Twenty-nint- h

street, Tuesday morning, April I, at 11o'clock. Interment private, i

UNIHCsVrAKEKS.

AMBULANCES (tiSSSl) tf.VSleU. L'rrled: Itata fta.oo

CAMMELL, TtSS

.c