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Ks LOVE?" $?|?ES AT ELL10?? iHtt*??1 Li*ht Comedy Which Is Acted Ad? mirably. HJCE* BRADY MAKES INDIVIDUAL, HIT; g^fgc Scarborough's New ptey Uni-*' al. Clever and Exceed in t? i y Human. By ALTON PA VIES. *Sf? ..instivk * lea BraJ> i: t.ratiam '*???,,_'" lUl.-ar I h*****. . Jerome rairlek ??* ** Lacla lla-H?i : ?ft? note < nterrogation which | |i,tlUts* ove?" mfcht k expected ti ound ?vas effectually ', ?lie-red -'. " EHiett on ? Mardi*? licht. -.nd ?he answer was ; ?|il? love I? abstract remained j %*?t it h??'- ,,1C world ! v^-, ih ed> which deals! ?fo thi- pi ndi> ?dual episode j #I (,_( >vl off the handle. f? cr '?? hat Is Love?" ?fwei '? George Scarbor trnth. in a ne? _ it. He has written B "What Is Lo ' * hat looks at the ?I* ?' the first act like an inconsc ?KStisl but exceedingly interesting Igfct comedy Then in the second act ??maires no! only comedy, but in i (?ttedinglv humen and unusual note, tt? in its final scene it mounts into ? ?rim) Before all else this credit mu-t bei nvM to "What ?? Lose?" It stands i m iu own bottom; it it ?-juive different fr?s the aversfr** run of comedies as we j tauv them on the stage. It's the sort ? t? play which will stiok in your i mutory like a burr, whether you want I g te or no*, before it present-* at felt from the stage's standpoint- a j Use poist of i * on a subject which - ill old as Adam. The action all takes ; mutt i? s pro*? ial town in the ; Mr* of ? The familv liv- ' S room is the arena, and a single j ?tarts everything going. The |*nine is ? ? A vf eighteen, who has ; iMac engag' I to a young but solid Vsfint?? m>' i fact, he's exceed UtU sohri. He's .. lawyer, doing very um tor him?elf. The heroine and her ?Ur-in-law. a characUr? which Miss Xsaette Com stock makes most di ii?t!y human, ?.re add re ?faille the in- ' t?stio?s for the heroine*?, wedding. smnz these invitations is one for Mtrt Hoyt. her old time sweetheart,! ?Is for three years had been taking, medical course in Berlin, and dur- i ir_ that time, feeling sure of her and ! Wicjr very busy, has sent her only! petare posta! cards. The sister-in-law taMavi that Robert iias come home that nay dsy. I sn't mention that btX to Lie;. However, Robert comes ? ? snd declares himself. He kisses Uey?snd that one kiss does the ?hale busn.e-- il makes her think: the same effect on Wr s? the ipple tdddy which ? mt once I picnic. And the ?or? she thinks about it the more she ; Ass her old sweetheart, Robert, and j tie let? fhe cares for her fianc?, John. I John, whate\<r his qualities as ai htyer may be. as a kisser is dis tbttly below par. His osculations aie I ft? efforts of a tired and absorbed Wiiness man -no more, no less. The1 i-ter-in-law, being happily mar- i hs<J herself, is all for love in the ab- | ?toset She's a woman *ho knows her ? tttk, and all her powers of i ?J-wussio: to induce Lucy to : asrry the man whom her sister-in-law i now? ?he it really in love with. That : as?, of course, is Robert. Still the ? iky drags ?long. Lucy is looking for j niormation. First she -.sks hei mait. j We the different kisses die may have "-wnntered affected her. The maid'? ! ?xperiencf, t I i< h ha-- been varied, ?Wats for a gu<.d deal with Lucy, bi- I ?wie on the face of it it is absolutely ?Were. Eventually Lucy confesses' that Robe' ised her, and the ? between her fair.- ; ?7 and hin family and John's, the ? ?her fellow's, family makes the test comedy situation of the play. Alice Brad) who played Lucy, has ! *?**? done anything so well. She ?faed to hav- forgotten that she had | n*t been pera, and she acted *<th a ftatlen? sa and an ingenuous- ! ??u which made her portrayal both j ??nvincing ar i charming. Jerome ' "?tritk, usua?y a leading man in all ; ??many senses of that word, scored ? distinct success by the remarkably ** *?y in wl ii h he acted the matter ?Mact lover. < harles Balsar was good *? the lad who finally won her, and -*?? Moore _ d Jennie Eustace were Muoirsble ?s. th? two elder wive? who J[j*d to fhake the girl profit by then MM e-Mrienee The role of the maid, ?so only knew her lovers by their first JJ>?M, was capitally played by Mis '?sdlay. ?J'hat I? Lu . ?" will cause no end M discus- a ploy something Jt of the ordinary run, and it's as u**n ?s a w] ST. MARK'S OPENS SCHOOL *ew Home Due to Efforts of tonner Miss Katherine Drexel 4A?f_th*r aritable plans of ?J* *?ht. 0f the Sisterhood Mi? v ^ rament, who was 5?**therine Drexel, daughter of the ?sdslphia hunker, was completed "??rtsy when _ new St. Mark's pa JJJ?'?1 school and a home for the Sis *?*_*?* ^l^ '*' ant" -*-*nox *v-> was T?? school will accommodate 3601 aZ. ^?is ai he cost was tth__i __*". ?W.OOO. Tiiree other, 5"??>?of the same kind will be opened ' i***~ one in Boston, another in Cin- ! 'j??*-*na the third in St. Louis. '?tt I f/'1 ,l,c'*J-?d. in 1889, to de- I *?? ?.IL. ??"<, fortune to educut-? Ws ii- ?nd '"dian children. She ??inij",_*.e?l*-bli>lied schools in Cali * ?no Texas. ?Y SCOUTS END OUTING ^lious Service Conclude.^ ?campment at yonker8 4U S" hu'ui,l"i Boy Scouts from | ?*<a*a_ili *", "s Kuburbs. who were ?*e_tr?Ht i l'-'-<ht ?-t the Empire City *-h-tiHikn *?"kt'-'?. concluded their ^mai?_Apt'c',Hl ?"'??gious exercises Th?, 7 d llon"-' >'t?terdav. ^Wr*. K?*'ne.d aw,ikt? whi'e their ?*nii?r a/.ni"d unUI 3 ?'c,ock in the ?-??rd K V -*",,-- f?-w hours' rest they 5'r?lar"f_._f*t',lle unJ attended early S*^8?_r.ltt?,Jon,<lu<,te*J bV Scout* J-? s??* ^ ?"k,?r!,? Uter they C_aIi!a,K ,Ml tho Fir?t I'resby l^orc.. where the pastor, the ?tttfc U"son' devoted his ser Alice, Bsady ^7* "?t?dir ?ore " *4 ?te M Axi NC _ E i uott^Theatre?; CIVIL SERVICE MEN SAIL AROUND CITY State Delegates Also Hold Informal Session on Boat Deck. Three hundred delegates to the -n nual convention of the Civil Service Association of the state, which opened Saturday at City Hal!, enjoyed a sail around Manhattan Island yesterday on the municipal ferry boat Bronx. The excursionists boarded the boat at the Battery at 11 o'clock, and first made a trip up the Hudson, later sailing up the East River as far as Hell Gate and finally being landed in South Brooklyn. During the boat ride a luncheon was served and music was provided by the uniformed band of the Street Cleaning Department. After witnessing a base? ball game between the police and fire departments, the delegates returned to the Battery late in the afternoon. In the course of the sail an informal meeting was held on the upper deck of the ferry boat, at which Dr. Joseph C. O'Gorman, state president, defended the Griffin-Walker bill, which the as- i sociation sought to have parsed at the ? last session of the Legislature. The ? bill was defeated by four votes, largely through the efforts of the Citizens I'nion and the Civil Service Reform As- I sociation, who denounced it as "vicious legislation." The bill provided that no civil ser- ' vice employe in the state should be re? moved except for incompetency, mis? conduct or insubordination, and then ' only after a formal hearing, at which testimony should be tr.kcn under oath and at which the accused should be represented by counsel. State Secre? tary Bradley ?.aid yesterday: "No fair-minded person is able to see anything 'vicious' in this reform. It protects the employe who is com? petent, faithful and attentive to the ] duties of his oflicc, while the employe i who is recrennt it does not protect from punishment. Above all. it pro? tects the honest worker in public offices against unscrupulous politicians who would turn his position over to the hangers-on and 'heelers' and clique of 'pseudo-reformers,' who are well typi? fied by the place hunters who sup? port such organizations as the Citizens Union and the so-called Civil Service Reform Association." The convention will hold its closing session this afternoon at the City Hall. JEWISH FAITHFUL PRAY FOR WU\S0N New Year Services Echo Hope of American Mediation in Europe. The Jewish New Year, 5675 of the Hebrew calendar, began yesterday at I sundown. Thousands of the faithful assembled in the temples to begin the series of ceremonies which terminate at Yom Kippur, or the Day of Atone? ment, a day of solemn fasting and prayer. One of the features of yester? day's services in the orthodox syna? gogues was the blowing of the ahofar, | or rum's horn. Yom Kippur occurs on Wednesday. September 30. Praysrs for peace in Europe were i made at all the services yesterday, and ; comments on the war in its relations to Jews of Europe were frequent, ?in the East Bids there was a unanimous agreement among the rabbis to pray for the President of the United States as a possible mediator. Rabbi Wise, at the Free Synago?tuc in Carnegie Hall, made a plea for high Jewish ideals. Without these, he said, Jewish influence would decline us a moral force. Most of the three hundred or more! synagogues were tilled to capacity. Well known cantors sang in the m-ire ' prominent places of worship, some of them having come from Europe espe? cially. The cantor at the TtBlpl? Adath Abraham. Madison av. and 121st st., was A. Epstein, of Vienna. During the services yesterday after? noon of the Young Folks' League, in Progress Hull, 1651 Second ?v.. Former ; Deputy Attorney General Maurice B. : Illumenthal spoke particularly of the F.uss'an Jewish soldiers. "No promise nor hope of future re v.aid or recognition actuates the??; ; men," he said. "Theirs is a martyrdom which demonstrates the moral and in- ' telltctual superiority of the oppressed over their oppressoia. We have n?> ' fnith whatever in the sweetly scented ( promises now being made by Russia j to extend civil and religious liberty to j ! its Jewish subjects after the war," OBREGON VILLA'S PRISONER, REPORT Americans from Chihua? hua Say Generals Quar? relled Over Revolt. *'? Telegraph to The Tribune. 1 El Puso. Tex.. Sept. 20. American? arriving to-day from Chihuahua City bring the report, that General Villa has arrested General Alvara Obregon and Obregon's entire staff and is holding them in prison at Chihuahua. The arrest is denied by Villa's repre? sentative? here, but they admit th.it Villa has threatened Obregon with ar? rest. Villa and Obregon the latter com mander-in-chief of Carranza's forces were conferring over th Sonora situa? tion in Chihuahua when a quarrel ?.rose. Obregon, it is said, objected to a plan outlined by Villa for the paei lication of Sonora, which has been in revolt for months, and Villa became enraged and caused the arrest of the Carranza representative and of his en? tire staff. The arrival in Juarez to-day of thro?* thousand Villa soldiers, who are said to be on the way to Sonora, has ?trengthencd the belief on the border that Villa has decided to control the Sonora situation without the aid of Carranza. Vera Cruz, Sept. l>.0. Wi en the Ward Line steamer Esperanza, winch sailed from here on Saturday night for Ila vana_ and New York, reaches Pro? greso to-morrow the American scout cruiser Sal em will be alongside her. Although the Mexican government la said to have no legal right to remove any of the Mexican passengers on thfl Ksperan/.a who are fleeing from the re? public, it is rumored here that an ef? fort to tb so will be made. To prevent the removal, it is said, General Funston and Rear Admirtl Beatty have decided to give the ref? ugees the protection of the Sal em. Mexico City. Sept. _0. General Car? ranza, supreme head of the Constitu? tionalists, to-day accepted the resigna? tion of General Villareal, who was act in?- Minister of Finance. SAYS IRELAND IS FREE Nationalist M. P. Explains Home Rule Situation. Richard McChee. Nationalist member of Parliament from the division of Mid Tyrone, .n the .lean of the Lister sec? tion of Ireland, spoke hist night on ti-1, Home Rule bill at the Holy Cross School, in West 43d s?.. near Ninth nv. "The Irish people have no quurrel now with the British democracy," Mr. McGhee ?aid. "The fight is over and a thing of memory only. We expect no interference from England when it comes time to exercise the rights and powers whieh we have won. "The Nationalist Volun'eers have not been formed to tight British troops o; L'lstermen. It is ah organization to protect the bulk of the Irish people from any interference on the part of the small, privileged, official sla officeholder*- in Ireland." -? EXILE ENDS FOR AUSTRIAN BARON Treasures of His Montclair Home To Be Auctioned for Red Cross. For the first time i- almost twenty years. Baron von Weiden, once ?an officer Ol t.u?sar?, in Austria, will see his native land. F.xiled by Lmperor Franz Josef for political reasons, von Weiden has lived in this country for the last few years at Greyhound Lodge, Montclair Heights. There he'has spent his time, attended by two old German servants and sur rounded by auch of his family belong? ings as he was able to secure from Austria. Now the period of waiting is over, for the Austrian government hau opened its doors to all political exile* and Baron von Weiden, who is well over fifty, expects to return some time this month and enter the service of the Austrian Red (. ross. All of his property will be sold at auction on the 23d of this month, and ' the baron has announced that the pro-1 ceeds of the sale will be turned over to the Red Cross. Among the articles to be sold is a Boul furniture sei, which was presented to one of the baron's ancestors by Maria Theresa. Also some j rugs once owned b. Baroness Vet sera. Greyhound Lodge has been dismantled and the fittings transferred to d Fast 33d st., where the .ale is to b? held, i PASTORS AROUSED, REPLY TO CRITICS Deny Failure of Christian- j ity Because of War in CHRIST'S TEACHINGS NOT FULLY ACCEPTED . Bishop Hartzeil, of Africa, Fears Moslem Uprising in Case Turkey lights. Fern preachers neglected Hie oppor- I tuniiy yesterds) to answer for Chris llianity tie ehargc that I had Failed In ? ? iu m?stica or the niH.i<>r :>.m, pf Europe i would not now br In the throes of .1 great \?ar. Due jastor said lie h-iil bee", asked why the church?? did not folio?,? the example of the Stork Exchange ,in-l close ihcir doors. Mary Startling [theories were evolved and striking pn , dictions made. As significant us any uttcranc. ti.e announcement ?nade bv the Pev. Dr. Charles I.. Thompson, chairman of tl^e Home Missions Council of th? ; Protestant Mission Hoards of Amer | ica. Preaching in the Twenty-third j : Street Presbyterian Church, he ?tatet) | that Presbyterian boards, all of them: ?meeting ni Atlantic City a ??eek hsBce. ! will plan for the whole Presbyterian I Church a peace-and rdueatieaal ram-1 paign, appealing to Sunday school.;.' Christisn Endeavor, men's ciubs ami newspapers to put peace sentiments foremost, ?. ? uai sentiments have been ? foremost. Dr. Thompson was a delegate to the Constance Peace Conference the for one day onl;. Th? war. he sai?!. I? p terrible blow, strueh i.y ? few men! in the great nations. History might | blame tin? (irr.nan Kaiser, but he : , though; the training of the Kaiser had , much to do ?\ ith it. Bishor? Hartzeil, ?.f ?\frica. in charge ? of Methodist missionary work there and as well acquainted as any man Ii? : ing with N'orth African affairs, preached j 'at the Metropolitan Temple, Seventh ?v., below 14th st. "Now is the time for the churches to I act and to act in the right way. The fact is that those who engage In th.? war have not fully accepted the teach? ings of Christ. Millions on battlertclris .it this moment, all praying to thi I Goda proves thnt God is a ??reat factor I in th<- world'.a affairs. Ai from our it ?vil War. there will come tremendous is and in?frl,tv good, in which con? querors ami conquered "ill ?hare.'1 The Rev, Roland C. Urmsbcc, St. I Margaret's Episcopal Church, The I Bron:?, was '?he minister who said lie had been asked why the Church ?!;.cs '. not shut up, us the Stock Exchange aloes. "I reply," said lie. "that men ??? ii.a make war may command others to , pray to God, but they really know i next to nothing of God. There are a pood many political and official t luis tians. They manage the Church as they do their army. "Christianity bas not had a fair chance. Its principles are sound. It lias accomplished much. What it needs io grenter strength and the help of more men. It has not broken down, as the Stock Exchange did." CONEY WRAPPED IN PALL OF CONFETTI Joyous Isle Ends Greatest Mardi Gras of All in Riot of Fun and Crowds. Digging their way to the surface troni beneath tons of confetti, Cone) Island amusem? nt providers realized yesterday morning that the most sue Cessful Mardi (?ras ever known at the seaside resort was over. From every point of view the cele-| bration that marks the end of the ope-, season lor the wily "hot dog" at Cone;, Island was the best ever. So for BS weather went, every day and night ??a , cluudkss and not too cool. The police arrangements were perfect. Th? re wi so little disorder amont* the crowds m to be negligible, ami the "attendance tor the week was in the neighborhood of 2.500,000, as near the moat expert crowd estimaters could ligure last night. As was to be expected, none ? holden of concessions ?it the island made moues during the Mardi (?ras. They never <l?.- The proprietor oi .. Punch end Judj ?ho? would be jud?*c?l lankly overenthuaiastic if he a.limit? : clearing expenses for the season. His | rent mig-ht be raised while he wa? spending the winter at Palm Beach. The largest of the weak'- crowd tin- islaml early yesterday morning. It was the largest of the celebration, and. ! some wise ones said last night, th?! greatest that the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company ever squeezed into New York's fair grounds in the i ol a single ?lay. Fifteen of the thin? arrests of the week were made la? night, all or. minor charges. When former Lieutenai t Becki 1 his strong arm squad were ul I Island during the Mardi das tine yean ago 241 arrests were made in on? i night, and the week's total wa- iGt) This year Captain MrKlroy. of the Coney'Island station, had .'.00 patrol ; men under him. and the result was pel ? ; feet order. Although the "official" season is over. 'many of the amusement and refresh. i ment resorts will remain open until the snow falls. ? WOMEN TO FOIL FAMINE Plan to Harvest Crops for War or Exercise. The recreation centre established S year ago by the Young Women'- Chris? tian Association, at 21 F'oet Itth st., offering to women and girls a chance for exercise, will hold an opening week beginning this evening at S: 15 o'cloc'.:. In the announcement of the opening the question is raised whether, if all the able bodied men in the United States were called to ?var, the women could harvest the crop-. The activities of ill?' centre aim to make women able to undertake such a duty, not in anticipation of war, but for their own physical wellbeing. Miss Mabelle M. F"r?l ??Mn charge of the work, assisted by Hiss Mats Clarke, of Wellesley. Mr.-. .lohn Fin ley is chairman of the recreation centre, and among those intereate ' with her aie Mr.. James S. Cuskman, Mrs William Pellowes Morgan. Mrs. Francis W. Bird, Mrs. W. P. ?Schell. Miss Dorothy Perkins and Miss Flor? ence Colgate. > "My Lady's Dress" Coming. "My Lady's Dress," produced at the Royalty Theatre. Lonu?n. ?a-t su ano still playing, will be shown v. , William A. Brady's l'h.?house under the direction of Joseph Brooks. Ti ? ? companv includes Mary Boland, mu.i. vears with John Drew, and I eon Qaiar- ? iermain. The different acts take idace ( in London, Italy. Holland Sibeiia and i'ans Kdward Knoblauch, the author. will comt over for Baal robes Prank Varean is stafiag the play here. Europe. WORLD COMMERCE PUT AWRY BY WAR Germany Chief Sufferer as Vast Machinery of Trade Is Clogged. $16,000,000,000 IN BUSINESS AFFECTED Stopping of Teutonic Exports Causes Serious Stringency in Many Necessities. Statisticians and economists who have been witching the effect of the Luropean war upon trade ligure that in the present conflict commerce among the nations that annually totals in ! excess of $16,000,,IO?,000 has been dislocated, with Germany, owing to ' Fngland's control of the seas, the chief sufferer, her foreign commerce being inferior in volume only to that of Great Britain and muking nearly onr third of the total trade of the live I principal nations involved. Austria is ; as badly off. These figures are reached by the use , of the ligures reported in the last busi- ! ne. yeat* by Germany, Kngland, . France, Belgium and Austria. These includi the reports of all the countries at war except Japan, ?hose commerce j is not disturbed, Servia and Montene? gro, ami Russia, whose trade is in?*-tly with the Bast How mach thin Russian trad'- is affected is as yet unknown. The business which the countries *'t war (excepting; Japan, Servi? and Ku si?) have been doing a nually in ex? ports an-! import;, is approximated i.i the following table: I '\pnrla I i p?ria (jerniati*, fJ.lrtl,.,000 l?..144.?Kto.ii<vi Austria, ."..-.it.<>i?<?.ia?,n ;.?_ ii.in.niin Kranrr. I..***,..?Hui I. *,.*)?),Oia>.n. I!? Igluin ... 7 .:?. 1. RiKi.Oon.ooo Urea) Britain, J.STl.ooo.ooo *t.?i2i,ooo.iio?i Telal?. |7.0t*?.t>M,000 IO,*I33.000.000 Germany's annual exports to the ! Western Hemisphere have amounted to about $"191,000,000 a ye;ir. She hough? from th<* United States in the fiscal year of 1913 goods to the value of over t331.000.000, and sold to her goods to the value cf nearl) $1*11,000.000. She shipped to the United States last vein chemicals including coal tar preparations, alizarin, aniline salts, in- | digo, potash, quinine ami other drugs 'to the value of $_l,76O,O0O, 113,000,000 of eotton ternis. i.ooo.uOO tons of pot? ash salts, 1 ,Mi.non.uijii pounds of wood pulp, _e.OOO.0O0 poondl of phIih and palm kernel oil, 18,000,000 worth of I toys, 15,000,. pounds of rice flour. I 7.000,000 pound' of crude cocoa, and Immense quantities of cutlery, anti frietion In-lls, gloves, silks, paper goods' and clover und .-ug-.r bcel seed. 'I iicri ?re irticles in ".hic'i Germany holds a \irtnul monopoly. She pro practically the world's entire supply of potash, by reason of the fact tli.it the immense deposits at Strass f?rt are leadily soluble 111 water, a j condition that ha. not so far been found to --'.ist anywhere else. At the present time America is pro? ducing about -'G per cent of the color.; and dyestuffa she uses. The rest have been coming largely from Germany, which exercises _ monopol) in eertain ! ; ?if the so-called coal tar products, ami synthetic indigo made so cheaply that it killed the natural indigo trade. SAVE MRS. SAGE'S HOME Firemen Break Into House to Get Blazing* Ash Can. \ lire in nn ash can in the home of Mr?. Russell Sage. 604 Fifth av., fur* ? I a great deal of excitement yes terday sftcrnoon far Sabbath prome* nadi rs, but did no damage. Firemen ! the offending can to the street while Kifih ??v. paused momentarily in it* walk to look. No one was in the house when a policeman saw smoke issuing from the cracks of the windows and doors. The firemen gained entrance through ?_ sec? ond -tory winde.- and groped then way through the smoke to the ash can. TO SIFT DOMESTIC NEEDS Household Science Clubs to Hold Meeting Saturday. The Associated Clubs of Domestic Science will hold their September meeting at the Imperial Hotel. Broad? ens anil 32d St., on Saturday at ?'! p. m. Bo-ough President Marks will speak ??n the re? open markets; a representa* ti , of the Jewish Maternity Hospital will speak mi the twilight sleep, and Mrs. .lam?- L Anthony, ehief inve_ii gator of the Ursinos Bourse, will talk peration between manufacturer and consuner. Time Curtain Rises To-day AFTERNOON. 2:00?Wars 01 the World....Hippodrome AFTERNOON FEATURE FILMS. 2-15?Caliii 1.1 .Globe 2:30?li:;.Vltagraph 12 to 11:30? Kuch a Little Queen..Btrand 1 to It? Damaged Gc-oii*.New York EVENING. 8:oo? i'assi!i| I..H im? i Garden Wars 01 tin w 011'l Hippodrome ,,: I'm Rosar- .Manhattan Carm? .Century 8:io?The Beautiful Adventure..L?yceiin ?lrl from Utah.Knickerbockei g:13?The Crinoline Olrt.Grand The .Miracle Mai.Astor what is Love?....Maxine Elliott's Prett) Mrs. Smith.?asino The Elder Son.Playhouse He Comea l*p BmtUng ....Libert) 1 iragon'a ? 'law.... New Amsterdam I :niei Cover.Corl Tbs Third Party.59th St. It Pays tu Advertise.Cohan's, Pt ? .. M> Hi art.Lyric a M,?!? ru 1 ;,i I.Comedy Potash ? Perlmutter.Bronx Miss Dala).Bhubert 8:20?The Ham Tree.Standard Twin Beds.Pulton I ? ni Trial.Candler Inn?? ?'it .Kltinge 8:30?'l'lie I 'liiiini;.. Hudson High L'o-I 01 Lining.Republic Th? Prodigal Husband Empire FEATURE FILMS. 8 13?Cabirta.Globe 1 to 11?! ?an-iased ?'ood.s. New \ ,? ., 8:30? ?1.;.Vitagraph ? 12 to 11*10 ? Much a Little guten. ..Strand VAUDEVILLE HOUSES. Mats. 1 fell). Evening. 1:45.? ?*?"?.Hammereteln'a 2:11.S:I5.... Royal 1:15.- : ? ..Palace .v:". Colonial Mi.- r... . ? irpl . - : .Alhambra BURLESQUE. 1:15... 1:1. ,..Col imbia Mi.f.li.Murray Mill FUNERAL OF MRS. LESLIE Services To-morrow in Cal? vary Church. The funeral of Mrs. Frank Les!i<* i Baroness de Bazusi will be held in, tho Calvary Baptist Church, in ?>7th st., to-morrow morning. The Rev. Dr. Cornelius W-ielfkin will officiate. The body will be taken to Woodlawn for burial in the family plot. Only relative and lifelong friends of Mrs. Leslie will accompany the body to tb:> grave. The Woman's Press Club, of New York, and many members of the Professional Woman's League will attend the church services. The honorary pallbearers will be Walter Pulitzer, L. II. Cranmer. Will? iam Nel on Cromwell, T. II. Wrenn. Charles Wrenn. Thomas Wrenn. Allan Wrenn. Franc V. Lemone and General Stillman F. Kneeland. ? ? PREPARES FOR 'OUTCASTS' Miss Elsie Ferguson to Appear in New Davies Play. Midi Elsis Ferguson will appear this ' season under the management of Charies Frohman, Klaw and Frlanger in "Outcast-," he ne cet play by Hu ' bert Henry Dftvies. "Outcasts" is noiv running a*. Wyndham's Theatre, Lon don. Mi. Davies iil sail Saturday for this city aid, directly lie arrives, the play will be put. into rehearsal. The piece I is a work entirely different in style from any of tba? earlia-r Davies come? dia?., [.oii-lon declared "Outcasts" an addition to Mr. Davies'a reputation. The company ?vill be made up of English actors, eng ed in London and American actors engaged here. CARN?VA? QUEEN CALLED PRETENDER ? Bayside Horrified Because Oirl ; Who Doesn't "Belong" Leads in Popularity Race. Ha;, side is trembling on the brink of a social abyss. Tradition bids fair to be shattered ami a iiumbi?r of fashion? able families disrupted by an eightcm ycar-old girl, Catharine Reade by name. Miss Reade is about to be elect- ' ed quei'ii of the Bayside carnival, iie.ice the inipc?iidnig social cataclysm. The threatened disaster arises from the fact that Miss Keade is th.? daugh? ter .?I a laborer m the Highway De? partment of Queens County. Further? more, the lists close m a few days, and il seems as though nothing could avert the catastrophe. The carnival is sched? uled to ba-irin ?>i? Saturday. When the conte-i opened the ?ist of candidate? lnnkcd like a blue hook <?f the town. The flower of Hay.-i.le-. wealth and beauty were entered. Then Came Miss l'.eade. who has beauty and popularitj and plenty of both to ai?l her. She forged rapidly to the t'ru .*. The elect of the town gre?v frighten ?i and began to devise ?vays and mean a. The result was the suggestion that Miss Reade withdraw from the If one thing was necessary to clinch matters for Misa Keade this was it. Her J ?ends rallied to her support, and soon she was so tar ahead of the ?ith^r entrants that she scarcely could be seen. LOSTWy^FOUND; NURSE IN JAIL Woman Accused of Kidnapping Reconciled to Husband by "Stolen" Child. because James Donohue, of lit West I'Mlth st.. reads '.lie papers :t kidnapped boy is back home after being miasirg ?nice September II, anil a forme: nurse in his family is locked up in th.' Bro i/nsville police station charged witn kid tapping, Arthur Wiessner. four years ol!. was found yesterday ma poorly furnished flat at Hi) \V-?i t I ont h detectives sent out r.s soon as his grandfather, Oscar A. I'.. rYeisener, <> ' i>7 Schenck av., Kast New York, could communicate v ith the police after talk ing over the tel ?phone with young Don? ohue. The boy's mother runs u board? ing house, and until a week ago had a? patrons Axel Carlson, a machinist, and iii-- six-year-old son. Mrs. Mi'rgaret ('..'ls.jn. the wife an?1 mother, was separated r?om then, and .? orked as a nur >e in the We lan.ily. On September 11 sh?- oDt, permissioi .?> ta-., th? n.>\ out for the , ..?i. I ? .?. .1-1 he la.-1 ? ??? him bj hi? relatives until ye-tenia-.. Ii appear thai Mrs. i - Ison look ?I .? ihild to see her own boy, and a recon? ciliation with her husband followed. The two children were playing mi the det? ctives broke in. Mrs. Carlson told the police at the itation teat she intended to return the child. Since she had been se|arattd from her o?-. n boy sta ?.ui become a tached t?i Arthur, but *.c didn't need him ;i ? : y mor.- since her reconciliation ??ith n.-r family. THEATRICAL NOTES. Hippodrome announces navy Ig, when a party >'.' Rear Admiral 1- letch? r 1 ? Mort h Atlantic squad ion, hi tatt and officers of Lh ? Wyoming, 'vill occupy boxen. One of the scene? : ? "V ;ir; of the World" is i reprod the storming ol Vera in ??'.ich Admiral Fletcher ?'?.a ? !;, act ne. .los-' Collins, the ca??t fo" "Su?i.'' which will be producid b) m about two weeks, will incluue 1: bei ' Evitt. an English tenor; Le Hearn, Fritii ven Busing. Melville I.-? France, s dancer from the Winter ?:,. Berlin. William Elliott, who left the stage to become a producing manager, will be come an sctor-producing-manager in V. Hobart's "Experience," which is to have a Broadway tun be? fore long. He was Youth in the orig? inal one-act presentation of the play at the l.'.mb-' Gambol, and will play that part in the longer play. Among the princinals engaged for th? Liebler company's forthcoming produc? tion of Edward Sheldon'.? "The Carden of Paradise" arc le^sie Villars. Minnie ferry. Angela Keir, Emily Stevens, Lionel Braham, Sheridan Block and Reitee Keil]. Run.?!! Edeson will appear a' the next week in Ivy Aahton Root'. "Apartment 3W," upported by Arthur S. Iluii. tari Anderson and Jane lla?c I. D?rect from I.una Will come to Ham* merstein's Victoria tor the week of Oc? tober ."? Captain Sorehoa and nis sea The entire act takes plscc under water, and will show the rinkin?* of a mi:iiature ship, the work of the I diver in the wreck and various oth.?r features of the profc*?icn. Miss Malilynn Miller : icing in "The Passing Show i f 191 I," has JU-: been plactd u'uler a long term contract oy the management o Winter Carden. This could not b. iiuiii? before on account of th?- fact that Mits Miller was not yet Mxteen I THOUSANDS HERE HEED PEACE CALL Crowd at Meeting in 69th Armory?6,000 Turned Away. PLEAS BY MARSHALL, . GLYNN AND CLARK1 War Losses and Horrors De-, picted?Cheers as Governor Praises President Wilson. More than 9,000 persons joined in ! the most enthusiastic peace meeting : since the beginning of the war at the i ?>i)th Regiment Armory last night. At I 7:10 o'clock the doors were closed and i Irorn then till H:45 o'clock 6,000 more were turned away. The meeting, which was held under the auspices of William Randolph , Hearst) drew to the platform Champ Clark, Speaker of the House of Repre? sentatives; Vice-President Marshall, Governor Glynn, Senator James ' A. Reed and Klbert R. Gary. All joined in an appeal for peace, which, they maintained, we, as the friends of all the belligerents, were in an admirable po? sition to secure. Even France and Gern-any joined in the apnenl. Mae. (ii-rvil!?--Reache sinp ing "J ? Maudis 1<> Guerre." and Mme. Sehumann-Heink the "Adriano" aria. from "Riensi." The Washington Irving Hieb School girls added their plea to that of the two stars, closing the meet- : ing with a chorus. Governor Glynn's appearance was the i signal for prolonged applause, which bur-t ota anew when Champ Clark slowly mounted the platform. He was i introduced by the Governor as an old j friend. Elb?it 11. Gary, the temporary chair- ' man, made the opening speech. He , i.eplored the horrors of war, saying | that all of us are atTected. Our eco? nomic interests ;?re jeopardized by the war. he said, but our opposition to it, "which is embodied in this meeting, stands ,.n higher grounds." "At least l?.OOO men are being wounded and 2,500 lives destroyed daily," he said, "and it may be ex? pected the number will be doubled on account of di-ease. The immediate mourners for the dead aggregate an increase of I-,500 for each day thai passes, and the cost of the struggle is $2,600,000,000 a month. Seeks Speedy Settlement. "We tlo not undertake to pass judg ment on the causes of the v.-ajr, hut that they will reach a speedy ?ment. We are the friends of all il il enemies of none. We offer no as? sistance to one we do not offer to an i.tiier. We pray for universal peace, honorable and lasting." Governor Glynn, who followed, was introduced by Judge Gary as chairman of the evening. "Centuries of progress have impo?ed an obligation on America." said the ?iovernor, "and in the name of prog? ress we rise to meet that obligation. "The framework of civilization on which the American commonwealth is built is being torn apart by the most terrible war in the history of the world, and in the name of civilization America pleads for peace. "As the only world power not , drawn into the struggle. Americans think and plan, not for themselves alone, but for the world. Our efforts are for the preservation of civilization itself, and there is no nobler mission to which a nation could dedicat itself than thi? abandonment of war. "It would teem that just as a gra? cious Pro*, idence gave an Abraham Lincoln to this nation to preserve its it tegrity *o, to preserve the integrity i i' America's foreign relations, it has laised up Woodrow Wilson. Whatever '???? say, whatever We do here, must be ?aid and ?lone with the recognition thi.t America has hut one representa? tive in the present crisis, and that that representative is the Chief Execu? tive. "We have but one duty to upliod the hands of America. President. We can do no less. We must do no more." ?is greeted (iovernor Glynn'a nee to President Wilson Washington Irving High School broke into the speeches with i chorus more loudly cheered than the references to peace. limen, Gerville-Reache and Schu nmnn-ileink followed, the latter being particularly applauded, and cheered into two encore.*. The speeches of Champ (lark and thi Vite-Fresident followed, in the miiic vein as the Governor and Jud?e Cry. Sees End of Strife. The speakers pleaded for impartial i'..\ in judging the differences between ombatants, and said the cause of ? cace could best be served by such i.. 'itrality. "I have sublime faith that out of t.ii.-. war the permanent peace of the wotld will be wrought." asserted Vice president .Marshall. He added that the lime was swiftly coming when all In? ternational disputes would be settled by arbitration. Senator Reed, of Missouri, spoke of the horror of conflict and how much Ci dit was due to the author of the present meeting for taking what steps he could to bring it to an end. Th.* firookhn Peace Society added life and beauty to the armor-., which was draped with American and white flag . Fifty or mote of .ts members, mostly young girl;?, volunteered to serve as ushers. Among the other -peak? ?? was Thomas W. Churchill, president of the Hoard of Education. He -aid that ,f children could he made to hate war. in .-tead of being taught to admire mili? tary heroes, the danger of it would .-.'. ay. Mr. Hearst's ?uests included, besides the speakers, Judge Wadhams, Assem? blyman Owen Kiernan, Captain Charles Finite and Captain William Costigan. m OBITUARY. DAVID UNIGLICHT. Word has been received i>> Mrs. Annie Uniglicht. of .'?-4 '*? Fairmont a-.., Newark, of the death of her son, David Uniglicht, m Denver, the result of an automobile accident. Uniglicht, who was twenty-seven years old, was in the Western eit> for the benefit of hi* health. lie was crossing tlu- streit with a Mi*s Alta ??'Donald when they wire struck by a car driven by I.. ( Stevenson, an automobile salesman. Uniglicht was fatalls injured, but his companion escaped with a fractured lag and brui.se.-. CHARLES W. RECKLEV. Lieutensnt of Police Chales W. Beckley. of the 5th Precinct station, Newark, is dead in St. Michael's Hos? pital, where he had teen operated on last Tuesday for intestinal trouble. He entered the departme t eighteen ago as a patrolman. He was fifty-two years old. was a Mary'ander by birth and one of the most popular members of the department. He leaves a wife and three children. NATIONAL PROHIBITION Massachusetts Starts State? wide Campai-rn for Bill. Boston, ?Sept. 20. A statewide tem? perance campaign, which is to be con? ducted throughout the week under the auspices of the Anti-Saloon League ni America and the Anti-Saloon League of Massachusetts, started to-day. Speak? ers urged audiences to use '.heir in? fluence toward tbe passing of th? Sheppard-Hobson resolution through the election of Congressmen favorable to national prohibition. Nearly a hundred speakers will take part in the campaign, and it is an? nounced that every city and town in the state will be visited. WRECKS A?ROPLANE IN HIS FIRST FLIGHT Brooklyn Youth's $4,000 Ma? chine in Splinters?Hydro Aeroplane Chases Ducks. I I!? T.?ligr;i; Ilempstead, Long Island. Sept. 20. George Jacobs, of Brooklyn, twenty four years old, a?*U-r saving nearlv $4,000, invested in a Wright biplan?, and before a large number of spec? tators made his first flight to-day on the ilempstead Plains. Afte. flying for about ten minutes Jacobs met with a mishap while making a sharp right turn, and the aviator fell two hundred feet. His machine was one of the worst ?vrecks ?ver seen here. Jacobs escaped without a scratch. Atlantic City. Sept. l!0. Flying over the- ocean off this resort, in plain sight or thousands of visitors, this after toon B. K. Jaquith. in ins new hydro? aeroplane, gave chase to a flock of Wild ducks. For three miles he mi r.i?uvred his plane trying to kill one. but failed. Several times one or twa? stray ones shot through the wings of his plane, but escaped uninjured. DIED. Benedict, Read. Judson. A. R. Dwight, Julia L. Leslie. Mrs. Frank. Hall, Edward J. Opdycke, Leonard E Ireland, Elenora C. Titus, Eunice J. Irish, Frank A. BENEDICT -On September 19. 1914. Read Benedict. Funeral at hi? late residence, West New Brighton. Staten Island, on Tuesday. Septem? ber 82, K?ll, at 2 p. in. Interment private. DWIGHT At Tadonsac. Province of (Quebec. < aneda. on Thursday, Scp 'ember 17, lull, Julia ?Lawrence, wife of the late Jonathan Dwight. Funeral ?.??rices at Springlield. Ma;,s., on Monday, ?September SI. at noon. HALL On September IT, Edward Ju? lius Hall, aged til year?. Funeral service at Church of the Redeemer, Morristown. N. J.. at 1 o'clock Mon day, September 21. Special train leaves Lackawanna station, Hoboken. at 2:46 p. m. Interment private. ? [RELAND In Brooklyn. September If. 1914. Elenora Cummings. wife of John H. Ireland. Funeral services fron. 4^7 Clinton av.. Brooklyn, Monday ev>nir-j, September 21, at 8 o'clock. IRISH?-On September 17, at Hancock Point, He., Frank Atwater Irish, son of the late Francis U. and Caroline E. Irish, in the 6?th year of his age. Funeral services to be held in the lecture room of the Lafayette A\? nue Presbyterian Church, corner Lafayette av. and South Oxford st.. Monday, September 21, - p. m. JUDSON Septeno? r 20. 1911, .it her late residence, "t Washington Square, New Vcrk. Antoinette Bar.-tow. of Edward Jud -?.-.. Funei Kindly omit Bo? LESLIE On September 18. 1911, ?v Sherm-.n Squ-tro Hole!. 71 t -t. a?Sb? -troad'.'-ay. Mrs. Frank De*?^H| Funeral services at Calvary .Japtiatt Church. 123 West 57th st.. TueaS^H morning at 10 o'clock Intcrm^HI V- oodlawn Cemetery. OPDYCKE On Thursday, <.p'emHer :). at Bar Harbor. Me.. Leonard Eek stein Opdycke. Funeral services at ?.race Church, Broadwav. on Wednes? day, September 23. at 10 o'clock. H il requested that no flowers be sent. TITUS Suddenlv. at her Te-Ulen?*e. Rye. X V. Eunice J. widow of re P. Titus and daughter of the late Benjamin Loder, in the S2?l veor ?af her age. Funeral ?or?, m? i w?l! ?a? held a: Christ Church. Uve. N. Y . on W edncsda;. Sei at ? t t|H train leaving Grand Central Statte? ;.' '.': l"i p. m. MANHATTAN ,\N[> BRONX COHEN, Max M.. I?15 West M2d st., Sentember 19. Funeral to-morraSST, 1 :80 p. m. ' DORAN. Dsniel S. 249 East l'J5th st.. ? 17. Funeral to-day. ENGL?NDER, Monoe. Septembei M'LOUGHLIN, Mary V. K . 201 West 105th st.. September 19. Funeral to day, in a. m. N'EIDINGER, Evelyn M. .!"47 Hull ?v. Sen?, -aber It?, aged 13. Funeral to dajr. 1" a- rn. READ. Thomas R.. 70 M oriiinpsid. Drive, Septemocr 19. BROOKLYN DUNNELL, IL.rry. 24:: East SSd st . September 19. GOMERINGEE. Estells M . 898 Ilenr -' . Sept? mber 19. ?aged 82. GRIFFIV. Margaret E.. IM Sixth a? . September 19. Funeral to-morrow, ?? ;-. m. HEATH. R imone A . 109 Adelpfti st., f September 19 HVDF "\|:?r\ E.? f?0 lor: .'ia st ,?r 19. Services to-morrow, 8 p. m. KEDIAN. Annie T. 27."> Fenimore ?t., September 19. ODONNELL, .lame.-. 109 Kast 5th s'. September 19. SELOVER, Edward J . 605 Throop av.. September 19, aged (3. Services to day. M p. m TILLMANN, Henrietta. 41X fOth st. September 19 ag?d 7".. Funeral to? morrow. 2 p. m LONG ISI.AMi Dcl.soN. Mary K. F., Qu-oirua? Septem? ber 19, -ged 7T?. Funeral to-morrow, 2 p. m. MORGAN, Thiodore T . Port Washinc to'i, Septemlwi 19, aged 06. Service to-day. 2 p. in. SHIPLEY, Sarah F.. IK' i mo-i Hill ?? . Jamaica. SEW JERSEY. HEALEY, Thoni.. .?g.ian av.. .lai?.?:, City, September Is. Funeral to-alav. 9:M a m. Kl.AKMANN. Ames. 12 Patenou ?t , v City, September 19. REEVE,Sa'ina 11., Caldwell, September 19, age?l 77. Funeral to-day. THENEN, Curl I., Jersey City, Septem? ber It, :?ge?l 9-f. WHITE, lo-iah. Atlantic City, S?ptem? ba i 1?, Bgltd 71. 1KMI r I III KM