min.n, jMi -" ' ' ir-s EVENING LEDGERPHILADTgTPHTA. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1916 .ATATom nACTOYDC eraiallULuoi i noiuno WREPARE TO ASSUME m th NKW nirriES Bkr District Superintendents 100 Ministers Are Transferred RANGES ANNOUNCED tL., new district superintendents and w iaa ministers, who nreto to in H 2 of new churches rturlhgtho coming ;C arc making preiraruuuim lu fi.TrnffW duties today. They wero Pr.tt.ir assigned to their new charges fetfaSBWiop Joseph F. Berry, at IE doslnit session or the izutn nnnuni luirtphla Methodist Kplscopal confer- Kfitjt Ttev. Dr. John C. Wilson, pastor of IfiffiS Church. Is to become superintendent Tj the Central uisingi; mo v. .. Irt.rl W. Straw, pastor of nchohoth 5!h Is to he superintendent of tho IfflrViWrlct! the nev. Dr. G. Blckley JS,rtS Is to bo n charge of tho West DIs IJttSna the Bcv. Dr. George W. Hcnson Itrlctanu i .,,ni.rlntniljnev of tho ,' rlct. Tho lW. Dr. deorge W. SSViunerlnlendent of tho Northwest DIs- 5fct was uie oniy oui.cn. .,.;. ...;.... ,...uou (jfrt aiu nui ti".v. s-irt-ni.r retiring superintendents wero (timed ns follows : Tho nev. Dr. Frank Rfrafkln. to Grnce Church: tho Itev. Dr. I'if'. nrimtha. to Jcnklntown: tho nev. thstWP E. li Durrls, to the Church of tho gft.KCJ.ns.nl. and tho llnv. Dr. Georgo H. .A Oln,R'ftT1n'' nml an. i wtrl rejJ 0k'. '! tl 3 i j Hf fol-si I.7.I.I.V (n lho corresponding secretary' Kmolthe City Missionary Society. Others lrh &re to assumo new duties for tho timing Venr nro! II CBNTrtAT. DISTRtCT. j- t'llann Ritnor Intinr1flnt. KWPSa.i.r-V.i nvmnlfi. Chnrles Truax. ntc "' ii . , Harry iru. ... , , , ... Ivn nml Cozens' Memorial, A. J. Kim- V;wL w- " Sm,th' Win."nM. ... ,-', "I BEKSffitniair.: Fmnii P. Park.n. lf!?:s're?., - i,?,!,,a,k0P- pjUUIHl vim. - ..... , NOUTH DISTRICT. f r v Strnw. Superintendent. m..miiiiid. i:. W. Ilurkc, TTHprnan. H. O. Pratnn. 1TL- itii... it it Itnhlnann. !:"'"..! . 1 II nnnil.nJ 3ftSSrr Wa'rr Onp. O. II. O. WuCrt Dunsor. (1. W. Humphreys. IISmIi Chunk. W. 8. Fox. iBIIiaelpnia iriupuuiB. , i. niui. iiillutlfton, Ilertriim Hhny. kSmnVford nehoboth. Qlndntono Holm. 'Llndlf y, . . a. Tyson. ' snth Ktrrct. OcorKe Uaul. rirtluid. J. L. c5ucrncy. .... i.iinctnn nnd Slntcil.ilo. Frank Mack. Jumnilt, Hill. B. I. IIarhliurKer NORTHWEST DISTRICT. B.II..1 Hv 1? ltNf1fni.fl. rtmno'n. and OrwlRburp. Uenjamln Scull. fEnniburff, Halifax and Hummelstown, II. U. t Slider. . bida and 1'axinn. u. w. oiesrisi. IMlttlown and Illveralde. Jnmpa runnlnahnm. ..4a,Auti.n'it( Street. W. It. nifUnnfnn. I IFUiadclphla Church of. tho Advocate, fJer ! ! muitown,' I. P. Shook. Him Avtnuc. RoxboroUBh, F. W. Z. Ilarrctt. V ' Sinetuary. II. a. HarKinaon. i! ' Tloca. Snmuel .McWllllann. h ' nth Street, lv. B. Johnson and A. F. Dot- r . terer; ; f union. J. u. uicKerion. rma drove, jonn Kiiery. 'httiTllle, W. Q. Bennett. fcSarlklH Haven, B. F. raraon. Tremont and Donnldaon,. F. A. Tyaon. Taller Forgo and Wlconlaco, W. II. Beyer.. SOUTH DISTRICT. rttmnrrrm W tTnnmn flllnnrlnlnn nl . Xnmdale and Chatham, T. It. Crooks, finter Trinity. C. I.,. Oaul. Elm and Itithlcliem. T. V. Bare, rrlendablp. II. D. Rnblnaon. Ijnft-nrw.ri? nnri fllnt Itlll. If. If. Potlcher. Uirihallton. It. K. Jlor.N'eal. Fhlladelphta Bethany, VS. B. Dixon. uroaa eireet, a. au Jiuaer. i Church of tho Covenant, B. E. Burrlaa. uinnera' lininel, H. J. uamer. AleConnell Memorial. I.. P. Zook. SMrryvllle. William May. foirthmore,' Luther Kettnls. supply. tTnlon and youth Media, J. I'.. OiMlaEher. UpUnd. W. A. Lewis, wtn Orove, J. C. Wood. ' WEST DISTRICT. i fi Tllffdnv Tlnrnn RiinArlntnrtint. fjCkrtitlana nnd Onn. a. S. Kerr. vsiomoia Mrsc unurcn, w. it. uray. eleron. S. It. Dout. Otonmoore. I.. It. Janney. HTOwell and IIIlH-rnln. A. S. Morris. Huletta. J. n. nmrnn. ffuont Joy, Thomas Itolwrts. Fklliclelphla Calvary. Elmer E. Helms. I tpwortn. u. l,. iicuartney. i'Satm Andrew. JI. II. Nichols. . BlVera Mnmnrfnl. fl. f. ltrndhml. fi 8, D. Cooiier Memorial, W. O. Jonea. Bltrnburir. II. O. JIaln. W. William Powlck. superintendent Anthraclto I .tJeorae H nickley. corrcapondtm; secretary Philadelphia City Missions and Church Ex ttulon Society. APPOINTMENTS DISPLEASE METHODIST MINISTERS Several Clergymen Object to New )' rhnt-ffAD Anninnnil Kf T7ntir Several of thn inlnlntfrR whn wpi- frnnn fared' to new churches by Bishop Joseph FBrry and his cabinet yesterday at the closing session of the Methodist Epls- VUDai UonrprnPA nn uiwnlv HlonnnnlntAn 'rer their prospects for the coming year. Among thean In tllA T9v rhnrlon A Ttnn. ftaijn, who has beeji transferred from Mariners Rothel Church. Moyamenslng JJ4 Washington avenues, to the First I purch. of Pottstown. The Rev. Mr. Benlamln nsserta his re- MBoval from the Philadelphia charge was weciea to give the place to tho Hew III J. Garber, who has been In charge of thurch at Mahanoy City, and that the Mange followed a controversy between w trustees of Mariners' Bethel Church M the oinclals qf the conference. "I wve been made the butt of this contro versary," he said today. "If I was to be liven another charge It should In all Justice have been ona In thla ritv. My H1 Is a student at the University of !k?iBIUylvanla and y daughter Is also --jug euucaiea Mere," Li? l"sakng of the matter Bishop Berry loaay; ."The transfer was not effected by the frastees 0f Mariners' Bethel or any ona ?"; There was no plot or controversy Jail I know tt Tha TTKt, Xr TXan1ti-iln 1U. be taken care of in Pottstown, and MafBure ha w'11 hava no causa for com wntv Every one cannot serve In Phila-JfJRSf- We have done our best to solve SJWflcult problem In making the appolnt- r "KAISER" CAPTURED nERE Arrested for Fighting With Irish man Over Verdun m "P1 Kaiser" Bpent an hour In a City --all Cell llBt Mini. ..1...-.....1 ..l,k Inn. XfebtCn '"" liifci UJaifitU VW1I 11,1- lEroJrt '"u uuu QisiurDing me peace in utuHT '"""" wniis teuing now easuy mo if1? 'orces could take Verdun when h i Y wlshed- With 'The Kaiser," liS. u"erwise Charles K. Bendlg. ot JJUl Bt rent n. ni........ -. - . "rested George Carey, of Short Hills, N. who declared that Irish soldiers, with gWJp 9f King George of England, would vSu tt German forces away from 3t a ",? m9a Cam8 to Dlows 'n front faii.r '"' ooara ana causea muca IKnSJ6!1 for a "n18- When they were IKjIS obrr8 Magistrate Baker in tba WUTaZ., -uu" uendlg and Carey decided PS5 gf Peace and let the KaUer. tbe DfJK"1 George and the rest take or JSErtcana1111!, -without assistance from STjrr to. i Mt j, -t.. ,- v AM6cr uiacoargea uim wita. iu doc mix yjua up in ueur Bndis Is a well-known fUt- oard," raere her to toowo M r'1 and la ti tanfani Teiitonia WINSTON CHURCHILL RAP ON NAVY COSTS HIM REMNANTS OF PRESTIGE Speech in Commons as He Returns From Trenches Called His "Worst Blunder" Balfour Defends ' Sea Power of Great Britain By HENRY SUYDAM ,. . YON March 8. Winston Church Ills latest outbreak has destroyed the remnants of his popularity and prestige In tho British now. Ttia ',n,A,i. iM u House of Commons yesterday, In which he attacked tho efficiency of British sca power, has caused tho British navy to dis avow him unanimously. Tho lato winter had been a period of ad vertisement for the British fleet. Ameri can correspondents had been charmingly entertained aboard British flacshlns. French Journalists had consumed cham pngne nnd uttered specious platitudes In North Sea wardrooms. Russian authors, brought all the way from Petrograd, had Interviewed ndmlrals nnd toasted King nnd Czar. Whereupon tho world, In enso It hnd any doubt, WftB Informed that tho British navy was efficient. Tho Ameri cana emphasized tho speed of tho new British battle cruisers; the Frenchmen described tho silhouette and outllnoi tho Russians waxed sentimental over their nlly's strength. Already supromcly con fident In that cordon of flontlng steel which guards tho United Kingdom from Invasion, tho British publls was doubly reassured. Kthot Lovoy went on singing "Rule, Britannia !" with a German accent, In tho musical halls, and Parliament con tinued Its ponderous discussions of war time economy. Then Winston Churchill came homo from tho front. Ho hnd qultcd tho army ns subaltern, ho re-entered It a generation laier ns n major; and ho turned up on a bench In tho House of Commons on tho afternoon of March 7 ns n colonel, In a top-hat, will to gaiters and a morning coat, BALFOUR TEt,t,S OF FEATS. Arthur James Balfour, who succeeded Winston Churchill as First Sea Iord when Mr. Churchill was banished after the Dardanelles scandal, delivered to the Houso an enlightening statement upon tho Introduction of tho now navy estimates. Ho said that tho British fleet was no longer n. British fleet, but nn International fleet; that 4,000,000 combatants had been transported under Its guardianship, 1,000,000 horses, 2,500,000 tons of army stores and 20,000,000 gallons of oil. Tho British navy had been expanded enor mously slnco tho outbreak of hostilities. Its personnel had doubled; Its tonnago had Increased by moro than 1,000,000; tho stregnth of tho air scrvlco had grown tenfold. Mr. Balfour concluded; "Surely ho must bo of somewhat poor spirit who. after ho has measured the greatness of tho fleet which Great Britain has at its disposal, cannot faco tho futuro In a spirit of cheerful serenity." Whereupon Colonel Winston Churchill. ex-First Sea Lord, arose nnd calmly told the Houso of Commons that tho'aerman navy had been "terribly strengthened"; that tho strategy of tho Admiralty was mistaken; that tho shipbuilding program was delayed ; that tho Intentions of tho ifiemy wore most formidable,, and that, should n German fleet attack the British fleet, a part of tho British fleet would be absent refitting. Ho concluded by de manding tho return of Lord Fisher, whom ho himself hnd discredited six months previously. Lord Fisher, who was sit ting in tho Peers' Gallery, smiled, scratched his head and withdrew. ATTACK GIVES A SENSATION. When tho evening newspapers were rushed Into the streets with screaming ecareheads, the first Impression was com bined astonishment nnd stupefaction. A Dutch telegram had nnnounced on thnt very morning that 25 German warships wero In tho North Sea, and rumors of n naval engagement wero everywhere to bo neara, uoionei Churchill's remarks could not havo been better timed. The confident assurances of Mr. Balfour wero unnoticed. At a period When tho Verdun bnltln nn 'Btlll fiercely undecided, Colonel Churchill's nttncK upon tho Admiralty furnished a war sensation. Ills pcrsonat appeal to the British musses assured an nttcntlvo audience. Winston Churchill was the first man who dared question tho efficiency of tho British navy. But tho British public refused to bo llevo III of Its fleet. Beyond causing fitful questionings In tho editorial col umns of tho newspapers, the substance of Mr. Churchill's remarks were soon for gotten. "Hands off tho British grand fleet 1" becamo a popular cry. London began to spcculato upon tho question: uia Winston Churchill mnkc n bad politi cal mlstnko In rushing back from tho front to demand tho reinstatement of Lord Flsher7 Tho general opinion Is that returning from tho trenches was Winston Church Ill's worst blunder. There Is a Btrong suspicion In England nowndnys thnt tho plnco of a soldier, oven when he happens to bo n moinber of Parliament, Is at tho front fighting tho enemy nnd not In Lon don attempting to cmbnrrass tho Govern ment. "Although Mr, Churchill hns been for six months nt tho front." said one mem ber of Parliament to me, "ho seems to forget that England Is at war." The troublo with Mr. Churchill's latest performance seems to bo that It failed to como off properly. His suggestion that Mr. Balfour bo replaced as First Sea Lord by Lord Fisher was regarded In many quarters as rank Impudence. Mr. Balfour made ft delicately sarcastic reply, so cleverly delivered that the mem bers of the, Houso held their sides for fear of laughing outright nnd drowning out the speaker. Col6nel Churchill offered rather a weak defense. He could not answer Mr. Balfour's reminders of the Dardanelles ex pedition, for whoso "useless slaughter, mismanagement, waste, loss of ships and ultimate failure Mr, Churchill seems to have no memory." He could not answer Mr, Balfour's reminders of tho nlr service which was "left In utter' confusion." Mr. Churchill said that six months' absence from England had "cleared his mind," To which Mr. Balfour answered that It had needed a European war for Its accom plishment. Honors, on lho whole, were all In Mr. Balfour's hand. Tho London nowspapers hoped that Wlnstoh would go back to tho front and stay there. What effect Colonel Churchill's nttnek upon tho Admiralty had on tho offlcora and men of tho British fleet, who havo been striving for nearly two years to maintain tho highest nttalnnblo standard of seamanship and bnttlo skill, may be better Imagined than described, I asked a friend, who Is n captain In tho Brltlnh navy, what ho thought of Mr, Churchill's speech. His reply was In formal and not Intended for publication. "Every dog has his fleas," ho said. CROWLEY, PUGILIST, BURIED Many nt Funeral of Young Man Killed in Ring Andrew Crowloy, tho 23-year-old pugi list, who was killed by a blow on tho neck from the fist of his opponent In tho ring of tho Nonpareil Boxing Club, Kensing ton nvonuo and Ontnrlo street, on Friday night, was burled today In Holy Cross Cemetery. Funeral service's were held at his home, 233C Oxford street, nnd nt St. Elizabeth's Roman Catholic Church, 23d and Berks streets, whero Solemn High Mass was celebrated. Slany friends of tho prize fighter were present at the services. The honorary pallbearers wero Chnrtcs Kelly, John Hngcn, William Lelnhauscr, Charles Jost, James Butler and Belmont White side. Forty Aged Persons Saved From Fire. WILMINGTON, Del.. March 22. Forty Inmates of tho Mlnqundalo Homo for Aged Persons wero marched to safety today when flro was discovered In tho building. Pick Them Out at They Are Regular $1.50 Shirts 1 85c It Is Im portant to find this mark on goods. It guar untefl qnallty, style and Talue. Our shirts at f 1.50 are famous for their stylo, quality and value and when wo reduce them to 86c they go llko hot cakes. Now Is tho time to stock Up a supply of these splendid shirts. Hundreds of other things also, nt great reductions. BECKERS Widener Building Arcade 926 Chestnut Street Juniper and Filbert Streets 20 South 16th Street No connection with any other store. onom uyiji aker Direct It has been said by philosophers time and time again that economy is wealth, and is there any one of us above this esteemed practice? It can be demonstrated to you beyond doubt that it is economy to buy your piano from the Cunning ham Piano Co. In the first place, price should not govern the pur chase, as you can get an imitation of anything at a small percentage of the cost of the real article; in the second place, an attractive case frequently is used to help sell a poorly constructed instrument, and in the third place, many persons, with a knowledge of music only, recommend a poorly constructed piano that may attract the eye and the ear for the time being only, , for the consideration they receive from the seller. "After all, it's the wearing and- lasting qualities and keeping in tune that count something to the pos sessor of a piano. It doesn't require extraordinary commercial skill to calculate that buying directly from as responsible manufacturers a8 we are in Philadel phia would save you from 25 to 30 per cent on pianos purchased from us. FACTORY-TO-HOME-PRICES Uprights $235 up Players $450 up Grands $575 up IT PAYS TO THINK Eleventh and Chestnut Streets Factory, 50th and Parlcside Avenue PHILADELPHIA BRANCHES 52d and Chestnut Sts., 283S Germantown Ave. OUT-OF-TOWN STORES Scranton, Reading, Pottsville, Johnstown, Sharaokin, J Girardville, WUHamsport, Lock Haven wlimnaaiM Clip and Mail This Coupon ' Please mall me art catalog of Cunningham Planoa wjth full particulars regarding your easy payment plan. ' E.L. 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