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SES FRM WN BUFFALO STRIKE _ FEW CARS RUNKING * Company Operates Only Ten of ts 300 Miles, Even Under Mifitary Guard, is She oh Go © 42,000 Workers To-Morrow Unless the Car Men Win. BIGGER STRIKE. BUFFATO, April 11.—With etreet cars Funoing under military quara ever only tem miles of the International Ratlway , Company's ™ irfies of tracks end a @eneral rtr'ke of atl union labor in the clty threatened, etrong infuences were brought to bear to-day upon the cor- poration and ite striiag car men to ‘reach an agreement upon which ques- tions ef wases and houre can be arm- trated, { A eorferance between the represen: tatives of the striking carmen, President, 3%& G, Connette of the company and) Mayor Louis P, Fuhrinann, held at noon to-day, failed to break the deadlock wetween the opposing factions. President Connete, who met the stri _ leaders at the conferense for the firs time, etated that the company atood by its ofiginal position, that it was ready and willing to mect a committee of its om- ployees. President Mahon of the Car- men's Union insisted that the company Meet a committee of the association, claiming that by 0 doing the right to or \ganize was recognized. Both sides held firm and the conference was off. | The fact that President Connette was willing to meet the strik leaders was regarded as significant. Street cars were operated on the Main ‘street and Elmwood avenue lines at) noom. The streets were patrolled their, efitire lengths by militiamen, and no trowble wae reported. The cars carried. Rochester dranch of the Street Carmen's | Union, conferred with Preaident Mahon | (| today and attended the meeting at the/ ‘Mayor's office. STRIKE. President WUlizm D. Mahon of the union to-day reiterated his determina- ‘tion to continue the strike unless the ‘ disputed questions in regard to hour iwages and re-employment of men b; be called out in Buffalo to-morrow ‘might on a eympathy strike unless he; wins his point. | District-Attorney Wesley C. Dudley Announced to-da: complaints of citizens he would present to the Grand Jury, now in session, evi-| dence on the question whether the rail- ‘way company has violated the law re- Guiring it to train motormen at ite! power house and then station on the platform of the car with them for aj Yerlod of fifteen days a skilled in-| structor. | \bpoenses have been placed in the ff for @ number of nd the policemen on the cars as would be opened to-morrow morning !f | the trouble is not declared off by that time, a Girt to Be Tried as Thief. Marion Desserl, who was arrested a few days ago in ¢ront of a Sixth avenue Gepartment store by a detective who had followed her through the aisles for an hour, to-day was held in $2,6000 bail for trial in Special Sessions, by Magistrate Appleton in Jefferson Market Court. The girl, it is alleged, was seen opening @ bandbag carried by Mrs. George ‘Witiams of No, 22 Union avenue, Mount ‘Vernon. A Clean home is healthy home. : CN makes a clean home. Soaps and cleansing pow- dere may clean ateste, floors and woodwork, but they won't kill jl germs, CN does both; it makes everything in which it comes contact 100 conditions favorable to germ life, that in response to|, 5 E up. fatal or final. the chureh in the ife they are livi: more dificult, perheps; but it Is same. Through the long ages which hawe ted man out of th eublme philosophy of @ epiritual ferment Mfting us from the slime. And that ‘ferment te made up of many 3 contains the souls of all Great pietures, And Some of the Intervening Stages ous, Why Waste Time THE GIRL WHO WORKS AND WINS “zc | MEINANS SEM eet Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). ‘There Are Some Women Born Blind to the Virtu- in Trying to Give Them Sight?” Writes ‘One Groping for Light’— “No Girl Need Be Lonely if She At- tends to Business,’”’ Says ‘‘Stenog.” $100—IN PRIZES FOR LETTERS BY REAL WORKING GIRLS—$100 erin Cash prizes amounting to $100 will be given’ for the most help- ful letters from REAL WORKING GIRLS on the subject dealt with in this series. The money will be divided as follows: Two prizes of $25 each. Five other prizes of $10 each. ; The seven letters which, in Nixola Greeley-Smith’s judgment, are MAHON EXPECTS 42,000 MORE TO || best and most helpful will receive these awards. ‘ BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITR. “It men could only awaken to the subtleties, they would cease this exact division between the bad woman and the good woman. a hundred stages in between, and at any up to the very last girls can be 2 Ls i s : i i ? There are myriads of women, just a5} Tre Evening World reader eays, who} are bending reeds that should be bound It ts true, too, that men confound wa thelr judgments the girl who hesi- tates with the girl who ts lost. AN ERROR THAT QUENTLY MADE. ‘The most miserable error in the world is that any false etep by @ woman ‘5 And any humen being who believes otherwise is denying the religion which the majority of civilized Persons profess. ‘The discouragement which masy women feel because of the phari- eaical thoughts they hear and read om the subject of the impossibility of outliving a past error is re- sponsible for more sine and greater sine than love or greed has ever It is the note of “What is the use?” which has sounded’ in eo many of the letters which girls have contributed to this eertes, Now, what I8 the use? To those who share the accepted formulas of faith the answer to this question f# easy. those who don't—and many, many youns “a seated Sear Orem sos 1@ FRE. To rimal to the Golden Rule been at work There are helped. But are we interested in the incurable? Why waste time on the condemned from infancy—the girl who never ‘went wrong’ be- cause she never had an instinct or a desire to go right? Are our ef- forts not better directed toward the girl who is weakening? Shall we save the flower or waste our time caring for the weeds? Will the weeds, no matter how carefully nur- tured, carry this nation toward a higher standard of morals or any- thing else?” ‘ I take this quotation from the very } interesting letter of a woman who signs it “One Groping for the Light.” I think she is right in thinking that some weeds exist which will remain weeds irreclaimably, no matter what care is lavished upon them; but surely there are not as many subtle gradations between the weed and the flower as she realizes between good and bad women. A weed {s often just a flower run wiki, a flower only a weed that has received cultivation and |eanlight. All the noble deeds, and Includes as well every beautiful and true thought or act of the least and humblest who have lived or live, and [t doesn’t matter par- ticularly how you namo it, J Vv: who remains true to the highest tradi- tions of womanhood adds to that Sum of All Things Good and 1s a part of tt, THE BAD AND THE GOOD WOMAN. Dear Madam: If men could only @waken to the subtleties they would coase this exact division between the “bad” woman and the “good” woman, There are a hundred stages in between; and at any up to she very last we can help the “falling woman." Your do in yesterday's Evening World tells us of the dread- ful consequences to fo pon the heels of the girl who missteps, Im- mediately he deals with the girl who has done £0 (being a man), he places her in the category of the uncle: the morally, mentally and phys! | unt, | Now, are we interested In the In- | curable? Wiy waste time on tho condemned—from infancy—the irl who never “went wrong’ Because ahe never had an instinct or @ desire to go right? There are some women born blind to the virtuous—why waste time in trying to give them sight? Are our efforts not better directed toward the girl who Is weakening, the girl who {s contaminated, per- chance infected? I speak from a ‘moral standpoint, Had we not better bind up the bending reed? 1 refer to the myriads of women—at loas: New York--who are far from wholly bad; who would scorn promiscuity, but yet wio have made the misstep. Many of them-most of them—are self-supporting and self-reapecting; they should be the pillars of our middle-class society. Instead, through some mischance of Fate, they are driven’ ‘to the left,” Being wteliigest and capable, the moat attract the intel oot see The Division Between Good and Bad Girls detriment of what is beet in Amer can society. Shall we save the flower, or waste our time caring for the weeds? Will the weeds, no matter how carefully nurtured, carry this nation toward a higher standard of morals, or any thing else? Time was when, tf" ton- sidering evil, the weed wes the only thing taken into consideration; but T tell you that what is menacing our national respect and gocial progress 1s the destruction of the flower! ONE GROPING FOR THE LIGHT. HOW GIRLS CAN AVOID BEING LONELY, Dear Madam: No girl need be lone- ly 1f ahe will only reall: to business to earn mi on the lookout fer ple: coat our fellow-workers money. The married men in business surely can- not be expected to show her such attentions, and most of ‘the unmar- ried men have sweethearts of their own, 8o have the girls, for that matter—in fact, I have met only | these years who not. not at all “lonely.” 10 some place of amuse- er, matinees and other Places that do not necessitate an escort, and it will not cost them very much money, even if they want to go once a week, That is surely more dignified than expectit menfolks among their busines: quaintance to take them out. A great many men and girle meet !n business and afterward become en- gaged, but I don't think any man wants to marry a girl he meets in business who is looking for an es- cort; he {s rather apt to wonder what kind of people she belongs to, and why she cannot find some one among her own friends. “STENOGRAPHER. HOW A BUSINESS GIRL SHOULD CONDUCT HERSELF. Dear Madam: In my five years’ ex- perience in the business world I have found that men—fer from being “gavening wolves in gheeps’ cloth- ing going about seeking whom they may devour’—are just as puncttlious bout the type of girl they have about them in @ high class office as they would be jn their selection of a good cigar, It matters not to them that the band be fancy or plain; that the cigar be long or short: that {t be fat or thin, if the quality 1s good. ‘That 1s all they ask and they appre- clate tt to tts full, It's a mistake for a y girl in business to imagine that every man she meets is a Don Juan who ie con- scio ly of her womanly charms, ‘The average man {s too wrapped up in his own affal 0 bother with the in business, He ts usually too busy fighting to hold his head above water in the struggle of ‘'the survi- val of the Att that ts going on For Constipation EX: LAX The Delicious Lazative Chocolate promote Good fer young and 014. ‘ie an6 Os, 08 al) Gruggiste. THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1918, Ialoleinintebelniaistelelsieioteisiok HELD BLAMELESS FOR TEST PATIENT'S DEATH Doctors Say Meningitis of Temple Not Due to Ex- pert’s Innoculation. Dr. 8. S, Goldwater, superintendent of ‘Mount Sina! Hospital, sald to~day that In fairness to Dr. Frederich F. Fried- mann, ft should be stated that in the opinion of Interested physicians the death in the hospital yesterday of Ben- Jamin Temple, one of the ninety-four | government test patients treated by Dr. | Friedmann, should not be considered in attributable to the Berlin spe- patient at Mount Sina! ti He not only had pulmonary tubercu- lonia in the second stage but tudercu- loste of the bone had attacked his wrists. There was a lesion in one of the patient's wrists. ‘T think no physician in possession of the @acts tn this case would attribute Temple's death of meningitis in ie | way to Dr, Friedmann’s innoculation, sald Dr, Goldwater. “In such canes of fe very likely to develop.” snot remember Temple's o! ad no comment to termination of the innoculation this instances. the second death to ocour amo yout two hundred gatients treated by (Dr, Friedmann in thie city. widely extended tuberculosis meningitis | ee Dr. Javea G, Baldwin Dies. Dr. Jared Grover Baldwin, second oMest homeopathio practitioner in this city, died early to-day at his home, No. § Bast Forty-firet mreet after a short Wines, De. Baldwin, was eighty-six years oK1, He wae born in Montrose, Pa. Dr, Baldwin received his medical de- gree from New York University Medical College in 183. He was a censor of the New York Homeopathic and Medical Cotiege and Hospital, consuking phy- siclan to the Hahnemann Hospital, « member of the American Institute of A LADY WISHES OTHERS MAY BE EQUALLY LUCKY Mrs. Goldberg Makes State- ment in Hopes that Some Others May Benefit. SIGNS OF SPRING IN GLORIOUS CLIMATE OF COLORADO. GRAND JUNCTION, Col., April 11. chores, he stumbled over a new born calf, and just after sunrise his blooded brood sow gave birth te a Mitter of six pigs. Not to be outdone a setting hen hatched out eleven Nttle chicks and & pigeon hatched out two squats. Harrieon says he !e golng to shoot the family cat. FEELS LIKE NEW BEING pegs gee e met‘tar one Since She Started to Use Tona wire ‘A°mas's thougme are | Vita for Attacks of Nere vous Debility. eyes or else he brings about a change. in their business relations. I know of @ case where a perfectly good, clean- minded girl lost out in a position be- atyle of dressing (which was @ little too extreme for the busl- ness world) and her manner in treat- ing those about her in the office. She gave the impression of being tao familiar (as the old man who em- ployed the stenographers put it, “she was too fresh"), while euch a thing far from the girl's thoughts, and hads any one attempted to overetep the hounds of convention an@ cour- tesy he would have been greatly taken aback at her way of receiving his attentions, But she had a care- less way of lounging in attitudes which, although very, attractive in a drawing room or at hoi onveyed en entirely wrong impr. office, with the result thi the old man, who had evil mind and to whom thi “Hont soit qui mat y pen be very aptly applied, gave her credit for being an entirely different type of @ girl from what she really was. It therefore behooves a girl to be te tasty re tan onde betel ita. ve e si"tind that it has greatly benefited Prior to taking this tonie I affected with nervous debility and a | general drowsy feeling. ‘These trou! | are fi f lonving me and I ‘ine eins anit ‘one any ene who ms; settarly distressed as I was.” i Mrs. is qne out of many mated the tonic. Nervous | suffered from, very ciroummpect and to keep before pility to col oll her the motto not only “to avo!d | constipation; belching of evil but the appearance of evil," and ing or that general run-down condition. does this she will surely get ‘ona Vit ‘on sale at nearly every MV. D. drug store in New York City.—Advt. Children’s Tan Shoes Bucher Oxfords, ankle ties and spring weght but- ton or lace boots, made on designed for the serious business of Proper'y moulding young feet. Materials special! q 8e= lected for flexibility and ser- vice. Sizes 8% to 1014, $2; 11 to 2, $2.50; 214 to 6, $3. Small boys’ Lace Boots in tan and black Russia calf, sizes 11 to 2, $2.50. ee ne aac nanan nme teen repentant a feel like a new | |I take great pleasure in recommendin, | Gustave Petaillot, Fenton, Mass. Dufty | has to its credit over fifty years of Positive $20 to $25 Values, all now greatly reduced to Aa, The most favored style effects of London, By, preme suit showing now exhibiting at the famous Bedell Bazaar de la Modes. 15 enabling you to select favorite rodel at this attractive Price. ; A Namber of Smart Suits, § 7 (08 Customarity Priced at $15. A ea Remember—Alterations FREE SALE 4T ALL FOUR STORES wisest Fewyenx 460-462 Fulten Street —Brosklyn 45-651 Broad Street—Newark, N.J. Market and 12th Sts.—Philadelphio FRANKEN, STEINBERG @ } OPPOSITE EDEN MUSEE ' 54 to 58 West 23¢ St. Every foible, whim and fancy of Fashion is faith- nly and smartly in our suits. What Paris Fifth Avenue proclaim as the height of style “Blouse models,” “! and Bulgarian models”—“Cut- aways” and Waist Lines”—all splendidly delin- eated in this developed from navy bine, ‘The styles mentioned above faille black, rove, checks, stripes, are foneacty gy Mite Ee eal ean en} it UR. GUSTAVE PETAILLOT ft certify that it has given back my life on *s Pure Malt Wh been questioned. It is an absolut: iy Fe Dllys the Keath ond srcugraving proper Sema ‘wonderful remedy in the prevention relief of pneumonia, chitis, coughs, ¢ ‘asthma, catarrh, stomach troubles and all weakening conditions, if taken as directed. It is recognised as « family medicine + ae Oy a a . wi wos Prize Reve Malt Whuskag le see ooby wei tek oes Meee ‘ saa 0 OR f Be eure yeu pate the reliable.” y at $1 a bottle, He aC Wsee Cohen eae ee 3 bat Wt Makes Little Differenge What You Wem, s World a