The evening world. Newspaper, September 21, 1914, Page 8

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TS OFF EMPLOYEES IDAVENPORT'S NAME ‘GOVERNOR WATCHES Ff aN) WANTS TO RAISE © SLARES OF HS ADES “fhe Tenemem House Department the Board of Estimate at meeting that in pursuance of plan of ecenomy it proposes drop- twenty-nine clerks, seven sten- here and typists, five typewriter two servers and ene nag Commissioner Joho J. , Who ia making thse exten- sot ein Rod ¢ payroll, points with fact that he is making aioe Georesie in personal service of "ERS The allowance asked for next budget is $725,698.50, which py ‘wetiee than the 1914 eliow- ae ote the ate and &re to lose their jobs\some of Ghose higher up are to have their sal- boosted. The salary of the first Comminsioner is to be rained 000 a year to $4,600. The chief is eased from + : ge for peteees of the salary. a the Commissioner isoe te oe So an Department of Doe! and Fer. tha requested for the expenses 1915 the sum of $2,392,640.85, which, fo ciaimed. fo $283,967.92 less than 4 ae 1914. allowance of $3,676,508.27, a Georease of over 10 per cent STAYS ON TICKET OF PROGRESSIVES ALBANY, Sept, 21-—The name of Frederick M. Davenport will remain on the primary ballot as a Progressive party nominee for Governor. Supreme Court Justice Chester eo decided to- Gay in dismissing the action brought by Waiter 1. Rathborne to have Mr. Davenport's name removed on the ground that many of the signatures of his nominating petitions were ob- tained fraudulently and that many of ers previously had wigned pe- nominating William Sulzer. The Progresmve primary ticket will bear the.names.of Mr. Davenort and Mr. Sulser as candidates for Governor. ‘William Suter said to-day: “I had nothing to do with the attempt to knock Mr, Davenport's name off the Progroasive ticket, The court action wan brought by # lawyer who formerly represented the Independence League nd In this cas wan acting on his own account @o far aa I know. “I prefer to beat and square in the ome! pi martes without resorting to any tech- nicalties. There is no question about my winning the nom jon for Gov- Progressive ticket and I he mupport of Col. Root lection campaign. = ON HAR CAUSES DANDRUFF, SOAP GETS DRY, HAR FALLS OUT fluffy sent bottle} wavy. flulty and abundant, and possess mparable roftness and lustre. Besides cleansin; fn and beautifying the hale, one es of Danderine dis- solves particle of dandruff; stimu- lates the ea sealp, pring itching and fall- ing hair. Dende veretation he tela ind sunshine are to a lkeredusiae thors je- ing pr ies cawe the hair to grow long, strong and beautiful. Men! Ladies! You can surely have of charming hair. @ 95 cent lots hair nee of Knowlton’s Danderine from any store or Cee e try it, Sry TEE EVENING. ‘WORLD,. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER. 24, 1918. AS COMPENSATION Takes Text From Victim's Widow on Visit to Hearing by New Board. —_——— A bareheaded woman who sat only @ few fee, away from him rocking a) year-old baby, furnished Gov. Glynn with the text of an addreas he de- livered ¢' afternoon (0 the meeting chamber of the Workmen's Compen- gation Comminsion apon the prompt and almomt paternal working of the Commission, All the Commissioners wore present, the room was crowded with spectators and petitioners, and there were several high officials in the Governor's audience, The woman, Concetta Ventrigito, had come to ask compensation for the death of her husband, Michaele, who dide of a fractured aku July 16 two days after he fell down « hatehway on a steamer lying at @ Brooklyn terminal, u Gov. Glynn was in the chamber at the right of Chairman Dowline while the widow's cane was being adjust It had been recorded that Micha had received $2 a day as longvhore- man and the recompense to the had been figured on that Aa ahe could not speak Bnglish, an Interpreter stood at her side while she looked wonderingly about her and rocked and patted the child she held. The commission awarded her $7.50 every two weeks, with $2.60 a piece semi-monthly for her two chfl- dren until they should reach the age |” of eighteen, Her own payment was to continue all ber life unless she should remarry, when she wan en- titled to a two-year-final payment in @ single sum. ‘The woman nodded her under- atanding and was about to leave | when it was brought to the attention RM, Mecy & Co.'s Attractions Are Their Low Prices. Herald Square, Dy 34th to 3th St. LONDON OVERCOATS At Their Actual London Prices We purchased the entire SAMPLE LINES of three of the greatest London. tailoring firms, at very low prices. When you see the makers’ names on, the labels you will realize the exceptional merit of the These Tailors as style originators in fine} Apparel for Men. The line includes both heavy Winter and Medium Weights, all priced so low that you will recognize the fact that you are paying at Macy's only about the amounts that you would pay in London for the same goods. We actually omit the cost of duty and transportation— you get the benefit of our close buying and careful figuring. The Materials Heavy Beavere Reugh Scotch Tweeds Fleeces, giving warmth without ree weight SGVEN WOMAN: of the Chairman that Michaele’s wages had been $% per day instead of $2. Immediately the commission began ® reconsideration of its award, There was & moment's prriey and Chair- man Dowling announce dthat Mre. Ventrigiio would revelve $9 per -week for herself and the children and that or’s bill of 8190 should way and, with her baby bundled in her arme, ' | crept out. | This was the last cane heard be- fore luncheon. When the “dor |closed Chairman Dowling introduc |Gov. Glynn as “the author of the |compensation act." The the Gover- nor said: “I comme here to-day to eee this |law in practical operation, ae it is the thing in my life of which I am | proudest. I firat became Interested in the compensation of workmen for injuries received in the course of their employment when I was growing up in @ small town. ‘I had lived on a farm and gone from there to @ little village or town, and there in the course of years I saw the boys and girls working in the then cast aside like au because they were no longer able to work at their trades. I saw three in- jured boys and two injured girls I knew sent to the county poorhoune. “It was then I determined that if T ever came In& power I would write upon the statute books a law which would require the treatment of the soldiers of peace on the aame basis aa the Government treats the soldiers of war. better time tha nto see that Italian woman who hae just left the chair in front of me. I saw her receive a mall award for the loss of her hus- band. “Now, what would have become of that woman If there had been no law ard her? There would have been aim for damages, a haggle in court, a verdict, an appeal, and in the end she would have got nothing. would have become an object uf y, perbapa. mort powerful interesta were cpponsd to this law when I started it. I took my political life In my hands when | jammed it through. But 14 rather be right with human- ity than with the most powerful in- teresta in the world. “We are fine. to nee about cutting down the 9 rates of those factories which safeguard thetr em- In July ana August there dents throughout the State. That is fone due to this compensation jaw.” Gov. Giynn had luncheon with the employees of the ered a brief address. Among thore who visited the gom- mission’a chamber with him were Lieut.-Gov. Wagner, Labor Commis- | sioner Lynch, Btate Saverinteasent ot Insurance Hasbrouck and C. L. Close of the United Btates Steel Corpora- wife of Judge Thom- T. Crain of the Court of General Bat rd Bee rete ee orobanty ret urd ot a" Whe is in the Overlook Hospital ches her dress ught rom the kitchen stove. slater, alse a lark ee Gling, alt in han ies in'the home of Benjamin V. White on con Road, A GREAT BOOK EVERY WOMAN SHOULD HAVE “If you will pay the mailing charges, which are but a trifle,” says tor | th #| Pierce, “I will send you my cloth bound The Details Sith and Venetian Yoke Linings Plain and Cuff Sleeves Pateh, Slt and Bellows Pockets Length, 44 te 50 inches Some are shower-proof Notch coorwte cane Which would ordinarily eall for $90.00 $i 18.75 WINTER OVERCOATS WINTER OVERCOATS LONDON FALL OVERCOATS, $15.75|& Which would ordinarily sell for $25.00 to $35.00. hie ns also a SAMPLE LINE that we seized the opportunity to purchase ee like those that well dressed ti Which would ordinarily sell for $35.00 $23.75 Which would ordinarily sell for $50.00 $32. 75 ondoners wear to-day. ish touches that London tailors put «& | book ‘of over 1,000 pages, with color plates and numerous illustrations, and bts not ne you a penny for the pacthags a million coples of “The Peo- ple’s Common Sense Medical OM oath are now in the hands of the Dyson} It is a book that every one shou! read and have in case of accident or sickness In the home. Xt is 80 plainly written that any one can understand it and treats of so many subjects in such an interesting manner that important knowledge in re, to the human body is quickly and easily attained by all who read the book. Send 20 cents in stamps for mailin charges to Dr. Plerce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y, and inclose this notice and you will Tecelve by rere mail, all charges prepaid. this valuable book. Clutch | Regular Price 36 Conus, mail ‘yer Cite leads ter 10 vente” > FACTORY PRICES “INCHES LONG — 3% “IT could not have come here at a! was a marked decrease in the acci- | Metropolitan Life | Insurance Company and there deliv-/ im-|away after WOMAN WHO KEPT BOY FOR TEN DAYS IS FREED Taken IM and Could ‘Take Youth Home, Mre, Margaret Carlson, in whose home at No. 110 West One Hundredth etreet four-year-old Arthur Wiessner,’ grandson of Oscar Wiessner of No. 97 fehenck avenue, Brooklyn, was found last night after he had been away jfrom his grandfather's home for ten |daye, was discharged to-day when she | wae arraigned in the New Jersey Avi |aue Police Court in Brooklyn. Mr, ieesner refused to make a complaint. | | Mre. Carleon, who had been em- ployed by Mr, Wiesmner as servant, | said she had taken arthur for a walk | on Sept. 11, had dectded to visit her husband and her own littie boy, six- yeor-old Frank, at her own home, and | had been taken il, She had tele-/| phoned to Mr. Wiessner, telling him of her inability to bring Arthur back, assuring him that the boy would be ‘ail right and suggesting that he come for the child if he feared to leave him | in her care. The grandfather was satisfied, but the next day he realised suddenly that he did not know Mrs. Carleon’s ad- Gress, and then he appeated police. | JEWISH NEW YEAR BEGINS; TO-DAY 1S YOM TERUAH j lt Marks the Opening of Year 5675 in the Jewish Calendar. To-day begins a new year, 6675 in the Jewish calen: and at sunset last evening the feast of Rosh-ha- shonab began, ushering in a nine-day beriod corresponding somewhat to the Christian Lent and coming to an end with Yom Kippur on Sept. 30, the day of atonement. To-day the Jewish people are called to account for their acts of the last |year. Trumpets are blown in the synagogues calling them to service, and the day Is known sometime: Yom Teruah, the Feast of Trumpets. Had Been Not to the The nine days to Yom Kippur are ob- served P ekaae of repentance and probat lynagogues are open day and night ane there services at sunrise and at sunset. |. Yom Kippur is the most fast of the yeur, It begins a of thi ‘@ of the Day of "Atonement and ‘until three stars may be seen in the sky the following evening, and then follows a great feast, —— DRIVER DID NOT SPEED AWAY. Boy Run Over by His Car Received Proper attention, Six-year-old Albert Goodyear of No. 1913 Webster nue, who was run down by an injuries under the care of Fordham Hospital physicians. The blotter en- try of the accident at the Tremont police station shows that Patrolman Bickelhaupt, who reported it, atate:) that the driver of the car had sped the accident without waiting to learn how seriously his victim was hurt. This was a mis- take on Bickelhaupt’s part, due, he claims, to the fact that he received hig. iatoema tae second hand ‘he owner and river of the car was man ge M. Renselaer of the Inspection Dis act, bir atop) his par, and saw thet the Tnjured boy teosived, pa Prompt me medical \sitendan lan: 4 @ accident ha) rather in the evening ‘and’ ned avout & ia not report it at the station house until en’ now fter midnight, and in the mean- meous repert had been to the newspapers. om WOMAN FALLS TO DEATH. Som Lett In Sitting at Oyen Windew. Herbert Boelan, following his daily custom, helped his mother, Mra, Naomi Boelan, to the window of her bedroom on the second floor of No. 39 Madison street, Brooklyn, this morning and then returned to his own room to finish pdicgie Betts Lyrae ae . wee oe: trouble. ‘hich made breath "alfeicutt and was accustomed ait for hours ihe open window looking out om the paces se @ for her te heip her to terrified to CY few mindtes later and was se her chair empty, He rushed to the window, looked out and ed hie _m lying an the sidewall iow. TI rushed t Swedish ere but the’ died there iH] two hours. SAVES WOMAN IN SURF. Reckaway Park Man Belag Carried to An extraordimarily high ti@e and a pounding surf kicked up by the wind on Vietims Among those at | Mra” Goldstein, +f fg Bient nui “he went into ith other Zeman One eet out too far, ay tarted after ight her ashore, was revived by frat a! Melntosh was exhausted. fecctbsals Ah Aa | THAW GETS $142,124 MORE. | Paymenutto Him From Trast him from the by the will of hia Thaw. it was the made to =r since Ve Give Surety Coupons With Purchases and Redeem Them in Our Own Mereh ixth- Avenue, 20th to 22d Street Sensational Prices on Silks, Dress Goods & Wash Goods . This Is the Time agd O’Neill’s Is the Place to Buy Your Dress Materials for the Fall $1.25 All-Silk Satin Duchess Just arrived in a new shipment. This beautiful, lustrous in all the Fall shadings $1.00 Yarn Dyed Messaline, 69c 35 inches wide. This popul all-silk “fabric in a wide range of shadings. 9c Shepherd Checks, 29¢ 64 inches wide. -A soft worsted- finish dress fabric, in a variety of checks. House Dresses: Values up to £3.00, faeraee teen $4 50 Made of Percale, Lawns and Voiles: German Flannel Wrappers. at $1.50 and 91.95 In dainty colorings, plaited back, belted at waist Nurses’ $2.25 and $3.00 Uniforms, $1.95 Made of white linon. O'Neill Main Store—Third Floor, Toilet Sets: Reduced Sterling silver toilet set jece toilet sets of the best bi0.00 Sets, at® $11.00 Sete, at. $18.50 Sets, at. 017.00 Sets, at. 920.00 Seté, at. O'Nelll Malm Store, Street Floor $1.50 C and shrunk, satin 69c 91.00 Wool Suitings, 49¢ 42 and 50 inches wide. A lar; variety of various weaves and orings to choose from. 1%e Standard Galateas,12}4c A full line of this much-desired wash fabric in plain and figured effects for children’s wear, at wholesale price. O'Neill Main Store—Second Fleer, Notions 9c Sewing ellie not alls! assortment; spool... ae Kimono Dress caren 50c Sonomote Dress Fastenette Bross..... ss BSC Ornett Main Store, Street Floer Toilet Articles ni 1b, ‘cartons, 35¢ value... . Health, 50 at Colgate's Taleum Pow- ders, all odors, at O'Nellt Main Store—Btreet Floor, “Se New Models, at New Modets, at 19¢) medium buste, long hiffon Broadcloth 54 inches wide, all wool; sponged in all the popu Fall colorings $1.25 Silk Dress Crepes, 69¢ ble width, in all the popular Autumn shadings. 39¢ Wash Dress Fabrics, 19¢ Different makes, weaves and styles in thie lot of wash fabrics, such as Irish Poplins, New Flowered Foulards, § lin, Silk Mull, Heures Ratine and Soisettes. Successo Corset $2.50, 83.00 & 88.50 $1, 95 | Made of fine imported ba ips, 18 to 96 inches. | 95.00 La Vida Corsets, $1.95. Made of fancy broche, low bust, [ hips, ribbon trimmed; $1.00 Brassieres, $0c. Made of muslin, hook front and cross back oo embroidery and lace trimm: Odd Lots of Fine Corsets at 91.45. Made of fine fark medium and low busts, broken sizes, Walue up to 84.00, s O'Nelll Main Stere—Serond Fleer, = O'NEILL-ADAMS.CO., Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Strest, New y York City S== You Don’t Have to Be a Millionaire To Have a Open Saturday Evenings. Fine Brass Bed 0. ine pies with “us jhat you can have it at will get bleasare and Fine Home— You don’t even have to have money in the bank. We trust you without red tape, without an intro- duction, and we give you a year anda half to ee Rig Furnished Here on Credit come and select the Furniture, Rug and Housefurnishings you want and we'll them home at once. Comperthurets Sona wad This prettily decorated Marly i me. Note low solidly it_te bul imitation Jeather. to this handsome sul ally low price of. comfort from $6. 25 CowPERTHWAIT & 5 ‘Oldest Furniture House in America 3rd Avenue at 121st Street 2212 to 2224 Third A bh ‘The ry Two Stores » i a-Fiece Easier Suite wid look, ante mand, jook, mlahty well tp eae | ot do dustic 778 Dance at Home to a Columbia Jewel Grafonola $35 'e nothing lke "a Co- Grafonola to mal ‘ou t te from 8 ONS | Park Row at Chatham Sq, 3 to 205 Park Rew IT MAKES LITTLE OIPRERENCE 1 URS dln cml beat “WANT” Nit 00 Ont. IK

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