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_15 STRIKERS SHOT IN JERSEY BATTLE FISAL _Gbe |“ Circulation Books Open to All. ———— the ONE CENT. Conrright, 1815, by ‘The Frese e (The Ni New York Wort YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY asst ADVANCE FROM TWI $26,500 URGED BYALDERMEN TO ENABLE PENNY LUNCHES TOBE SERVED IN GO SCHOOLS Mr. Curran’s Resolution Pro- vides for an Issue of Revenue Bonds for That Sum. NO DEBATE HELD ON IT. Goes to Committee on Geh- eral Welfare Who Are Favorable to It. A resolution was introduced at this afternoon's meeting of the Board of Aldermen providing for the appro- priation of $26,500 to equip sixty Pub- He Schools with suitable furnishings for the service of penny luncheons tu school children. ‘The resolution was introduced by Alderman Henry Curran at the sug- gestion of The Evening World so that the plans inaugurated by this news- paper for the proper nourishing of children may be carried out. The Curran resolution is as follows: “Reaolv: That in pursuance of the provisions of Subdivision 8 of Beotion 188 of the Gri New Yaerk Charter the Board of Estimate be and it is hereby re- quested to authorize Comp- troller te issue special revenue bonds in the amount of $26,500, @ roceeds to be used by the Department of Edu viding equipment suit the furnishing of nourishing lunches to children at co: city, all obligations hereunder to be contracted on or before Dec. 31, 1915." The tentative schedule of estimated cost of establishing sixty additional echool lunch rooms on @ permanent basis is as follows: Cost of equipping one central Kitchen with stationary boilers, ranges, pinks, portable boilers, uten- ils, tableware, &c., $900, Cost of equipping five associate eehools with furniture, utensils, &c., fat $350 per school, total, $1,750, Total cost of central kitchens with e schools with lunch lable to approximately 12,000 children, $2,650. For 10 units with 60 schools, with epproximate register of 120,000 chil- Gren, it would cost approximately | for equipment, $26,500, The resolution was referred to the Committee on General Welfare and will be reported by them at the next meeting of the Bourd, when it will in all likellhood be unanimously adopted. The Evening World has already equipped or has in process of equip- ment ten public schools with funds raised by public subscription, The Evening World has several thousand dollars of a balance which, if the city equips the additional schools as pro- vided by the resolution of the board, will be wholly available for feeding the necessitous children in the schoola—ehildren who may not have) pennies for the schoul luncheons, Alderman Curran said to-day: “L am very 4.1xious to see that this great work, which was started in a small) way by the city authorities, will now have their full support in u much | needed extension, as public approval | bas been se strongly manifested, “The efficacy of this thing hi passed ‘perimental stage, is certainly shown by the splandid work mow being done in the ‘schools that have been fortunate enough to have auch service in~ * 4 eee | WASHINGTON, ‘2 STRIKERS DEAD, 13 OTHERS SHOT IN JERSEY BATTLE Workers Stop Train and Try to Prevent Others From WANT TO CHOOSE NAME allan $a FOR WHITE HOUSE BABY! wany Go TO HOSPITALS. Suggestions From Various Parts of Country That Contests Be Held to Decide Question. a |Two Dying When Carried From the Battlefield at Carteret. Jan. 19.—Sugges- tions that President Wilson's grand- son, the child of Mr. and Mrs. Fran- cis B. Sayre, go nameless until con-| tests to choose a name can be held in various parts of the country began arriving at the White House to-day and caused much amusement among | wounds following a riot to-day which members of the President's family. jdeputy sheriffs had with strikers in ther weny ea eee ettasatf. tee] th® Several chemical works in the cause the child “would have troubles | R¢ahborhood of Carteret, N. J. enough of his own to bear.” He told) Th® men shot were formerly em- callers that a family counci| on the| Plovees of the Williams & Clark Com-| j subject was held at the White House Pan and the two of kaa hpenaae ls to-day, bi hed. panies o| ie merican gricultural lorday, but no decision was reached. | mmical Company of No. 3 Rector| Two strikers were killed, two are re- ported to be mortally wounded and a dosen others are in hospitais in Elizg- beth, N. J., suffering from bullet Francis Woodrow Sayre was the! & peak se Tame most frequently suggested. Peds abil ‘or! The President said his grandson @ shooting occurred on the rall-| road line which passes the Williams was a model infant and up to the os! ar & Clark works and the Liebig Chem- present had not kept the family Jawake nights by crying, {eal factory, both members of the | |American Agricultural Chemical ;Company. At a point between Car- {WILSON CANNOT ORDER teret and Elizabeth the strikers, a cording to officials of the company, had piled the tracks high with tl | to Interceptthe 8 o'clock train from, Newark, which had aboard about WHEAT EXPORT EMBARGO |President Explains Such Authority sled’ leu) Go oinee eationk loys Must Come From Congress— | throughout the troubles. The strikers Talks of Price Kiting. | heard that these men were going to work to-day. WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—President| A large crowd of strikers assembled Wilson has no authority to deciare| about the train when it was stopped an embargo on the exportation of and several of them boarded the cars. wheat and other foodstuffs, he told|The half hundred loyal workmen callers to-day, discussing recent in- jeventuully sturted from tne train | creases in food prices in the United jand then, 40 one of tie company of- | States. Such authority must come |ficials said this afternoon, a wrougle from Congress, he said, adding that| occurred and one of the strikers fired ke had not investigated the consti- ja pistol. tutionality of such a step. Flo did) ‘This was the signal for the deputies, not commit himself on the advisa-|wiio were on duty under Deputy bility of an embargo act. Sheriff Revelinsky of New Bruns- The President said nothing could be | wick, at the Williams & Clark works, done by the Government toward reg-|about a hundred fect away, to open| ulating prices, unless illegal practices |fre on tho crowd. by merchants were disclosed by the| ‘The strikers scattered when the Investigation he hi» directed the At-|deputies began to shoot, but a dozen| torney General to b¢gin. of them fell to the ground wounded. Se { |-rhe deputies who faced the strike NEW ORLEANS RESULTS. | were said to number about forty and the estimate of the crowd of strikers FIRST RACE—For maiden two-| surrounding the train was put at i threo furlongs.—souventr, lergast), 7 to 10, out and P Al in about 400. | When the firing ceased the strikers | pli Hig t og bi sitarey Wee us Nor airy began the work of gathering those| the trip, but that it was possible thar|two walfs found last Saturday in a >» b id 2 » 5, 01 : | . * a | goteo. itt (Pickens), 10 tot, Ste {| Who bad fallen, Many of them were|developmenta.abroad or in the United | front of Gimbel's store, a remarka- and 8 to 5, third. Time, 864-6. Gray | dragged to their feet by their frionds.| States might interfere. ble dimtrapancy. in: statemants cons Lady, Busy Alice, Tay Dangant and | Michael Gacky was found to save! He added that tho trip to Panama) werning the family of Haeffners ny a ran me Th |been shot six times and was doad./ was dependent upon domestic and) aovotoped late this a saan held, hud not raced “a sixteenth be. |Staniias Helda hud three bullets in /foreign conditions because “practically |" pyrqugn investigations made by fore the favorite Souvenir rushed to| his body and three also bad struck] ail the Government would be at seu.” lary. gyvaning World reporter a woman the front and opening up 4 lead of Santo Tessitore, Hoth of these nen| He smiled at bis own remark an) V6 brought to the Children's Society Cour eee ea ot Cac nko wok ware dying when picked up. John /added that he meant “literally at! wo identified Haeffner and hia wite andily from Mar ry z é ; ee M4 n interfered with th Hasky, who was shot six times, died! sen, las the parents of four children, an the race, Sho finished two lengths |!” the hospital Infant seventeen months old and a ip frome ob Bolo |, Pinon the Othary Iniuren weeel ETTOR A PRISONER | buby born lust September in addition = er =a |Antone Shanto, shot in the neok; \to Freddic and Jimmie, the walfs in Paul Robida, shot in the leg and | ; lied by the good work done in and; stephen Poth, bullets in both ON TREASON CHARGE She. AOSIEN A PeGra | that direction by The Evening | iegs; Charles Rob, shoulder and thigh; t only did both the Haefiners World campaign and Supt. Max- | 4 ndrew Gankos, shot in thigh; George _ deny that they ever had more than) well's efforts to meet the imme- | Bodner, wound in wrist n Music|], W, W. Agitator, Leader in Many two children, but both dented they diate needs. right leg struck; Frank Cuggich, left ’ had ever seen the woman who Identi- leg; John Subinsky, three bullets in] Strike Movements, Is Arrested | fied them, Mra, Anita Haskie, who | |\\egs; Coro Yanos, chest and side, and not gone far enough, as is | irerd Joseph, iit thigh. jainly evident by the present | he wounded men were taken to rnestly putting [charles Ohlott's barber shop at No. to fill a great (43 Ranway Avenue, Carteret. Two | physiclans gave the men first ald and fore think the time | | least the schools in most need may be provided thia winter.” _ thi s om $4Odod eee Wilson sees no likelihood of th nation of the European War spring. not noticed any indications of peace connection with his plans for @ trip through the Panama Canal and to the San Francisco Exposition charged with treason, _ SGoatinued an Segrnd Fege) slo, ald tor 16 PAGES Weather—Clearing; colder to-night) Wednesday FINAD = oe Se 8 PRICE ONE OENT. ONE CENT. — (epecially Photographed by an Evening World Staff B9G99O99O990-000-0004+ Le eeoerre JIMMIE, MR. "AND MBB. HABFFNER, NACE THE GERMANS AT ST. Mii Father and Mother With Deserted Children Reunited To-Day by Evening World Reporter Photographer.) OSGi | POINTS, [EL | TRENCHES CAPTURED | BATTERS SILENCED, REPORT FROM PAR }/Lullin Battle Around Soissons, With Heavy Artillery Duels Elsewhere Believed to Foreshadow a Deters mined Drive at That Point. 5 REPORT OF FRENCH GAINS =~ CONTRADICTED BY BERLIN, PARIS, Jan. 19—A further advance in the effort: to- pleres: the German line above St. Mihiel, near the eastern end of the battle ling in France, is announced in the official communication to-day from Paris, It is said that another German field work in the Forest of Le Pretre was captured and that 500 yards of the German trenches there have |now been occupied. At the same time the allies are attempting to press forward to the northwest of St, Mihiel. These two movements, if successful, would either cut through the German line or compel the evacuation of St, Mihiel. Tenure of this town by the Germans results in a sharp bend in the line of the allies, presenting a menace which they have been endeavoring for weeks to remove. ‘About Solssons itself there was a lull in the fighting. bare: Pe rr RESIDENT WILSON SEES NO SIGNOF PEACE ABROAD nd He Hopes to Be Able to Pay a Visit to the San Francisco Exposition. WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Prei * jent| termi-| this He told callers to-day he had | the situation yet. Mr. Wilson mentioned the subject in Following the discovery by ar Eve- ning World reporter of Mr. and Mrs. Ho ¢X-| red Haeffner, the ent f th jained that he fully expected to make apnton hiseliaiet had lived in the same house with the at St. Clairsville, O. Haeffners, she maintained, at No. 63 ST. CLAIRSVILLE, ©. Jan, 19.—| West One Hundredth Street us Joseph K. Ettor, noted 1. W, W, agi- | lately as last September, tator, wan arrested here to-day | Immediately upon learning through The Evening World reporter of the now propitious for the City Gor |they were sent to the General Hos-| Bttor is ane of the leaders of the remarkable conflict of statements and sramoent # ee to it at ore, shat |pitat and the Alexian Brothers Hov-|1, W, W. movement. He wag one of |the denial of patrenthood by the Mty” additional, schools twhich j pital ie Rilasbeth, the managers of the big strike Haeffners Superintenddent Ernest il) make 100 in all), so that at Leonard Frisina of the American| Lawrence, Mass, and was arrested | Coulter of the Children's Society or- dered an immediate search to be made! gf the Buseay of Vital Stapisticn No ere in councetion with 4 killing and & Se . PARENTS OF DESERTED BOYS 4 BABIES, WOMAN SAYS |17-Months-Old Child and Infant Missing, De- clares Neighbor, and Children’s Society Holds Pair Pending Inquiry. record was found there either of the ¢hild who was seventeen months old (Continued on Sixth Page.) CROPSEY ELIGIBLE LIST IS WIPED OUT AT LAST One Promotion Made to a Poliec Captaincy To-day—Enrigat at Head as It Died. The appointment of Lieut. Chartes G, Mead to @ captaincy was an- nounced this afternoon by Police Commissioner Woods. Capt. Mead was assigned to the Bathgate Avenue Preein of which he has been in [command as acting captain. His ap- |pointment wipes out the famous Cropaey eligible lint, This Het was | Service Commi ed by the Civil jon four years ago tommiasioner Cropaey refused to) appalat from fend f of it under syor Gaynor's system saying that |the frat twenty men were not com- | petent, He was forced out. At the head of the list when It expired at 5 o'clock to-night was) Lieut. Richard Enright, President of {the Lieutenant's Benevolent Asso. giation, who was No, 2 when the list ianuade wae — a wityin © weak, an Military experts look upon this lull as a bad omen. A renewal of the Geaperate fighting 1s expected momentarily and it is believed here that the Kaiser's forces will shortly begin a supreme attempt to force a gap ia the allied lines at this point. ‘The text of the French War Office report this afternoon is as follows? “In Belgium there has been a snow storm and also intermittent exchanges at certain points, There was also a fall of snow yester lay in the region of Arras, where our heavy artillery on several Gifterent occasions silenced the batteries of the ene: “As we set forth yesterday, a fairly spirited engagement has deen developing at La Boisselle, where, following the breaking out ol al fires, we were compelled during the night of Jan. 17-18 to evacuate our positions. These we recaptured Jan. 18 at day- break. The enemy has not renewed his attacks on this part of our front. In the sector of Solssons the bombardment of the suburb of St. Paul during the night of Jan. 17-18 was not followed by any im fantry attack, and the day of Jan. 18 passed in absolute calmness “In the valley of the Aisne to the east of Soissons and in the sector of Rheims there were yesterday artillery exchanges. “To the northwest of Pont-a-Mousson we yesterday occupied another field work of the enemy in the Forest of La Pretre, where we to-day occupy 500 yards of the trenches of the enemy. “In the Vosges yesterday there was a snow storm. Here alse there has been artillery fighting, particularly in the Ban de Sap¢ and in the neighborhood of Thann.” Denial of French Gains Made by Berlin War Office BERLIN, Jan. 19 (United Press).—French claims of important suo cosses in the fighting for possession of La Bolsselle and of gains in the La Pretre Forest were officially denied here to-day. ‘The War Office declared that while artillery fighting continues along the line north of Arras, to the south, near La Bolsselle, to the east of Solssons and in Alsace, there have been no important developments, The official statement this afternoon asserts that Russian attacks is the east have been repulsed with the capture of several hundred prisoners. Special mention 1s made of Russian defeats at Nadsonow, Cjoshun end Slerpez. Germans Attack British Troops In Third Advance Within Week LONDON, Jan. 19 (Associated Press).—The Germans have degen another offensive movement, according to unofficial advices to-day from Holland, It 1s said that the German artillery went into action resorted and that a battle is in progress for the possession of Ypres. The British are moving in fresh troops to defend this town, weak which occurred some of the heaviest fighting of the war at the time Germans were attempting to force their way to the English Channel, The ault on Ypres, following the success of the Germans at Sole sons and their attack at Albert, marks the third movement of the ind