The evening world. Newspaper, February 11, 1916, Page 3

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/ iH ‘ FRENCH BEATEN - lM FOUR ATTACKS, Unable to Segue Trenches | | They Lost in Battle North- ' west of Vimy. BATTLE IN CHAMPAGNE. French Attacks South of the Somme Xiver Also Re- | ported Checked. | BERLIN (via London), Feb. 11.- The repulse of four successive attack made by the French {n efforts to re- wapture trenches they had lost north- “west of Vimy, in the Artois, was an- nounced to-d by German Army Headquarters. ‘The French also faile “in assaults to the south of the Som- me. The text of the statement fol- low! Northwest of Vimy tho French, after artillery preparations lasting for hours, attempted four times to recap- ture the trenches they had lost, All teir attacks failed. South of the Gomme they were also unable to re- capture any part of their lost posi- tions, “On the Aisne and in the Cham- pagne there have been local artillery @uele of a lively characte: “One of our captive balloons es-! ‘eaped without its crew and drifted ‘over the enemy lines near Vailly.” PARIS, Feb, 11.—The official com- |munication issued this afternoon by the French War Departinent says: “In the course of the night the ro /was no event of importance to re port.” ——— AGREE ON SUGAR REPEAL. Democrats Ready to ttash Bill Contin Patios, WASHINGTON. Repeal of the free sugar clause of the Wilson- ‘Underwood Tariff Act, contin jent duties of slightly over on: und on 1 Mos deal was decided upor Democrats of the House W and Means Committee. ‘They directed Leader Kitchin to 1 Tepeal resolution to-morroy QUIT MEAT WHEN BACK HURTS OR KIDNEYS BOTHER Says Uric Acid in meat clogs Kidneys and irritates pres cent a ro. CZAR NICHOLAS. GOES TO THE FRONT "GERMANS CLAIM ASSLAVS AVS ADVANGE Russi Czemowitz and Dvinsk Battle Lines LONDON, Feb, 11.—A | aispate h to Reuter’s says that Em- shot peror Nicholas yesterday front, PRHTRO! RAD, eb. 11 cessfully resisting energetic efforts of the Teutonia forces to break their lines, the Russians have now resumed | the offensive in Gaticta "heir object is capture of Crernowitz, the capital |of Bukowina, which, {t | would exert powerful | Roumania. | ‘The unusual accuracy and effective: jim of the Russian artillery ts men- tioned in all acounts of the fighting which continuing vigorously on the | Dvinak front. The German advance guar [have boen attempting stubbornly to influence on establish new positions, have been forced back repeatedly, while in the act of digging trenches, to their | former lines. | persistent efforts, the line is approxi- mately the same as that held by them | last October. BERLIN, Feb, 11 (via wireless). — On the eastern front, where the Rus- j slans have launched a vigorous attack jagainst the Austrian front, the Ger- man War Office reported repulse of onslaughts by a strong Russian de- tachment north of Drysvyadi Lake. -U-BOATS ORDERED (TO RAID ALL SHIPS THAT MOUNT GUNS Berlin Announces That Such Vessels Will Be Treated as | Warships After March 1. BERLIN, Feb, 11, ~ Beginning March 1 Germany and Austria will re- open thelr submarine warfare against the allfes In a sharper and more acute form than known, having | served notice on all neutral powers armed merchant vessels, oven armed ostensibly only “for de- fense,” will be viewed as warships any yet those ans Rein OF Offensive on! Petrograd left for the -After suc- | is thought, | Notwithstanding their! THE EVE J Why Do Girls Leave Homes $5, 000 WAS RAISED For Furnished Room Perils? Too Many Saprenetce. eet |Chill Atmosphere of the|% Average Woman’s Ho-|? tel Appals the Feminine} + Makes}; | Worker Who | Her Own Living. |Stirred Into Revolt by | Needless ‘‘Don’ts’’ that Prove So Irksome She Seeks Independence | With Its Perils. campaign and Proposed to devote part of the money to a new home or hotel for self-sup- porting women that a systematic in- vestigation of working conditions for women in New York was undertaken. The Young Women's Christian Asso- ciation thought very properly that before spending the money they had raised it would be well to find out Just how girls live in New York, and Particularly why they prefer the mor- al perils and the chill loneliness of f..nished room hou--- to life in homes and hotels specially endowed for their benefit. Miss Esther Packard, a graduate of Smith College, now Assistant Secre- tary of the Consumers’ League, and who sprang into sudden prominence A year ago because of her testimony before the State Factory Investl- gating Committee, was chosen to con- duct the inquiry, She had as her as- sistant Miss Mary Dean Adams, and together these two young women asked 842 wage earning girls their reasons for disliking the homes cre- ated for them, and in order to judge conditions of life in furnished rooms, NING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1916. -FOR BAFF KILLING, = GUNMEN EN CONFESS | Man Who Shot Poul Poultry Dealer} } Shows Police How It | Wi as Done. | 9694.46.49. five gunmen and the two} now held in connection | $| with the murder of Barnet Baff the | police that a fund of 3! From the other men learned to-day OLLY FANGHER IES AFTER FIFTY YEARS IN SICK BED Amazing Invalid Had Cele- brated “Golden Jubilee” of Suffering Eight Days Ago. In tha same bed in which she bad Jain, @ cheerful and amaging invalid, for more than fifty years, Miss Molly Fancher died at five minutes before 1 | $5,000 was originally raised to Mnance Bart » | paying for te kil | the mu his was used In of the poultry} | 3 | merchant and the resi of it was used Smith. $j in hiring other gunmen to kill off} At the taking of the last census those who knew the instigators of there were in the Borough of Man- the Baft murde hattan alone 345,443 young girls and From Antonio impoiluzto, now tn] ih earaing “Goal the Death House at Sing Sing await- own living. ing execution for the murder of ¢ Since that time tano La Monte on Oct, 14 last, the the number has | Doltee expect to learn the detalla of it Me. Nae |the plot to Kill off those who served| Yorkers steing | the instigate rain killing Balt, tppe- | this army of |iito Greco, La Monte's partner tn the] young women, ? Jownership of the murder stable in faring forth in 4 Harlem, paid the men who shot Baff. the early morn-|2 Greco was kflled on Oct. 7 last and ing to the day’e ¢ La Monté was killed a week later é by Impolurzo. The pol elleve battle with hunger and discourage- | Weeesteeas “Will “tail wae aie re ment ask themselves how and where| ¢ ms hart ta Atshtay these girl workers live, what} ¢ i La } | The murder of Baff was staged to- they live on and what can be] @ > b done to make lite happier tor them. [eT Fa Young. Wemiats: CHNAIEN TALIS © MISS ESTHER PACKARD. men, while Giuseppe Arichtollo, Giation. Had puliae $4,000,000 by | S2CCSSSIOS known better as Arcallo, iNustrated & Whirlwind © wie how he shot the merchant, He broke ible to one at all familiar with the principles of modern psychology—te that complaints against a 10.30 o'clock closing hour come not always from down after hours of questioning and told the full story of the murder, “I got word the Baff killing was the little blonde, gad-about to come off quick,” he said, “and 1} one would expect, but in great part | went to Greco's saloon on Hast One| rom quiet, well-mannered girls who id Ninth e | would never think of being out after Hundred and Ninth Street. A man whose name I didn't know gave me @ revolver and told me to Ko along with the others. Three of us walk- @d over to One Hundred and Third Street and First Avenue and we met the automobile. 1 do not know the names of the other men. } “When we got to Washington Mar- ket one of the men left the car and went to a telephone. He asked if Mr. Batf was there. We learned he was, and we waited for him to come out. Ho walked out and ! fired one shot and one of the others fired an- 10.80 o'clock. It seems to be the idea of the rule, rather than the rule itself, which oppresses, “Of the thirty-one houses reporting on a closing hour, there were sev closing their doors at 10 o'clock, seven at 10.30, six at 11 and nine at 12. Spe- cial permission could usually be ob- tained from the Superintendent for a later hour of return if this was not requested too frequently. Only four houses gave keys to the girls, and two kept open all night with a woman t clerk in charge, It makes me feel I!ke a baby to be in at a certain hour,’ remarked one woman of thirty, ‘My friends are al- ways teasing me when we go out to- other shot. Then we ran and got gether in the evening about having | O\"er Sho le.” | to bein at IL, At 9 o'clock thay'll|*W4y In the automobi begin to jive, “Don't you think you] AS Arcallo told the story hb better ey home now? Little girls| flourished an empty revolver which mustn't be out so late, you know. been given to him. tHe placed| “The landiady of ‘one furnished |0ei teen civen 6 hic. He placed room hous located on the same detectives about the room at about street with home, closing its doors | the distance Haff and the other gun- at 10 o'clock, sald she very frequently | men stood and excitedly went over rented rooms for a night to girls who the tragedy | had been locked out of the home. he tragedy | Miss Fancher celebrated the “ | confines of an invall jin my own way. | jand try to be goo. | remarkable woman. | markable. and torpedoed without notice. No ef- fort will be made to warn passengers | and crew or to spare lives of neutrals _ Bladder. Miss Adams herself lived as a work- long drawn-out ‘Oh,’ accom. pilin Gitfecsnt | panied by a stretch of the arms, as eae Bis ni GiRerent seotions Of ew | ee Rriahl The Geos Oe eerie Arcailo was luter placed in a lineup) with several other prisoners and nine witnesses of the shooting were asked A glass Fe Salts is Naerlesat on board such vessels, ‘7 rte In «a long meme ndum of the Im- way to flush Kidney 8, rial German Government, made says authority. public here last n’ t by Under For- If you must lave your meat every eat it, but flush your kidneys h salts occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid, which alinost paralyzes the kidneys in their ef- torts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you su with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The nrine gets cloudy, full of sediment, t channels often get sore and irritate obliging you to s: relief two or th times during the night ‘To neutralize these irritating acids, to} cleanse the kidneys and flush off the hody's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts fram any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidueys will then act fine, ‘This famous salts i nade from the acid of grapes and | Jenson juice, combined with lithia, and) has been used for generations to ‘flush | wud stimulate sluggish kidinys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpens cannot in- jure, and makes a delightful efferves- vent lithia-water drink,—Advt BELL-ANS Absolutely, Removes |‘: Indigestion. One package | proves it +4 2dcat all druggists. Real Estate More Real Estate offers to buy and sell are published in The World than in any other news- paper. During the month ot January The Worla printed 5,166 Separate Real Estate Ads. 876 More Than the Herald! If you are thinking of buying a home you will do well to read The World’s Real Es Ads, next Sunday. econ soret eign y Zimmerman to Amer- correspondents, the German Gov- ernment takes the tion that armed | belligerent tmen are auxiliary | cruise or even pirat and will be ! with accordin Summing up ninetcen detalied giving the time, and circum- stance of alleged ion of inter- national law by armed British mer- chant ships. firlng German sub- marinos, and reproducing secret or- ders of the British Admiralty to at- tack U-boats, the Imperial memoran- | dum concludes; “In tue fore cumstanc ant ships which are armed with guns no longer have the right or claim to considera. tion as peaceful trading ships. |i mercha es, place vic on joing situation nemy and cir- mere “Tae German sea forces, therefore, which will taice le interests of orders to deal with warsh German Government hereby gives utial powers hizance of this sit- | uation, that the iy Warn their citl- against further intrusting their Ife or property to armed merchant ships of the powers at war with Ger- | many , of memorandum has \ be > dor rd. | Mure police force was | perhap, vhen he surprised Itwo burglars who were preparing. to peor a Vast quantity of loot from a tink goods to a watting auto | mobi to-e Ly »bber J escape jon walked to headquar- Ite iperiors of the Tob- a 100 Years ! oO FOR A MODERN “SOCIALIZED APARTMENT HOUSE. The result the reco! of this investigation is jendation of what Miss Packard calls a “socialized apartme: house,” which would have apartmen ranging in si. from one room and kitchenette to several rooms, with a cafeteria to the public as well as to guests of the house, a large ri ception room on the main floor and several smaller and more private re- ception rooms where giris could re- ceive their men friends, with a so- claily minded woman Superintendent in charge. At present, Miss Packard says, thero is no home for working women in New York where they may live without being compelled to take thelr ineals—a hardship, since iu many in ances girls must eat at or near their work and are sometimes supplied with meals as part of their wages, Miss Pack. An Effective Laxative Purely Vegetable Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, etc QO ORF © Oa nigh until relieved Pere e eevee ee ¢ oc «© IML | in many attitud: current homes. eurions fact— urioux, they is, at first, but Intoll! hind her and stood smiling reflectively for & moment on the ste; was the reaction of one young been taken to see a home, care for it then?’ timid), companion ure, it’s fine for thos to identify him. They did not readily | pick him out, but when he was point. | ed out they agreed that he ap- peared to be the man who fired one that can siand it, was the reply, “hut | of the shots, One of the gunmen held those stiff parlors made me feel Uke|the revolver in his left hand screaming, and I had hard work to|he fired at Baff, and Arcallo in giv keep from yelling, down those long still corridors, Geel doesn't when ing his demonstration held the revo! | em good to be out again?’ ver in that hand never let the girls dance here | believe the mystery which for so | | said the matron of one house, ‘but on | long enveloped the Killing of Barnet Raff will be cleared up when the goes to the Grand Jury,” District At- a Wednesday a Virginia them ‘ski and Saturday night | Reel tune and let |The ‘o'clock this morning at her home, No. 160 ates Avenue, Brooklyn It was only eight days ago Jubilee” of her from the active world to the narrow 's toom. There) enforced retirement | Was no indication then—no more than there had been in all the fifty yeare— that sho was not to round out many more years of life. She was cheerful, | as she had always been, and had her umual smiles and happy words for those who gathered about her bed. Bhe said: “T don't feel otd not going to « world and I love @ in for fun, I'm not old, and I'm Id. It's a dear old 1 keep happy by T have my fun laugh and sing I never bore any for I haven't Oo} one with my troubles, any troubles.” This was the simple gompel of the Far from #hut- ting herself away from the world in all her bed-ridden years, Misa Fancher took an active interest in everything that was going on about her. She was devoted to reading and writing: particularly conscientious in answering the avalanche of letters | which came to her, Last year sho received about 6,000 letters. It was the indomitable spirit of the| frail little wounan which made her re- For what seemed to have been countless years she had lain tn her bed, a dainty, Dresden-china sort of creature in lace and always with the winsome amlie which triumphed over hor suffering. Never @ soul had heard ber complain! against @ fate, which had robbed ber of most everything Everything about her room was tn the same note of cheerfulness, even to the chatter of Loretta and Joe, her parrots, iu thetr cages by ber bed. When she celebrated her “Golden Jublies” ribbons and flowers, which were twine about the four-poster or banked in great asses at headboard and foot- boat For two hours in the after- noon and two hours in the evening she received hundreds of visitors, many of them the children of the! neighborhood, with a smile and a hand-clasp for each The acute Ilnes: which brought about Miss Fancher's death began at! 5 o'clock yesterday At the death! were Dr. and M wood, N. J odw: nephews. Mri . Was on her did not reach aunt died. Funeral services the home at 8 o'clock Monday eve ning, the Rev. Dr. A. A, Shaw of Emmanuel Baptist Church officiating. inte mene will be in Greenwood on Tuesd TEXAS REVOLUTION” fternoon. vd of Misa Faneh and George Fan- Liltan Howe, a way to the house, thera before her Will be held THE PERILS OF THE FURNISHED| ROOMS ARE REAL, “And the only alternative to tne |home is the furnished room house, is \it not?” I asked. “We visited and of these lorney Swann said to-day after he| conferred with William and Harry | uff, the sons of the murdered man. | ow in a fair way to obtain some knowledge of the man who instigated murder, There ere a great many | 500 but furnished twenty-six rooms, had public parlor where giris could enter tain their friends. Girls living in fur- | D°oPle tnduiring anxiously at the of. | , nished room houses in every section | five of the District Attorney to-day of the city bad tales to teil of dis-|who manifest unusual interest. in| agreeable experiences endured. — ‘It| what we know of the identity of the! you entertain a man in your room in |tho evening, no matter it brother, he's your |man who directed the crime, , a charming woma said one ‘the “nex iseppe and Antonto Zafarone whose young, and sympathetic | morning the men the house alilother gunmen taken into custody, face is framed Iver, told mo yeu (nile at 3 weynanner In| have persistently denied they were In terday of ber iny ion and its re-|+you can imu pleasant it ig {the murder car when Baff was shot, sults said another girl, ‘to sit | ur room |but they edmit that on four other “New York City, in the Borough of |i the evening and have tho landlady | occasions they were out in the ca Manhattan, has fifty-four organized Poe Besar Hen doa ese 32:1) ¢ for him and under instruc non-commercial homes for working | worse, still, to sit thers and know she|tion’ to shoot him. Carmine Di women,” she said, ‘In March, Aprii|should be evicting her but isn't | Pollo, who was arrested last night and May, when we gathered our sta-| “Countless stories told by girls of} sonies he was in any of the attempts . pecans vacant beda|{2e. disagreeable experiences” whieh | a ee cae i tistics, there w vacant bedaliney have had in furnished resc ‘ ein ag a materia n thirty-one of these homes," houses cou dl, but the re- ome Why?" [ asked mark of one landlady sums it all up ‘ Mate Mirkt of all, lack of knowledge on| ‘With houses const wt of a laundry the part of working girls that these |hands, with roomers ah homes xist, @ strong and|!ng, with the practice ris enter- ne Hundred and Sev- sometimes unreasoning prejudice | taining men in their | and |enth Stré re Areailo formerly against thom, Then, experience gath-|men girls, almost universal, is it any | worked, 500 bail on a ered by girls who havo tried the|Wonder that the moral conditions tn | \"" On Taw, homes and do not like them, Many|many rooming houses are decidedly |”! . of th rict their benefits | bad? cia i i T adjoins the to thirty-five, But Er, veigy vunde 5 5 Tundred | ti rarely followed.| LITTLE SNOWFALL HERE, and tighth street, and when detec: n porting to house ' | ' nda very oily we nae now De and We 1 rei r by nged From hea | Have Ratn Lo-Mor " 7 eget a to sixty-five, This was because the z : in the safe matron of the home considered the| A Haht fall of snow began tow influence of older women beneficial |noon to-day ‘forecast searr of th to the young is. ‘The chief ob- |local Weather Bur ‘ofessed to hola! NO SAINT. CYR REOPENING. jection to homes by girls who had |it in small respect. The wind is from tried them is found in the number |the southeast, he said. and the snow Court Refs o Set Antde Probate f unnecessary rules, would turn to rain before tt had time of Wil, to, whiten the. & te ‘ 7 GIRLS FRET UNDER NEEDLESS | "rho ‘temprrature 2 § “ RULES. o'clock, dropped Yet Ine successful: on but Mr, Sta ae Vad 4 ‘U6 atk On ¢ atron Chat “it would. he be Oe ne: “In inany homes rules any time to-night ‘ - at a girl when she arrives and whe] Wainy wenths th snow A are | har » feels hedged in by them constantly, [expected to continue into Sund: Jreopening of the probate of the w The clever Superintendent lets her aan ete rege Ithe late Mrs, Caroline P. Saint Cyr « imbibe first the spirit of the house| ‘Twelve ¢ of Mall Frauds, | yonkers, which was lint and come gradually to an under- A jury 4 Criminal Branch of | punor John F. Brennan o r of why there must be stand. | the F strict Court. te | pointed spe guardian fo iee®Guine girls ne want to go| foun’ mbers of. the a 4 : od ater 30 or 11 o'clock at night, | Bambe swindling Ne % 1 hy. then, aid be made to| i hud of the te t tad tat they couldn't if they wanted | at a 1 Pou Anes 1"? iy Mawel rs > n rule and VN break it?! | Probst olosePhy t and b un quiet, well po jacob’ Levy, Hen : nd Bdward ' Voice diet Regus, ph u : poald rKe Horn} I Tarry Mun. TWO. defendanty— Dr ' oe Rush and, Achiles Sorap re xe LAMATI “Biot quitted The j had been’ out ait) te Lett ad money it it (b Bigaw b's siguatuse is ov east bos, [unrest last s LEADER IS JAILED Mexican Held Responsible tor. Bor- der Troubles Is Prisoner at Matamoras BROWNSVILLE, Tex, Feb. 11 uiceto Pizana, alleged le of the “Texas Revolution” and held responsi ble fo troubles and general mmer and fall, was cap borde tured late yesterday and taken t Natamoros, Mexico, opposite here for incarceration, according to an officia report to Col. A. P. Blockson, cow manding the United States border pa trol to-day, GHEERS FOR WHITLOCK = AT LONDON MOVIES for Nurse ©; Him Most Pop Americ LONDON, Feb, 1 avell Ha cap on “Two Distinguished Americans’ ov theatres London are now showing pictures of Col, House and Minister Brand Wii py ywds displ nie Hous irse « rhaps t sai Jon lor Strike i t wid N Union Square, the "i 4 of the International nent Makers Union The plan is to promote ar ' trade and . t f was iar { ane liv J cap and ribbony— | worth living for. | the room was decorated with | | DEATH ENDS AT LAST SUFFERINGS OF WOMAN FIFTY YEARS IN BED GOES WEST TO SEE HOW HER INTENDED HUSBAND ACTS IN HIS OWN HOUSE oamtnsijpanation Olive Owen, Poetess, Will Wed ©. Abbott Burton if He Stands the Test. EVANSVILLE, Ind., Feb, 11—Be- fore choosing a life mate Miss Olive Owen, Brooklyn writer of verse, in- tends to see how he acts in his own | home. This explains her presence here to-day @ guest of Mrs. Mary Dauer, She wishes to study O. Ab- bott Burton, Mrs close range. “Mise Owen is here look me over,” explained Burton, “It jinspection she will marry mi Burton said he met Miss Owen in Chicago at the home of a friend. “tf knew the minute | saw her she was my mate, The Burtons are that What if she won't have you?” hi —.| was asked. “Oh, well, 1 won't shoot myself. said Burton, Ie said that while Mise Sanderson & Sons, agents in this Owen was in Brooklyn he commun\- city for the Royal Mail Steam Packet] Coted with lier by thought waves, Company of London, received a cable se message to-day from Sir Owen Phillips Chairman of the company, stating that the published reports that the new steamship Arlanga had been sunk are untrue. Bauer's stepson, at to at Kovno Reopened. LIN, Feb, 11 (by wirelens to 8 ville).—The Jewish School of Kovne, Russia, has been reopened by permission of the German authorities, Sale Tomorrow, Saturday, February 12th Beautiful Bevies of | New Spring Hats Introducing the Latest Modes $ ATS of the various picturesque periods—of straws and satins, in old rose, the new blues, browns and blacks—a remarkable che ‘The severe tailored models, directoire and Wat- teau styles. New sailor shapes and turbans, of Man- darin origin, and several of the new all-ribbon hats. Every hat a smart and refined example of ap- proved millinery. \ | Spring Waist Offerings Blouses of Special Charm at $ B® IGHT, particular _ models from the < bandbox of Spring styles ~modes that are filled with new frills. New habutai shirts, tailored effects, crepe de ~ chines, stripes—the latest ideas for out-of-doors, for the new Spring suit and for the formalities of after- noon and evening. Al the New Fashion Shop Nineteen West 34th Street aan ee ‘OU pay less for choice furniture here than | is asked for man) undesirable patterns ‘isguised as “February Furniture Bargains’ | { Prove this b) comparing the suites , | _ offered here with the “sales offerings” F HY 5 ew Ja” else Louis XVI. Bedroom Suite, 4 pieces, In American Watout or Antique Ivory $160 Enamel « \

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