The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1916, Page 3

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WARNED OF PERIL, very Man Has a Job and Every Woman BGLNER ESEHPES DISGUISED MARSH Chicago Shows Her Heels to, German Pursuer in the | \% Bay of Biscay, IGNORES STOP ORDER.| | THERE Ane Brrvre Lafayette Signals Liner’s Com- ; mander to Beware of | “Enemy Corsair.” PARIS, Feb, 21 French Miner Chicago, which left New York} Feb, 8, commanded by Capt. M. Mace | @nd carrying many notable Ameri- cans, has reached Bordeaux, owing her safety only to her speed, which enabled her to escape from a bostils | German commerce raider which is Jurking somewhere off the Bay of Biscay, On the Atlantle Capt. Mace re- ceived two wireless warnings that a German vessel was seeking him, One came from a French land station and| the other from the liner Lafayette, Mowe MARRIAGES aes RerorreD sey which told him “an enemy comate| Making War Implements, the Men Have No Time i Cepia for Drink and Crime, but There’s New Furniture Ashk Vessel, cafrying ait tiehts Gan in the House, New Clothes on the Children, More Food in the Market Basket and More Money in the Savings Bank. was in his p: bowing no flag, appeared three miles off and signalled the Chicago to heave to, Capt. Mace. instead, crowa- | ed on all speed, his vessel doing| seventeen knots to her pursuer’s four- teen and escaping after a chase of a Capt. Mace declares the ship w Was disguised as a neutral merchant- man, showing all lights, but only able to log fourteen knots. The Chicago, which sailed fro New York Feb. 8 rying among her passengers D, L. Brown, Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Corey, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Arthur Cobb, Arnold Eng, Peter J. | Meming, Cecil Howard, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Irwin, Marry Kurz, Louis B. de Koven, W, M. Lucas, F. W. Muel- ler jr., Miss Andreo Mery, Rupert Pound, J. G. Paul, Frank C. Penfold, H. Warner. child @ school and a toy. The La Fayette, which signalled | PROSPERITY CHANGES TOWN'S ¢—————_______ | the warning, sailed from Bordeaux CHARACTER. on Feb, 12 and is duo in New York| This is to-morrow. On her last trip she was|of which convoyed through the danger zone by| “Here is one of the three wicked French warships, many of her Ameri- | towns in all the world. Tho only dif- can passengers having received warn- | ference ist sald: a noted evang ings from anonymous sources that she was to be torpedoed. fad which will take you out of South Bothichem." And yet It isn't the NEW YORKERS SAVED AT SEA.) one town. For one thing, the rail- "i |road’s passenger business just at + consists chiefly In taking peo- ple INTO South Rothiehem un- Bethlehem has been Taken From!" Captain and Sinking b. L—-Six men compri Ing the crew of the three-master A Lord of New York are under medical treatment here to-day, following rescue from their ship, which wasata doned off Minot Light Tho vessel, with decks awa danger of going down when she wast ine reached by Capt. A. M. f% men of the schooner Flo. who In thrilling style and saved the sl Capt, A. BL OM m are so wise as 8 who deitbe r religious can rved siums to the well fed nandthree}| oecers in her father’s munitions L. Olive craft | plant [stn Bethlehem to-day there is not one really destitute person— Harry arrow, provided he or she is willing to are work.” Roolal Ww =: ~ | Be needy o: : | ties; a teacher, Whose pupils all come An Inside Bath ltrom the so-called “poorer class;" a] shopkeeper, whose place of business Makes You Look lis in the heart of the steel factory | / \district; the wife of a worker em- d F 1 FE ployed in one of the mills of the} an ee resh | Bethlehem Steel Company—iudle that annot, of irse, vouch personally for its truth, ment to me to-day. 1 at @ a glass cf hot wat e ihewohate before Kote after ten hours of observation, I ¢ keeps Ilin away. onl) w South Be mn who looked under- This excolient, common-sense See, health measure being land dece adopted by millions. dressed, eat THE WOMAN WITH THE MAR- Physician world over recom-| KET BASKET IS SYMBOLIC. side cleanliness, because the skin pores | t paint or carve a symbolic figure of do not absorb impurities into the blood, | te new Bethlehem, I should choose causing ill nealth, while the pores in the | the figure that L met most frequensly ten yards of bowels do. on Third and Fourth | Streets | this Men and women are urged to drink| morning: A woman who carcied a each morning, before breakfast, a glass) Rew, eth a sprit e DANK ots ary of hot water with a teaspoonful of lime-| WAS S/N ays | Bathe er Work stone phosphate im it, as a harmless | has not been dimmed during the fow means of helping to wash from the! Me 0%. thas been carried. And al stomach, liver, + and bowels the| Ways it was filled with most interes previous day's tible material,| ing and suggestive packages: * the poisons, sour bile and toxing; thus cleans-| groasy, quecrly shaped on i ing and purifying the entir » from the buteh the groce trim boxes and bags, the unwrepped i "| purchases from fruit i food into the stomach. pur es Just as soap and hot water cleause} min. Perhaps the full i ket is a woman's chotce as prosy ind freshen the skin, so hot water and ity’s symbol, but to me it seems even imestone phosphate act on the climina-| j.or— truly ‘indicative than the full tive organs. i dinner pail, South Bethlehem kas ‘Those who wake up with bad breatn,| tyat, however, tf you prefer it— coated tongue, nasty taste or have 4] though this is a Democratle Admin- dull, aching head, sallow complexion, | istravion. acid stomach; others who are subject Tho small shopkeepers, the dealers to bilious attacks or constipation, jin provisions with whom the workin should obtain a quarter pound of lime-| classes trade, say that bualness uever stone phosphate at the drug store, This | Bas Peon ho Bec Ae eee nid will cost very little, but is sufficient to] Si. milatantian aasouais demonstrate the value of inside bathing. | eee ine oe naw shops have opened ‘Those who continue it each morning are| And in a roady-made clothing estab- assured of pronounced results, both in| jisnment on Third Stree regard to health and appearan Advt. counters well stocked with ———— J sits, T heard tho same story of gooet Sunday Worid Wants Work | ; i aes ly and often attractively = THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1916, GETTER CAD THROW THEIL MONEY to of (Ataows Commute By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. aisles 00 an hour. (Special to The Evening World.) BETHLEHEM, Pa., Feb. 21.—In Bethlehem of Judea, nineteen hun- # German raider, his wireless warn-| dred and sixteen years ago, a few wise men worshipped the Prince of ings having told him the German boat! Peace—who, nevertheless, by His own admission, came to bring not peace | but a sword. In Bethlehem of Pennsylvania to-day| hundreds and thousands of men, both wire and simple, | are serving the gods of war—and to Bethi . gods bring not a sword but peace, peace and prosperity beyond wildest dreams, At a recent Aldine Club dinner Charle until the other day President of the Bethlehem Steel Corporation, ndéw Chairman of its Board of Directors | and employer of the greatest industrial army that ever omething of the new Beth-| Jehem which he and his steel company and war orders an although, charactertstically, | ee M. Real, Miss Valeska urate he preferred to discuss the general field instead of his own flourishing section Mr. and Mrs, Gilbert B, Tinker, A. D. of it. But for one whole day I have seen and talked with the new Beth- Voore, Oscar K. White and Artbur|!¢hem, where every man has a job, every woman a market basket worked for one man, told between them have mad live y they dress better,” sald the smiling the same South Bethlehem how much more money do they you any more of the effects of prox perhaps you'd like somo details of the cause, The, are solid facts which wer by one of the highest officiuls of the Bethlehem Steel Company. THE WAGES GREW WITH THE ween South Bethlehem and hell is that there's a railroad laborers The company to-day emplo: 20,000: men. A’ few years ago there were only bo. A TYPICAL TAKE iT ta OT FOR | a SALE ‘YY THe WORKMEN Are BUYING yu Cant oer 42-Centimetre Shot From “The New Bethlehem.” Nobody willing to work is destitute, The Bethlehem Steel Company has more than doubled its forces In s over 20,000 men, 1 wage inerease of from 7 to 15 per cent. Men earning $45 a mocth in 1912 now earn 855-865. earn $7 or $8 a night. In addition to high wages common workmen receive bonuses based on productiveness, is a dearth of servants, because wives and daughters of 1 aftord to stay at home, There is a marked increase In weddings, Keal estate has gone up 70 per cent, yet foreign born workmen are buying it. urs, It now emplo na gene ‘There has The The ehildre are going to school Instead of to the factory, Prosperity is making the town behave better rather than worse, tween 8,000 and 9,000 on its pay- During the last year there has been a generat advance in wages, varying from 7 to 15 per 912 the lowest-priced ved 12/2 cents an re med, and that has more to do with caving its soul than 1 evangelists nay think, Not all 8 Major ely trans. paign from workmen re » $45 a month, The new Beth children to school instead of to the 2, cipal of the and Wile of the ad. Pop= the { that many ehil-| joo! this win-| us would hav In the high|* a common labor Plant range fro $58 to $65 a month, Also, tna high official ones to profit system of bonu: distributed monthly to the rank and file of workers, according to their productiveness, During the last year the Steel Company 000,000 in enlarging its plant orders totalling hundreds of factory high jain Quinn School, lar Street pupils from the prin are not the only » but these are Four representative individuals—a er, born and brought up in » and for years serving Its in many helpful capact- gone to shop or fact school there are in girls, and an incre of nearly year's attend= since requires mur 1h per ¢ ance. T ehinery and protect the workmen from girl ttok suits, 1 saw oe siumiest group of This will Le for use by spring. say that I did not see man, an or child within the limits of night and day, and though rK on twelv« who Was not warnly © of a worker nly the other urd of a boy of elghteen who earn $4 a day inspecting shells,” said th © Associated Chari chief worker for t of Hethlehen, with her In her Locust Street office, that there is indeed a non “men were sitting in each other's laps in this office, begging me to find jobs for them. This winter | haven't heard other hand, it is almost impos- sible to discover a woman who will do housework or even laun- imple reason that hor husband or father is bringing wdry, for th there are not nearly enough tenements or rooms for the work- ers in South Bethlehem. But in many homes or a new rug, graphaphone, And the larder is well stocked. as duriv y making purchase ett Lr Ny had a 1c . Its windows | § full of pretty shirt waists and its en's 6 money and quite new expr ales of Keef in New ending Saturtay, . Monday Morning Wonders.| pei Yu.ae"caia' se souad=aarct? the sre live for." MORE SCHOOL CHILDREN IN- STEAD OF FACTORY HANDS. grade, stout shoes and « have furs and 4 Indeed, even in shadow of that smuh of milk and the color ¢ aw no child wearnes 2 uate clothing he ca Ldmitted of a lery on ‘ t, dow railroud racks, “I've been in t w f ears, and this is the year L suppose th «day t steel company it take men. For the last few months ren. f , o was job if b wh there Hungarian workers are build ing a beautiful stone church John's Windish—on Fourth Street. And what happens to the good pay, that isn't being apent just now? A Justice of the Peace enlightened me. “Real estate has gone up 70 per cent. or more, and yet these foreigners are buying it.” he said. “Some of them are paying thousands of dollars for homes of their own. There are nowhere near enough rented houses or boarding houses in South Bethichem. A lot of the workers have to stay as far off as Easton or Allentown, and from one town twelve miles down the line they run a special train that's packed solid every night and morning.” d what ab t Rethlehem? Do rn hi He's pid 1 rt known ‘ Shall they hop 1 eter hope—American n is sending its inches long and 6 inches wide. POWDER BOAT AFIR SCARES JERSEY CITY) sars ¢ some Firemen Soaked Explosives] LONDON, Feb room of the| the United st National, which carries about | n y City n buildings | inqu the | serv foot of Hudson Street showed a dis-| wants to they eeed or in| are the thing any flurnes while for Deank=| saci 1 in Washingtor Police | Vim afraid F wax under the in ornton eritieal » skins of thirty fre Des Moines, f th thi ‘ou cam rel with a gest that Hub-Mark Rubber Footwear, ely oot that. But U-BOAT SITUATION A Market Basket in Schwab’s Home Town’ (LOSE 10 CRISIS, S CAPITAL VEN Issue Over Plan to Sink Armed Merchantmen Approaches Deadlock. BERLIN REPLY AWAITED. | | | | } Loss of Life of an Americ Under New Rule Might Involve Break. WASHINGTON, Feb, 21--The sit- uation tn the Lusitania controversy has been made as grave as It was before the recent German conces- sions, as @ result of Germany's Iseu- ance of the armed merchantment pro- clamation, This was affirmed by the State Department to-day. The possibility of a crisis arising over the execution of the German and Austrian proclamation on March 1 was admitted by the department. The crisis may arrive, It was said, if Amers jean citizens are killed by the sinking of a merehantman or by the Indefi nite postmonement of the Lusitania settlement deponds upon the reply from the Ber- Bernstorft’s last’ =~ commu: which explained that this ment still insisted on plilance with international law re- |garding the right of merchantmen to arm for defense In the meantime it v | Department to-day this ¢ | to the cation, yern- said at the yvernment allies sw unm their tands and the action of G Jaffected as ye [many and Austria What action the State Departnent will take in the mutter will depend upon the reply of the allies, which 1s held up, it is said in diplomatic ctr 4 out by the foreign offices adon, Paris, Petrograd and self, as y treats of the gives all in Unite 8 contended, off it clearly guarantees against another such disaster, because wh It refers at the outset to the assur- inees that German submarines would not reiterate them. Secretary L Ambassador yon Bernstorff that as- surances that the previous declara new ecampaicn are highly desirable, | tw wnsiders a ship arm s only and 4 the #ame ing no Kut German ¢ the new conditions of naval wartare brought about by the advent of the submarine erchant ship to be im- arms whatever, ' , ; sot and hope; they look a8) there's one thing for which everybody] When Seoretary Lansing was asked found something really to/in America’s Krupps has @ legitimate] flatly whether he still contemplated Prepared-| calling Ambassador von Bernstorft (o account for his red activities press agent he evaded a dir awe iy Seer sald “If Tdid contemplate such action, 1 would not make it Known before through the press." >_. GERMANY TO STAND NO OPPOSITION FROM U, Cologne rdam despatches to-day, declares that ¢ sition fro Gazette, according many should brook no o Hl submarine pol Why suid We await the wishes the United States and stpone other submar war? the agorte interests if it again tiations on the nemorar The time for action with | ter that the diplomat to protect the | is way write and talk ar for a hundred years abo rtiate murine o-day war da much hoy 1k i London newspape te called upon rment to take prompt steps to con new eru- frightfulne W re forewarned; let us Tho next move by this Government | lin Foreign Office to Ambassador von | jermany's com. | | blanket Is do not| not sink unrevisting liners, it does nsing already has told tions will not bo abandoned in the ntention it that under i should carry no Faithful Dog Keeping Long Vigil By Body of His Dead Stable Pal DOG KEEPS LONG VIGIL IN COLD BESIDE BODY OF HORSE LOVED | Refusing to Leave Even for Food, Animal Guards Dead Stable Pal 48 Hours. Since Saturday morning a dog has lain beside the body of a great gr draught horse in the street in fi One Hundred and Sixty-first Street ¢ from its vigil! It remained the remarka was removed to-d Edward D. Mu While the matter is being|dog when he found it could not be driven awa and covered it with a 4 also was taken to it, and keep under the but the m nimal a ll effort te scarcely blanket The devotion of Flo, the dog, to Je ry, the big gray truck horse, b ‘/gan when the dog was born in th It slept in Jerry's stall almost every night and Was never content a moment while stable four yea a the big horse was out at work, When Everett Phillips, the stablo manager, opened the establishment Saturday morning be heard Flo whin- ing in Jerry's stall, Jerry was dead ind the dog was inconsolabl when the horse was drag . that It might be taken Inariin'’s for autopsy, _———— DIES AT 106 YEARS. Wan Belleve: New York MALON Y., Feb. gee, 106 years old and b Yow York State cyt he Civil War that we are forea gan sounded by the Obse ‘Lacking confirmation ft PER\** | polley re have’ caused surprise because of the new |§ IN, vic Amsterda reports that opposed to Ge i) Ar understood that & Lansing had Indleated th ad it 8 vance that the United States would -lapprove the new German programing It was reported unofficially that sing had teld Ambassador Berg & month's notic niton to treat armed merchant is warships would by guard neutral inte news from Washin ew. the man pe rica yninds SPECIAL NOTICES. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheep substitutes cost YOU same price USINESS women give rubber footwear hard service. Earning her living the pennies. ubber Footwear. | That's why school teachers, saleswomen, hers, etc., show a decided preference for H makes a woman watch enogra- jub-Mark Trim fitting, stylish and serviceable, Hub-Mark Rubber Footwear is ade in a wide variety of kinds and atyles to cover the stormy weather needs of men, women, boys and girls in town or country. The Hub-Mark is your value mark, —for a real dutch lunch Some spare ribs—nnd kraut, Some frunk- aut, Some—oh, anything and krant, but kraut yor It's a great food in itvel you en, " other fyod, and it wids HUB-MAR Note this: ~¥ 7.98 thing you buy from dei hey are dependal RUBBERS The World's Standard Rubber Footwear whe sell ble merchants. C649 0G4.00b49.06-04-4 6.64.04.04-04-00900000 nt of Murphy's stable at No. 245 East cold nor hunger until the horse ny. proprietor of the stable, and of the dog too, had straw placed a bedding for the . in dead at |his home in Moira, He was a former st Lawrence River steamer captain and a was the slo- etary of sufficient Se Seer r epee TET ert £0600CCOOS0CO00OOM + PTET ROT OO DOPSDODOO FINLAND TWO DAYS LATE. Sudden Gale Cat Down Speed and Tossed the Sh After a beautiful day Inet Friday when the nea was calm and the temperature like spring the American Mner Finland steamed into a bit of bad weather that rivalled In nastiness any that has been this winter, ‘The day's ran dropped from knoty to 172 and the wind went up toa full gale, The shi with. 1 it well, but the discomfor « increased when a blinding snow torm blotted out all about the ship Py Finhand arrived # late, but hot a person or thing on board was injured —_—_—— 1000) Fire at Edgewater, I IWATER, N. J, Feb, Ste Damage estimated at $100,000 wae caused this morning by fire im the hing mills of Spencer Kel~ » ‘The fire Was prece by an explostonsin mill No, 1. mill was completly gutted. Ofticlal are unable to explain the cause of the explosion. Chief Engin Bell of the Eiaewater fire department, was 6e- verely Injured by « falling beam, To Enjoy These Snappy Days You Should Drink vans FAMOUS on CREAM INDIA Fresh and Foaming from the Wood \Try Te ais To-Day WHY BE AMERE DANCER} N YOU CAN BE AN EXPERT? nA Few Hours with | a “Spectaliet”” wit put that profes: sional snap’ your dancin: Mr ciait place of #0 ordinary teache: VERMS MOST REASONABLE, Send for, “The De fully iustrated G. HEPBURN WILSON, M.B. American Authority on Modern Dancing FIFTH AVENUE, NEW ,YORK ‘Thorley NW. Cor Te 0 WYANT An Effective Laxative Purely Vegetable Constipation, Indigestion, Biliousness, ete. QO ORF E Oar night unti. relleved Chocolate-Coated or Piain Onee- Absolutely,, Removes Indigestion. Onepa proves it. 25c at all druggists. THE KING {' Aan tost or found articles fe’ vertisved in The WV id will be listed at The World's Informae tion Bureau, Pulitzer Building A + World's there

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