The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1916, Page 8

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a WANT NEW YORK IN MANAGING RAILWAYS HERE. | In some other cities, notably Cleve ‘| | corru marke addition tion of pul improvement the city tak the surplus pr Kansas City ction troubles thro pal authority not having the priva tr and mpi ar ae aa J actuat participation board of conir: THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 27, BUILDING HEIGHT —O'CORMAN TO FIGHT nanagemer ail lie fu no scandals ir nies © PROPERTY OWNERS — IS HINT IN SPEECH Mr re ty the, Discrimination FAIR, SAY hn} | —_>— in Districting City Is Alleged at Public jland, @ representative of t eit ou Paring sacs anct s no United 4 lates operations of the str way Hearing H su freely into transit | with more of lesa auto v that inti Thompson ructio freoly into (ramut (exercised by New York’e Public Ker-| , eo. Re " aeve hea far in advance | Vico Commission, The Con On BUAINS e cir con and| In the field of steam railroads triet# and Kestr f which Bd igements with{are numerous instances erie ward M. Hassett is Chairman, held a ‘ rely in return | mental representation in the Board plic hearing to-day in the City Ha J for hen 4 Directors. The Governor of Ilinois Ix, PUblic hearing to-day in the City Hall Among the + Phila the city at which Now |ex officio a director of the Mlinois, for the district extending from city stipe Yorkers like to jeer for being so slow|Central Railroad. Tho State takes 7 limits north to Twenty-third Street ag lh e ls nd xo corrupi, has had representa: | per cent of the sroas earnings, in! Joseph B. Kean of the Central Mer- eo Thowps {tion in the directorate of ita traction inois in return for the franchise |, on, No. U1 Fifth tee in its pre combination for nine years, In 1907{and in leu of taxes. ‘ See, Ge on a at Ge ore important than that New York| the relations between the city and the] The City of Cincinnati invested| Avenue, favored the report o' more imp ~trlthea ty Vhiladelphia Rapid Transit Company] public money in construction of | commiasion generally, but entered a City should hav entation 1 | were adjusted by reed which | Cineinnatt Gouthera Ratlroad 24) fay minor objections. He sald his the dircet« of ate compantes | ot only to municipality @lleased it to the Queen and Cregeen! nae operating the now subways. The com ya vii r the company sin System for more than $1,000,000 a “ssoctation did not think Fourteenth ‘ r hat the M r that exereised by the Public Tho property is in charge of 4 Street between Seventh and nth Bas tt recommend: a es 4 hl vise Commission tn Pd roy but cit appoint d Board of big oe rt Avenues should be restricted against and the Com er become directors) aiso permitted the Mayor and two ¢ Federal Government had direc- “0 cf the Interborough ( yany and the|citizens to become members of thel¢ors in the old Union Pacific Raiiroad factories. It should ty Pea aie B. R. T's subway nubsidiary, tho| Board of Directors, to watch the large investment of cash develop naturally, he thought, Like- “ 4 The City of Philadelphia has not/and land that the Government mie wise Mr. Kean was of the opinion Now York Municipal Kallway Corpo-} joureq millions of publio money into|to assist construction of the first! imnirteenth Street batwoeen Sixth Ave- fation. It is understood that thie in-|}{ struction. But through the|transcontinental line, but under the | ~ rae and the Borel novation will sed by the cor er of franchise it present-|Harriman reorganization that interest | nue and Re. ‘orth River o he nor ne. They ¥ seort that there/ation in a private company's board,| was wiped out and the Nation is noj side of Fifteenth Strest in the same “sahil Sty | it a ol over all capital ts-|longer represented in the manaxe-| territory should also bo left unre! ia no legal grounds on which the City | ired the right to recapture;ment, There 1s, however, one unusu dee Government can force its way Into} ranchises at a fixed pri er of the board, the head of the | *tr! their boards, nor is th anything ribed the methods of fu non Church, Joseph F. Smith.) Borough President Marks of Man- soggha eer ts neing under a commission's esent Chief Apostle, sits around nattan said an advisory commission in the dual subway contracts pers the board with New York millionaires | "4 ted to him the recommenda mitting such representation. The sit- Ko, Also, has taken the traction|to represent the investment of the|'4 reported to him the recommenda. uation (o-day is that the partner in]situation {n hand. All the surface |¢hureh in the company. tions concerning tho heights of build~ the enterprise who ts putting up the! lines of th rdless of private| It is a common and accepted prac- |ings and the restriction of certain In- larger share of cash is kept in the|owning companies, are operated as ajtice for State and Municipal Govern- | gugtries to mapped out zones are dark about ali that goes on around | unified system known as the Board of|ments to name members of Boards of | . tleally supported by directors’ tables, Operation of the Chicago Surface | Directors In companies In which pub. heing enthusiastically supporter Uf the city had been represented in] Lines, composed of represcntatives of|}!¢ money has been invested. Now property owners, the boards there would have been no| boti city government and private com. | York City has invested many millions | “Neighborhoode which have been $150,000 bonu to. slip through to] panies. While city officials do not ac-|of dollars in subways given over to! iaiy deacrted would to-day be President Shonts. There would have | tually become members of the Board of |/private companies for operation and CoUClY ye da ee been no “prior determinations” of and actual ownership is left|has no representation in their direc. thriving business centres and many mysterious and unexplained obliga capital, the management and |torates. real estae tragedies would have been ons. There would have be is fn ree of the Board of| It is a replay developing system |. varted had the butlding zone restrie- portunity for the attempt Operation, dominated by represent. |in the Middle West for municipal). “Y°" : cent. third-tracking contract which | atives of the public tles to exercise dominating control tions been in force before,” declared atill needs explaining. Since Chicngo asserted {ts right tolover operation of tranalt lines, in ad-|Mr. Marks. TONIC FLESH ON BONES ly a auperv its Public § The Thompson . for the oily, greany substance which tastes 0%, 2, Jbad and which has no value anyway. And in addition to this tasteless xtract of cod livers, he has scientifically ombined malt extract, iron and hypo- phosphites, making malto-ferrin a pal delicious and wonderfully effective 'n PUTS © tection for {ts million ted entirely tion. talizer of the entire system, To sharpen you appetite, to put flesh on your bones, to get rid of that tired, run down feeling, take thi: new tonic before meals, It will mak: your food COUN T—will help you assimi- late what you eat, will strengthen the sat K Fulton Stree ita, in return for without investing public construction. 4 of epee he Subway. A laborer at work in the new subway on Greenwich Street between Dey ani was killed to-day when a largo atick of timber fell on him, crush dition to taking @ large share of prot- | franchise grants funds in Chi- give New cure di- Seth Sprague Terry, of No. 46 Cedar Street, owner of real estate through the Church Street district, claimed New York City has exercised mere-| discrimination was shown in fixing of jory regulation through rvice Commission. cago and Kansas City have gone far | in advance to guard the public's tn terest and assert participation in ac tive manaxement of the property committee recont- ! mendation for municipal represen u- directorates will York City opportunity to rect participation in management tn place of indirect Public Service Com- mission control, and also insure pro- Invested public funds which are now commit- to private administra- He sald condl- height« of buildings possessing identical residential street. As an instance, he ited Fifty-second Street, between Lexington and Third Avenues, He gaid such an act was like an attempt to the property and no confiscate court would sustain it senting property n Nos, 3 and 41, n’s recom- heights of C. 8. Higgins, rep! on Park Place betwe protested the mendations concerning commiss : es : ing his skull. His name is not known. buildings in his nelghborhood were Hite. poasteel an aitinie tere A brass check with the number 627 waa unjust. From Broadway to Church French Chemist Discovers Secret |, ,\> mniter how many tonics vou have lheteht, weighed 170 pounde, wad was Church Sireet to West roadway only of Building Up Entire is nothing like cod liver exteact, com-|ang brown eves, tn Wark Prown hair two. Madison Av System Dine with mat extract om and ype oe (RSTn cetig ane enact phosphi It pu the blood, builds Bricklayer Falls Eighty Feet, HE moment any one mentionse liver oil to you, you think of its un- on the stomach, Yet you realize what a wonderful body builder it is—if you ould only take it French chemist has separate the purely the system. Why not try malto-ferrin| brickwork at the top of an eighty- sion as unjust discrimination, No 3G. Pp jKhty Jeasant taste and disagreeable effect |for a week or two? Go to your druggist, | foot ohimney to-day sent William “uibority had the right to tell one take home a bottle and use it, hen | Brown tumbling down inside the groat 0 * building must be two and a} bring the empty bottle back and get} cylinder of the Knickerbocker Ico [i#!f {tines the width of a street and Realizing this, a your money ifit doesn't help you won. | Company's plant at Lombardy Street Minit another owner to one and a halt scovered w way to \derfully, That is our GUARANTEE | 4nd Kingsland Avenue, Williamsburg, ¢" he width of & street, Dr. Berg ments from cod livers, without taking firm flesh, strengthens and revitalizes His body was taken Btreet Police Station. 694 Tenth Avenue. MEDICINAL ele- |to you. ‘Tear out this clipping to remind jyou.—Advt. ‘othe Herbert a height of building restriction along A misstep while he was laying the the lines laid down by the Commis- suid. He ed there should be a ntend He lived at No.| uniform height limit ASK FOR IT BY NAME! 190” WARDS "i P-TrOoP BREAD It pays to take the trouble to specify by name, because when you buy WARD’S TIP-TOP BREAD or DAINTY- MAID BREAD, you know you are getting a pure food product in which you may have the fullest confidence. There is a notable difference between TIP-TOP or DAINTY-MAID and other kinds of bread. Even the waxed wrappers which surround them are distinctive and different. On the table the firm, creamy white, close grained slices of these quality loaves present visual proof of their excellence, and when they meet the trial of taste there comes the full realization of why it is worth while to ask for them by name. The crowning satisfaction in eating TIP-TOP or DAINTY-MAID BREAD is that fine feeling of confidence which comes from the knowledge that they are clean inside the crust and outside. Purity Quality Cleanliness TODAY nen nh PUY IT FROM YOUR GROCER | Robert Anderson Pope, a landscape artist, of Forrest Hills Garden, pre dicted the Wall Street district might eventually be restricted to pedestrian traffic, | - _ | 2 oH. Elam Dead, INDIANAPOL! Ind, March 27.— John B. Elam, seventy yeare old, one of the most widely known lawyers of In- diana, {s dead at his home here. He was a law ther of former President Benjamin Harrison for a number yeara, ‘BEST FOR LIVER, BOWELS, STOMACH, ~-HEADAGHE, COLDS They liven the liver and | bowels and straighten you right up. Don't be bilious,constipated, | sick, with breath bad and stomach sour. WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP Tornight sure! Take Casoarots and en- Joy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel | cleansing you ever oxperionced, Wako up with your head olenr, stomagh sweet breath right nnd fooling fino, Get rid of stock headache, biliousnoss, constipa: thon, furred tongue, aour stomach, bad Cleat your skin, brighten’ your yes, quicken your atep and fool Ike doing a full day's work, Cusoarate are hotter that: salts, pills or calomel bocause they don't shock tho liver or gripe the bowels or cause Inconventenes all the next day Mothors give crows, wink, bits fous, fevers! children a whole Casoaret any thme ny Chey eannot injure the thirty f€and, | teacher living at No, 29 Convent Ave- 1916, Stranski Get Warm Farewell 10 HOLD IN SEAT At Philharmonic ter Rawling. STAN I * flernoon ae Outlines Platform to West- the poethoven-Warner-1 byt chester Men and l Jefends ; atest” progra yroused the andl ence to enthusiaem beyond the ordl- War Vote. nary, Reeth «fifth aymphor — got n ele formance, the William irch Osborn, Samuel) Prelude and glorifi n from W Untermyer, Charles A Towne and Parsifil en's “Corio- Ianus" — ove and Wagner's other Democrats w ave allowed | wrannhauser’ overture also wero themselves to believe that Senator} played splendidiv; bu Mr. Stransky James A. O'Gorman intends to re-/and his men surpassed themselves in tire at the clo his term and leave | Liszt's tone poem “Tasso,” whtoh, It would seem, Mr, Stransky has chosen for his battle he There was a demonstration for him at the end by both the audicnce and the orchestra. | Louls Graveure, the baritone, no| matter wi he is a Belgian or an| Englishman with a good old name} that would seem worth oherishing| just now, has a voice, and he knows how to use it. At his recital in| iticlans tn the audience—and there] Aeolian Hall yesterday afternoon a were plenty of them on hand—tormed | Crowded house acclaimed him, He Just one impression of the addre on | eh cine yf hal Lats Ale ga ; Scar well, since he first appeared in re- of the senior Senator from New York,| cital, His programme ran from Men- 1. that it was a notice that he will/ delssohn, through sat Schumann | try for nomination and election this} and Brahms ta of Hun- fall garian folk-songs 1. English, | ‘ f to a French group, and at the end to | Senator O'Gorman, at his own re-| 41, American grou n which Sidney the fleld clear would have revised their view of the situation had they attended the dinner of the West- | chester Democratic Club at the Wal- dorf-Astoria Hotel Saturday night. Senator O'Gorman was there and spoke, Indirectly but none the leas positively, Senator O'Gorman gave his hearers to understand that he ts along way from retirement. The pol- {quest, was the last speaker of the) Bainbridge Cr Whitney evening. Previously United States | nbs, Kennedy R and Fon Senator Hollis of New Hampshire Ay het Mlk esenteds Tike had defended President Wil9on’s | at the piano, | policies with respect to the war in anion Senator O'Gorman indorsed Senator] |), j; Phanics aL nieNe, Tele Hollts's views. inevitable that there shall be an The Senator from New York lauded | for more than F the President for keeping the United | were ‘ened am box office, States out of war. Then he launched |{o\eaq her nnounced into @ carefully prepared address de} Macleod’s “La Priere des F me: nouncing war and warfare. His! but she wes il Fh! eat rt's gr -| . ts _{eiows art found quick appreciation hearers gathered that this ts his plat- | fea uuusted br That eaper form. ist, George Barrere; by Emily He believes ‘President Wilson has sser, violinist, and by Ward- done all he can to keep the United | Stephens, a trensure for Mme bert, at the piano. States from becoming involved in the tions wore restricted differently | Buropean catastrophe Mine. 14 1 and seph L. Buttenwieser of No, 220' He believes that no American citi: | Aw n were adway, declared It was dangerous zen should do anything which might b t of the and arbitrary for the Commission to | by chance involve this country in the : chante dosignate @ street surrounded by fac- | war. and applause the work of the tory buildings and warehouses as a| He is for President Wilson's policy| orchestra was also fitly recognized. The audience was one of the largest, of preparedness, but is firmly of the | Pee eee ee ee eceon | belief that this country is in no dan-/} a gg css | ger, immediate or remote, of war] The Tollefsen Trio gave n concert with any European country or with/@t the Harris Theatre yesterday | : afternoon. It is made up of Mme.| Japan. Schnabel-Tollefsen In a sense, the speech was an ex- Tollefsen, violinist pianist; Carl H| Gl William | planation of his vote in the Senate} Duricux, cellist, They play well to- in favor of the Gore regolution—which | B*ther and show their mui nship. | Our own Rubin Goldmark's trio in| would have forced this Government |to warn American citizens to keep off ships of the belligerent powers, It is quite plain that Senator O'Gorman D minor, opus 1, @ minor, opus ata ig F oma made the p' metana’a trio in| nd Haydn's son- violin and plano | >eramme. thinks United States citizens going Loulse V soprano, made a} abroad should travel under the Am-| New Yor vut at Carnegie Cham-| erican flag. ber Music Hall last night, It may be sald of he hat voice has The Sonator sald he placed the} Voume and quality, that hee einer |blame for the war in Europe on the} 4s inte Sad that ahs. ta pales Emperor of Austria, the Czar of| promise. ngs were in French Russta, Emperor William of Ger-| German ish. many and Earl Grey of Great Britain, PeAnia Manecthh: |He thanked God, he said, that the at the Metrone wisdom of the founders of this re-|on Saturday drew rs A public renders it impossible for any poure M Fare netit one man to declare war on behalf of | "4 | Mn. Poetine wl this country, of Giord Hlaeceo con.| Why go limping around with aching, [fort; takes down swellings and drawa Senator O'Gorman ended his speech | ducting ac In the evening | puffe dup feet—feet so tired, chafed,| the soreness and tnivery right out of with an eloquent apostrophe to the| “Ua Sonnambula, with M Har aa ea apellen yaw aap Bay ne Heat fray chaes tenet an ape i4 r ; ra kes © | your shoes on or off? don’t you | insta ops p 0 ; Stars and Stripes, which hid trom acco and Adamo Didur in the} yet a @5-cent box of “Tiz” from ‘the | and bunions “Tin” is glorious for view the wall back of the speakers’ Mr. Bavagnolt ducting, at-|drug store now and glacden your tor-| tired, aching, sore feet. No more shoe table. sae BY Ms | tured feet? tightnese—no more foot torture, Other speakers were Sheriff Alfred ap. PAdereweld, "the acer ait Viz” glow with com- Ask for “Tis. tonly “Tiz.”—-Adrt Smith, Secretary of State Hugo| piano." as a young woman was over- and Michael J. Walsh, the guest of| heard to remark, at his reel | ono as was toast-| Carnegie Hall on Saturday afte n honor! Augustus Thomas was toast-| Carnenic Hall of fe iturday afternoon éC master, with him on wings of hts fantasy creeereempentretee wherever he willed, The Liszt sonata in B minor he played as if tt were Reethoven, Schubert, Chopin. and E A MR Rubinstein numbers were heard with | . nething near to re ‘A great| diac tribute was paid to man as! well as t. 8 Tries to Get Marriage to Husband's Best Friend Annulled by | The constant fear that she is a modern Mrs, Enoch Arden is the bur- | den which Mrs. Etta Gregg Whitney BurrowesHakes of a wealthy Cort- N. ¥,, famiy, must carry through Ife. Supreme Court Justice Goft to-day refused to annul her marriage to Bert De Forest Hakes, a PHYSICAL WRECK Tells in Following Letter How! She Was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s | Compound. | | nue who sought to end his marital career on the ground Mrs, Hakoa’s Vegetable firet husband was alive, tl Goft used " s | Tustice GOR refi to decide! Milwaukee, W Before taking | whether Edwin Stock Burrowes, the firat husband, is dead or alive, ‘Two years ago she tried to get a divoroe, | but a decree was denied by the late Justice Amend. She has been mar | ried to Hakes since Sept. 19, 1908. Hakes's existence too ts fraught | with almost as much anxiety as bis wife's. He was Burrowes's most int!- mate friend, and to have his old chum turn up efter sixteen years of absence to find him wedded to the former Mrs, Burrowes is not, in Hakes's mind, a most pleasant pros- | [be ing down pains pect to look forward to, which had been so bad that I would have Most of her trouble, Mrs, Hakes told | to lie down, I also used tho Sunative Justice Gott, was due to hor refusal | Wash and it has dono me a great deal ¢ to look upon @ body that had been | good, and Iam not troubled with a weake taken out of the Past River a few|Res any more.""—Mra, B,J. drill, dayn after her husband's disappear- 1290 Booth Street, Milwe is, anoo on Oot, 28, 1900 Tho moat auccosstul remedy for wor man's Ills te Lydia EB, Pinkham's Vegoe table Compound, It has stood the test Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-| a & sical wreck, I had | heen going to a doc- tor for several years | but he did me no! Afriend told Lydia BE Pinkham's ble Compound, decided to give it ‘airtrial,andit gave me relief from bear Gave Hiv \Marguerite Clark Florence Reed Yien Mat 1d Pablo Co Harold Rawer, planist suls, cellist, gave a joint rowded house that LONGSHOREMEN STRIKE, before overflowed upon the stage, Both TYING UP THREE SHIPS wriista were warmly applauded Ina orramme that included sonatas by - iims, Chopin and Strauss, In the] ,. vening, at Aeolian Hall, Pont Gruppe, | Three Hundred Walk Out Suddenly © Duteh cellist, gave enjoyabl a His att isnot wnkhorn to} atk Then Make Demand fer , was warmly greeted by an Higher Wages. dience of good ae. He was I by Conraaed V. Bos at the} Without warning and without mak piano, ing any demands, 800 ‘longsboremer . oa employed by the Eastern Steamahit the American Scandinavian Soct«| Ct ~ ty gave third annual Scandina- | Corporation, at Piers 18 and 18 Mert vian concert g gle Hail on Bat. | iriver, ult work oo Manal tile See urday night. ‘There was a largo au-| {ns at 7.80 o'clock, and ~? dience that was justly enthusiastic, | aving two ships to be un! specially over the singing of the another with its cargo only male chorus of one hundred and fitty, | stalled. Traffic on the water |tweon Warren and Murray Streets tm mediately became jammed, o' te the cessation in handling of | and it was hours before the policemey could relieve the congestion. A committee from the strikers ed on Supt. Albert Smith at 11 of ‘with a demand for 80 cents an hour for day work and 85 cents an hour fo: night work. They are now a cents an hour for day work an@ $7 cents an hour for night work, Mr Smith offered them 27% cents for day work and 80 cents an hour at and the committee retired to eubmii this offer to the strikers. At noon the strikers’ committee re. turned with @ compromise demand of 40 cents an hour flat, day and night. Supt. Smith refused the demand, a of which there was not w enough for some of us, But society has @ mission, Tt seeks to make Scandina- vian music known to and appreciated by American audiences. Coni quently the programme held Scan- dinavian songs sung by Marte Sun- delius, who has a good voice and much art and musical taste (I doubt whether the frock she wore would have been approved in Stockholm, or, in spite of the green over tt, in Dub- lin); a concerto for cello in D major, by Herman Sanby of the Philadelphia Orchestra, played by himself, and or- chestral members played by the Scandinavian Symphony Orchestra, Ole Windingstad conductor, It was all interesting and enjoyable, Onwald Garrison Villard waa eleot- |! not @ shipping concern im ed President of the Philharmonic §o- | Coastwise trade paid wages ae ciety last week. For a long period | @8 that, Tho men then he has been a patron and a su: er | the strike would continues. of the society, as his father, Honry|,,5uPt. Smith at once set about get: Vitlard, was before him, ting men to replace the strikers, Iv —_——— is feared the arrival cf atrikebreakerc may start trouble and preparetion: are being made accordingly. oe "a School's Sixtteth Year ¢ Be Celebrate ‘The sixtieth anniversary of the found- ing of St. Paul's School at Concord, N H., will be celebrated by the “old boye’ with a dinner at the Waldorf to-morroy night. Many men prominent in nations | life are alumni of the school, which wa. ed by Dr. George C. Shattuck NURSE FOUND STRANGLED. Attacked Whi After Atten on Way Home i @ Patient. DALLAS, Tex., March 27.—The body of Miss Z. M. Cramer, a nurse, was found to-day in the High School cam- pus at Oak Clift, a suburb. She had been strangled to death. Indications showed that she had made a desperate struggle nai for her Boston, and graduates from all over ttt Mies had been on @ case at! country are expected at the dinner ir Edom, Tex. She returned Sunday night! Charles D. Hart of Philadelphia, Prest and probably was attacked, the police, dent of the alumni association, will pre said to-day, while en route from the @ide, and Congresaman A. P. Gardner 0, railway station to her home. The vic- Massachusetts will be the principal 4in was twenty-four years old. epeaker.. “TIZ” FOR FEET No More Sore, Tired, Tender Feet; No Puffed-up, Calloused Feet or Painful Cors—Try “Tiz” Film Folk” New Series of Beautiful Gravure Portraits in Cabi- net Photograph Style. NEXT SUNDAY’S SET Ollie Kirkby William Farnum A New Group Each Week* GET THE SET Each Portrait asGood asa Photograph. | New Names Will Be Announced | From Week to Week. for forty years, whlch would he Impose ip BURGH, Pa, Maroh a7 renee sible if (t did not have genuine merit ward Davis, @ workman at the plant of the Aetna Chemical Company to-day naw a friend, James Dougherty, another workman, overcome by ges as he en-(e@ Lydia E. Pinkham |tered an empty (ank, Davis ran to nia] Co, (confidential) Lynn, pelsiance and had just carried him to, Your letter will be opened, gufety when he fell dead from the and answered hy a woman, write free, Medicine For special advice, Mai read and feet of Lender Lowels--Adviy ume WJ a te De ih phy> TE aki ed, <pevaeC BaD ene io asiot contidena - Order Sunday World From News- | dealer in Advance ;

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