The evening world. Newspaper, April 12, 1916, Page 12

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ta yaar ee THE JERSEY CITY TO HOLD EU-ROLLING CARH os OIL PLANTS Enjoy Just Like ster Monday ust like they do in jt te House grounds in Wash- Laborers Are Bapacted to De- “Vac MEE Mba la, clare Big Strike in Sym- | capital city, but New Jersey has been pathy With Youths. HEnAH hitnse ORUMGERE: PPILIOR 4M tered the White House MORE RIOTING FEARED.|. Mrs age i rens of No. 130 n, arranged for the when she re Like That Which Cost: Six | evived 1 berm ion fron the Hudson ation has ivas Yo 4 the Lives Year Ago 7 ¥ school chil In anticipation of another big strike | Comm ately wilt 1 refineries at Bayo! y brovic 8 ern anc ee eee coe, N. Ju aunts ig sisters of the kiddies Inspector of Police Cady to sta-| will attend with the little ones and tioned plain clothes men at the va-/ will bring lunches. Easter Monday rious plants to supp disorder In| * just about the biggest day in uary six men were killed, and there trey City will be tho first city in the United States outside Poa in) of Wash. rip RK rolling, has already been 1 Rayonne in the pre though only 200 boys are involve Boe ves tom MOVIE ACTRESS BUYS HERSELF AN AEROPLANE strike yesterday. They ie in trouble, al fling labo! iige were Tidewater | Is on cans! em- ployed in the plant of the O11 Company, pasting lat for $1.23 for a duy of nine hours, The] It's Mary Miles Minter, and She’s superintendent of the plant says the Going to Fly It Her. boys struck without notice, demand- | fi self, Too, ing $1.50 a day and a reduction of working time from nine to eight; If folks around Hempstead Plains! hours. see a strange girl in the sky this| Some of the boys, after quitting | afternoon this is to tell th that work nong the Tidewater | she is Miss Mary Miles Mintner try company laborers and asked them to|ing out her new car. Mise Mintner went New York Girl to Bea Baroness; Engaged to Wed Lord Torphichen Pore ree ee | | MSS GRACE. PIERCE, Orwmes strike in sympathy. The laborers in} has pondered long on preparedness, 6460446466404 4049004 606-05.6 6460-6 6.6 69486446-00604-0% all the Bayonne plunts, numbering | Also she is long on deeds of derriag-| the engagement has been announced of Miss Grace Douglas Pi about 15,900, are practically in an|do, So she has come to the con-| dat and Mra, Winslow Shelby © of Bayville, LL, to G agreement to demand $2.50 a day in-Jelusion that in case of war she will |G nds, Baron ‘To : mise, Midlothian, Beotland. stead of $2, but they were not ready | carry the despatches, wing the fying | (1° ; ite he New WIth tie iene Wnucana Me Blerse is to strike yesterday and refused to go | foe, and all that sort of thing, | caunael for the Wabash and a director of seve 1 out with the boys. As soon as she thought it all out} Most of the boy strikers, armed witb] Miss Mintner went into No, 1895 nd serap| Broadway and bought from the Duffy out-|Motors Company a 124 horse-power tractor biplane, made by the utical Company, This history of fly one right Into uught a sky~ Just like empty milk bottles, stones fron, hid in doorways and alley aide the Tidewater plant evening and bombarded the laborers |¢ they left f Joseph Auda-| is lies, sixteen years old, of No. 103 Ave- {ing tha ha nue FE, Bayonne, ac-la Broadway store and cused of assaulting one of the labor-!wacon right off the ers. that The demand fo 7 ! Miss Mintner planned to go to most universal among Hempstead late this afternoon to take of the Bayonne oll re a Petraes ee Pir a first trip heavenward in care of Sky-Pilot Clarence Fitzsimmons, cleaners in the Stan h is on the ix going to be pho- 16 Hook from the ng at the helm of her je a demand for more yesterday | war neral A ome nt ny one was arrested, Monday, “They won an i ane RAR RY Wages in the last strike, but « VOTES FOR WOMEN Standard Oi Company ‘is perfe Mrs. Elion FB, Aldrich elected an automatic still cleaner, which ; Mayor of Sawtelle, Cal, and Mra put them ut of jobs in a year or two, and they might as well strike} W. 4. Harris heads the “big four” for ‘higher wages now as wait until there is no prospect of geiting any wages at all, Kansas sends to Democratic Na tional Convention. Big Deed Men Chew Gum The men with that determined, go-get-'em spirit that makes them leaders. They chew gum because it’s a nerve steadier and thought producer. And it's a national habit. Wide- awake Americans should chew SMITH BROTHERS’ S.B. CHEWING GUM because it relieves the throat while you enjoy the chewing. The same ingredients and flavor as Smith Brothers’ Cough Drops— famous since 1847. SMITH BROTHERS’ COUGH DROPS Poughkeepsie, N. Y. “FORTY FAMOUS FILM FOLK” New Series of Beautiful Gravure Portraits in Cabinet Photograph Style. NEXT SUNDAY’S SET: Florence La Badie Theda Bara Ethel Clayton A New Group Each Week GET THE SET! Each Portrait as Good as a Photograph. Will Be Announced From Week to Week. Order Sunday World in Advance jie ith tdine aa bounds | Be- | Bryant Washburn New Names | SULLIVAN WINS IN CHICAGO. Defents MAYOR DEFENDS STATEN ISLAND at-Large. April 12.—-Roger C. Sul Hvan bowled out former Mayor Har- rison and his organization yesterday and | lected his vient delegates wt large to CHIC. New Contract, He Says, Is a lation Crushing Defeat of Pres- * lresidential preference Pres- : ident. Wilson no opposition. On| ent Contractors. the Repubhiean ticket Sherman was! scratched he and the name of! ab gss: Roosevelt pub ohn Maynard Mayor Mitchel to-day replied to the AiSTlan, WhO ran ae lepende attacks ma on him by Staten beate Islanders for suddenly calling a Board of Estimate meeting Monday and de- ciding to locate an immense garbage plant on the banks of the Kills with- out even consulting the wishes of Richmond, The Mayor claims that [the real opposition does not come ple of Staten Island, but from the New York Disposal Corp ration, of which T. A. Gillespie is President, and which has the city contract for % disposal on Barren Island “In order to understand the action of the Estimate Board Monday when the special meeting was hurriedly called,” said the Mayor, “a brief re view of what New Yark City has*had from the present Get a 10 Cent Box of Hovoaniands win ia nessa” ttl “Cascaretsy or Our He ee cies) iulvenana Bowels, | public nuisance and a disgrac We have done everything to get the com- To-night sure! ‘Take Cascarets and |pany to modernise the plant, but enjoy the nicest lest liver and bowel | without avail Even action by cleansing you ever experienced, Let the Health Department and other branches of the local government has been fruitless. 5 “When LT say that the Barren Isl- { and concern has defaulted, | |that it has failed to make the ’ ments for garbage disposal privileges | which it promised. The terms of the contract provided that the firs | payment was to be % year $82,500 and $112,500 for the | three years. Only about $45,000 has | heen paid, and I have instructed the | | Corporation Counsel to bring suit and | mean nnn he cases will to trial in a few days, “Street Fetherson tells is right |cern, which has broken its word with |the city, is reaping a harvest of at st $1,000,000 a year, It 1s now at- npting to prevent the city from en- tering new would divert that profit into the p concern ix ey ling, fo: Jing the Commissioner and I believe he that the Barren Island con- | into a contract, $1,000,000 prive pic tyeasury, ‘This ctive It in fonte \“ ns, engineering and push opposition to a new garbage | night and day translated ent sition is | r injunet! ‘When the I ed Monday about time f with its business before the Islanders and those they had en! into injuncuon ist injunction was va I decided that the etty to t was head Barren | ted in their support were in. a position | to again hold us up in the courts. | The action of the Estimate Rourd | Monday was not a blow at Staten Island, but a crushing defeat of the defaulting New poration York Disposal Core | all N ho Kive the Collbat THE EVEN mat sCreeteT Gi Haw BUREAU, Donald Bulk Wiring Che KL iano of the pockets : pealta Gimbel Bros, The man Was! 8 patterns, IMPORTANT—Write othing was'of pond quaita specify size wanted. : | explosion occurred, {| trom the the National Convention and an almost | | solid delegation from the twenty rive districts | Among his ates at large are ov. Dunne as on both tle! Kets; livan, Congre: i r J n i ee ht WAKE UP FEELING == PREAH mM A DAY The May Manton Fashions Lumps for each pattern order EVENING WOKLD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1916, PLANT WIPED OUT WHEN 4,000 KEGS OF POWDER BLOW UP |Two Persons a Mile A Killed by Flying Rock— Man Is Blown to Pieces. RLUAFIELD, W. Va, April 12.— hree persona were Killed, one per- laps fatally injured and two others leas seriously hurt at the Nemours plant of the du Pont Powder Com- pany, eight miles from here, early to- | day, when 4,000 kegs of black powder exploded. The plant was destroyed, | with @ loss of about $100,000. The tes of the buildings are marked by | great holes in the ground. | Howard Mathena, a glazer, had just lentered the glazing shop when the nd he was blown to pieces. Calvin Butts, a watchman. was near by, and was so seriously | hurt that he may not recover, George and Roy Crawford were asleep im their home, almost a mile mill, and were crushed to death under a great rock blown through the roof by the force of the Two other persons in the lage were injured by falling debris | A number of dwellings were badly damaged by the force of the crash Officials are unable to assign any cause for the explosion, The plant jhad been working day and night on | war orders, oo blast vil | RING LED TO ARREST. When Girt 8200 Diamond Detec- tive Got Busy. Because of complaints by Philip Garfunkle, owner of the & P. Ex- press Company of No. 132 East Broad- way, that he had been obliged to pay it $4,000 for packages stolen from wagons, Policeman Gillman of the ison Street Station has been keep- iB watch for weeks over the ffice, Last night he heard nry Garfunkle, the nineteen- old son of the proprietor, who been loud in ves, had ring. to'# git Gillman” narrowed his wateh to young Henry and to-day saw him take kages from the office and it under litter in the yard. d the boy and in conse: | quence of a statement made by the goncr also arrested Louis Feldman vo. 175 Madison et and Morria rand Street and Centre Street Court stolen goods. [in given a $200 diamond ich, Mayor SAWTELLE, Cal, April 12.—Mrs. Ellen French Aldrich, formerly of Day-| ton, ©., will be the first woman Mayor of | !Sawtelle. She received the largest vote polled by any candidate for places on ithe Board of Trustees at the election lyesterday. The candidate with the larg- eat vote is elected President of the bo th the title of Rien ee rel Casearets liven your liver and clean | your vary feet of bowels without grip- | You mull wa fi r head will tongue ee es brigit. sti elastic and complexion rosy they're wonderful. Get a 10-cent box | now at any drug store. Mothers can} safely give a whole Cascaret to children at any time when the feverish, bilious, tongue pated—Casearets are become cross, | ted or consti- harmless.—Advt. | USPENDER ceedingly fashionable — thi son ‘and. the suspender always becoming to the | younger girls, fe Is one that is charming. he skirt pieces with an. applle plalt ut each s ‘and th penders seem box’ pliits. siinple on fronts hb ond to voke Anished with a wi here, or with collar. Inthe ts made of sh effects are ex-| | a continuation of) The blouse is a with the tuline Id in tucks t lepth, It je collar, 4 straight standing pictuse, the blouse white mull and ar made | eponge is one of the best liked materials for such use, but the design could of course ‘be copied in numberless materials, F more dressy frock it etty made of plaid taftet plain taffeta with, the bo ri mull or handkerchief lawn 8 the skirt or striped as like of lawn, or agat suspenders could » linen or of whi to_be worn over a w blouse. The new material, pikella, is very pretty for such « dress, It would be charming with handker- chief lawn for the blouse, r size the blouse yards of material 8 27 oF Both the blouse re. No. and the sidrt, No. 9039, are cut in ‘sizes for girls from 10'to 14 years Added Seam Allowance.) Girl's Blouse, 10 to 14 years. No, 9039—(With Basting Line and \ ‘Added Seam Allowance.) Girl's Four-Plece Skirt, 10 to 14 years ING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION ding, 100 West ‘Thirty-second Street (op~ corner Sixth Avenue and Thirty-second ent by mail on recelpt of twelve cents in your address plainly and always = made of | No, 9041—-(With Basting Line and | ail Na y BRIA MA ill an BRAT rea ME ‘ ao} TR int AY INU Ss im Tin nu Thursday Thrift Sale Savings On Much That You Want for Easter For yourself, from the crown of your head to the soles of your feet, for your home, from the guest-room to the kitchen—a good part of whatever you need, for Easter, and all the Springtime afterwards, is to be found in this tremendously helpful Thursday Thrift Event, which week by week convinces more and more people of its real and di- verse economies. Smartest Spring Suits at $14.75 for Women price. They earn their title of “Smartest Suits” by virtue of being exact copies of models at over twice their All the charm of line and trimming have been reproduced in these suits at a price that holds good value unduplicated Tailoring is as fine as in any Suit of higher price All coats are silk lined in bright contrasting or blend- ing shades There are ripple-flaring, and boxed models, origin semi-Norfolk, straight line besides many others of Spring Materials include serge, gabardine, poplin, shepherd and velour checks. All sizes. Second floor, Central Building. Charming Silk Dresses for Women, $9.98 fabrics. Smart, fashionable frocks they are, of rustling taf- feta, soft crepe de chine, striped silks and novelty Skirts are draped or smocked or have tunics in some charming phase of the fashion Bodices are mainly in combination with sheer Geor- gette crepe, touches of lace or embroidery. Splendid dresses, New Sport Frocks full of good use and smartness. All sizes for women. Coats of poplin, and velour checks, many with introductions of taffeta and faille silks, They are undoubtedly better values than can be ex- pected later in the season Sizes 34 to 44. Women’s Tailored Skirts Smart Spring Styles Seond floor, Central Butlding Unusual Values in Women’s Spring Coats, $9.95 There are models good for most occasions, and espe- cially so for semi-dress wear, and again others dis- tinctly for travelling, motor and utility wear, In fact, the assortment is extraordinary serge, whipcord, cheviot, worsted 4 floor, Central Building. $3.95 Three models for sport wear of fine washable cor- duroy—the favorite sports material features. sleeves. waists, disposal, fles. colors; Na pair | at 19¢ Extraordinarily good at this low price. checks, mixtures, black and navy serge waist; lengths to 42 inches. Of navy blue Scotch plaid, model, showing low neck and long sleeves. silk and cotton they are, front, with loop buttons; a tailored yoke, Cast Steel Scissors, Wide varieties of the desirable shepherd checks, novelty mixtures and navy and black wool poplins; fashioned in the charming Tailored and detachable belts and the newest pocket styles of Spring mode, Waistbands up to 32 inches; lengths to 42 inches, Very Special! 300 Women’s Tailored Skirts, $1.08 Of shepherd Sizes to 34 in Second floor, Central Building $2.89 Scotch Plaid Silk Blouses at $1.59 in a charming tailored Mixture Crepe Blouses, 69¢ in a model opening in and long $1.29 and $1.98 Blouses at 98c A clearance sale of odd and broken sizes of silk taken from higher priced regular stocks for Second floor, Central Building, Women’s Fine Sateen Colored Petticoats, 76c In a lovely shade of old rose; also navy blue, with deep plaited flounce trimmed with two gathered ruf- At $1.89 are Petticoats with Seco Silk top (a cotton and silk mixture) and taffeta silk flounce, tucked and trimmed with double pleated ruffle have cotton underlay. In the prevailing Beoond floor, East Butlding. Nail Files, Usually oc For This Thursday, 5c And three other attractive specials as follows Embroidery Scissors, heretofore 15¢, at 12¢ a pair Cuticle Scissors, heretofore 35c, at 28¢ a n several sizes, heretofore 25c, Street floor, Livingston street, Central Rutiding, $10 and $12 Beautiful Trimmed Hats at $4.95 The tremendous success of Tuesday's event, We offered similar ntodels, spurred us fort—clearly shown in these fine hat Sailor Hats of when to greater ef- Milan Straw or Liseret These are in the main trimmed with ostrich banding or tailored bows; shapes, also smart suit hats in. s trimmed with wings or made goura; turbans and sailors, flower-trimmed Mezzanine er floor, Kast Butlding 250 Tailored Suits for Young Women, $12.08 Young women will like these Spring Suits, in either | charmingly tailored or semi-dress style. Norfolk els are pleated from the yoke to the belt; ripple-flaring | Styles are snugly fitting above; semi-dress inserts of taffeta in the peplum, creat Skirts follow the lead of the coats styles, Serge, poplin and gabardine a 14, 16, 18 years. Suits show Ka fan flare. artly tailored the materials. Sizes juiiding. Women’s $2 Embroidered Suede Gloves, $1.20 They are the 12-button length, tor which so many women are asking, fir the new frocks and di SSy Suits. * At the same price, $1.29, are t2-buttun glace kid Gloves, in an incomplete size range. Women's White Silk Gloves, 50¢ In Milanese weave, with combination black and white embroidery Glove 8a! 2 “*Her Mayesty’’ Corsets Special at $1.29 Of brocaded coutil with medium low bust, and another model of white coutil with medium high bust; both long hip. A. SS. Special Corsets at 98 Perfectly fitting Corsets on fashionable lines, Well defined waists, in either medium or low bust styles $1.50 Warner Rust-Proof Corsets, oSe Second Coor, bat Building 2500 Women’s Silk Handkerchiefs, 12\sc Each A cable from Japan tells us that prices have ad- vanced 40 per cent. on these goods. At 12146 these Handkerchiefs are, therefore, much lower than it will cost to land duplicates. There are pink, rose, blue, Nile green, crepe or Japa- nese Handkerchiefs, with narrow white hems or white centres with colored hems. Strvet floor, ‘ental Women’s Pure Silk Stockings, Special, 58c¢ Pair | Made to sell for a much higher price, but not up to their very particular maker's idea of “perfect.” But the “hurts” affect neither looks nor wear, Mostly black or white; a few in plain colors; full fashioned; lisle thread double garter tops and soles Store orders only, Street floor, Central Building, All-W ool Taffeta Regularly 79c, at 64c Yd. Rich jet black, fast dye, firmly woven and 42 wide, 50-Inch Hair-Line Serges, White and black and white and gray wool; fashionable fabric for Spring and Street floor, Livings 50¢ Yard hair-line Summer skirts, . Went Building $7.19 Crystal Glass Towel Bars, 89c Polished glass, 18 inches long and 1 inch in diam- eter, Same in 24-inch length and 1 inch in diameter, at 98c, instead of $1.44 Crystal Glass Shelves, regularly 85c, at 65c, 24 inches long and 5 inches wide, with nickel-plated brackets. 30 inches long, usually $1.25, at 85¢ Heavy Nickel-Plated Towel Bars, 18-inch, regularly $1.07, at 85c, 24-inch, regularly $1.19, at 95c, 39. inch, regularly $1.34, at $1.19. 25¢ Canned Heat Outfits, 10¢ Each outfit complete with saucepan, tripod and can of solid alcohol. Subway floor, East Building. ng them especially suitable for | nehes | . part |

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