The evening world. Newspaper, April 27, 1916, Page 6

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6 THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1916, ‘ HASTINGS STRIKE SETTLED. Companies of National Guardsmen Will Now Leave the Town. ‘The strike at Hastings, which lasted fourteen days and was marked by such rioting and violence as necessitated the calling out of National Guarnismen, waa settled yesterday by an agreement that the strikers, employed in the factory of the National Conduit and Cable Com- pany shall recetve a wage increase of 2 cents an hour, that no discrimination shall be shown in re-employing men who quit work and that Sheriff Wiesen- : danger and Village President Goodwin i } MOUNTED PAGEANT OPENS HORSE SHOW IN SPRING EXHIBIT Costume Cavalcade Shows Picturesque Features in New York’s History. shall use their efforts to obtain the re; lease of eight strikers who wero jailed for rioting, Y Michael J. Reagan of the State Board of Arbitration assisted in the settle- ‘Two companies of the guards- to-day, one to- and ment. Le mnen will leave Hastings t morrow and the fourth, t pany. Saturday. NOT A GASOLINE SCENT. last, com: Alkali in Soap Bad For the Hair Soap should be used very carefully if | ou want to keep your hair looking its beat. Most soaps and peeves sham- poos contain too mucl kali. dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle and ruins it. The best thing for steady use is ist ordinary mulsified cocoanut off (which fe pure and greascless), and is better than the most expefisive soap or any- thing else you can use. ‘One or te teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply moisten the hair with water ond rub it in, It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, Tandruff and excessive oll. The bair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft and the ‘hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to ge x alsified cocoanut of! at PR ao its very cheap, ands few ounces will sup; whetyd member of the family for months.—Advt. Automobiles Outside, but Only Scent of Tanbark Is Found in Durland’s. There was an odor of garoline in front of Durland’s Riding Academy, on Sixty-first Street west of tho Park, last night, for the street was Nned with automobiles awaiting tho crowds inside at the twenty-first an- nual Spring Horse Show, but once inside the academy the smell of the “gas” was replaced by the mingled scents of the tanbark, the harness and the glossy coats of the four- footed competitors. ‘The opportunity to sniff this fa- millar aroma and to watch the thor- oughbreds put through thelr paces attracted a crowd which comfortably filled balcony and boxes and left a considerable fringe of standeos on the outskirts. In addition to the fact that ite twenty years’ existence has made the Spring Horse Show a clas- OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & 34th Street—New York Wilt Place on Sale Friday Corduroy Sport Coats For Women and Misses (On Sale Main Floor Rear) New Belted Model Sport Coat of Broad Wale Velvet Cordu- roy (as illustrated) with convertible roll coflar and two slashed sport pockets, lined throughout; colors, Rose, Copen, Cherry, Gold and Green. Exceptional Value 4.95 Fibre Silk Sweaters Sash model Coat of Fibre Silk (with mer- oerized back) in Copenhagen, Gold, Purple id Watermelon Pink, also two tone ef- of Blackand White or Black and Gold Unusual Value 5.00 Featuring Tailored Suits : 34th Street—New York lovers, the audience Iast night was vivante, a feature introduced sense ‘This costume cavaleade took place about 9 o'e! after five claswes had been Judged and Miss Marion London had rendered two soprano solos, It was arranged by Willlam| Durland and H. 1, Fitzpatrick and represented the riding attire and rid- Jing customs of eight different pertods | in the history of this and other coun- | tries, | Joseph Benalfo and Miss Freda J, Krauss led off as Gov, and Mrs. | Stuyvesant in the costumes of the period when New York was “Nieuw | Amsterdam.” ‘They were followed by | Charles W. Dickel and Miss Clara |Rennett, costumed as the Barl and| Lady Rellamont, taking a horseback | outing past the Bowling Green when} |New York was an English colony. The period when New York was the capital of the newly formed Ro- | public was represented by @ group | portraying Georee and Martha Wash | ington, her grandchildren and Wash- | ington’s colored najor dome, bound for St. Paul's Chapel of a Sunday morning, The ciaracters were por- trayed, respectively, by Jack Mo- Keon, Misy Lilian Krauss, Master J 8, Meyer, Miss B. M. Meyer and Clee Irving, Mrs. H. 6, Tanyane, mounted primly behind her husband, deploted tho English pillion style of 1820, when one horse carried two, The same per- jod in Spain was illustrated by Mra, Josephine Reynolds and Reginald Dougias, riding pillane style, with the lady seated in front. In scarlet coats and silk “toppers,” Miss Hliga- beth Trabue and W. E. Baker were a striking pair of mid-Victorian fox hunters, They were followed by H. W. Kose, Mrs. Rose, Miss M, Preece and Fred Wettach jr, as a family «roup, riding in the newly opened Central Park, just after the Civil War, That brought the pageant down to the Present time, and the year 1916 was | represented by a smart group, romp- ing through the park in the most modern of riding cos men in the audience plaining bitterly beca of two blond equestr: group were hidden with the oth under the programme caption, “Pa- trons of the academy.” Thirteen classes were judged last Might, ranging from the harness horses to the jumpers. Credit is due to Stanley P. Jadwin, Joseph ¥. Meyer and Robert E. Tod, last night's Ring Committee, for the rapid dete: mination of the winners and the clo! adherence to the time schedule which marked the show. The exhibition will continue to-night and to-morrow night, with many interesting classes to be fudged on both occasions. OBITUARY NOTES. Howard Gardiner Cushing, portrait painter and National Academician, {s dead of heart disease at his home, No. 121 East Seventieth Btreet, aged forty-seven, Miss Sarah Furst, one of the first members of the Brooklyn Institute of pied and Sciences, is dead, aged fifty- x. Mrs. Anna A. Smith, long a trustee of the Chapin Hous I died there Infirm at cd Tuesday, aged elghty-three, Brand, prominent real estate man of Queens, is dead at Hollis, aged sixty-six John Lilly, lawyer, is dead at hin! home in bertville, N. J. aged) aixty-five, George Herbert Stockbridge, aged @ixty-four, electrical engineer and an authority on patent laws, died yester- dav at New York Medical Collexe Hospital following an operation, John M. Rogers, veteran Long Ist- end hotel man, te dead at his Bay- shore home, aged eighty-nine, Albert H. Wheat, general manager of the Sheffield Farms Slawson- Decker Company, died yesterday of heart disease, aged fifty-oight. Capt. Samuel A. Wakefiled, Civil War blockade runner, is dead at Mal- don, Mans., aged eighty-six. Algernon B. Corbin, photographer of Yale athletes, dropped dead yesterday at New Haven, Conn. Mra. Angie David Reid, aged seventy, widow of Judge John R. Reid, is dead at Babylon, L. 1. George Washington Adams of the OPPENHEIM, GLLINS & G Important Suit Sale Friday Linooln Trust Company ts dead at his home, No. 161 Forbell Avenue, Brook- |Ivn, aged sixty. three, slo event among New York horse’ THEY’LL RAISE MONEY attracted by the mounted tableaux this | for the first time. | RETURN TO AMERICA ON MISSION OF MERY FORTHE WAR HORSE American Wife of Italian Of- ficer to Raise Funds for the Blue Qross, FOR THE BLUE CROSS, WAR HORSE’S FRIEND. The horses that have gone to Italy from the United States undoubtedly have contributed much to the success of the Italian arms along the nor- thern border, where the Austrians are being driven back, atep by step, to their mountain fastnesses, and one American woman who has seen their work ie sufficiently grateful to them to return to America and try to raise funds for the alleviation of the Paine they quffer in transportation and on the battlefield, She ie Mre. Virginia Bogue Baron, the daughter of an American engi- neer and the wife of ItalMan Lieut. Carlos Baron who has been for the past seven months fighting at tho from. A young son was left in this country with the father of Mra. Bar- on, who i# Virgil B. Bogue of New Rochelle, and the child's parents have arrived here on the steamship Dante Alighreire for @ brief visit while the father ie recovering from wounds he had received in the war. “The Blue Cross, which is the name of the organization which considers the wellbeing of army horses, main- tains @ corps of veterinarians and ambulances to look after the animals that are wounded and may be saved," sald Mrs, Baron. “I hope to interest some of my friends in the work of the society while I am here.” The lot of the horses while cross- ing the ocean in the great transports is necessarily a hard one, The mor- tality on some ships is very high. The space allotted to them is not sufficient for them to le down and B. Altman & Co. An Exceptional Sale of Misses’ Tailor-made Suits for to-morrow and Saturday, will present several desirable styles attractively priced at $29.00 and will include a number of Suits taken from the regular stock and marked at appreciably reduced prices. (Misses’ Department, Second Floor) B. Altman & Co. Important Reductions (to take effect to-morrow) have been made in the prices of 2 number of Men’s Soft Felt Hats These Hats will be marked $2.50 & $3.50 which, considering the qualities, are excep- tionally low prices. Boys’ Smart Suits for Spring and Early Summer are shown in most attractive assortments which include practically every new style that is in good taste for the growing boy. Decidedly worth looking at are the following (in the regular stock at the prices quoted): most. In one survived in interested.” |_ Mrs, Baron | woman, whi Thamara Taken from the Regular Stock About 350 Women’s and Misses’ Suits Superior Tailored and Lined. Of Men’s Wear Serge, Gabardine, Stripes Semi-Norfolk Suits of blue serge, with extra pair of kmickerbockers, at $10.00 to 13.50 School Suits of durable woolen mixtures, with extra pair of knickerbockers, at. . . . ° . $8.50 to 12.50 st eescrs proeererce those nearest the engine |sixty were stored. ‘This is a matter in which the Blue Cross is much 0 was well known {n | American society before her mar- riage to the Italian officer. a IN THE SOUP. that he had carried Joy, Mme. dog, out to the kitchen under t up tureen cover. room suffer instance only one horse a compartment where RADWAY & CO. INTRODUCE 25¢ ase RRR Sen ee oe ‘sit comers who ack tor Re GIRLS “HELLO” IN SMOKE. $75,000 Fire Next Door. TraMe on Broadway surface car lines ‘was interrupted for an hour last night, and service in the Franklin and Worth telephon inges was menaced by ‘@ two-alarm fire which burned out the third, fourth and fifth floors of the six-story loft building at Nos. 69 to 63 is a tall and handsome t it Franklin St 3 % Hen wi Hotel waiter was much |E“Goldberg, kul goods manufacturers! RADWAY’S READY RELIEF shocked last night to discover occupies the building. ‘CaD AGA The telephone exchanges, in the ad- joining building on Franklin Street, were ed with smoke, but the cares, hun. Swirskaya's pet toy 66° 99 You won't “sit itou —you CAN'T! OT if you are human, not if you are /ive, not if you have any red blood in your veins—not when Columbia Dance Records are playing! Columbia Records for the dance are the spirit of youth in music—they’ll r you up on your toes and dancing, almost in spite of yourself. : ; They have the swing, the dash, the rhythm—the fire, the life, the perfect time of the very best music you ever danced to, the music that sings in your memory yet. PERDITA WALTZ Prince's Orchestra BLUE PARADISE WALTZES Prince's Orchestra HELLO, HAWAII, HOW ARE YOU, Fox Trot Prince’s Band UNDERNEATH THE STARS, Fox Trot Prince's Band HERE COMES TOOTSIE, One Step Prince's Band ARE YOU FROM DIXIE, One Step ‘Prince's Band AS760 12 inch $1.00 AS780 42 inch $1.00 AS786 42 inch $1.00 Start any of these Columbia dance-records laying, and it fairly swings you out on the for with its sparkling brilliance, resistless lilt and joyous, gay invitation, ; At your next informal affair—let the music be Columbia Records. See your dealer to-day. New Columbia Records om sale the 0th of every month, Columbia Records in all Foreign Languages. This advertisement was distated te the Dictaphone, Columbia Grafonola 150; Price $150 COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS and DOUBLE-DISC RECORDS FONKERS (continued 8 Golgbure, tur Go 18 ia ibarbarion Arm fouukere Talk i 8 sou Jd: hob, see. Lead Be, do Westchester vam Bos ie od and Checks, in a Choice Collection of ‘Tailored, Braid Bound and Smartly Trimmed Models in prevailing colors. 22.50 Washable Norfolk Suits, in a diversity of styles and materials n at $3.50 to 6.00 Owns bev rerzep Also Light-weight Coats, im many smart Reduced from 35.00 to 40.00 models, at moderate prices. (Department on the Fourth Floor) y Ningville, #, 2. None Sent on Approval Maunie Portchester Te, No Exchanges or Credits. Fifth Auruw, New York f . Rm mee . t

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