The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1916, Page 3

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wag Vite ik aS prog NOY 9 : TEST FOR WHITMAN: MUST SIGN OR VETO $60,000 00 BILLS Faces Dilemma Next Week and Political Pressure Makes It a Hard Job. ALL UP-STATE “PORK.” Legislative Extravagance Made | pass upon not later than May 20, This a Treasury-Wreck- | ing Session, | (Special to The Evening World) | ALBANY, May 6.—Gov. Whitman] during tho coming week faces the most dificult problem that haa yet confronted him. He must approve or veto the enormous appropriations made by tho last Legislature. Instead of a budget of $52,000,000, as was proclaimed by legislative leaders, {t now develops that tho appropria- tions total $60,769,023, was @ $60,000,000 session, the most extrava- gant save one in history of tho State. To his friends the Governor at first asserted that he intended cutting the appropriations when they came before him for signature, But he finds him- self under great pressure from every beneficiary of public funds, and he hesitates. Tho one big budget bill, which w: supposed to carry all the State ap- propriations, did amount to the $5 000,000 proclaimed by the legislators, But they slipped through extra pieces of “pork,” some large, many emall, adding $8,000,000 to the vast sum of State expenditures. | Much of this excess ts contained in three bills for improvement and maintenance of up-State highways, not one penny of which 1s applied| to the five counties embraced in Greater New York, In all, the rural roads get $6,000,000, of which 70 per cent, will be contributed by the tax- payers of New York City: An examination of records shows that in the last two days before the Legislature adjourned there were slipped through twenty-eight little special bills, providing for expenditure of $1,141,387 of State money, and that in the previous week eight other spe- cial bills passed carrying appropria- tions of $2,708,157. Nearly all of these were for local improvements in up- State counties, such as roads, bridges, waterways, supplies and investiga- tons. |M’ADOO WILL TESTIFY Instead of all State appropriations) being included in one comprehensiv budget bill, as was the announced} policy of the Legislature when it turned down the plan of a budget made. by the Governor in favor of one of its own making, there were a total of forty-five special bills carr, ———— % =| 'H | 'NGTH Father John's Med- icine con- tains the ex- act kind of tissue build- ing food needed by rundown, It makes flesh. No Alcohol or Dangerous Drugs. “Self preservation ing appropriations of money passed amounting to $8,000,000 extra. The Governor has approved nine of these bills carrying $4,000,000, but these were passed early in the session. He has before him now the great bulk of the appropriations, which he must For every dollar the Governor vetoes he makes a political enemy and when it cone to getting away with the “pork,” up-State politicians, re- gardiess of party and faction, use all their power and influence to save their pet appropriations, The Gov- ernor may elther veto bills entirely or he may cut out particu He cannot scale down any by the Legislature. He has either to approve or cut out entirely. a HARBOR STILL TIED UP BY STRIKE OF ENGINEERS Mediators Unable to Get Owners to Agree to Give Men a Day Off. There is but slight prospect that the mediators sent by the Department of Labor to arbitrate the strike of the marine engineers will be able to complish their object and put an end to the tie-up of traffic in New York Harbor, The strikers, 400 in number, held a meeting last night and voted unanimously to stand firm in their demands for increased wages and one day off a week. The only concession the boat own-| ers have Indicated a willingness to! Grant is that of giving the engineers two days off each month. There will bo another meeting on Monday be- tween the engineers, their employrs and the Federal mediators, but the men are pessimistic as to the outcome of the conference, An effort is belng made to handle certain traffic in the harbor by means of small power yachts and motor boats, but the congestion of freight at all terminals becomes worse hourly. The engineers announced that with the final accession of International Mercantile Marine he demands of the engineers for a “bonuses, all the trans- lines have now granted the the | to r ris atlantic increase demanded. This has no bearing on the local tle-up, but tt) means an advance of from 25 to 50 per cent, In the wages of the men travelling {nto the war zones. AT THOMPSON INQUIRY’ Secretary Will Tell of His Re- jected Offer to Build Subways. The Thompson Investigating Com- mitten met to-day and adjourned un- til next Tuesday, when they expect t» summon Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo, the man who built the first tubes under the Hud- | son, and get him to tell about the offer he mado to build ail the new subways Naw York City needs, “Mr. McA loo's offer was the best the city received,” said Senator | Thompsom “and he couldn't even get @ hearin If we can persuade him to appear before tliis committee thy people of New York City will hear | some very esting facts,” Senator ompson and other mem- bers of the sel ar lyn Ul ous »mmittee and their ¢ aking a trip through Bro: fternoon to inspect the v that BOR 1 in as part of its contribution king the dual contract with the un zs to take special in hompson be- . n the famous Thirty- eut between Fourth and Brooklyn put $1,000,000, which the city all it solely: f the use of the right of way. property still belongs to the B. R. T. aud no provision has been made for by the of the dual contracts, city at the end Ww. 5) nue, Rocks ion, Was leep x. The ig in the TAKE GOOD CARE OF YOURSELF is the first law of Nature,” and if you will only keep the stomach strong, the liver active and bowels regular you will do much toward the promotion and mainte- nance of better health. Oftentimes, assistance is needed, and it is then you will greatly appreciate the aid of HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS NESTER OA To Insure Domestic Bliss, Every Wife Should Be Guardian of Her Own Conduct, and the Hus- band Who Tries to Tell) Her How to Dress Will Get Into Trouble—Hu- man Male in Captivity Is Not an Amiable Crea- ture. THE EVENING By Nixola Greeley-Smith. In a suit for the custody of a child brought in the Supreme Court in Brooklyn yesterday it was revealed that Louis Van Brink, aged fifty, made promise to live according to the following codo: he must not paint. She must not pencil her eyebrows. She MUST live in Brooklyn. she must not visit Manhattan except to go to see her mother, and then only if accompanied by ber own his wife, aged tweaty-: daughter. b>) 1 admit that all wi in Brooklyn, and Iam sure few men Wil dispute the resulting corollary that ail hus' iid live in New York. Since the Bridge has but two ends—a fixed habit with bridgea—| man with his natural chivalry would | naturally yicld to woman the safer and saner side of it, The Spartans’ | as nearly all of us know, had «| theory that husbands and wives) should not occupy the sume dwelling house, so that the meetings might have all the glamour of romantic try sis, Only yesterday a very eh: and modern Frenchwoman_ te of a still more modern friend she had left in Paris, Madeleine,” Bald h al for making shop wich give During til her after 8. rtment husband ha floor of wT a large lives on ks ‘because i! strated in actual 1 ha \ moral y Mrs, Ha kK » in Cornwall hundreds of mi notwithstanding the fact that ison i dmittedly much tn love wi ch other, This may © a feasible scheme: save for exccptional people, but tt has merits. The human male in captivity is not an amiable a rhaps he is overfed, And most impor tant provis code for hus- bands should be grouch before Husbands, avoid the meat Does not of advice to wn tendeney to pu flesh and husbands to "put of som, No one has ever been ermine — positively her way abou general failiy tendency to mak of the conduct, me expecially the “ Many a Woman we ’ morals doubted t new dress criticised adversely, If a husband can't say something charming abou his wife's appearance he had be nothing at all. Have we not all ally a u sife to in t i ' tha ' ur kid " marked hike medicine glass should live | fingers for d \for balls, It will be seen that every provision of this Inter- esting code violates what should be among many needed maxims for husbands the golden text: sry wife should be the censor of her own con- duct and the guardian of her own respectability. Certainly somethin have to be done about it. I ====0c0——0m0=— Py ————(-) — 1) —] t+ —— («) — (.) —___— (.) — (.) OAN’S KIDNEY PILLS dinners and so many more WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1916. [ASE OAR OREN - | IS Censors Are All Right in Genuine War, | But Hubby Shouldn’t Be One in the Home;| IN SHELTER ISLAND | His Golden Rule: ‘‘Don’t Criticise Wife’’| FOR HUSBANDS —ShOULD AFORE -Dwwea. GaoucH® a moans f _ VERY WOMAN) SnD Te cennoe Se nee combucr * ™S Me SHOULD WOT cerncine mea. CoTHes, of one reigned for a week wifo wept herself into the nd told manners on the front porch. seem to pause on the threshhold home and re spirit as the hom mother who her than his father showed. must have been Eve, never to be more wncivil mate than to a stranger, @ will know at “I can’t stand this “Every Picture Tells a Story’’. sold at ALL Druggists’. ewes family wherein darkness and a pretty sem- © of middle age because her her she was too old ‘ar red satin slippers with a black net dress. All these questions involved in conjugal eriticisin come under the snoral classification of manners. But fo many men and women leave their They ve all their graces of rab stops to remove his shoes. Now, manners began in the . They were invented by the first resolved that her son should have a little more respect for This Probably the whole code for husbands and wives might be packed in the one injunction to your ache much longer”’ TEN DEER CAUGHT HUNT; MANY ESCAPE Two Animals Are Killed Try- ing to Get Away From State Game Protectors. (pela to The Drening World.) SHELTER ISLAND, N. ¥., May 6— Ten dger are tn crates on & ferry float off Clark's pler on tho south end of Shelter Island. Two more, dead, are to be shipped to the State Hos- pital at Amityville, Six more are etill roaming Big Ram Island and will be hunted down before night tn the New York Conservation Commission's cam- paign to eave the lives of the crop- marauding animals on Sholter Island. Chief Cameron, his aides, Division Protectors Kirby, Hayes and Overton and thirty other up-State protectors, are in @ hurry to close up this job and get back to their regular poste. ‘They went out before daylight and landed on the south ond of Great Ram Island, which is connected with the mainland by the narrow strip of aand across which a tmp fence was stretched yesterday afternoon. Hound-like cries sent the eighteen cornered deer dashing for the trap. A bonfire was lighted at both ends. At the centre opening evergreens had been act uv to mask the corral. Only one of the deer went through into the pen. He came back faster than he went fn, He ts one of six which broke back through the line and are being hunted again to-day. Another deer attempted to leap the fence. His head went through the top atrands and ho dropped back so badly injured it was necessary to kill him. The rest took to the water. Two rowboats and a launch went after these to the east of the beach. Three were caught allve, hobbled and brought ashore to the crates, One was killed in his atruggle to get loose. ‘The patrol boat Olive, a launch and fa rowboat accounted for three more. They will all be loosed on the State Reservation near Saranac Lake early next week. Every time the protectora mention a giant gray fox which went into tho trap with the deer they all roar with laughter. “Never aid see a fox run fo fast,” said Protector Kirby. “He just didn’t jtke his surroundings nohow. There waa'nothing in his book of rules for right living that fitted.” The fox hit the wire screen with of ull all-day backache? If you are, of course there’s something wrong, probably kidney weakness—not hard to overcome if treated promptly, but very dangerous if neglected. Bright’s disease, dropsy, gravel or crip- the velocity of a foul tip. He bounded! oft, rolled in a ball, and, somersauit- ing backward, he landed on his feet, running, and tried it again, This time he went through a wide uppe mesh, He avoided the bay-beri seruo, which he knew from his sad experience Was infested with howling, clattering lunatics, Finally he scoot- ed up the beach like a gray streak. Yesterday the game protectors of the State of New York said things about the native Long Islander as a deer driver which cannot be printed in any nowspaper. Time and again, when the right or left wing should have halted while the other beat a tangle of bull briers, reed swamps or pine thickets in the rolling sand hills, the volunteers charged forward, yeil- ing and beating the brush and making maddened fugitives of animals which refused to pay. The otner 8 offered to drive all the r into Smith's Inclosure. took advice of counsel. He I would for the total of if he acknowl said Mr. Smith, firmly, are no deer of mine. are net the progeny of deer of mii ‘ever saw them before, These wi r must have swim here from inland or the Maipe coast or Bel~ jomaliland or somewhere, but on me. I don't ha with them.” phi ELEVATOR KILLS WOMAN. n't p thing to di Mra. Ella Alexander, thirty-five years old, living at No, 503 West Forty-stzth should have merely jogged toward the great trap, Once made fran- tle by fear, the deer charged the broken ling recklessly and went bounding in thirty-foot Jumps back to the north side of Shelter Island and temporary liberty. ‘© ought to drive everything from deer to chipmunks and field mice,” Protector St. Clair of Saranac shouted across The Evening World reporter's post to his Saranac colleague, Will- jam Stearns. This was just at the fifth mile of the cross country strug- gle with bull brier and swamps. Only once had the flash of a white deor’s tail, upraised in flight, been seen. Three minutes later the constant musical imitation of baying hounds far out on the left changed to yells: “Deer coming! Took out on the right!" More nolse on the right. “Hold your line!" they shouted. Ten volunteer “beaters,” supposed to cover 3,000 feet of line, fell silent as they galloped madly to the left “to got a look at the critters.” A moment later through the depleted line to freedom galloped a buck and beautiful brown and whi joe, skim- ming the high underbrush as though it were grans. Chief Camoron believes now there are lesa than 100 deer on Hhelter Island, not counting those inside the ten-foot fences of the C. M. Smith ostate, The big Smith preserve and {ta 300 inclosed deer supply a new angie. For a time, three years or more ago, C. M. Smith paid for the done by deer on the theory they had escaped from his place. The bills grew and grew. Then Smith Terms to Do you need a van for your May should bring new life and energy to human beings, just as it does to plants and animals. Does this May find you dull, tired and des ondent? Do the occa- sional damp, chilly days make you ache all over? Are you lame in the morning, subject to headache and _diz epails, taken often with sudden stabbing pains, or bothered wit pling, deforming rheumatism may result. Get a good kidney remedy. Try Doan’s, the universal kidney pill, used all over civilization, recommended everywhere, and especially in Greater New York. New York People Tell What To Do Vanalet Ave. (Long Ie. City) Mrs, John Michael, 1101 Vanalst Ave., 8 “T was always ailing with my back and kidneys and had fearful headact es and dizzy spells. Sometimes, I almost fell down upon the street. Little, black specks appeared before my eyes and everything seemed blurred. ki My back ached constantly and J I of irregular, troubling me during the night. all out of sorts. Doan's Kidney Pills, my back has and languid, especially in the morn- My kidneys acted very larly, too, After I had taken a few doses of Doan's Kidney Pills I noticed wonderful relief and be- fore long, they put me in splendid health again. c Price 50¢ a Box. Foster-Mil tain, U say's: was brought on from exposure and the drinking of polluted during the Cuban campaign in ‘98, of the kidney secretions are regular and my health is very good.” W. 15let STREET E. John G. Donovan, retired cap- S. A., 521 W. lélst St., “T was a sufferer from my idneys for years. The complaint | used water | my b had a weak back, The passages the kidney secretions were T often felt run down and Since using aused me no pain, the passages burn Co., Butfalo, N.Y. SE CHE CRS CUS ORM CECE OE Ea ORC ee ; Unusual Sale of Slightly Used Pianos Grands and Uprights Steinway, and other standa All in perfect condition, 100°” Pp. fully warranted from fe have just what you require. PIANOS TO RENT CHAS. H. DITSON & CO., 8, 10, 12 East 34th St. Mrs. Joseph Simon, 229 E. Fifty- third St., says: weak from over-exertion and colds make the complaint worse. Often me awake at night. move in bed, as I was that sore and lame across my back. 1 was hardly able to bend at all and felt as tired and worn out es if T hadn't rested, specks and flashes of fire ceme before my Doan’s Kid and it has lasted over a year.” Street, was killed instantly at 7 o'clock this morning, when struck on the head * by the edge of an elevator car root An she was about to enter the car om the eighth floor in the National Cloak and Suit Company's building, Twemtye fourth Street and Keventh Aven he car dropped just after Do ator, David Drucky, of No. 171 West Fifteenth Street, had opened the door to let the woman in. The blow on the woman's head sent her reeling back om the floor, and the car dropped to the bottom of the shaft without injury te ree) Drucky. 3 Round Trip BALTIMORE ‘The Monemersel Cup WASHINGTON The Contet of the Nesma SUNDAYS May 14 and June 11 PEARLS aie riggs, a suit convenience of purchasers Summer Cottage or Bungalow? FIFTY-THIRD STREET “My back was to settle on my kidneys and pack ached so steadily, it kept 1 couldn't Mornings When bending, After taking ey Pills, 1 was cured eyes. o=200=0 1001050100 0100105 ] '

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