The evening world. Newspaper, September 4, 1916, Page 4

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ethene pe ee ‘Win the Ballot Before Tellin Is Retort of Women of the BUF cCIEN TONMAKE ADLES AN HOUR Can Sed © Black Smoke to ( Warnisorowe Basis le Wrong. Ny Nivola Greeley Smith down went pyres Beihg Competed by the Newey Depart Bome American cruisers carn four weeks ant some of Huropean © have Gre, Out with the Seption of & fee winell dewtrorer® He ‘Searels in opereiion have we Phe bettie eruisers will 4 oti burning be required to produce vensels wil give off no smoke J thelr movements, nine be equipped oo as banks of bieck Eastern member f and to cart their ballots WHO ARE QUMIFIED AS “One would (uink,” observed Mra |!" behind them. thirty-five knot aperd been necessary ships with bet 000 horse. pow nes, whieh in turn it the women wh nd do vote rather than from Suftr in the Hart who 1 om a young wo but I have been throu paigns for the vote in O final campaign we won co-operation and help and belief in us of the mon of Or been voting only a fre atill greatful to our mei when the Cong speakers to Oregun to tell us to vote American DAVY against ali Demvcrats we laughed at ) must make the Te / them. Why, at the Inst election they full fighting eqUID- | campaigned against Goorge B. Cham hinds of £4) beriain, who introduced the first Suf- and who had f= ul i it g th Ia the) the Went rough tbe) Orem the confident they will make with tull equipment aboard, will run 46 knots or miles an hour. Bu- | out thelr ewift i! F E years and we H i t i i : i it : { | peen the friend of hrough their fifteen years’ fight. R'S OWN AUTO USED AS PATROL WAGON D> Police Seize Man as © Plat, They Say, and He Gives Them Ride. Prancie P. Ryan, who owns the be runs for hire and lives at No. One Hundred and Seventy- | Woodrow Wilsun ia opposed to the ‘ederal amendment, Tho Democratic pu Want to free He Is Robbing , Democrat wot together ed Mrs, Thompson f i want to free our siatera in the East, t we don't want to do it by turning Grove policemen to the our backs to our brothers in the West car after they had ar- | on a charge of DUFSIAFY | Fayy us the ballo who fought for us. In other wor we don’t want to bite the nand tha! And furthermore, don't belleve in going after the It never has been it never will be. 0. ballot with a club. won that way and Party organised ot Colorado this summer with the idea king war on the Demecrats will cause of Suf- do more harm tc frage, will retard its triumph more than the combined efforts of all thg most active enemics of Woman Suf- it of Mrs. Cornelia Stern, below hers. Mrs. Stern is out wn, Mrs, Pond telephoned to police. Bluecoats surrounded the | and guarded the exits, Patrolman Petrisso broke open the door, He says he found Ryan The prisoner, Petriszo says, him be had left his car standing “SLAUGHTER THE DEMOCRATS,” 18 UNWELCOME ADVICE. “I agree with every |rhompson has spoken, Teresa M. Graham, Notliication Committee “The conditions In my State are the same as in Oregon, except that we have had the vote for twenty years, and it was given \our having to fight for rd that Mrs, declared Mrs, proxy meniber of pL sia ON THE FIRING LINE. ne for twenty ‘Pultet crossed the Hudson River and wounded a woman @m the opposite shore. ae —_—_ oe to slaughter mocrats and free our How silly that ts women tn thy East so foolish as to by the mere declaration te, unsupported by his personally in favor of a Federal amendm IN, Wept. 4.—The Senate | party, celebrated Labor Day by| the Workmen's Compens: Charles E. Hughes ever voted for Buffrage? Wilson has done every- one of the fundamental principles of Democracy. ver win as & State rights, he conference ALL STAGES OF LIFE he Woman’s Medicine. Good All Ages. Mrs. Hi Smith's Experience. rtisan issue. United States are all going to vote aa surely as the sun will rise to- If they could be enfran- chised by a Federal amendment ob- tained without clubbing we should all or it, But what Intelligent person can believe that an amendment en- franchising women could obtain the vote of two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths of the States? Do the serious women in the East believe it? “T am gure a Federal ame ‘And Tam one of those persona who better to win In twenty 0 lose in one round. lose a State \s merely to lose a battle. To lase a Federal amendment would be to lose a war.” WHY ORGANIZATION ON A SEX BASIS 18 WRONG. ly every election now we pick up a State or two,” inter- rupted the bi a | Clarksburg, W. Va.—"l am writing ‘te tell you the gooi your medicine has 1 hope my letter may be the ntrans 5 a es woman, When I was 16 years old I caught cold and had suppression for two Mrs. Thomp- nee of power in the Electoral College and the East and South will have to vote thelr women. people who oppose Suffrage to-day will be compelled to say then, ‘Let or these other women weak I could scarce- ly drag myself up doctors, then 4 mother got a our women V« will rule us" above all others in this word ts that men and women can go forw hand in hand. the organization of women on @ sx hasis, nullifles one of the best argu- I took it again before my lit:le born and it belpea me a good ive the Compound the cr mn this spring 1 felt very again, but I took the Compound been well all summer, 1 ul enough for your BAROLD M. H, Water Street, Clarksburg, W. Va, forty years it has bee: i strong and weil ments in favor of the vote en don’t want to be set apart, that they want to be human beings and not scuregated intellectually. “What ts the Woman's Party but sex segregation, harem rule? find words to express the stré #8 and those oh campaign ay & Bex Wa or a partisan 8 on that bagis that the Congressional has taken very expensive vilices in our cities, 18 spending mone in billboards and advert! d then getting women to attend its meetings. could go out West for a few weeks you would see bow laughable is the claim nes painy. advice write | Mass.—Advi, | want especial J awr Politicians Aroused Over Attempt of Associates Here to Instract Them in Use of Voting Privilege on Urged to “Slaughter” Democrats Say Organization on a Sex Dre. wore Dr Kather Lovejoy of Purtiand, Tere ( “am ‘wour @ Alene moment et the Waldorf-Astoria 4y knows, 1 Was & Warm afternoon, wen politicians fr ai Union who e to tell them by where | of the Woman's I i }y t even attend thelr h lens vote as they etn seem and very amuning,” inquired Dr whi , should develop extraordinary she add how to register and vote. The su Woman's F needed. Gt the women ig lessons in voting sin the Went coals to Newcasti ded Mra Thomp: mand 1 ar the St. Louls © rdy asks us to Suffragiats. ne al repeatedly what Sufirag my bare ested. women of the We "| WHITE SLAVE DATA READY FOR GRAND JURY Prosecutor Smith Promises Shock- ing Revelations About Narra- gansett Pier, Assistant District Attorney James E. Smith, in charge of the White Blave investigation, returned to his office to-day after exciting evidence hunts in Boston, Providence and Nar- ragansett Pier. “When I am ready with my revela tions concerning Narragansett Pier, said Mr, Smith, “the public will be shocked to learn that men consid- ered eminently respectable have been making thelr money as procurers for the rich.” The Prosecutor went from Provi- dence to Narragansett Pier Saturday morning. A “stool pigeon,” succes fully used in the Boston raid last week, was sent ahead to locate the men willing to talk to Mr, Smith, Mr. Smith said he had struck new police graft trails in the New Eng- land cities involving two men who, he sald, were high in police circles, One of these, the Assistant District Attorney said, made the collections him Mr. Smith said he needed only corroboration before tak- ing the case before the Grand Jury, which meets Wednesday, pl hates dr SUICIDE END OF HIS DREAM. Life Atm of Kast Since leaving school ten years ago Nathan Horowits, twenty-five years old, had worked early and late in his father’s fur store at No. 61 Raat Tenth Street, The oldest of a family in which there were three brothers and @ alster, his one ambition had been to see the name of Horowtts written in letters of gold on the lower east side. work and no pli for him and whi he fell in love wit borhood he worked hi 4 His health failed and t im would have to chts of marriag art to wed im: \y, he threatened suicide. Early efused & to-day he jumped from the roof of his home, No. 317 East Thirteenth Street, and was killed. a ay NEWARK AUTOS KILL TWO. pat LS, ‘Two women were run down and killed in Newark to-day by automobiles, Neither has been identified as yet. Frank Butta of No, 102 Madison Ave- nue, Newark, was driving an automo- bile south along Relleville Avenue, when he struck a woman at Nursery Street, She died almost instantly, The unds, was five foet six inches in height, had Mgbt victim weighed about 220 brown hal: and fair complexion, Frank Keating No, 631 Kearny Avenue, Arlington, driving east on Springfield Avenue, Her hair was dar ——— Seldom Seen, (Prom the Kansas City Journal.) aa" ey what? What's a scintilla, dad? being absent." HIS SIMPLE SCHEME, (From the Richmowtd Timesispateh,) or, Duck has a n of an’ annoying patien' “What ts thatch? “Cure him," Mie Alexander yen who helped oe ob uid Bot be m the Wort it was or by certain thoughts they bad about ‘arty Chat It cam de- women votera Why, the you very consid- - 9 NEW LAWS FORLABOR’S GOOD PASSED IN YEAR Mra Helmont joting 1 really unnecessary for out managers to tell re Women have not got That is where the work ts three women who uccessful political | cislature in our | Graham was @ na- offered a talk about 8 done for Oregon for | Ans: expenses. Nobody ts inter- ¢ Congressional Union would rather send out its speakers to tell the up work , When he struck a woman at Belmont Avenue, She was taken to the City Hiapital and died there at 6 o'clock, The second victim was about forty-five years old, five six inches tal and medium build. “Something invariably alluded to as Ww,,way to get rid se dodo eel » 7 ~~ Congress and Various States Add to Safeguards and Benefits to Workers. | deetded they were on the wrong road, | | Ninety-two labor lawa have been and got out to see if there was room passed by Congress and State Legis- | enough to turn the car around, On latures during the past legislative} one side of the road at this point ta year, according to a survey which has| the golf Jinks, on the other a sparsely been made pubite by the American “The most significant ftems tn this|two men sud) logislation,” says the Secretary, Dr. John B, Andrews, “are two national laws, one prohibiting ‘the shipment tn interstate or foreign commerce of certain products in the preparation of which the labor of children has been employed, and the other provid- ing @ model scale of workmen's com- pensation for personal injuries among Federal employees, of which there are now more than 480,000, lation in various States follow: “Three States, Maryland, Massa- chusetts and South Carolina, con- cerned themselves with the legal In Ma-yland a State board is author- ized to prescribe rules of procedure “During the year seven of the eleven States holding regular legisla- tive sessions passed new or strength- ened old laws affecting child labor. Shorter hours, a higher minimum age, prohibition of night work and exciu- ston from hazardous employments are the main tendencies. South Carolina ralses the minimum work age from twelve to fourteen. “Following the Imitation of work- ing hours on public work to elght a day in the majority of the States, Massachusetts this year provides for her public employees the further liml- tation of the forty-elght hour week. In private employment several States place additional safeguards around the employment of women and children during the Christmas shop- ping season, “Legislation authorizing public em- ployment bureaus in Maryland, the regulation of private agencies @n Vir- ginia, and the croation of a bureau of farm settlement for immigrants in New York is also noteworthy,” >-—-—_ TWO PARK BANDITS AANY HOLDS (Continued from Page One.) count of what happened. She sald the men who shot Dilworth were both short in stature, not more than 5 feet 4 inches tall, But she did not see the face of either, In their brief orders to the man and woman to stand still and not to ery out, they spoke without @ trace ignored their commands and atarted for them the two backed away and fred :.o shots in the air. Three shots ere fired after the lawyer disap- peared from her aight around the corner of tho machine and then she beard him groan and he came stag- gering back into slght again and fell dead within a few inches of the wheel, next to which she was sitting In the tonneau, TO BE THERE. quite pretty, explained very earnestly to the Coroner and police that Dil worth, who was @ close friend of the |eousins with whom she lives and through whom she became his client, Mr. and Mrs, ‘Us How to Cast Ours,’ The Association's summary of the| more important items of labor legis-| regulation of collective bargaining. | for arbitration of industrial disputes. | ESCAPE AFTER KILLING, of foreign accent. When Dilworth | EXPLAINS HOW SHE HAPPENED Miss MeNiff, who is petite and ene Corwin, called @t the house at 8 o'clock yesterday 4 Pee, | pseu West to Those of the East , AE ADLER LALLA OLE LL DA AOI ee ™~, , 4 - afternoon and talked to Mr, Corwin inviting him and his wife and Ms MeNiff to go for an automol in the evening and to have 4 at an out of town inn The tnvitat was accepted, he said, but at the last moment Mra. Corwin changed her mind and remained at t The lawyer was not altogether familiar with the Van Cortlandt Park roads, she suid, and by mistake he turned into the Golf Links Koad, sometimes called “Lavers’ Road,” which is wall In a short time, she said, Dilworth | wooded hillock. While Dilworth was fon for Labor Legislation.|on the side of the road, she said, the ly appeared | George Weise, a florist of No, 239 East One Hundred and Sixty-second Street, drove through the golf Unke road five minutes after the shooting. | ‘They saw Dilworth’s machine pulled up beside the road, unoccupted, but knew nothing of the tragedy unul they came to the signal tower, where Miss McNiff was imploring the towerman to aid her, Weise took her back to Dilworth’s body, Despite Miss McNiff's impression | that the whole affair passed in a} flash, the condition of the road and the grass at the side indicated that Dilworth engaged in a band to band struggle with the bandits, Ol\LWORTH’S WIFE AND SON NOW IN THE WEST, Mr. Dilworth, whose otfice is at No. 16 Broad street, formerly ved at the Kovert fulton Apartments, Ninety-seventh Street and itiveraide Drive. There, in 1913, bis wife was) sobbed of $3,000 in jewelry, for about three years ne bad lived with his wife and young son at No. | 493 North Fullerton Av faso- ionable section of Montclair. Several | we o Mrs. Dilworth and her sou, William, three years old, went to Kansas City, Mo., to visit his mother, A despatch to-day from Kansas City quoted Mrs, Dilworth as saying! she never heard of Miss MeNiff. | Dilworth is the seventh mber of his family to be murdered in) recent years, His father, William P,} Dilworth, was killed in his hardwa: store in Oklahoma City two years ago by burglars, Four uncles and @ nephew are the other members of his family who have been murdered, ‘A Miss Mary McNIff, @ stenograph- er, was in the apartment of Mrs. S. Dayan, on the fourth floor 10 West One Hundred and First Street, when John D, McDon- ald, a young builder and contractor, jumped or fell to bis death on the sidewalk Aug. 10, 1919, Dilworth’s companion was ques- tioned by Coroner Flynn to learn if she was the same young woman. She denied emphatically she was, saying she remembered reading sn account of McDonald's death in the news- papers and had remarked to friends ‘at the time upon the peculiar coin- cidence that her name was the same as that of the woman involved, ian KEPT HER FROM CHURCH, Husband who put on wife's dress and kept her from going to church at Lewiston, Pa, was sent to jail for thirty days. “Now I know” said Mr. Roberts,"whyyou did not Duy candy with your ten cents—mother promised tomake D&C doughnuts —didn't she?” *Yes* sald little Bobby “Mother says they're so light Tcan have ail L want” Dec] Is the Flour for me « Yort home @ thew tg Neo Pt volaed is the millions, vi Das Me bad 8 coulioceted iy Mur Bond > on wiored by Cartan bane - os 00 Mr Madero newer uttered the pame . Me nice f the sseeasination of |" Gp picral The City Cownctl of a Mtge } town which formahes etectete wt te homme’ waa tiny machines has appointed Mow Physicians Recommend Castoria , ASTORIA has met with contical societies and medical authorities, It is used results most gratifying, The extended uso of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three facts: Firet—Tho Seeond—That it not only allays stomach ——| lates the food: 7se—It is an agrepable and ft substitute for Castor Oil It is absolutely safe, It does not contain um, Morphine, or other narcotlo ‘ and does not stupefy., It is unlike ing By over »| Cordial, etc, This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how- ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. Tho day tind and remained at home with ber for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To only one to accept tho invitation, | OW knowledge, Castorla is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Zall’s Journal of Lealth, ed and as dark as a) months old ce it ts shown here of serge with a taffeta quimpe of of Unen or cotton poplin or pique or some such material with @ gulmpe o: lawn oF batiste or cotton volle or cotton arepe, or you could make! A Coupon Good for a Box of the 4 crepe de cnine. It model, and yet it 1 ‘The suspender effect makes a pretty feature aid the lines are very charming. ° . Such materta: 8 pique or rep or poplin D k C and the Ike are pretty with scalloped rin In ups edaes. Pink or blue would be c! with the edges scalloped with white or { Li} T's rome nee! SUNDAY l i ~ SSS SS 3 yards of material 27 inches wide, 1% yards 36 or 1% yards 44, with 1% yards Portrait of a Model 36 inches wide or 1% yards 44 for the » rhea blouse. From a Paintigg by Lester Ralph a WITH SEPARATE GUIMPE @ to 12 years. for giris from 6 to 12 years of age, Models of the New York Studios Call at THK EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second Street (op- posite Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth Avenue New York, or sent by mail on receipt of Afteen cents coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT—Write your addreaa plainly and always specify size wanted. cen nieasimlaeaettaantiaentas tienes TENANT ALLS ATE JAMES £. GRAYBILL DEAB, hee Pome Cre fore, Bee nent commas @ the Cae “ma offal wash pronounced favor on the ga mye — i y physicians | indisputable evidence that it is harmless: , pains and quicts the nerves, but assimi- | Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ills., says: “I have prescribed your Castoria often for {nfants during my practice, and find it very satisfactory.” Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “Your Castoria stands first in {ts class, In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I have used your Castoria and found {t an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for many years. The formula is excellent.” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: “I prescribe your Castoria extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it for children’s troubles, I am aware that the ‘@ imitations in the field, but I always eee that my patients get Fletcher's.” Dr, Wm. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb, says: “As the father of thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family experience I have in my yeara of practice found Cam toria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.” Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “The name that your Cas toria bas made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the Presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorse | ment of the medical profession, but J, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy.” Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Physicians generally do not Dreacribe proprietary preparations, but in the case of Castoria my experk | ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an ex ception. I preacribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found it to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children’s complaints. Any physi elan who has raised a family, as I have, will join mo in beartiest recom mendation of Castoria.” CENUINE CASTORIA ALways / the Signature of a he ¢ 6§ In Use For Over 30 Years } The Kind You Have Always Bought | NEXT that mothers always like it, and here is on that you can make as WORLD of taffeta and the guimpe of very simple little an attractive o Five Lily ming white makes a very dainty frock with the edges scalloped with color, or you! First Instalment of a New and could braid any one of those materials | Thrilling Detective Story by Frank with soutache, using some simple little| Froest, Formerly Executive Crim- design that forms just a border on the H ' quapenders, the upper ¢ tinal Investigation Dept. Chief of bodice and on the belt. Braid and em. | Scotland Yard— brofdery of all sorts are greatly in vogue, and these scallops and simple braided devigr.s seem especially sulted to children's wear, There are some mate- rials also that would be still more ef- fective with woreted thr treated in that way or wool poplin, and of the over- _ - The Maelstrom Uttle buttonholed ed Serge would be p a | Ten Beauty Portraits in Hy bright colora can be used, for this Gravure ‘a seasov of Russian effects, On blue Beautiful Women Appearl : I, a rich red on the ppearing on cares, for euample, © Heh red 0 tel 146 New York Stage This Fall.” rich green. For the eight year will be needed The pattern No. 9194 ts cut in sizes| Of One of the Most Popular Artists’ (in Colors), nd Thirty-second Edition Limited. Order from newe. al advance if you would be sure of getting @ copy.

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