The evening world. Newspaper, September 12, 1916, Page 3

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HARED AT RATE OF 300 IN 12 —— Recruiting Offices of Inter borough Besieged and Guards are Called + fast as they qualified men were being put to work on the eviwey and doy by | of the Inverts tiandt peut eutra to the building te company ban ite epecur From noon yestertay, when the bu Peau wae opened, & midnight last breskers had been Hivisions At veo day 600 men were in line waiting to ein applications ‘The line was growing at the rate of more than 160 an he Hatra @uarde in plain clothes were summoned by the fnterborough A force of twelve clerks wae on duty when the bureau opened, but before 10 o'clock the force was dou. bed. The tine at t) o had wr 80 long that it w {about pil- fare in the bowen nd reached into Cortlandt Btreet. A crowd of younger applicants « terous during | 4 man who said of the row asa fe given w place ahead of them in the Ine. No jormer ¢ yoes of the road Were given positions, although those who deciared they had resigned at least SIX month» before the were permitted (o men appl Later” these applications: Stated ai the bureau, were an Oo Ws the nt ment. More tha r y J When the Workmen's Compe Act went into effect two years a If on frat Feading no disqualifications, physical or mental, wore cations, the in elevated employm found in the app! n were sent to the nt headquarters at Bouth Ferry or the subway head quarters at Ninety-sixth reet. less than twenty minutes after there | arrival at those points they were on the payrol! and “br: ing in. A large percen of the men, it w stated, would V be used on th subway or raine but Were set at “breaking in” on the rapid transit neg just to learn the working of the controller and air brakes. After these lessons inost of the green men were sent to the various barns of the New York Railways Company — ‘Jump from Bed in Morning and Drink Hot Water , | Telle why everyone should drink hot water each morning s | before breakfast, } Why is man and woman, half the time, feeling nervous, despondent, worried; some days headachy, dull and unatrung: tated by illness * Mf we all would practise inside-bath- inf what a gratitying change would take place. Insiead of thousands of half-sick, anaemic-looking souls with pasty, muddy complexions we should see crowds of happy, healthy, ro cheeked people everywhere, The rea son is that the human system does not! rid itself each day of all the waste which it accumulates under our pres- ent mode of living. For every ounce | of food and drink taken into the system nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out, else it ferments and forms ptomaine-like poisons which | are absorbed into the blood, ssary as it is to clean wace each di i before the fire will burn bright a di morning clear hot, so we must each the inside organs accumulation of indigestible waste and body toxins. Men and women, whether sick or well, are adv sed to drink before breakfast, a gl water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, as a harm. | means of washing out of the stomach, liver, kidueys and bowels the indigestible material, wasgy sour bile and tox thus cleansiff, sweeten: ing and purifying the entire alimen- tary canal before putting more food into the stomach, Millions of people who had their turn at constipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, nervous days and sleepless nights have become real cranks about the morning inside-path, A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will not cost much at the hee store, but sufficient to demonstrate to any one ite chansing, sweetening and freshen- Krumbles has a flavor never known before In the thou- sands of years that people have been eating whole dianka| some days really incapaci- | TMS BVENING WORLD, TUBSDAY, serTsusEs ‘L'TRANS TARGETS. 34PERCENT. GAIN Marriage by Contract, Sane and Simple, Far From ‘‘Shoot-tiie-Chutes Matrimony ’’ Of BULLETS, or Lack of Ceremony, Has a Champion in Bride Who Has Just Passed Through It She's in Busin and Her Maiden Much Like Making an Allidavit, but Differs From Ordinary Con- tract Because It's Hard- er to Break, Which It Shouldn't Be, Declares Miss Cahn, Who Is Really Mrs. Levy. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Miss Pauline Cahn has just married by con She also has just taken the job of being house manager for the veton Square Players. Bhe bas de All uh sane and simple. dreds of girls. say could do it!” pny. them a bit for the enlightenm No, 131 Weat Forty-first Street. ,| Most becoming saffron blouse. MARRIAGE NOBODY'S BUSINESS EXCEPT THE PRINCIPALS. congratulations for being so sen- sible,” I said, “Now Just why did you do it?" “Why do you ask,” she countered with a smile, “since you admit that I was sensible? “| think,” she added reflec- tively, “that if two persone de- cide to marry ite their own busi- nese and—if there are to be chil- dren—the business of the 1 don't see that the matter con cerns any ono el; | was mar- ried by contract, because it's the simploat form of the ceremony, because it involves the fowest | people and the least fuss, be- ca ‘6 the most unsentimen- tal sort of wedding.” | “Just what did you have to do? I | asked, | “The process !s as simple as mak- jing an affidavit,” she replied, “and | very similar. The formula of the contract reads like this: ‘We, the undersigned, agree by the terms of t cuted at Chambers t, before Court Justice Lehman, to enter into the morriage relations and take each ether for husband and wife” An ordinary affidavit may be signed be- | fore a Notary Public, but a marriage contract must be taken to a Justice of the Supremo Court. We signed {it and it was witnessed by my par- lente, Mr, and Mrs, Herman Cahn, and by Mrs. Sadie R. H. Levy, That's all, » contract, a it true,” I questioned, “that | there 1s a movement on foot among ; Barnard girls for marriage by con- tract?” Not long ago Miss Freda Kirchwey, a Barnard graduate and daughter of Dr. George W. Kirchwey, formerly Dean of the Columbia Law School, was married by civil contract to Evans Clark, an instructor at Prince. ton University, It has been stated that three other Barnard alumnae chose the same form of ceremony. But since the average college grad- uate is the most conservative and conventional of young women, I was not surprised to hear Miss Cahn deny the rumor of a Barnard crusade for the civil contract “Freda Kirchwey 1s the only one of us married that way besides myself,” she said. “I barely knew Freda, and when I heard that she had omitted the usual ceremony I was sorry that she had beaten me to tt. For I have planned for a long time to be married in the simplest possible way. “L thought it was enough that we Alkali Makes Soap Bad for Washing Hair poaps and pp h alka brittle. | The best thing t: it plain mul- |sified cocoanut oil, for this is pure and entirely greaseless, It's very cheap, and ‘beats the most expensive soaps or any- thing else all to uu can get this at sey drug store, ond a few ounces j will last the whole famil month: nply moisten the ra with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all th tis required, It makes an abundance , creamy lather, cleanses th nd rinses out easily, The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh lonking, bright, easy to handle, akes out every mnie of dust, dirt “i ,dandrulf,—Advt, - ae. her checks and correspondence achievements are, of course, perfectly But because there are more barnaclos of artificial prejudice clinging to marriage than to any other of our institutions ther sons who, reading about M “How exceedingly peculiar! Belng myself convinced of the normality and good sense of Miss Cahn’s marital arrange: nt of the conventionally minded and blinded I found her at her desk tn the offices of the Washington Square Players, She is a small, son, with tawny skin and eyes, set in a frame of dark hair, and she wore ‘| f act Arthur M Levy. Wash- mined to use her maiden name on They might be duplicated by hun- no oar are ever so many per-| s Cahn and Mr, Levy, will I don't see how (hey hote practising boys.” to discuss ‘I register There's no feminian use in nts, | persuaded her think | that most would hall with relief your marriage by contract,” I T rose to xo. “Oh, but sho declar PLANS TO BAR OUT GREEN wien ttf Site) MOTORMEN IN STRIKE! t when we looked up the law w pund that someth che told her so would most bride: pleasantly rounded per-| ing more was nec- Alderman Offers Ordin: Ordinance Calling | for Fifteen Days’ Experience “You had to take out a marriage MA NEA Hcense, didn't you?" I asked, “What! Alderman Edward V. Gilmore of the is there about that process which TWéNty-socond District, introduced a makes one feel as if one were being Proposed ordinance in the Board of hung?" Aldermen to-day which, if adopted, “1 cannot say that 1 felt that ) Wil! Prove an effective weapon for the striking car men. ‘he suggested way,” replied Miss Cahn. “My chief impression was that mar: ™/esure provides (hat: Plans. Wa Tah -pabenttallon cries © person shall act ax motorman MARRIAGE TOO EASY, DIVORCE! NOT EASY ENOUGH. tarian thing. Everybody was in | crated either etre hive i the license bureau. And there face or on elevated tracks, unless such I think the State maker things persons shuli have first received at joa Two persons can go | east fiftecn days’ instruction upon into the bureau, take cut a license |#nother railroad line of elther kind operated within the city mits, such instructon to be under the supervision of and certified to by a competent instructor whose certificate shall de- clare the fitness of an applicant for such employment prior to the employ- ment of any such person “Any violation of the provisions of this article shall be punishable by a and be married by the clerk, all in fifteen minu' They can marry on a@ dare or a drunk. They ought to be made to wait at least @ week after getting the licen I'm not a believer in shoot-th chutes matrimony.” “It'w an awful question to ask a fitte not to exceed $150, or by imprison- \bride.” 1 said, “but, wince you view MAt not to exceed sixty days, or by | both fine and tmprisoniv t Inarrlage as @ civil contract between Alderman Henry Curran, the mi- two persons, don’t you think that it) nority r, objected to immediate n be dissolved uy other contract? ie “Ah, but that's just the difference between aeriaca’ and other con- ‘hat whatever authority the city has tracts," she replied. “It can't be dis. /OVer the street railway companies is solved an easily. Of courro it should Vested in the Public Service Com- be. 1 think the divorce law in this Mission. The resolution was referred State is a shame and a disgrace, The 0 the Committee on Welfare. Similar {dea of being permitted to get a di action was taken on a@ resolution of- vorce for only one cause, and that less fered by Alderman Edward W. Cur- justifiable than others! Surely it might, !€Y providing for an investigation of be worse to live with a drunkard than|the street car «i nike, with a man who had been sail ag EGGS “MODEST WN MEAL of the proposed ordi «round that the Board ermen has no jurisdiction and once.” 1 felt that even in an interview de- signed to enlighten the conventional Miss Cahn and I ought not to voice fully our views on the divorce ques. So 1 slipped back to the safer ind of marriage. u know,” L said, “that there are persons who will say that the form of marriage you chose kills romance, Of course you don't think 0?” “If I did, would I have been mar- ried by contract?" demanded Miss Cahn, with a tell-tale flash of her beautiful eyes. EREMONY'S ARTIFICIALITY KILLS ROMANCE, “| believe that what kills ro. Thinks the Desire for Dainties, Not | Hunger, Caused Complaint of Strikebreakers. The lack of delicate desserts and pastries Is what prompted some of the subway strfkebreakers to com- sion they were receiving insufficient mance—only, of cour: nothing | food, Interborough President Shonts Teally kill it if it said to-day. He told of seeing a marriage motorman eat a modest meal, which ity of i consisted of thirteen ems, ham to mateh, large quantities of vegetables, two cups of coffee, and desert, | “He topped off the dinner,” said Mr. Shonts, “with four plates of ice cream, when he suddenly discovered that the flavor did not sult him, and said: ‘I don't care much about ice cream; haven't you got some other kind of dessert?’ visits of friends and relativ clothes, the good adv whole complicated mess, there are the tears, That's one thing that | escaped—the deluge it the bride is left in a hysterical, rotic frame of mind, which is anything but nor- mal, and which is decidedly not the proper basis for any new un- dertaking.” “And how did your husband and | your family feel about your sort of marriage?” L asked “My husband agreed with me,” replied, (This is Mr, Levy's comment MUSTARD IN HIS HAT? A San Francisco woman com: plains that her husband is 80 mean | he hides the butter in his rubber she | poots and the cheese in his collar bor, on the affair: "We thought we ought to marry ourselves Instead of having some one else marry us") “And my people are very much pleased—now, They were afraid, beforehand, that things would be too automatic, too! ——__ BIG RAILROAD PROFITS, for July #03,415,21 cut and dried. My mother said she | - felt as if she were going to be sub- ¢ 975,508 t Ve poenaed. But now they agree that it, WASHINGTON, Sept. 12.—Net rey- Wag all very simple and dignified. enues from railway operations of $93,- “Yea, of couse, going to keep 415,264 for July, aa against $7 this job. I've Just started it, in fact . . for July, 1915, for 150 railroads w It seems to me that ev active 1 t woman must want to do mething, announced to-day by the Intersta even if she is married, 1 shall be Commerce Commission Miss Cahn, essionally, and He Bros revenue fo porting. was, 8 . * than $40,000,000 o an't throw out my cheat ,roua® ayoeg and | and say Lavy. if any one calls me Mrs, hhout $23.00 ‘and 1 aball sign (hat name oo ees 00 more than a year ELOPENENTS bell | bridegroomn OF ONE MAN, SAYS SHONTS: plajn to the Public Service Commis- | iA MvucH LESS PXPENGAVE T FETHERSTON CLASHES AT GARBAGE HEARING Takes Exception to Questions Bearing on Performance of His Official Duties. Street Cleaning Commissioner John T. Fetherston grew angry at the questions of District Attorney Fact to-day In the investigation of the proposed Staten Island garbage jreduction plant before Deputy State | Health Commiss.« Dr, Lindsay Williams. | you mean to accuse me of ection of duty?" Mr. Fethers ton asked. “If #0, there ts a thine co for such accusation.” "replied Mr, Fach, who re resents the people of Staten Island in their effort to prevent the buili- ing of the plant on Lake's Island, “That ts simply the construction put on my questions by your own | mind If t * is any occasion, I'l) mefer charges," Mr. Fach retorted The Commissioner admitte that te had read Mayor Mitch davit tha Iiny Rockaw complained do by shores being dropped off New | garbage scows. Ho had no ac- in the matter because he had iot received offietal notice of com- plaints, Fetherston added he saw no reason for having the scows | covered. The Commissioner testified that he drew the contract under which it ‘s Proposed to put the garbage plant on | Staten [sland—except that part which forbids putting it on Manhattaa Island or on Jamaica Bay. That was drawn by President McAneny of the Board of Aldermen and Borough Presidents Connolly of Queens and Van Name of Richmond. STRIKE OF PLASTERERS | TO BE SETTLED TO-DAY |Seven Hundred Men in Employ of | Independents Win Fight | for New Scale, tion | | Seven hundred plasterera on strike since Sept. 1 will return to work to- morrow and “at their own terms,” officials of Local Union No, 60 de- lclared to-day the Labor Lyce | No. 243 East Kighty-fourth Street, he boss plasterers aceept the new scale adopted by the Ynion to become | loperative on The final step in the arrangement will be made at} noon to-day, when the employers sign the new agreement (MEXICAN CONFEREES =, | HEAR OF CARTANZA’S RISE After Which All the Members Pa Intormal Visit to President Wilson on the Mayflower. | NEW LONDON, Sept. 12.—The | American-Mexican Joint Commisston turned to-day to @ review of the politl- cal events In Mexico which resulted in | the n of the present de facto i nt under Carranza. ereati The fean Commissioners said that the call for municipal elections | throughout Mexico had a! dy heen issued and that a Constitu ional Co held the afternoon sik Commissioners going together to the naval yacht May flower to pay their respects informally to Preaideat Wilson, Disorder Increases and Several Passengers Are Hurt in he Attack teahers vavout «h teginning . g helure davig A ae o% tare the « all forme ‘The sieht of thew Wad ite sed “ew y no| along Pighth Aver trom Mus +d and Pisteenth Mireet to On Hun " Twonty-third Mtreet quads vs always reached the near ate to catch (he throwers *, but 9 o'clock orders} sad of * under I fying Kh Lexington Madinon Avenie and Box nue by a ang Of Maehting #trik sd assembled again td stop curs, win and! Otte thre who seattered 4 repeatedly rmash dows and threaten motormen juctor kers attacked in the ly to work Cirete forenoon ! to pry ire net out an, Bolle ' of the lubbed them with unt her policemen arrived helped him arrest Edward Keane of No. 802 Kighth Avenue, @ etriking Bighth Avenue conductor, There were rcattered fights all along Ninth Avenue from the time the first car appeared, It was neces. vary to stop the cars cvery block or two while the policemen guarding it jumped from the front platforms and chased off men and boys who were threatening the motormen and con- ductora, A milk bottle thrown from above near Fifty-seventh Btreet grazed the head of a passenger and filled the car with flying glass splinters. There were policemen on the roofs in the block and they were sure the botile had been thrown from a dark window been protecting Hirown and eman vestibule atick and at Fifty-tourth treet an No bullets struck the vs uniman vanished into an partment house down the —biock Elevated trains were stoned fre- quently A committee of strikers, entering by different stairways, assembled suddenly on the downtown platform of the Third Avenue elevated at Forty-second Street at half past 8 to haut won « stricken and o'clock to-day and attempt from their gates. pantie gers me rushed from the vil 129 Mulberry Street, one of the guards ae Ivador Leyofsky of No. 1564 Wash ington Avenue and dealt him a stun ning blow in the f Layofaky, who | Was one of those trying to fo y out of the car, refure Green’ 's excuses and had him arrested. There were no other arrests, ——.—_—— CARMEN ON STRIKE TO PARADE THURSDAY Organizer Orders Demenstration and Expects to Have 41,000 in Line. Orders were issued by Organizer Fitzgerald of the Amalgamated As- | soclation forall street car employees on strike to join in @ parade next Thursday, Inasmuch an a city ordi- nance forbids such a parade on Fifth | Avenue no route has been selected, | but the plans contemplate a mass| meeting in Union Square at the con- | clusion of the parade, The organizers say they want the men to parade #o that the public may see how many are on strike. The number claimed is 11,000, ‘The paraders will wear thetr uniforms If the present | tions of the or- ganizers pre re will be no music in the U-Hont Captures Dutch Veasel, BERLIN (via wireless to Sayy! 12) opt. 12.—A German submarine has captured the Dutch motor steamer landie In t North Sea, She was car- rying contraband from Rotterdam to London SORE,CHAFED SKIN ALWAYS HEALS & SOOTHES CHILDRENS SKIN ONE BOX PROVES IT 25¢ Show tem ROCKS IN SUBWAY AND ‘L' .: » AND MILK BOTTLES TM MED Declare Sys 44) the Tw Rt 4 oe apacity Vor the frat . 1.” yeoterday, | Said 1 ri srengers carried in| Wher he subway was only 6,060 behing the | My glas oF ot the 1 Th mw vated ¢ yandiod 1,196,868 p aere, the subway 1.191 way the And cars every day.” Mr. Emplovees" ¢ for thetr loyalty and urging then point out to the police any men wh insult or threaten matter may be brought to the atteg- Hon _of the court $& 0 th " we have suffiete snnengere. Yow handled iraday by| we more train history nner tor sub- | is sehedule nd elevated nave in the case of uird Avenue, which lacks two the two whieh were stoned Jay and are laid up for repairs Vave crews for these two strike is breaking bes | went out, heew use we are Shonts sent a letter “To jay commending th: All them no that he 15 Fashion’s Correct New Offerings Blue serge or black serge, gabardine or poplin, charmeuse or meteor—dresses for morning, afternoon or evening. Hosts of the new high-girdled models, with shoulder-wide col- lars and yokes of chiffons and Georgette. Box-Plaited Skirts Billiard Pockets Effective embroideries defin- ing pockets, girdles o the salient style features—touches of rich color in silk, wool or vari-colored is. All the new styles that have been recejving so much atten- tion—a brilliant assortment at fifteen dollars, Remember—No Charge for Alterations At the New iter ot teed tomepeer te comfortably on y out pinching or tilting, Attached to your 56 cents or more—dependi: ag upon the grade selected, Tos at Nicholas A. tan Pullen St. onnosite A. 4 — cM ea ive. Tomorrow, Wednesday Autumn Dresses Modishly Simple a “Lm not bothered, new car | let rip » won't slip off my noes, For they're fitted with the Deans Suction | | No matter how hard the wind ' may blow, if your glasses are fitted with the patented Harrie 4 Suction Clip, there is no need to think about your glasses, It has a steady grip that firmly and ur nose with- eglasses | Sold only at our stores, + way, wr, Fashion Shop Nineteen West 34th Street N THRILLING STOR ENTITLED THE YELLOW MENA‘ ‘BEGINS IN | TO-MORROW: S EVENING | WORLD ” =

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