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itridge and Union Organ- izer Said to Have Come to Agreement. “M@THER” JONES TALKS. capes Being Run Down by Bronx Trolley. . of the Third Avenue Railroad and Street Railroad Employees reached an agreement over ‘the tele- : strike were circulated in labor circles to-day. ‘Mr. Fitzgerald refused to discuss the rumor. He said he would have something to say about the strike sit- wation late this afternoon in an ad- ress to the students of the Columbia ‘University School of Journalism. “Mother” Jones made speeches to * ‘the street raiiway strikers tn the Bronx this afternoon. The automo- bile in which she was riding narrowly escaped being run down by a trolley oar at One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street and Third Avenue. Owing to an error in printing the Notice of the amendment of the or- @inance requiring fifteen days’ ox- Derience for stmet car motormen in Mount Vernon, it cannot be promul- gated until to-morrow, The company sent out six cars to- day in charge of former employees and inspectors and starters. Mayor Fiske supervised the police arrange- ments. Four policemen rode on each car and two followed in an automo- bile. : ‘Three hundred strikers and sympa- Get the Habit of Drinking Hot Water * Before Breakfast Saye we can’t look or feel right with the system full bathe internally ing their syste Ww hat's an inside bath Well, it is guaranteed to form miracles if you could believe these hot-water enthusiasts. There are vast numbers of men and + women who, immediately wy + in the morning, drink a ¢ with drugs. you say. stone phosphate ii excellent health m tended to flush the neys and th of the ste, sour bile material left over in the body w! if not eliminated avery day, become food for the millions of bacteria which infest the bowels. The quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed into the blood, causing headache, bilious attacks, foul breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trouble, kidney misery," sleeplessness, impure blood and all sorts of ailments. People who feel good one day and ) badly the next, but who simply can-| not get feeling. right, are urged to} obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at. the drug store, ‘This will cost very little, but is sufficient to muke any one a real crank on the subject of internal sanitation. Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, Siespsing, sweetening and freshening, so limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, It is vastly more important to bathe on the inside than on the outside, because the skin pores into the blood, Advt Her Automobile Narrowly Es- Reports that President Whitridge Organizer William B. Fitzgerald of the Amalgamated Association of had Phone as to the settlement of the TYSON CLOSES HOME AND GOES TO TEXAS; MRS. BASS IN SOUTH. GREENWICH, Conn,, Oct. 6.—John H. Tyson, who recently left his third wife, Mrs. Rose Budd Exiner Tyson, after @ honeymoon of six days, has closed his home here and is said to be on his way to Texas. He has installed his children, servants and the grand- mother of his second wife in a bun- salow at Riverside, al Monday, the same day that Ty- son left, Mra. Olive Ha’ Bass, | hee: Se left her tena” She ‘and Tyso: © professed their affection and Tyson aid he married his third wife only to spite Mra. Bass because of a tempoprary spat. Mrs. Bass, ac- companied by her mother, is also sald to have gone South. She is suing her husband for an annulment of their marriage. lzers made a rush at the first car, ut wene scattered without arresta. Following the repeal of the fifteca- day ordinance, effective Saturday, in New Rochelle by an all night mect- ing of the Common Council, similar action is to be urged at the meeting of the Yonkers Aldermen to-nignt. To discourage the Counc!i from re- pealing the act a parade of West- chester car strikers, escorted by the members of other labor unions, Is to be held to-night. STRICKEN ON STREET, FATHER CARROLL DIES Rector of St. Michael’s Church in Brooklyn Expires of Heart Failure, Stricken with heart disease while walking last night on Nostrand Ave- nue, the Rev, Thomas E. Carroll, rec- tor of St, Michael's Ronian Catholic Church, Fourth Avenue and Forty- second Street, Brooklyn, died before @ physician could reach him. Fatber Carroll was fifty-four years old and was ordained in 1886. Be- sides doing work at Rockville Centre, L. L, he had been in charge at Bt. Mary Star of the Sea, Brooklyn; St, Bridget’s, Ridgewood, Queens, ‘and | . Vincent de Paul, Brooklyn. The | greater part of his life was spent in Brooklyn, where he was born and Jeducated, He celebrated his sitver | jubilee in 1911. PLATTSBURG CAMPS END; 12,000 TRAINED THERE PLATTSBURGH, N. Y.,| Oct. 5.— |The Plattsburgh military training camps for 1916 were brought to an jend here to-day with the return from the eleven-day hike and fleld manoeu- vres of the tenth training regiment. During the summer more than 12,000 men, the camp authorities say, have recelved instructions in five suc. | ceasive camps. Major Gen, Leonard Wood, com> mander of the Department of the East, and called the “father of the ltraining camp idea," was with the istudent soldiers in the fleld to-day and watched them fight a spirited mimic battle as the wind-up of thelr cam palen. ~ Give Yourself a UNB " “OLIVE Ac lelightful combination of luscious olives, sweet pimento Feppers and p'quart spices. As wickes it is better than meat, more Get a hottle of “Olive Zest” from y Austin, Nichols & Co., Inc.,-—-New York The Largest Importing, Manufacturing, Whe Grocery Concern in the World. Sole Manufacturers. Smart ei ees Blackhall, Cornell Often Told of Desire to Take Up Death Adventure. HAD NO FEAR OF IT. Shunned,” Youth Drowned Off Ferry Is Quoted. ‘That Robert Blackhall, years old, was led to jump into the Hudson River from a Fort Lee ferry- boat Sunday night by prompting from “the spirit world,” ts the bellet of the boy's mother. dent and a spiritualist, At tho home of her daughter, Mrs. | Harold W. Stimpson, No. 601 Cathe- dral Parkway, Mrs. Blackhall told an Evening World reporter to-day she belleves her son could not have com- mitted self destruction voluntarily. “I can't belie Robert would do such a thing,” she said in answer to the police report that the boy had been positively identified as her son. He was to have returned to his archi- tectural studies next week in his sophomore year. The police to-day are scanning the river for the body. “Robert was so strangely given to the studying of books on Spiritualism that I am sure has was in a reverie when he fell or jumped from the said Mrs, Blackhall. “He often spoke to me of his desire to take up the adventure after death and said he held no fear of such adventure, as it must be without the misery of hu- manity, and more to be courted than shunned.” According to the young man’s moth- er, with whom he lived at No, 257 Lenox Avenue, young Mr. Blackball was of a marked nervous tempera- ment and of a nature so sensitive that his casual observation of suffering on the part of others disturbed him. The police identification was made from a photograph of the student sub- mitted at Edgewater last night by Harold W. Stimpson, husband of ols half-sister and treasurer of the Ajax Rubber Company, of No, 1796 Broad- way, who since Blackhall's failure to return from a visit to his sister, Mra, Harold Houghtaling, at Englewood, N. J., last Sunday evening, had given his entire time to the case. A porter who saw the young man go overboard was positive in the identification. Mrs. Blackhall, ill from the shock of her son's disappearance, has been at the home of her daughter in Ca- thedral Parkway since Sunday. She said Robert had never given an inti- mation that he would end his fe, al- though she sald she had been wor- ried over his condition since last Christmas, when the strain of over- study forced him to give up his school work for a time. Sunday, she said, he went to Englewood to visit his sis- ter and left there at 7 o'clock to re- turn home, According to his mother, “Life and Health” and “Life Understood” were two of the books young Biackhall read incessantly, ‘ $200,000 Worth of Butter, Essa and Cheese Lost in Fire. LINDSAY, Ont., Oct. 5.—Flavelles, Limited, one of the biggest produce and cold storage plants in Canada, was gutted by fire to-day. The damage will ainount to about $200,000. Immense exes and cheese quantities of butter, workers thrown, were destroyed and 1 out of employmen Finds Body of Baby. A three-weeks-old male infant was ound dead to-day in a package tucked under a wall of the back yard of the house at No. 150 West Elghtteth Street, by Reed Ostrander, superin- tendent of the premises. “The baby was nude and bore no marks of vio~ lence NEW Taste. EAM ZEST a relish or for filling sand- tasty and more economical, ‘our grocer to-day and try it. THE EVENT! ISON LED TO SUICIDE BY “SPIRIT VOICE.” DECLARES MOTHER Student, , “More to Be Courted Than’ twenty He was a Cornell stu-, 15¢ and- ‘259 Bottles jomict| j that the calamities whl TTY Ar YOUTH WHOSE MOTHER — SAYS ‘SPIRIT VOICE” LED HIM TO pis .. Indulged in So Many Escapades BLACKHALL: KISSES AND LOVE TALKS BY PHONE, TOLD BY ) BY HUNTER Lawyer Defeated | in Divorce Action Presses Alienation Suit Against Kerfoot In spite of a divorce sult decided against him early this year, Fredérick William Hunter, wealthy lawyer and antique collector of this city and Freehold, N. J., to-day went ahead with his $50,000 alienation sult against his brother-in-law, John Barrett Ker- foot, noted literary critic and novel- ist, Before a jury in Justice Cohalan's part of the Supreme Court, Attorney Carlisle Norwood, for Hunter, prora- ised to show how’ Kerfoot secretly wooed Mrs. Anna Belleville Hunter over a private telephone, visited her in her room in his pajamas, sprayed her throat and kissed her in the liv- ing room of the Hunter summer home at Freehold. The court room was crowded with well dressed women who surrounded Mrs, Hunter and comforted her when Mr. Norwood told the jury how he would show that Mrs. Hunter had Teceived the critic in her dressing room while she was attired in biack silk tights, All the principals in the case are either fifty or over and gray haired; but age, Mr. Norwood told the jury, had not cooled Kerfoot's ar- dor. He referred to the situation of the Hunters and Kerfoot as an “ex- traordinary golden triangle” in which Hunter was the only unwilling an- sie. “In order to intelligently understand this case,” Mr. Norwood said, “it is necessary for you to understand Mr. Kerfoot's position in tho Hunter household. The Hunters, who were married in 1889, were living with Mra, Hunter's mother when Kerfoot came here from Chicago, where he had been a bank clerk, and married Mr. Hunter's sister. Mrs, Kerfoot died about three months after her mar- riage and her husband went on a trip around the world, When he returned he was cordially welcomed into the Hunter home, “Through all these years until 1914, when Mr. and Mrs, Hunter had some sort of a disagreement there was pver a breath of suspicion ainst Kerfoot and Mrs. Hunter. It was not until some time during the summer of 1914 that Mr. Hunter began to think there was something back of his wife's coolness toward him. “Why, Mr. Kerfoot,” the lawyer ex- claimed over the protest of the critis lawyer, “at times prac Hunter household, gave servants and bought supp Hunter's handy man Hunter's throat was sore he sprayed it. “Mra, Hunter called her haudy wan, Mr. Kerfoot, on a private telephone she had Installed in the house, He called upon her in her home tn bis pajamas and kissed her, as maids em- ployed in the household will testify,” In the divorce proceedings in which Kerfoot was named as co-respondent harged her hus- friendly with Mrs. Grenner, a middle-aged widow for whom he purchased a handsome gift at Tiffany's. The decree of the court in favor of Mrs, Hunter was appealed to the Appellate Division and is now pending. —» im Good Reads Thousands ef Au je. ST. CLAIRSVILLE, 0., Oct. 5.—Sev- eral thousand automobiles, filled with enthuniastic advoca: from Ohio, Weat V nd sylvania, to-day paraded over the thirty miles of the newly paved Nas tional Pike through this county in tion of the completion of the provement, Motor trucks hands were scattered trough” parade. ee Day was | man. In it he rr the Btate to “he past by the he care of thi end have visited us and the attendant avoidable loss may ize reduced to the smallest he ai NS. BAYLYFREED ~ FROM HUSBAND, A. NOTED HORSEMAN Re of “Paul Mi Morton and Husband Agreed on Suit, It Is Reported. 'SHE HAD WILD CAREER. She Had to Be Kept in Restraint. CHICAGO, Oct desertion, 6.—On a charge of Mrs, Helen Morton Bayly, daughter of Mark Morton of the In- | ternational Salt Company of this city and a niece of the late Paul Morton, to-day won her divofee from Roger Clay Bayly, a noted horseman of the Warrenton sot in Virginia, She and Bayly were married in 1914 and their life was a stormy one almost from their wedding day. With the decree Mrs. Bayly ob- | tained permission to use her maiden |name. The circumstances of the di- vorce indicated that it had been ob- tained by mutual consent, Bayly had charge of the horses on j the estate of Miss Morton's mother ‘in Warrenton when she ried him, Throughout the hunting country thereabouts Bayly was known as @ | skiliful rider to hounds and gentle- man jockey, Miss Morton had a bad fall from |ot her madcap adventures are said {to be traceably tu the injuriés she received, From being a studiour girl in Miss Finch’s school in Now York she suddenly developed a crav- ing for Broadway life and compan- fons. Later she went to Warrenton and there met and married Bayly. A day or two after their wedding she chased him about the dining room of their house with a carving knife, Three weeks after her marriage, upon her husband's application, she was adjudged mentally incompetent, but in March, 1916, she was declared sane again, although she and Bayly lfe together, At one time she disappeared from home and was found on the estate of Col. George B. Fabyan, on Fox River, The courts gave her into Col. Fabyan’s custody and guards were placed about the estate to make sure she did not escape, Mrs. Bayly, who is a skilled horse- woman, has been doing sculptural work lately and with some success. > 38 SPEECHES BY HUGHES ON THIRD TOUR OF WEST Adamson Eight-Hour Law to Be Made Paramount Issue, Say Campaign Managers. In announcing to-day the itinerary of Hughes’ third western tour to pe- gin Monday, his campaign managers proclaimed that the Adamson eigh’- hour law would be made the para- mount {issue in Hughes’ thirty-elgnt speeches. While Mr. Hughes will ox- toll protective tariff and criticise the Wilson administration for its foreign and Mexican policies, he will put! Principal emphasis on “the surren ter of the Administration to fore cording to Chairman Willcox The itinerary is as follow | Oct, 9—Newark, N. J., and Phila- deiphia, Oct. 10- Oct, 11 Hagerstown and Baltimore. Clarksburg, Parkersburg, nd Charlestown, W, Va i ‘ikesville, Prestonburg, Loulsa, Ashland and Ky, and Joplin, Mo. y, Beatrice, Falr- bury, York and Lincoln, Neb Oct. 16—Hastings, Grand. Island, Columbus, Fremont and Omaha Oct, 17-—-Mitchell, Sioux Fall. Yankton, and Sioux City, Oct, eo, 1 and Niles, Kalamazoo and Grand 1 ids, Micn Oct. 19—Bay City, Saginaw and Flint, Mich., and Youngstown, Oh'o. Mra, Hughes will accompany Mr Hughes, The special train will con | sist of six cars. | Infant Rash and Chafing Quickly Healed by the use of a horse some years ago and many) y used Sykes’ Comfort Powder ov this baby for rash and chafin, Pid the very best ree It is} soothing, ae and healing to the most deli- cate skin, I have used) many other powders but | never ound y Burbid, nurse, M. Used after baby’s bath it will k <p | “\ehe She chin healthy and free from sore- mNot a plain talcum powder, but a highly medicated preparation un-| Pay for ureery and sickroom | I and prevent chafing, itching, i. ae, goaldings @ La 34 infant's hive cots ety JARS, py trritation caused by eruptive diseases and At Deeg and Dep't Stores Ba The COMFORT FOWDER COs Bestom ns MRS. ‘BAYLY. DIVORCED FROM FORMER NOTED SOUTHERN HORSEMAN | | festouny Guard, returned to ies after three months of Coverhment, iv find that INS AND PENROSE NOW HAVE L REUNION had not been held for them. , ’ he Practical Men They Desire the! The Chicago Employment Bureeucet the 4 | Election of Hughes, So Get | United States Department of Labor re« ‘ T yi illeox eclved orde ere Together With Willcox. Newt hee geenae dp 4 Another reunion of the Old Guard jand the Bull Moose occurred to-day ——_—_——_—_—— i jin Repubiican National Headquarters CURED HIMSELF OF THE LIQUOR HABIT | Senator Botes of Pennay! jvania, “worst of reactionaries,” and) George W. Perkins, first Mnancial lous | in cordial spirit, but Jotned in earnest " = Atte | conference to line up their respective |A wie tage |followers, The two men had a jong! ~ palgn plans, They explained that it Simple Home Was not for spectacular effect but for! a »Y } essentially practical purposes. | = be dg | Mr. Thos. J. D. O'Bannom a | ‘mon cause of electing Mr Hughes" ee resident of Missouri, living iat > | said Senator Penrowe as he and Mr, |" F. D. No. 3, Prederickstawm, Mo, | af} | Perkins stood side by side. Then some | banished his craving for liqhor with Hone quoted the famous line trom thu {® simple recipe which he mixed fat letters of T. R.: “You and I are prac- | home | Mr. O'Bannon recently wn ———« | tical men." "-lJowing statement: “I am “RUN DOWN IN BROADWAY. Chairman Willcox regretted to a _|PeR vars _ Petrose tenant to Col, Ruosevelt, not only met | talk with Chairman Willcox on cam.4 Craving for Liquor “We ate both interested in the com- | nounce careful invest there. w in the story vf) 0ld and had drank for Hare ‘ri yeaterd: ‘olonet and Tate years. My craving was so. meeing In the Unton ‘ator and tapped eavh | other on the shoulder. There was no| Year vo Crossing Broadway in front of rrinity leould not quit liquor, Mi > T had the following League Club ¢ Church to-day, George Tarler, sixty. soven sears old, a retired importer iv.| gpPortunlty for the tapping hecause) recipe filled and began taking” R and ing at No, 249 West One Hundred and] Orn hy went down, te Sevater it entirely banished my cra Thirteenth Street, waa knocked down by! "An ¢or Perkins and Penrose they | liquor. ‘o 3 on. of water . an automobile owned and driven by| agreed to “tap” each other “iat suo of muriate of am Walter Claypole of No. 29 Station eously, so there would be no first sur-| of Varlex Compound and render on either side. Regular tup'of pepsin, Take a of the Atlantic Commercial Cable Com- onve are to be scheduled each week|times a day. An; peny. ‘ Republican - headquart: for new it for you or ow the Mr, Tarler's right shoulder was frac-+ Sanbers in the political Skull and! j very little tured and he was also cut and bruised; Bones Club. ltaken of about the body. After being attended San surgeon from Hudson Street Hose Back From e. © eerees to Ft CHICAGO, Set tures hundred BONWIT TELLER &CO,;" The Specialty Shap of Onginalions P FIFTH AVENUE AT 38&™ STREET Square, Forest Hills, N. J., an officer believe any with this imple recipe.” —Adwt <> ANNOUNCE THE CONTINUATION, UNTIL SATUR- ; DAY, OCTOBER 7TH, INCLUSIVE, OF THEIR + Annual Advance Sale of Women’s Fas of Quality 8 Tashan At 25% to 33% Less Than Regular Season Prices (Smart Motor Modes) 85.00 Pichon long, full Flare mertae, gia vs ihn neg Trim’d Hudson Seal Coats (Or Self Collar and Cuffs) 85.00 Natural skunk or sailor collar and cuffs of seal. Trim’d Caracul Coats : (Natural Skunk Collar)” 95.00 42 inches long, full flare per han pes 9 Hudson Seal Coats Selected Dyed Muskrat 45 inches long, full flare mode! Trimmed Leopard Coats } Contrasting Fur Trimmings Smart new 40. inch long model, 110.00 beruiflly "marked natural collar and cuffs. Bordered Hudson Seal Coats . Border _and Collar of Skunk 45 inches long, full model, 6- 110.00 Trimmed Mole Coats Border and Collar of Contrasting Fur ull flare model, with border inch dovtle stripe border, ted ru Sire eget wih Sete caller of skunkservess ss 135.00 gauntlet culfs.. sss... 225000 Bordered Hudson Seal Coats Border, Collar and Cuffs of Skunk Very full model, 45 inches long; 6-inch double stripe border, collar, cuffs of natural skunk Belted Russian Mole Coats 48-Inch Long Models ' Cee sien fet it '. ar of oe jy bi 325.00 165.00 Original Paris Models and Reproductions Exclusive Modes in Fur Coats, Capes and Wraps 225.00 t 1850.00 Luxurious Pelts developed in modes that feature enveloping, voluminous fold of fur with monk, clache, bishop and crushed collars and new sleeve effects—made of Hudson Seal, Baby Caracul, Broadtail, Mole, Ermine, Kolinsky and Mink. A large collection of choice pelts, in sable, ermine, silver fox, natural blue fox and fisher, is presented frome which fur garments, neckpieces and muffs will be made to special order. Capes, Scarfs and Stoles | Barrel _and Canteen Muffs Mole Cape Collar......25.00 27.50] Mole Muffs.......... . 22.50 25,00 Hudson SealCapeCollar. 19.50 25.00 | Hudson Seal.,.......... 12.50 16.50 Mole Stoles............39.50 59.50] Natural Skunk .. 16,50 25.00 Hudson Seal Stoles.....29.50 45.00 | Taupe Fox 32,50 35.00 ° Natural Skunk Scarfs. .19.50 25.00 | Hudson Bay Blue Fox.. .29.50 39.50 Taupe Fox Scarfs. ... ..25.00 29.50 | Kolinsky. . .. 39.50 45,00 Natural Raccoon Scarfs. 8.50 12.50 | Hudson Bay Sable. . 69.50 to 150,00 Hudson Bay Blue Fox Scarfs... 25.00 29.50 | Raccoon. 10,00 14.50. Kolinsky Stoles.......95.00 165.00 | Beaver. 12.50 19.50 Hudson Bay Sable Stoies.. 11000 to 450.00 | Black Fox Muffs 16.50 22.50 Ermine Capes & Stoles.. .. . 69.50 to 245.00 | Ermine Muffs 45.00 75.00