The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1916, Page 3

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a TWOSHOTINRIOT ‘Evening World’s League of Housewives OF 3,000 BAYONNE OIL MENON STRIKE Policeman and Worker Are! Wounded in Violence Follow- ing Open-Air Meeting. Thirty shots were exchanred this afternoon between the police of Bay- onne, N. J., ahd 3,500 striking em- ployees of the Standard Ol Com- Pany’s plant at that pince in a run- ning fight which followed the de- struction of about fifty feet of fence surrounding the pinnt of one of the company’s subsidaries, Policeman Michael Cushing received a bullet in his right shoulder and was removed to a hospital. One of the strikers ‘was wounded, but carried away by his companions, | About an hour tater the police went | to the roof of a house and arrested Joseph Debonnenovitch, Frank Hricko and Arnold Marlin, ali strikers. Do- bonnenovitch and Hricko had rifles snd Marlin @ revolver, The police say they were “sniping.” ‘The disorder followed a meeting of the strikers in an open fleld after they had been driven from Mydosh Hall, the strikers’ headquarters. In the hall the police seized fifty rifles and as many swords, the property of a semi-military organizauon which meets there. The police thought it best to put the weapons beyoud the reach of the strixors, nearly ail of whom are foreigusts of the aigbiy ex- citaoie type. Two men were killed in Mydosh Hall during ‘he strike of the Stanaard Uil plant a year ugo. Avout dow of the compan, em- ployees are now on strine, 5,000 10- day joining the 1,500 who quit work last might. The entire police ‘orcs, armed with repeating ritles, is gusrd- ing the property of tive company, | ‘This precaution Was taken because of| threats to set tire to toe nuge oil tanks, The dry grass in the neign- borhood of the pliant was set on iire times to-day. Six hundred men employed by the Vacuum Oli Company weat out in aympathy with the strikers, and tha | temper of tho 1,500 inen employed sy | the Tidewater Oil Company was such! that the management closed up too plant for the day, Both conceras are subsidiaries of the Standard Uil Com. , pany. ' While officials of the Standard Oj! Company say they will close the plants rather than hire str oak: | ere, tho strikers declare 600 strike. | breakers are now housed at the pla As soon as this nows spread strike attacked the trolley road and bloc aded the street leading to the p Michael Machanaki, a contractor charge of street paving, nt. in attempted to stop the strikers and was severely deaten, All the saloons in the vicinity of the oil district have been closed. BEAUTY DOCTOR TELLS SECRET | Detroit Beauty Doctor Gives Simple | Recipe to Darken Gray Hair and | ' | Promote Ite Growth. Miss Alice Whitney, a well-known beauty doctor of Detroit, Mich., re- cently gave out the following ment: “Anyone can prepare a simple mixture wt home, at very itte cost, that will darken gray bait, promote its rowth and make it soft and glossy. fe a half pint of water add I oz. of bay rum, 4 small box of Barbo Com- und and 4 oz. of glycerine. These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Appty to the hair twice a week \util the desired bhade is obtained. This will make o gray-haired person look twenty years younger. It is also fine to promote the growth of the hair, and relieve itching and dandruff."—-Ad: | | BELLANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25catall druggists thousands of ears wheat has’ cen hiding ade-~ ilclous, natural flavor, now brought out for the first time In Krumbles, Will Eliminate ‘‘Graft’’ in Home Bu THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1916. “One of the Most Important Movements: for the b aaa VEEDPOD DE DO DODO D109 OF4GOE HEE EOL OEE DEDEO DODO Benefit of the Home That Has Come Before the, : Public in Many a Day,” Says Miss Florence |: Guernsey—No Pains to Be Spared in Aiding Housewives. By Sophie‘Irene Loeb. Even woman who has the interest of her household at heart is Pe eee Invited to join the Housewives’ Protective League, which is bein formed under the auspices of The Evening World. This is a combined effort of the women of the city, backed by The Evening World, to do something ddout | the constantly growing problem of the howsehold Inj 4 relation to the high food prices and economics of| household management. Every woman can readily realize what {t will mean to have thousands of women banded together to fight | prices that are unnecessarily high, and to have a means) of exchanging views and methods of economy through the columns of this newspaper. No dues or fees of any kind are required. 2289S 0 t Eeefi woman may simply fill the application blank! ? and receive in return the emblem of the league. 4 It Is In the form of a coin or token that can be > hate every day while shopping or otherwise negotiating for the 4 jome, Fa Should any honsewlfe feel she Js unjustly treated, she has only g to show the emblem, 4 This coin I at once significant to the dealer in that he realizes $ that a large body of women are represented in that coin, together with the support of The Evening World, Every effort will be made to get to the bottom of wrongful prices, un- wholesome foods and short weights and measures. NO EFFORT TO BE SPARED IN AIDING HOUSEWIFE. woman to safeguard her interests in her everyday dealings for her house- hold. The tremendous appeal of a large group of women with a real pur- pose in view cannot be estimated. The average woman has litte or no knowledge of why her household expenses are constantly soaring higher—for example, as to how the common commodities are handled in a large city from one source to another, until It reaches her at a toppotch price. With an earnest, united effort such as is represented in the Housewives’ Protective League the unnecessary charge can be found and put out of business, Shouid a strike arise, such as the milk situation, a band of women such as the Housewives’ Protective League can compel public attention to the wrongs of the consumer and thus iaore speedily adjust the situation. Preventive measures may be formulated, as to high prices, looking to the future seavons, In a word, there are so many ways and me: of fertilizing the field of household ceonomy through such an interchange of views and activities that It behooves every woman to get in touch with this progressive activity, TIME FOR WOMEN TO ACT, SAYS MISS GUERNSEY, In the words of Misa Florence Guernsey, a member of The Evening World co-operative committee, First Vice President of the New York State Federation of Women's Clubs, and President of the Eclectic Club: ' “T think this is one of the most important movements for the benefit of the home that has come before the public In many a day “It Is high time that the women of the city take hold in » reat constructive effort to reduce prices of common commodities that are constantly hecoming prohibitive to the average home in the elty, It used to be that 825 a week was considered fair wages for @ small family having but two children, But It is almost impos. siblet to make ends meet on this sum to-day, “The housekeeper on this sum must be very careful indeed to actually keep out of debt in order to pay for the necessitles of life, anch us rentand food and clothes, to say nothing of putting a penny by for a rainy day. “Take eggs and butter, for instance. Where there are little mouths t6 feed it 1s almost Impossible to supply enough of such nourishing food with the average income. “Something must be done about it. and {f women work together I believe life. Her] State Chatrman Harriv said: “The ¥, comes of a noted nit. y in the second day of repie- they can mako themselves felt in the direction of reducing the prices. . atival at the pi¢r was a trumph.|Penneyivanin Raliroad, #o tor us ite| {ree ae schuaiboy aiesre shan che |tration. Registration places open “Leastwise, women are very resourceful, and I look for many valuable Probably one thousand of her country lines and employees in New York] ations! nes and he was the young. from 5.30 P. M. until 1030 P, M 4 . en and women were o to ern ‘ champlo 3 suggestions through such an organization as ‘8 formed by The Evening GG Ue kA a mil [ State are concerned, In forcing every | SUMAN amplon: you do not req you cannot veti World.” plank, ‘Twenty young girls, claimant to accept private settlement , ————— minting fhe Leitich, French ‘and tol} uo the word ‘forcing’ advisedly.” | ins . #ian Keliet Bund for Blind Soldiers ‘ $0, 92 a. , mt | MAN WHO STOLE $22 000 biles, had an income from the West.) Actress, Vivacious as Ever, | strow@! lowers before Mme. Bernharct | _ M8 mois Kes rot No, 92 diay No Connection With Any Other Establishment in the World was a collector of sporting firearm Da ad she was carried along the pier to| Street, Salamanca, 2 wrote 4 ’ and apparently 5 bie ieamo eathun- Welcomed by Big Throng— the automoblie tn Waiting, Everybody | plaintive letter to the Industrial J iast, Extravagant entertainments in| . cheered, even the ‘longshoremen, and | or imisalo 1 Pi pt GETS TWO TO FOUR YEARS irs, sssoreegnt enters spend the| Carried Along Pier to Auto, Juve iactivns tuirly sparkled ag ‘ene | commission Fecently, stating that her 1-3 po as stolen money, led to his discovery ‘ jfelt the warmth of her reception husband had been earn 4 rat q ; araeited a ' ;. | there, } After @ short rest at the Hote!}road Aug. % 1914. The State Com- : Edward C. Kindred, Caught in bos- <ieeeieneiiiceane Sarah Bernhardt returned to New Masoutic, Mme. Bernhardt will go tol mission had mado an award of oon Sect | 3 mn After Flig Fi , ee ee years’ ah treal, where she opens he “ wenaation, bi y ne au atyed | = ppoaite : ton After Flight With Firm's | Yorn tontay ater three year, she fu scusie ioatoe tents chan. |deumtegyeas ie Sache es Testrdl| 43 & 48 West 34th Street mitt te ba Money, Is Sentenced, menos, as vivacious, good-natured, “P+ nounced that ahe would not produce| “Will you kindly let me bear tere |? Rdward C.K 1,'who startled timiatic and explosive as ever, al-jn vlolunily anti rman y ¢ jyou in reward to it, as J am very | e } Aw Pe coaatianihennd though sadly handicap; ter | “Lew Cathedr which was written! mach in nead," the poor widow mild S wna yuasnd wim emioyerm fin and! AB HEROINE OF FIRE} sous mttynonscanoa nmr "i Omen ro] hts Apa Seer mide Aa uits Dresses Coats 1915, by drawing SR Re Ras rans |which waa amputated in France a/eountry.! she salde "Tt would wa tw Js any hope of my getting 1 7 , t | Hy ae . " ; 0. passeng nlright for me to create any partis Th h inoney from the National) JAMESBURG. N. J. Oct. 10.-—Wwitn | YOOr 88 f Heuldan thw iver sig hh@ commission replied that * Bank, driving to nd Worth} two adjoining houses and the bulla. PM Espawt Nd word to Premt yun vail the railroad cases are held in Exce tional Values ‘ un aul bandon- RnR ROMEES ROS RS AMIS ae one Of the ! wholthae | will don | abeyance pending decision of the except Ee ean al pander ting of the telephone company burn- lene chat = eka OA GINA Mma feulaue ae | case of Winfield versus the Now not tome than two years} Ine about her, Belle Matthews, aines |r, 6s 4 oe sunday night, yesterday | body | whine Mdina beter nt || Women's & Misses’ ‘ han four in Sing Sing| (een years old, remained at the| > | bd ‘a x ny Se 1 ay by Judge Wadhains in| switchboard at 6 A, M, to-day and | #Md last nig ! D United States Supreme Court Navy Serge Dresses ‘ ; danslone sent in tolephone calls for help to| Whon Capt 1 the FROST UE TO-NIGHT! MAY nein Vo veree New Models, Morden Battie, Diaadink for | ices Nalenborkia lowte. Whe Bitlet courne of his « 1 eYEOIDE Weather Indications Say the chin Sot only Mra, Kester but many | Handsomely Tailored, money, Ahont vatruction and she wan carried |!mity of & submarine, M rhe W i Halina § ee ea aa bor pe Wool Embroidered, Ki Ive 1 . ots and cheered ag a | hardt sent for bim and dema day that overcoats better be taken o1 wr t years or thore of wa Very Special, was learn own , the lifehoata were swung ou of the mothbatls night, ae th though the iy dn 6 ‘ ife-belts had heen dl 1 CADE | indications are for a severs from t ards Women’s & Misses E | mac ene fold nan uss” sho fp city fromty weather toentene and tonality of th Silk Dresses : me = 3 % tomn aw . promise for waaterr ar s 4 = commanded, “the twenty-five mem-| New. York, with diminishing: nocthwen exe that they are not amenable to For Street and r enna cee aati eo eee og : mire, State compensation acts pue\| the Danse, 2 } poten New Jersey will share New York's deral compensation law Satin, = before I am taken of. | Know Leni ‘ procena throush’ jowar Taffeta \ : | Be ee sear hat os er ints, the test oase finally wa i 4 e 3 ” @ | ciel lsfory the Unitet Staten || Charmeuse, 3 ' = sine Court | be | eorgette, Very Spectal, FY AEMBERSHIP APPLICATION *_flusten wea ane of 4 } eee eel 3 / . . OaeR, Ne AARINAN, HA Women’s & Misses’ Suits : : every compensat Broadcloth, 3 of Cut out this coupon, fill out and mail to the Housewives’ Siena te Duvetyn, 3 . . yg Velour de Laine, = Protective League, Evening World. a ’ b It i undaretood the resi Fur, and oO. tite Fock Rakes | Pisin BERNHARDT HERE: FLOWERS STREW Address ...... No pains will be spared to go to tho source of existing conditions that Miss will In any way be helpful to the housewife tn alleviating the distress that FLORENCE ‘ { 418 prevalent—in making the weekly wage reach as far as possible. GVERNSEYy i Men make houses, but women make homes; and it { possible for OE F.Forey ee eee ol oe cere eee eee rere ee eee ? ‘ 204 dO94 Objects of Housewives’ League Organized by The Evening World . The purposes of the Housewlves’ Protective League are; To reduce the cost of living wherever possible. To fight high prices that are artifictal, To secure just weight and measures. To eliminate petty graft on the common commodities To stand together against unwarranted strikes on the necessaries of Florence Guernsey, Vice President of the State Federation and President of the Eclectic Club. Dillon, wife of the State Commissioner of Foods Robert Adamson, wife of Fire Commi Marcus Marka, wife of Borough President. Frederick Nathan, President of Consumers’ League. Inez Milholland Boissevain, lawyer. William Einstein, Chairman of the Families Committee of shall b: the ascendant. If] am the last to taken off, then all who are taken before me will be safe." Mime. Bernhardt were a1 I fur and a toque of gray velvet Oct. 1916 I desire to enroll my name as a member of The Evening World’s Housewives’ Protective League. Inclose 2-cent stamp and membership token will be mailed, To exchange opinions and views through the columns of The Eve- \ | ning World, To set forth methods of household economy. A committee of organization has been formed which will co-operate with The Evening World and the housewives of the City of New York, This committee consists of representative and well known women closely identified with the civic betterment of the city. members of this committee are: Mi ef Women’s Clu Mes. William Grant Brown, President of the Biennial Board of Women’s Clubs. Mre. John J. Mrs. Mre. Mra. Mre. | Mre. |] the New York Child Welfare Board, | Some of the fe, for my lucky atar is tn be off a trimmed gown of vivid purple with a long train, a long coat made of civet Re Qeesseee SEABURY CHARGES COMPENSATION ACT i] “Jokers” Permit Private Settle- | ment — Supreme Court Causes Delay, Is Charge. Samuel Seabury, DAMrocratic candi. ate for Governor; Mawin 8. Harris, State Chairman, and Robert F. War- ner, party leader in the Lomistature, united to-day in declaration that by moans of “Jokers” inderted in the law by the Republicans the Workmen's Compensation Act of New York State has deen #o altered and rostricted ax to nullify its intent and minimize ite venefits for laboring men and thelr COSBORNE'S SPEECH wring 6. HAS BLOEAED HAS IS EFFECT AT TRL OF ROFRANO | What Was Said of Bambrick’s Case Changes Views of | Capital Punishment. The speech of Thomas Mott On- borne, ex-Wardon of Bing Sing Prison regarding his belief in the Innocence of Thomas Bambrick, executed Sat- urday morning for the murder of | Poltceman Dapping, was cited by two | talesmon in the Rofrano murder trial to-day as having caused them to johange their views regarding capital punishment, thereby disqualifying them to ait 8 jurors, Both men had sworn when examined aa upectal Commissioner of the | This has revived the Ingenious, un dependent families, Two distinct methods have boon | eanee oF utilized to deprive men Injured at | /Urors ze work, or the families of those killed “Walnst giving @ verdict which en- in employment, from obtaining full et capital Lodtelaiey ie ae measure of what the law intended aymond L. O'Neill of No. 244 Wert | they should receive. Seventy-stcond Street told Assistant they had no scruples |® ROSY COMPLEXION © \Oays we can’t help but leek, | better and feel better j after an inside bath, j | To look one's best and feel one’s best 3 is to enjoy an inside bath each morn- ing to flush from the system the oe | vious di waste, sour fermentations : and poisonous toxins, before it is ab + sorbed into the blood. Just as coal, . when it burns, leaves behind @ cer tain amount of incombustible materia in the form of ashes, so the food an. drink taken each day leave in the gli. ., mentary organs o certain amount of indigestible material, which if noi + eliminated, forms toxing and poisons which are then sucked into the bloor! - « through the very ducts which are in * tended *to suck in only nourishment to auatain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to ae | your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning ? 3 ng Mae of hot water wil if teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in hich is a harmless means of wash ing the waste material amd toxiny from the kidneys and “* bowels, thi sweetening ame - ‘The first and most effective blow! District Attorney Brothers be bad struck at’the law was by tho Repub- Changed bis views on capital punish- lican Legialature of 1915, amending the Pasian ee ve Osborne's apoech. original compensation act #0 aa to han Hc oe e who had dented permit employers to negotiete private nbrick’a plea for a new trial, at sottlements with claimants, instead et took @ band of having all cases adjudicated dabberdhns:* thet See Gacniee wk ue through the State Commission. | peument ah the lsial ct Bassler f ent and proved of | M0thing of the trial or the evidence Near neketiale beweal Hf beaauaity | presented tHere and had not read the companies who indemnify corpora-|Tecord of the case? Do you moan to tions ° | accept his statement in preference to Full effects of this weakening of the, ® Consclentious study of the case by jaw are now becoming apparent, and! thie court?” 60 great is the loss of labor that) “All I know is,” replied Mr. O'Nolll, | Judge Seabury intends making it| “that Mr. Osborne's speech made a one of the foremost Issues of his| Very deep impression on me and iny campaten aguinat Gov. Whitman and | Conscience would not let me convict a the Republican Administration. man when conviction would send him The second method of depriving| to the chair.” injured workmen of their Just due ta Justice Weeks brusquely dismiased charged to that old source of poor| the talesman and ordered Clerk Pen- | complaint known as the Jaw's | Rey to strike bis name from the spe- delay. This time it i the United ¢lal panel, | States Supreme Court which is hold- William Warren, an accountant of ing up numbers of cases and poor | No. 3800 Broadway, the next talesman widows unable to obtain any com- | Called, said that he too had formed a pensation at all from corporations in| ait wrong since reading | Oaborne's ; sevice the bands were speech. Justice Weeks ordered. hin whose service thelr hus! name off the special panel st also. killed, Sidney Abenhelm, chosen foreman Charles F. Hughes was a member | og the jury yesterday, wan excused by ‘ot the court when the cases were |inutual consent to-day because of if Laban into, Mealtl, Albert D. Newhall, an artist tuken there 3 of No, 202 West One Hundred and politics i# axwerted to be the cause ‘pwonty-elghth Street, wis aelocted ta 3 of delay, while the poor) hig place, [ot months of tes, Jasiion Weaks han lordered that he and unfortunate suffer. jurymen be kept together tn custody man's trance [impurities into the blood, while the b Advt. | belief that capital punishment was} urifying the entire alimentary tract Cetore putting more food into thr stomach Men and women with sallow skins liver gpots, pimples or pallid com. plexion, also those who wake up’ with w coated tongue, bad taste, mast: | breath ' bothered with vend: 5 ation, should begin this phos: iphated hot water drinking, a1 are assured of very pronoun results in one or two weeks. A quarter yround of limestone phos phate costs very little at the drug store, but sufficient to demonstrate that just soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water ane limestone phosphate act on the inside organs. We must always consider that internal sanitation is vastly mote im [portant than outside cleanliness, be. ‘eause @he skin pores do not absorb wel pores do.—Advt SAFEST, BEST ALWAYS publican candidate, is charged by dj | house at No. 66 Pine Street, qualisind the Democrats with being agent as el@hth Juror. | William H. Hotehkies, one of Jif a court officer at the Murray. Hill | the foremost Progressive leaders, pete when not in court. i Ily of the Re- iam DP. Carter of the Hotel | ihe Rew aa.getive aly | Wellington, ‘cashier of a bankius of the casualty compani who | .Jamos K. Fraser, of No, $17 West secured amendment to the law hoes At nue srtising expert permitting private settlements. 5 “When the bill was ad | ~ senator Wagner to-day, “t preaioted, TRAVERS, GOLFER, TO WED. | [that It would result in Just what) spre | now has come to Hght-—men induced | lby Immediate needs or coerced in| Jerome Dunstan Travers | settling privately with employers for) amateur golfer of the United States their Injuries and nearly always on | tnd Miss Doriy bee AaUmnier att Walter Cuyler Tiffany of Newburgh- lhe conipaya earten | Walter Cayler Tittany of Newburgh: | ; on-the- Hudson, called at the office of | “The amendment was jammed! noon and through by the Republican State Ad- | « | ministration and now we have Mr. | Hotchkies, Progrexsive casualty com- rit f ny re} ve, @ ¥ ». | Avenue. They are to be married on pany representative, engaged in help [tet 14 nt the Firat” Presbyterian ing the Republican campaign.” ure M Hughes from the court June was the principal calise for deferring Velvet Trimmed, | Very Special, Women’s & Misse. 1h n and that it is probable the| ease will have to be argued | again earn! | Velour, Dentiot relat iy Who Oper-| Duvetyn, ‘HICAGO, Oct, 19—Dr- 3M wain.|| Broadcloth, viraud. tormeriv « suraon tn the m-|| Peau de Peche, nole National Guard, died to-day of Bolivia, wounds init 1 th Me- Ss cenaae ates ait ania ke eka Hudson Seal, formad on him eoven voara aga by Mole, Beaver Wetnetraub had runied Trimmed, f ‘ory Special, ‘40.00 HEALS & SOOTHES im CHILDRENS SKIN im ONE BOX,PROVES IT 25¢ ” Fd ot | | 3 a is All “Lost and Found” articles advertued in The World or reported te “Lost and- Found Dep't.." Ime formation Hureau, World Bullding, will be listed for thirty di These " te. y of The World's “a < el directly to TI REGISTER TO-DAY, Spangled Dance Frock, $40.00 mindy Marten

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