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Sy EDITION -RED SOX HIT PFEFFER LANG “ Circulation Books Open to All.’ Copyright, Cov PRICE ONE CENT. 1910407, RIOT Yoru Wertd). NEW yo 12, RK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER +——y Circulation Books 1916. 16 ini en RED SOX JUMP INTO LEAD N FIFTH OF “SERIES, AIDED BY OLSON'S MISPLAYS —-—-—- Fo — Bostons Have Little Trouble With Pfeffer, While Meyers’s Single in Fifth Was Brooklyn’s First Safe Blow Off Shore. Score by Innings Brooklm. 01000000 Roston... 01201008 | By Bozeman Bulger. BOSTON, Oct. 12,—Pfefter BRAVES’ FLELD, Meyers were Brooklyn's battery and Shore and Cady for Boston World's Se at against o start of today's game, the fifth of the hes. FIRST INNING--Myers was ¢ 4 _ out on strikes, Daubert was ont bs ; A T Scott's wild throw of his grounde “i Hoope On, first error of th Wheat f Tanvrin, ut to Hobby » tt Shorten, f. Hoblit error, on Cutshaw threw out Hoope out, Mowrey to Dauber lifted a high fly to Wheat no hits, no errors, let i SECOND INNING Cutshaw] Sinpiros: ¢ annolly be hind. the late: O'Day, bases; reen, right walked, Mowrey sucrifived, Hobby to| fond: Quig et field, Shore, the latter covering first, Gard- | sects accpieshanssianoeniewell ner tHfew out Olson, Cutshaw ad-| Vancing to third, Cady isc a wile |ROOSEVELT OFF NEXT WEEK curve go by him for a passed Dall ANd | iweey Went o sila’ Camealin Cutshaw scored, Scott threw out Your for Hughes. Meyers. One run, no hits, no errors, Roonevdit. apeaits in Wilkes. none left Barre, Pan, rday night on the elght- Pfeffer tossed out Hobi Lewis's hour labor question, and on Oct. 17 tune drive over W ieud went for | starts ap a long Western campaign trip hree bases, Gardner flied to Wheat | in the interest of Hugh and Lewis scored on the throw-in,| His itinerary is as follows: Oct. 18, Mowrey muffed Scott's high foul. | Unt ue » during the Hay and Tonle , y Moyers, One| Vile for the evening; Oc + Phoenix Soott then popped to Meyers Stat ORG BLL dbycimeatiaerae oe run, one hit, one err one left querque, No M.; Oct. 26, night meeting THIRD INNING efter struck vat. Gardner tossed out Hy Myer > — Shore tossed out Jaubert. No runs, no ‘oo Dears Urge ne of Sweet Potatoes, its, no errors, none I | ' Shore popped’a toh Huy aweet po- mmission men ad- ' looper walked, Olsor 9 Hooper wail t 18 the only rellof fuinbled Janvria’s easy grounder and Feu oriben ce tone then threw wild to second, allowing ent caporte showed Cady to, score and Ho to reach | 4 of 59,000,000 bushels in the third, Olson js offlelally credited jw to crop. Retail grocers are + ee a ll \payiNg $145 @ bushel, housewives $2, out trying to sleal second, Meye ¥ poate 1 for 75 to 90 cents Olson, Shorten singled ent ama oring Hooper, Shorten Was OU! yell for Wife Marder, He Seeks He- aling ond, Meyers to Olso 1s Mrosecutor, Two runs, two hits, tw 1 1 0., Oot. 12.—With Inte lett trial for urder set for a week TOURTLLINNING=e fijea | from to-day, County Prosecutor Oscar ‘ Wheat atrnck oat, cut. |MeDaniel, out on bond, is putting In » Shorten, an : the time campaigning for re-election, | shaw Was ati easy out, 8 Hobe | ived @ rousing reception at a No suns, nu hilts, 1 NE pylitical meeting last night. Whether : MeDanlel sha suspended as Prose Hobby w eriticud ul I# over Will be de- Daubert to \ yan to-d ing first, an went tos es Cutshaw wooyt ¢ Talares 16 on threw ou u omen sco its, no erie © lef eer und brakeman were Killed WIRTH INNING —At we $ 1 teen injubed when a Western eae Pe Mtawroy xeursion train, en route ison filed 5 Me 1 wn, rir nto the sun y ‘Veale the Knob Mount Inet threw out Melt ii 40 u'ciouk this motning ardner the J ' nd injured were ail tn Olson threw out a Wheat ude a great ' Bishop Ge proved, snore's ! Hooper singiedt ‘ ob Gheer'n nuch huprove Janvrin 1 ing Hooy in 1 uproved that t ph mitted him to depart wild piteh Janvrin went to Nes i NeW Wary His koe Shorten struck Ono run, tw not considered serious ta, no error Hhought afler a few days vest at SIXTH INNI M Rome, be Slit gute purtleipate th bert, Btenee! por pee QE E'S WINES GIACE ANY TABLE, Wink ma iery 1 SPE nity Nowups, bo hit st. NX,” Phone $00)" Cartyembdres HUSBAND ILL, WIFE TURNS BURGLAR TO FEED MORE BABES Family of Tuberculosis Victim, Idle Four Years, Increased by Three. |COURT CRITICISES LAW. Suspends Sentence on Mother, but Hints at Regulation in Such Cases. Prior to five rs ago Samuel of No, Third Street, earned a good Uving as an operator Because of atmosphere Yy ' Schnur on children’s clothing, bad ventilation, dusty and other il! conditions in the shop| where he worked, Schnur developed tuberculosis, Me had & wife and three small ob{ldren and had not gaved any money, Then the law intervened. Board of | Health inspectors said he could not continue at his work upon children's warments, as it might spread the disease to other persons, Schnur had to stop work four years ugo und has done none since, To-day his wife Rebevc ar- algned before Judge Wadhams, Mor- ris Moskowitz of No, 208 Bast Sev- enth Street charged r with bur- lary in entering his apartments and stealing money, a watch and some 4 was wearing apparel, | "Lam guilty,” the woman sald, “I | stole to feed my children "So I understand,” replied the Judge. “I haye had your case thor- | oughly investigated.” | Probation Officer Irving Halperin reported that since Schnur was forced to discontinue his work three more children had been born to the couple, The youngest is ten montha old, the eldest eleven years, Charity of the neighbora kept the family alive and a roof over thelr head | "The records,” Judge Wadhams | said, “Mform me that this woman was found gullty once before of stealing, She was lot go at that time on suspended se Because of that fact she ought to be sent to jail | but how can I send her to | Prison under the circumstances?” | Judge Wadhams spoke of the so- presented by the now, clologica) conditior and continued But the father | children who have under the goes on producing very lttle chance, to be anything but tubercular, and themselves | rowing up repeat the proces with | woctety, ‘There is no law against that conditions “But, if information ta given with respect to birth regulation people are brought to the bar of Justice for it There is a law they violate, The question is whether we have the most | intelligent law on this subject that we might have, ‘These matters are regu- | tuted better in some of the old coun- rticularly in Holland, than in this country, I belleve wo are living in an age of ignorance? which at some future timo will be | Jooked upon aghast as we look back at conditions which we now permit to © was suspended PARK CIRCLE CASINO BURNS, Two Boys Who Told of Seeing Mat- treas Ablaze Are Sought, wik Clrele Canin, at Coney Is. and Caton Place, Flatbush, ed by fire this morning. Tro s who said they had seen a mattress in & room in th of the hall are being soug building \ 14 @ tworstor eupying halt the bloc rear BROKEN RAIL IN OF HUGHES SPECIAL TRAIN IN KENTUCKY MOUNTAINS Portion Removed Evidently by Blows From Some Heavy Tool at | Point Rounding a Danger- ous Curve. LOUISA, Ky, Hughes on his thiri Western trip was stopped by a broken rall on the point of @ curve around a steep embankment of the Big Sandy River, leaving Paints- ville to-day 1 The rai Oet -The special train carrying Charles BE. was broken for a distan having been knocked entirely away. of several inches, the inside flange Was due and flagged the train, The broken part of the rail could not be Train officials said that the break appeared to have been caused | by a heavy blow from some instrument found, Only a few per TONBURG, 4 E. Hughes to-day cat ms aboard the special learned of the cause of tho deli Oct. 12.—] tenance of Ar an rights abroad, dhis stand as the representative of a Ky. campaign to the mountalns of Ken-| party," he told an audience In the tucky and into mining and iumber| village streets h “but in the true towns which no presidential nominee| sense ay a rep tative of that had ever visited before i-|Amertoan sentiment which demands ences were ¢ 1 lurgely of men and women who hid travelled m inte mpor that the lives and property of Amer- eitty shall be safeguarded throughout the world, That does not an uw polley of war by horse and mule back to | him us he outlined his views on the main- PRESIDENT'S TRAIN BACKS INTO CROWD BUTNO ONE IS HURT mounted and foot police during his ride rom the railroad station to the hotel. Th sidewalks were lined with people and us the hotel was neared the hand- ing and applause grew in volume. ‘© band followed Mr, Wilson, The Reveption Committee which met the President was headed by Gov, Ralston aa Acroas the street at sev- al poluts were banners praising» the President for keeping the country at ania peace er The automobile parade, celebrating Several Persons Narrowly Es-|the Centennial Highway Day, was . r iis started by the booming of cannon cape Being Caught Under |imnemeututely atter the tunchoon given His Private ( by Gov. Ralston In honor of the Pres- dent Motorists from all parts of » at indiane participated In the parade, RICHMOND, Ind, Ot " The review of the parade the train to which President W arranged to motor ty the was attached, on its wa Grounds over a route apolia, backed into \dvance #0 that the crowds him, v. Ralston was to-day. of the Vatr Grounds meet Several persor We ' caught under the President's cat address of the day {4 Jobn Q. Hye, a secret service man, eduled in the fatr grounds late this pulled one woman the way | afternoon food roads speech. te he sddresses 4 crowd of just in time n INDIANAPOLIS, 1 mn 12. | He will leave to-night for Shadow President Wilson declared a non-| Lawn, Long Branch, N. J., where he partisan lunc n he day that | arrives to-morrow afternoor kind applause DAYTON, ©, Oct. 1 President ap y-day he Wilson was greeted by a belleved that the roved his | 2,000 people here to-day. He shook Interpretation of t it of the|hands with many and thanked th [people. After saying was Inter-/crowd for its cordial reception, Mrs partic ly in national | Wilso red also and Was grevted | feeling of the United States, Mr, Wil- | with am declared prene © knew | Pe ae | BIG LINER CANOPIC SAFE. son smilingly the Republici as good | J Americans as he and that ¢ fight lng ter a fu more ws partion | Mad Wirelens Warning of 0-53 and . s ‘ ; wi would work for the « Algood Nan With Lights Out, the Natior STO Ott 12. = White sta sce Cano ‘or Which some anatety Ripeasing f | been felt in sbipping ctreles be tlon later, the ir © loause of the presence in North Atiantle need for a united nation, H Vared | waters of @ Gerinai submarine, arrived that good roads are very rtant rranean ports. Her in knitting 1 the towns that they had not | ane sald rowd veld Maasachu: ne uaual ¢ Hisy without eparation wae fan attack Section hands discovered the break a few minutes before the onectady Open i a ews SH To-Day'’s Weather—FAIR AND WARMER, to All. t : — ___—_—$—<—$<$————— PAGES PRICE ONE CENT. NG STRIKERS DISARM Y 400 BAYONNE VIGILANTES THE WAY ADRIATIC BRAVES. U-BOAT PERIL WITH 335 PASSENGERS White Star Liner Stops Within Three-Mile Limit and Waits for Dark, RICHEST PRIZE AFLOAT. May Meet Convoy of British Cruisers—Demonstration as Liner Passes Down the Bay. The Adriatic of the White Stur Line slipped away from the pier at the foot of West Twentieth Street a fow min- utes after nobn to-day, bound for Liv. ond class ang 100 third clas# passene gore and « cargo of 18,000 tons made up largely of munitions of war not including ammunition, Part of the steerage wa used for cargo storage | and on the decks were packed 16 im- mense auto tractors and 150 automo- Diles, The Adriatic dropped anchor within | the three-mile limit after clearing the bar. Shore observers thought #he would wait until nightfall before re- | suming her voyage. During the morning Captain J. B. Ranson ordered all the life boats un- covered and supplied with provisions and water and the falls were loosened and pullies inspected. Outside Sandy Hook the lifeboats were to be slung out over the aides of the veasel in readiness for immediate use and life belts were to be distributed to the passengers, The passengers exprewsed the belf@? that British ships of war are walting off the coast of Long I and to act as quarda for the Adriatic Against possible attack by the Ger- man U-68, ‘There are four Americans in the first cabin, H. A. Emerson, a New York commission merchant; R. G Hrasgington, who tm in the safe bual- nest at No, 919 Canal Street; William J. Wilson and his wife, who are going to join the London Hippodrome forces, Tho names of several Amert- cans in the ond cabin were not siven out, Frederick Hall, a newa- paper man, and his wife were also passengers, Mr. Hall ts an English- man and ts going abroad to offer his services fo the government The Adriatic sailed on time a8 advertised weeks ago, It was rather & subdued departure, for everybody on the pier and the ship recalled that the Lusitanta left New York in the face of a warning not nearly 69 emphatic aa that given by the U-53's activities last Sunday, | Captain, officers and crew went schedule | sel away with the calm confidence of wd of | British seamen. Ao tho big steamship | backed out into the North River and | headed out to take a chance on the ocean those left behind on the pier cheored time and again. All the way along the river front the Adriatic was greeted by cheers and | whistles. In the upper bay every vou- sel at anchor or in motion saluted the ner, Probably as deeply interested in the departure the Adrtatic ot us ‘Tl unybody were the sallors and officers) divorced on board the German ships tled up at |the Hoboken piers. “They lined the raila as the Adriatic passed down the stream and perhaps their hopes that the submarine would get her we just as hearty as the hopes of those on the New York side that she would either the officers of ti the Whit wu Star lin Second Page.) erpool, carrying 88 first class, 198 eo | about the business of getting the ven. | ED RMN —_-+-—___—- THREAT 10 CLOSE STORES IS MADE BY MERCHANTS AS RIOTERS BEGIN LOOTING Situation So Alarming Delegation of Business Men Waits ‘on the Bayonne City Officials and De- mands Better Police Protection. STRIKERS ARE BEYOND CONTROL, SAY LEADERS ~ ~“K défermined effort was made this afterfiooi To end the rioting that has marked the strike of Standard Oil employees at Bayonme, N. J., which city for the last twenty-four hours has practically been atthe mercy of thousands of armed strikers. Four ‘hundred policemen, deputy sheritts and cilizens, the latter in- cluding fifty members of the local National Guard company who have just returned from service on the border, invaded the oil district to arrest every drunken man and every one carrying a weapon and seize all arms. SONI Se URGE DNORCE BAN ON BOTH PARTS the city officials expect a battle, —— t ‘The fact that the holiday closed many of the manufacturing plamte and added thousands of men to the strikers already on the streets was looked upon as another dangerous factor. Most of these men are ty sympathy with the strikers. RIFLES PROTRUDE FROM AUTO- ? . MOBILE! Church Committee Against) Capt, Rawara Grimn was in com= ‘mand of the “cleanup” expedith Remarriage While Either Man or Wife Lives. |having been selected by Mayor Gar- vin, director of Public Safety Wilson and Chief of Police Reilly after a long jconference at Police Headquarters. ‘Thirty-five or forty automobiles care ried the Invading party, the rifles pro- truding from the machines adding an- other grim touch to the warlike con- ditions that have prevailed in the oll district since Monday. A night of unrestrained violence, in which one woman was killed, more than a score of strikers injured and numerous incendiary fires started, followed by a morning of rioting and plundering of stores and saloons, spurred the city offictals to action, Mobs of armed strikers marched through the streets, continuing the reign of terror th inaugurated yes- ST. LOUIB, Oct. 12.—A church law forbidding clergyme marriage for a person divorced for marriage, | to solomnize a any arising after while the divorced partner livea, was the of tho! cause recommended tn report Joint fatters Relating to Holy Commission on Le ation on trimony, | the Tr otestant nanial Epis eubmited to-day i. Convention of the F copal Chureh The commission recommended, however, that where {t is shown a divorce has been «ranted for causes arising before marriage, such & de-|terday. The Jersey Central Rallroad cree, “being in fact a decree of an- Company made no attempt to open ite nulment,” t# no bar to marriage | Twenty-second Street Statlon, closed A minister ts now permitted to per- | yesterday by the strikers, forin the ceremony In the case of ‘The situation became so alarming the marriage of the Innocent party to | during the day,that the Central Busl- a divorce, providing the clergyman | ness Men's Association, following a has received the consent of his] special meeting, waited on Mayor Gar- Bishop. vin and Director of Public Safety Wil- The committee pointed out that the | son and informed those officials that | whole subject of marriage, “with its [responsibilities and obligat should unless more protection was fortheom= ink immediately they would close up be made # matter for caveful Inves-| every store In the elty. tigation by the clergy much more 8 men had scarcely left frequently than is now common. ffice before a committee ommend * arrived and asked Mayor Garvin to increase the number of special policemen, The atrike lead= ters, with every appearance of anxtety, imitted that thelr own men had gote It was further rec | refusal to # Jemnige the ryon need no nanent exel by a p Jperson from the #acr tesiash ten b 3 th sro} jee a ONE HUNDRED MORE POLICE- |$10 MEN'S FALL SUITS, $5.95. MEN ARE GWORK IM, The “HUB Clothing Carne 4 a Many of the business men are ine way, cor, Hurclay St. orp. Woolworth clined tu vriticize the city authorities at eine hall Hulls mad Overconts | for not asking that the State milésia iit , brovgal to restore order, Director of Public tety Wilson and Chief Police KeillyQinsist, however, the silts FOR EARLY LEAD